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10 - The D~ily Sentinel.

197&gt;

Naomi Lodge No. 55

·INTRODUCING
.

to host Sunday eve1,1t

975
•

Home Entertainment
SAVE UP

J0$80

More than 100 persons are
expected to attend a Rathbone Bible Class in Gallipolis
Sunday
according
to
Theodore Harper, Chancellor
Commander of Gallipolis
,Lodge Naomi No. 55, Knights
of Pythias.
The local K of P which
includes 150 members in the
Gallia, Mason anct Meigs
County areas, reminded
members that reservations
should be made with
Cliff Dixon, 47 Sycamore St.,
Gallipolis. Dinner is $5. All
candidates are welcome.
The Rathbone Bible Class
rituals will start at I p.m. in
the K of P Lodge Hall, located
at the corner of Second Ave.,
and Locust St. All three ranks

will be given.
Dinner will be served at
6:30p.m.
Supreme Chancellor Georg
H. Thompson will attend the
session and v,:ill have the
Rathbone Bible in his
possession. Ohio Grand
Chancellor Donald D. Treadway will also be on hand
along with other supreme
1national) and grand (s tate) ·
officers.
The Rathbone Bible was
the Bible used by Justus H.
Rathbone to initiate the first
member in the order. it is
encased in plastic.
City Manager Richard
Mills will welcome members
and Pylhian Sisters and
guests to the Old French City.

Buckeye Hills group
takes part in event

II

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The Office Data Accoun ling
Club of Buckeye Hills Career
Center recently engaged in
Activities of a Business
Nature by participating in the
local Flea Market held at the
Gallla County Fair Grounds
on Oct. II. Bob Walter of
Hannan Trace High School
and Vanessa Pleasant of
North Gallia High School
were in charge of the ac·
tivities.
The loca lion wsa decided
on by Bob Waller and Brenda
Sexton, Southwestern High
School, who also helped to
assemble the canopy and set
up the booth along with the
advisor, Mr. Roger L. Fetterly,
Those participating in the
sales
were :
Vanessa
Pleasant, and Sandy Utile of
North Gallia High Schooll,
Brenda Sexton, Vickie
Hubbard and Mike Fortner of
Southwestern High School
and Bob Wal~r of Hannan
Trace High School.
The day's aeli vi ties
provided a variety of
educational experiences for
the would be future business
students. They engaged in
pricing several different
i~ms at a fair market price
and the methods in displaying

MEIGS tHEATRE
OCT. 14-26
FRt.-SAT.-SUN.
OCT.24-26
Clint Eastwood
In
THE EIGER SACTION
(Technicolor)
Show starts at7:oo p.m.

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and, selling those items. The
last part of the day was
devoted to an all out effort to
move as many i~ms as
posilible in order to avoid
repacking and added transportation charges.
The project was altogether
beneficial to the students with '
many experiences that could
only be gained at the Flea
Market.
The Office Data Accounting
Club expresses its sincere
thanks to Thaler Ford Sales
for the use 'of their table. The
Gallia ·county Children 's
·Home for donations and
lransportation, and Mrs .
Roger L. Fetterly for her
assistance and help with the
local students.
SIX FINED
Six persons were fined in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Dale E. Smith Thursday
night. They are Michael
S~wart, address not lis~d .
$10 and cos ts, disturbing the
peace; Marc Dalley, Toledo,
$10 and costs, reckless
operation;
Robert
Blankenship, Hartford, W.
Va., $10 and costs, disturbing
the peace ; Don Lovett ,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
intoxication; Mark Oiler,
Pomeroy, $20 and cosls, no
operator's license, and Hugh
. Rousey , Pomeroy, 110 and
costs, disturbing the peace.
RITES PLANNED
Miss Regina D. Harrison
and Ron E. Grate will be
married at the Rutland
United Methodist Church,
Rutland, at 6:30 p.m.
Saturday , Oct. 2~. The
gracious custom of open
church will be observed.

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Includes gift box.
state.

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Oct. 23)
Octava Akers, Bowman
Burdet~, Landon Burnett,
Mrs . Earnest Clark and
daughter , Clarence Clary,
John Coffman; Gil Coleman,
Mrs. Phil Cook and son, Mary
Deer, James Elkins, Lenore
Flowers, Noah Gambill,
Beverly Hoff, Robert Hoff,
Jr ., Heather McGhee,
Samuel Miller, Bonnie
Moore, Woodrow North, Mrs.
Larry Petrie and daugh~r.
Robert Polcyn, Bessie
Rippey, James Salmans,
Linda Sears, Kelly Smith,
Seth Taylor, Susan Tope,
Lawrence Townsend, Donna
Wallace.
(Births, Oct. 23)
Mr. and MrS. Bob Bishop,
daughter, Rutland; Mr. and
Mrs. David Darst, daugh~r.
Bidwell ; Mr. and Mrs. John
Hamric, daughter, Bidwell;
Mr . and Mrs . Clarence
Young, son, Mason, W. Va.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Nellie
Leifheit, Pomeroy ; Don
Weese, Racine; Juanita
Chapman, Clifton; James
Pauley, Albany; Robert
Lewis, Jr., Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Victor
Vaughan, Vera Stewart,
Willie Collins.

Franco
better
today
By PEfER UEBERSAX
MADRID
(UP! )
Generalissimo Francisco
Franoo, 82, gravely ill alter a
massive heart attack
Tuesday, is showing signs of
improvement, an official
medical balletin said today.
The bulletin, released at
2:35 p.m. (9:35 a.m. EDT ),
was signed by the same ll
doctors who issued a first
medical bulletin Thursday
evening.
Franco suffered a relapse
Thursday and he was
reported so gravely ill that
the cabinet drew up the
necessary papers to transfer
power to Franco's designed
heir apparent, Prince Juan
Carlos de Borbon. Franco
refused to sign them.
When · Franco's health
apparently improved this
morning, the cabinet canceled a scheduled meeting.
Informed government
sources said any action
toward transferring power to
Juan Carlos would be post.
paned unW sometbne this
weekend.
Tlie latest medical bulletin
said textually :
"At 2p.m. (9 a.m. EDT) on
Oct. 24 the condition of the
Chief of State has improved.
The signs of cardiac Jn.
sufficiency which were observed yesterday were
partially reduced. His vital
functions are normal. The
evolution of his coronary
illness Is following liB normal

course."

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.

EXTENDED OUTWOK
Sunday through
Tuesday, a chance of
showers and cooler Sunday. Mostly lair Monday
and Tuesday. Highs will be
In the 50 and lows will be In
the 40s Sunday and in the
30s Monday and Tuesday.

Toot your own horn!
A low-cost Auto Loan
puts you in the driver's seat.
Easy. Convenient.
Check it our today, Toots:

Ohio Politics

Mid-month auto
sales shoot up
By EDWARD S. LECHrziN

UPI Auto Writer
DETROIT (UP!) - Mid·
October car sales were the
best for any mid-month
period in 17 months - up 37
per cent from a year ago but
automakers
are
scheduling new production
cuts and layoffs. .
Nearly 11,000 workers will
be idled In new layoffs neJt
week as the companies at·
tempt to keep their car lots
from bulging with unsold 1976
models. But they 're also
working overtime at I1plants
that build hotselling modela.
All four companies shared
in the jump - American
Motors up 53.5 per cent,
General Motors 43 per cent,
Cbrysler 33 per cent and Ford
28 per cent. The 37 per cent
jwnp was the biggest for the
industry since mid-February
Jf 1973 and the first time since ·
a two-year slwnp began that

State Issues 2-5 called 'mini-campaign'

two ''plus" periods have been
put together.
The 234,670 cars sold In t~
Oct. 11-20 period were within
2 per cent of the IJWlle period
two years ago, just before the
Arab oil embargo pushed the.
industry Into its deepest and
longest sales slwnp since the .
Great Depresalon.
•
The strong pace of the 1978,
models introduced earlier
this month contrasts sharply
with a year ago when average
$500 price Increases scared
buyers away.
''The first two sales period!'.
of the 1976 model year are
right about . where we ex;·
pected, maybe a little better r
but we're still being cautious
about letting OlD' Inventories(
get out of hand like last'year," one Detroit anal~
said.
.
"That way, we can avoid
those layoffs like we had lm1
year If sales do slow down." '

.•

ONLY

'6495

DANCE SCHEDUlED
The Middleport Disaster
Unit wlll stage a public dance
from 8to 11 p.m. Saturday at
the Middleport Elementary
School on Pearl St. The
dance, at $1 a person, ill for,.
people 21 and under. A live
band wlll be feattD'ed.
LADYBIRD IS OK
ROCHESTER,
Minn.:
(UPI) - Lady Bird John110n,
widow of fonner President
Lyndon B. Johnson, rom·
pleted a routine annual
checkup at the Mayo Cllnlc:
Wednesday.
·•
A spokesman said doctors~
gave Mrs. Johnson, who en.
tered the clinic Monday,
clean bill of health .
•

a.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 8 PM
\

pomeroy

natlona
bank

the bankol
thl«**lury

lltablllhed 1872

Member FDIC

BE SURE TO VISIT OUR TOYLAND LOCATED
IN THE MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE.
MAIN STORE, ANNEX AND WAREHOUSE OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 lO 8

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

tntint

tmts

the issues and deep in his files digging out
the seemingly timeless information that
Rhodes' OOl\lltY airports of the 1960s are
fmancially unsol\lld ,
· And state Attorney General William J.
Brown, citing his authority under the
00nsumer sales practices law, got into the
act late ·Jast week by warning Ohioans
about "possible deceptive or misleading
statements" in the governor S advertising .
Although Rhodes himself pledged to stay
out .of "political controversy" on lhe bond
issues, his campaign committee last week
{Continu ed on page 20)
1

Your In vited Gue.~t
R eaching More
Than 12,000
. Families

Devoted 1'o The Greater Middle Ohio Valley
VOL. lG

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

NO. 39

PRICE 25 CENTS

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1975

Victim's body found Saturday_

killed in
accidents
Two deer were killed in
separate traffic accident
investiga~d ThtD'sday by the
Gallla-Meigs Post Sta~
Highway Patrol.
The first occurred on Rt.
in Addison Twp. where a
ran into the path of a
operated by Robert
ninghwn, 33, of ColumlJus.
There was minor damage
his car.
A second was at 3:51 p.m.
Thursday on Rt. 35 where a
deer ran into the path Of a
car driven by Robert F. CoX,
37, Rl. I, Hamden.
The impact knocked the
deer into the path of an
eastbound car driven by
Lowell L. Gla~burn, 71 , of
Galllpolis.

reports revealed on ly half the final' ex- CJO, the Ohio Education Association and
penditures.
'
. others ru;e working in opposition to three of
The same Washington-based public the four statewide i§sues even :though they
relations firm of Bailey, Deardourlf &amp; lack money to buy a heavy dose ot' media
Eyre is conducting this year's media advertising.
campaign with the same type of wellState legislators are out working lor or
pcoduced, oversimplified and misleading against the issues, and some Democratic
ads that appeared for Rhodes iii 1!)74.
elected state officials are finding time to
While special interest groups such as the campaign against them .
Ohio Contractors Asso~jation have shelled
U . Gov. Richard F. Celeste, who has
out money to pro!l)ote the bond issues, the little else to do, has been a semi-official
normal anti-Rhodes special interest leader in the camp or the opponents.
groups have ganged up on the governor,
State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson, who
just ·uke in !I" election campaign.
should have plenty of other things to do,
The United Auto Workers. the Ohio AFL- has been on the speaker 's platform against

•

NORTHUP - The body of Mike
VanSickle, 24, Rl. 2, Patriot, was round in
Raccoon Creek near here Saturday afternoon.
According to Sheriff Oscar C. Baird ,
the body was found by a member of the
VanSickle family, who was assisting the
sheriff's deputies and members of the

Gallia County Disaster Agency in the
search.
The body was found one-half mile
below the ·Blessing Bridge. No ruling has
been made in the case, pending further
investigation.
VanSickle disappeared Monday night
in the high, swill wa~rs of Raccoon Creek

Jtiry finds

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Monday through Wednesday,
. generally lair through the forecast
period with highs to lhe upper 50s to
the 60s. Lows will he from the upper
30s to the mid 40s.

man guilty

Leisure Shirts.
rutland
tupp4N'I plalna

unba

Two deer

Suits, Dreu Slacks ancl
pomeroy

Fair today with highs in the
low 60s. Probability o[ rain is
10 per cent.

famny in town," said
fonner partner was not
person to jump
something without thinking.
"He really believes in !hill,~
I'm stD'e of that," Hutchinson ·
said. "I'm sure he believed Ui•
what he did and what he's
doing, but it's sure hard for,
those he left behind to un.;
derstand."

our sale of Men's Leisure

'

Weather

0

Save this weekend during
The NOCTURNE
F472W - AM/F.M digi tal
clock radio . .zenith
Circle-of-Sound design
.lor balanced, natural
sound. Touch 'n Snooze
control. Target Tuning.
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the issues fare with lhe voters Nov. 4.
have run out and the adminl&gt;1ration is
While waiting for a vote on the four · counting on pasSage of the bond issues to
economic recovery issues, the governor stimulate the Ohio economy and bring in
has done little else. He has submitted few more revenye..
new programs to the legislature, choosing . To that eml., the governor has launched a
instead to react to those sent him by the lavish spending campaign to secure
lawmakers.
passage of the issues. It could turn out lo
· He · bas continued govern men! be the most expensive push for any
operations at the same, level, trimming statewide issue in Ohio history.
slightly to conform the payroll , to the . Already, $1.1 million has been spent on
budget but declining to offer anything advertising - · c"Ompared to the $755,000
more than fiscal gimmicks to pay lor used to elect Rhodes with a devastating
future spending.
last&lt;ninute television blitz. Media exRhodes' financial chief, Howard L. penses lor the issues already exceed those
Collier, conceded last week the gimmicks for Rhodes last year, when preelectlori

''

Last chance for other
kingdom in 2,000
DURANGO, Colo. (UPI) Friends say wealthy land
developer John M. Q-alg bad
a good life here. They can't
understand why be left it to
look for a better one on
another planet.
"He dido 't talk to me or his
wife, he just left," said E.L.
Hutchinson, Craig's partner
in the Colorado Land and
Cattle Co. "There was no
Indication at all. He just met
those people and a week later
he left."
''Those people" were a
group of persons from Oregon
who left their homes and
familles in search of a UFO
which they believed would
take them to a better life
elsewhere in space, Hutchinson said. He said he
believed Craig was contacted
by an old friend who had
joined the ·group and who
persuaded him to leave.
"I probably was pretty
close to him, b,ut I had no Idea
what was happening,"
Hutchinson said. "There
weren't any famlly pcoble1118
and no financial problems, I
can assure you of that. He
had plenty of assets."
Hutchinson said Craig, a 41year-old father of six, signed
everything he owned over to
his wife before he left July 12.
He said Mrs. Craig has
received two letters from her
husband since his disap·
pearance, but neither bad a
return address.
In the latest letter, Hut·
chinson quoted Craig as
saying this was hill last
chance of reaching ''the other
kingdom" for at least 2,000
years.
"Jesus spoke of Ills journey
and Ills teachings 2,000 years
ego," Craig wrote. "All the
lnformatloo In the Gospel is
there, even though the people
teaching it did not understand
since they could not compcehend the mesaage.
"His words are completely
understood now," the letter
went on. "It ill understood
what the kingdom of heaven
ill all about, bow to get there
and at what time It ill
available."
Hutchinson, who described
Q-alg as "a pcetty Intelligent
person" with the ''nicest

By LEE LEONARD
UPI statehouse Reporter
cOLUMBUS I UP! ) - The campaign for
and against State Issues :W has all the
earmarks of a nrinl-campaign for governor. In fact, it may be just that.
Gov. James A. Rhodes, promoting
passage of the issues as an antidote to
depression in Ohio, has spent virtually all
his. time and effort on them since last
January.
Energy, employment, capital con·
struction, health care, transportation,
housing, lmjustrial expansion :- any
progress under Rhodes will depend on how

PLANT MANAGER Mtrilael T. Bucci (left) of !be Point Pleasant Goodyear
1
plant pretents medallion to IIPirlt award wiMer, James (Jeep ) Holley.'

Coveted Goodyear award
winner is James Holley
GALLIPOLIS - James (Jeep ) Holley, he was appointed to the quality control
quality control Inspector, has beeh an- department in April, 1968. In December,
nounced as winner of the 1975 Goodyear · 1973, Holley was named to hts present
Spirit Award for the Point Pleasant plant, position of quality control inspector.
according to Plant Manager Michael T.
Exemplary of the Goodyear spirit,
Bucci.
Holley takes an active interest ~ in em·
Holley was recently presented an ployee recreational activities. He serves
award of $100 and a medalllon.
as chairman of the plant golf league and
Bucci said that Holley 's name will be tournament and also directed this year's
entered along with other plant winners In a Goodyear in~r-plant golf tournamen:
contest to select a Goodyear Cbemlcal hosted by Point Pleasant.
Division winner. The Chemical Division
Active in the community, Holley
winner and those of other worldwide Good- donated many evenings In serving as a
year divisions wlll become finalists for the coach to the Gallipolis Midget Football
E. J. Thomas Goodyear Spirit Award of League. He is an active member ol the
1975.
Gallla County Democratic party and a
Holley's nomination cites his many past committee member to the Boy Scouts
years or dedication to Goodyear, Boy of America, Holley is a member of the
Scouts, Midget League Football, church Grace United Methodist Church in
and other community services.
Gallipolis where he serves as usher· and
Holley began his career with part-time bus driver.
Gcx.dyear at Pont Pleasant as a chemical
At home, Holley finds the time to enjoy
operator In the production deparlment in fishing and camping with his wife, Judy,
August, 1962. Alter gaining experience In and his daughter, Michele. The Holleys
sever! ·areas of the production dept., make their home at Gallipolis.

Beggars nigh Oct. 29

GALLIPOLIS - A guilty verdict of
eggravated assault was returned here
Friday in the trial of Phillip House, 47, of
Bidwell.
'
House had been indicted for felonious
assault In the alleged shotgun shooting last
May t7 of Charles Peck of Bidwell.
The verdict was rendered following
two hours of deliberation.
In his charge to the jtD'y, Conunon
Pleas cOtD'l Judge Roriald R. ~un
staled three cboltfi.lhould be conlidered:
( I ) guilty of felonious assault; (2) guilty or
aggravated assault or, (3) not guilty.
The aggravated a111111ult conviction
carries a six month to five year jail tenn .
Felonious assault conviction would have
carried a two to 15-year tenn.
Upon the recommendation of defense
attorneys , Raymond Musgrave, Jr. and
Richard Roderick, Jr., Judge Calhoun
agreed to conduct a pre-sentencing report.
Bill Eachus and Gene Wetherholl
represented the state. Members of the jury
were Hayes Deel, Juanita Lupton, Roslee
M. Bostic, Esta Reese, Connie W. Johnson,
Arthur Casto, Marinelle Jeffers, Margaret
Myra Edminston. Marie H. Cox, Edith
Mae Sheelll, Jane Singer Vinson, and
Virginia A. Taylor. Norma Jean Johnson
served as the al~rnate juror.

John Greene welcomed
as new Rotary -member

MIDDLEPORT - John Greene was
welcomed as a new member when the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club met
Friday night at Heath United Methodist
Church. Vernon Weber, preside nt,
presided.
C. E. Blakeslee, a member and
president of the Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical SOCiety, gav.e a slide presentation on the development of the Meigs
Museum in Pomeroy. He also stressed
membership into the organization for
residents as a bicentennial gesture. The
museum Is now open three days a week, he
reported.
There was group singing with Gene
Grate
at tJie piano. The dinner was served
- Turn pqrch lights on during begging
by
women
of the church.
hOlD'.
The annual parade and costume
contest will be held Thursday,
Oct. 30, beginning at 6:30p.m., in front of ·
theGalllpollsCitybuildinglnthe500block
·
of Second Ave. The Gallla Academy High
x~
~~:;~':~~i~:;~!;m take part in th~
.

Annual
Halloween contest,
parade scheduled Oct. 30
~

-

GALLIPOLIS - Dates lor the annual
Halloween parade and costume
contest events were announced Saturday
by Chairman L. G. Marchi.
Beggars' night wlll be observed on
Wednesday, Oct. 29from 8 until 7 p.m. Mr.
Marchi , along with Pollee Chief John
Taylor, recommends the followlnR rules
for safely durillg beggars' night.
- Limit of trick or treating to
elementary and pre-school youngsters
under 12 years of age.
- Have a parent or other adult ac·
company little beggars and particularly
by pre-school group.
·
...:.. Ma~e sure each child has a safe
costume.
·

Friday, Harold Pauley of Vinton
piloted the sheriff's helicopter over the
creek area and divers from Mason County
jpined search efforts Friday and Saturday.
VanSickle was the son or Mr. and Mrs.
Foster VanSicltle of Rl. 2, Gallipolis, and
the husband of Dana Paxton VanSickle
whom he married 10 months ago.

"

New Amtrak service
to begin May 1

MIDDLEPORT - Amtrak has ad·
vised the Meigs County Rail Service
Commit~ that Its new Washington to
Denver rail 1passen~r service is tentatively sche\luled to begin operation on
May 1, 1976. The train will operate over the
Che!!Sie System (Ballimore and · Ohio )
mainline and stops are planned at
Parkersburg, A~, ,and Chillicothe.
The route wtll be the filth serving Ohio
and the third serving West Virginia where
it will extend service beyond a current
Washington - Cumberland, Md. train
which serves the eastern panhandle . A
new Amtrak route to serve northern Ohio
wlll begin operation Oct. 31. This train will
serve Cleveland and Toledo on !Ill Buffalo.
N. Y. to Chicago, Ill., rou~. Currently
Amtrak service Is · available to
Southeastern Ohio at Columbus,
Charleston, W: Va .• Huntington, W. Va.,
and Tri-State Station (Catlettsburg ). Ky.

Mail box victims
urged to contact cowt

BAlLOTS FOR the Nov. i election were delivered to the Meigs County Board
of Elections Friday, approiimately 130,000 In all, the largest number delivered to
the hoard by the Quality Printing Co., In the some 28 years that Vernon Weber has
been a printer. Every voter In the Nov. i elecllon will receive from 10 to 13 ballots.
Pictured at the delivery are Mrs. Dorothy Johnston, director of the board of
elections,and I tnr, Vernon Weber, Elmer Young and Dallas Weber.

.., ,

POMEROY - Meigs COWl ty Court
Judge Robert E. Buck announced
Saturday that persons of the Long BottomReedsville area who had their mailboxes
destroyed are to make their identity
known to him by contacting county court.
This is [or individuals who have not yet
had their mailboxes replaced.
Roger Smith and John Chevalier, both
of Rl. I, Reedsville, appeared iri county
court Friday and were sentenced to 60
days in the county jail with 30 days
suspended, are to replace the mailboxes
and make restitution within 60 days.
They wlll be taken to the Long BottomReedsville area during the day to replace
the mailboxes and returned to jail in the
evening,
Judge Buck also said that the two men
are not to en~r an establisluhent that sells
alcoholic beverages or partake of any
alcoholic beverages lor six months.

DID YOU FALLBACK?
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Th e
nation returned to standard time at 2
a.m. today, when clocks were turned
hack one hour to I a.m.
Standard time wiD continue until
the last Sunday In April.
The lime change Sunday wlll have
no effect in Arizona, Hawaii, Puerto
Rico, the VIrgin Islands, American
Samoa and the eastern time zone of
Indiana, whlcb consists of 80 counties
around Indianapolis, Fort Wayne
and South Bend. Those areas are on
permanent standard time.

E n ect more
•
f
optrons
0
'
'.r
.

The parade will move down Second ·'
Ave. to Court St., then over to the park
front where ·Judging for the costume
contest wlll take place.
'The contest will be divided into three
age groups: 1to 7, 7 to 12 and 13 to 80 years
of age.
.
•
•
Prizes will be awarded to individuals
judged: best dressed, most original, most
•
ugly and most comical.
,
GREAT BEND - Optioning of land in
'
)leigs Rail Senice
Mrs. Paul Wagner will serve as the Great Bend area for the possible
mistress of ceremonies.
construction of .a power plant by the
supporting Issues
Judges ' wlll . be Winnie Wetherholt, Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs County Mrs. Richard Mills and Hoyt V. Mullins. has reached about 1,000 acres with more
options to be taken.
Rail Service Committee urges all
Optioning of the land in the Great Bend
Southeas~rn Ohio voters to support Issue
MAN SENTENCED
8 on the ballot Nov. 4. IISUe 8 will amend
POMEROY - Lonnie Black. Rutland, area has been underway lot the past some
the Ohio Constitution · to allow .Ohio to was sentenced by Meigs County Common 20 'months by the company for lhe
participate in federal-state rail subsidy . Pleas Judge John C. Bacon SatUI'day to the proposed plant which would be either
atomic or fuel type , In~rest of the com.
1programs which are vtlal to continued rail . Ohio Pen from lour to 25 years on charges
18rvtce In Southeastern Ohio, and to the of aggravated robbery of John Ambrose, pany In the Oat, rich farm land of Great
jobs of many resldenlll. Issue 8 Involves manager of the Kroger Store· I~ Pomeroy. Bend was announced a couple or years ago
the Issuance of two bonds, and is not to be Black appeared !Jelore Judge Bacon at a dinner meeting held at the Steam boa!
oonlused with the TranspOrtation Bond · earl:~r on a blll of information and pleaded Inn in Racine by the Meigs County
Hc~ionul Plannin~ C&lt;~m !l)issiun .
Issue.
guilty to the charge. ·
'

after a 12-foot aluminum boat in which he
· and David Jenkins, 19, Rt. 2, Patriot, were
riding, took on water after striking a log.
Jenkins made it to the southwest bank
and VanSicltle was last seen heading for
the northeast bank.
Dragging opera tions were halted
Tuesday then resumed Thursday night.

land for possible plant
Latest to sign an option and addtng a
considerable portion to the approximate
1 000 acres under option was Mrs. Helen
Hayes. She has 310 acres of the to~
acreage now under option . Mrs. Hayes
option Is ror one year from Wednesday,
Qct, 22. when she signed.
The lime of other options on land taken
in the area varies, a spokesman of the
company at the real estate office in
Chillicothe said. Mrs. Hayes has been in
conference with representatives of the
company for. some 19 months. She com·
mented that she had flnally signed the
option "under terrlflc pre5$ure .;·
Mrs. Hayes has or. occasion expressed

her concern on preserving land and also
her feelings that. perhaps. land in the
Great Bend area ~o uld be useful for "
plant other than a power operation which
would provide more employment when
completed.
The Chillicothe real estate office in·
dica led that more options on land in the
Great Bend area are to be la,ken . While the
taking of options Is indicative that the
plant will be buill, its reallly is not definite
at this time. The company pays a portion
of the agreed purchase price to the land
owner at the time the option is signed with
the balance paid when the options are
tak~" up .

Nursing home
application to
be reviewed
GALLIPOLIS .- The Ohio Valley
Health Services Foundation Inc. of Athens
will meet here Nov. 5 at Oscar's
RestatD'ant to review an application for a
new nursing home. Robert Ellls Clifton of
Albany, Ohio is one of several sponsors
involved in the $747,100 project.
According to a release from the Ohio
Department of Health, the proposed new
facility must be approved by the Director
of Health who is the Designated Planning
Authority as established by Section 11~
of the Social Security Act.
The application, submitted Aug . 28,
must be evaluated against certain stan·
dards to determine whether the additional
capacity is needed for the area; whether it
can be adequately staffed and operated
when completed ; whether · it is
economically feasible, and whether the
project wlll help contain costs or improve
quality of care for patients.
The plans call for a 75 bed structure in
the renovated Gallipolis Clinic on Fourth
Ave. near the Gallipolis Golf Course . The
project cost has been esimated at $747,100
with completion set for June, 1976.
The facility would be known as the L.
H. Ratliff Memorial.

ATTEMPTED ii&amp;E PROBED
GALLIPOLIG - City pollee Saturday
morning investigated an attempted
breaking and en~ring al Ce ntral Soya of
Ohio on Sycamore St.
- Officers said someone pried the )atch
off the door on the east side of the building
but were unable to get beyond a padlocked
dOOr ,

v
'l

u

�'•

3 - 1'he SIUiday r·

.

~~.~~~;.~f11me! ,Sundav. Oct . 26, 1975

FOUlt WOMEN n·c·l'i vcd

- The SIUiday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, 0&lt;'1 . 26, 1975

The problem drinker

RAY CROMLEY

Investigators throw
.· back the big fish
WASHIONGTON - Some tlme back in a cerl.llin office of
the Sales Tu Division of the New York State Department of
Tautlon and Finance, examiners would determine which of
the local businesses were slow in remitting the sales taxes
they'd collected, and call the owners in. If a business operator
owed $6,000 the examiner would tell him they'd settle for $4,000
- $3,000 for the state and $1,000 for the examiner. The official
would then split his share with his supervisor.

+++

The accused kliier'sllid he'd been offered a fixed judgment
for cash. TheDA's office wired hlm , sent him out on the street
and covered his contacts. The fixer turned out to be a judge's
secretary, an attorney nominated to the bench by all four
political parties, and later elected judge .

+++

These Incidents are so oommon they could be repeated
indefinitely .
They suggest we may be attacking crime at the wrong end
of the ladder.
It Is no secret that organized crime could not ellis! without ·
corrupt officials and corrupt judges, It would make sense
therefore to focus on these men. Awrehenslon and successful conviction of powerful judges and high officials Is
difficult indeed. But there Is another avenue.
Suppose every elected and appointed official In any
po~ltlon of Importance, and every judge1 were required to
m~ke periodic detailed reports of net worth, Income and in·
vestments. If investigators would regularly compare this data
with the We styleofthese peaple, either they would be exposed
for spending more than they legltlmetely had coming in or
they would have to be relatively clean, restricting the amouilt
of an illegllimate "take" to chicken feed. They could, of
course, · hide dishonest dollars away to be later used on
retirement. But few dishonest men have that much self con·
trol .
As luck would have it, tbe two caaes mentioned at the
opening of this column had satisfactory endings. In the sales
tax case, eight of the 11 !IBnlor examiners, the district supervtaor, the second in command, two junior examiners and three
accountants were indicted.
The attorney-fixer was not allowed to become a Jullge; he
was wired and turned Into an Informer.
Maurice Nadjarl, New York special state prosecutor, and ·
Angelo F. Tona, ~ant district attorney In K!ngs CoiUity,
New York, who leU these stories, have more problems than we
would believe. lnfonnatlon from their coWtterparts in otber
states and localities indicates the problem Is the same aU over. By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR bR. LAMB -I have
Few officials will cooperate In Investigating fellow of·
ficlals. They're part of the fraternity. High-minded citizens ·a slightly pudgy 6-year-&lt;lld
find It difficult to believe that men they've known socially, boy who needs to lose about
g011e to school with, or have served with are dishonest. Tht · eight pounds, according ~his
reluctance persists sometimes even after the facts are pediatrician. My problem is
how to limit his diet without
pobllclzed.
Too o~n the men ~~!ked to check on official crime are overdoing It or leaving out
themselves Involved with the very crimes they're asked to any lmpor.tant elements.
Investigate. They've been part of the aperatlon or they've been Teaching him long range
paid 1o keep quiet. Or they have frienda who would be caught In eating habits in additlon to
- the net. Few men like to take part In exposing a clo8e losing this eight pounds is my
goal.
aasoclate.
We starte,d his eifel last
Of late, Independent Investigators and prosecutors haw
been more widely used. This ellmlnates but part of the week by lim,Jtlng )llm to one .
problem. Those caught represent no more than the Up of the glass of skiln milk or Juice
Iceberg. ·There's still a veU of sUence. And powerful officials with meals (unlimited water
after that), dropping second
have powerful· ways of covering their trackll.
, MOlt of thOte caught, therefore, are men at .the bottom of helpings, and keeping his
the ladder, underllnp with Utile protection. This does little to . dessert portions tiny. After
school snacks have been
eliminate official corruption
. . . or orpnlzed crime.

Intense baule over
fighter acknowledged
By JOHN MILNE
WASHINGTON (UP!)
The Pentagon's top two of·
!icials have acknowledged an
intense bureaucratic battle
. over the Navy's FIB jet
fighter.
Defense Secretary James
R. Schlesinger has even in·
dicated that the attention
focused on accusations
against Northrop Corp., a
prime contractor of the F1B,
may be part of the behindthe-scenes struggle.
Northrop invited 151 Pentagon
officials
· and
congressmen to a lodge in
Easton, Md., for goose
hunting during a period
'ending In 1974. A Defense
Contract Audit Agency study
raised questions about
whether the government paid
for the lodge and other

worth the extra expense.
- LTV. The selection of the
FIB includes a derivative Al8
for air-to .ground fighting. U
the Navy buys a number of
A18s, that means there will be
no more purchases of L1V 's
A7s.
The plane.struggle involves
billions of dollars and thousands of jobs before even the
major subcontractors such as
engine makers become involved. The result Is a level of
· bureaucratic infighting that .
might Impress Machia ve lli.
One example : The 1975
appropriations bill contained
language which said that the

0

,
•

l.er s.

•

vestigatlon of the matter.
And too, there has been
concern in pllrts of the
poli tlcally conservative
community,
head-nodding
mostly, and amens. Yet for
the overall, the temperature
has not risen a degree, the
media having ignored
Goldwater's comments with
a decided ho hum, and a
•rather remarkable story has
thus been left stillborn.
The story, as Goldwater
tellsit, isrootedinamonths·
ago conversation between
himself and Vice President
Nelson Rockefeller, when
Rockefeller revealed that his
commission on the CIA had

Berrys World

"Holy cow, Mr. Moynihan! II you're not cere lui,
some ol these Third World nations will refuse
our aid!''
T

•

I

SUSAN GEORGE
PLUS

Clint Eastwood
ln

Raquel Welch in

THE EIGER SACTION

HANNIE
CAULDER

I Technicolor)
Show starts at 7:00p.m .

\ .......

,I

THOMAS W. MORGAN, M.D., Olairman of the
Department of Surgery at Holzer ~edlcal Center; was the
guest speaker Thursday afternoon at the third annual
Volunteer Awards Luncheon: Dr. Mor~an;s topics were
~ "How the names of operations are derived and what they
:;: mean," "World · of Vascular Surgery" and "Trauma
(accidental injury) .

CARTOON

• I

-OCTO

'.,

president; Betty McGinness,
secretary.
Speaker lor the afternoon
was Thomas W. Morgan,
M.D., Chairman of the
Department of Surgery at
Holzer Medical Center. Dr.
Morgan covered three subjects of interest to his
audience. First, he explained
medical terminology used
for common · operations
performed in surgery, so the
volunteers would know what
the many Greek and Latin
terms mean . He then
the newest
discussed
dev~lopments in vascular
surgery, used to solve arterial
problems.X -ray
examinations can be made by
using opaque dyes to discover
the exact location of the
arterial problems. He had Xray !lim to $how as examples.
He also had samples of artificial grafts made of knitted
and woven dacron that are
used to ~eplace or by-pass
bad arteries .
The third subject he
covered was Trauma, which
means accidental injury_ The
statistics Dr. Morgan shared
Indicate that accidents are
overall the fourth leading
cause of death, and are
considered the primary cause
up to age 40. Greater public
awareness of trauma as a
health problem Is vitally
needed. Too often the public
accepts accidents, then too
soon forgets them. He also
pointed out how . vital
emergency medical service
Is to our area and urged
support of the EMS levy. As a
founding member of the
American Trauma Society,
Dr. Morgan is at wort trying
to organize a local chapter,
emphasizing how necessary
It is tn have available first
rate trauma care.
Following Dr. Morgan 's
presentation, the special
(Continued on page 6'

IG

r

r:-·--- ..

Luncheon recognizes
Holzer voluntee.rs
GALLIPOLIS - The Third
Annual Recognition Luncheon of the Holzer Medical
Center Volunteer Service
League was held Thursday
afternoon at the Holiday Inn.
Malcolm Orebaugh,
president of the Volunteer
Service League, welcomed
the group of more than 70.
Invocation was given by Rev.
Arthur C. Lund, Director of
Chaplaincy Services at the
hospital.
Following the luncheon,
Orebaugh introduced H1Jkh
P. Kirkel, executive vice
president of the ho,pital.
Kirkel expressed his appreciation on behalf of the
hospital for the work of the
volunteers, and introduced
the nine staff members of the
hospital who- were present.
Mrs. Mary Jeanne Walker,
Director of VoiWJteer Ser·
vices spoke briefly, ex·
pressing her gratitude to the
volunteers and Introducing 18
volunteers who have joined
the group during the past
year. They are Marilyn
. Barron, Stella Brown, Betty
Jo Clark, Maxine Clay,
Elaine Fountain, Annie
Galloway, Janet Goucher,
Nora Knotts, Janet Ludlum,
Sara Plants, Carol Rawlins,
Mamie Robinson, Alice
Salyer, Sara Slayton, Janice
Sommer, Betty Stout, Jo
Williams and Carol Wood.
She expressed her appreciation to the officers and
committee chairmen . She
pointed out that 9,3B4 1k
volunteer hours have been
recorded during this past
year, almost double the total
from three years ago.
During the business
meeting, Mrs. Nancy Houck,
chairman of the Nominating
Co'llmi!tee read the slate of
officers for the corning year.
Re-elected for lhe year 197ii76 were Malcolm Orebauggh,
president; Earl Neff. vice

;

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rUCENT

KEY

We Hold These Truths ...

•

JAMES MASON

TONITE
SUNOA'(
OCT. 26

,

specifiC,
a
company
Ir·
I
spokesman said Northrop
. (
..'
answered the questions and
J
.
. By Don ~kley
.
!
would repay any mone that
Reaction to PreSident Ford s tax proposal - challen~e
·
ed
h
dybe
mightbeabetlerword
- seemstohavebeenasunfavorablem
DCAA detennm
a
en
th
h
·
C 'tol Hill
improperly charged
e ustmgs as on ap1
.
fn a news confere~ce MooThe President pro~sed making the current income tax ._
day Schlesinger did t con· cut permanent and addmg another one to 1t to the tune of $28
do ' 'th N thr no the billion In aU - providing, that is, that Congress cuts federal
as:rt".:ct e~en:gonopo:~cials spending by alike amoWtt. ~s would mean holding the fiscal
who ac ted its h itallt
1977 federal budget to $395 b11llon .
For the~ or so w:::"did n~t
Horrified conunentators immediately poin~ed out that this.,
have ''mitigating cir· would mean parmg away at .such things as soc1al secunty and ,
, cumstances," Schlesinger· food stamps. But the_rea!ly mte~estmg thmg about so much of ,
said "It 1s plain that this was the oppos1t1on reachon IS that 1t _Is based, _not on arguments
at best a severe error of tha~ a hold~own on federal spending Is unWise or ~nnecessary ,
Judgment in con6ict with the or liDp~acllcal, but .~n the assurnpllon that the people
existing rules of the Defense wouldn t stand for II.
.
De artm t ..
Typical of press comment was the fiat charge ·that
~~~ same time, President Ford knew even before he made it tha_t his proposal :
fruits, four ounces of fruited for his age and height he .is a
little
chubby.
You
will
do
him
Schlesinger suggested the had no chance. Because Congress faces an election next year,
yogurt, or a handful of sheUed
or dry roast peanuts or an enormous favor if you Northrop revelations were few members wo,~d 'dare chop ~illi?,ns out of the budget. The
control his weight now. It "onl the ti of the lceber result would be electoral smc1de.
cheese.
Whate~er this kind of state~ent says about the _characl~r
What added suggestions could help him . prevent an that yshows pabove the s.J
obesity
problem
later
in
life.
face"
and
that
investigations
?f
th~
typ1cal congressman, It 1s more n;vealmg m what 1t '
can you give me for
There
is
no
magic
number
.
might
uncover
to
times
liDphes,
about the character of the American voter.
managing his diet? How
7 8
of
valories,
but
I
would
try
to
that nmber who acce ted the
Congressman (as well as most other lesser elected of· ,
many calories are minimum
for him at 4 feet an~ 66 give him at least 1200 calories hospitality of other ~orpora- fice)lolder~) are ~outinely plllo_ried and despised for _being
a day. We can reduce adults Uons
more "poht1cal arumals " who wtll do anythng - or nothmg - ,
pounds?
"I , would not think that to keep their offices.
.
DEAR READER - . Yes, on a balanced diet of 1200
calories daily. The Important Northrop 1s unique _ 1 hope
Yet when it comes to a case where Congr~ Is challenged •
point is to see if he is actuaUy indeed that It 1s unique but 1 to do somethmg not unmediately popular, 1t 1s taken for
losing fat from under his skin · would not think It were. We granted by some that the electoral revenge of the people will
__
and
at UJe same lime give must recognize that at the be cerlllm ~nd me~ciless. .
'
.
hlm
all
the essentials.
moment we llave on the Hill a
. We can t have 1t both ways. If congressmen are gutless,
'
You need to be sure he Is bureaucratic industrial battle ' spmeless pollttcal animals, the vo:ers who reward them lor·
0.
(r getting enough minerals, of the century Involving the that are somewhat less than admll'able, too.
;,/,(
·~ particularly Galcium for that possible survival of a number A 'vantastic' solution
' i·
growing skeleton, and of aerospace firms and all of
'
vitamins. And be sure he gets the .attention that has been
Even with gasoline the priee it is, the average commuter '
enough complete protein to focused on Northrop may not automobile still carries only about 1.4 riders. It's estimated '
provide all the ·essential be entirely altruistic in !he that raising this national average by only one more rider a '
amino acids. ·
~._poblic Interest."
year would save the country 30 million gallons of gasoline
"You sure you weren't married He needs 34 grams of ::: Arguing for FIB money daily,not to mention the job it would do on pollution and traffic ·
lwfore? Something smells like protein a day (Recommended • Tuesday before the Senate congestion.
'
mothballs ."
Dally Allowanc;e, 197~)- _An 8- • Aj)pproprlatlons Cmunittee,
A n~ber of companies are experimenting with van'
Ihe House, Georgia Democrat OD;"ce glass of fortified skim Deputy Defense Secretary , pooling to encourage conservation . Asmall, easy-to-drive van '
Larry McDonald, regularly m1lk will c?nlaln 10 grams of Wllllam p, Clements said, can carry a dozen passengers- and take as m;my as five cars'
uses the Congressional good protem. A poD?d of raw "the only Interests served by off the road.
Record to levy charges that meat, chicken or fiSh, afler denying the requested funds
An example Is General Mills, which organized a fleet of ·
congresslonalaldes as weU as removal of ~at and _bone so lt for the FIB are those ... using company owned vans for its commuting employes in the '
uncovered evidence that congressional members are Is edible wetght, WID contain · the old rationalizations and Minneapolis area. The program began last January with 13
"seven to nine" Senate staff supporters of Communist 100 grams of good prote!n. On thOle of the cootra,ctors who va~s. Currently, there are 17 vans in the fleet and it is1
members were Communists. organizations. There is an that basis you can figure how stand toloseasaresult of UJls estunated that they have replaced about 175 personal vehicles.
. When Goldwater asked why unfortunate tendency among much fortified skim milk and • program."
Another plorieer of the idea is, of all things, an oil com: :
this information was not some accusers to confuse m~at products to give hlm
A couple d. years ago, tbe pany. For a minimal fee o~ $19 a mont? for a 21knile round trip '
made public in the com- radicalism with Soviet datly, .Ne needs 800 grams 111 Defense Department began or $29 a month for a 7().mtle round tnp,wme 103 employes of '
m!Bslon's report, he says that sympathy, but at least a half calcium ~d ·two gla~s of seeking a lightweight, Co~tinental Oil Co. in Houston are being picked up at or near'/
Rockefeller replied that he'd dozen
senators
and fortified skim milk will only lnexpenslvejetfighterforthe the1r homes dally, taken to work, then dropped off in the"
been asked wwithhold it. By representatives are, in provide 700 grams of It, so I Air Force, the Navy and U.S. evening,at the same spot.
whom? For what reason? private, considered to be would include \WO glasses of allies 1n the 198lM. The Air
Ten vans ·operated by the company have taken 50 ·
Goldwater says he doesn't pinko.
fortified sklm 1mllk a day. Force selected the General automobiles off Houston's already crowded streets and high·•
know and Rockefeller Is
There's no argument that That plus one three-and-a- . Dynamics Fl6 over Nor· waysandaresavlng52,000gallonsofgasolineayear.
'
~eclinlng public comment. Communist influence · here half-&lt;lunce serving of meat or lhrop's F17 for the job earlier
The idea, which Conoco calls a "vantastic solution," has
Act~ally, the part of the should be of concern, as half that amount twice a day 'this year and said It would been so successful that the oomp!!JIY is offering its experience''
story concerning the alleged should the influence of anf will meet his protein buy -up to 650 planes man to any other that would like to start Its own mass transit '
Communists is admittedly anti-democratic ideology, requirements and, with a lnternatlnal deal which•may system.
'J
not groundsh 11 ktng . . Com- racism to name another. little calcium from other Involve up to 2,500 aircraft. Paintedly patriotic
mWJlsts In Washington are Membets ~ CongreSIJ and foods, will probably meet his
The Navy, however, said
Well, it probably had -to happen . Musket Brown sedans, 1
commonplace, the Soviet bloc their aides take a loyalty oath needs.
the F16 was not suitable for Concord Green coupes and Independence Red station wagons 1
dl p lorna 11 c de leg a lion to support the u. s. ConYou should eliminate all aircraft carrlersandllelected wUI be part of the Bicentennial SC01Je. Or if you prefer, Musket I
numberihg at least 1,500. For stltutlon, and, to an extent concentrated sweets. Those as Its fighter th.e FIB, Brown station wagons, Independence Red coupes and Concord I
1he most part they come and short or witch hWJting, they peanuts, even dry roasted, essentially an F17 derivative. Green sedans.
1
go as they please, to and from must be expected to keep are loaded with calories, and, It estimates buying over 1110
Buyers of 1976 model cars can .also expect such patriotic :
Capitol Hill, for example.
faith. McDonald Is correct other, than cottage cheese, for the. Navy and Marines.
colors as Continental Gray, Colonral Yellow, Mount Vernon '
Says Goldwater : "Every when he suggests we do cheese Is loaded with calories
It's hard to talk only about Green and Uberty White, according tO PPG Industries, a ;
once in a while 1n the Armed ourselves no good when we and Ill per cent of the calories the characteristics of fighter leading supplier of automotive paints.
:
Forces Committee, I'll see investigate our own spies _ are fat. Stress cereals, bulk planes In the Pentagon. The
'
the Russian equal sitting out the CIA and FBI _ and vegetables, fruit, lean meats officials who must deal with
there. Once in a while Ignore the labors of the KGB. and fortified skim mUk.
the
contractors
and
someone will go say, 'Is there
Yet because the news of
For information on the con~essmen end up talking
A Chronidc of America
anything you •re not un- Communists in washl!igton Is dally dietary requirements about corporatims Instead ---,
derstanding?' _ Just to make ageless, 1he real story of for
children
and but off the record. A number
him feel at home."
Goldwater's conversation requirements for children of corporations would lose
As for Red spy activity, It's with RockefeUer.lies, as these and adults, write U1 me in bualness if Northrop bullds
October 26, 1775:.
enormous . The Russian things ever do these days, In care of this neV&lt;spaper, P.O. the FIB. Here Is what the
In England there Is a growing public awareness of the ,'
diplomatic delegation has the fact that the government Box 1551, Radio City Station; aallors turned bureaucrats
oratoricalstrength of Charles FoK,Ieader oltheopposltlon ;
grown by a factor of 10 over considers it necessary to keep New York, NY 10019. Send 50 are saying privately about
In the House of Commons. Amiable, magnanimous, and '
the la~t. rleeade, and so it secret. The vice president cents, a long, stamped, self- them.
dissipated, Fox is becoming a speaker of unquestioned :
presumably has Its capacity o{ the nation has been tnld not addressed envelope, 'and ask· - General Dynamics. The
brilliance. Rising In Commons today- the first day that I
to snoop. FBI Director to advise Americans of for The Health · Letter sources say that General
Parliament has met since
'
Clarence Kelley says • a alleged · anti-Americans Number 4-6, Balanced Diet, Dynamics, seeking to oolld
the news of Lex ington and
"substantial proportion" of working in their Congress. Recommended Dally Dietary all the planes, tried to conConcord reached London Soviet diplomats engage In That slings. And that part of Allowances (RDA).
. struct a carrier version of the
Fox uses these words to blast
espionage, and s~ most the country that has not yet
Now studies have shown Fll, but the Navy and
the Prime Minister, Lord
probably do large numbers of ' lost the capacity to anger that diet control of obesity Marines say it did not meet
North, who Is in the audithe 2,000 to 3,000 others from should be angry.
alone in children may not the requlrementa.
ence :" I cannot consent to the
that nation who visit the
Perhaps Goldwater should prevent adult obesity. fn
- Grumlllan. The Navy
·bloody consequences of so
United States each year. No be the angriest of all. He has animals It appears that seema to have Bit institutional
silly a contest about so silly
news here, for sure. The revel ved summit-level . ph~alcal !JCtivi!y Ia the major bias for Grummsn, which
an object, conducted In the
Communis! ear is' so confirmation ·o( his long-held factor .If you want to protect makes the sophisticated and
silliest manner that history
routinely o~vious that the u. noUon that, as he says, the your son from adult ,obesity G)lelllive Fl4. The FH's cost
has ever furnished an InS. eavesdroPs on the Soviets Sovielll "have our country problems you should set up a I'Oie to $20 million apiece this
stance of." Fox says that
while they eavesdrop on lhe abaolutely infiltrated." Yet regular physical activity year, partly because the
.Lord North has lost an entire
U. S. ·
.
even as a senator he's denied · p!Ogram for hlm nowj and be Navy forsaw .the C(IJipany's
continent, which is more
The matter of Communist the precise ·Information . Sll'e he gels plenty d. it on a business shrinking. Also,
than Alexander the Great
Senate staffers is also old hat. Plainly, he should now reallte daily basis. Encourage him Ul :10un:es clolle lo the program
ever gained.
I
Goldwater and others have that ~recy _ 1s an even enjoy physical activity by say, the Nayy feels keeping
I
- lh' RO!s Mocken1 1e &amp; Jt"tf MarNelly /41- 197~, llni!ed Ftel urt Syndlca1t.
for years suspected as much. greater u. s. worry than teacHing hlm games and Grumman in busloess as
O~c John l!lrch m~mber in communism.
·
aftivities thai require it.
another major contractor is

The story behind
Goldwater's story

Fri-Sat-Sun

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•

Six year old needs to diet

WASHINGTON - There
was a time, actually an
epoch, when a suggestion of
Communist Infiltration In
government was volcanic.
blowinQ tops all across
America. Times change.
')'he other day Barry
Goldwater passed the word
the government may be
suppressing Information
c_oncernlng Communist
employes in the U. S. Senate,
but as ye\ the response has
closely resembled a snore.
Some of Goldwater's
colleagues have yelped a bit,
one easily abused freshman
In , the House of Reprtsen·
tatives demanding an In·

•

These
women havt: worked more

DR. LAMB

TOM TIEDE

COLO'\' I ·

/\w~1rds l ~u•whc~m .

Will b d
~~~;: e~:~~~e~ts!~~ ;
·~
u get •cuttm~
·violation of regUlations.
. · • -- · ~
~
· t
l ·h t ?
Alt~ough he would not be . ~· . ' . cu po s t roa s .

ft

f:•ln·

tlllrd annual Volunteer

Navy's lightweight fighter
must be as much like the Air
Force's plane as possible :
Opponents said the Navy
disregarded the law in
selecting the FIB. Others said
the langage was slipped into
the final conference report by
somebody from Texas, where
General Dynamics and L1V
are major employers.
An other : Shortly after
Schlesinger made the Northrop comments, company
officials
and
their
congressional allies were
pointing theril out to repor-

1

'l'r;Jin&lt;•r who ha!&lt;i
trihult··d I ;0!11.

srwf'ial honurs Thursday al
llulz~·r Mt •dif-:•1 t,'cnh•r's

CHARGE
IT!

�'•

3 - 1'he SIUiday r·

.

~~.~~~;.~f11me! ,Sundav. Oct . 26, 1975

FOUlt WOMEN n·c·l'i vcd

- The SIUiday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, 0&lt;'1 . 26, 1975

The problem drinker

RAY CROMLEY

Investigators throw
.· back the big fish
WASHIONGTON - Some tlme back in a cerl.llin office of
the Sales Tu Division of the New York State Department of
Tautlon and Finance, examiners would determine which of
the local businesses were slow in remitting the sales taxes
they'd collected, and call the owners in. If a business operator
owed $6,000 the examiner would tell him they'd settle for $4,000
- $3,000 for the state and $1,000 for the examiner. The official
would then split his share with his supervisor.

+++

The accused kliier'sllid he'd been offered a fixed judgment
for cash. TheDA's office wired hlm , sent him out on the street
and covered his contacts. The fixer turned out to be a judge's
secretary, an attorney nominated to the bench by all four
political parties, and later elected judge .

+++

These Incidents are so oommon they could be repeated
indefinitely .
They suggest we may be attacking crime at the wrong end
of the ladder.
It Is no secret that organized crime could not ellis! without ·
corrupt officials and corrupt judges, It would make sense
therefore to focus on these men. Awrehenslon and successful conviction of powerful judges and high officials Is
difficult indeed. But there Is another avenue.
Suppose every elected and appointed official In any
po~ltlon of Importance, and every judge1 were required to
m~ke periodic detailed reports of net worth, Income and in·
vestments. If investigators would regularly compare this data
with the We styleofthese peaple, either they would be exposed
for spending more than they legltlmetely had coming in or
they would have to be relatively clean, restricting the amouilt
of an illegllimate "take" to chicken feed. They could, of
course, · hide dishonest dollars away to be later used on
retirement. But few dishonest men have that much self con·
trol .
As luck would have it, tbe two caaes mentioned at the
opening of this column had satisfactory endings. In the sales
tax case, eight of the 11 !IBnlor examiners, the district supervtaor, the second in command, two junior examiners and three
accountants were indicted.
The attorney-fixer was not allowed to become a Jullge; he
was wired and turned Into an Informer.
Maurice Nadjarl, New York special state prosecutor, and ·
Angelo F. Tona, ~ant district attorney In K!ngs CoiUity,
New York, who leU these stories, have more problems than we
would believe. lnfonnatlon from their coWtterparts in otber
states and localities indicates the problem Is the same aU over. By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR bR. LAMB -I have
Few officials will cooperate In Investigating fellow of·
ficlals. They're part of the fraternity. High-minded citizens ·a slightly pudgy 6-year-&lt;lld
find It difficult to believe that men they've known socially, boy who needs to lose about
g011e to school with, or have served with are dishonest. Tht · eight pounds, according ~his
reluctance persists sometimes even after the facts are pediatrician. My problem is
how to limit his diet without
pobllclzed.
Too o~n the men ~~!ked to check on official crime are overdoing It or leaving out
themselves Involved with the very crimes they're asked to any lmpor.tant elements.
Investigate. They've been part of the aperatlon or they've been Teaching him long range
paid 1o keep quiet. Or they have frienda who would be caught In eating habits in additlon to
- the net. Few men like to take part In exposing a clo8e losing this eight pounds is my
goal.
aasoclate.
We starte,d his eifel last
Of late, Independent Investigators and prosecutors haw
been more widely used. This ellmlnates but part of the week by lim,Jtlng )llm to one .
problem. Those caught represent no more than the Up of the glass of skiln milk or Juice
Iceberg. ·There's still a veU of sUence. And powerful officials with meals (unlimited water
after that), dropping second
have powerful· ways of covering their trackll.
, MOlt of thOte caught, therefore, are men at .the bottom of helpings, and keeping his
the ladder, underllnp with Utile protection. This does little to . dessert portions tiny. After
school snacks have been
eliminate official corruption
. . . or orpnlzed crime.

Intense baule over
fighter acknowledged
By JOHN MILNE
WASHINGTON (UP!)
The Pentagon's top two of·
!icials have acknowledged an
intense bureaucratic battle
. over the Navy's FIB jet
fighter.
Defense Secretary James
R. Schlesinger has even in·
dicated that the attention
focused on accusations
against Northrop Corp., a
prime contractor of the F1B,
may be part of the behindthe-scenes struggle.
Northrop invited 151 Pentagon
officials
· and
congressmen to a lodge in
Easton, Md., for goose
hunting during a period
'ending In 1974. A Defense
Contract Audit Agency study
raised questions about
whether the government paid
for the lodge and other

worth the extra expense.
- LTV. The selection of the
FIB includes a derivative Al8
for air-to .ground fighting. U
the Navy buys a number of
A18s, that means there will be
no more purchases of L1V 's
A7s.
The plane.struggle involves
billions of dollars and thousands of jobs before even the
major subcontractors such as
engine makers become involved. The result Is a level of
· bureaucratic infighting that .
might Impress Machia ve lli.
One example : The 1975
appropriations bill contained
language which said that the

0

,
•

l.er s.

•

vestigatlon of the matter.
And too, there has been
concern in pllrts of the
poli tlcally conservative
community,
head-nodding
mostly, and amens. Yet for
the overall, the temperature
has not risen a degree, the
media having ignored
Goldwater's comments with
a decided ho hum, and a
•rather remarkable story has
thus been left stillborn.
The story, as Goldwater
tellsit, isrootedinamonths·
ago conversation between
himself and Vice President
Nelson Rockefeller, when
Rockefeller revealed that his
commission on the CIA had

Berrys World

"Holy cow, Mr. Moynihan! II you're not cere lui,
some ol these Third World nations will refuse
our aid!''
T

•

I

SUSAN GEORGE
PLUS

Clint Eastwood
ln

Raquel Welch in

THE EIGER SACTION

HANNIE
CAULDER

I Technicolor)
Show starts at 7:00p.m .

\ .......

,I

THOMAS W. MORGAN, M.D., Olairman of the
Department of Surgery at Holzer ~edlcal Center; was the
guest speaker Thursday afternoon at the third annual
Volunteer Awards Luncheon: Dr. Mor~an;s topics were
~ "How the names of operations are derived and what they
:;: mean," "World · of Vascular Surgery" and "Trauma
(accidental injury) .

CARTOON

• I

-OCTO

'.,

president; Betty McGinness,
secretary.
Speaker lor the afternoon
was Thomas W. Morgan,
M.D., Chairman of the
Department of Surgery at
Holzer Medical Center. Dr.
Morgan covered three subjects of interest to his
audience. First, he explained
medical terminology used
for common · operations
performed in surgery, so the
volunteers would know what
the many Greek and Latin
terms mean . He then
the newest
discussed
dev~lopments in vascular
surgery, used to solve arterial
problems.X -ray
examinations can be made by
using opaque dyes to discover
the exact location of the
arterial problems. He had Xray !lim to $how as examples.
He also had samples of artificial grafts made of knitted
and woven dacron that are
used to ~eplace or by-pass
bad arteries .
The third subject he
covered was Trauma, which
means accidental injury_ The
statistics Dr. Morgan shared
Indicate that accidents are
overall the fourth leading
cause of death, and are
considered the primary cause
up to age 40. Greater public
awareness of trauma as a
health problem Is vitally
needed. Too often the public
accepts accidents, then too
soon forgets them. He also
pointed out how . vital
emergency medical service
Is to our area and urged
support of the EMS levy. As a
founding member of the
American Trauma Society,
Dr. Morgan is at wort trying
to organize a local chapter,
emphasizing how necessary
It is tn have available first
rate trauma care.
Following Dr. Morgan 's
presentation, the special
(Continued on page 6'

IG

r

r:-·--- ..

Luncheon recognizes
Holzer voluntee.rs
GALLIPOLIS - The Third
Annual Recognition Luncheon of the Holzer Medical
Center Volunteer Service
League was held Thursday
afternoon at the Holiday Inn.
Malcolm Orebaugh,
president of the Volunteer
Service League, welcomed
the group of more than 70.
Invocation was given by Rev.
Arthur C. Lund, Director of
Chaplaincy Services at the
hospital.
Following the luncheon,
Orebaugh introduced H1Jkh
P. Kirkel, executive vice
president of the ho,pital.
Kirkel expressed his appreciation on behalf of the
hospital for the work of the
volunteers, and introduced
the nine staff members of the
hospital who- were present.
Mrs. Mary Jeanne Walker,
Director of VoiWJteer Ser·
vices spoke briefly, ex·
pressing her gratitude to the
volunteers and Introducing 18
volunteers who have joined
the group during the past
year. They are Marilyn
. Barron, Stella Brown, Betty
Jo Clark, Maxine Clay,
Elaine Fountain, Annie
Galloway, Janet Goucher,
Nora Knotts, Janet Ludlum,
Sara Plants, Carol Rawlins,
Mamie Robinson, Alice
Salyer, Sara Slayton, Janice
Sommer, Betty Stout, Jo
Williams and Carol Wood.
She expressed her appreciation to the officers and
committee chairmen . She
pointed out that 9,3B4 1k
volunteer hours have been
recorded during this past
year, almost double the total
from three years ago.
During the business
meeting, Mrs. Nancy Houck,
chairman of the Nominating
Co'llmi!tee read the slate of
officers for the corning year.
Re-elected for lhe year 197ii76 were Malcolm Orebauggh,
president; Earl Neff. vice

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We Hold These Truths ...

•

JAMES MASON

TONITE
SUNOA'(
OCT. 26

,

specifiC,
a
company
Ir·
I
spokesman said Northrop
. (
..'
answered the questions and
J
.
. By Don ~kley
.
!
would repay any mone that
Reaction to PreSident Ford s tax proposal - challen~e
·
ed
h
dybe
mightbeabetlerword
- seemstohavebeenasunfavorablem
DCAA detennm
a
en
th
h
·
C 'tol Hill
improperly charged
e ustmgs as on ap1
.
fn a news confere~ce MooThe President pro~sed making the current income tax ._
day Schlesinger did t con· cut permanent and addmg another one to 1t to the tune of $28
do ' 'th N thr no the billion In aU - providing, that is, that Congress cuts federal
as:rt".:ct e~en:gonopo:~cials spending by alike amoWtt. ~s would mean holding the fiscal
who ac ted its h itallt
1977 federal budget to $395 b11llon .
For the~ or so w:::"did n~t
Horrified conunentators immediately poin~ed out that this.,
have ''mitigating cir· would mean parmg away at .such things as soc1al secunty and ,
, cumstances," Schlesinger· food stamps. But the_rea!ly mte~estmg thmg about so much of ,
said "It 1s plain that this was the oppos1t1on reachon IS that 1t _Is based, _not on arguments
at best a severe error of tha~ a hold~own on federal spending Is unWise or ~nnecessary ,
Judgment in con6ict with the or liDp~acllcal, but .~n the assurnpllon that the people
existing rules of the Defense wouldn t stand for II.
.
De artm t ..
Typical of press comment was the fiat charge ·that
~~~ same time, President Ford knew even before he made it tha_t his proposal :
fruits, four ounces of fruited for his age and height he .is a
little
chubby.
You
will
do
him
Schlesinger suggested the had no chance. Because Congress faces an election next year,
yogurt, or a handful of sheUed
or dry roast peanuts or an enormous favor if you Northrop revelations were few members wo,~d 'dare chop ~illi?,ns out of the budget. The
control his weight now. It "onl the ti of the lceber result would be electoral smc1de.
cheese.
Whate~er this kind of state~ent says about the _characl~r
What added suggestions could help him . prevent an that yshows pabove the s.J
obesity
problem
later
in
life.
face"
and
that
investigations
?f
th~
typ1cal congressman, It 1s more n;vealmg m what 1t '
can you give me for
There
is
no
magic
number
.
might
uncover
to
times
liDphes,
about the character of the American voter.
managing his diet? How
7 8
of
valories,
but
I
would
try
to
that nmber who acce ted the
Congressman (as well as most other lesser elected of· ,
many calories are minimum
for him at 4 feet an~ 66 give him at least 1200 calories hospitality of other ~orpora- fice)lolder~) are ~outinely plllo_ried and despised for _being
a day. We can reduce adults Uons
more "poht1cal arumals " who wtll do anythng - or nothmg - ,
pounds?
"I , would not think that to keep their offices.
.
DEAR READER - . Yes, on a balanced diet of 1200
calories daily. The Important Northrop 1s unique _ 1 hope
Yet when it comes to a case where Congr~ Is challenged •
point is to see if he is actuaUy indeed that It 1s unique but 1 to do somethmg not unmediately popular, 1t 1s taken for
losing fat from under his skin · would not think It were. We granted by some that the electoral revenge of the people will
__
and
at UJe same lime give must recognize that at the be cerlllm ~nd me~ciless. .
'
.
hlm
all
the essentials.
moment we llave on the Hill a
. We can t have 1t both ways. If congressmen are gutless,
'
You need to be sure he Is bureaucratic industrial battle ' spmeless pollttcal animals, the vo:ers who reward them lor·
0.
(r getting enough minerals, of the century Involving the that are somewhat less than admll'able, too.
;,/,(
·~ particularly Galcium for that possible survival of a number A 'vantastic' solution
' i·
growing skeleton, and of aerospace firms and all of
'
vitamins. And be sure he gets the .attention that has been
Even with gasoline the priee it is, the average commuter '
enough complete protein to focused on Northrop may not automobile still carries only about 1.4 riders. It's estimated '
provide all the ·essential be entirely altruistic in !he that raising this national average by only one more rider a '
amino acids. ·
~._poblic Interest."
year would save the country 30 million gallons of gasoline
"You sure you weren't married He needs 34 grams of ::: Arguing for FIB money daily,not to mention the job it would do on pollution and traffic ·
lwfore? Something smells like protein a day (Recommended • Tuesday before the Senate congestion.
'
mothballs ."
Dally Allowanc;e, 197~)- _An 8- • Aj)pproprlatlons Cmunittee,
A n~ber of companies are experimenting with van'
Ihe House, Georgia Democrat OD;"ce glass of fortified skim Deputy Defense Secretary , pooling to encourage conservation . Asmall, easy-to-drive van '
Larry McDonald, regularly m1lk will c?nlaln 10 grams of Wllllam p, Clements said, can carry a dozen passengers- and take as m;my as five cars'
uses the Congressional good protem. A poD?d of raw "the only Interests served by off the road.
Record to levy charges that meat, chicken or fiSh, afler denying the requested funds
An example Is General Mills, which organized a fleet of ·
congresslonalaldes as weU as removal of ~at and _bone so lt for the FIB are those ... using company owned vans for its commuting employes in the '
uncovered evidence that congressional members are Is edible wetght, WID contain · the old rationalizations and Minneapolis area. The program began last January with 13
"seven to nine" Senate staff supporters of Communist 100 grams of good prote!n. On thOle of the cootra,ctors who va~s. Currently, there are 17 vans in the fleet and it is1
members were Communists. organizations. There is an that basis you can figure how stand toloseasaresult of UJls estunated that they have replaced about 175 personal vehicles.
. When Goldwater asked why unfortunate tendency among much fortified skim milk and • program."
Another plorieer of the idea is, of all things, an oil com: :
this information was not some accusers to confuse m~at products to give hlm
A couple d. years ago, tbe pany. For a minimal fee o~ $19 a mont? for a 21knile round trip '
made public in the com- radicalism with Soviet datly, .Ne needs 800 grams 111 Defense Department began or $29 a month for a 7().mtle round tnp,wme 103 employes of '
m!Bslon's report, he says that sympathy, but at least a half calcium ~d ·two gla~s of seeking a lightweight, Co~tinental Oil Co. in Houston are being picked up at or near'/
Rockefeller replied that he'd dozen
senators
and fortified skim milk will only lnexpenslvejetfighterforthe the1r homes dally, taken to work, then dropped off in the"
been asked wwithhold it. By representatives are, in provide 700 grams of It, so I Air Force, the Navy and U.S. evening,at the same spot.
whom? For what reason? private, considered to be would include \WO glasses of allies 1n the 198lM. The Air
Ten vans ·operated by the company have taken 50 ·
Goldwater says he doesn't pinko.
fortified sklm 1mllk a day. Force selected the General automobiles off Houston's already crowded streets and high·•
know and Rockefeller Is
There's no argument that That plus one three-and-a- . Dynamics Fl6 over Nor· waysandaresavlng52,000gallonsofgasolineayear.
'
~eclinlng public comment. Communist influence · here half-&lt;lunce serving of meat or lhrop's F17 for the job earlier
The idea, which Conoco calls a "vantastic solution," has
Act~ally, the part of the should be of concern, as half that amount twice a day 'this year and said It would been so successful that the oomp!!JIY is offering its experience''
story concerning the alleged should the influence of anf will meet his protein buy -up to 650 planes man to any other that would like to start Its own mass transit '
Communists is admittedly anti-democratic ideology, requirements and, with a lnternatlnal deal which•may system.
'J
not groundsh 11 ktng . . Com- racism to name another. little calcium from other Involve up to 2,500 aircraft. Paintedly patriotic
mWJlsts In Washington are Membets ~ CongreSIJ and foods, will probably meet his
The Navy, however, said
Well, it probably had -to happen . Musket Brown sedans, 1
commonplace, the Soviet bloc their aides take a loyalty oath needs.
the F16 was not suitable for Concord Green coupes and Independence Red station wagons 1
dl p lorna 11 c de leg a lion to support the u. s. ConYou should eliminate all aircraft carrlersandllelected wUI be part of the Bicentennial SC01Je. Or if you prefer, Musket I
numberihg at least 1,500. For stltutlon, and, to an extent concentrated sweets. Those as Its fighter th.e FIB, Brown station wagons, Independence Red coupes and Concord I
1he most part they come and short or witch hWJting, they peanuts, even dry roasted, essentially an F17 derivative. Green sedans.
1
go as they please, to and from must be expected to keep are loaded with calories, and, It estimates buying over 1110
Buyers of 1976 model cars can .also expect such patriotic :
Capitol Hill, for example.
faith. McDonald Is correct other, than cottage cheese, for the. Navy and Marines.
colors as Continental Gray, Colonral Yellow, Mount Vernon '
Says Goldwater : "Every when he suggests we do cheese Is loaded with calories
It's hard to talk only about Green and Uberty White, according tO PPG Industries, a ;
once in a while 1n the Armed ourselves no good when we and Ill per cent of the calories the characteristics of fighter leading supplier of automotive paints.
:
Forces Committee, I'll see investigate our own spies _ are fat. Stress cereals, bulk planes In the Pentagon. The
'
the Russian equal sitting out the CIA and FBI _ and vegetables, fruit, lean meats officials who must deal with
there. Once in a while Ignore the labors of the KGB. and fortified skim mUk.
the
contractors
and
someone will go say, 'Is there
Yet because the news of
For information on the con~essmen end up talking
A Chronidc of America
anything you •re not un- Communists in washl!igton Is dally dietary requirements about corporatims Instead ---,
derstanding?' _ Just to make ageless, 1he real story of for
children
and but off the record. A number
him feel at home."
Goldwater's conversation requirements for children of corporations would lose
As for Red spy activity, It's with RockefeUer.lies, as these and adults, write U1 me in bualness if Northrop bullds
October 26, 1775:.
enormous . The Russian things ever do these days, In care of this neV&lt;spaper, P.O. the FIB. Here Is what the
In England there Is a growing public awareness of the ,'
diplomatic delegation has the fact that the government Box 1551, Radio City Station; aallors turned bureaucrats
oratoricalstrength of Charles FoK,Ieader oltheopposltlon ;
grown by a factor of 10 over considers it necessary to keep New York, NY 10019. Send 50 are saying privately about
In the House of Commons. Amiable, magnanimous, and '
the la~t. rleeade, and so it secret. The vice president cents, a long, stamped, self- them.
dissipated, Fox is becoming a speaker of unquestioned :
presumably has Its capacity o{ the nation has been tnld not addressed envelope, 'and ask· - General Dynamics. The
brilliance. Rising In Commons today- the first day that I
to snoop. FBI Director to advise Americans of for The Health · Letter sources say that General
Parliament has met since
'
Clarence Kelley says • a alleged · anti-Americans Number 4-6, Balanced Diet, Dynamics, seeking to oolld
the news of Lex ington and
"substantial proportion" of working in their Congress. Recommended Dally Dietary all the planes, tried to conConcord reached London Soviet diplomats engage In That slings. And that part of Allowances (RDA).
. struct a carrier version of the
Fox uses these words to blast
espionage, and s~ most the country that has not yet
Now studies have shown Fll, but the Navy and
the Prime Minister, Lord
probably do large numbers of ' lost the capacity to anger that diet control of obesity Marines say it did not meet
North, who Is in the audithe 2,000 to 3,000 others from should be angry.
alone in children may not the requlrementa.
ence :" I cannot consent to the
that nation who visit the
Perhaps Goldwater should prevent adult obesity. fn
- Grumlllan. The Navy
·bloody consequences of so
United States each year. No be the angriest of all. He has animals It appears that seema to have Bit institutional
silly a contest about so silly
news here, for sure. The revel ved summit-level . ph~alcal !JCtivi!y Ia the major bias for Grummsn, which
an object, conducted In the
Communis! ear is' so confirmation ·o( his long-held factor .If you want to protect makes the sophisticated and
silliest manner that history
routinely o~vious that the u. noUon that, as he says, the your son from adult ,obesity G)lelllive Fl4. The FH's cost
has ever furnished an InS. eavesdroPs on the Soviets Sovielll "have our country problems you should set up a I'Oie to $20 million apiece this
stance of." Fox says that
while they eavesdrop on lhe abaolutely infiltrated." Yet regular physical activity year, partly because the
.Lord North has lost an entire
U. S. ·
.
even as a senator he's denied · p!Ogram for hlm nowj and be Navy forsaw .the C(IJipany's
continent, which is more
The matter of Communist the precise ·Information . Sll'e he gels plenty d. it on a business shrinking. Also,
than Alexander the Great
Senate staffers is also old hat. Plainly, he should now reallte daily basis. Encourage him Ul :10un:es clolle lo the program
ever gained.
I
Goldwater and others have that ~recy _ 1s an even enjoy physical activity by say, the Nayy feels keeping
I
- lh' RO!s Mocken1 1e &amp; Jt"tf MarNelly /41- 197~, llni!ed Ftel urt Syndlca1t.
for years suspected as much. greater u. s. worry than teacHing hlm games and Grumman in busloess as
O~c John l!lrch m~mber in communism.
·
aftivities thai require it.
another major contractor is

The story behind
Goldwater's story

Fri-Sat-Sun

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CATHERINE SCHB.l
Oct 24 25 Z6
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PETER SEu.ERS~

Ella Condee, 1,238• , , and
Ellabcllc McDonald, 1,037 .
Not pictured is Florence

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MEIGS THEATRE

DON OAKLEY ·

·

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TONIGHT THRU
TUESDAY

than t,OOO hours as
•oluntccrs lor the hospital,
They arc, left to right,

•

Six year old needs to diet

WASHINGTON - There
was a time, actually an
epoch, when a suggestion of
Communist Infiltration In
government was volcanic.
blowinQ tops all across
America. Times change.
')'he other day Barry
Goldwater passed the word
the government may be
suppressing Information
c_oncernlng Communist
employes in the U. S. Senate,
but as ye\ the response has
closely resembled a snore.
Some of Goldwater's
colleagues have yelped a bit,
one easily abused freshman
In , the House of Reprtsen·
tatives demanding an In·

•

These
women havt: worked more

DR. LAMB

TOM TIEDE

COLO'\' I ·

/\w~1rds l ~u•whc~m .

Will b d
~~~;: e~:~~~e~ts!~~ ;
·~
u get •cuttm~
·violation of regUlations.
. · • -- · ~
~
· t
l ·h t ?
Alt~ough he would not be . ~· . ' . cu po s t roa s .

ft

f:•ln·

tlllrd annual Volunteer

Navy's lightweight fighter
must be as much like the Air
Force's plane as possible :
Opponents said the Navy
disregarded the law in
selecting the FIB. Others said
the langage was slipped into
the final conference report by
somebody from Texas, where
General Dynamics and L1V
are major employers.
An other : Shortly after
Schlesinger made the Northrop comments, company
officials
and
their
congressional allies were
pointing theril out to repor-

1

'l'r;Jin&lt;•r who ha!&lt;i
trihult··d I ;0!11.

srwf'ial honurs Thursday al
llulz~·r Mt •dif-:•1 t,'cnh•r's

CHARGE
IT!

�5- The SlUlday Times·-Sentinel, SlUlday, Oct . 26, !97S

~ Fall fashia·n ·is

~ - The Sunday Tunes -Sentinel, SlUldav. Oct. 26.1975

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Sarah Carsey ~Charlene Hoeflich~•

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Pleasant ~
446-2342

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Woman 's World
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EARLY .WEEK

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OPEN HOUSE PLANNED - An open house honoring Mr. and Mrs. Sam Pickens on
their 5001 weddlng anniversary will be held Sunday, Nov. 2 from 2 to 4 p.m . at Syracuse
Asbury Ul1ltedMethodlst Church. Mr. BhdMrs. Pickens were.married on Nov. I, 1925 at MI.
Alto, W. Va. by the Rev. Ben Ridenour. They have seven chtldren, Ehner,l.etart; Shelby,
Pomeroy; Eber, Syracuse; Clara Smith, Columbus and Emmett, Wesley and Don, all of
Toledo. They have 32 grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. Frtends and relat1ves
are lnvlted to call during the open house hours.

;f R.UtIand ClU b ef-ects
1
prest.•;]uen· t
f

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RU'rLAND - Mrs. Marie
Birchfield was elected
presld~nt of the Rutland
. Friendly Gardeners at . a
meeting held Wednesday
night at the home o[ Mrs.
Janet Bolin.
Other officers elected were
Mrs . Lois Walker, vice
presldenti Mrs. Joanne
Fetty, secretary, and Mrs.
Marjorie Bishop, treasurer.
A discussion was held on
the planter now: located on
Main Street and the group
decided to move It to Forest
Acres Park. The regional
meeting of the Ohio
Association of Grden Clubs in
Middleport Nov. I was announced.
·
Plans were made 'for a trip
to Fenton Glass at Williamstown, W. Va. and Dudley's
Flower Shop in Parkersburg,
Tuesday, leavlng Rutland at
5:15p.m.
The Gardeners Day.Out at .

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Woos'ter ·was attended by
Mrs . Birch£1eld, Mrs.
Margaret Edwards, Mrs .
Marjorie Davis, Mrs. Judy
Snowden , Mrs . Marvel
Quillen, Mrs. Bolin and Mrs.
Suzy Carpenter.
The annual Meigs ·county
Christmas ·flower show was
announced for Dec. 6 and 7 at
the Pomeroy Elementary
School by Mrs. Bolin, new
Meigs County contact
chairwoman. She also noted
that Mrs. Birchfield is the
new secretary-treasurer of
the t'OlUlty association.
toevotions for the meeting ·
were given by Mrs. Bolin who
used !he book "Our Daily
Bread" with the meditation
" Good Connectio ns, Much
Fruit.'' A !hank-you note was
read from the Gideon Society
thanking the club for flower
arrangements for a dinner
meeting.
Mrs . Charlotte Willford

prese nted the program on the
mechanics
of
fl ower
arranging. She demonstrated
various forms of mechanics
including pin holders , candle
adapters, water picks and
oasis.
.Gardening
tips
for
Novem ber were given by
Mrs Bolin who noted that
now is the time to mulch
peonies and suggested that
after the fit'S! freeze they be
mowed off with the lawnmower. She also talked about
perennial borders.
The traveling prize was
won by Mrs. Bishop. Mrs.
Bolin served refreshments .

Sunday Times-sentinel
Published every Sun day
b-,
The
OhiO
Va ll ey
Pu blishi ng Co .
GAL LIP OLIS
DA ILY TRIB UN E
825 Thi rd Ave ., Gallipol is,
Ohio 45631. .
Published every · weekd ay
evening exc ept Satu rday .

Second · Cla ss Postage Pa id

at Ga ll ipolis, Ohio .&lt;~563 1 .
THE DAILY SE N TI NEL ·

111 Court St., Pome roy, 0 .

45769. Published e'llery week day even ing except Satu r
,day . Entered as seco_nd c: lo'll ss

mailing matter at Pomeroy ,

Oh io Post Office .
By c arrier daily

and

Sun day 75c per week . Motor

ro ute U .25 p er month .
'

MAI L
SUBSCRIPT ION RATES
T he
Ga llip olisO~;~lly

Tribune .i n Ohio and West
Virginia one yeBr $21 .00 ; six
months 511 .50; three month s
. $7 ,00 . Elsew here $?6.00 per

vcar;

six

monlhs

S7 .50.
The Unilcd P r ess In ternational is exclusivelv

Cut them

the use for
publication of a ll news
dispa tches cred l t~d to the
newspllper and also the loca l
news publis hed herein .

and enj~y the

to

VINE STREET

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MARK V

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EGGS
GRADE ALARGE
~ZEN

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comfort,look so goodl Navy
Black

'l'liEsE THREI!: Sl.EEi.'YHEADS were a atiut1ng

picture Thursday night when they modeled sleepwear at
the Newcm~ers Style Show held at the Ellts Club. Karen
Smith is In the gramy gown, Sharon Kittrell is u cilddly
as a bunny In her bumy sleeper and Cheryl Sheard llands
out in her karate' robe '*nd gown: Area wbmln. were
treated to a look at all areas of fashion &lt;ll!rb!i the
evenlng'sfashlon preview. ThetheiJie, "PJ'sF~IIBhion
Flavors" outlined the ne';Vest In women's clo
. PJ's
I .Lr, __
and Carl's Shoe Store provided the clothing aril11110es
for
the models.

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O(iT. 26 :J'HRU NOV. 1

fQOTLONG .

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2,400.00 on Display 24x52 Sectional
11,000.00 on Display 14'x70'

WIENERS

.,~

HOt
MARIANNE CAMP•
BELL narrated
the
Newcomers Style Show
Thursday night. Mrs.
Campbell emphasized the
trend to "dlltllled" fuhlon
whlcb tecenll' aarrowneu
• of line and iolt ral)rlcl In
natural .colora.

It's NOT
Too Early!

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= DINNER SET
CHESTER - The Chester
"'United Methodist Church!
• women will serv~ an ele~Uoo
;;jay dinner at the Masonic
=Hall in Chester on Nov. ~.
late lunches , soup, chili, pie,
offee and .cake will be served.
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CHRISTMAS!

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SEEN AND HEARD
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne 1\msbary and
son, Dr. Harry Amsbary and
wife and son, Wayne, of
Cleveland, have just returned
from a foliage tour of the
Eastern United States. They
visited friends, Dr. and Mrs.
David Cline, Buffalo, N.Y.,
and relatives, Dr. and Mrs.
Burt Chambers, professor at
Dar tmouth College; Mr . and
Mrs. Harold Cook, Waynesburg, Pa., and Mr. and Mrs.
T. C. Pollock, Wheeling, W.
Va. They also traveled to
Niagara Falls, N.Y. ; Trapp
Family Lodge at Stowe, Vt.;
Kittery, Maine; Amesbury,
Mass.; While Mts., Salem,
N.Y. , and PocOI'IU"M ountains,
Pa.

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=

NO. 1 OHIO

What Savings
Now At Lar,Y's

'•
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Peddler's Pantry

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POTATOES

$

•

Walker were ce lebrated with
cake
and punch . The mem·
Center.
bers were given pumpkin
The birthdays of Nadene favors .
The next meetin g will be
Welsh, Anna Higg ins,
Florence Quickel and Dewey Nov. 11 at Vinton Town Hall.

· person read a le tter from the

VINTON -· The . Vinton
Cl ub uf Senior Citizens met
reccnlly at the Vinton Town
Hall with six memb ers
prcsenl.
Minutes o[ the August
meeting were read . Dues
were paid, and two new
members were welcomed.
Mrs. Audrey Adkins
reported on her trip to Texas
thi s su.mm er. The chair ·

..

SUPER MARKET
MIDDLEfORT, OHIO

Camel

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of an
electric ·heat
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GALLIPOLIS -~ Feminine, ·.

Indianapolis Orchestra
to appear at OU series

GALLIPOLIS, 0. ·

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SUPERMARKET

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LAYOFFS SfOPPED
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - A
temporary restrainlng order
prohibiting !he layoff of 33
Ohio Civil Rights Com·
mission employes was Issued
Thursday by U.S. District
Court Judge Joseph P.
Kiruteary,

'

Thursday's show presented
.1: flatterinB and fun. That's the ~lothing 'tor ·.women's every
look for fall in women's need : sporty, elegant, every
fashion according to the day and nighttlme, yet
. , ensembles seen Thursday feminine, attr~Uve and
l: night at ·the Gallipolis Area ·appealing:. c ·• • 1
: Newcomers Club Style Show. • Shoes are · fashionable In
: "PJ 's
Fall
Fashion many styles and f~brics, but
:: Flavors" was the theme the most notable· change is a
"' of
the
show
held trend 'back to the. narrow, ,, ,
: at the Elks Club here. . higher ge~l, ex!rem~ly ,
:: PJ's and· Carl's Shoe Store flattering ,to the legs.
. ;
~ provided clothing, Shoes and
Following the show, the . ··
:: accessories for the evening's Newcomers served a buffet ol
:::: preview of fashions .
hors
.d'oeuvres
and .,.,
:: Marianne
Campbell, beverages.
,.
: Director of Community
Models were Bonnie Stutes,
.. Relations at Holzer Medical
Gloria ' Young, Sharon . ·
.
.. Center, was the evemng's Johnston, · Karen Smith,
. '
;: narrator. Organist was Jim Shar on Kittrell, Cheryl
. , niE .DENIM KIDS were the hit of the evening Thursday at the Gallipolis Area
Thaler.
·
Sheard, Leslie Treleven,
Newcomers Style&amp;ow. Models, I-I', Ellen Chasteen, Bonnie Stutes and Joyce Thaler were
"' Fail promises to be an Joyce. ·; Tha1er,
Ellen , . attired·ln.denim work outfits. AlthoUgh always popular for work and play like those shown
:: exciting season .this year in Chasteen, Pat Dressel,
above; denim is no longer confined to just that. Denim dresses and skirts can be a nattering
:": women's clothing. Hemlines Nancy Levernier and Joy ' "dressed-up" look. Held at the Elks Club; lhe show was sponsored by the Newcomers and
longer with the accent on Nickels of Carl's Shoe Store.
clothing and accessories were provided by PJ's and Carl's Shoe Store.
:: soft, clinging fabrics in
Mrs. Campbell paid special
,., natura! shades or "earth recognition to !hose working
C tones" witho11t many darts, behind the scenes, Peggy
;: linings or lnterfacings . Evans, Jan Thaler, Ida
:: Fashion is subtle, but Thaler, Joy Nickels and Gay
::l becoming.
Jeffers in addition to the , I
,
'
: Mrs. Campbell said, Newcomers Club; 'and em: "We're having what is being ployes of PJ's and Carl's.
;: referred to in ·Paris and New
Donating door prizes for
~ York as the 'distilled' the show were Dudley 's
•
• fashion. Clothes are simply a F1orist, PJ's, Carl's Shoe , ATHENS The In- in 19l0 . by Ferdinand
.. line that is narrow on !~ Store, Jack and Jill, Thomas dianapolis Symphony Or- Schaefer, who conducted !he
: body, fabrics are soft and Clothiers, Paul Davies chestra, one of the top 10 orchestra until his retirement
: natural and colors are both Jewelry Store, Peddler's orchestras in the nation, will In 1937. Presently directed by
born
Oleg
:: rich and discreet in every Pantry and the Uniform appear at 8 p.m., Fridily, a! Russian
: way."
Center:
Memorial Aud(!orium as part Kovalenko, the Indianapolis
of !he Ohio University Artist Symphony Orchestra is
Series. ·
maintained and operated by
The
combined
efforts
of
80 the
Indianapolis State
"'
professi onal musicians , Symphony Society, Ind.
many faculty members at
Performing concerts
Indiana colleges ' and geared to people o£ every age
universities, create one of the group, the Indianapolis
mostactiveorchestrasinthe Symphony Orchestra
cquntry. The orchestra' presents Lolli Pop concerts
performs over 160 coocerts a throughout Indiana in
year, touring 45 states.
auditoriums, zoos, and
The symphon~ ~a~ founded museums. A program called
"
••
", ,
(.
New Vibrations, geared and
~lNG 0~ v HONORED
preseqted to children in th~
BEVERLY HIW, Calif. upper grades, moves from
••
••
(UPI) - Hundreds of Norwe- Bach to Rock , while the
glan-Amerlcans honored "biergarten" pop concerts
King Olav of Norway at a played in the local malls are
•
bl!nqu~l ThUI'S!IaY night at directed toward a more
•
the Beverly ~IIB!lire . Hotel. general audience.
Tickets are available at the
A small group of about 15
•
pickets marched In front of Memorial Autli torium box
the hotel protesting the office from 1-4 p.m., Monday
killing of baby seals by through Friday or by calling
N?iil!.el,ian
. . fur hunter
. s. _ . 594-:H71. Two new outlets,
•
L, ~·tour of where ' Artist Series tickets
the ' hi~ ..states 'Ih honor of may be purchased, have been
the 150!1l 811nlversary of the opened in the Tri-CoWJ!y
,.'"
arrJval of the fll'st Norwegian Vocational School ( Deca) 753immtgran,ts !)ere. This is his • 3511 and the Hocking Valley
~
12th vial! to thia ·country.
·Technical College 753-3591.

SUNDAY, MONDAY. TUESDAY
OCTOBER 26·27-28

GOODLETTSVILLE,
were Timothy Baum and
Tenn. _ The marriage of Bobby Edwards of Chester,
MissMickieDuncanandRick friends of the groom. Mrs.
Hollon took place Sept. 13 at Charles Harding, aunt of the
th e Goodlettsville Cum- bride, registered the guests.
berland Presbyterian Church
Areception was held at the
at Goodlettsville, Tenn.
Goodlettsville Bank reception
The new Mrs. Hollon is !he room. The cake was three· PEMBROKE CLUB, 8 p.m.
· daughter of Mrs. Chanita tiered topped with the with
Mrs.
Manning
DlUlcan or Nashville · and traditional miniature bride Wetherholt.
Wallace E. DlUlcan of Johns- and groom. Mrs. John Davis
LEGION
town , Tenn. The bridegroom and Mrs. Shirley Wheeler AMERICAN
1·s th e son of 'I
n rs. 0 pat·Hollon , served 'the cake with Mrs. Auxiliary Unit 27, 7:30p.m. at
Chester and the late James Charles Harding presiding at the legion hall.
WEDNESDAY
Hollon.
the punch bowl.
Th e ceremony was per - The mother of the CHESHIRE VIllage to
formed by the Rev. James bridegroom was attired in a sponsor community
Vickers . The bride was yellow crocheted dress with Hallo\l'een festivities at the
escorted to the altar by an white accessories. Mrs. playground, 6 to 8 p.m.
unc Ie, John· Dav 1·s, Atlanta , Hollon wore a navy and while Costume judging, games,
Ga. ~'or her wedding, she polyester gown with red prizes and treats. ChUdren
wore a gown o[ brl·dal ••tm
- ' accessories. Both mothers and adults welcome. Rain
which featured a v-neckline wore white orchid corsages. date is Friday.
and chantilly lace sleeves.
Mr. and Mrs. Hollon reside
Her veil was bridal tulle ·With in Columbus. Mr. Hollon
a pearl crown headpiece imd graduated from the Nashville
she carried a bouquet o£ Diesel College and is
shasta daisies, lilies of !he presently employed In
valley and baby's breath lied Columbus.
with lace streamers.
In addition to those named,
The bride's maid of honor other out-of-town guests were
was Reggie Martin and she Mr. and Mrs. Edison Hollon,
was attired in a maize gown Minersville; Mrs . Sheila
fashioned with a v-neckllne · Hollon, Columbus; Mrs.
and lace sleeves. She carrlfld Janice Parker, Marieltaj
a bouquet of yellow shasta Mrs . James Hollon, Vienna,·
daisies. Miss Sandra Duncan, W. Va. ; and Mr. and Mrs. B.
sister of the bride, was the Davis, Atlanta, Ga.
bridesmaid and she wore a
white gown o[ shnUar design
to the other attendant and
carried yellow shasta daisies.
Best man was Gerald
Hollon, CoiW)Ibus, brother of
the groom, and the ushers
Just how comfortable

113.50 :

lh ree month s S7 .50 ; m otor
route $3 ,_,5 month ly .
Th e Dally Se ntin e L one
Year $22 .00 ; Six months
$1 1.50 ; three month s S7 .00 .
Elsewhe r e
S2C .OO;
sl~e
rnontlls SlJ . SO ; th ree months

entitled

·Hollon-Duncan wed
in September rites

~

5*

REGULAR meeting of OCSEA (Ohio Cl vii Service
Employees Assocla!ioo), 7:30
p.m. · at Grand Square
Building, Eastern Ave.,
Gallipolis. All members
urged to attend. Guest
speaker will be there to reply
to inquiries.
TUESDAY
RIVERSIDE Study Club, I
p.m. with Mrs. John Allen as·
hostess.
ANN JUDSON Bible Class,
First Baptist Church, 7 p.m.
at the church.

Mr. and Mrs. Rick Hollon

'l

:

SUNDAY
NEW HOPE Baptist Church,
Harrisburg, Ohio, will
present two films, 7 p.m.
Subjects: The Holy Land and
" When I'm Old Enough,
Goodbye.· • Everyone
welc0111e.
RIO GRANDE Community
College Cake Show, basement
of Davis Hall, 1:30 to 5 p.m .
Public invited to view the
cakes of the students of Mrs.
Betty Carpenter.
SONGEST at Palestine
United · Baptist Church,
Greasy Ridge for the benefit
. of Keith Wilson and family
whose home burned, I p.m.
All singers invited: Everyone
welcome.
MEMORIAL SERVICES for
Henry Scott at Old Kyger
Free Will Baptist Church, 2
p.m.
MONDAY
VOLUNTEERS OF GSI meet
at 7:30p.m. at Cottage Q.

Pomeroy-Middleport :
992-2156
:.

.
~.
fl.l

Vinton Senior Citizens meet

unu

2nd &amp;Olive

~

.. .

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

.....

Gallipolis, 0.

--

...OR\.
WW

ACROSS FROM
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA. GALLIPOLIS

'-------Get to know us; you'll like us.-·-------~

�5- The SlUlday Times·-Sentinel, SlUlday, Oct . 26, !97S

~ Fall fashia·n ·is

~ - The Sunday Tunes -Sentinel, SlUldav. Oct. 26.1975

~ •··············································~·············~
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•

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••

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Sarah Carsey ~Charlene Hoeflich~•

•••
• Gallipolis-Point
•• •

•

Pleasant ~
446-2342

••
••

•

~.•

Woman 's World
•

EARLY .WEEK

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OPEN HOUSE PLANNED - An open house honoring Mr. and Mrs. Sam Pickens on
their 5001 weddlng anniversary will be held Sunday, Nov. 2 from 2 to 4 p.m . at Syracuse
Asbury Ul1ltedMethodlst Church. Mr. BhdMrs. Pickens were.married on Nov. I, 1925 at MI.
Alto, W. Va. by the Rev. Ben Ridenour. They have seven chtldren, Ehner,l.etart; Shelby,
Pomeroy; Eber, Syracuse; Clara Smith, Columbus and Emmett, Wesley and Don, all of
Toledo. They have 32 grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. Frtends and relat1ves
are lnvlted to call during the open house hours.

;f R.UtIand ClU b ef-ects
1
prest.•;]uen· t
f

•

'- •

: ,
1:

""'
••
•'

RU'rLAND - Mrs. Marie
Birchfield was elected
presld~nt of the Rutland
. Friendly Gardeners at . a
meeting held Wednesday
night at the home o[ Mrs.
Janet Bolin.
Other officers elected were
Mrs . Lois Walker, vice
presldenti Mrs. Joanne
Fetty, secretary, and Mrs.
Marjorie Bishop, treasurer.
A discussion was held on
the planter now: located on
Main Street and the group
decided to move It to Forest
Acres Park. The regional
meeting of the Ohio
Association of Grden Clubs in
Middleport Nov. I was announced.
·
Plans were made 'for a trip
to Fenton Glass at Williamstown, W. Va. and Dudley's
Flower Shop in Parkersburg,
Tuesday, leavlng Rutland at
5:15p.m.
The Gardeners Day.Out at .

."

•'

Woos'ter ·was attended by
Mrs . Birch£1eld, Mrs.
Margaret Edwards, Mrs .
Marjorie Davis, Mrs. Judy
Snowden , Mrs . Marvel
Quillen, Mrs. Bolin and Mrs.
Suzy Carpenter.
The annual Meigs ·county
Christmas ·flower show was
announced for Dec. 6 and 7 at
the Pomeroy Elementary
School by Mrs. Bolin, new
Meigs County contact
chairwoman. She also noted
that Mrs. Birchfield is the
new secretary-treasurer of
the t'OlUlty association.
toevotions for the meeting ·
were given by Mrs. Bolin who
used !he book "Our Daily
Bread" with the meditation
" Good Connectio ns, Much
Fruit.'' A !hank-you note was
read from the Gideon Society
thanking the club for flower
arrangements for a dinner
meeting.
Mrs . Charlotte Willford

prese nted the program on the
mechanics
of
fl ower
arranging. She demonstrated
various forms of mechanics
including pin holders , candle
adapters, water picks and
oasis.
.Gardening
tips
for
Novem ber were given by
Mrs Bolin who noted that
now is the time to mulch
peonies and suggested that
after the fit'S! freeze they be
mowed off with the lawnmower. She also talked about
perennial borders.
The traveling prize was
won by Mrs. Bishop. Mrs.
Bolin served refreshments .

Sunday Times-sentinel
Published every Sun day
b-,
The
OhiO
Va ll ey
Pu blishi ng Co .
GAL LIP OLIS
DA ILY TRIB UN E
825 Thi rd Ave ., Gallipol is,
Ohio 45631. .
Published every · weekd ay
evening exc ept Satu rday .

Second · Cla ss Postage Pa id

at Ga ll ipolis, Ohio .&lt;~563 1 .
THE DAILY SE N TI NEL ·

111 Court St., Pome roy, 0 .

45769. Published e'llery week day even ing except Satu r
,day . Entered as seco_nd c: lo'll ss

mailing matter at Pomeroy ,

Oh io Post Office .
By c arrier daily

and

Sun day 75c per week . Motor

ro ute U .25 p er month .
'

MAI L
SUBSCRIPT ION RATES
T he
Ga llip olisO~;~lly

Tribune .i n Ohio and West
Virginia one yeBr $21 .00 ; six
months 511 .50; three month s
. $7 ,00 . Elsew here $?6.00 per

vcar;

six

monlhs

S7 .50.
The Unilcd P r ess In ternational is exclusivelv

Cut them

the use for
publication of a ll news
dispa tches cred l t~d to the
newspllper and also the loca l
news publis hed herein .

and enj~y the

to

VINE STREET

'

MARK V

•I•

•

."

I

i

EGGS
GRADE ALARGE
~ZEN

~

I

'

I

..

Phone 992-Sf''

.

Ohlo

BOWL

12.50

1

1'12 Qt.
SAUCE PAN

24.50

1

STATE &amp; TIUHD---GALliPOLIS, 0.

,....

•

-......

I

M

COKE

,.

OUARTS
FOR

can a leatti'er walker be?
As soft as tne knit· fit
lining ... as easy as
tne hidden elasticized
goring ..~and as wolkable as
tne covered mid-heel I Only
Nalurolizer could make
comfort,look so goodl Navy
Black

'l'liEsE THREI!: Sl.EEi.'YHEADS were a atiut1ng

picture Thursday night when they modeled sleepwear at
the Newcm~ers Style Show held at the Ellts Club. Karen
Smith is In the gramy gown, Sharon Kittrell is u cilddly
as a bunny In her bumy sleeper and Cheryl Sheard llands
out in her karate' robe '*nd gown: Area wbmln. were
treated to a look at all areas of fashion &lt;ll!rb!i the
evenlng'sfashlon preview. ThetheiJie, "PJ'sF~IIBhion
Flavors" outlined the ne';Vest In women's clo
. PJ's
I .Lr, __
and Carl's Shoe Store provided the clothing aril11110es
for
the models.

.e,."'
..-.."'

RETURNABLE SOmES

$

&gt;

~

SAVE '4.07

I

I

RE

I
: ·
:,

Streak less Machine Wall Washing
Uoholsferv . Wilillows - Floors
Complete Line of ...
Cleaning Equipment &amp;. Supplies

r

ADVANCED CLEANING SERVICE

Super T-strap for Women, Teens.
Covered Platform, High Heel.
Black. Reg. $13.97

New for Fall
· Multi-compartment
Swagger Bag

FOR FRIE,..pLY F."~E ESTIMATES

I

::.~ 544
Reg . $7.97. Assorted
Colors and Styles.

J.
Call 675·5572. After 4 P.M.
;
~------------------- -----~-

SAVE '2.53
Girls' Moe-toe Pocket
Boot. Brown, Black or
Navy. Suede-like Uppers.
Lug-sole. Candy Laces .
Reg . $6.97. Sizes 8~ -4.

PRESTONE
GALLON
(9j
:fliil

'

I

~
__ __

I

-

SUNDAY th~ SA

.... ----·-~---.....;..

O(iT. 26 :J'HRU NOV. 1

fQOTLONG .

SAVE

SUPERIORS

2,400.00 on Display 24x52 Sectional
11,000.00 on Display 14'x70'

WIENERS

.,~

HOt
MARIANNE CAMP•
BELL narrated
the
Newcomers Style Show
Thursday night. Mrs.
Campbell emphasized the
trend to "dlltllled" fuhlon
whlcb tecenll' aarrowneu
• of line and iolt ral)rlcl In
natural .colora.

It's NOT
Too Early!

~

.

LAYAWAY
FOR

MARGUERI
12oc

BETTY OH INGER
•
102. E. MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

~

t

Bold All New Side Zipper
Boot. Soft Tricot-lined
Upper in Black or Brown.
Our Regular $17 .97

DO.GS.
~ I"'

~

\

.

'
'

"FiXed Th~

I

.

~

I",,

JPay

'
You L 1'k·e,' ''E m "
''

We reserve the right
to limit quantities.

I

uruc.u

e

79e f.

SAVE $5.07

I

!;i

= DINNER SET
CHESTER - The Chester
"'United Methodist Church!
• women will serv~ an ele~Uoo
;;jay dinner at the Masonic
=Hall in Chester on Nov. ~.
late lunches , soup, chili, pie,
offee and .cake will be served.
·

"'

,(

'

"59·.. jt·

C

ALL BEEF WIENERS

FOREMirta~dC
ABBOlT

For a

to

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

CHRISTMAS!

Before you replace your heating system,
find out more about an Amana heat pump.

Mak ing a lovely giff
give or receive.

~

.

Plus we have tnree homes that have
s per cent .fax credit on them. Plus
1974 prices are now on at Larry's
and homes are aii197S models. Your
chance to beat inflation.

Th is beautiful Sca n·
dina vlan enamelware is
decorative and dorable .

~

1300.00 on Display Add-A-Room

On many winter days, it uses heat from
outdoor air to warm your home. Gives
exceptional heating economy that can't
be matched by other heating systems.
During the summer, it efficiently cools your
home. It's an ail-electric, completely
automatic comfort system . And Amana
quality assu~es you of lasting dependability
ahd operating efficiency.

FINEL ENAMELWA,RE

.....
......
...
-.....
e..,...

10 LB•

1

-FREE ESTIMAT

BRINGS TO YOU

-.............

~

''

SEEN AND HEARD
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne 1\msbary and
son, Dr. Harry Amsbary and
wife and son, Wayne, of
Cleveland, have just returned
from a foliage tour of the
Eastern United States. They
visited friends, Dr. and Mrs.
David Cline, Buffalo, N.Y.,
and relatives, Dr. and Mrs.
Burt Chambers, professor at
Dar tmouth College; Mr . and
Mrs. Harold Cook, Waynesburg, Pa., and Mr. and Mrs.
T. C. Pollock, Wheeling, W.
Va. They also traveled to
Niagara Falls, N.Y. ; Trapp
Family Lodge at Stowe, Vt.;
Kittery, Maine; Amesbury,
Mass.; While Mts., Salem,
N.Y. , and PocOI'IU"M ountains,
Pa.

....
=

NO. 1 OHIO

What Savings
Now At Lar,Y's

'•
.J 'l•

Peddler's Pantry

.::
.
::.

POTATOES

$

•

Walker were ce lebrated with
cake
and punch . The mem·
Center.
bers were given pumpkin
The birthdays of Nadene favors .
The next meetin g will be
Welsh, Anna Higg ins,
Florence Quickel and Dewey Nov. 11 at Vinton Town Hall.

· person read a le tter from the

VINTON -· The . Vinton
Cl ub uf Senior Citizens met
reccnlly at the Vinton Town
Hall with six memb ers
prcsenl.
Minutes o[ the August
meeting were read . Dues
were paid, and two new
members were welcomed.
Mrs. Audrey Adkins
reported on her trip to Texas
thi s su.mm er. The chair ·

..

SUPER MARKET
MIDDLEfORT, OHIO

Camel

· h~at
of an
electric ·heat
pump

,

.

GALLIPOLIS -~ Feminine, ·.

Indianapolis Orchestra
to appear at OU series

GALLIPOLIS, 0. ·

'' '
'

soft, .exqitif}~: ..

: .are

SUPERMARKET

I '

' I

•

S

JOHNSON'S

AmNTIOI

. clean,saf~

I

•

..

GEr

LAYOFFS SfOPPED
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - A
temporary restrainlng order
prohibiting !he layoff of 33
Ohio Civil Rights Com·
mission employes was Issued
Thursday by U.S. District
Court Judge Joseph P.
Kiruteary,

'

Thursday's show presented
.1: flatterinB and fun. That's the ~lothing 'tor ·.women's every
look for fall in women's need : sporty, elegant, every
fashion according to the day and nighttlme, yet
. , ensembles seen Thursday feminine, attr~Uve and
l: night at ·the Gallipolis Area ·appealing:. c ·• • 1
: Newcomers Club Style Show. • Shoes are · fashionable In
: "PJ 's
Fall
Fashion many styles and f~brics, but
:: Flavors" was the theme the most notable· change is a
"' of
the
show
held trend 'back to the. narrow, ,, ,
: at the Elks Club here. . higher ge~l, ex!rem~ly ,
:: PJ's and· Carl's Shoe Store flattering ,to the legs.
. ;
~ provided clothing, Shoes and
Following the show, the . ··
:: accessories for the evening's Newcomers served a buffet ol
:::: preview of fashions .
hors
.d'oeuvres
and .,.,
:: Marianne
Campbell, beverages.
,.
: Director of Community
Models were Bonnie Stutes,
.. Relations at Holzer Medical
Gloria ' Young, Sharon . ·
.
.. Center, was the evemng's Johnston, · Karen Smith,
. '
;: narrator. Organist was Jim Shar on Kittrell, Cheryl
. , niE .DENIM KIDS were the hit of the evening Thursday at the Gallipolis Area
Thaler.
·
Sheard, Leslie Treleven,
Newcomers Style&amp;ow. Models, I-I', Ellen Chasteen, Bonnie Stutes and Joyce Thaler were
"' Fail promises to be an Joyce. ·; Tha1er,
Ellen , . attired·ln.denim work outfits. AlthoUgh always popular for work and play like those shown
:: exciting season .this year in Chasteen, Pat Dressel,
above; denim is no longer confined to just that. Denim dresses and skirts can be a nattering
:": women's clothing. Hemlines Nancy Levernier and Joy ' "dressed-up" look. Held at the Elks Club; lhe show was sponsored by the Newcomers and
longer with the accent on Nickels of Carl's Shoe Store.
clothing and accessories were provided by PJ's and Carl's Shoe Store.
:: soft, clinging fabrics in
Mrs. Campbell paid special
,., natura! shades or "earth recognition to !hose working
C tones" witho11t many darts, behind the scenes, Peggy
;: linings or lnterfacings . Evans, Jan Thaler, Ida
:: Fashion is subtle, but Thaler, Joy Nickels and Gay
::l becoming.
Jeffers in addition to the , I
,
'
: Mrs. Campbell said, Newcomers Club; 'and em: "We're having what is being ployes of PJ's and Carl's.
;: referred to in ·Paris and New
Donating door prizes for
~ York as the 'distilled' the show were Dudley 's
•
• fashion. Clothes are simply a F1orist, PJ's, Carl's Shoe , ATHENS The In- in 19l0 . by Ferdinand
.. line that is narrow on !~ Store, Jack and Jill, Thomas dianapolis Symphony Or- Schaefer, who conducted !he
: body, fabrics are soft and Clothiers, Paul Davies chestra, one of the top 10 orchestra until his retirement
: natural and colors are both Jewelry Store, Peddler's orchestras in the nation, will In 1937. Presently directed by
born
Oleg
:: rich and discreet in every Pantry and the Uniform appear at 8 p.m., Fridily, a! Russian
: way."
Center:
Memorial Aud(!orium as part Kovalenko, the Indianapolis
of !he Ohio University Artist Symphony Orchestra is
Series. ·
maintained and operated by
The
combined
efforts
of
80 the
Indianapolis State
"'
professi onal musicians , Symphony Society, Ind.
many faculty members at
Performing concerts
Indiana colleges ' and geared to people o£ every age
universities, create one of the group, the Indianapolis
mostactiveorchestrasinthe Symphony Orchestra
cquntry. The orchestra' presents Lolli Pop concerts
performs over 160 coocerts a throughout Indiana in
year, touring 45 states.
auditoriums, zoos, and
The symphon~ ~a~ founded museums. A program called
"
••
", ,
(.
New Vibrations, geared and
~lNG 0~ v HONORED
preseqted to children in th~
BEVERLY HIW, Calif. upper grades, moves from
••
••
(UPI) - Hundreds of Norwe- Bach to Rock , while the
glan-Amerlcans honored "biergarten" pop concerts
King Olav of Norway at a played in the local malls are
•
bl!nqu~l ThUI'S!IaY night at directed toward a more
•
the Beverly ~IIB!lire . Hotel. general audience.
Tickets are available at the
A small group of about 15
•
pickets marched In front of Memorial Autli torium box
the hotel protesting the office from 1-4 p.m., Monday
killing of baby seals by through Friday or by calling
N?iil!.el,ian
. . fur hunter
. s. _ . 594-:H71. Two new outlets,
•
L, ~·tour of where ' Artist Series tickets
the ' hi~ ..states 'Ih honor of may be purchased, have been
the 150!1l 811nlversary of the opened in the Tri-CoWJ!y
,.'"
arrJval of the fll'st Norwegian Vocational School ( Deca) 753immtgran,ts !)ere. This is his • 3511 and the Hocking Valley
~
12th vial! to thia ·country.
·Technical College 753-3591.

SUNDAY, MONDAY. TUESDAY
OCTOBER 26·27-28

GOODLETTSVILLE,
were Timothy Baum and
Tenn. _ The marriage of Bobby Edwards of Chester,
MissMickieDuncanandRick friends of the groom. Mrs.
Hollon took place Sept. 13 at Charles Harding, aunt of the
th e Goodlettsville Cum- bride, registered the guests.
berland Presbyterian Church
Areception was held at the
at Goodlettsville, Tenn.
Goodlettsville Bank reception
The new Mrs. Hollon is !he room. The cake was three· PEMBROKE CLUB, 8 p.m.
· daughter of Mrs. Chanita tiered topped with the with
Mrs.
Manning
DlUlcan or Nashville · and traditional miniature bride Wetherholt.
Wallace E. DlUlcan of Johns- and groom. Mrs. John Davis
LEGION
town , Tenn. The bridegroom and Mrs. Shirley Wheeler AMERICAN
1·s th e son of 'I
n rs. 0 pat·Hollon , served 'the cake with Mrs. Auxiliary Unit 27, 7:30p.m. at
Chester and the late James Charles Harding presiding at the legion hall.
WEDNESDAY
Hollon.
the punch bowl.
Th e ceremony was per - The mother of the CHESHIRE VIllage to
formed by the Rev. James bridegroom was attired in a sponsor community
Vickers . The bride was yellow crocheted dress with Hallo\l'een festivities at the
escorted to the altar by an white accessories. Mrs. playground, 6 to 8 p.m.
unc Ie, John· Dav 1·s, Atlanta , Hollon wore a navy and while Costume judging, games,
Ga. ~'or her wedding, she polyester gown with red prizes and treats. ChUdren
wore a gown o[ brl·dal ••tm
- ' accessories. Both mothers and adults welcome. Rain
which featured a v-neckline wore white orchid corsages. date is Friday.
and chantilly lace sleeves.
Mr. and Mrs. Hollon reside
Her veil was bridal tulle ·With in Columbus. Mr. Hollon
a pearl crown headpiece imd graduated from the Nashville
she carried a bouquet o£ Diesel College and is
shasta daisies, lilies of !he presently employed In
valley and baby's breath lied Columbus.
with lace streamers.
In addition to those named,
The bride's maid of honor other out-of-town guests were
was Reggie Martin and she Mr. and Mrs. Edison Hollon,
was attired in a maize gown Minersville; Mrs . Sheila
fashioned with a v-neckllne · Hollon, Columbus; Mrs.
and lace sleeves. She carrlfld Janice Parker, Marieltaj
a bouquet of yellow shasta Mrs . James Hollon, Vienna,·
daisies. Miss Sandra Duncan, W. Va. ; and Mr. and Mrs. B.
sister of the bride, was the Davis, Atlanta, Ga.
bridesmaid and she wore a
white gown o[ shnUar design
to the other attendant and
carried yellow shasta daisies.
Best man was Gerald
Hollon, CoiW)Ibus, brother of
the groom, and the ushers
Just how comfortable

113.50 :

lh ree month s S7 .50 ; m otor
route $3 ,_,5 month ly .
Th e Dally Se ntin e L one
Year $22 .00 ; Six months
$1 1.50 ; three month s S7 .00 .
Elsewhe r e
S2C .OO;
sl~e
rnontlls SlJ . SO ; th ree months

entitled

·Hollon-Duncan wed
in September rites

~

5*

REGULAR meeting of OCSEA (Ohio Cl vii Service
Employees Assocla!ioo), 7:30
p.m. · at Grand Square
Building, Eastern Ave.,
Gallipolis. All members
urged to attend. Guest
speaker will be there to reply
to inquiries.
TUESDAY
RIVERSIDE Study Club, I
p.m. with Mrs. John Allen as·
hostess.
ANN JUDSON Bible Class,
First Baptist Church, 7 p.m.
at the church.

Mr. and Mrs. Rick Hollon

'l

:

SUNDAY
NEW HOPE Baptist Church,
Harrisburg, Ohio, will
present two films, 7 p.m.
Subjects: The Holy Land and
" When I'm Old Enough,
Goodbye.· • Everyone
welc0111e.
RIO GRANDE Community
College Cake Show, basement
of Davis Hall, 1:30 to 5 p.m .
Public invited to view the
cakes of the students of Mrs.
Betty Carpenter.
SONGEST at Palestine
United · Baptist Church,
Greasy Ridge for the benefit
. of Keith Wilson and family
whose home burned, I p.m.
All singers invited: Everyone
welcome.
MEMORIAL SERVICES for
Henry Scott at Old Kyger
Free Will Baptist Church, 2
p.m.
MONDAY
VOLUNTEERS OF GSI meet
at 7:30p.m. at Cottage Q.

Pomeroy-Middleport :
992-2156
:.

.
~.
fl.l

Vinton Senior Citizens meet

unu

2nd &amp;Olive

~

.. .

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

.....

Gallipolis, 0.

--

...OR\.
WW

ACROSS FROM
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA. GALLIPOLIS

'-------Get to know us; you'll like us.-·-------~

�7
3~:::~:;$!~::::.::::::;::::;::::;:;:;:;::::~;~;:::.:~:·

American Education Week
announced at Salisbury PTA

Social ··,

f

Calendar
SUNDAY
REVIVAL AT Syracuse
United Methodist Church,
Friday through Suuday , 7:30
each evening with pastor
Richard E. Jarvis speaking ;
public invited.
OLD FASHIONED HYMN
SING at Freedom Gospel
Mission, Bald Knobs, 1:30
p.m. Public is invited to bring
songs and participate.
MONDAY
EASTERN PTSA, 7:30p.m.
al the school. Program' will
be a film, "People Taking
Action."
•
RUTLAND GARDEN
CLUB, 7:30p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Robert Canaday, Sale
of bulbs, planls and baked
goods to be held .
MEIGS CHAPTER 17 Ohio
Association of Public School ·
Employes, 7 pm . at Meigs ·
Junior High cafeteria. Field
representative to be present.
Officers will be installed.
TUESDAY
OPEN SHOWER for Mr.
and Mrs. Rick Blake and son
at Chester Fire House, 7:30
p.m. The family lost all their
h011.1ehold goods and personal
POMEROY - In a double
belongings in a fire that ring ceremony at the
sleeves and empire waists. de.~troyed their trailer home Pomeroy United Methodist
Their hats were made of the' -on Oct. 12. For additional Church, vicki Lynn Vaughan
same material with light blue information, call 985-3525.
and
Michael Charl es
veiling, and they carried blue
MEIGS AREA Holiness Williams exchanged wedding
and white carnations.
ASI!OC!ation at Danville vows.
Tony Milhoan served as Wesleyan Church, 7:30p.m.
The bride is the daughter of
best man for the groom, and Clyde Henderson speaker. Frank A. Vaughan and Mrs.
ushers were Rodney Baker Special singing . Everyone Reva L. Vaughan, Pomeroy,
and Bruce Myers, brothers of welcome.
and the bridegroom is the son
the bride. The male at·
JUNIOR AMERICAN of Mr _ and Mrs. Charles E.
tendants wore tuxedos with Legion Auxiliary, Feney- Williams, Rt. 1, Shade.
light blue jackets and dark Bennett Post 128,6:30 p.m. at
The wedding was an event
pants.
the home of Becky Roush. A of Aug. 3 at 2:30 p.m. at the
For her daughter's wed· Pizza party to follow.
Pomeroy United Methodist
ding, Mrs. Myers wore a mint
COMBINED JUNIOR AND Church. The Rev. John Elsgreen print dress of polyester SENIOR meeting of Pomeroy wick officiated. Organ music
and Mrs. Westjohn was in a American Legion Auxiliary, by Mrs: Harvey Van Vranken
beige dress of polyester. Both Drew Webster Unit 39, 7:30 included "My Heart Ever
had white carnation cor· pm. Program on scholarship Faithful," "A Time for Us,"
sages.
and education. New film on "We've Only Just Begun "
A reception honoring the drug abuse by Carl Hysell. and "Wedding Bells."
couple was held immediately Speaker will be Mrs. Maxine
Decorations fe atured a
following the wedding at the Plwnmer. Senior and junior heart-shaped candelabra
home of the bride's parents. members to ~ring a guest. with single candle slicks tied
Mrs. Barbara Sargent, aunt Public invited to view film . with floral arrangements at
of the bride, and Mrs. Erma
either side.
Cleland of Chester, presided
P AS T M AT R 0 NS ,
Given in marriage by her
at the refreshment table.
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order father, the bride was attired
Out~f-town guests at the of the Eastern Star will en· in a gown of bridal satin
wedding were Diana and tertaln Past Matrons of fashioned with an empire
Debbie Cleland, Oklahoma; Evangeline Chapter, Mid· waistline gathered skirt and
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pugh, dieport , at the Pomeroy full sheer sleeves with bands
. ton, Md .; Mrs . ..,,__
Kensmg
......., Masonic Temple, 7:30 p.m. of lace. The gown featured a
Hawk, Cheryl Smith, Pam
WEDNESDAY
sheer overlay with lace ac·
Smith and. Nannette Smith,
POMEROY WCTU, 2 p.m. cent trim on the ·skirt.
Shelby; Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd at 'the Pomeroy United
She wore a lace cap from
Koenigandl\larie,Nancy and Methodist Church.
which fell a chapel length
Jane Heydlnger, Mansfield;
WILDWOOD Garden Club, train of illusion edged in lace
Mr. and Mrs. Henry West. 7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs. and a blusher. The bride
john, Linda, Leonard and Mary Nease. Members are to carried a bouquet of pink,
Chris, Talona, Dl.; Pauline have a plant exchange.
yellow and green daisies with
Westjohn of Rantaul, Ill. and
stephanotis and baby's
Mrs. Joyce Baker, Texas.
breath. For "something old,"
ported its members to
Huston's Rest Home in
Hamden, the Wellston Rest
Home in Wellston, the Good
Shepherd Manor in Wakefield
and the Veterans Ad·
By RENE BROYLES
ministration Hospital in MIDDLEPORT - The an·
PIKETON - Ten members Chillicothe,
nual Halloween carnival at
of the RSVP visited with the
Several members of the the Bradbury School will be
residents of the Casey RSVP made and presented held Tuesqay from 6:30 to
Nursing Home in Piketon lap robes to the residents of 8:30p.m. I
earlier this week.
the home in Piketon. Making
Featured will be a country
Gallla Countians residing the trip were Clara Cardwell, store and a sweet shop with a
there are Elsie Scott, c.irJ Bill Menshouse, Marie Van variety of games. Children
Westfall and the widow of Gilder, Waiter Bartram, should be in their rooms at
Emmett Gothard, the former Maude Sellards, Cora Rupe, 6:15 p.m. in preparation for
Katie Warren.
Malinda Bradbury, Mary judging of the costumes.
Bonnie Brannan, a gifted Sisson, Luctlle Mulford and Children below the fifth grade
pianist, ' accompanied the Elias Sisson.
will be judged as a group in
group as they sang many
Monday, Nov; 10, the van the categories of prettiest,
favorite religious hymns. · will transport volunteers to ugliest and the most original.
Bonnie is one of 32 residents the Twin Maples Rest Home
Merchants in the Meigs
under the care of the ad· in McArthur. Anyone having Local School District have
mlnistrator, Erma Jewett, friends or relatives in this donated merchandise for the
LPN. For persons wishing to home are free to call Maye party. The public is invited.
send cards or letters to any of Roush or Rene Broyles if they
the above mentioned, the wish to send a message or a
address is The Casey Nursing gift to any of the residents.
Home, Rt , I, Piketon, Ohio.
There is no charge for
I'm sure they would be transportation to these
pleased to hear from their nursing homes, but a
friends and a&lt;;quaintances. donation for gas is ap. The RSVP van has trans- predated.

POMEROY - American
Education Week Nov, 17·21
was announced by John l.Jsle,
principal, at the Tuesday
night meeting of the
Salisbury PI'A.
Plans ·\Jrere made by the
PI'A to serve coffee on Nov.
18. A report was given by the
ways and means committee
on the fall festival plans. The
Nov. !5 festival will l)egln
when the kitchen opens at 5
p.m. Games wtll start at 6:30
p.m.
It was announced Salisbury
Blue Streaks sweat shlrta are
for sale and the tables for uae
in the auditorium have
arrived. Benches will be built
for use with the tables along
with doors for uae in the boys'
·restroom. Membership in the
PI'A now stands at 70, It was
reported.
Mrs. Jean Cooper of the Rio
Grande Community College
was guest speaker. She
talked about the community
college program and noted
that this Is the . centennial
year for Rio Grande. Also

I.

l

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Williams

Mr. and Mrs. .(inthonv Westjobn

I

Westjohn-Myers
united in marriage
POMEROY - A July 26
open church wedding at the
Second Heart Catholic
Cl1urch, Pomeroy, united In
marriage Miss Unda Sue
Myers, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Bruce D. Myers, LOng
Bottom, to Anthony William
Westjohn, son of Mr. atld
Mrs . Henry Westjohn,
Talona, Dl.
The Rev. Fr. Paul Welton
performed the double ring
ceremony at 2:30 p.m.
following a program of
nuptial music by Mrs. Fred
B. Paetlman, organist. Two
vases of white carnations and
gold mums decorated the
altar and white bows marked
the pews.
Given In •marriage by her
father, the bride was attired
. in a gown of white polyester
crepe with lace bell sleeves, a
matching shoulder cape,
empire walsUine and rounded
neckline. The bride's blusher
and long train of Illusion fell
from a crown headpiece, and
she carried a bouquet of blue
and white carnations.
Mrs. Joyce Baker, sister of
the bride, was matron of
honor, and Miss Unda West·
john, sister of the groom,
served as brideamald. They
wore dresses of light blue
polyester knit with dark blue
and yellow flowers. Their
gowns were fashioned with
square necklines, half bell

RECEIPTS UP
POMEROY - Retail sales
tax receipts in Meigs County
were up a little over eight
percent but sales tax receipts
for auto sales were down 9,53
percent for the · month of
September according to the
report of State Treasurer
Gertrude Donahey.
Retail sales tax receipts for
September, 1975, totaled
$51,269.52 .compared to
receipts of $47,464.58 for
receipts in 1974. Motor
vehicle sales tax receipts for
September, 1975, totaled
$31,229.87 while the total for
September, 1974, was
$34,520.85.

Luncheon
Continued from page 3
awards ceremony took place.
Fourteen volunteers received
awards for -accumulating
froni 100 to 500 hours; they
are Betty Stout, Jeanette
Bausell, Anna Nibert, Eunice
Niehm, Elias Sisson, Esther)_
Gilmore, Maxine Ollver,
Nora Price, Beaulah Mills,
Nora Knotts, Ethel Burdette,
Sadie Runyon, Deanna
Morgan and Eleanore
Markley. Four have a total of
between 500 and 1,000 hours;
they are Florence Untaia,
Evelyn Brandeberry, Opal
Baker and Eloise Mills. Four
who passed the 1,000 hour
mark are Helen Trotter,
Ellabelle McDonald,
Florence Trainer an(! Ella
Candee. Robert J. F'anning,
vice
president
for
professional services at the
ho~pital presented these
awards.
The coinmittee in charge of ·
Thursday's program was
Evelyn Brandeberry,
chairman; Deanna Mocgr
and Eunice Niehm.

,,

August vows read

Halloween
carnival set

RSVP update

she wore her grandmother's
wedding ring, and for
SOmething borrowed~ " she
wore the pearl necklace of
Mrs . .Jean Will.
The bridP 's attendants
were her sisters, Pain and
Pat, bridesmaids, and Kay
Vijakuia, Hemlock Grove,
maid of honor . The attendants wore identic,Uy
designed dresses in yellow,
green and pink dotted swiss
and carried bouquets of
daisies in the colors of their
gowns. The dresses had V·
necklin es , short puffed
sleeves and empired waists.
They wore matching picture
hats.
Craig Ramsey, Pomeroy,
served as best man for the
bridegroom, and the .ushers
were Eric Pearch, Mid·
dleport and Andy Vaughan,'
Pompano Beach, Fla.
. For her daughter's wed·
ding, Mrs. Vaughan was in a
mint gr)!en gown and wore a
corsage of carnations tinted
green. Mrs. Williams was in a
gown of pink and she wore a
pink tinted carnation cor·
sage.
A reception honoring the
c0uple was held in the church
social room. The bride's table
featured a four-tiered cake
decorated with pink roses.
Yellow, green and pink
daisies surrounded the base
of the cake and was also used
on two single candle holders.
Cathy Francis
Reed,
Pomeroy, and Mary Jane
Dee leg, Pomeroy, presided at
the refreshment table.
Mr. and Mrs. Williams
reside at 550 South Third
Ave .• Middleport. The bride
is a 1975 graduate of Meigs
High School and is employed
at Elberfelds in Pomeroy.
Mr. Williams, a 1971 graduate
of Meigs, is employ~ with
the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co.
Out-of-lown guests at the
wedding were Mr. and Mrs.
Wilbur Williams, Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kelly,
Columbus ; Stephen C.
Rannells, South Rannells,
Mrs . Ada Rannells, St.
Petersburg, Fla.; Mr. and
Mrs. Billy Jo Spencer,
Bellevue, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs.
T. D. Marshall, ColumbUs
and Miss Thurma Vaughan;
~ew York.
--. ~ ·0

LICENSE ISSUED
POMEROY - Marriage
license was issued to Ronald
Eugene Grate, 24, Rutland,
and Regina Dawn Harrison,
18, Racine.
PICKUP WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND - Free leaf
pick up will be held in
Rutland Wednesday, Oct. 29.
The leaves must be bagged
and placed at the curb.

From
Christmas
•
morning on,
he'll be
sporting
aSeiko

Reg . $15 to $35

SPECIAL
Dry, Oily or Normai

'9

91

Regardless of type or condition we will
select the proper wave for your hair.

The response has been great! We will
continue our. spec.lal Man., 'rues., Wed.,
Thur. Only $9.98.
,
AT 9 A.. M.

Shape &amp; Style
$3.69
Reg. Hair Cut
$2.69
All Conditioners
•!t Price
Reg. Prices Fri. &amp; Sat.

IN THE
SILVER
BRIDGE

~

featuring
Annie Anybody
B\' BETIIE CLARK
E&gt;leDB10D A•ent,

Home Ec011omlco

M

PLAZA

]EWELNOOK
has
The "Nothing" look

necklace in several styles!

--- t~t&lt;:.

r. and Mrs. F Michael Hoffman

Miss Melanie Burt, Pomeroy,
presided at the coffee service
and Miss Bonnie Dillon, .
All&gt;ilny, poured the punch.
For a brief wedding trip to
South Point and Kentucky,
the bride changed into a light
blue floral slack suit.

The couple resides in
Middleport. The new Mrs_
Hoffman is a 1975 graduate of
Meigs High SchooL The
groom, a !974 graduate of
Meigs, is employed at the
Southern Ohio Coal Co.

Past matrons gather
VINTON - The past
matrons of Vinton Chapter
OES met recently at the
home of Elizabeth Cloud with
11 members· present.
The president called the
meeting to order with the
hostess in charge of the
program. Scripture was the
23rd Psalm read by Opal
Payne. Prayer was by Vennie
Casto.
Readings were, " My
Task", Vema Gleason and
"The House Beside the
Road," Ruth Evans.
The Lord's Prayer was
repeated in unison. The
secretary's and treasurer's
reporls were given by Mary
Walker. Both were approved.
Dues were paid and a thank·
you card was read from Lucy
Hartsook for the cards and
flower,she received while in
the hospital.
Election of officers was
held. They are president,

Mary
Walker ;
vicepresident, Verna Gleason;
secretary
treasurer,
Elizabeth Cloud. Atalent sale
was held.
Refreshments
were served to Mary Walker,
Verna Gleason, Lavina
Swisher, Grace Welker,
Hazel Norman, Opal Payne,
Vickie Powell, Vennle Casto,
Ruth Evans, Eleanor White
and the hostess. The group
thanked the hostess for the
evening .
THANKS GIVEN
GALLIPOLIS - Kena and
Evan Plymale Sr. recently
expressed thanks to their
friends and relatives for the
anniversary cards, telephone
calls, con'gratulations in
person and gifts they
received on their 50th wed·
ding anniversary. Mr. and
Mrs. Plymale said, "May
· bless each one of you".

"SPOOKY SAFETY"
GALUPOUS-Since Halloween falls on Friday this year,
the kids will probably be more excited than usual due to the
fact that they don't have to go to school the next day. And even
though Halloween is for kids and fun, it Is the responsibility of
adults to make sure It will be SAFE fun!
H you receive the "Homemakers Newsletter," you
already have the following llBt of salety precautions. However,
since I know you can't all be getting the letter, I feel these
safety tips are worth repeating.
"'nps To Make Costumes Safer as WellasSpooky"In 1942, the American warships in a fierce naval
1. Witch, or whatever, be sure the costume is flame aircraft carrier " Hornet" engagement off the Solomon
resistant, or at least, name retardant. H purchased, check to was sunk by Japanese Islands in the Pacific Theater
t5ee if the garment or box is ao labeled.
of World War II.
2. HomHeWn costumes can be temporarily fiameproofed
at home by_soakin~ in a special solution and leiting them drip
dry. Wigs and beards should also be treated this way. Though
almost all clothing fabrics will burn to some extent; avoid
gauzy or synthetic materials that may flame rapidly.
3. Hemlines should be several inches off the ground.
(]illdren can trip in long garments. Avoid costumes with
flowing sleeves, voluminous skirts, long acarves or sashes.
Anything that can catch on bushes, or brush near flames is
potentially !!l!ngerous.
.
4, Light, brighUy colored costwnes, eaally seen at dusk or
dark, are best. If costume ill dark, trim with fluorescent or
reflective tape that is highly vlaible to drivers.
5. &lt;lllldren should-carry a white shopping bag to collect
their "treats". This adds to their vlaiblllty and leaves their
arms free. Make sure that ''pirates" leave swords or sharp
pointed objects •t home.
,
6. Masks or hoods can allp and oblcure a child's vision. Be
sure maslt Is secure and that the holes correspond to the child's
eyes. Asafer alternative, one which children find fun, Is to uae
cosmetics. Alloll' older children to make up their own faces to
suit their costumes. For easier removal of rouge, lipstick, eye
shadows, have them first apply a thin layer of cold cream.
7. Never permit children to carry pumpkins with lighted
candles. Give them flashlights and check to see that batteries
are fresh.
UlltE IRME DtRII~.:-~
''l'lpl For Safer 'Trick or Treating"'
by K~rntron
I. Aparent lhould always accompany young children on
their ro1mda. If a group Is going out together, a responsible
adult should follow to let people know that the youngsters are
chaperoned.
.
Jewelers
. 2. The "a-anks", people who dislike children, are usually
well known to the community. Children should be told to stay
away from these particular homes.
3, Review pedestrlal safety rules before they leave home.
Dusk, the time wllen most children are out, Is particularly
hazardous. Remind them : crosa only at corners; walt on the

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of the bride, matrons of
honor ; and Tami Hoffman
and Beverly Hoffman,
Middleport, sisters qf the
groom, bridesmaids.
The attendants were at·
tired in flowered gowns of
nylon over taffeta styled·with
standup collars and 'long
sheer sleeves in the pastel
colors of blue, orchid, yellow,
pink and orange. They
carried white parasol b.~skels ·
of daisies dyed to match their
gowns and wore white picture
hats with ribbons in the colors
of their gowns.
Gerry White of Middleport
was best man for the groom,
and the ushers were Dan
Abbott, Syracuse and' Roger
Abbott, Pomeroy, brothers of
the bride, and Pat Soulsby,
Pomeroy, and Robert Rams·
burg, Middleport.
For her daughter's wed·
ding, Mrs. Abbott wore a
polyester blue gown with lace
sleeves. Mrs. Hoffman was in
a yellow polyester gown with
short bell sleeves and both
mothers wore white car·
nation corsages tipped in
colors to match t)leir gowns.
A recepllon ·was held in the
social room of the church .
The bride's table featured a
four-tiered wedding cake
decorated with silver bells
and topped with wedding
bells and doves. The rainbow
colors of the wedding were
featured
In
flowers
surrounding the cake. Single
candleholders with white
tapers completed the table
decor.
Miss Judy Radford ,
Pomeroy, registered the
guests. Mrs. Jack Scites,
Pomeroy, served the cake,

tachymeter. An elapsed i
indicator. An instant-sol day/
date calendar. Self-winding,
30 minute recorder, marresliltanl Hardlex
229ft. Nioo. '..\fi,iJo'iJ;t:l
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I bracelet $135.00.

chllr, buoyent foam turroundl him
wtlh IIP'Of·luxury comfort. Hand·

~'

Ph. 446-3353

MIDDLEPORT _ The
Middleport Church of Christ
was \he scene Of the Sept. 5
wedding of Miss Vicki Lynn
Abbott, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Horace Abbott, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy and Fred Michael
Hoffman, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Hoffman, Middleport.
The Rev , , c. J. Lemley
officiated at the double ring
ceremony at 6:30 p.m.
following a program of
nuptial music by Mrs.
Chester Erwin, organist Her
selections included ''Wedding
Bells/' uo, Perfect Love n
uWith These Hands," "O~e
Hand, One Heart" and "The
Lord's Prayer."
The altar was decorated
with a 1:&gt;-branch candelabra
flanked by two wedding white
\Pillar vases filled with white
gladioli and trimmed with
satin bows which were also
used on the pews.
Escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride wore a
princess style gown of nylon
organdy fashioned with a
sheer yoke bodice with a
venlse lace slandup collar,
long sheer sleeves and at·
tacl1ed chapel train. Venise
lace flower moilfs were
featured on the bodice, collar,
sleeves and train of the gown.
The bride's elbow veil of
illusion was attached to a
Queen Anne's cap and she
carried a bouquet of white
carnations, pink roses and
baby's breath. ·
The bride's attendants
were Miss Christy Hysell, Rt.
2, Pomeroy, maid of honor ;
Mrs . Dan Abbott, Rustic
Us, Syracuse and Mrs.
oger Abbott, Brick St.,
omeroy, both sisters-in-law

Homemakers'
Circle

curb for the green light ; look both ways before crossing: walk
on sidewalks, not roads.
4. Urge children to stay In their own neighborhoods where
they are known. Tell them to avoid homes that are dark or
dimly lit; people who welcome Halloweeners generally leave
lights on for them.
·
~. Never put candle-lit pumpkins outside where they can be
knocked over accidentally. If neighbors have placed such jack·
a-lanterns outside in the past, suggest they mov• them to a
safer apot indoors. Never use candles in paper mache or
plastic pwnpkins or other such home decorations.
6. Set a time limit for trick or treating. About one hour Is
sufficient. Older children also should be told when to be home.
Let them know special refreshments await them when they get
home.
f
7. Emphasize to the children that they are not to eat an~ o
the goodies they collect untll they get home. Exanune
carefully everything they receive; discard anytlung un·
packaged or with wrappings which seem to have been undone
or are torn. Wash and cut fruit into small oieces. Unwrao
packaged candies to check each piece.
Solution for TemporarUy flameprooflllg Materials
Mix three ounces of boric acid; seven ounces of borax; and
two quarts of water. Saturate fabric or material and allow to
drip dry. The material will resist fire until washed or wet by
rain.
HAPPY HALLOWEEN HAUNTING!

It's a slopwatch with

back. - " " ' ht'a rocking hla
car11 away, rHdlng, TV·vlewlng Of
catchl~ 40 wlnkl rtellnlng . , .
Father .....,., htld It 10 10ftlln "hla"

AIID lOCKEtS
10 QtODS(

Silver Bridge Plaza

Middleport church is
scene .of September rite

Ohio

For the "'' of l'lla llfi - give him
ttlla handaomt, reathil rooktr·
re&lt;llnor wttll deep, bUnon-luniCI

liMY 01H£R REWIIEIS

endorsed the levy.
.
.
Mrs. Delores Will 'gave
devotions to open the
meeting, and Mrs . Susie
Pullins led in the pledge to the
flag. Room visitation will be
~eld next month.

BEAUTY
SALON

OP~_N_

A chair he'll love
to come home to I

NOWRIR
aiiSIIIAS

speaking at the meeting was
· a-representative of the 648
Board asking renewal of the
two-tenths mill levy for the
Meigs, Galli&amp; and Jackson
mental ·health and relar·
dation program. The PI'A

- The SUilday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 26,197~

ON BASSEn AND
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American Education Week
announced at Salisbury PTA

Social ··,

f

Calendar
SUNDAY
REVIVAL AT Syracuse
United Methodist Church,
Friday through Suuday , 7:30
each evening with pastor
Richard E. Jarvis speaking ;
public invited.
OLD FASHIONED HYMN
SING at Freedom Gospel
Mission, Bald Knobs, 1:30
p.m. Public is invited to bring
songs and participate.
MONDAY
EASTERN PTSA, 7:30p.m.
al the school. Program' will
be a film, "People Taking
Action."
•
RUTLAND GARDEN
CLUB, 7:30p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Robert Canaday, Sale
of bulbs, planls and baked
goods to be held .
MEIGS CHAPTER 17 Ohio
Association of Public School ·
Employes, 7 pm . at Meigs ·
Junior High cafeteria. Field
representative to be present.
Officers will be installed.
TUESDAY
OPEN SHOWER for Mr.
and Mrs. Rick Blake and son
at Chester Fire House, 7:30
p.m. The family lost all their
h011.1ehold goods and personal
POMEROY - In a double
belongings in a fire that ring ceremony at the
sleeves and empire waists. de.~troyed their trailer home Pomeroy United Methodist
Their hats were made of the' -on Oct. 12. For additional Church, vicki Lynn Vaughan
same material with light blue information, call 985-3525.
and
Michael Charl es
veiling, and they carried blue
MEIGS AREA Holiness Williams exchanged wedding
and white carnations.
ASI!OC!ation at Danville vows.
Tony Milhoan served as Wesleyan Church, 7:30p.m.
The bride is the daughter of
best man for the groom, and Clyde Henderson speaker. Frank A. Vaughan and Mrs.
ushers were Rodney Baker Special singing . Everyone Reva L. Vaughan, Pomeroy,
and Bruce Myers, brothers of welcome.
and the bridegroom is the son
the bride. The male at·
JUNIOR AMERICAN of Mr _ and Mrs. Charles E.
tendants wore tuxedos with Legion Auxiliary, Feney- Williams, Rt. 1, Shade.
light blue jackets and dark Bennett Post 128,6:30 p.m. at
The wedding was an event
pants.
the home of Becky Roush. A of Aug. 3 at 2:30 p.m. at the
For her daughter's wed· Pizza party to follow.
Pomeroy United Methodist
ding, Mrs. Myers wore a mint
COMBINED JUNIOR AND Church. The Rev. John Elsgreen print dress of polyester SENIOR meeting of Pomeroy wick officiated. Organ music
and Mrs. Westjohn was in a American Legion Auxiliary, by Mrs: Harvey Van Vranken
beige dress of polyester. Both Drew Webster Unit 39, 7:30 included "My Heart Ever
had white carnation cor· pm. Program on scholarship Faithful," "A Time for Us,"
sages.
and education. New film on "We've Only Just Begun "
A reception honoring the drug abuse by Carl Hysell. and "Wedding Bells."
couple was held immediately Speaker will be Mrs. Maxine
Decorations fe atured a
following the wedding at the Plwnmer. Senior and junior heart-shaped candelabra
home of the bride's parents. members to ~ring a guest. with single candle slicks tied
Mrs. Barbara Sargent, aunt Public invited to view film . with floral arrangements at
of the bride, and Mrs. Erma
either side.
Cleland of Chester, presided
P AS T M AT R 0 NS ,
Given in marriage by her
at the refreshment table.
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order father, the bride was attired
Out~f-town guests at the of the Eastern Star will en· in a gown of bridal satin
wedding were Diana and tertaln Past Matrons of fashioned with an empire
Debbie Cleland, Oklahoma; Evangeline Chapter, Mid· waistline gathered skirt and
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pugh, dieport , at the Pomeroy full sheer sleeves with bands
. ton, Md .; Mrs . ..,,__
Kensmg
......., Masonic Temple, 7:30 p.m. of lace. The gown featured a
Hawk, Cheryl Smith, Pam
WEDNESDAY
sheer overlay with lace ac·
Smith and. Nannette Smith,
POMEROY WCTU, 2 p.m. cent trim on the ·skirt.
Shelby; Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd at 'the Pomeroy United
She wore a lace cap from
Koenigandl\larie,Nancy and Methodist Church.
which fell a chapel length
Jane Heydlnger, Mansfield;
WILDWOOD Garden Club, train of illusion edged in lace
Mr. and Mrs. Henry West. 7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs. and a blusher. The bride
john, Linda, Leonard and Mary Nease. Members are to carried a bouquet of pink,
Chris, Talona, Dl.; Pauline have a plant exchange.
yellow and green daisies with
Westjohn of Rantaul, Ill. and
stephanotis and baby's
Mrs. Joyce Baker, Texas.
breath. For "something old,"
ported its members to
Huston's Rest Home in
Hamden, the Wellston Rest
Home in Wellston, the Good
Shepherd Manor in Wakefield
and the Veterans Ad·
By RENE BROYLES
ministration Hospital in MIDDLEPORT - The an·
PIKETON - Ten members Chillicothe,
nual Halloween carnival at
of the RSVP visited with the
Several members of the the Bradbury School will be
residents of the Casey RSVP made and presented held Tuesqay from 6:30 to
Nursing Home in Piketon lap robes to the residents of 8:30p.m. I
earlier this week.
the home in Piketon. Making
Featured will be a country
Gallla Countians residing the trip were Clara Cardwell, store and a sweet shop with a
there are Elsie Scott, c.irJ Bill Menshouse, Marie Van variety of games. Children
Westfall and the widow of Gilder, Waiter Bartram, should be in their rooms at
Emmett Gothard, the former Maude Sellards, Cora Rupe, 6:15 p.m. in preparation for
Katie Warren.
Malinda Bradbury, Mary judging of the costumes.
Bonnie Brannan, a gifted Sisson, Luctlle Mulford and Children below the fifth grade
pianist, ' accompanied the Elias Sisson.
will be judged as a group in
group as they sang many
Monday, Nov; 10, the van the categories of prettiest,
favorite religious hymns. · will transport volunteers to ugliest and the most original.
Bonnie is one of 32 residents the Twin Maples Rest Home
Merchants in the Meigs
under the care of the ad· in McArthur. Anyone having Local School District have
mlnistrator, Erma Jewett, friends or relatives in this donated merchandise for the
LPN. For persons wishing to home are free to call Maye party. The public is invited.
send cards or letters to any of Roush or Rene Broyles if they
the above mentioned, the wish to send a message or a
address is The Casey Nursing gift to any of the residents.
Home, Rt , I, Piketon, Ohio.
There is no charge for
I'm sure they would be transportation to these
pleased to hear from their nursing homes, but a
friends and a&lt;;quaintances. donation for gas is ap. The RSVP van has trans- predated.

POMEROY - American
Education Week Nov, 17·21
was announced by John l.Jsle,
principal, at the Tuesday
night meeting of the
Salisbury PI'A.
Plans ·\Jrere made by the
PI'A to serve coffee on Nov.
18. A report was given by the
ways and means committee
on the fall festival plans. The
Nov. !5 festival will l)egln
when the kitchen opens at 5
p.m. Games wtll start at 6:30
p.m.
It was announced Salisbury
Blue Streaks sweat shlrta are
for sale and the tables for uae
in the auditorium have
arrived. Benches will be built
for use with the tables along
with doors for uae in the boys'
·restroom. Membership in the
PI'A now stands at 70, It was
reported.
Mrs. Jean Cooper of the Rio
Grande Community College
was guest speaker. She
talked about the community
college program and noted
that this Is the . centennial
year for Rio Grande. Also

I.

l

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Williams

Mr. and Mrs. .(inthonv Westjobn

I

Westjohn-Myers
united in marriage
POMEROY - A July 26
open church wedding at the
Second Heart Catholic
Cl1urch, Pomeroy, united In
marriage Miss Unda Sue
Myers, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Bruce D. Myers, LOng
Bottom, to Anthony William
Westjohn, son of Mr. atld
Mrs . Henry Westjohn,
Talona, Dl.
The Rev. Fr. Paul Welton
performed the double ring
ceremony at 2:30 p.m.
following a program of
nuptial music by Mrs. Fred
B. Paetlman, organist. Two
vases of white carnations and
gold mums decorated the
altar and white bows marked
the pews.
Given In •marriage by her
father, the bride was attired
. in a gown of white polyester
crepe with lace bell sleeves, a
matching shoulder cape,
empire walsUine and rounded
neckline. The bride's blusher
and long train of Illusion fell
from a crown headpiece, and
she carried a bouquet of blue
and white carnations.
Mrs. Joyce Baker, sister of
the bride, was matron of
honor, and Miss Unda West·
john, sister of the groom,
served as brideamald. They
wore dresses of light blue
polyester knit with dark blue
and yellow flowers. Their
gowns were fashioned with
square necklines, half bell

RECEIPTS UP
POMEROY - Retail sales
tax receipts in Meigs County
were up a little over eight
percent but sales tax receipts
for auto sales were down 9,53
percent for the · month of
September according to the
report of State Treasurer
Gertrude Donahey.
Retail sales tax receipts for
September, 1975, totaled
$51,269.52 .compared to
receipts of $47,464.58 for
receipts in 1974. Motor
vehicle sales tax receipts for
September, 1975, totaled
$31,229.87 while the total for
September, 1974, was
$34,520.85.

Luncheon
Continued from page 3
awards ceremony took place.
Fourteen volunteers received
awards for -accumulating
froni 100 to 500 hours; they
are Betty Stout, Jeanette
Bausell, Anna Nibert, Eunice
Niehm, Elias Sisson, Esther)_
Gilmore, Maxine Ollver,
Nora Price, Beaulah Mills,
Nora Knotts, Ethel Burdette,
Sadie Runyon, Deanna
Morgan and Eleanore
Markley. Four have a total of
between 500 and 1,000 hours;
they are Florence Untaia,
Evelyn Brandeberry, Opal
Baker and Eloise Mills. Four
who passed the 1,000 hour
mark are Helen Trotter,
Ellabelle McDonald,
Florence Trainer an(! Ella
Candee. Robert J. F'anning,
vice
president
for
professional services at the
ho~pital presented these
awards.
The coinmittee in charge of ·
Thursday's program was
Evelyn Brandeberry,
chairman; Deanna Mocgr
and Eunice Niehm.

,,

August vows read

Halloween
carnival set

RSVP update

she wore her grandmother's
wedding ring, and for
SOmething borrowed~ " she
wore the pearl necklace of
Mrs . .Jean Will.
The bridP 's attendants
were her sisters, Pain and
Pat, bridesmaids, and Kay
Vijakuia, Hemlock Grove,
maid of honor . The attendants wore identic,Uy
designed dresses in yellow,
green and pink dotted swiss
and carried bouquets of
daisies in the colors of their
gowns. The dresses had V·
necklin es , short puffed
sleeves and empired waists.
They wore matching picture
hats.
Craig Ramsey, Pomeroy,
served as best man for the
bridegroom, and the .ushers
were Eric Pearch, Mid·
dleport and Andy Vaughan,'
Pompano Beach, Fla.
. For her daughter's wed·
ding, Mrs. Vaughan was in a
mint gr)!en gown and wore a
corsage of carnations tinted
green. Mrs. Williams was in a
gown of pink and she wore a
pink tinted carnation cor·
sage.
A reception honoring the
c0uple was held in the church
social room. The bride's table
featured a four-tiered cake
decorated with pink roses.
Yellow, green and pink
daisies surrounded the base
of the cake and was also used
on two single candle holders.
Cathy Francis
Reed,
Pomeroy, and Mary Jane
Dee leg, Pomeroy, presided at
the refreshment table.
Mr. and Mrs. Williams
reside at 550 South Third
Ave .• Middleport. The bride
is a 1975 graduate of Meigs
High School and is employed
at Elberfelds in Pomeroy.
Mr. Williams, a 1971 graduate
of Meigs, is employ~ with
the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co.
Out-of-lown guests at the
wedding were Mr. and Mrs.
Wilbur Williams, Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kelly,
Columbus ; Stephen C.
Rannells, South Rannells,
Mrs . Ada Rannells, St.
Petersburg, Fla.; Mr. and
Mrs. Billy Jo Spencer,
Bellevue, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs.
T. D. Marshall, ColumbUs
and Miss Thurma Vaughan;
~ew York.
--. ~ ·0

LICENSE ISSUED
POMEROY - Marriage
license was issued to Ronald
Eugene Grate, 24, Rutland,
and Regina Dawn Harrison,
18, Racine.
PICKUP WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND - Free leaf
pick up will be held in
Rutland Wednesday, Oct. 29.
The leaves must be bagged
and placed at the curb.

From
Christmas
•
morning on,
he'll be
sporting
aSeiko

Reg . $15 to $35

SPECIAL
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The response has been great! We will
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IN THE
SILVER
BRIDGE

~

featuring
Annie Anybody
B\' BETIIE CLARK
E&gt;leDB10D A•ent,

Home Ec011omlco

M

PLAZA

]EWELNOOK
has
The "Nothing" look

necklace in several styles!

--- t~t&lt;:.

r. and Mrs. F Michael Hoffman

Miss Melanie Burt, Pomeroy,
presided at the coffee service
and Miss Bonnie Dillon, .
All&gt;ilny, poured the punch.
For a brief wedding trip to
South Point and Kentucky,
the bride changed into a light
blue floral slack suit.

The couple resides in
Middleport. The new Mrs_
Hoffman is a 1975 graduate of
Meigs High SchooL The
groom, a !974 graduate of
Meigs, is employed at the
Southern Ohio Coal Co.

Past matrons gather
VINTON - The past
matrons of Vinton Chapter
OES met recently at the
home of Elizabeth Cloud with
11 members· present.
The president called the
meeting to order with the
hostess in charge of the
program. Scripture was the
23rd Psalm read by Opal
Payne. Prayer was by Vennie
Casto.
Readings were, " My
Task", Vema Gleason and
"The House Beside the
Road," Ruth Evans.
The Lord's Prayer was
repeated in unison. The
secretary's and treasurer's
reporls were given by Mary
Walker. Both were approved.
Dues were paid and a thank·
you card was read from Lucy
Hartsook for the cards and
flower,she received while in
the hospital.
Election of officers was
held. They are president,

Mary
Walker ;
vicepresident, Verna Gleason;
secretary
treasurer,
Elizabeth Cloud. Atalent sale
was held.
Refreshments
were served to Mary Walker,
Verna Gleason, Lavina
Swisher, Grace Welker,
Hazel Norman, Opal Payne,
Vickie Powell, Vennle Casto,
Ruth Evans, Eleanor White
and the hostess. The group
thanked the hostess for the
evening .
THANKS GIVEN
GALLIPOLIS - Kena and
Evan Plymale Sr. recently
expressed thanks to their
friends and relatives for the
anniversary cards, telephone
calls, con'gratulations in
person and gifts they
received on their 50th wed·
ding anniversary. Mr. and
Mrs. Plymale said, "May
· bless each one of you".

"SPOOKY SAFETY"
GALUPOUS-Since Halloween falls on Friday this year,
the kids will probably be more excited than usual due to the
fact that they don't have to go to school the next day. And even
though Halloween is for kids and fun, it Is the responsibility of
adults to make sure It will be SAFE fun!
H you receive the "Homemakers Newsletter," you
already have the following llBt of salety precautions. However,
since I know you can't all be getting the letter, I feel these
safety tips are worth repeating.
"'nps To Make Costumes Safer as WellasSpooky"In 1942, the American warships in a fierce naval
1. Witch, or whatever, be sure the costume is flame aircraft carrier " Hornet" engagement off the Solomon
resistant, or at least, name retardant. H purchased, check to was sunk by Japanese Islands in the Pacific Theater
t5ee if the garment or box is ao labeled.
of World War II.
2. HomHeWn costumes can be temporarily fiameproofed
at home by_soakin~ in a special solution and leiting them drip
dry. Wigs and beards should also be treated this way. Though
almost all clothing fabrics will burn to some extent; avoid
gauzy or synthetic materials that may flame rapidly.
3. Hemlines should be several inches off the ground.
(]illdren can trip in long garments. Avoid costumes with
flowing sleeves, voluminous skirts, long acarves or sashes.
Anything that can catch on bushes, or brush near flames is
potentially !!l!ngerous.
.
4, Light, brighUy colored costwnes, eaally seen at dusk or
dark, are best. If costume ill dark, trim with fluorescent or
reflective tape that is highly vlaible to drivers.
5. &lt;lllldren should-carry a white shopping bag to collect
their "treats". This adds to their vlaiblllty and leaves their
arms free. Make sure that ''pirates" leave swords or sharp
pointed objects •t home.
,
6. Masks or hoods can allp and oblcure a child's vision. Be
sure maslt Is secure and that the holes correspond to the child's
eyes. Asafer alternative, one which children find fun, Is to uae
cosmetics. Alloll' older children to make up their own faces to
suit their costumes. For easier removal of rouge, lipstick, eye
shadows, have them first apply a thin layer of cold cream.
7. Never permit children to carry pumpkins with lighted
candles. Give them flashlights and check to see that batteries
are fresh.
UlltE IRME DtRII~.:-~
''l'lpl For Safer 'Trick or Treating"'
by K~rntron
I. Aparent lhould always accompany young children on
their ro1mda. If a group Is going out together, a responsible
adult should follow to let people know that the youngsters are
chaperoned.
.
Jewelers
. 2. The "a-anks", people who dislike children, are usually
well known to the community. Children should be told to stay
away from these particular homes.
3, Review pedestrlal safety rules before they leave home.
Dusk, the time wllen most children are out, Is particularly
hazardous. Remind them : crosa only at corners; walt on the

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PERMANENT
WAVES

of the bride, matrons of
honor ; and Tami Hoffman
and Beverly Hoffman,
Middleport, sisters qf the
groom, bridesmaids.
The attendants were at·
tired in flowered gowns of
nylon over taffeta styled·with
standup collars and 'long
sheer sleeves in the pastel
colors of blue, orchid, yellow,
pink and orange. They
carried white parasol b.~skels ·
of daisies dyed to match their
gowns and wore white picture
hats with ribbons in the colors
of their gowns.
Gerry White of Middleport
was best man for the groom,
and the ushers were Dan
Abbott, Syracuse and' Roger
Abbott, Pomeroy, brothers of
the bride, and Pat Soulsby,
Pomeroy, and Robert Rams·
burg, Middleport.
For her daughter's wed·
ding, Mrs. Abbott wore a
polyester blue gown with lace
sleeves. Mrs. Hoffman was in
a yellow polyester gown with
short bell sleeves and both
mothers wore white car·
nation corsages tipped in
colors to match t)leir gowns.
A recepllon ·was held in the
social room of the church .
The bride's table featured a
four-tiered wedding cake
decorated with silver bells
and topped with wedding
bells and doves. The rainbow
colors of the wedding were
featured
In
flowers
surrounding the cake. Single
candleholders with white
tapers completed the table
decor.
Miss Judy Radford ,
Pomeroy, registered the
guests. Mrs. Jack Scites,
Pomeroy, served the cake,

tachymeter. An elapsed i
indicator. An instant-sol day/
date calendar. Self-winding,
30 minute recorder, marresliltanl Hardlex
229ft. Nioo. '..\fi,iJo'iJ;t:l
l•tall.nleilssteel, deep blue dial ,
I bracelet $135.00.

chllr, buoyent foam turroundl him
wtlh IIP'Of·luxury comfort. Hand·

~'

Ph. 446-3353

MIDDLEPORT _ The
Middleport Church of Christ
was \he scene Of the Sept. 5
wedding of Miss Vicki Lynn
Abbott, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Horace Abbott, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy and Fred Michael
Hoffman, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Hoffman, Middleport.
The Rev , , c. J. Lemley
officiated at the double ring
ceremony at 6:30 p.m.
following a program of
nuptial music by Mrs.
Chester Erwin, organist Her
selections included ''Wedding
Bells/' uo, Perfect Love n
uWith These Hands," "O~e
Hand, One Heart" and "The
Lord's Prayer."
The altar was decorated
with a 1:&gt;-branch candelabra
flanked by two wedding white
\Pillar vases filled with white
gladioli and trimmed with
satin bows which were also
used on the pews.
Escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride wore a
princess style gown of nylon
organdy fashioned with a
sheer yoke bodice with a
venlse lace slandup collar,
long sheer sleeves and at·
tacl1ed chapel train. Venise
lace flower moilfs were
featured on the bodice, collar,
sleeves and train of the gown.
The bride's elbow veil of
illusion was attached to a
Queen Anne's cap and she
carried a bouquet of white
carnations, pink roses and
baby's breath. ·
The bride's attendants
were Miss Christy Hysell, Rt.
2, Pomeroy, maid of honor ;
Mrs . Dan Abbott, Rustic
Us, Syracuse and Mrs.
oger Abbott, Brick St.,
omeroy, both sisters-in-law

Homemakers'
Circle

curb for the green light ; look both ways before crossing: walk
on sidewalks, not roads.
4. Urge children to stay In their own neighborhoods where
they are known. Tell them to avoid homes that are dark or
dimly lit; people who welcome Halloweeners generally leave
lights on for them.
·
~. Never put candle-lit pumpkins outside where they can be
knocked over accidentally. If neighbors have placed such jack·
a-lanterns outside in the past, suggest they mov• them to a
safer apot indoors. Never use candles in paper mache or
plastic pwnpkins or other such home decorations.
6. Set a time limit for trick or treating. About one hour Is
sufficient. Older children also should be told when to be home.
Let them know special refreshments await them when they get
home.
f
7. Emphasize to the children that they are not to eat an~ o
the goodies they collect untll they get home. Exanune
carefully everything they receive; discard anytlung un·
packaged or with wrappings which seem to have been undone
or are torn. Wash and cut fruit into small oieces. Unwrao
packaged candies to check each piece.
Solution for TemporarUy flameprooflllg Materials
Mix three ounces of boric acid; seven ounces of borax; and
two quarts of water. Saturate fabric or material and allow to
drip dry. The material will resist fire until washed or wet by
rain.
HAPPY HALLOWEEN HAUNTING!

It's a slopwatch with

back. - " " ' ht'a rocking hla
car11 away, rHdlng, TV·vlewlng Of
catchl~ 40 wlnkl rtellnlng . , .
Father .....,., htld It 10 10ftlln "hla"

AIID lOCKEtS
10 QtODS(

Silver Bridge Plaza

Middleport church is
scene .of September rite

Ohio

For the "'' of l'lla llfi - give him
ttlla handaomt, reathil rooktr·
re&lt;llnor wttll deep, bUnon-luniCI

liMY 01H£R REWIIEIS

endorsed the levy.
.
.
Mrs. Delores Will 'gave
devotions to open the
meeting, and Mrs . Susie
Pullins led in the pledge to the
flag. Room visitation will be
~eld next month.

BEAUTY
SALON

OP~_N_

A chair he'll love
to come home to I

NOWRIR
aiiSIIIAS

speaking at the meeting was
· a-representative of the 648
Board asking renewal of the
two-tenths mill levy for the
Meigs, Galli&amp; and Jackson
mental ·health and relar·
dation program. The PI'A

- The SUilday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 26,197~

ON BASSEn AND
KINCADE OPEN STOCK

*9 PIECE
DINETTE SET
~~~9s NOW '159.95

�MADE WITH U.S. GOVT•.INSPEaED
BEEF
.

We ,...,.. the rl1ht
to limit fiiMIRIItl.. on
ell I t - In thlo 0&lt;1.
Prlcel ........ Sun...,. Oct. 26 thru

'

197S. None 10kl to

CLOSED SUNDAY

:l52 THIRD AVENUE - GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
2500 JACKSON AVENUE - PT. PLEASANT, W.VA.

ALL OUR CHICKENS ARE U.S.D.A. INSPEaED

F ESH

-·....

SaturHy, Now, 1,

OPEN DAILY 9 TIL 9 -

We re..rve·, the right to limit
quantities on-all Item• In this
ad. Prlc.. eHectlve Sunday,
Oct. 26 thru Saturday, Nov. 1,
1975. ~on• eolcl to dHIIrt.

FAMILY PAK

..

ICEBERG
LEnUCE

SUPER MARKETS

INCLUDES:
2-BREAST QUARTERS
. WITH BACK
2-LEG QUARTE!tS
WITH BACK
2-PKGS. GIBLm
&amp; 2-NECKS

Family Pale - S-Ibs. Or More

SOliD CRISP HEADS

ARMOUR 1::r STAR
U!.S. GOVT. INSPECTED

lb.

ea.

CALIFORNIA
RED EMPEROR

GRAPES

c

WAGNER'S

·ORANGE DRINK

All Choice Pieces

32 OZ. BOTTLE

lfl9(
Breast Quarters
FRESH

lb.,

NO NECKS,
BACKS
OR GIBLm

3/$100

lb.

lb.
·L;'g Quarters •.69c

JUMBO
BOLOGNA ·
ANY SIZE PIECE

FRESH

Roasti
CHIC
3-lbs.
or More .

lb.

GALLIPOLIS STORE ONLY

'lb.

(
(
~- 59 CORN:::~. 5 69

MciNTOSH "CRAlY BRAND"

APPLES

FRESH

Goltltn

PORK STEAKS
CLITY CHICKEN

PESTA

SAUERKRA
.

FOR

U.llag

'

G

DETERGENT ·
.25' OFF LABEL

WELCH'S
FROZEN

1-lb. 13-oz. Can

.PREMIUM
SALTINES

CHUNK LIGHT

TUNA

JUI~CE

.

FABRIC
SOFTENER
25'

REG. &amp; UNSALTED

6.5-oz. Can

6-oz. Can

1-lb. 1-oz. Cans

DOWNY .

ARGO

GRAPE

PEA·S

PEACHES

... .~~--

Y2-Gal. Bottle

SWEET

SLICED

ERBREAD

STATE FARE
SLICED .

JOAN OF ARC

BARONET

BmY CROCKER
ERA LIQUID

$1 !!
lb. $1 ~ .

lb.

FOR

WHITE
BREAD
. 1-lb. 4-oz. Loam

'

MARGARINE
1-lb. Qtrs. Pkg.

FOR

THOROFARE

THANK YOU

ICE
CREAM

APPLE
IE FILLING

OFF LABEL

. 1-lb. Pkg.

$

BLUE BONNET

ALL FLAVORS

1-lb. 5-oz. Can

V2·Gal. Bottle

CLIP I REDEEM

CLIP I REDEEM

AT ANY PINNYFARE WITH THIS COUPON

....
:. .

HUNT'S
WHOLE PUUD ·

.: TOMATOES
.

· .·

14.5-ol. c..

IOIIN IIOOD

!1

FLOUR
s-•· Pkg.

Res~ulor Retell Without Coupon-4/11.56

R. .ular Retail Without Coupon-95'
Limit Ona I'll g. Per Coupon
· Valid Tlwu Sot., Nov. 1, 1915
·
Par C111tomor

Limit Pour Cent Per Coupon
Valid Thru !lot., Nov • .1, 1975
Limit One Cou11011 liar Cu•t-

SHOP AND COMPARE OUR EYERYDA Y PRICES!!!
\

••

"

. 1-Qt. 16-oz. Bot.
Regular Retail Without Coupon- U .71
Limit One lot. Par Coupon
Valid Thru Sot., Nov. 1, 1975
Limit One
Par Customer

�MADE WITH U.S. GOVT•.INSPEaED
BEEF
.

We ,...,.. the rl1ht
to limit fiiMIRIItl.. on
ell I t - In thlo 0&lt;1.
Prlcel ........ Sun...,. Oct. 26 thru

'

197S. None 10kl to

CLOSED SUNDAY

:l52 THIRD AVENUE - GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
2500 JACKSON AVENUE - PT. PLEASANT, W.VA.

ALL OUR CHICKENS ARE U.S.D.A. INSPEaED

F ESH

-·....

SaturHy, Now, 1,

OPEN DAILY 9 TIL 9 -

We re..rve·, the right to limit
quantities on-all Item• In this
ad. Prlc.. eHectlve Sunday,
Oct. 26 thru Saturday, Nov. 1,
1975. ~on• eolcl to dHIIrt.

FAMILY PAK

..

ICEBERG
LEnUCE

SUPER MARKETS

INCLUDES:
2-BREAST QUARTERS
. WITH BACK
2-LEG QUARTE!tS
WITH BACK
2-PKGS. GIBLm
&amp; 2-NECKS

Family Pale - S-Ibs. Or More

SOliD CRISP HEADS

ARMOUR 1::r STAR
U!.S. GOVT. INSPECTED

lb.

ea.

CALIFORNIA
RED EMPEROR

GRAPES

c

WAGNER'S

·ORANGE DRINK

All Choice Pieces

32 OZ. BOTTLE

lfl9(
Breast Quarters
FRESH

lb.,

NO NECKS,
BACKS
OR GIBLm

3/$100

lb.

lb.
·L;'g Quarters •.69c

JUMBO
BOLOGNA ·
ANY SIZE PIECE

FRESH

Roasti
CHIC
3-lbs.
or More .

lb.

GALLIPOLIS STORE ONLY

'lb.

(
(
~- 59 CORN:::~. 5 69

MciNTOSH "CRAlY BRAND"

APPLES

FRESH

Goltltn

PORK STEAKS
CLITY CHICKEN

PESTA

SAUERKRA
.

FOR

U.llag

'

G

DETERGENT ·
.25' OFF LABEL

WELCH'S
FROZEN

1-lb. 13-oz. Can

.PREMIUM
SALTINES

CHUNK LIGHT

TUNA

JUI~CE

.

FABRIC
SOFTENER
25'

REG. &amp; UNSALTED

6.5-oz. Can

6-oz. Can

1-lb. 1-oz. Cans

DOWNY .

ARGO

GRAPE

PEA·S

PEACHES

... .~~--

Y2-Gal. Bottle

SWEET

SLICED

ERBREAD

STATE FARE
SLICED .

JOAN OF ARC

BARONET

BmY CROCKER
ERA LIQUID

$1 !!
lb. $1 ~ .

lb.

FOR

WHITE
BREAD
. 1-lb. 4-oz. Loam

'

MARGARINE
1-lb. Qtrs. Pkg.

FOR

THOROFARE

THANK YOU

ICE
CREAM

APPLE
IE FILLING

OFF LABEL

. 1-lb. Pkg.

$

BLUE BONNET

ALL FLAVORS

1-lb. 5-oz. Can

V2·Gal. Bottle

CLIP I REDEEM

CLIP I REDEEM

AT ANY PINNYFARE WITH THIS COUPON

....
:. .

HUNT'S
WHOLE PUUD ·

.: TOMATOES
.

· .·

14.5-ol. c..

IOIIN IIOOD

!1

FLOUR
s-•· Pkg.

Res~ulor Retell Without Coupon-4/11.56

R. .ular Retail Without Coupon-95'
Limit Ona I'll g. Per Coupon
· Valid Tlwu Sot., Nov. 1, 1915
·
Par C111tomor

Limit Pour Cent Per Coupon
Valid Thru !lot., Nov • .1, 1975
Limit One Cou11011 liar Cu•t-

SHOP AND COMPARE OUR EYERYDA Y PRICES!!!
\

••

"

. 1-Qt. 16-oz. Bot.
Regular Retail Without Coupon- U .71
Limit One lot. Par Coupon
Valid Thru Sot., Nov. 1, 1975
Limit One
Par Customer

�.

.·.·
·.·

4-H elects

1 • SU!hl:t\

IT WAS SO NICE to hear that Frieda Faehnle is back
home.'
.
Plagued with health problems, Frieds was first at Holzer
and then at the Arcadia Nursing Home lor convalescent care.
Tuesday she came home.

offering two classes . in

Production Credit Building·

LaUjJt'es A ;d
t-•

It's almost Thanksgiving and a visit to the Atklns.:aaWday
!ann near Harrisonvtlle leaves no doubt about that. They have
thousands - 5,000, in fact - plwnp turkeys ready for the
November market. Now that's a lot of turkey I

we lc ames
By RENE BROYLES
CHURCH REPORTER
President . Myrtle Cun·
ningham presided at the
recent meeting of the Ladies
Aid of the Addison Freewill
Baptist Church with Emma
Johnson giving the opening
prayer.
Two new members, Velva
Casey and Lou Grubb, were
welcomed into the auxiliary.
Twenty-four gel-well cards
were sent and 43 visits 'were
made.

Nineteen

ANY SIZE
BUY NOW

VINTON - The Vinton
Friendship Ga'rden Club met
at Vinton Town Hall recently
with Mary Ann McCarley,
hostess.
The president Mary Ann
McCarley, welcomed 19
members and two guesis.
Devotions Including prayer
were given by Lorraine
Bryant, who read "He is
Coming Over the Hill ."
Scripture was Psalm 125:1.
Roll call was "What I would
like to learn this year in
garden club."
Minutes of the previous
mee ting were read by
secretary Beatrice Bush .
Treasurer's report was by
Pearl Burger. Both were
approved. ,
CommWlicalions were read
about the county meeting
held Thursday at Cheshire
Baptist Church and the
regional mee'ing Nov. I at
Middleport Elementary
School.
The program was given by
Verna Chamberlain on
clea ning and. conditioning
weathered wood. She said her
knowledge on the subject was
limited, but she was happy to
tell the club what she knew.
The first thing is [;nd wood.
She said "Get a corner
some where, where our
husbands can't see and bring
home anything thlit looks
unusual. A good place to find
wood is along river banks,
in woods and even along road

sides.''
The first thing, is to wash
the wood. If not dirty, let it
dry and brush il with a steel

brush. Stand the wood at all
angles to see how it can be
used. Cut off all unneeded
points so it will stand.
&amp;&gt;ak it in bleach water to
lighten the color .. &amp;laking it
in bleach water depends on
how the wood ts. To make the
wood another color, black or
brown shoe polish can be
used. Some people put salt
water on it and place it in the
sun. This gives it a gray
color. There is also the antiquing method. &amp;&gt; antique
the wood, paint the wood and
lelet dry, then put on gold,
silver or whatever color is
desired, and take a cloth and
rub most of it off.
The natUTal colors of the
wood depend on whet~er it is
hard or soft, and the
territory. In this area, it is
gray or beige, in the west
where there is red clay and
sandstorms it is mostly red
looking and near the ocean, it
mostly gray. The wood can
also be sand blasted. Judges
have rules to go by, but
Mother Nature is the judge in
driftwood .
The November meeting
will be at the Vinton Town
Hall with Esta Downard and
co-hostess Eleanor White.
New members welcomed
were Marie Howard, Mae
Blair, Lorraine Bryant and
Pat Adkins. Refreshments
were served.
In 1920, the lord mayor of
Cork - Terence McSwiney died after fasli~ ~5 days in a
British prison cell , demr n.
ding ind ' P&lt;'rt dence for
Ireland .
I

i\lra....;on Rziaas
1 Ylt f"
66 •

,,

-

"'

FISH &amp; CHIP STYLE
Z4 OZ. BOX

LB.

.

'-:

·~

·-·.

suggests-

.......

SWEATERS .

~,

SEEN AND HEARD
GALLIPOLIS - Kenneth
Watts,· Edwards Air Force .
Base! Calif.1 retired, came
here Aug. 30 to be with his
mother , Gladys Watts ,
Gallipolis, who had an accident. He returned to ·
California Oct. 17.

1

uu

•

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

by Collage
for the Girl on the Go I

---- r;tc.

Chester. Ohio

Gallipolis, Ohio

BEllY CROCKER

FLUFFO

SKIPPY

SHORTENING
3lB. $189

M&amp;R
SHOPPING CENTER

ERA
LIQUID

DOG
FOOD

$217

STOR~ HOURS

BORDEN'S

OPEN 9 AM TIL 8 PM WEEKDAYS ·
9AM TIL 9 PM SATURDAY

~ CHEESE

CLOSED SUNDAYS

1
LIFEGUARD
WHITE ALUMINUM

EXTRA SPECIAL

WHITE

PLASTIC DRAIN PIPE

Q1.

KISSES

$

REG.

3.99

5

••

••

25 LB. BAG

89~--L~~:::::::::=-=-..;iiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiii
•
•
•

'
· PEAK

PINTO BEANS

VALVOLINE

10 W40 ALL CUMATE

. ~

GUJTER

NOW ONLY

4" X 10 FT.

!

CAKE MIXES

CHUNK

KING SIZE

RED

ROMAN

DELICIOUS

APPLES

BEAUTY

Valvoline

PERMANENT

BUSHEL

BAG

ANTI-FREEZE

..
..'

1fz BU.

APPLE

MOTOR OIL

. ..
~ ·\

o\\~1

69

.

BAG

..

\o•

I

,,.,,,,

BOX

·-·

LIMIT
6QTS.

. surprised
TUPPERS PLAINS Marion Riggs was surprised
last Sunday when a number
of relatives and friends
gathered at his home in
Logan to celebrate his birthday.
.
Dinner was served from a
table decorated with a large
birthday cake with the in·
scription, "Happy Birthday,
Daddy ."
Gifts
were
presenterl to him.
Present were Mr. and Mrs.
Lindsey Lyons Ill and
daughters. Mr. · and Mrs.
Lawrence Hasbargen and
children. Parkersburg ; Mr.
and Mrs. David Riggs and
daughter. Belpre; llir. and
Mrs. Gene Riggs and sons,
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Justis and
son, Mrs. Dorothy' Dodderer
and Mrs. Lois Riggs Leonard,
all of Reedsville, Rt . I; Ray
Riggs,' Pomeroy, Rt. 3, Mr.
:tlld Mrs. Lindsey Lyons, Jr.
and sun, Mrs. Ulah Swan, Mr.
and Mrs. Osbar Babcock,
Mrs. Josephine Babcock ,
Tuppers Plains ; Mr. and
Mrs. Marion Rigg s and
daughters and Fannie Devol
~md daughter , ull · f Lt1gap.

'

&lt;1r1

Ill!

. d
exll
tne
/a
wood 'r

Weathered
-to Vinton Garden Club

'"'

.

~"

persons'

responded to roll call . The
reports of secretary Mary
Barcus and treasurer Effie
Marlin were accepted.
The group received $95
from its recent bake sale at
lhe Silver Bridge Shopping
Plaza.
Freda Cottrill, Gloria
Tripplet , Angie Abshire and
Belly McCoy each won a door
prize.
Debbie Groves, Jewell
Russell, Shirley Dovenbarger, Goldie Warren, Lou
Grubb and Myrtle Cunningham will furnish, the door
prizes at the next meeting.
At the close of the busmess
· meeting, the group adjourned
lo the basement where
refreshments were served to
lhe guests of the Ladies Aid.
AI the November meeting,
refreshments will be served
by Gloria Tripplet, Mickey
Smith, Mary Barcus and
Rene Broyles.

$

HADDOCK

•

NEW

members

BAllER &amp; BAKE.

II I I

,.,;,~

OOUPLE BETROTI!ED - Mr. and Mrs. Alfred
Scarberry, Rio Grande, announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their daughter, Peggy, to
Douglas Fields, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Fields, Dayton.
· Miss Scarberry is a graduate of Gallia Academy High
School. She is presently attending Ohio State University
where she is majoring in nursing. Her fiance is a graduate
of Belmont High School in Dayton and is employed as an
assistant manager of Bob Evans Sausage Shop. Plans are
being completed for a December Wedding.

DEBI AND BOB BUCK have purchased tile Kiddie
Shoppe in Middleport from June Kloes and will be taking over
the business in a lew weeks now. June, we understand, is back
in college preparing lor a ~ In 11urslng.

TilE OC'l'OBER EXHIBIT at Rlverby features an·
tiques most of Which are native to the Ohio Valley region.
A ya~ winder, left, was loaned to the exhibit by Dr. and .
Mrs. James Kemp. Another interesting item is the plank
chair from tbe Proctorville area and loaned by Atttc
Antiques. This chair is for sale. The gallery Is open 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays.l-5 p.m. Saturday and
Sunday. (Photo by Lanna Waugh) .

TURKEYS

on Upper' Route 7. Anyone
interested in learning to sew
should bring a tape measure,
paper and pencil to the
P.C.A. building. There will be
measuring for pattern sizes
as ·well as instruction on
selecting patterns and
fabrics. The classes will be
about two hours long and run
for six to eight weeks.
The otl:t.er class is an
"Advanced Beginners" and
is planned for those who have
sewed some, but stfU feel they
need help. This clas.s will be
held at the Harrisburg

Miss Peggy Scarberry

FRANCES REIBEL, the darling of Trinity Church Sunday
llchool teachers, celebrated her 88th birthday this week and
while nothing was planned, there was an Informal party with
Mildred Morris and Carrie NeuWing taking ice cream and a
decorated cake. Mrs. Reibel received numerous cards, gifts
and flowers.
Friends and neighbors coming in for the party were Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Curtis, Mrs. Eddie Smith, Miss Nelle Bing,
Mrs. Neva Seyfried, Robert Morris and Ben Neutzling. The
Rev. and Mrs. W. H. Perrin alao stopped by to extend birthday
·wishes.

....

.

A ' 'Begi nn e rs Sewing"
dHss v. ,;!! starl Tuesday, Nov .
· 4 al 9 tt m . in the Jackson

~. .

...

OVEN READY

Clnlhing Construction .

NafHING QUITE delights grandparents more than the
accomplishments of their grandchildren.
Harvey and Ruth Erlewlne have been in Newark where
they attended the presentation banquet of the Joan Wine
School of Dancing. The Erlewines' granddaughters, Beth, 7
and Kandi, 10, both received large ti'ophles In recognition of
their perfect attendance at practices and parades during tbe
past year. They are the daughters of David and Joetta Eskew.

, .~

,·,,.·

•

lcnsion Service is cur·renUy

..

...
,.,

ARMOUR STAR

l:AI.I.JI'UI.l~ ·· The Callia
Co unt y Cooperative Ex-

POMEROY - At the Meigs County Christmas flower
show a memorial tribute will be made to Mrs. Ruth Bller
whose talents have long been recognized by garden club
members.
For many years Ruth served as ctialrwoman for the flo~er
shows held at the Meigs County Fair and she was a long~1me
member of the Chester Garden Club. Her name will occupy a.
prominent place on the flower show program to be handed out
at the two-day holiday show, Dec. Gand 7. Anice gesture-

"......
·:·.
.,,..

. .......·.

'

EXTRA LARGE
EXTRA HEAVY

TABLE LAMPS
LARGE

ASH TRAYS

42" TAU

'

REG. $1.19

PUFFS
F~CIAL

TISSUES

200CT.

JENO
PIZZAS
'
PEPPERONI OR SAUSAGE

REG. '39.95

28 OZ. BOX

ONLY

REG. 11.49
,.

..

o~'-~

�.

.·.·
·.·

4-H elects

1 • SU!hl:t\

IT WAS SO NICE to hear that Frieda Faehnle is back
home.'
.
Plagued with health problems, Frieds was first at Holzer
and then at the Arcadia Nursing Home lor convalescent care.
Tuesday she came home.

offering two classes . in

Production Credit Building·

LaUjJt'es A ;d
t-•

It's almost Thanksgiving and a visit to the Atklns.:aaWday
!ann near Harrisonvtlle leaves no doubt about that. They have
thousands - 5,000, in fact - plwnp turkeys ready for the
November market. Now that's a lot of turkey I

we lc ames
By RENE BROYLES
CHURCH REPORTER
President . Myrtle Cun·
ningham presided at the
recent meeting of the Ladies
Aid of the Addison Freewill
Baptist Church with Emma
Johnson giving the opening
prayer.
Two new members, Velva
Casey and Lou Grubb, were
welcomed into the auxiliary.
Twenty-four gel-well cards
were sent and 43 visits 'were
made.

Nineteen

ANY SIZE
BUY NOW

VINTON - The Vinton
Friendship Ga'rden Club met
at Vinton Town Hall recently
with Mary Ann McCarley,
hostess.
The president Mary Ann
McCarley, welcomed 19
members and two guesis.
Devotions Including prayer
were given by Lorraine
Bryant, who read "He is
Coming Over the Hill ."
Scripture was Psalm 125:1.
Roll call was "What I would
like to learn this year in
garden club."
Minutes of the previous
mee ting were read by
secretary Beatrice Bush .
Treasurer's report was by
Pearl Burger. Both were
approved. ,
CommWlicalions were read
about the county meeting
held Thursday at Cheshire
Baptist Church and the
regional mee'ing Nov. I at
Middleport Elementary
School.
The program was given by
Verna Chamberlain on
clea ning and. conditioning
weathered wood. She said her
knowledge on the subject was
limited, but she was happy to
tell the club what she knew.
The first thing is [;nd wood.
She said "Get a corner
some where, where our
husbands can't see and bring
home anything thlit looks
unusual. A good place to find
wood is along river banks,
in woods and even along road

sides.''
The first thing, is to wash
the wood. If not dirty, let it
dry and brush il with a steel

brush. Stand the wood at all
angles to see how it can be
used. Cut off all unneeded
points so it will stand.
&amp;&gt;ak it in bleach water to
lighten the color .. &amp;laking it
in bleach water depends on
how the wood ts. To make the
wood another color, black or
brown shoe polish can be
used. Some people put salt
water on it and place it in the
sun. This gives it a gray
color. There is also the antiquing method. &amp;&gt; antique
the wood, paint the wood and
lelet dry, then put on gold,
silver or whatever color is
desired, and take a cloth and
rub most of it off.
The natUTal colors of the
wood depend on whet~er it is
hard or soft, and the
territory. In this area, it is
gray or beige, in the west
where there is red clay and
sandstorms it is mostly red
looking and near the ocean, it
mostly gray. The wood can
also be sand blasted. Judges
have rules to go by, but
Mother Nature is the judge in
driftwood .
The November meeting
will be at the Vinton Town
Hall with Esta Downard and
co-hostess Eleanor White.
New members welcomed
were Marie Howard, Mae
Blair, Lorraine Bryant and
Pat Adkins. Refreshments
were served.
In 1920, the lord mayor of
Cork - Terence McSwiney died after fasli~ ~5 days in a
British prison cell , demr n.
ding ind ' P&lt;'rt dence for
Ireland .
I

i\lra....;on Rziaas
1 Ylt f"
66 •

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FISH &amp; CHIP STYLE
Z4 OZ. BOX

LB.

.

'-:

·~

·-·.

suggests-

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SWEATERS .

~,

SEEN AND HEARD
GALLIPOLIS - Kenneth
Watts,· Edwards Air Force .
Base! Calif.1 retired, came
here Aug. 30 to be with his
mother , Gladys Watts ,
Gallipolis, who had an accident. He returned to ·
California Oct. 17.

1

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RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

by Collage
for the Girl on the Go I

---- r;tc.

Chester. Ohio

Gallipolis, Ohio

BEllY CROCKER

FLUFFO

SKIPPY

SHORTENING
3lB. $189

M&amp;R
SHOPPING CENTER

ERA
LIQUID

DOG
FOOD

$217

STOR~ HOURS

BORDEN'S

OPEN 9 AM TIL 8 PM WEEKDAYS ·
9AM TIL 9 PM SATURDAY

~ CHEESE

CLOSED SUNDAYS

1
LIFEGUARD
WHITE ALUMINUM

EXTRA SPECIAL

WHITE

PLASTIC DRAIN PIPE

Q1.

KISSES

$

REG.

3.99

5

••

••

25 LB. BAG

89~--L~~:::::::::=-=-..;iiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiii
•
•
•

'
· PEAK

PINTO BEANS

VALVOLINE

10 W40 ALL CUMATE

. ~

GUJTER

NOW ONLY

4" X 10 FT.

!

CAKE MIXES

CHUNK

KING SIZE

RED

ROMAN

DELICIOUS

APPLES

BEAUTY

Valvoline

PERMANENT

BUSHEL

BAG

ANTI-FREEZE

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1fz BU.

APPLE

MOTOR OIL

. ..
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69

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BAG

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·-·

LIMIT
6QTS.

. surprised
TUPPERS PLAINS Marion Riggs was surprised
last Sunday when a number
of relatives and friends
gathered at his home in
Logan to celebrate his birthday.
.
Dinner was served from a
table decorated with a large
birthday cake with the in·
scription, "Happy Birthday,
Daddy ."
Gifts
were
presenterl to him.
Present were Mr. and Mrs.
Lindsey Lyons Ill and
daughters. Mr. · and Mrs.
Lawrence Hasbargen and
children. Parkersburg ; Mr.
and Mrs. David Riggs and
daughter. Belpre; llir. and
Mrs. Gene Riggs and sons,
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Justis and
son, Mrs. Dorothy' Dodderer
and Mrs. Lois Riggs Leonard,
all of Reedsville, Rt . I; Ray
Riggs,' Pomeroy, Rt. 3, Mr.
:tlld Mrs. Lindsey Lyons, Jr.
and sun, Mrs. Ulah Swan, Mr.
and Mrs. Osbar Babcock,
Mrs. Josephine Babcock ,
Tuppers Plains ; Mr. and
Mrs. Marion Rigg s and
daughters and Fannie Devol
~md daughter , ull · f Lt1gap.

'

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Ill!

. d
exll
tne
/a
wood 'r

Weathered
-to Vinton Garden Club

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persons'

responded to roll call . The
reports of secretary Mary
Barcus and treasurer Effie
Marlin were accepted.
The group received $95
from its recent bake sale at
lhe Silver Bridge Shopping
Plaza.
Freda Cottrill, Gloria
Tripplet , Angie Abshire and
Belly McCoy each won a door
prize.
Debbie Groves, Jewell
Russell, Shirley Dovenbarger, Goldie Warren, Lou
Grubb and Myrtle Cunningham will furnish, the door
prizes at the next meeting.
At the close of the busmess
· meeting, the group adjourned
lo the basement where
refreshments were served to
lhe guests of the Ladies Aid.
AI the November meeting,
refreshments will be served
by Gloria Tripplet, Mickey
Smith, Mary Barcus and
Rene Broyles.

$

HADDOCK

•

NEW

members

BAllER &amp; BAKE.

II I I

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OOUPLE BETROTI!ED - Mr. and Mrs. Alfred
Scarberry, Rio Grande, announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their daughter, Peggy, to
Douglas Fields, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Fields, Dayton.
· Miss Scarberry is a graduate of Gallia Academy High
School. She is presently attending Ohio State University
where she is majoring in nursing. Her fiance is a graduate
of Belmont High School in Dayton and is employed as an
assistant manager of Bob Evans Sausage Shop. Plans are
being completed for a December Wedding.

DEBI AND BOB BUCK have purchased tile Kiddie
Shoppe in Middleport from June Kloes and will be taking over
the business in a lew weeks now. June, we understand, is back
in college preparing lor a ~ In 11urslng.

TilE OC'l'OBER EXHIBIT at Rlverby features an·
tiques most of Which are native to the Ohio Valley region.
A ya~ winder, left, was loaned to the exhibit by Dr. and .
Mrs. James Kemp. Another interesting item is the plank
chair from tbe Proctorville area and loaned by Atttc
Antiques. This chair is for sale. The gallery Is open 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays.l-5 p.m. Saturday and
Sunday. (Photo by Lanna Waugh) .

TURKEYS

on Upper' Route 7. Anyone
interested in learning to sew
should bring a tape measure,
paper and pencil to the
P.C.A. building. There will be
measuring for pattern sizes
as ·well as instruction on
selecting patterns and
fabrics. The classes will be
about two hours long and run
for six to eight weeks.
The otl:t.er class is an
"Advanced Beginners" and
is planned for those who have
sewed some, but stfU feel they
need help. This clas.s will be
held at the Harrisburg

Miss Peggy Scarberry

FRANCES REIBEL, the darling of Trinity Church Sunday
llchool teachers, celebrated her 88th birthday this week and
while nothing was planned, there was an Informal party with
Mildred Morris and Carrie NeuWing taking ice cream and a
decorated cake. Mrs. Reibel received numerous cards, gifts
and flowers.
Friends and neighbors coming in for the party were Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Curtis, Mrs. Eddie Smith, Miss Nelle Bing,
Mrs. Neva Seyfried, Robert Morris and Ben Neutzling. The
Rev. and Mrs. W. H. Perrin alao stopped by to extend birthday
·wishes.

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A ' 'Begi nn e rs Sewing"
dHss v. ,;!! starl Tuesday, Nov .
· 4 al 9 tt m . in the Jackson

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OVEN READY

Clnlhing Construction .

NafHING QUITE delights grandparents more than the
accomplishments of their grandchildren.
Harvey and Ruth Erlewlne have been in Newark where
they attended the presentation banquet of the Joan Wine
School of Dancing. The Erlewines' granddaughters, Beth, 7
and Kandi, 10, both received large ti'ophles In recognition of
their perfect attendance at practices and parades during tbe
past year. They are the daughters of David and Joetta Eskew.

, .~

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lcnsion Service is cur·renUy

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ARMOUR STAR

l:AI.I.JI'UI.l~ ·· The Callia
Co unt y Cooperative Ex-

POMEROY - At the Meigs County Christmas flower
show a memorial tribute will be made to Mrs. Ruth Bller
whose talents have long been recognized by garden club
members.
For many years Ruth served as ctialrwoman for the flo~er
shows held at the Meigs County Fair and she was a long~1me
member of the Chester Garden Club. Her name will occupy a.
prominent place on the flower show program to be handed out
at the two-day holiday show, Dec. Gand 7. Anice gesture-

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EXTRA LARGE
EXTRA HEAVY

TABLE LAMPS
LARGE

ASH TRAYS

42" TAU

'

REG. $1.19

PUFFS
F~CIAL

TISSUES

200CT.

JENO
PIZZAS
'
PEPPERONI OR SAUSAGE

REG. '39.95

28 OZ. BOX

ONLY

REG. 11.49
,.

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�~~ - The Sunday Times - Somtincl, Sunday, 0&lt;1 . 26. t!I7S

r - l l - -1--11&lt;1/1-f!l.FTFtc:l_,___lltllt
..~ l IIIII I Tl1!

Club formed in 1889

Thursday Club opens 86th year
BY JAN WF.THERHOLT
(;ALLIPOUS - On Thursday , ,I he Thursday Club of
Gallipolis opened Its 86th
year with a luncheon at the
Holiday Inn. Hostesses were
Mrs. Garland Gillingham and
Mrs. Harold Welherholt.
Tite theme of this year will
be literary programs pertaining to the bicen tennial
celebration .
In .keeping with this theme,
the guest speaker for the
luncheon was Dr. Lawrence
Butcher, who presented a
talk on "The Origins of the
Disparities of the American
Political and Religous Institutions." Dr. Butcher
selected key phrases from the
Declaration of Independence
and discussed the effects of
science and religion, and the

and love . of gracious
hospitality and entertaining
'combined w(th the early New ·
England concern for church
and education set the .innuence for the direction the
club would take.
Literary in its primary
purpose, the club explmded
its interests and efforts to
benefit the community . It
presented elegant social
affairs, ;md sponsored many
concerts
an d
lectures fea turing the best talent
·available from near and
abroad. Iri 1927 the club
donated ·$12$ to the' new obstetrical department of the
Holzer Hospital which purchased one of the new electrically heated bassineltes
valuable in saving lives of

premature inl'anl ~. 'l'he
the innuence of !he "inmoney also helped toward
lelllgencia" an d the common
other needed equipment. In
man upon our J&gt;Olili cal
19~6
th e picture of
system.
Washington was purchased
In 1889, on a fa ll day two
for Our House. In 1895, the
young women, Miss Amy
Thursday Club sponsored the
Nash, and Miss Nell Dages
Philomathean Club, and in
discussed the formation of a
1929, the Pembroke Club.
literary society origi nall y
Perhaps the most outnamed "The Tourists." They
standing achievement was
were "dedicated to enter into
the successful campaign for
eve ry departmen t
of
the public library in 1895.
knowledge which in time
As a means to further the
would give one the full mind
project, the club sponsored
and ready speech that make a
the printing on silk of an issue
fini shed conversa tionalist
of the Gallipolis Journal.
and social leade( ." Miss
Mrs . Addie Vanden , who was
Nash and Miss Dages were
to be the first librarian,
joined by nine other young
designed
the
margin
women of predominately
decoration in a floral pattern.
French and New England
Bob Herbert created the
immigrant descent . The
cover sketch. The copy was
spirit of gaiety, and the art
auctioned at $100 to George
!louse and later ·presented to
' the Public Library where it is
preserved today.
In June, 1898 the club
served tea at the home of
Mrs. J. W. Jones, admission
to which was a gift of a book
for the library. In this way 2l!3
vollll11t).s wl)l'e oQ!alned.
The first quarters for the
library were two rooms on
the second floor of the Lupton
Building, where in November, 1898 the collection was
opened to the public with
Mrs . . Addie Vanden as
librarian. The enterprise was
a long gamble based on a
collection of only l,700
volumes and a treasury of
$800. When Andrew Carnegie
began his policy of p~oviding
library buildings for ener, prtsmg commumunities,
Mrs. Horace Bradbury inves tigated the possibility or a
library
building
fo r
Gallipolis.
The 'tr4ste.es of Gallia
Academy dopa ted the ground
on which the present library
stands.
Andrew Carnegie
THE '11JURSDAY CLUB OF Galllpolls opened Its 86th year Thursday afternoon with
dona te d the $12,500 for
a luncheon at the Holiday Inn. Attending were, left to right, seated on floor: Mrs. Herman
building purposes and the
Koby, Mrs. William Jenkins, Mrs. Neal Prendergast, Mrs. Gene Wetherholt; first row
people
of the community
11eated : Mrs. John E. Halllday, Mrs. Howard Neal, Mrs. Harold Wetherholt, Mrs, Arthur
raised
the rest of the
Darnbnnagh'; .tanding,' flrllt row: Mrs. Garland Gillingham, Mrs. George Bush, Mrs.
necessary
funds. In 1904 the
Slglsmwid Hl.rdl!r, Mrs . .1o1m Qlrnett, Mrs. William Thomas, Dr. Lawrence Butcher;
present
library
was opened.
lltandlng j second row: Mrs. Jack Carty, Mrs. James Orr, Mrs. Charles Holzer, Mrs. Miles
TodaY., with 66,000 volumes,
Epling, Mrs. Oscar Clarke.
an.d a program of many other
services, the library is a
:·:~;:::::;:;:::: ::::~;;;:;:;::~:::::::::::::~:::::::·:::::::·:::·;
living memorial to the small
group, who In 1898 look their
~..
;:;: stack of 2l!3 books, and a
dream, and started public
~»
TU«l
· ·: library service in Gallipolis.
GALLIPOLIS - TheSenlor The club continues to support
the library today.
Citizens Center, located at 2W
The' presen t members,
MIDDLEPORT - Several Bowles, legislative and Jackson Pike in the Courtly individually, and as a club;
new chairpersons were ap- historian ; 'Mrs. Hampton , Home Building , is open endeavor to carry on a
pointed by Mrs. Allen civil defense, and ' Mrs . Monday through Friday from tradition of interest in all that
Hampton, president, when Richards, foreign relaliohs. 9a.m. till3 p.m. The schedule broadens knowledge through
the American Le gio n
Mrs. Bowles requesled that of activities lor this week Is literature, as well as to
Auxiliary of Lewis Manley members write to AI mtman, as follows :
maintain an involvement in
Post 263, Middleport, met at cbalrman of the House Ways
Monday, Oct. 27 community affairs, so that a
the home of Mrs, Arnold and Means Committee, Veterans Day. The Center Is vision of long ago, realized
Richards Tuesday.
protesting the tax on military closed.
throughout the years, will he
Appointed were Mrs.' Ruth retirement pay.
Tuesday , · Oct. 28 - perpeiuated as we .enter this
Brown, veterhhs affairs and
Reports were given on the Visiting, 9 ~ .m. - 3 p.m.
bice~tennial year.
rehabilitation: Mrs. Lucille recent district conference at
Wednesday, Oct. 29 - Card
Saunders, community ser- Junction City and also on a Games, 1-3 p.m.
vice; Mrs. Dewey_ BenUey, vlsi t to the Soldiers and
Thursday, Oct. 30 - Birthchildren and youth; Mrs. Sailors' Orphans Home at day Party, 1:30 p.m.
Wedding
aad
Campbell Ha rper , Xenia.
Friday, Oct. 31 - Blood engagement notices for the
Americanism; Mrs. William
A field orientation meeting Pressure Check, 1-2 p.m. Art ·Sunday ·Times-Sentinel
Smith, poppy and national Nov. .g at Gallia Unit 27 was Class, 1-3 p.m. Halloween must be in ourhands by 1%
security; Mrs. Ernes t announced. Cards were Party, 7 p.m.
noon on the Thursday
signed for Von Cousins,
The Senior Nutrition preceding publication ..
Cleveland, an d Donald Program serves meals at the Information may be tumed
Luckadoo, Rutland.
center blonday through In or mailed to tbe
Friday at II: 30 a.m.
Galllpells Daily Tribune or
The Seniors' Coop Store is Pomeroy Dally Sentinel.
Engagemeat and wedding
COMPLETES PROGRAM open from 12:3!)-l:Jo p.m.
forms are also available on
MARlETTA - Marietta
request.
College sophomore David
Wolfe of bllddleporl, recenUy
completed a summer inTIJESDAY
ternship program in coorOPEN GATE Garden Club at dination with the Coolege's
the home ·or Mrs. Dina Edwy R. Brown Department
WEST COLUMBIA, W. Va.
Howard, 7:30 p.m,
of Petroleum Engineering. - The annual West Columbia
Wolfe was one of 58 MC School Fall Festival will be
WEDNESDAY
students who parllcipaled in held Nov. I at the school with
TRICK OR TREAT in Bid· the "on the job training" food and eventS for all. ·
well 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. for program in conjunction with
The soup sale will start at
age; 12 and under. Childnin , 20 of the nation's leading appro~imately 11 a.m. Then
must be accompanied by a petroleum companies. Wolfe at 4 p.m., the carnival will
parent or another adult.
was an Intern with Labor begin featuring the fish pond,
'
Services , Inc. in Harvey, a fun house -auction and
Louisiana. A1974 graduate of several more event.s.
Meigs H.S., Wolfe Is also
Culminating the even'in2
DALEY BLASI'S OEM
involved
In
football
and
a
will be ''Pie In the Eye," in- 7V2 Pel. per year on 1
SPRINGFIELD, ID. (UPI)
4 year certlfi,ate of
member of AIME at the volving one child in the school
- O!lcago Mayor Richard J . southeastern Ohio school. He
deposit.
'
picking his "favorite"
Daley, one of the nation's
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. teacher and putting a pie in
Sl,OOO.OO minimum
staunchest and
most
David
E.
W
olle,
273
Pearl
St.,
deposit,
Interest paid
their
eye.
powerful Democrats, has
Middleport.·
quarterly.
. All visitors and the entire
given his beleted encommunity are welcome.
dorsement
to. former
Republican Gov. Richard B.
Your Vote and Influence Appreciated
Ogilvie.
The endorsement was the
latest and most vitriolic blast
In Daley's continuing feud
with Gov. Daniel Walker , the
maverick · Democrat who
- t:AN DWATJo: FOR The Athens County
defeated Ogilvie In 1972.
S•vings
&amp; Lo.n Co.
Daley marshaled his forces
2'6 S.cond 51. ·
to override Walker's veto of
Pomeroy, Olllo
SllTI'ON TOWNSHIP
$111 million In state school aid
and ~&gt;!!rated Walker In a rare
appearance before a joint
General Elect;on November 4, 1975
session of th e. General
Pd . Pol. Adv.
Assembly Thursday.
necessary balance beL ween

- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, SUnday, Oct. 26; 1975

..

Lewis Manley Post 263 i
appoints new chairpersons .''~

Sr. Citizens f
Cafe--1-r

~lish

Fall carnival is Nov. 1 ·

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Gallia

•County
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Banu.lnerieant
UU I I

Chapter elects officers

; ib

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Personal Credit

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Also Available .

VINTON - Vinton Chapter
Offi cers elected for ·
O.E.S. 375 met at the Masonic 1976 were Worthy Matron,
Temple recently for its Barbara Denney; Worthy
regular meeting with Worthy Patron, Daniel Evans;
Matron Mildred Donahue and Associate Matron, Jean
Worthy Patron Jerry Barnes Moore; Associate P_atron,
presiding.
Robert Powell; Conductress;
The worthy matron · Cathy Aldennan; ASIOclate
welcomed the ·group. The · Conductress, Toriit 'Co!ller; .
secretary'• report was given Secretary, Margar~t Simms;
. by Margaret Simms and Treasurer, Ruth Evan~. : .
treasurer's · report was by Chapter closed ln ·rekuJar
Evelyn Denney.
form. A .social hour and
poUuck supper followed.

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Polyester.
Interlock Knits
Slinky prints .and solids for dren" and
blouses. In florals and novehiBs. 58 ·
60" wide . Machine wash, tumble dry.

R•t· S3.99 to 14.99 yd.
You .... to U .11 yd.

_$;1!!~
..\ too:~i~c~tl~ · ..
'

.lflrllltwJJ'
,.,•.
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· Do&amp;ml·e Knitl ' :

.

.The popular weight for fall sporlsw~ar
ond dresses. Solids and ll)uill·colortd
Ianclos. 58·60" wide. Machine waoh
and dry .
· ·
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bg, U.99yol . . ·,: ·, ';
You .... 11 .51 yd. ·

GALLIPOLIS ,.- . The Oc- at his death.
meeting of the English
John J. Audubon, 1785-1851,
was held reeently at the pajnled birds of America.
of Mrs. Florence Willis Whistler, 1834-1903, palnled
Mrs. Mary Virginia · "WhisUer's Mother. " WinsRnrnor, co-hostess.
low Homer was one of the
Eleven members answered grestest marine pain ten of
call with "Name an all limes.
IArrterit:an . artl!!\ and one of
In 1839 the camera was
works.'' Named were inveriled, a rnecbanical InArchibald ·M. Willlard who vention that rang the bell for
"Spirit of 76"; the end of portrait painting as
r.urrier and lves, who from a lucrative profession.
1492-1900 painted
One or the fainOus landlithograptiS; .Charles Marion scape painters of this era wbs
Russell 1864-1926, known as iierstadt In 11163. he palnled
lhe cowboy ' artist; William "Rocky Mountains" which
Jackson, a western made him a national hero.
pair•ter; a painting, "First
Grant Wood's "American
of the Revollulon" by Gothic" sold to the Chicago
Wlknown artist; Julian Art Institute for $300~
Weir, "Visiting NeighSculptors became more
Grandma Moses, active about that time.
prirniti•~e pajptings; Winslow Fredrick Remington made
'Ratner, seascapes; Benjamin "Bronc Buster" in 1895.
"PeM's Treaty with · E. Fraser painted "End of
lhe Indians';; Norman Rock- the Trail," and C. T. Webber, .
paintings on Saturday 1824-19lo, patnled "The Tribe
c~..,v·"
'Ev•enlrrg Post covers; Grant of ban,'' nine sons of Daniel
uw
&lt;&gt; J J•
Vwo.
Wood, .'American Gothic"; McCook. "Grant Memorial"
John Trwnbull, "BatUe of was compleled in 1922 by T
han~ed
'
Hill," Michael Shrady, Bruce Wilder
~
who painted men sculpted "The Battle of
who signed the Declaration of Fallen Timbers."
Independence as· tliey were
Thereisapeacemonument
s
-~ejltem
' ~
when they signed It, not when at the foot of Capital Hill
they were · old. ·The sculptured In Rome to
secretary'~ report )"as read memorialize· the Navy Civil
MIDDLEPORT - Vases of shaped necklace, gift of the
accepted; Three cards War dead . It portrays
white
gladioli and mums groom. She carried a colonial
were signed fOil ~ r\IC~Dber. America weeping on the
decorated
the allar of the bouquet of mint green, lilac
Treasury rep«&lt;l't wis read shoulder of history,
and accepted·. , .
In 1930, Thomas Benton led Middleport O&gt;ilrch of Christ and white pompons with
Mrs. Beatrice Clark In- In painting murals c .He for the wedding of Cynthia baby's breath tied with lilac
traduced Mrs. Jennie Elliott painted some at N.Y. World's Marie Manley, daughter of ribbon and wore a garter
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford E. given to her by Mrs. John
whose program was "Art In Fair.
Manley,
Middleport, and Ambrose as part of the
America." Art in Al_'11erlca Is
After 1945, abstract exStephen
Robert
Hartenbach, "something old, borrowed
less than 300 years old. World presslonlsm became the
art be1an about 4000 B.C. thing in America: sUII life, son of Mr . and Mrs. Robert C. and blue ." ·
Debbie Hartenbach, sister
Art could he traced back to fruits, people, and realistic Harten bach, Pomeroy.
The
double
ring
ceremony
of
the groom , was the maid of
cave men atleast 20,000 years scenes of life. Artists sought
was
performed
by
the
Rev.
honor.
She wore a gown of
to show direct emotions,
ago.
George
Glaze
Sept.
12
at
5:30
orchid designed with long
Art and history are 1 closely fears, anger and gaiety.
p.m.
following
a
prograin
of
sleeves
and carried a bouquet
interwOven In the f~brlc of u.
During lhe depression lhe
nuptial
music
presented
by
of
orchid
pompens and baby's
cultures. Colonists were nation needed something to
Mrs.
Chester
Erwin,
breath
.
Wanda Wigal,
making a Jiving unUI bolster ita sense of national
organist.
Middleport
and Vicki
time tn the ' 17th Cen- pride so a huge monwnentat
Given
In
marriage
by
her
Snouffer,
·
Pomeroy,
bridestory. Bef.ore, there were Mt. Rushmore, South
father,
the
bride
was
attired
maids, were in gowns of mint
mosUy engravings made by Dakota was started comin
a
gown
~f bridal satin with green with lace bodices and
European arllats.
biQing the faces of
Portralla beCame popu1at Waehlngton, completed In an overlay of re-embroldered sleeves . They carried
with fi\IDUY ~ ~tinp 1930; Jeffer8111l,1936; Uncoln Alencon lace. The gown was bouquets of mint green
Benjat!lhl · )Velt piJalld lt37 and Theodore Roosevelt, fashioned with a double pompons and baby's breath.
tiered ruffle it the bottom, a
Kevin Dailey, Middleport,
"Death of Gt!t,INo!fe1• ui 1771- ,.. by Borglwn.
standup
collar
edged
with
was best man for the groom,
ind "Pena'a rr,aty with the William Jackson, dean of picot and long . full sleeves and
usher~ were. Jeff Shank
lndl.onll', lll&lt;~rn. •. . .•. , . American landscapes
banded
at
the
wrist.
The
and
Gary
Snouffer, Pomeroy,
··:fuj;;p' 'n'1iPbull l?M-IM3, pbotographel'8 reilred in 1929
bodice
was
trimmed
with
For
her
daughter's wedpupil of J!eaWn!n w...,t, did at ace 88. He returned to his
seed pearls and sequins.
ding.
Mrs.
Manley wore a
American .eenea to en- flrat love ptlinting. Many of
The
bride
wore
a
cap
of
navy
and
white
dress jacket
courage · 1 · feeling of hll pictures show true scenes
Alencon
lace
from
which
fell.
ensemble
and
a
corsage of
patriotism In the colonies. He of the transition period :
fioor-length
veil
of
illusion
a
white rosebuds. Mrs. Har"The Surrender of covered wagons being
accented
at·
the
bottom
with
tenbach was In a mint green
" portraits or replaced by the railroads and
lace
flowers.
Her
only
jacket
dress and also had a
and Uamlllon, pony express by . the
jewelry
was
a
diamond
heart
whlie
ro11ebud
corsage.
was given 1 rcmmlsslon telearaph was shown tn his
A
reception
honoring the
ln ·t•n11t jlllnli!lp for the palnll,~gs:, "Buffalo Stamcouple was held at the home
Cap•ltol at Washington D C pede'
Pony ExjM'ess .
of Mr. and Mrs. John Amcost of P2.000. He ~or
Rider·" His phiJOIIophy of life
brose following the wedding.
them for elilbt years and was to have something to do
three-tiered wedding cake
A
lna~tlled lhen1 1111824
tomorrow. He died In June,
featured
the traditional
lollowtr of Ben- 11142 at the age of 99.
,
miniature
bride
and groom
Weal, Gllbett Stuart,
Two other palntel'8, Benton
JOHN GEffi 'SfAR'
on top . Jal)et Ambrose
more than tOo ~tinga and Curry did stirring·murals
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
registered lhe guests and
,·
thowlng a growing nation.
Tada:r Scott has walercolors Elton Jolm wore a con- Becky Ambrose distributed
at Riverby that sell from $200 tiiii'Vatlve - for John - outfit the rice bags. Presiding at
and 1 huge grin Thursday as the refreshrnen! table were
to $900.
The progra!ll was enjoyed he became the 1 ,66~ en- Cathy Elliott, Fort Knox, Ky.
tertainer to he glven a star in and Vicky Russell, Rutland.
by all.
For a wedding trip to
Mra. Elliott Introduced the Hollywood Boulevard
sldewlllk.
Cincinnati
and Kentuckr, the
Jt1111than Louden from the
Some
3.1100
peraons
turned
brlde
ch'anged
Into a navy
Gilllpolla Ubrary who
showed a film of all out to aee John at tbe blue paniB outfit.
The couple resides at
Presidents from George dedicatlon ceremony, and
Washington · to Richard pollee closed off three blocb Brown 's Trailer Court,
of tbe boulevard. John tootled Minersville. The new Mrs.
Nixon.
Refreshmen Ia were served up to the lite aboard a goJc! Hartenbach is a graduate of
to II members and one guest, goU cart with a large pink Meigs High School, class of
bow a ·• hood ornament, 19'1$ and Is employed at
Mra. Raymond Willis.
The ned meeting wiD be deoorated with stan and , Adop~'s Dairy Valley. The
Nov. 4 at 7 p.m. at.the orne of bllntlpg llgbta that apell~ groom, a 1972 graduate of
Meigs High, is a deputy
Mrs. Ruth Mu!Uneaux with out his name.
Jolm
Wol'e
thick,
rainbow
·sheriff
in the Meigs County
Mrs. Irene Brannon, cocolored ~· a chartreuse. Sheriff's Office.
hOIIIesa.
Roll call wW he "An herb bowler rlmined with sequins, Out-of-town guests were
used for medicine." The a chll1reu!e suit aivered Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Elliott and
..,... program will be "Early with large gold stal'8Jike the daughter, Forl Knox, Ky.;
American Medicine" by Mrs. mea In Ute sidewalk and Mrs. Phil Wise, Miss Susie
Mary Vlrllnla Burner, - green A tin llhoes with $-Inch Budd and Miss Rosalee Wise,
heell.
~verly.
J111e Cantrell, Secntary.

Mr.. and Mrs.

uartenz.,"rh

Tows exc·

y

b-•nr.n"te

t"n

·

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Party hqnors
Tami£nm~r
GALLIPOLIS - Mr . .and
Mrs . Thomas Corner en tertained recenUy with a
party honoring the ninth
birthday of their daughter,
Tami Lynn.
Gifts were pre~~ented to
Tami and a cake inscribed
" Happy Birthday" . was
served with ice cream, KoolAid and nut cups.
Games were played with
prizes going to Bobby Allen,
Sherry Longley, !';Iaine
Kiskis and Laura Amsbury.
I.Jsa Blackburn won the door
prize.
Attending were Matt
_Comer, Sherry Longley, Julie
Lane, Bobby Allen, Pam
Allen, Patty Camden, Laura
Amsbury, Elaine Kislds, Jo
Ellen Oliver, Gina Oark,
Lisa Blackburn, Mandy
North and Todd Varney. Also
present was Taml's grandmother, Mrs. Winston Varney.
Setldlng a gift was her
grandmother, Mrs. Alma
Comer.

countries of Southeast Asia
and their many needs for
survival.
The second part was entitled " Benevolences."
Readings were given on this
topic, stressing the right and
wrong altitudes in giving.
Mrs. llollon gave a resume of
."An Old Time C;jmp Meeting
in Te&lt;as." Mrs. Olan
Genheimer had the special
' entitled "Charity and the
Man ." The program was
concluded with the song
" Amazing Grace" and
prayer by the leader. The
leader also conducted a
contest In keeping with
autumn.
· The November meeting of
the County Church Women
Uniled at tne Forest Run
United Methodist Church
Nov. 7, at 1:30 p.m. was
discussed and plans were
made. The Thanksgiving
dinner or the society will be
held at the church in
NovemJ&gt;er with each member
bringing their "Thank Offering" boxes. Names for a
Christmas gift exchange
were drawn. Forty-one sick
and shut-in calls were made
by the. members the past
month . The treasurer 's
report was read and the
meeting adjourned.
Refreshments were served
by the hostesses to ·Mrs.
Edison Hollon, Mrs. Hanson
Holter, Mrs. Alfred Yeauger,
Mrs. Vernon Neaile, Mrs .
Uswin Nease, Mrs. Erma
Roush, Mrs. Fred Nease,
Mrs. Kerns Rouith, Mrs. Jolm
Scott, Mrs. Edith Sisson, Mrs.
Russ Watson, Mrs. Richard
Jarvis and one guest, Mrs.
William Knig~t of Pt .
Pleasant.

DRIVER CITED
GALLIPOLIS - Harry D.
McQuaid, 43, Gallipolis, was
cbarged with DWI following a
traffic accident on Second
Ave. Friday night,
Officers said McQuaid lost
control of his car which
struck a parked auto owned
by Okey E . Coffee of
Gallipolis .

WOWK-TV, Channel13, has
announced a "Meet Your
Senators" essay contest for
Tri-State area junior and
senior high school students.
The announcement was made
by Channel13 Vice President
. and General Manager Leo M.
Mac.Courtney.
Winners of the contest will
win an all-expense-paid trip
~ Washington, D. C., where
they will meet personally
with Uniled States Senators
from West Virginia, Ohio and
Kentucky. The winners will
also be featured on a special
half-hour television program
to be aired on Channel 13.
To compete, students are

required to write an essay of
no more than 1,000 words
detailing the three most
pressing needs or problems
facing their conununlties and
expiain the reasons for their
choices .
A panel of area educators
will judge the essays on tbe
basis of originality and
content.
The contest is open to all
Tri-State area junior and
senior high school students
and completed essays must
he received by WOWK-TV no
later than Dec. 12.
Essays may he mailed to :
Meet Your Senators, WOWKTV, 625-4th Ave., Huntington,
W.Va.

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il'

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PUJJIII~I GIll
All IOG~IIHIER
W~III~I

BLOUSES
"Fall styles in
fall colors"
Make
this
fall
something special
with sty Iish Blouses
by

LADY
MANHATIAN
JANTZEN
CATALINA
LORI LYNN

BAHR
CLOTHIERS
Middleport,
Ohio

SEE THEM
TODAY!

house--~---------..

~
ca

th ANNIVERSARY

....
·-...
~

"

.c

NaN lHRU SAT., NOV. 1
'

1-

1 GROUP
GIRLS SHOES
1 GROUP WOMEN'S

TUBE SOX

SHOES S300

ALL AREA ·
SCHOOL COlORS
REG.I1.19
SALE

1 GROUP BOYS'

1 GROUP,WOMEN'S

DRESS SHOES AND BOOTS
30%

FF·

FAMOUS BRAND
MEN'S SAMPLE

DRESS SHOES
SALE •9 to •11.
Rttg •. S14.f9 - Sll.99

SPORT SHOES
7-7'1:!-8

Reg. 17.99

ROQ.SI1.99

SALE •5.00

SALE •14.40

REGULAR •3.91 .

.·.

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· FOREST RUN - Mrs. Olan
Genheirner and Mrs. Harry
Wyatt entertained the Uniled
Methodist Women · of the
Forest Run Uniled Methodist
Olurc:; at the home of Mrs.
Genheimer Tuesday evening.
• · The meeting opened with
the song '' America the
Beautiful " and the Lord 's
Prayer. Mrs. Richard Jarvis
was d,evotional leader, Her
topic was "Fruitful Seasons
Bring Gladness.' ' She gave a
meditation on the subject
bringing out the question,
"What kind of harvest are
you preparing and what kind
of seed are you sowing."
Mrs. Edison Hollon condueled the program prepared
by Mrs. Denver Holter who
was unable to attend. The
program was divided Into two
sections. The first part was a
"Missilin Study" centering on
Southeast Asia. Se.vei'al
readings were given on

7·7'1, ..

2YARD
·' . ·
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~

Forest Run UMW Station sponsoring
entertained Tuesday student essay contest

DRESS BOOTS
Sire

$ 48
I

'

,o'
!

ER"

'

60" DOUBLE KNITS
Good selection florais, patchwork, checka, plaids and
plains. Buy several yards

now.

10%

..@

Slroo 5-12
Rt•PU9

." '

'

,'

$298

WOMEN'S
SAMPLE SIDES
Sires H'h-5
,.

"

SALE •5.00
Children's

YARD

10% DISCOUNT

4·H and Homt Ec. Students,

A Few Pairs
S.mplu In Tills Group

_ALL OTHER
MERCHANDISE
IN

,,

.

Bridal Parllts &amp; Church Oroupa.

••••0• 101••1110! ... (111

.., J I

SALE •6.25

DISCOUNT TO ..

@

TRUSTEE

.

LaCROSSE
CANVAS
Mlroott-Mtn's

I HEAT TRANSF ERI

Meigs Co. Branch

.

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c(ub hears
on painters

ked

to be Nov. 1

.

.,

o"tl,n ..

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School festival

Jack L. Wolfe

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RACiNE - The Racine Bostick, pop; Patty Pape, {\_ ·
PTA will sponsor a fall S~anne Wolfe, JoAnn Crisp, ' ·''-\ ..
Sally Savage,.Patty Hensler,carpival on Nov. l ·at the Kathleen ..Morris, bean bag .
Racine Elementary · School.
·
~"'
· }.
·. Serving will begin at 5:.311 toss ; Darlene Justis, ma,uup · · '"I ·
p.m. and on the menu·will be lady; Leanne Beegle, .Unda . ;: ·.. ·• .
sandwiches, soup, ·chili, Diddle and Jane Beegle, milk .•. :, .,~.
sloppy joes, hot dogs, pie, · can loss.
·
,,,
cake cookies and Kool-Aid.
Leo and Helen Hill, Uoyd · •,d ..
Ther~ will be a countty s!Qre, .and Paula Sayre, silhouettes;
a sweet shop, a variety of . Ronme and Cookie ·Sallier, ., :. 1.··.
BY FRED J. DEEL
games and an auc.tiori at 8 .Mike and .Patti Str\lble, ... '::f.
Gallla County
. p.m.
en·gravlng ; . Larry ·. and , .·:~·:I
4-H Extension Agent
The committees are David Delores Wo~fe, .Frank. and · ' .,.,·~
and Linda Hill, popcorn ; Btu, Mary Porter, rtng-a-nose; . •;q
and Diann Jewell Jack and George and Kay Wolfe! Jim . .,; ,
"Does An Incubated (:blct Love lt'8 Mother?"
Betty Teaford, To~ and Pam and Betty Bell, ball?ons; ·SUe " .. ,. 't
GAI..LII'()lJS- Well, this question will proQ&amp;bly not he Theiss, and Bill and Evelyn Ha~e.r, members!llp; Jean : :.:·:·
answered completely but many youth In Gallia County will be Maynard, fish pond; Earl and Alkir~, Mary Hill, Donna ·,. ,1;:
learning more about poultry and development of a chick .Jean Cleland, cane loss; Jim Morns, hcket~ ; Lillian .. ; :!I ·:
through the 4-H Clllck Embryology project, that Is being used Werry, Harold . Hager, DOn Weese, Luctlle _Dtehl, pocket , . ,,, 1 -,
by several teachers In variousschoolslnGallia County.
.
Beegle and Bob Fisher, dart lady; Edna. Prtce, florence . !''l ..
On Sept. 30, about 15 teachers attended a work:lhoctedpcobn- game.Circle, cashier; Ltbby
R. ,
cerning the Olick Embryology project that was condu . Y Russell . aitd Coralee . -Fisher, ticket sale. .
.. ,,,
Jun Marquand, Assistant State 4-H Leader, Ohio State Cummins, ; and Tom and
Linda Holter, Barb.ra· ·. · ·• ·,
University. They participated in several activities showing Phyllis Stobar.t, hoqi-a-shi&gt;ot; . Dug~, Jo.. R\)b~ti, , Jltie , , :· ·:·~ ..
how the project could be used In a classroom and related to the Jack Bostick and , Pauline ,,Rice, f_ap~ •. ft!IDe, ·';O)ll)lry; 1,, , , · ·
different subjeCIB that are taught In schools.
· :·
.. ,
, s~, .ll!ld "nita .HU11, !Cirel\ : , •:lt ..
The teachers were also informed of different equipment
. •·:w'~. UI Hat,,,,Jjnlf. ~tb, , : Wi .
and educational materials that are available tO be u~ with
··
, !lOttie CUrtis,. ~o~ Wolf~, : • '. •ill
the project. These iric!ude charts, slides and two Incubators
··, '
Phy~is McMillan; .-!)Oroth&gt;: ·:, ..,;,
that were purchased with funds proVided by the Ohio 4-H
· Johnson, Donna Ihle, Nancy , ,. , ,..,
FoiDldatlon. Presently, one of the Incubators 1s In use In the
Ervin, Cindy Smith, J~JI · · ;, .
1
classroom of Mrs. O!rl$tlne Napier at the Cll'esblrt-Kyger
SIGNS CONTRACT
Cardone, Doris Fisher, .
Elementary School. The other teachers have schedulejl the
CINCINNATI
The Romain Frederick, ,Jut.e. . '"'·
incubator and materials for pcrlods during the remainder of Ai!Jerican ' Mutual Group of Bliker and Betty Curfman; · '· "
the year.
.
Recording · Companies,. a ldtchen.
· ·' ·
We, at the Extension Office, are also very inVQived with this Cincinnati based operation, ,
, ;: ·
project. One of the iricubators were not being used so we Bel a has announced the signing of
group of eggs In the Incubator and if everything goes as ex- Joel Hopkins, an artist from
peeled, we will have a batch of 'chlcks hatcli out about Patriot, to a recording
Tuesday, Oct. 28. So If you would like to see some newly hat- contract.
.
. ·. ~ liS
ched chicks, stop in the Extension Offlce this week and
After coijferring with'
bopefully there will he Some there for you to Bee.
. · . AMG's chief · producer · Ctirl'
I would like' to also mention that at varloliS . tl!nes : Edrnon4s011, . ahd co~~ai)y
throughout the year we will be needing fertile eggs for tiie with executive ·Bill Stith, H,opt(fns·
this projec;\ and sometimes they arehard 19 find. So If yotihiive 'was signed to a conft!lct. .'.
. ,....
a flock of hens, with some roosters among them, aqd you feel AMG plans ·to release ·a ·,
you mi&amp;tt ~ve some e~s that we could use in this project, ·recording in lhe near future .
then let us know •.we would appreciate it.
.

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Store

The Fabric

Hours
flo 5
Mon .• Fri.
9 to 1. S.t.
Closed Sun.

heritageMIDDLEPORT,house
OHIO

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�~~ - The Sunday Times - Somtincl, Sunday, 0&lt;1 . 26. t!I7S

r - l l - -1--11&lt;1/1-f!l.FTFtc:l_,___lltllt
..~ l IIIII I Tl1!

Club formed in 1889

Thursday Club opens 86th year
BY JAN WF.THERHOLT
(;ALLIPOUS - On Thursday , ,I he Thursday Club of
Gallipolis opened Its 86th
year with a luncheon at the
Holiday Inn. Hostesses were
Mrs. Garland Gillingham and
Mrs. Harold Welherholt.
Tite theme of this year will
be literary programs pertaining to the bicen tennial
celebration .
In .keeping with this theme,
the guest speaker for the
luncheon was Dr. Lawrence
Butcher, who presented a
talk on "The Origins of the
Disparities of the American
Political and Religous Institutions." Dr. Butcher
selected key phrases from the
Declaration of Independence
and discussed the effects of
science and religion, and the

and love . of gracious
hospitality and entertaining
'combined w(th the early New ·
England concern for church
and education set the .innuence for the direction the
club would take.
Literary in its primary
purpose, the club explmded
its interests and efforts to
benefit the community . It
presented elegant social
affairs, ;md sponsored many
concerts
an d
lectures fea turing the best talent
·available from near and
abroad. Iri 1927 the club
donated ·$12$ to the' new obstetrical department of the
Holzer Hospital which purchased one of the new electrically heated bassineltes
valuable in saving lives of

premature inl'anl ~. 'l'he
the innuence of !he "inmoney also helped toward
lelllgencia" an d the common
other needed equipment. In
man upon our J&gt;Olili cal
19~6
th e picture of
system.
Washington was purchased
In 1889, on a fa ll day two
for Our House. In 1895, the
young women, Miss Amy
Thursday Club sponsored the
Nash, and Miss Nell Dages
Philomathean Club, and in
discussed the formation of a
1929, the Pembroke Club.
literary society origi nall y
Perhaps the most outnamed "The Tourists." They
standing achievement was
were "dedicated to enter into
the successful campaign for
eve ry departmen t
of
the public library in 1895.
knowledge which in time
As a means to further the
would give one the full mind
project, the club sponsored
and ready speech that make a
the printing on silk of an issue
fini shed conversa tionalist
of the Gallipolis Journal.
and social leade( ." Miss
Mrs . Addie Vanden , who was
Nash and Miss Dages were
to be the first librarian,
joined by nine other young
designed
the
margin
women of predominately
decoration in a floral pattern.
French and New England
Bob Herbert created the
immigrant descent . The
cover sketch. The copy was
spirit of gaiety, and the art
auctioned at $100 to George
!louse and later ·presented to
' the Public Library where it is
preserved today.
In June, 1898 the club
served tea at the home of
Mrs. J. W. Jones, admission
to which was a gift of a book
for the library. In this way 2l!3
vollll11t).s wl)l'e oQ!alned.
The first quarters for the
library were two rooms on
the second floor of the Lupton
Building, where in November, 1898 the collection was
opened to the public with
Mrs . . Addie Vanden as
librarian. The enterprise was
a long gamble based on a
collection of only l,700
volumes and a treasury of
$800. When Andrew Carnegie
began his policy of p~oviding
library buildings for ener, prtsmg commumunities,
Mrs. Horace Bradbury inves tigated the possibility or a
library
building
fo r
Gallipolis.
The 'tr4ste.es of Gallia
Academy dopa ted the ground
on which the present library
stands.
Andrew Carnegie
THE '11JURSDAY CLUB OF Galllpolls opened Its 86th year Thursday afternoon with
dona te d the $12,500 for
a luncheon at the Holiday Inn. Attending were, left to right, seated on floor: Mrs. Herman
building purposes and the
Koby, Mrs. William Jenkins, Mrs. Neal Prendergast, Mrs. Gene Wetherholt; first row
people
of the community
11eated : Mrs. John E. Halllday, Mrs. Howard Neal, Mrs. Harold Wetherholt, Mrs, Arthur
raised
the rest of the
Darnbnnagh'; .tanding,' flrllt row: Mrs. Garland Gillingham, Mrs. George Bush, Mrs.
necessary
funds. In 1904 the
Slglsmwid Hl.rdl!r, Mrs . .1o1m Qlrnett, Mrs. William Thomas, Dr. Lawrence Butcher;
present
library
was opened.
lltandlng j second row: Mrs. Jack Carty, Mrs. James Orr, Mrs. Charles Holzer, Mrs. Miles
TodaY., with 66,000 volumes,
Epling, Mrs. Oscar Clarke.
an.d a program of many other
services, the library is a
:·:~;:::::;:;:::: ::::~;;;:;:;::~:::::::::::::~:::::::·:::::::·:::·;
living memorial to the small
group, who In 1898 look their
~..
;:;: stack of 2l!3 books, and a
dream, and started public
~»
TU«l
· ·: library service in Gallipolis.
GALLIPOLIS - TheSenlor The club continues to support
the library today.
Citizens Center, located at 2W
The' presen t members,
MIDDLEPORT - Several Bowles, legislative and Jackson Pike in the Courtly individually, and as a club;
new chairpersons were ap- historian ; 'Mrs. Hampton , Home Building , is open endeavor to carry on a
pointed by Mrs. Allen civil defense, and ' Mrs . Monday through Friday from tradition of interest in all that
Hampton, president, when Richards, foreign relaliohs. 9a.m. till3 p.m. The schedule broadens knowledge through
the American Le gio n
Mrs. Bowles requesled that of activities lor this week Is literature, as well as to
Auxiliary of Lewis Manley members write to AI mtman, as follows :
maintain an involvement in
Post 263, Middleport, met at cbalrman of the House Ways
Monday, Oct. 27 community affairs, so that a
the home of Mrs, Arnold and Means Committee, Veterans Day. The Center Is vision of long ago, realized
Richards Tuesday.
protesting the tax on military closed.
throughout the years, will he
Appointed were Mrs.' Ruth retirement pay.
Tuesday , · Oct. 28 - perpeiuated as we .enter this
Brown, veterhhs affairs and
Reports were given on the Visiting, 9 ~ .m. - 3 p.m.
bice~tennial year.
rehabilitation: Mrs. Lucille recent district conference at
Wednesday, Oct. 29 - Card
Saunders, community ser- Junction City and also on a Games, 1-3 p.m.
vice; Mrs. Dewey_ BenUey, vlsi t to the Soldiers and
Thursday, Oct. 30 - Birthchildren and youth; Mrs. Sailors' Orphans Home at day Party, 1:30 p.m.
Wedding
aad
Campbell Ha rper , Xenia.
Friday, Oct. 31 - Blood engagement notices for the
Americanism; Mrs. William
A field orientation meeting Pressure Check, 1-2 p.m. Art ·Sunday ·Times-Sentinel
Smith, poppy and national Nov. .g at Gallia Unit 27 was Class, 1-3 p.m. Halloween must be in ourhands by 1%
security; Mrs. Ernes t announced. Cards were Party, 7 p.m.
noon on the Thursday
signed for Von Cousins,
The Senior Nutrition preceding publication ..
Cleveland, an d Donald Program serves meals at the Information may be tumed
Luckadoo, Rutland.
center blonday through In or mailed to tbe
Friday at II: 30 a.m.
Galllpells Daily Tribune or
The Seniors' Coop Store is Pomeroy Dally Sentinel.
Engagemeat and wedding
COMPLETES PROGRAM open from 12:3!)-l:Jo p.m.
forms are also available on
MARlETTA - Marietta
request.
College sophomore David
Wolfe of bllddleporl, recenUy
completed a summer inTIJESDAY
ternship program in coorOPEN GATE Garden Club at dination with the Coolege's
the home ·or Mrs. Dina Edwy R. Brown Department
WEST COLUMBIA, W. Va.
Howard, 7:30 p.m,
of Petroleum Engineering. - The annual West Columbia
Wolfe was one of 58 MC School Fall Festival will be
WEDNESDAY
students who parllcipaled in held Nov. I at the school with
TRICK OR TREAT in Bid· the "on the job training" food and eventS for all. ·
well 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. for program in conjunction with
The soup sale will start at
age; 12 and under. Childnin , 20 of the nation's leading appro~imately 11 a.m. Then
must be accompanied by a petroleum companies. Wolfe at 4 p.m., the carnival will
parent or another adult.
was an Intern with Labor begin featuring the fish pond,
'
Services , Inc. in Harvey, a fun house -auction and
Louisiana. A1974 graduate of several more event.s.
Meigs H.S., Wolfe Is also
Culminating the even'in2
DALEY BLASI'S OEM
involved
In
football
and
a
will be ''Pie In the Eye," in- 7V2 Pel. per year on 1
SPRINGFIELD, ID. (UPI)
4 year certlfi,ate of
member of AIME at the volving one child in the school
- O!lcago Mayor Richard J . southeastern Ohio school. He
deposit.
'
picking his "favorite"
Daley, one of the nation's
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. teacher and putting a pie in
Sl,OOO.OO minimum
staunchest and
most
David
E.
W
olle,
273
Pearl
St.,
deposit,
Interest paid
their
eye.
powerful Democrats, has
Middleport.·
quarterly.
. All visitors and the entire
given his beleted encommunity are welcome.
dorsement
to. former
Republican Gov. Richard B.
Your Vote and Influence Appreciated
Ogilvie.
The endorsement was the
latest and most vitriolic blast
In Daley's continuing feud
with Gov. Daniel Walker , the
maverick · Democrat who
- t:AN DWATJo: FOR The Athens County
defeated Ogilvie In 1972.
S•vings
&amp; Lo.n Co.
Daley marshaled his forces
2'6 S.cond 51. ·
to override Walker's veto of
Pomeroy, Olllo
SllTI'ON TOWNSHIP
$111 million In state school aid
and ~&gt;!!rated Walker In a rare
appearance before a joint
General Elect;on November 4, 1975
session of th e. General
Pd . Pol. Adv.
Assembly Thursday.
necessary balance beL ween

- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, SUnday, Oct. 26; 1975

..

Lewis Manley Post 263 i
appoints new chairpersons .''~

Sr. Citizens f
Cafe--1-r

~lish

Fall carnival is Nov. 1 ·

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Gallia

•County
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Banu.lnerieant
UU I I

Chapter elects officers

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Personal Credit

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Also Available .

VINTON - Vinton Chapter
Offi cers elected for ·
O.E.S. 375 met at the Masonic 1976 were Worthy Matron,
Temple recently for its Barbara Denney; Worthy
regular meeting with Worthy Patron, Daniel Evans;
Matron Mildred Donahue and Associate Matron, Jean
Worthy Patron Jerry Barnes Moore; Associate P_atron,
presiding.
Robert Powell; Conductress;
The worthy matron · Cathy Aldennan; ASIOclate
welcomed the ·group. The · Conductress, Toriit 'Co!ller; .
secretary'• report was given Secretary, Margar~t Simms;
. by Margaret Simms and Treasurer, Ruth Evan~. : .
treasurer's · report was by Chapter closed ln ·rekuJar
Evelyn Denney.
form. A .social hour and
poUuck supper followed.

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Polyester.
Interlock Knits
Slinky prints .and solids for dren" and
blouses. In florals and novehiBs. 58 ·
60" wide . Machine wash, tumble dry.

R•t· S3.99 to 14.99 yd.
You .... to U .11 yd.

_$;1!!~
..\ too:~i~c~tl~ · ..
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· Do&amp;ml·e Knitl ' :

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.The popular weight for fall sporlsw~ar
ond dresses. Solids and ll)uill·colortd
Ianclos. 58·60" wide. Machine waoh
and dry .
· ·
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bg, U.99yol . . ·,: ·, ';
You .... 11 .51 yd. ·

GALLIPOLIS ,.- . The Oc- at his death.
meeting of the English
John J. Audubon, 1785-1851,
was held reeently at the pajnled birds of America.
of Mrs. Florence Willis Whistler, 1834-1903, palnled
Mrs. Mary Virginia · "WhisUer's Mother. " WinsRnrnor, co-hostess.
low Homer was one of the
Eleven members answered grestest marine pain ten of
call with "Name an all limes.
IArrterit:an . artl!!\ and one of
In 1839 the camera was
works.'' Named were inveriled, a rnecbanical InArchibald ·M. Willlard who vention that rang the bell for
"Spirit of 76"; the end of portrait painting as
r.urrier and lves, who from a lucrative profession.
1492-1900 painted
One or the fainOus landlithograptiS; .Charles Marion scape painters of this era wbs
Russell 1864-1926, known as iierstadt In 11163. he palnled
lhe cowboy ' artist; William "Rocky Mountains" which
Jackson, a western made him a national hero.
pair•ter; a painting, "First
Grant Wood's "American
of the Revollulon" by Gothic" sold to the Chicago
Wlknown artist; Julian Art Institute for $300~
Weir, "Visiting NeighSculptors became more
Grandma Moses, active about that time.
prirniti•~e pajptings; Winslow Fredrick Remington made
'Ratner, seascapes; Benjamin "Bronc Buster" in 1895.
"PeM's Treaty with · E. Fraser painted "End of
lhe Indians';; Norman Rock- the Trail," and C. T. Webber, .
paintings on Saturday 1824-19lo, patnled "The Tribe
c~..,v·"
'Ev•enlrrg Post covers; Grant of ban,'' nine sons of Daniel
uw
&lt;&gt; J J•
Vwo.
Wood, .'American Gothic"; McCook. "Grant Memorial"
John Trwnbull, "BatUe of was compleled in 1922 by T
han~ed
'
Hill," Michael Shrady, Bruce Wilder
~
who painted men sculpted "The Battle of
who signed the Declaration of Fallen Timbers."
Independence as· tliey were
Thereisapeacemonument
s
-~ejltem
' ~
when they signed It, not when at the foot of Capital Hill
they were · old. ·The sculptured In Rome to
secretary'~ report )"as read memorialize· the Navy Civil
MIDDLEPORT - Vases of shaped necklace, gift of the
accepted; Three cards War dead . It portrays
white
gladioli and mums groom. She carried a colonial
were signed fOil ~ r\IC~Dber. America weeping on the
decorated
the allar of the bouquet of mint green, lilac
Treasury rep«&lt;l't wis read shoulder of history,
and accepted·. , .
In 1930, Thomas Benton led Middleport O&gt;ilrch of Christ and white pompons with
Mrs. Beatrice Clark In- In painting murals c .He for the wedding of Cynthia baby's breath tied with lilac
traduced Mrs. Jennie Elliott painted some at N.Y. World's Marie Manley, daughter of ribbon and wore a garter
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford E. given to her by Mrs. John
whose program was "Art In Fair.
Manley,
Middleport, and Ambrose as part of the
America." Art in Al_'11erlca Is
After 1945, abstract exStephen
Robert
Hartenbach, "something old, borrowed
less than 300 years old. World presslonlsm became the
art be1an about 4000 B.C. thing in America: sUII life, son of Mr . and Mrs. Robert C. and blue ." ·
Debbie Hartenbach, sister
Art could he traced back to fruits, people, and realistic Harten bach, Pomeroy.
The
double
ring
ceremony
of
the groom , was the maid of
cave men atleast 20,000 years scenes of life. Artists sought
was
performed
by
the
Rev.
honor.
She wore a gown of
to show direct emotions,
ago.
George
Glaze
Sept.
12
at
5:30
orchid designed with long
Art and history are 1 closely fears, anger and gaiety.
p.m.
following
a
prograin
of
sleeves
and carried a bouquet
interwOven In the f~brlc of u.
During lhe depression lhe
nuptial
music
presented
by
of
orchid
pompens and baby's
cultures. Colonists were nation needed something to
Mrs.
Chester
Erwin,
breath
.
Wanda Wigal,
making a Jiving unUI bolster ita sense of national
organist.
Middleport
and Vicki
time tn the ' 17th Cen- pride so a huge monwnentat
Given
In
marriage
by
her
Snouffer,
·
Pomeroy,
bridestory. Bef.ore, there were Mt. Rushmore, South
father,
the
bride
was
attired
maids, were in gowns of mint
mosUy engravings made by Dakota was started comin
a
gown
~f bridal satin with green with lace bodices and
European arllats.
biQing the faces of
Portralla beCame popu1at Waehlngton, completed In an overlay of re-embroldered sleeves . They carried
with fi\IDUY ~ ~tinp 1930; Jeffer8111l,1936; Uncoln Alencon lace. The gown was bouquets of mint green
Benjat!lhl · )Velt piJalld lt37 and Theodore Roosevelt, fashioned with a double pompons and baby's breath.
tiered ruffle it the bottom, a
Kevin Dailey, Middleport,
"Death of Gt!t,INo!fe1• ui 1771- ,.. by Borglwn.
standup
collar
edged
with
was best man for the groom,
ind "Pena'a rr,aty with the William Jackson, dean of picot and long . full sleeves and
usher~ were. Jeff Shank
lndl.onll', lll&lt;~rn. •. . .•. , . American landscapes
banded
at
the
wrist.
The
and
Gary
Snouffer, Pomeroy,
··:fuj;;p' 'n'1iPbull l?M-IM3, pbotographel'8 reilred in 1929
bodice
was
trimmed
with
For
her
daughter's wedpupil of J!eaWn!n w...,t, did at ace 88. He returned to his
seed pearls and sequins.
ding.
Mrs.
Manley wore a
American .eenea to en- flrat love ptlinting. Many of
The
bride
wore
a
cap
of
navy
and
white
dress jacket
courage · 1 · feeling of hll pictures show true scenes
Alencon
lace
from
which
fell.
ensemble
and
a
corsage of
patriotism In the colonies. He of the transition period :
fioor-length
veil
of
illusion
a
white rosebuds. Mrs. Har"The Surrender of covered wagons being
accented
at·
the
bottom
with
tenbach was In a mint green
" portraits or replaced by the railroads and
lace
flowers.
Her
only
jacket
dress and also had a
and Uamlllon, pony express by . the
jewelry
was
a
diamond
heart
whlie
ro11ebud
corsage.
was given 1 rcmmlsslon telearaph was shown tn his
A
reception
honoring the
ln ·t•n11t jlllnli!lp for the palnll,~gs:, "Buffalo Stamcouple was held at the home
Cap•ltol at Washington D C pede'
Pony ExjM'ess .
of Mr. and Mrs. John Amcost of P2.000. He ~or
Rider·" His phiJOIIophy of life
brose following the wedding.
them for elilbt years and was to have something to do
three-tiered wedding cake
A
lna~tlled lhen1 1111824
tomorrow. He died In June,
featured
the traditional
lollowtr of Ben- 11142 at the age of 99.
,
miniature
bride
and groom
Weal, Gllbett Stuart,
Two other palntel'8, Benton
JOHN GEffi 'SfAR'
on top . Jal)et Ambrose
more than tOo ~tinga and Curry did stirring·murals
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
registered lhe guests and
,·
thowlng a growing nation.
Tada:r Scott has walercolors Elton Jolm wore a con- Becky Ambrose distributed
at Riverby that sell from $200 tiiii'Vatlve - for John - outfit the rice bags. Presiding at
and 1 huge grin Thursday as the refreshrnen! table were
to $900.
The progra!ll was enjoyed he became the 1 ,66~ en- Cathy Elliott, Fort Knox, Ky.
tertainer to he glven a star in and Vicky Russell, Rutland.
by all.
For a wedding trip to
Mra. Elliott Introduced the Hollywood Boulevard
sldewlllk.
Cincinnati
and Kentuckr, the
Jt1111than Louden from the
Some
3.1100
peraons
turned
brlde
ch'anged
Into a navy
Gilllpolla Ubrary who
showed a film of all out to aee John at tbe blue paniB outfit.
The couple resides at
Presidents from George dedicatlon ceremony, and
Washington · to Richard pollee closed off three blocb Brown 's Trailer Court,
of tbe boulevard. John tootled Minersville. The new Mrs.
Nixon.
Refreshmen Ia were served up to the lite aboard a goJc! Hartenbach is a graduate of
to II members and one guest, goU cart with a large pink Meigs High School, class of
bow a ·• hood ornament, 19'1$ and Is employed at
Mra. Raymond Willis.
The ned meeting wiD be deoorated with stan and , Adop~'s Dairy Valley. The
Nov. 4 at 7 p.m. at.the orne of bllntlpg llgbta that apell~ groom, a 1972 graduate of
Meigs High, is a deputy
Mrs. Ruth Mu!Uneaux with out his name.
Jolm
Wol'e
thick,
rainbow
·sheriff
in the Meigs County
Mrs. Irene Brannon, cocolored ~· a chartreuse. Sheriff's Office.
hOIIIesa.
Roll call wW he "An herb bowler rlmined with sequins, Out-of-town guests were
used for medicine." The a chll1reu!e suit aivered Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Elliott and
..,... program will be "Early with large gold stal'8Jike the daughter, Forl Knox, Ky.;
American Medicine" by Mrs. mea In Ute sidewalk and Mrs. Phil Wise, Miss Susie
Mary Vlrllnla Burner, - green A tin llhoes with $-Inch Budd and Miss Rosalee Wise,
heell.
~verly.
J111e Cantrell, Secntary.

Mr.. and Mrs.

uartenz.,"rh

Tows exc·

y

b-•nr.n"te

t"n

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Party hqnors
Tami£nm~r
GALLIPOLIS - Mr . .and
Mrs . Thomas Corner en tertained recenUy with a
party honoring the ninth
birthday of their daughter,
Tami Lynn.
Gifts were pre~~ented to
Tami and a cake inscribed
" Happy Birthday" . was
served with ice cream, KoolAid and nut cups.
Games were played with
prizes going to Bobby Allen,
Sherry Longley, !';Iaine
Kiskis and Laura Amsbury.
I.Jsa Blackburn won the door
prize.
Attending were Matt
_Comer, Sherry Longley, Julie
Lane, Bobby Allen, Pam
Allen, Patty Camden, Laura
Amsbury, Elaine Kislds, Jo
Ellen Oliver, Gina Oark,
Lisa Blackburn, Mandy
North and Todd Varney. Also
present was Taml's grandmother, Mrs. Winston Varney.
Setldlng a gift was her
grandmother, Mrs. Alma
Comer.

countries of Southeast Asia
and their many needs for
survival.
The second part was entitled " Benevolences."
Readings were given on this
topic, stressing the right and
wrong altitudes in giving.
Mrs. llollon gave a resume of
."An Old Time C;jmp Meeting
in Te&lt;as." Mrs. Olan
Genheimer had the special
' entitled "Charity and the
Man ." The program was
concluded with the song
" Amazing Grace" and
prayer by the leader. The
leader also conducted a
contest In keeping with
autumn.
· The November meeting of
the County Church Women
Uniled at tne Forest Run
United Methodist Church
Nov. 7, at 1:30 p.m. was
discussed and plans were
made. The Thanksgiving
dinner or the society will be
held at the church in
NovemJ&gt;er with each member
bringing their "Thank Offering" boxes. Names for a
Christmas gift exchange
were drawn. Forty-one sick
and shut-in calls were made
by the. members the past
month . The treasurer 's
report was read and the
meeting adjourned.
Refreshments were served
by the hostesses to ·Mrs.
Edison Hollon, Mrs. Hanson
Holter, Mrs. Alfred Yeauger,
Mrs. Vernon Neaile, Mrs .
Uswin Nease, Mrs. Erma
Roush, Mrs. Fred Nease,
Mrs. Kerns Rouith, Mrs. Jolm
Scott, Mrs. Edith Sisson, Mrs.
Russ Watson, Mrs. Richard
Jarvis and one guest, Mrs.
William Knig~t of Pt .
Pleasant.

DRIVER CITED
GALLIPOLIS - Harry D.
McQuaid, 43, Gallipolis, was
cbarged with DWI following a
traffic accident on Second
Ave. Friday night,
Officers said McQuaid lost
control of his car which
struck a parked auto owned
by Okey E . Coffee of
Gallipolis .

WOWK-TV, Channel13, has
announced a "Meet Your
Senators" essay contest for
Tri-State area junior and
senior high school students.
The announcement was made
by Channel13 Vice President
. and General Manager Leo M.
Mac.Courtney.
Winners of the contest will
win an all-expense-paid trip
~ Washington, D. C., where
they will meet personally
with Uniled States Senators
from West Virginia, Ohio and
Kentucky. The winners will
also be featured on a special
half-hour television program
to be aired on Channel 13.
To compete, students are

required to write an essay of
no more than 1,000 words
detailing the three most
pressing needs or problems
facing their conununlties and
expiain the reasons for their
choices .
A panel of area educators
will judge the essays on tbe
basis of originality and
content.
The contest is open to all
Tri-State area junior and
senior high school students
and completed essays must
he received by WOWK-TV no
later than Dec. 12.
Essays may he mailed to :
Meet Your Senators, WOWKTV, 625-4th Ave., Huntington,
W.Va.

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PUJJIII~I GIll
All IOG~IIHIER
W~III~I

BLOUSES
"Fall styles in
fall colors"
Make
this
fall
something special
with sty Iish Blouses
by

LADY
MANHATIAN
JANTZEN
CATALINA
LORI LYNN

BAHR
CLOTHIERS
Middleport,
Ohio

SEE THEM
TODAY!

house--~---------..

~
ca

th ANNIVERSARY

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NaN lHRU SAT., NOV. 1
'

1-

1 GROUP
GIRLS SHOES
1 GROUP WOMEN'S

TUBE SOX

SHOES S300

ALL AREA ·
SCHOOL COlORS
REG.I1.19
SALE

1 GROUP BOYS'

1 GROUP,WOMEN'S

DRESS SHOES AND BOOTS
30%

FF·

FAMOUS BRAND
MEN'S SAMPLE

DRESS SHOES
SALE •9 to •11.
Rttg •. S14.f9 - Sll.99

SPORT SHOES
7-7'1:!-8

Reg. 17.99

ROQ.SI1.99

SALE •5.00

SALE •14.40

REGULAR •3.91 .

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· FOREST RUN - Mrs. Olan
Genheirner and Mrs. Harry
Wyatt entertained the Uniled
Methodist Women · of the
Forest Run Uniled Methodist
Olurc:; at the home of Mrs.
Genheimer Tuesday evening.
• · The meeting opened with
the song '' America the
Beautiful " and the Lord 's
Prayer. Mrs. Richard Jarvis
was d,evotional leader, Her
topic was "Fruitful Seasons
Bring Gladness.' ' She gave a
meditation on the subject
bringing out the question,
"What kind of harvest are
you preparing and what kind
of seed are you sowing."
Mrs. Edison Hollon condueled the program prepared
by Mrs. Denver Holter who
was unable to attend. The
program was divided Into two
sections. The first part was a
"Missilin Study" centering on
Southeast Asia. Se.vei'al
readings were given on

7·7'1, ..

2YARD
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Forest Run UMW Station sponsoring
entertained Tuesday student essay contest

DRESS BOOTS
Sire

$ 48
I

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,o'
!

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60" DOUBLE KNITS
Good selection florais, patchwork, checka, plaids and
plains. Buy several yards

now.

10%

..@

Slroo 5-12
Rt•PU9

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$298

WOMEN'S
SAMPLE SIDES
Sires H'h-5
,.

"

SALE •5.00
Children's

YARD

10% DISCOUNT

4·H and Homt Ec. Students,

A Few Pairs
S.mplu In Tills Group

_ALL OTHER
MERCHANDISE
IN

,,

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Bridal Parllts &amp; Church Oroupa.

••••0• 101••1110! ... (111

.., J I

SALE •6.25

DISCOUNT TO ..

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TRUSTEE

.

LaCROSSE
CANVAS
Mlroott-Mtn's

I HEAT TRANSF ERI

Meigs Co. Branch

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c(ub hears
on painters

ked

to be Nov. 1

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School festival

Jack L. Wolfe

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RACiNE - The Racine Bostick, pop; Patty Pape, {\_ ·
PTA will sponsor a fall S~anne Wolfe, JoAnn Crisp, ' ·''-\ ..
Sally Savage,.Patty Hensler,carpival on Nov. l ·at the Kathleen ..Morris, bean bag .
Racine Elementary · School.
·
~"'
· }.
·. Serving will begin at 5:.311 toss ; Darlene Justis, ma,uup · · '"I ·
p.m. and on the menu·will be lady; Leanne Beegle, .Unda . ;: ·.. ·• .
sandwiches, soup, ·chili, Diddle and Jane Beegle, milk .•. :, .,~.
sloppy joes, hot dogs, pie, · can loss.
·
,,,
cake cookies and Kool-Aid.
Leo and Helen Hill, Uoyd · •,d ..
Ther~ will be a countty s!Qre, .and Paula Sayre, silhouettes;
a sweet shop, a variety of . Ronme and Cookie ·Sallier, ., :. 1.··.
BY FRED J. DEEL
games and an auc.tiori at 8 .Mike and .Patti Str\lble, ... '::f.
Gallla County
. p.m.
en·gravlng ; . Larry ·. and , .·:~·:I
4-H Extension Agent
The committees are David Delores Wo~fe, .Frank. and · ' .,.,·~
and Linda Hill, popcorn ; Btu, Mary Porter, rtng-a-nose; . •;q
and Diann Jewell Jack and George and Kay Wolfe! Jim . .,; ,
"Does An Incubated (:blct Love lt'8 Mother?"
Betty Teaford, To~ and Pam and Betty Bell, ball?ons; ·SUe " .. ,. 't
GAI..LII'()lJS- Well, this question will proQ&amp;bly not he Theiss, and Bill and Evelyn Ha~e.r, members!llp; Jean : :.:·:·
answered completely but many youth In Gallia County will be Maynard, fish pond; Earl and Alkir~, Mary Hill, Donna ·,. ,1;:
learning more about poultry and development of a chick .Jean Cleland, cane loss; Jim Morns, hcket~ ; Lillian .. ; :!I ·:
through the 4-H Clllck Embryology project, that Is being used Werry, Harold . Hager, DOn Weese, Luctlle _Dtehl, pocket , . ,,, 1 -,
by several teachers In variousschoolslnGallia County.
.
Beegle and Bob Fisher, dart lady; Edna. Prtce, florence . !''l ..
On Sept. 30, about 15 teachers attended a work:lhoctedpcobn- game.Circle, cashier; Ltbby
R. ,
cerning the Olick Embryology project that was condu . Y Russell . aitd Coralee . -Fisher, ticket sale. .
.. ,,,
Jun Marquand, Assistant State 4-H Leader, Ohio State Cummins, ; and Tom and
Linda Holter, Barb.ra· ·. · ·• ·,
University. They participated in several activities showing Phyllis Stobar.t, hoqi-a-shi&gt;ot; . Dug~, Jo.. R\)b~ti, , Jltie , , :· ·:·~ ..
how the project could be used In a classroom and related to the Jack Bostick and , Pauline ,,Rice, f_ap~ •. ft!IDe, ·';O)ll)lry; 1,, , , · ·
different subjeCIB that are taught In schools.
· :·
.. ,
, s~, .ll!ld "nita .HU11, !Cirel\ : , •:lt ..
The teachers were also informed of different equipment
. •·:w'~. UI Hat,,,,Jjnlf. ~tb, , : Wi .
and educational materials that are available tO be u~ with
··
, !lOttie CUrtis,. ~o~ Wolf~, : • '. •ill
the project. These iric!ude charts, slides and two Incubators
··, '
Phy~is McMillan; .-!)Oroth&gt;: ·:, ..,;,
that were purchased with funds proVided by the Ohio 4-H
· Johnson, Donna Ihle, Nancy , ,. , ,..,
FoiDldatlon. Presently, one of the Incubators 1s In use In the
Ervin, Cindy Smith, J~JI · · ;, .
1
classroom of Mrs. O!rl$tlne Napier at the Cll'esblrt-Kyger
SIGNS CONTRACT
Cardone, Doris Fisher, .
Elementary School. The other teachers have schedulejl the
CINCINNATI
The Romain Frederick, ,Jut.e. . '"'·
incubator and materials for pcrlods during the remainder of Ai!Jerican ' Mutual Group of Bliker and Betty Curfman; · '· "
the year.
.
Recording · Companies,. a ldtchen.
· ·' ·
We, at the Extension Office, are also very inVQived with this Cincinnati based operation, ,
, ;: ·
project. One of the iricubators were not being used so we Bel a has announced the signing of
group of eggs In the Incubator and if everything goes as ex- Joel Hopkins, an artist from
peeled, we will have a batch of 'chlcks hatcli out about Patriot, to a recording
Tuesday, Oct. 28. So If you would like to see some newly hat- contract.
.
. ·. ~ liS
ched chicks, stop in the Extension Offlce this week and
After coijferring with'
bopefully there will he Some there for you to Bee.
. · . AMG's chief · producer · Ctirl'
I would like' to also mention that at varloliS . tl!nes : Edrnon4s011, . ahd co~~ai)y
throughout the year we will be needing fertile eggs for tiie with executive ·Bill Stith, H,opt(fns·
this projec;\ and sometimes they arehard 19 find. So If yotihiive 'was signed to a conft!lct. .'.
. ,....
a flock of hens, with some roosters among them, aqd you feel AMG plans ·to release ·a ·,
you mi&amp;tt ~ve some e~s that we could use in this project, ·recording in lhe near future .
then let us know •.we would appreciate it.
.

'

Store

The Fabric

Hours
flo 5
Mon .• Fri.
9 to 1. S.t.
Closed Sun.

heritageMIDDLEPORT,house
OHIO

.,
•

•,

�·-T--.-.
·... H -

MIDDLEPOR T ~
Saturday afternoon movies
"111 be held at the Middleport
Elementary School under
sp&lt;lnsorship or the Middleport
PTA with the first one to be
shown on Nov. 15.
MeeUng Monday night at
lhe school , the PTA agreed to
sponsor enlerlainljlent fUIJlS
to begin at 1:30 p.m. on
Saturday afternoons. FiiiJlS
h!l.ve been seheduled (or Nov.
15 and ' 22 and for sev·
eral Saturdays !P De·
cember' the dates and
titles to be announced
later. To offset the rj!nlal
charge, a 50 cent donation
will be taken. All children are
welcome an d adul ts will
su~rvise .
It was noted that there will
be no additional heat in the
bui\ding and lbe children
should take sit-upon s or
blankets since there will be
no chairs.
With Mrs.
Richard
Va"8han presiding, the unit
also voted to contribute to .the
two scholarships to be
awarded in the spring, and to
pay the dues to the Meigs
County Council of Parents
, and Teachers.
Mrs . Joyce 'Blake, wavs
and. means committee 1
reported.on plans for the fall
carnival Oct. 3o at the school,
6 to 9 p.m. Costume judging
will begin at 6 p.m. lor the
kindergarden through the
fourth grades of the school.
· Baked goods are to be taken
after 12:30 on Thursday, and
items for the country store
can be taken any time after
Monday.ltems too large to be
handled by the children will
be picked up ,

Playground improvement compo~ by Mrs . Gladys
Open house followed the
meeting.
was discussed and it was F'oley, music teacher.
noled that progress is at a
f
standstill
due to the lack of
I
parent help.
~
Mrs. Vaughan introduced
1
Mrs
. Charles Goeglein ,
:.
t of the Meigs
presiden
•
County
Council
of Parents &amp;
(
Teachers, and alsonoted that
Robert Morris, principal, had
received the "Outstanding
Ed
ucator's Award " for
:
District
16 at the ·ohio PTA
:
conven
lion.
#
Mrs . Carolyn French
•
reported the PTA now has 158
~
paid members . Donations
w~re requested for the lun·
.
cheon to be served to garden
'
d ub members Saturday .
•
American Education Week
:
=
was announced for Nov. !S.22.
~
Mrs. Pat Kitchen reported on
~
room mothers and urged the
PTA to save Campbell soup
labeb which can be
redeemed for classroom '
materials. Room count was
won by Mrs. Mary. Rose's
mornlng kindergarten class.
Speaking at the meeting on
the community mental health
levy, lwo·lenths of a mill
renewal, ·was Marcia Kubbs.
Also present to speak were
A·FALL GOSPEL OONCERT Ia slated ~t the Gallia
Virgil King, candidate for reAcademy High School Auditorium In Gallipolis Friday at 8
election to · the· Boarct of
p.m. Featured singel'll are Bob Wells and the In·
Education of the Meigs Local
splratlonals from Texas, sponsored by the Southeastern
School District, and Jennifer
Ohio Gospel Music Association . There will be a concession
Lohse Sheets, of near
stand and a free will offering will be taken to help support
Rutland, also a candida~~! for
the slngers. President of the aSBociation Chester A. Sexton
the board.
and director La!T)' McGraw Invite everyone to attend.
Prayer by Mrs. Vaughan
opened the meeting and the
first grade students of ,Mrs . . '
Wilson Carpenter led In the
pledge to the flag and sang
three songs, " America,"
"Smoky, the Bear," and the
Anewly organized t-H Cl~b answer ~riod followed.
new Mid&lt;!leporl school song In the Patriot-Gage Com·
The club decided to take All
munity met Oct. 13 at the American Foods as a club
--------·-----·----~- home .of Ruth Wood. Ruth project to go along with the
' Wood was In charge of the bicente.nnial year. The
meeUng and Beth Salisbury meeting adjourned. The nell
read the scripture followed meeUng will be Oct. '!/ (a
by the Lord's Prayer led by Halloweenparty)atthehome
Kay Smith.
of Ruth Wood.
Rollin Hudson read a poem
Refreshments were served
titled "Halloween". Kay . to the 11 members and
Smith and Robin Massey led guests, Mrs. Janie Elkins,
Cakndar
I group singing. A discussion Michael and Scott, Missy
Oct. 26, Sunday, 2 p.rri.-4 p.m. - Parent-Child Work•hm, was held on what the name of Carpenter, Mrs. Jacky
the club would be, but no Graham, and Mr. and Mrs.
"Make Yow Own Halloween Masks," Riverby.
diflnlte
name was decided. Herman Wood.
Oct. 28, Tueaday, 8 p.r,n. - F .1\,C. Trustees Meeting,
Olllcera
elected were Club advisors are Ruth
Riverby.
. , Elhibit for the month of October: Antiques, partlcW.rly president, Robin Hudson; Wood and Sue Smith.
prlmitive.antlques, native to the Ohio Valley region, pre-1900, · V\ce"ilf'sldent, Judy Davies; Reporter, Ruth Wood.
secretary, Beth Salisbury;
Riverby.
•
treasurer, Janie Hill; news
reporter, Sandy Lakin; song
:
'·
leaders, Robin Muley and
LAFF. A. DAY
Angela Elkins; recreation
I~
leaders, Lorle Carpenter and
Mary CJac&amp;; health ' Chair·
man, Kay ~t.h, and safety
chairman, Jessica Elkins.
Each member received an
Next door to Post Office
office.
Jacky Graham was the
pt, Pleasant, W. Va.
guest lor the evening. She
spoke on 4-H. She discUMed
the many projects that are
·••
•
avalli~~ t~r Hf·Hers and ;:,;" :....... .. .. :. ... ..
exp
an
4- motto and "How come he never gets
••
CAN~
'\
t-H emblem. A quesUon and nlamed lor anythirig1 " ·

SIVEY
::;..__--=.;..EA;:.:;;RL:.;_vw.;,.;. E: .=.;EK;.;...,"
A~ERTISED ITEM POLICY
Each of these advertiSed items is required
to be readily available for ,sale at or below
the advertised price in each A&amp;P store, ex·
as specifically noted in this ad.

Super-Buy" sPEcIALs
SAVE

sz49

-

~·

•o

~--

sunray RANGES

Or Mort!

Prices Gqod Sunday, Monday And
Tuesday, October 26th, 27th &amp; 28th!

cept

Terrific Buys AI/ Down the Line on
Famous Maytag Dspsndability!

~~
••

WE BUY

•

THEM BY

I
One Half-Gallon Carton

•'
"
'

MARVEL- ANY FLAVOR

l ........

Ice cream
~

COUPON'-=============-1°:11:11
·-·eJ
One Half-Gallon Carton
MARVEL- ANY FLAVOR

•

s~"

\ 'a\O'l

. With This Coupon And 17.50 Purchase

Good Sunday, Monday &amp; Tuesday, Oct. 2oth, 27th &amp; 28th at A&amp;P

~~~:i&gt;i====-==========Um. H 0ttt Coupon Pit C.CIJ10ttt"'LIIfllr==========41~.:.-:

'

.

REST GUARD

••'
•

r ·:.IJ~.MLLJ

I

••
••

,

,.T-1' -.- ~'

I

..

•'I•

--

I.-- ~- 'I :'

••

- -- 1 • •

i'

·I

!,.'I•

MAnRESS AND BOX
SPRING

SAVE 540

MAYTAG~
DISHWASHERS

ON EACH

l

SET DURING THIS SALE

L_ _
1;

SEALY

l ~tt&amp;

MODEL
WU200

~EL
'

''

..

STOCK UP AND SAVE

--

COKE

1

EVERY lADIES

'

· Sealy . Redi·Bed-Sofa with
mattress inside. You must
see these.

We have some real buys
in used furniture.

.,

SHOP US ARST!

WARRANTY
.ON

SALE SPECIAL!

COMPRESSOR

bottles

•379 WIT

LINOLEUM RUGS
ONLY

Model F1'1·170T

·

t

lplu •posltl

A&amp;P
SUPER

!gldnlr&amp;.ltolna En¥lrorom1nt Dlt-111on of Gln1ral ~

FLOOR SAMPLE SALE

BUY

'

SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY ONLY
OCTOBER 26th &amp; 27th
MODEL
FV21M2

21

cu. Fr.

'

./

'&lt;

In Our Window

2 Pc. Velvet

LIMITED SELECJION

LIVING ROOM

L. R. SUITE

2 PC. LIVING

UVING ROOM

UPRIGHTS &amp; QiESTS

SUITE

Nylon, Real Pretty •

ROOM SUITE

SUITE

• more prolecllon for 'your valuable
food with lock and safety key that
pops out into your hand. so y(,u can
never forget it.
• more co nvenience wi.th defrost
w~ter drain.

8-oz.

SHOES
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

2 Pc. Red Floral

• more value wilh the Inne; door liner
~aid ed. of Iough, new ABS material.
II s easter cleaning , highly damage
resistant, and stain and odor lree.

$
,...

&gt;'I Gibson~

~ APPLIAM:ES~
..

THEY LAST ·

L•

I'

..

'

2 Pc. Herculon

••• and your
Gibson. men
deliver more

DIXIE ROME
MEAT PIES

•

Teakwood trim and distinctive
smoked onyx accents are elegant
hints of convenience inside. Super·
tough liner cleans easy, resists
stains. Top-freezer has 4.75 cu. ft.
with c:~vered ice tray storage and
a separate, removable fuli·width
shelf (4 in refrigerator section).
Storage Includes twin Vegetable
Hydrators, compartments in door
for spreads, cheese; removable
servers for eggs; door shelves for
bottles, cartons.

Used Furniture
Bargain Center

SOmething Special in Home Appliances
10 YfAR

"Sales With Service"

$29995

· sHOP·OUR

,. . .$

IN OUR STORE

Maytag! the one
to buy in the first p/aceJ

SOFA BED WITH
'
MATCHING CHAIR

Ii'

MACRAME. DECOUPAGE. CRAFT,

HANDBAG

• Full size upper &amp; lower high velocity
spray arms plus center post spray . .. 3 ,
level scrubbing eliminates pre-rinsing •
Unique racking • dishes and silverware on
top • not the bot·
t om - MicroMesh filter

.

'

ART &amp; CRAFT SUPPLIES

FUR, atENILLE. PAINTS,
....
ETC....__..__.

DRYERS.
• Permanent Press. Regular and Air Fluff
Cycles • Famous Maytag Hat o~of-Heat
drying eliminates " hot spots" • Large porcelain enamel drum with easy to clean lint
fi lter • Zinc coat~
ed steel cabinet
with Iough acryl·
M~L ic enamel finish

SEALY

---·---

'
•I• .
•I

MAYTAG~

FREEZER HOLDS 129 LBS.

frOst*Ciear RefrigeratOr-Freezers

....."'"'"

• Permanent press and regtJiar fa br ic
cycles • 3 Water level settings • 3 Water
temperature seHings • Zinc coated steel
cabinet with tough acrylic enamel finish
• Family size
tub with Power
Fin Agitator •
MODEL
A
·
Aloe
ttrachve
brush·
ed met~ l trlii -

Sales with service - we set your
range up for natural or bottled gas
before it leaves our store. We
, deliver ready to hook up. You' ll
· !Ike our better service .

14 cu. FT.

.

il
;

'
•••

Ice Cream

Gal1ia 4-H Club News

Gibson·

•'

,.

•

SRM29CX·O
36" Town and Country · Hinged, Recessed
Cookln9 Surface · Wood·vralned . Conkol
Panel · Oven Window and Light .
SPECIF-ICATIONS: Width 36", Height .
43112 ' 1 •. Depth 28" · Oven Interior
20"xl41h" x19" . Approx. ship wt .: ·195lbs.

THE

!

With Coupon Below
And $7.50 Purchase

SAVEll&amp;!
MAYTAG ~O\ID®llO
WASHERS

The Gazebo

J

- - - ·

SALE OF APPLIANCES•• .SALES AND SERVICE, THAT'S US!

,.

•

··"'-·--

BRIDGE RE-OPENING

l

!'

--~-·

PER BUY

'

j

...--~

The Suriday TUl1~ ·S&lt;-ntinel,Sunday, Oct . 26 , 1975

Saturday afternoon nzovies
to start at Middleport school

I

--.

Was
$399.95

$29995

Big Sale Of

·aASSETI
RECLINERS
NOW

$7700

~::.95

$49995

Bassett "Wall-Away"

RECLINER

~~~~9;eat

$29995

~::.95

$39995

2 Pc . Brown

2 Pc . Seal)'

VINYL

SOFA &amp; CHAIR

L.R. SUITE

10 SUITES IN STOCK

~::. 95

TO CHOOSE FROM

$39995

�·-T--.-.
·... H -

MIDDLEPOR T ~
Saturday afternoon movies
"111 be held at the Middleport
Elementary School under
sp&lt;lnsorship or the Middleport
PTA with the first one to be
shown on Nov. 15.
MeeUng Monday night at
lhe school , the PTA agreed to
sponsor enlerlainljlent fUIJlS
to begin at 1:30 p.m. on
Saturday afternoons. FiiiJlS
h!l.ve been seheduled (or Nov.
15 and ' 22 and for sev·
eral Saturdays !P De·
cember' the dates and
titles to be announced
later. To offset the rj!nlal
charge, a 50 cent donation
will be taken. All children are
welcome an d adul ts will
su~rvise .
It was noted that there will
be no additional heat in the
bui\ding and lbe children
should take sit-upon s or
blankets since there will be
no chairs.
With Mrs.
Richard
Va"8han presiding, the unit
also voted to contribute to .the
two scholarships to be
awarded in the spring, and to
pay the dues to the Meigs
County Council of Parents
, and Teachers.
Mrs . Joyce 'Blake, wavs
and. means committee 1
reported.on plans for the fall
carnival Oct. 3o at the school,
6 to 9 p.m. Costume judging
will begin at 6 p.m. lor the
kindergarden through the
fourth grades of the school.
· Baked goods are to be taken
after 12:30 on Thursday, and
items for the country store
can be taken any time after
Monday.ltems too large to be
handled by the children will
be picked up ,

Playground improvement compo~ by Mrs . Gladys
Open house followed the
meeting.
was discussed and it was F'oley, music teacher.
noled that progress is at a
f
standstill
due to the lack of
I
parent help.
~
Mrs. Vaughan introduced
1
Mrs
. Charles Goeglein ,
:.
t of the Meigs
presiden
•
County
Council
of Parents &amp;
(
Teachers, and alsonoted that
Robert Morris, principal, had
received the "Outstanding
Ed
ucator's Award " for
:
District
16 at the ·ohio PTA
:
conven
lion.
#
Mrs . Carolyn French
•
reported the PTA now has 158
~
paid members . Donations
w~re requested for the lun·
.
cheon to be served to garden
'
d ub members Saturday .
•
American Education Week
:
=
was announced for Nov. !S.22.
~
Mrs. Pat Kitchen reported on
~
room mothers and urged the
PTA to save Campbell soup
labeb which can be
redeemed for classroom '
materials. Room count was
won by Mrs. Mary. Rose's
mornlng kindergarten class.
Speaking at the meeting on
the community mental health
levy, lwo·lenths of a mill
renewal, ·was Marcia Kubbs.
Also present to speak were
A·FALL GOSPEL OONCERT Ia slated ~t the Gallia
Virgil King, candidate for reAcademy High School Auditorium In Gallipolis Friday at 8
election to · the· Boarct of
p.m. Featured singel'll are Bob Wells and the In·
Education of the Meigs Local
splratlonals from Texas, sponsored by the Southeastern
School District, and Jennifer
Ohio Gospel Music Association . There will be a concession
Lohse Sheets, of near
stand and a free will offering will be taken to help support
Rutland, also a candida~~! for
the slngers. President of the aSBociation Chester A. Sexton
the board.
and director La!T)' McGraw Invite everyone to attend.
Prayer by Mrs. Vaughan
opened the meeting and the
first grade students of ,Mrs . . '
Wilson Carpenter led In the
pledge to the flag and sang
three songs, " America,"
"Smoky, the Bear," and the
Anewly organized t-H Cl~b answer ~riod followed.
new Mid&lt;!leporl school song In the Patriot-Gage Com·
The club decided to take All
munity met Oct. 13 at the American Foods as a club
--------·-----·----~- home .of Ruth Wood. Ruth project to go along with the
' Wood was In charge of the bicente.nnial year. The
meeUng and Beth Salisbury meeting adjourned. The nell
read the scripture followed meeUng will be Oct. '!/ (a
by the Lord's Prayer led by Halloweenparty)atthehome
Kay Smith.
of Ruth Wood.
Rollin Hudson read a poem
Refreshments were served
titled "Halloween". Kay . to the 11 members and
Smith and Robin Massey led guests, Mrs. Janie Elkins,
Cakndar
I group singing. A discussion Michael and Scott, Missy
Oct. 26, Sunday, 2 p.rri.-4 p.m. - Parent-Child Work•hm, was held on what the name of Carpenter, Mrs. Jacky
the club would be, but no Graham, and Mr. and Mrs.
"Make Yow Own Halloween Masks," Riverby.
diflnlte
name was decided. Herman Wood.
Oct. 28, Tueaday, 8 p.r,n. - F .1\,C. Trustees Meeting,
Olllcera
elected were Club advisors are Ruth
Riverby.
. , Elhibit for the month of October: Antiques, partlcW.rly president, Robin Hudson; Wood and Sue Smith.
prlmitive.antlques, native to the Ohio Valley region, pre-1900, · V\ce"ilf'sldent, Judy Davies; Reporter, Ruth Wood.
secretary, Beth Salisbury;
Riverby.
•
treasurer, Janie Hill; news
reporter, Sandy Lakin; song
:
'·
leaders, Robin Muley and
LAFF. A. DAY
Angela Elkins; recreation
I~
leaders, Lorle Carpenter and
Mary CJac&amp;; health ' Chair·
man, Kay ~t.h, and safety
chairman, Jessica Elkins.
Each member received an
Next door to Post Office
office.
Jacky Graham was the
pt, Pleasant, W. Va.
guest lor the evening. She
spoke on 4-H. She discUMed
the many projects that are
·••
•
avalli~~ t~r Hf·Hers and ;:,;" :....... .. .. :. ... ..
exp
an
4- motto and "How come he never gets
••
CAN~
'\
t-H emblem. A quesUon and nlamed lor anythirig1 " ·

SIVEY
::;..__--=.;..EA;:.:;;RL:.;_vw.;,.;. E: .=.;EK;.;...,"
A~ERTISED ITEM POLICY
Each of these advertiSed items is required
to be readily available for ,sale at or below
the advertised price in each A&amp;P store, ex·
as specifically noted in this ad.

Super-Buy" sPEcIALs
SAVE

sz49

-

~·

•o

~--

sunray RANGES

Or Mort!

Prices Gqod Sunday, Monday And
Tuesday, October 26th, 27th &amp; 28th!

cept

Terrific Buys AI/ Down the Line on
Famous Maytag Dspsndability!

~~
••

WE BUY

•

THEM BY

I
One Half-Gallon Carton

•'
"
'

MARVEL- ANY FLAVOR

l ........

Ice cream
~

COUPON'-=============-1°:11:11
·-·eJ
One Half-Gallon Carton
MARVEL- ANY FLAVOR

•

s~"

\ 'a\O'l

. With This Coupon And 17.50 Purchase

Good Sunday, Monday &amp; Tuesday, Oct. 2oth, 27th &amp; 28th at A&amp;P

~~~:i&gt;i====-==========Um. H 0ttt Coupon Pit C.CIJ10ttt"'LIIfllr==========41~.:.-:

'

.

REST GUARD

••'
•

r ·:.IJ~.MLLJ

I

••
••

,

,.T-1' -.- ~'

I

..

•'I•

--

I.-- ~- 'I :'

••

- -- 1 • •

i'

·I

!,.'I•

MAnRESS AND BOX
SPRING

SAVE 540

MAYTAG~
DISHWASHERS

ON EACH

l

SET DURING THIS SALE

L_ _
1;

SEALY

l ~tt&amp;

MODEL
WU200

~EL
'

''

..

STOCK UP AND SAVE

--

COKE

1

EVERY lADIES

'

· Sealy . Redi·Bed-Sofa with
mattress inside. You must
see these.

We have some real buys
in used furniture.

.,

SHOP US ARST!

WARRANTY
.ON

SALE SPECIAL!

COMPRESSOR

bottles

•379 WIT

LINOLEUM RUGS
ONLY

Model F1'1·170T

·

t

lplu •posltl

A&amp;P
SUPER

!gldnlr&amp;.ltolna En¥lrorom1nt Dlt-111on of Gln1ral ~

FLOOR SAMPLE SALE

BUY

'

SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY ONLY
OCTOBER 26th &amp; 27th
MODEL
FV21M2

21

cu. Fr.

'

./

'&lt;

In Our Window

2 Pc. Velvet

LIMITED SELECJION

LIVING ROOM

L. R. SUITE

2 PC. LIVING

UVING ROOM

UPRIGHTS &amp; QiESTS

SUITE

Nylon, Real Pretty •

ROOM SUITE

SUITE

• more prolecllon for 'your valuable
food with lock and safety key that
pops out into your hand. so y(,u can
never forget it.
• more co nvenience wi.th defrost
w~ter drain.

8-oz.

SHOES
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

2 Pc. Red Floral

• more value wilh the Inne; door liner
~aid ed. of Iough, new ABS material.
II s easter cleaning , highly damage
resistant, and stain and odor lree.

$
,...

&gt;'I Gibson~

~ APPLIAM:ES~
..

THEY LAST ·

L•

I'

..

'

2 Pc. Herculon

••• and your
Gibson. men
deliver more

DIXIE ROME
MEAT PIES

•

Teakwood trim and distinctive
smoked onyx accents are elegant
hints of convenience inside. Super·
tough liner cleans easy, resists
stains. Top-freezer has 4.75 cu. ft.
with c:~vered ice tray storage and
a separate, removable fuli·width
shelf (4 in refrigerator section).
Storage Includes twin Vegetable
Hydrators, compartments in door
for spreads, cheese; removable
servers for eggs; door shelves for
bottles, cartons.

Used Furniture
Bargain Center

SOmething Special in Home Appliances
10 YfAR

"Sales With Service"

$29995

· sHOP·OUR

,. . .$

IN OUR STORE

Maytag! the one
to buy in the first p/aceJ

SOFA BED WITH
'
MATCHING CHAIR

Ii'

MACRAME. DECOUPAGE. CRAFT,

HANDBAG

• Full size upper &amp; lower high velocity
spray arms plus center post spray . .. 3 ,
level scrubbing eliminates pre-rinsing •
Unique racking • dishes and silverware on
top • not the bot·
t om - MicroMesh filter

.

'

ART &amp; CRAFT SUPPLIES

FUR, atENILLE. PAINTS,
....
ETC....__..__.

DRYERS.
• Permanent Press. Regular and Air Fluff
Cycles • Famous Maytag Hat o~of-Heat
drying eliminates " hot spots" • Large porcelain enamel drum with easy to clean lint
fi lter • Zinc coat~
ed steel cabinet
with Iough acryl·
M~L ic enamel finish

SEALY

---·---

'
•I• .
•I

MAYTAG~

FREEZER HOLDS 129 LBS.

frOst*Ciear RefrigeratOr-Freezers

....."'"'"

• Permanent press and regtJiar fa br ic
cycles • 3 Water level settings • 3 Water
temperature seHings • Zinc coated steel
cabinet with tough acrylic enamel finish
• Family size
tub with Power
Fin Agitator •
MODEL
A
·
Aloe
ttrachve
brush·
ed met~ l trlii -

Sales with service - we set your
range up for natural or bottled gas
before it leaves our store. We
, deliver ready to hook up. You' ll
· !Ike our better service .

14 cu. FT.

.

il
;

'
•••

Ice Cream

Gal1ia 4-H Club News

Gibson·

•'

,.

•

SRM29CX·O
36" Town and Country · Hinged, Recessed
Cookln9 Surface · Wood·vralned . Conkol
Panel · Oven Window and Light .
SPECIF-ICATIONS: Width 36", Height .
43112 ' 1 •. Depth 28" · Oven Interior
20"xl41h" x19" . Approx. ship wt .: ·195lbs.

THE

!

With Coupon Below
And $7.50 Purchase

SAVEll&amp;!
MAYTAG ~O\ID®llO
WASHERS

The Gazebo

J

- - - ·

SALE OF APPLIANCES•• .SALES AND SERVICE, THAT'S US!

,.

•

··"'-·--

BRIDGE RE-OPENING

l

!'

--~-·

PER BUY

'

j

...--~

The Suriday TUl1~ ·S&lt;-ntinel,Sunday, Oct . 26 , 1975

Saturday afternoon nzovies
to start at Middleport school

I

--.

Was
$399.95

$29995

Big Sale Of

·aASSETI
RECLINERS
NOW

$7700

~::.95

$49995

Bassett "Wall-Away"

RECLINER

~~~~9;eat

$29995

~::.95

$39995

2 Pc . Brown

2 Pc . Seal)'

VINYL

SOFA &amp; CHAIR

L.R. SUITE

10 SUITES IN STOCK

~::. 95

TO CHOOSE FROM

$39995

�16 - The S•mdayTimes • St•ntincl, Sw1day , Ort . 26, 1975

Mrs. ·Atkins selected
'
.Granger of the Year ' '

POMEROY '
Meigs
&amp;&gt; niur Cili1.cns Center 1\rli\dtics locHi ed al Pdrne:roy

POMEROY
Mrs . · specializing in turkey coun iy fair fl ower shows.
Pauline H. .Atkins of prOduction. She is also emMrs . Atkins is al so a
Harrisonville .was selected ployed by the Ohio State member of the Farm Bureau,
"GrangerortheYear" at the Dairy Improv ement a pasfmatron of the Order of
recent Ohio State Grange Ass ociation
as
dairy Eastern Star, a past district
annual convention in Toledo. prOduction supervisor.
president and a past . high
Selected from among 37
A member of the priestess of the White Shrine
·nominees for the awa rd, Harrisonville Presbyterian &lt;Jf Jerusalem.
given to recognize and honor Church, Mrs. Atkin s is a
Her hobbies in clude
. outstanding grange members ruling elder, clerk of the growi ng and arrangin g
by the Ohio Stale Grange and Session and vice president of fl owers, workin g with
the Farmers and Traders the Ladies Society. She has animals and doing the things
L1fe Insurance Co ., Mrs. been advisor of the which keep her c!O!;e to
Atkins was presented a Harrisonville 4-H Girls for nature in the rural complaque and recognized at U1e the past 32 years, and is a munity. She and he~· 1 mother,
banquet,
.
past president of both the Mrs. Ruby Halliday, a 67The plaque was presented Rutland and Star Garden year Grange member, live
by
Richard·· Trunde l, Clubs and an active member together. Mrs. Atkins has a
representative of the Far- serving on committees. She daughter, Sharon Jewell ,
. mers and Traders Life !n- has also served as . ~halr­ who also resides near
surance Co., In recognition woman of both reglolll!l and Harrisonville.
for "outstanding service to
community . and grange -for
the 1974-75 year." In addition,
. Mrs. Atkins received a $50
_check as did the Harrisonville .
. Grange or which she Is a
·member. .
'
Mrs. Atkins Is one of 137
persons In the United States
to have received the award in
the past seven years. Last
year ' she rece ived the
• "Outstanding Granger In
Meigs Coun ty'' award.
She has been a member of
the Harrisonville Grange for
47 years and is also a memb~r
of the Pomona, State and
National organizations. She
has filled the offices of
ma~ter, lecturer, secretary,
lady assistant steward and
chairwoman of Women 's
Activities.
In addition she has served
as lecturer of Meigs Coun ty
Pomona Grange for 24 years
and has held the offi ces ol
Pomona and lady assistant
steward. For 12 yea•·s she
served as Ohio State Grange
deputy matron and for two of
those years served In U1e dual
position of both deputy
master and matron due to the
197~ death or her husband,
VIrgil , who had th e apSELECTED GRANGER OF THE YEAR - Mrs.
pointment of master:
f&gt;auline Atkins, ~rionsvllle, .was selected "Granger of
Mrs. Atkins operates a ~Ill).
the Year" recenUy at the Ohio State Grange annual
acre farm near Harrisonville
convention In Toledo .• Mrs. Atkins Ia shown with the
doing diversified farming and
plaque she was presented ..

Letart Homemakers
hold meeting Oct. 1
LETART, W. Va . - The
Letart Homemakers held.
their regular monthly
meeting Oct. 1 at the Letart
.School. The president, Mrs.
Lois Hoffman presided over
the meeting. Devotions were
led by Mrs. Shirley VanFossln.
The members decided to
have their monthly meetings
at the home of the members
once again star ting nexl

LAY-AWAY
FO~

Christmas

GIVE
BULOVA
The true
value
watch.

inonlh.
The lap robes made by the
club will be given to senior
citizens ln t)le various
communities. Some will also
be taken to hospitals.
The club will sponsor a
Halloween Party for mem:
bers and their families at the
White Church Community
Building on Ocl . 31 at 8 p.m.
New officers are president,
Dorothy
Click ; vicepresident, Pat Friend;
secretary, Lois Durst ;
treasurer, Judy Hunt ;
recreation leader, Barbara
Winter; devotional leader,
Ruth Pickens; scrapbook,
Unda Grimm and Mildred
Morgan.
Hostesses for the ·evening
were Linda Grimm and Betty
Fisher. Attending were
Dorothy Click, Lois Durst,
Betty Fisher, Opal Friend,
Unda Grimm, Audrey Hoff.
man, Lois Hoffman, Judy
Hunt , Sharon McClellan ,
Mildred Morgan, Maxine
Morrison, Ruth Pickens, Sue
Sayre, Shirley VanFOSBin and
Barbara Winter.

te~lured

bractret welch.

&amp;&gt;nior band

were

hun\Jr ~ d'

- -.t' ,ii4?
'
Honorary, ~nd Miss

Fisher
;md Miss Rhodes hi!ve participated in solo and ensemble competitio n. Miss
Harris is presiden t of the
band and last year served as
secretary, while Miss Rhodes
was vice president during her
jw1ior year.
Following the recognition,
the band did an eKit drill to
the Pepsi Cola theme
"Feelin' Free". ,Joy Bigler is
the dit•ector.

11

the chaplain closed the
business with p~ayer~
· Games were played and
refreshments were .served to
Mary (Biil ) Roush; Mary
1Bob)
Roush, Thelma
Capehart, Helen Knapp,
Ale tha Weaver, Karen
Marshall, Genevieve Woods,
Sadie . Warth, Evelyn Dunbury, Mary Ellen Dye,
Virginia Smith, Bonnie
Freeman and Mary Work
man , second vicl~·presiclenti

PRICES GOOD THRU
NOV. I, 197~

'•

HOME ECONOMICS sfUDENTS It Kyger Creek
High &amp;hool have worlted long hours
. .since school began on

.

has-

•

\~\
\

\1\

Ave .•·- ·- - -·- -·- - -..- ·-----Ga,JIIt)Oiils--i

' ~~~~---------\i~i 1.1'

I

,..,..-·~

FALL HARVEST VALUES
SAVE
0/0 OFF

•I

"

I

'.15 It

j!

.MEN'S
Reg. 110q
.
, •. 11'

,t•r1 •1 ... ,..

Jl

(I'

MEN'S

MEN'S

SPORT COATS

WINJR COATS
Reg. Sl7

NOW '59.50

NOW '85
n

NOW '22.95

Reg. 590

Reg .'~120 · '

Reg , 140

''•

., ' ,/ anys·
I~

ll

Miss Terry D 'Annuf!zio
'

1"1 ;. •

ENGAGED - Mr . and Mrs . .Ben D'Anmj,nzio1;.,••
Clarkesburg , IV. Va., announce th e engag.mcn! of llheir~ ,
daughter, Terry, to Ronnie Lee Durst, son ol Mr. and•Mrs:··'"'
Ralph L. Durst, Letart, W. Va . Miss D'Annunt io Is d,f973
jp'adual• of Washington Irving High School and attended
West VirginiHUniversity. She is presenUy attending the
WVU School or Radiological T :~n ology . Mr. Durst is a
1971 graduate of Point Pleasar,t ligh School,1 raduated
from West Virginia University In -1975 and lqow attending gradua te school in Awlculture Econ h11cs.

'NOW •34.00

MEN'S

MEN'S

'I

WINTER COAts
.' Reg. su'·

DRESS SLACKS

' NOW '12.75
'
li ' Reg. S20
.. •·
.
NOw
:•17·
;
oo
..~ '

NOW '10.20

-

~,.

I

NOW '76.50

..
-

)!.

Reg. 512

SPORT SHIRtS

•

Reg.

NOW •17.00

Europe opposite Paskalia
By GLENNE CURRIE
before, and quickly settled
UP! Lively A111 Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) - Con- down dllrlnc her second act
A STRIKING . COM· stanza Cuccaro, a pert scene with Figaro. From then
JIINATION ~ was made at soprano from Toledo, Ohio, on she mov~ about the ltage
the Newcomers Style Show showed at her Metropolitan as If at home, lmpre~ with
Thursday night when Opera debut Thursday night ber comic acting, lind her·
Nanty l..ev~ier modeled. that she may be one of the relaxed voice rang out ID
his ensemble of Emily fineSt comediennes In the greater advantage.
MJa8 Cuccatro, who now
Just Emily aeparates. opera world.
:Winter white wool comHer debut was as Rosina In lives with her composer
bined with a jacket with Rossini's "The Barber of hUBband Edwin Penhonrood
patch pockelll and deep Seville," and Miss Cuccaro In Berlin, where abe sings
1um back cuffs provides held her own against such lead roles with the Betlln
t legant appeal. Her shoes fine buffo actor-elngers as State ~a. WGn the Met
are an all leather black Fernando Co rena u Dr , naUonalaudiUonaln 11187, but
sling with an open toe and Bartolo, Jerome Hines · as passed up the Met contract
heel.
I More pictures and
Don Basilio and Kostas which uaua11y goes to the
'
winner. "I was attn at
&amp;tory on page 51 .
Paskalis as Figaro,
school,"
she told UPI before
Her voice Is a small, pure
the
performance.
"I bad no
coloratura, ·and though she
••
repertoire,
no
I•guages,
-.
got off to a shaky start In
j
Mr.
(former
Met
Gtneral
,
"Una voce poca fa" she soon
gained oonfidence and the Manager Sir Rudolph) Bing
'J arla,lnterrupted mid-way by . persuaded me to finish
applause, won her an ovation. school." After,CDilpletlng her
"'
llle has played Rosina In studies In voice, plano and
. violin at the Unlvenlty of
- -- - - - - - - Iowa, she won a Fulbright
scholarship to study under
rPOMEROY - Michelle
Wally Hatfield II, Mark ' lAdgl Ricci In Rome, and
Lynn Taylor celebrated her
Taylor, Billy Ellis, Anita never has looted back.
fiflh birthday recently with a
She
certainly
has
Dean, Yvonne Young, Judy
gathering or family and
Carl, Anna Taylor, Joyce languages now. She has111111g
friends at the home of her
Taylor, Diane Pyatt, Leta Rosina In three languages,
~ents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Hall, Rheba Hyse1), Mary and her Italian diction and
Roush, Rt. 2, Pomeroy,
Houdashell, Karen Murray, accent as Rosina were flrll
Games were played with
clan, specially In the
pi'izes going to Ryan Hysell, Wallace and Donna Hatri~ld , recitative.
Gene and Marjorie Smith,
Phil King, Tim Hall, Andrea
llle will sine Rosina four
Steve and Becky Smith.
Ryall and Barbara Hatfield.
times thll ...,, her only
Sending
gifts
were
Allie
Cake, Ice cr~am, . potato
Marr, Milton, Gladys and role at the Met. llle hopes to
c!Jips and Kooi-Aid were
Terry Roush , Edith Ross, return nm - n . after a
~rved.
busy European schedule
Paul and Ginny Scott.
•Guests were Wesley Youn g,
which
Includes
"Der
1\jelody
Carl,
Audra
Roaenkavalier" In Berlin,
Houdashell, Tina Murray, ,_..E_V_E_R_Y_B_O_D_Y_-t Olympia· In '"'be Tales of
Andrea Pyatt, Chester Pyatt,
Hoffmann" In 1~Ilia, and
A~gela Hatfield, Barbara
Shops the ,
Gilda In " Rigoletto" In
Hatfield, Danny Carl, Phil
Munleh.
~g, Jeremy Dean, Jeremy
H):sell, Ryan Hysell, Joe
WANT AD w·Jiv
flail, Tim Hall, Chad Taylor.
· n.1

si.oo

'

"..l
l
~

'
If

I

-

.b!' EN FRIDAY

&amp;

$4

ATRUCKLOAD OF FREEZERS
UPRIGHTS 13·14-15·16-18
21 CU. FT.
CHISTS 10, 1$, 20, 25 CU• .FT.

RIDENOUR
, Chester, Ohio

SCHOOL OF BATON

.

Lace into

ANNOUNCES

fun. '
•
•I•=

I '

$24.00

l•

Brltk Ten

I

~

NEW

And lace into fashion
that's good for you.
While real leather
coddles your feet,
crepe soles keep you
sure-footed. What
n icer support for a
fabulous, busy fall?

I

GROUND
~

.

LB.

CLASSES

•

STARTING· NOV. 5th
.
ROYAL OM PARK
PLACE: REQIEATION
BUILDING

~

~

.•'

f

'

~.

TIME:

COURT STREET - SILVER

Wm., ·6:00 PM. BEGINNERS
MJ. AGES WELCOME
TAUGHT BY

·JUDY RIGGS

OlHER STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM

. PROFESSIONAL INSTRUCfOR

49

HOMES, DELICIOUS
WINESAP

Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

APPLES

342

Phone Chister: 98~3595

. Middle of Upper Block. Pom....,

Open All Day Tllursdaya-Frldrt Til I
•J

3 LBS. OR
MORE •

BEE If,"••••••••••••••••

ENROLL NOW!
.

PEAS~ •••••••••

TV &amp; APPLIANCES ·
GAS SERVICE
Ph. 985-3307

Phone 446.f458

.

CANS .

ALL AT SPf.CIAL PRICES.

MONDAY TIL 8 P.M.

LOW PliUC~

S~ECIAL

JUST RECIIVEDI

JUDY RIGGS

~

bearing Chrislmas,qub.
nov,;. By n~xi ' ear s Jl.f ·'
holid ay. time, y~l::; I
hove o tidy sum s
'. ~"'=:::-14
· up tor all your Christmas shopping! It's easy!

ARGO .

Model FV14M2

NOW '1.50

I

COMMERCrAL &amp;·
SAVINGS BANK

FREEZER

•

~

And join our interest-

·

14 CUBIC FOOT

'.

1
•'". ' ' ' :

apples.

GIBSON

Reg . 510.00

1:"
VISIT RECF.N'J'LY
POMEROY - . Hecenl
weekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Carsey, Rt. 4,
Pomer.oy were Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Steimelz, also of Ill. 4,
Pomeroy.

to ccmplete the JX'Ojecl. It consl!ted of two sheelll, blue on

bzrthda11

NOW '5,95

Reg. 520
~

a BlcenleMial Quilt. The class of senitH' girls drew the
pattern and quilted it themselves. Six weeks were needed

~elebra~d

•

REG. PRICE

Reg . $70

I

HALLOWEEN PARTY
THURSDAY.
OCT.
30
298 SECOND ST.
6 • 7:30 PM
Fr~e treats, donuts, coffee, cider,
POMEROY, OHIO Prizes
for costumes. Bob for

.

"

,,"

10 A.M.-10 P.M. SUNDAY

one side and ~te on the other, and features an eagle in
the middle of I!&amp;Ch. Show..- here with the quilt Is, l-r,
Deblie FUe~ Olarlene Hlvely, Carla Hannon, Henrietta
Sa~, Marsha Dillard and Peggy Mc!{inney.

Toledo .soprano debuts
at Metropolitan Opera

I'

... ,

. ~ t_,l66 Second

MON.-SAT•

.

l

~

STORE HOURS
8 AM-10 PM

·"

..

SLEEPWEAR

HAS RILOCATED_AT 244 SECOND AVE.
We are offering Benjamin
·
Moore's new line of paint BENJAMIN
Decor-Kraft. This sale will last
MOOR.E'S
for . one week only, Monday,
October 27 to November 3. Take
DECOR KRAFT
advantage · of these prices for
.
· •
your fall cleaning.
RAT VINYL LATEX

services also. Save money . with
reduced winter rates. Guaranteed
work and frett estimates. Plenty of free
parking . Located between Duke's
Cleaners ·and O.llipolls Motor.

NEW -HAVEN, W. Va.· New members were received
at the regular meeting of the
Ladie.s of the American
Legion Au•iliary of New
Haven and fo llowing the
busi ness
meeting, ' a
Halloween party was held.
Presiden t Marj&gt; 1Bill)
Roush presided and recited
the Preamble. Prayer was
said by the chaplain, Mar.y
Ellen Dye. Thelma papehart
read the financial report and

1HE UNIFORM CENTER

SUITS

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
.Leonard D. Smith will
celebrate their 46th wedding
anniversary at their home
near Great Bend tOday.
· They· were united in
marriage Oct. 26, 1929 at the
United Brethren Church by
the Rev. T. L. ·Miles at
Dunbar, W. Va.
Mrs, Smith is the former
Emma Lee Lamb of Given,
W. Va., daughter ofthe late J.
S. and Ella Lamb of Given,
W. Va . .
Smith Is the son of the late
Clyde 8IId Dovie Smi:h of
Great Bend.
They are the parents of five
sons and one daughter:
Darlena Chapman, Nitro, W.
Va.;
Ri chard
Smith ,
Hollywood, Fla. ; James
Smith, Lakewood; Wesley
Smith , Dunbar , W. Va .;
William Smith, Strongvllle;
Clarence T. Smith, Kanawha
aty, W. Va.
They have 27 grandchildren
and one great-grandchild.

•. c,lendar
automatic with

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE

membe rs

~-

"· ,.:•

NOW '102

C &amp; R offers professional painting

•

HACINI•!

....

Celebration
set today

17 Jewels. $15.

lfoman fll.tl .
17 Jt~"~"'- ' ' ·ua.

-

Juni or lligh School , (lpen 9 during the half-lime show .oi
" .111. - 4 p.m. Monday l.h1·ougll
the Southern High &amp;hool
Friday.
tna rehing band at the SouthMi•nday, Oct. 27 -· Physical CI'II·Eastern football game.
Filness 11-11 :15 a.m. Square
ln· concert formaWm, the
Dancing, 1-:1 p.m.
b&lt;-p l d!\ Ju('n
presented
Tuesday, Oct, 28 Physic;il
1\amblin' Mw1 ' ' and then
Fitn ess 11-11 :15. Cho rus played the Tornado school
12:30-2. "Mar ta Guilker - song as each of the seniors
Nulrili on for Sr. d tizens"
nnd her pa~enls were innoon .
troduced . Wednesday; Ocl. 29 Honored were Molly
Physical Fitness 11 -1 1:15. F'isher, daughter of Mrs.
Games 12:30·2 p.m. Quilting. Marlene Fisher and John
Th'ut·sday , . Ocl. :10 Fisl\lir. who plays sa•opiwne, .\ ,~~~~~ t~
Physical Fitness 11 -11: 15. clm·met and bells; Trina · . ·
Craft s.
Hltodes, tl ~ ug hter oJ M~s . r ' _,......
· Friday, Oct. 31 - Bowling h·enc Rhodes, who .· plays
,1·3 p.m. Vegetable Sou p saxophone and drums, 1lllnd.
Supper Friday eve n i n~ at B&lt;:cky Harris, daughter i&lt;Jft
center. Take outs, brin g own Mr. nnd Mrs, Wi lli ~ttl Harris·
container .
wlto p'lays I he u·ombone.
Se ni or .Citize ns nutritiOn
All three ·bf the ..glrls ' are .
.' .)· ' ' '
'
pr ogram, 11:30- 12:3 0, . members or the Tri-M Music ;,
'
'
lON
G
GOWNS
Monday thr ough Friday.
Menu for week of Oct. 27
through Oct. ~~ . 1975, tl::I0- bread, butter and milk.
' '
SHORT GOWNS
12:30:
Thursday, Oct. 30 ~ ~aked
Monday, ,Oct. 27 - Baked beef P·.·•ttie, rn,ashGd uotatoe&amp;•
PAJAMAS AND
meatballs in gravy , baked but tered spinach; )em'V'
pola to, buttered br us~e l pudding with" vanilla ' waf&lt;J'
FEET-IN PAJAMAS
spr o1its, ice · cream anti ' roll , butter and milk~
·~
' '
''
poonut butter cookie, bread,
Friday, Oct.31'- Tuna loAf .
butter and milk .
with cheese ·sa uce,, hashe'i:l
Tuesday , Oct. 28 - F'rietl br own po tatoes, b u tter ~·d
LONG AND SHORT ROBES
I '
.
chicken with gravy, mashed peas, t•olled oat ca~~ c•ca(J
MATCHING GOWN .&amp; ROBE SETS
po tatoes, buttered gre en butter· and nll'ik. r ::1·
~
.I
beans, peacl&gt; shortcake with
Coffee, tea abp . ~¥tternf k '
1
topping, biscuit, butter and Sen red d a ily,;,{,~ I .., ,
''
' '
milk.
The Se nior Nu ti-ition
Wednesday, Oct. 2U - Pot Program is on II aoliUti~n '·
GOWNS FROM 17.00 UP
roast of beef witli gravy, bas ts ONLY for Semors .
dressin g, buttered miK ed Guests and people wh o · e
ROBES FROM 19.00 UP
vege~1bles , canned 1
1pricots, not Seni or Citizens pay $1.

C&amp;R PAINT CENTER

A. 8ttut!lull1

.

..

.

.

New members received
Senior band
members
.
introduced!at Southern by New Haven auxiliary

.,

••

''

,,

•

I
' I.

•

�16 - The S•mdayTimes • St•ntincl, Sw1day , Ort . 26, 1975

Mrs. ·Atkins selected
'
.Granger of the Year ' '

POMEROY '
Meigs
&amp;&gt; niur Cili1.cns Center 1\rli\dtics locHi ed al Pdrne:roy

POMEROY
Mrs . · specializing in turkey coun iy fair fl ower shows.
Pauline H. .Atkins of prOduction. She is also emMrs . Atkins is al so a
Harrisonville .was selected ployed by the Ohio State member of the Farm Bureau,
"GrangerortheYear" at the Dairy Improv ement a pasfmatron of the Order of
recent Ohio State Grange Ass ociation
as
dairy Eastern Star, a past district
annual convention in Toledo. prOduction supervisor.
president and a past . high
Selected from among 37
A member of the priestess of the White Shrine
·nominees for the awa rd, Harrisonville Presbyterian &lt;Jf Jerusalem.
given to recognize and honor Church, Mrs. Atkin s is a
Her hobbies in clude
. outstanding grange members ruling elder, clerk of the growi ng and arrangin g
by the Ohio Stale Grange and Session and vice president of fl owers, workin g with
the Farmers and Traders the Ladies Society. She has animals and doing the things
L1fe Insurance Co ., Mrs. been advisor of the which keep her c!O!;e to
Atkins was presented a Harrisonville 4-H Girls for nature in the rural complaque and recognized at U1e the past 32 years, and is a munity. She and he~· 1 mother,
banquet,
.
past president of both the Mrs. Ruby Halliday, a 67The plaque was presented Rutland and Star Garden year Grange member, live
by
Richard·· Trunde l, Clubs and an active member together. Mrs. Atkins has a
representative of the Far- serving on committees. She daughter, Sharon Jewell ,
. mers and Traders Life !n- has also served as . ~halr­ who also resides near
surance Co., In recognition woman of both reglolll!l and Harrisonville.
for "outstanding service to
community . and grange -for
the 1974-75 year." In addition,
. Mrs. Atkins received a $50
_check as did the Harrisonville .
. Grange or which she Is a
·member. .
'
Mrs. Atkins Is one of 137
persons In the United States
to have received the award in
the past seven years. Last
year ' she rece ived the
• "Outstanding Granger In
Meigs Coun ty'' award.
She has been a member of
the Harrisonville Grange for
47 years and is also a memb~r
of the Pomona, State and
National organizations. She
has filled the offices of
ma~ter, lecturer, secretary,
lady assistant steward and
chairwoman of Women 's
Activities.
In addition she has served
as lecturer of Meigs Coun ty
Pomona Grange for 24 years
and has held the offi ces ol
Pomona and lady assistant
steward. For 12 yea•·s she
served as Ohio State Grange
deputy matron and for two of
those years served In U1e dual
position of both deputy
master and matron due to the
197~ death or her husband,
VIrgil , who had th e apSELECTED GRANGER OF THE YEAR - Mrs.
pointment of master:
f&gt;auline Atkins, ~rionsvllle, .was selected "Granger of
Mrs. Atkins operates a ~Ill).
the Year" recenUy at the Ohio State Grange annual
acre farm near Harrisonville
convention In Toledo .• Mrs. Atkins Ia shown with the
doing diversified farming and
plaque she was presented ..

Letart Homemakers
hold meeting Oct. 1
LETART, W. Va . - The
Letart Homemakers held.
their regular monthly
meeting Oct. 1 at the Letart
.School. The president, Mrs.
Lois Hoffman presided over
the meeting. Devotions were
led by Mrs. Shirley VanFossln.
The members decided to
have their monthly meetings
at the home of the members
once again star ting nexl

LAY-AWAY
FO~

Christmas

GIVE
BULOVA
The true
value
watch.

inonlh.
The lap robes made by the
club will be given to senior
citizens ln t)le various
communities. Some will also
be taken to hospitals.
The club will sponsor a
Halloween Party for mem:
bers and their families at the
White Church Community
Building on Ocl . 31 at 8 p.m.
New officers are president,
Dorothy
Click ; vicepresident, Pat Friend;
secretary, Lois Durst ;
treasurer, Judy Hunt ;
recreation leader, Barbara
Winter; devotional leader,
Ruth Pickens; scrapbook,
Unda Grimm and Mildred
Morgan.
Hostesses for the ·evening
were Linda Grimm and Betty
Fisher. Attending were
Dorothy Click, Lois Durst,
Betty Fisher, Opal Friend,
Unda Grimm, Audrey Hoff.
man, Lois Hoffman, Judy
Hunt , Sharon McClellan ,
Mildred Morgan, Maxine
Morrison, Ruth Pickens, Sue
Sayre, Shirley VanFOSBin and
Barbara Winter.

te~lured

bractret welch.

&amp;&gt;nior band

were

hun\Jr ~ d'

- -.t' ,ii4?
'
Honorary, ~nd Miss

Fisher
;md Miss Rhodes hi!ve participated in solo and ensemble competitio n. Miss
Harris is presiden t of the
band and last year served as
secretary, while Miss Rhodes
was vice president during her
jw1ior year.
Following the recognition,
the band did an eKit drill to
the Pepsi Cola theme
"Feelin' Free". ,Joy Bigler is
the dit•ector.

11

the chaplain closed the
business with p~ayer~
· Games were played and
refreshments were .served to
Mary (Biil ) Roush; Mary
1Bob)
Roush, Thelma
Capehart, Helen Knapp,
Ale tha Weaver, Karen
Marshall, Genevieve Woods,
Sadie . Warth, Evelyn Dunbury, Mary Ellen Dye,
Virginia Smith, Bonnie
Freeman and Mary Work
man , second vicl~·presiclenti

PRICES GOOD THRU
NOV. I, 197~

'•

HOME ECONOMICS sfUDENTS It Kyger Creek
High &amp;hool have worlted long hours
. .since school began on

.

has-

•

\~\
\

\1\

Ave .•·- ·- - -·- -·- - -..- ·-----Ga,JIIt)Oiils--i

' ~~~~---------\i~i 1.1'

I

,..,..-·~

FALL HARVEST VALUES
SAVE
0/0 OFF

•I

"

I

'.15 It

j!

.MEN'S
Reg. 110q
.
, •. 11'

,t•r1 •1 ... ,..

Jl

(I'

MEN'S

MEN'S

SPORT COATS

WINJR COATS
Reg. Sl7

NOW '59.50

NOW '85
n

NOW '22.95

Reg. 590

Reg .'~120 · '

Reg , 140

''•

., ' ,/ anys·
I~

ll

Miss Terry D 'Annuf!zio
'

1"1 ;. •

ENGAGED - Mr . and Mrs . .Ben D'Anmj,nzio1;.,••
Clarkesburg , IV. Va., announce th e engag.mcn! of llheir~ ,
daughter, Terry, to Ronnie Lee Durst, son ol Mr. and•Mrs:··'"'
Ralph L. Durst, Letart, W. Va . Miss D'Annunt io Is d,f973
jp'adual• of Washington Irving High School and attended
West VirginiHUniversity. She is presenUy attending the
WVU School or Radiological T :~n ology . Mr. Durst is a
1971 graduate of Point Pleasar,t ligh School,1 raduated
from West Virginia University In -1975 and lqow attending gradua te school in Awlculture Econ h11cs.

'NOW •34.00

MEN'S

MEN'S

'I

WINTER COAts
.' Reg. su'·

DRESS SLACKS

' NOW '12.75
'
li ' Reg. S20
.. •·
.
NOw
:•17·
;
oo
..~ '

NOW '10.20

-

~,.

I

NOW '76.50

..
-

)!.

Reg. 512

SPORT SHIRtS

•

Reg.

NOW •17.00

Europe opposite Paskalia
By GLENNE CURRIE
before, and quickly settled
UP! Lively A111 Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) - Con- down dllrlnc her second act
A STRIKING . COM· stanza Cuccaro, a pert scene with Figaro. From then
JIINATION ~ was made at soprano from Toledo, Ohio, on she mov~ about the ltage
the Newcomers Style Show showed at her Metropolitan as If at home, lmpre~ with
Thursday night when Opera debut Thursday night ber comic acting, lind her·
Nanty l..ev~ier modeled. that she may be one of the relaxed voice rang out ID
his ensemble of Emily fineSt comediennes In the greater advantage.
MJa8 Cuccatro, who now
Just Emily aeparates. opera world.
:Winter white wool comHer debut was as Rosina In lives with her composer
bined with a jacket with Rossini's "The Barber of hUBband Edwin Penhonrood
patch pockelll and deep Seville," and Miss Cuccaro In Berlin, where abe sings
1um back cuffs provides held her own against such lead roles with the Betlln
t legant appeal. Her shoes fine buffo actor-elngers as State ~a. WGn the Met
are an all leather black Fernando Co rena u Dr , naUonalaudiUonaln 11187, but
sling with an open toe and Bartolo, Jerome Hines · as passed up the Met contract
heel.
I More pictures and
Don Basilio and Kostas which uaua11y goes to the
'
winner. "I was attn at
&amp;tory on page 51 .
Paskalis as Figaro,
school,"
she told UPI before
Her voice Is a small, pure
the
performance.
"I bad no
coloratura, ·and though she
••
repertoire,
no
I•guages,
-.
got off to a shaky start In
j
Mr.
(former
Met
Gtneral
,
"Una voce poca fa" she soon
gained oonfidence and the Manager Sir Rudolph) Bing
'J arla,lnterrupted mid-way by . persuaded me to finish
applause, won her an ovation. school." After,CDilpletlng her
"'
llle has played Rosina In studies In voice, plano and
. violin at the Unlvenlty of
- -- - - - - - - Iowa, she won a Fulbright
scholarship to study under
rPOMEROY - Michelle
Wally Hatfield II, Mark ' lAdgl Ricci In Rome, and
Lynn Taylor celebrated her
Taylor, Billy Ellis, Anita never has looted back.
fiflh birthday recently with a
She
certainly
has
Dean, Yvonne Young, Judy
gathering or family and
Carl, Anna Taylor, Joyce languages now. She has111111g
friends at the home of her
Taylor, Diane Pyatt, Leta Rosina In three languages,
~ents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Hall, Rheba Hyse1), Mary and her Italian diction and
Roush, Rt. 2, Pomeroy,
Houdashell, Karen Murray, accent as Rosina were flrll
Games were played with
clan, specially In the
pi'izes going to Ryan Hysell, Wallace and Donna Hatri~ld , recitative.
Gene and Marjorie Smith,
Phil King, Tim Hall, Andrea
llle will sine Rosina four
Steve and Becky Smith.
Ryall and Barbara Hatfield.
times thll ...,, her only
Sending
gifts
were
Allie
Cake, Ice cr~am, . potato
Marr, Milton, Gladys and role at the Met. llle hopes to
c!Jips and Kooi-Aid were
Terry Roush , Edith Ross, return nm - n . after a
~rved.
busy European schedule
Paul and Ginny Scott.
•Guests were Wesley Youn g,
which
Includes
"Der
1\jelody
Carl,
Audra
Roaenkavalier" In Berlin,
Houdashell, Tina Murray, ,_..E_V_E_R_Y_B_O_D_Y_-t Olympia· In '"'be Tales of
Andrea Pyatt, Chester Pyatt,
Hoffmann" In 1~Ilia, and
A~gela Hatfield, Barbara
Shops the ,
Gilda In " Rigoletto" In
Hatfield, Danny Carl, Phil
Munleh.
~g, Jeremy Dean, Jeremy
H):sell, Ryan Hysell, Joe
WANT AD w·Jiv
flail, Tim Hall, Chad Taylor.
· n.1

si.oo

'

"..l
l
~

'
If

I

-

.b!' EN FRIDAY

&amp;

$4

ATRUCKLOAD OF FREEZERS
UPRIGHTS 13·14-15·16-18
21 CU. FT.
CHISTS 10, 1$, 20, 25 CU• .FT.

RIDENOUR
, Chester, Ohio

SCHOOL OF BATON

.

Lace into

ANNOUNCES

fun. '
•
•I•=

I '

$24.00

l•

Brltk Ten

I

~

NEW

And lace into fashion
that's good for you.
While real leather
coddles your feet,
crepe soles keep you
sure-footed. What
n icer support for a
fabulous, busy fall?

I

GROUND
~

.

LB.

CLASSES

•

STARTING· NOV. 5th
.
ROYAL OM PARK
PLACE: REQIEATION
BUILDING

~

~

.•'

f

'

~.

TIME:

COURT STREET - SILVER

Wm., ·6:00 PM. BEGINNERS
MJ. AGES WELCOME
TAUGHT BY

·JUDY RIGGS

OlHER STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM

. PROFESSIONAL INSTRUCfOR

49

HOMES, DELICIOUS
WINESAP

Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

APPLES

342

Phone Chister: 98~3595

. Middle of Upper Block. Pom....,

Open All Day Tllursdaya-Frldrt Til I
•J

3 LBS. OR
MORE •

BEE If,"••••••••••••••••

ENROLL NOW!
.

PEAS~ •••••••••

TV &amp; APPLIANCES ·
GAS SERVICE
Ph. 985-3307

Phone 446.f458

.

CANS .

ALL AT SPf.CIAL PRICES.

MONDAY TIL 8 P.M.

LOW PliUC~

S~ECIAL

JUST RECIIVEDI

JUDY RIGGS

~

bearing Chrislmas,qub.
nov,;. By n~xi ' ear s Jl.f ·'
holid ay. time, y~l::; I
hove o tidy sum s
'. ~"'=:::-14
· up tor all your Christmas shopping! It's easy!

ARGO .

Model FV14M2

NOW '1.50

I

COMMERCrAL &amp;·
SAVINGS BANK

FREEZER

•

~

And join our interest-

·

14 CUBIC FOOT

'.

1
•'". ' ' ' :

apples.

GIBSON

Reg . 510.00

1:"
VISIT RECF.N'J'LY
POMEROY - . Hecenl
weekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Carsey, Rt. 4,
Pomer.oy were Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Steimelz, also of Ill. 4,
Pomeroy.

to ccmplete the JX'Ojecl. It consl!ted of two sheelll, blue on

bzrthda11

NOW '5,95

Reg. 520
~

a BlcenleMial Quilt. The class of senitH' girls drew the
pattern and quilted it themselves. Six weeks were needed

~elebra~d

•

REG. PRICE

Reg . $70

I

HALLOWEEN PARTY
THURSDAY.
OCT.
30
298 SECOND ST.
6 • 7:30 PM
Fr~e treats, donuts, coffee, cider,
POMEROY, OHIO Prizes
for costumes. Bob for

.

"

,,"

10 A.M.-10 P.M. SUNDAY

one side and ~te on the other, and features an eagle in
the middle of I!&amp;Ch. Show..- here with the quilt Is, l-r,
Deblie FUe~ Olarlene Hlvely, Carla Hannon, Henrietta
Sa~, Marsha Dillard and Peggy Mc!{inney.

Toledo .soprano debuts
at Metropolitan Opera

I'

... ,

. ~ t_,l66 Second

MON.-SAT•

.

l

~

STORE HOURS
8 AM-10 PM

·"

..

SLEEPWEAR

HAS RILOCATED_AT 244 SECOND AVE.
We are offering Benjamin
·
Moore's new line of paint BENJAMIN
Decor-Kraft. This sale will last
MOOR.E'S
for . one week only, Monday,
October 27 to November 3. Take
DECOR KRAFT
advantage · of these prices for
.
· •
your fall cleaning.
RAT VINYL LATEX

services also. Save money . with
reduced winter rates. Guaranteed
work and frett estimates. Plenty of free
parking . Located between Duke's
Cleaners ·and O.llipolls Motor.

NEW -HAVEN, W. Va.· New members were received
at the regular meeting of the
Ladie.s of the American
Legion Au•iliary of New
Haven and fo llowing the
busi ness
meeting, ' a
Halloween party was held.
Presiden t Marj&gt; 1Bill)
Roush presided and recited
the Preamble. Prayer was
said by the chaplain, Mar.y
Ellen Dye. Thelma papehart
read the financial report and

1HE UNIFORM CENTER

SUITS

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
.Leonard D. Smith will
celebrate their 46th wedding
anniversary at their home
near Great Bend tOday.
· They· were united in
marriage Oct. 26, 1929 at the
United Brethren Church by
the Rev. T. L. ·Miles at
Dunbar, W. Va.
Mrs, Smith is the former
Emma Lee Lamb of Given,
W. Va., daughter ofthe late J.
S. and Ella Lamb of Given,
W. Va . .
Smith Is the son of the late
Clyde 8IId Dovie Smi:h of
Great Bend.
They are the parents of five
sons and one daughter:
Darlena Chapman, Nitro, W.
Va.;
Ri chard
Smith ,
Hollywood, Fla. ; James
Smith, Lakewood; Wesley
Smith , Dunbar , W. Va .;
William Smith, Strongvllle;
Clarence T. Smith, Kanawha
aty, W. Va.
They have 27 grandchildren
and one great-grandchild.

•. c,lendar
automatic with

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
STORE

membe rs

~-

"· ,.:•

NOW '102

C &amp; R offers professional painting

•

HACINI•!

....

Celebration
set today

17 Jewels. $15.

lfoman fll.tl .
17 Jt~"~"'- ' ' ·ua.

-

Juni or lligh School , (lpen 9 during the half-lime show .oi
" .111. - 4 p.m. Monday l.h1·ougll
the Southern High &amp;hool
Friday.
tna rehing band at the SouthMi•nday, Oct. 27 -· Physical CI'II·Eastern football game.
Filness 11-11 :15 a.m. Square
ln· concert formaWm, the
Dancing, 1-:1 p.m.
b&lt;-p l d!\ Ju('n
presented
Tuesday, Oct, 28 Physic;il
1\amblin' Mw1 ' ' and then
Fitn ess 11-11 :15. Cho rus played the Tornado school
12:30-2. "Mar ta Guilker - song as each of the seniors
Nulrili on for Sr. d tizens"
nnd her pa~enls were innoon .
troduced . Wednesday; Ocl. 29 Honored were Molly
Physical Fitness 11 -1 1:15. F'isher, daughter of Mrs.
Games 12:30·2 p.m. Quilting. Marlene Fisher and John
Th'ut·sday , . Ocl. :10 Fisl\lir. who plays sa•opiwne, .\ ,~~~~~ t~
Physical Fitness 11 -11: 15. clm·met and bells; Trina · . ·
Craft s.
Hltodes, tl ~ ug hter oJ M~s . r ' _,......
· Friday, Oct. 31 - Bowling h·enc Rhodes, who .· plays
,1·3 p.m. Vegetable Sou p saxophone and drums, 1lllnd.
Supper Friday eve n i n~ at B&lt;:cky Harris, daughter i&lt;Jft
center. Take outs, brin g own Mr. nnd Mrs, Wi lli ~ttl Harris·
container .
wlto p'lays I he u·ombone.
Se ni or .Citize ns nutritiOn
All three ·bf the ..glrls ' are .
.' .)· ' ' '
'
pr ogram, 11:30- 12:3 0, . members or the Tri-M Music ;,
'
'
lON
G
GOWNS
Monday thr ough Friday.
Menu for week of Oct. 27
through Oct. ~~ . 1975, tl::I0- bread, butter and milk.
' '
SHORT GOWNS
12:30:
Thursday, Oct. 30 ~ ~aked
Monday, ,Oct. 27 - Baked beef P·.·•ttie, rn,ashGd uotatoe&amp;•
PAJAMAS AND
meatballs in gravy , baked but tered spinach; )em'V'
pola to, buttered br us~e l pudding with" vanilla ' waf&lt;J'
FEET-IN PAJAMAS
spr o1its, ice · cream anti ' roll , butter and milk~
·~
' '
''
poonut butter cookie, bread,
Friday, Oct.31'- Tuna loAf .
butter and milk .
with cheese ·sa uce,, hashe'i:l
Tuesday , Oct. 28 - F'rietl br own po tatoes, b u tter ~·d
LONG AND SHORT ROBES
I '
.
chicken with gravy, mashed peas, t•olled oat ca~~ c•ca(J
MATCHING GOWN .&amp; ROBE SETS
po tatoes, buttered gre en butter· and nll'ik. r ::1·
~
.I
beans, peacl&gt; shortcake with
Coffee, tea abp . ~¥tternf k '
1
topping, biscuit, butter and Sen red d a ily,;,{,~ I .., ,
''
' '
milk.
The Se nior Nu ti-ition
Wednesday, Oct. 2U - Pot Program is on II aoliUti~n '·
GOWNS FROM 17.00 UP
roast of beef witli gravy, bas ts ONLY for Semors .
dressin g, buttered miK ed Guests and people wh o · e
ROBES FROM 19.00 UP
vege~1bles , canned 1
1pricots, not Seni or Citizens pay $1.

C&amp;R PAINT CENTER

A. 8ttut!lull1

.

..

.

.

New members received
Senior band
members
.
introduced!at Southern by New Haven auxiliary

.,

••

''

,,

•

I
' I.

•

�..
'
18 - The Sunday Times ·Senltn•!,Swtday, Oct.

Katie~s

•!Patty was .ready,

Korner

By Katie Crow

..

~ to

POMEROY - Guest of Mr. and .Mrs.
W. (BOOne)
Weaver, Jr., of Racine, for the past lO days has been Mrs .
. Otarley Hufbnan, former Lucille Weldon, of Pittsburgh. Mrs. ·
Huffman is th~ daughter of the late Willie Weldon, a former
pilot on the Ohio River who resided in Racine for many years,
.Last Sunda,Ya reunion of the four living Weldon descen·
dants was held at the Weaver home. Attending were Mr. and
Mr$. Richard Cott~man, former Josephine Hayman, Mr',s.
VIrginia Hayman R;enner, all of Parkersburg; Mrs. Huffman
and the host and hostess, Mr. and Mrs. Weaver.
Mrs. Cotlerman and Mrs, Renner are daughters of the late
Eber and Myrtle Weldon Hayman. Mr. Weaver's late mother ·
was the former lillian Weldon and the late Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Weldort were the grandparents of Lucille Huffman,
Josephine.(;ctterman, Virginia Renner and Boone Weaver and
at Qlle Iinne they all resided where the Weaver home is now
located in Racine.
·

..

Jfarrjs.

...

I

CELEBnA,TING BIRTHDAYS in October were Mr; and
,Mrs., Cliff Williams and Rosa Holstein, all of Syracuse. Mrs.
Holstein resides wjth her daugl!ter-ln·law, Enunogeoe.
CONGRATULATIONS!

,.

. •'

Mr. and Mrs. Owen's daughter, Judy, Is a freshman and
Mr, and Mrs. Diehl'sdaughter,Jo Ellen, !sa senlor.

•WiftiiCOitl
\

'

'

SHIRTs ·

, I

..

A great skirt fot flghtl~tg tho.. chiiiJ
huntina daya. Wokn. Nghtw-'&amp;ht Cll'ld
cf?otn't 1m..... molr;ljlf. Solid a..d
plaid detigns in aiiCif'fM colort.
ChOoM fr0111 auortld

•iz•. ·

'

ATTENDING P'AMD.. Y WEEKEND at Marietta College
this weekend are Mr. and Mrs. Richard Owen, Middleport, and
Mr. a!'d Mrs. James Dithl, Pomeroy.

, A go-between trying to
medlste between the 2J..year·
old newspaper heireas · and
the Harrlsea wu trailed by
the FBI to the two San
J.i'ranclsco houses where ihe
'lbng-«1"ht fugltlvee were
l)ldlng out, the magazine said
#I the second of two articles
~ut the case, A copy of the
second article, dlle to reach
newsstanda in about 10 days,
was . obtained by UPI
Saturday.
.: ~U~Illng Stone a11o llld
fPOriB activlal Jack . Scott
!mew of MIU Hearst's
~ectton with the SLA imd
worJdnc w!Ut her father;
· ~ndolph A. Hearst,
ll'tlident of the San rran·
lli.sco Euminer, to briJig her
)JJme. It aald Mila Hearst's
!JIOI!Ier,' Catherine, told the
FBI of the negoUat10111 and
IIIeY were ended.

FLANNEL

Wl•c••n•
22 CAL. RIFLE

'

.

H.lllliiiLE SHOT lllliTIUII
•

Choose from 12 or 14 gauges

$3188

SPORTS
. DEPT,

H.Cic's Reg.
$6.99

I:IECK'S '·REG. •(!9.99
.
SPORTS DEPT..

Hocl'o Rotr• $~9 .99•

"By late summer 1975, she

(Patricia) had lost almost all
fllsclnatloo for the intrigue of
the undergrou~Jd," said
authOl'll Howll'!i Kolin and
David Well'. "Most of her
time wu spent away from
the Harrillel, ·Who no tonger
seenied like the lrother Teko
and slater Yolandfi sh.e once

· ''PENNZOIL
MOTOR
· A
PENNZDil
OIL
..... . . . ?

'
COUMAN
4, LB.

· "SLEEPINI BAG .
.

'II

;oddtd weaJiwrMOt. loxtd CO!'ftlrl.,
R.inforctd ltre11 poinla. Ti• !opts for roll up
ltorogl:. &amp;.ch Opefll fully for oiring end mat..
with anotfltr bog Into double bog. ~

· lOW-30

1

rnultl-vll

\ · IIIOTOII OJ~ I

71.·1/ . . ., ;&gt;-

49~

.

HECK'S REG. 69'
.. AUTO DEPT.

/r f,

v
/

. '
...........~ '

.

'

FRONT
NYLON·N·FOAM

SEAT COVERS
Hy\N ond

(91'•

-'lei w.fl. ln llf11011wd wlvrt. ,

HECK'$ •17;99 '
SPORTS DEPT

,$29_9

'A11tiiiT.

HICK'S RIG,
$4.'?9 .

20''

BATON

y

.

.

·W. RENCH.

$.39"

9
HECK'S REG. 2.77

HECK'S REG. 99•
'.
•••
AUTO DEPT•.

1

AUTO DEPT.

' .. u. .
fU DUIROIIIT

HOI.

STEP SAYER1

'$129

.'
WATER.COOLED gas turbine capable ot'. doobllng
'generatillg power of convendonal turbinel ia inlpected by
lab researchers at General Elactrlc'a . Research and
Development Center in Schenectady, N. Y.' Tbe ultra·
high-temperature turbine prototype bums lower grade
fuel and ope~"ates at nearly 2,000 degrees F., more th8n
1,000 degrees higher than currently used tutbinee.

Heck's

'1.33

Hec:lc't

R-,. $1.65

HOUSEWAIE DE".

11-e.

' I •

'' . $2.99

I OZ.

...

,
ucuall ·

I

TAME

'

CIIMIIIINSE

Regular- With Bddy-l~ mon

TOOTHPASTE . '

61~;Hed'a R-e.
88c

- 78C
••
·--

,_

...

- llrl

l!iCIIrUda
had a M per cent majority of
the vom and hll neare1t
~nt only 15 per cent.
A mockelectlon of atudenta
~ several state co~ps
last ""k gave Edwardll 49.3.
)ler cent of the vom.
· " · Edwards, 48, Ia oppoled by
· 'lllate Sen. Robert Jones of
.. t,.ake Charles, Secretary of
State Wade 0. Martin Jr.,
'Cecilia Mary Pizzo, A.
' Rarwell ThomiJIOn, both of
. New Orleans, and Ken lewis
li Batoo RoUIJe.
• Saturday's primary
.~Uoo Is the first under
J,.oulllana's new open electiona law in which all voters
'- riJI!ardiNI of party af.
flllatlon _ can participate
and vom for candldalel of
my party. No RePublicans
· ve in the governor's race.
· '!be ballot also will include
112 candidates for Ueutensnt
governor, secretary of state,
agriculture commlsaioner,
lbaurance commluloner,
lidueatlcJn superintendent and
•lectlon commluioner as
lrell aa hundreds seeking
state legislative seat.s, and
two Public Service Com·
mlsaioo aeat.s.
H ~lected, Edwards will
become the aecood man this
century to be elected to two
consecutive terms as

HICK'S RIG •

•

• ' HECK'S REG. 14.95

coSMEnc DEPT.

ROUGE, La.
(UP!) - Gov. Edwin Ed·
wards, a colorful, smooUt·
talking Cajun who has
worked to build a nallonal
~e by hammerlllg away
at government ' energy
. policies, is espected to cout
10 an easy re-election Yic:IGry
~ flv• Olllllllitiltl Balm'-

cliy •
'll'wo pollllb

...

CHAIN ~ .aw ·. ···

.

By RAFAEL BERMUDEZ

'•

704

$1.21 .

'toiMITit,., .

JEWELRY DEPT

Applications are
. bei,ng accepted
' POMEROY' - The Ohio

'I

G. E. 8 TRACK
·mlm COMPONENT

3 ONLY
HE~I('S

•1.66-

TQY DEPT.

.1 .

'

WITH AMIFM STEREO RADIO
1
HECK'S REG. 13U8
899
JEWELRY DEPT.

,

I

;'7

Heck'. lleg. $1.18

COSNRC DEPT.

Louisiana governor.
Edwards has appeared on
national televiiiDil shows nu·
meroua tbnee to criticize
national energy polJctes.
He once flew to New York
wltb a baaquet of seafood
fished from the Lout.slana
coaat to demoaatrate to
IIO•••imellt," civic and in·
dustr1 ~~~otflhore
oil and PI
hid not
hurt the alate s valuable
fishing lndullry.
Edwards, 'IIllo often uses
bla fluent French when
·carnpalgning in Loulsiana's
Cajun areas, hu called for
deregulation of gas and C111de
oil prices and for Increased
oU and gas production off the
Eastern seaboard.
::::::~::f,;:::::::::.:.:::::::.:::::::.:::.:::::::.:::::::::::::::.::::::::::

Volunteen Awarded ...:.
Mary J, Walker, Director
of ' Vohllltetr Servlcet1 at
Holzer .Medical Cuter,
u
e~preued her apprecia on
Tltnrtday 10 approlllmateiy
90 volunteers at the
hospital. The director
spoke at a laneheoD for tbe
volunteen at Ute Holiday
IIUL

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

New contract
okeyed Friday
DAY'I'ON, Ohio (UP!)- A
new contract beetween the
UUI!ty Workers Union of
America, Local 176, and the
Dayton Power &amp; Ught Co.,
wu approved Friday night.
'!be new agreement, to
become · elfecUve at mid·
lligbt, &amp;lnday, provides a
wage Increase averaBing 8
. per cent. The agreement was
announced jointly by Harold
Moots, ~dent of lhe local,
and Wll1laill Miller, manager
of lnduairlal relations for ,
DPL.
Tile new conll'act 'fleets
2,259 unioo employes.
PLJ!;ASA!It'T VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Roy
Nitz and son,' Middleport;·
Mark Blankenship, Point
Pleasant; Jackie Waugh,
Crown City, 0.; Virginia
Jeffers, Southside; Mrs.
James Mitchell, West
Colwnbla; Cheryl call, Point
Pleasant; Mfs. John McDaniel, ~!!ton; Mrs. Glll'land
Mayes, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Roas Roush, Mason; Mervin
Norris, Lakin; Rena Johnson,
·New Haven; Mra. Cleo Smith,
Galllpolla FerrY; Mrs. Or·
ville- Ellis, Point Plea1111nt,
and Jamea Bell, Point

Bureau of Employment
Services, in conjunction with
the Gallia-Melgs Community
Action Agency, will be .ac·
c:,eptlng applicalioris lor
1mployment and tralolng
~pporttinities for Meigs
County residents.
This aervice is being
provided for those who have
not registered within the last
, 88 days .at the Empioylfll!nt
Office In Gallipolis.
Regt.stration ITlll take place
at the Ccimmunlly AclioJI
Agency offke to the Court. .
houae in Pomeroy oo Ocl. 11;
•• 30 and 31 from g I ,Ill. !Uitil
Vf.terUI Mf!IIIOI'Ial HOII(IItal
S~30 p.m. each day.
ADMITTED - Hobart
Pen0111 not hiiYing tranaDurham;
Pomeroy; Velma
IOrtatlon and wishing to
Jtgilter should contact the Pai'IOIII, kine.
DlSCHARIJED -' Marjorie
:!AA office in Meigs County at
Grlrnm, Evalena Pauley.
18U&amp;Q5. '
1

"'*-I. '

TIRED OUT might be 811 apt descrlptloo bi more
ways ·than one for two cllwn at work in Lake Erie. 11iey
are chaining together 1111111 11 dllc:arded lirea to fonn al
Ooating breakwater Cor the port of Dunkirk, N. Y.

•

•

.,

.F irst Lady continues
giving fr~ opinione

Emily

COWMBUS (UPI~ - State Auditor JeNpb E.
Feraa-llllld Sallll'day bll office was 1rimg 10 reeever
$1M from 11 IIJviiiGG· of h!Pnys 111pel"l'llon for dr·
culatillg Gov. Jamet A. Rhodet bGad luae petltlou 011
ltate time.
. Fergusoa Aid employes of the di'l'illoD Ill BowliDI
Gnea we!'t alied to 11gD petitD. ·cJuriD&amp; tlllb from
1qpervl10r, wlllch ranged from Ill mlmllel to an lioar lilt
JuDe.

Ferp1011 said the aqpervllon were attemptlu&amp; to
obtalo the S07,0oilalgoaturel needed to get the boDd ~~~­
placed 011 the November hallot.
FerpHD Aid eiiiJIIoyea were reqalred to bear tile
talb, beld on payroll time.
DIJtrlct
louts at llowliDg Gne11, coven ·die
COIDdel of Fallo11, Wood, Heary1 Llcal, OUna, s-,
Se""!'l'ky ud Wlllllm.t.

z.

Levitt finally
tells NYC no .
always said, "as of today,"
he could not advise federal
actioo.
U he were going to change
his poeltlon, hll testimony
Tltursday, u the last witnea
before the subcommittee
meeta to decide what to do
about New York, was lhe
time to do it.
'
Whlie be took a more
serious view of the impact of
default "than I did three
months ago or even three
weeks ago," Burns said, "the
naUonal intereat does not
require federal assistance."
As a respected, con·
servative eeonomlst, in·
dependent of the ad·
ministration, Burns probably
has more inOuence In
Congreas on economic
matters than any other

should prevent me · from 'taking place in America,"
she said. "And part of the job
expressing my views.
"I spoke out on this im· of those of us who support
portant lsaue because of my ERA is to help remove this
deep personal convictions. cloud offear and confusion."
She said the amendment ...
Why should my husband 's job
or yours prevent us from "will not be alter the fabric of
being ourselves? Being the Constitution - or force
ladylike does not require women away from their
famlllee."
silence."
She has been "distresSed,"
Mrs. Ford apparently ref~ed specifically to charges she said, that one outgrowth
by ERA opponent.s that the of the argument over era
First Lady illegally used "has been the J&amp;ck of ap.
government facliitles and preciaUon ,of · the role of
women as · wl ves and
staff to lobby for ERA. .
Mra. Ford said Ute con· mothers."
"In trying to open up
troversy has developed
among people who fear choices and opportunities,
change and she propoeed that women muilt not unERA proponents should lower derestimate their accom·
pllshments in the home," she
the tenor of the debate.
"The debate over ERA has · said. "We have to take that
become too emotional 'just' out of 'just a housewife'
because of the fears of some and show our pride in having
- both men and women - made the home and family
·
about the changes already our life's work."

COLUMBUS (UP!) -Gov.
"let me just point out !hat program (the four bond
James A. Rhodes Saturday in thla whole program, if we isaues) costl!."
defended his four econcmlc have 500,000 people working,
"In 1966 welfare cost the
bond issues appearing oo the they will pay ~million to $95 taxpayers of Ohio $217
November ballot during mlllioo more in sales tax m1lllon. in 1971 it was $488
taping of a radio program to revenue," he said. "They will m1lllon," said Rhodes. "This
be aired &amp;mday.
,
pay $38 million more in yell' we have appropriated $1
Rhodes, Interviewed by · personal Income tax. There's billion. The record shOWII that
WBNS lor lt.s "55 Minutes" $55 mllllon more In corporate welfare In Ohio doubles in
program, denied charge. the franchise tax because they Ohio every five years. It
bond issues, which he placed will be doing more business. means that by 1981 It will be
by pel!tion on the ballot, There's $60 mllllon more in • $2.1 biJUon dollars. And in
would not produce the 500,000 municipal inccme tues. All 1986 we are
about $4.2
new joblln Ohio which he has the money we collect, state billlon dollars."
claimed they will.
anatocally, is more than thla
Rhodes 1111id Ohioans,
"We have boulinl and I
between !_lOW and 1981, will

Ia-

lbe

.u.u• .• ,,.

we can ·create 16,000 jobllii
just the howdDg indllltry. We
have $1.75 bWlon bi highways
and, in the master plan for
transportation, we get $2.5
billion from the federal
government," the governor
said.
"According to the Lllbor
Development and Trans·
portatlon Department, lor
every blllioo dOllars we spend
in transportation we get
123,000 jobs," Rhodes said.
"So you just multiply that
and we are talking about
522,000 job&amp; and we are trying
to be CO!Illervative here.

A's' own
' er

tOpS SLA
.

kill list

SAN FRANCISOO (UP!) The flrlt euauinaUon target
figure.
of lhe Symblmell! Uberatioo
Tbenntday, Sen. Jacob K. Army wia Olarleli 0. Finley,
Jav!IIJ, R·N.Y., told reporters owner !i the Oakland A's
the city's proapects In baseball team, Rolling Stone
Congress are "grim." Later, magazine says.
he learned the Ford ad· The controversial sports·
mlnl8traUon, whUe oppoalng man was chosen ,for miD'der
New 'York's cause in by SLA leader Donald
Congress, propoeec1 a .., "Clnque" DeFreeze In the
m1lllon loan ror the African fan 1973, before it kidnaped
nation of Zaire. "I don't Patricia Hearst, but the tiny
undentand lhll callousness," terrorist group later changed
said Javlt.s.
Its mind, the magazine saki in
The House subcommittee the second of IWil articles
and tbe Senate Banking about the Patricia Hearst
eommlttee are to vote this caae.
week oo billa to provide
"In the faD of 1973 Onque
mulU~n loan guar,antee1• began aelectlng targets for
WlUt Burns advlalng against palitlcal a88818lnatlon," the
a ~ederal investment in New magazine ·salil bi the article
York, Levitt refuaing to in· by Howard Kobo and Oivld
vest pension lunda In New Weir. "His first choice was
York, and public and Charles 0. Finley, Ute
congr.easional , sentiment Oakland A's owner depleted
running agalnsl helping the on many sports pages as the
big . city, New York's petty tyrant of baseball.
prollplecil in Coogreu aren't Cinque expected Finley's
good.
execution to produce a media
splash for the SLA.
"But Cinque changed his
· ~ROMP
mind when be heard that the
LINCOLN, Neb. (UP!) - Black Panthers were
Nebraalla's fourth-ranked cr!Uclzlng the conduct of
cor11tullien lbocked by a , Marcus Foster, tbe first
74-yarcl acdring run by , black superintendent of
, Colorado quarterback Dave Olihlnd'a schooll."
Wllliaml 111 the third·play of
Foster wu a!!P"'inated
the game, 11111 ulbed bi oo Ute nlaht of Nov. 6, 1173. SLA
an almost unbelltvllblutrilll members Rusaell Utile and
of mistakes Saturday to IICOre Joaeph Rerniro were tried
a ~21 rout of the Buffaloes. and convicted of the killing.

or

t)

.

lunch with Madame Vijaya
Lakshmi Pandit, former
president of the U.N. General
Assembly, and il group of ·
Cleveland~s most influenUai
women.
Mrs. Ford was greeted at
the airport by Republican
Mayor Ralph i'erk, who
asked her to "tell the
President to stay well - we
need him .around ." She
replied "Well, be seemed just
fine today."
Her speech deplored
restrictions still placed on
woinen's behavior and said
the American !JJusewlfe has
been too much maligned.
"My own '!Uppol't of the
Equal- RlghiiJ Amendment
has shown · what h8ppens
when a definition of proper'
behavior collides wiUt an
Individual's right to per!DIIal
opinions," she said. "I do not
believe that being first lady

Rhodes defends bond issues

think "

By MIKE JI'EINSILBER
WASHINGTON (UPI)- At
mid-afternoon Thursday,
Arthur Levitt, who controls fl
bllllon; said no again.
A few hours later, in
another room on capitol Hill,
Arthur Burns said no again.
Thoae two no's, It may turn
out, doomed New York City to
a future of inaolvency and
IDlcertainty.
The whlte-llalred uvitl, 7S,
has been comptroller of New
York state for 20 years. 14e Is
the 10le trustee of New York
state 's employes pension
fund. He alone decides where
to Invest over fl bUUon.
He has purchased _.27S
rnllllon of bonds to help New
York City meet 1111 debts. He
told the Senate Banking
Committee Thursday no, he
would buy no more.
He 1111ld he is compelled by
taw to be prudent In wbere he
Invests the pension funds.
These are other people's
earnings, he noted. He
camot, he said, prudently
bivest in New York City
Securlues.
. levitt's refusal to invest 1n
New York at the very time
New York is asking CongreM
to rt.sk taxpayers' money oo
New York will8W'ely be cited
with damaging elfect when
New York's appeal Clmee to
a vote in House lind Senate.
Arthur Bums' no came as
the Federal Reserve Board
chalnnan testified before the
'House
banking
sub·
committee. Several monilia
ago, Burns adamantly opposed a federal rescue effort
for New York City. It w~ a
matter of principle; it would
involve the federal govern·
ment in the administration of
a dty.
Liter Burns modified his
poljtiOil. He started saying
New York City's default
Could hurt ret;over)' from the
recellllOil, could have un·
tettllng consequences on
financial markets; could
ralle Interest cosls f!ll' ev~
the molt ttedltworthy cities.
He said at one point that
default could touch off a
seriousreceaslon. But still, he

PAGE 19

SUNDAY. OCTOBER 2~, 1975

NO. 39

more to do with chauvinism reputation. Hearst listened,
than radical politics."
the magazine said, but Mrs.
The debate continued, the Hearst would not cooperate.
magazine said, and Kathy
The next day the FBI
Sollah was enlisted as a go· qpestloned the coup)e about
between to try to smooth over •their meeting with Scott.
the sittiaUon. Her bfolber, Hearst was noncommittal,
steve, was arrested the same Rolling Stone silld, "but the
day 88 Mlsa Hearst and the . FBI Blitlcipated •Catherine's By li.uc.A l"RffZ
Harrl!es.
•
cooperation and she provld~
CLEVELAND (UP!) Mlsa Sollah was under FBI an obliging account."
Betty Ford, whose frank
surveillance and a·gents
At the same tlme, the Los expressions of opinion have
watched as she commuted Angeles Times was tipped by stirred up the public oo more
between the two hideouts an FBI SOID'ce about the . than one occasion said
ldentWed Bill and
Hearst.scott negotiations and · Saturday she will cooUnue to
Harris, picked them up and ' ran a story· Hearst denied it · speak out because "being
then found Miss Hearst.
at Scott's insistence.
ladyUJte does not require
It was two and a half · "But the Hearst-Scott silence."
months earlier that Scott's negotlaUons had been ef,
Mrs. Ford has been
negotiations with, Ralxlolph fectlvely scuttled," the ·cr!Uclzed foe" her outspoken
Hearst began, the magazine magazine said. Mlsa Hearst's comments on a range of
said.
'
rejection of the SLA will be an lsaues from sex to marijuana.
"Jack had learned that element in her defense She defended the practice in a
Patty's loy!Jilies were drift.. against criminal chargee, the speech prepared for. an ·
ing .away from the SLA," magazine said. It said lbe audience of aeveral Utouaand
Rolling Stone said.
rejection will be cited even - 'possibly her biggest
"Patty had allo &amp;lltlaed ~.according to.lhe ,1111· audience to date - at the
an awakening homeslckneu lhors,lhe participated bi two · Greater Cleveland lntei'na·
for her family; she even had bank robberiel: One at a tiona! Women's Year
talbd of settetly vlaltlng Hibernia Bank !ranch in San Congress.
them."
Fr811C11co In April, 1974, and
She flew here from
At diluter wiUt the elder the other at a Crocker Bank Washington 'ror the day to
Hearsta last · July, Scott lranch in Carmichael, Calif., make the speech promoting
hinted that be might be able a year later In which a ratification of the Equal
to convince Mlsa Hearl! to woman customer was killed. Right.s Amendment, and to
retu(n, ' at the same time Both were designed to tie her
protecting his radical closer to the SLA.

'

~

GAS TREATMENT

-

Ellrly In September Mlsa
Heant confronted Harris
with her feelinga In a seven·
pap leiter.
'"fttey C8lliUI'ed Bill for his
machilmoandspggested that
.the SLA 'a pall violence had

"'111 .....

UN , fvr• ~Pif

STP

..•.

lOIIItrUii':IIOII

~-" ~ lllfl
91

.'

\

t.on.

lilot""'"""'•'"""-•t
_,
IIIIJ',l Q
""fit "*'vii"""
It
righl into lit
ar

machismo."

:'-" Edwards said
.
.
· easy.vzctor

"'!:

~

..

""' .

. '

admire~~."

While hiding out in the San
·Francllco !JJuse where she
wu arrested, Miss Hearst
came under the Influence of
her roommate, fellow
fugitive Wendy YoshlmiD'a, a
militant femln!Jt.
"W~en Wendy Initially
criUclzed the SLA as selist,
Patty had defended Cinque
(original SLA leader Donald .
DeFreeze)
and
Teko
• (Harrla)," Rolling .Stone
said. "But over the IIIIIIDier
her oplnloo changed. She wu
beginning 10 view the SLA as
a IIWI-toling gang heavy oo

wu'

SPORTS DEPT.

VOL. 10

.

;verge of rejecting .the Sym·
lilonese Liberation Army
"hen she was arrested, ac·
~rding !o ~oiling Stone
. magazine. ,~t said the FBI
loUnd her hecause of her
arguments with fellow
. fugitives William and Emily

SUNDAY

.

reject
·SLA
.

.••SAN FI!ANCISOO.(UPI) Palrli:la Hearst wu on the

MR. AND MRS. FERMAN MOORE, Lincoln. Hill,
Pomeroy, have returned home following a slx~ays visit in
New Vork, where Mr. Moore attended a convenUon. ' · ,

THURSDAY AT THE POMEROY Go!£ Course Harold
Lohse got a hole in oneQilthe number four green.lt was a drive·,
of 152 yards.
.
·
·
Playing With Lohae at the time were Perry Mitch, Ed
Nelaon· and Charles Gibbs.
Nice work ll you can get it.

.

.

~

'I

have to pay, peP. person,
$1,730 in federal and state
taxes just for welfare
programs.
"Now they (opponents of
the bond isaues) can call me
anything they so want, they
can demean me, they can
assasainate my character,
they can do everything,"
Rhodes said. ''All! am trying
to do t.s a job for the people of
Ohio. We can make Ohio, with ·
this program, the most ex·
citing stale in the nation."

.

'I

.

Second Soviet craft perishes
By CHARLES P. WAlLACE

MOSCOW (UP!) - A
second Soviet spacecraft
landed oo Venus Saturday
and sent back a ''panoramic"
view of a lave-like landscape
before it apparently perished
m lhe planet's fiery surface.
Scientists said the Venus 10
ttaft performed 85 minutes of
work after a soft touchdown,
the aerond wunanned Soviet
landing on Ute planet In four
days.
The official Tass news
agency 1111ld Venus 10 landed
about 1,300 miles froin lhe
llpQt where 811 identical sister
Slip, Venus · 9, · set . down
Wednesday.
Moscow Radio quoted
aclenUats at the space control
center as saying photographs
transmitted from the Venus
10 showed what ,seemed like
''molten lava." But Utey said
they had time only for a
pretlmlnar)' analysis.
'!bey said the photocrapha
trafllllllitted diD'ing the com·
munlcations period included
a "panoramic" view of lhe
swface. Thus far, the Venus
(ilotographs ba-Ye shown only
small regions of the ground.

"Photography of Ut~
aurface of . the planet,
measurement.s of light and
analysis of the physical
properties and lhe nature of
the rock at the landing site
were studied for 85 minutes
after the landing," Tass said.
Tass 1111id the searing
temperature of the surface
was 870 degrees and that
atm&lt;JIII)herlc pressure was
about 00 times stronger than
on earth. Winds were
reported to be about one-half
mile an holD'.
While the Soviets did not
state positively that Venus 10
ceased functioning , the
report on the 85-mlnute work
period did not raise the
possibility of further com·
munlcaUons. ·
Venus 9 lroadcast data
from the surface for 53
minutes and Soviet presa
account.s suggeat that It, too,
has ceaaed to operate.
The 65omlnute duration of·
the Venus 10 work oo the
surface was the longest of
any Soviet mission. The
Soviets landed craft on Venus
tn 1970 and again in 1172.
BoUt Venus 9 and 10 were

~ed

to better withstand
the Inhospitable climate of
the planet, earth's closest
planetary neighbor.
Both cfaft coosisted of an
orbital module and a descent
vehicle. The orbital capsules
of both shlpa have becmle
artlflclsllllltellites of Venus.
Tass Aid Venus 10 made
the descent to the swface by
parachute and during lhe 75
minutes before it reached the
ground was able to transmit
Important chemical and
physical data about the at·
mOaphere.
The historic dual-pronged
probe 'has so flu- produced
pictures showing discernible
rocks on the surface,
evidence which tends to .,..
disprove theories that the
surface was aroded Into sand
by higJl wind and heat.
Venua10,1aunched June 14,
made a 187-mlllion-mlie
Jol!mey to Venus, which is
often called the earth's sister
planet.
.
Venus and the earth make
elllpUcal orblt.s around the
8IDl and come within 26
million miles of each other at
the closest point.

d
National scenic river desi an ate
·

~--

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Little Beaver Creek In
Columbiana County will
officially become a national
scenic river next Tuesday,
state Natural Resources
Department Director Robert
W. Teater announced
Saturday.
Teater, along with James
Watt, dil'eclor of the U.S.
· Interior Department's
OOre&amp;u of outdoor recreation,
will fonnally designate 33
miles of the cree1t ·u the
~~teond natiooal scenic rlv.er
in Ohio.
A 64-mile portion of the
Utile Miami River ill south·
. western Ohio becaille the
first national scenic river In
the state in August, 1973.
The ceremony for the Little
Bener O'eek will be held at a
Pllrk picnic ares •djacent to
.Gaeton's Mill on the creek's
blnk at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday.
In January, 1974, a 2CHnile
portion of Little Beaver
\)

Creek, Including stretches of ·main stem Oows through
the west fork, the main stem Pennsyulvanla.
and the north fork, became
- Seven and two-thirds
the first wild river in Ohio mliee of the middle fork from
under the Ohio Scenic Rivers the Elkton Rd. bridge,
Law of 1968. At the same crossing to the confluence of
Ume, an additlonal16mlle8 of the middle fork with the west
Utile Beaver Creek was fork near Williamsport.
designated u scenlc.
- Four and one-fourth
Ohio will administer Little miles of the west fork from
Beaver O'eek as a component the y :c.;amp Rd . bridse,
of the National Wild and ttosaing east to the junction
Scenic Rivers System. The of the middle fork and the
Natural ResoiD'ces Depart· west fork near Wllllamaport.
ment l.s working with a 11}- Four and one-fourth
memher advisory council ancP miles of the north fork from
local sovernments to develop Brush Run, south to the main
a plan to preserve and protect stem at Fredericktown.
the river corridor.
The area of the tteek to be
included in the National Wild
CORRECTION
and SCenic Rivers System
GALLIPOLIS - II was
Includes :
Atty.
Dean Evans pictured in
- Sixteen anll two-thirds
Thursday's
ribbon cutting
miles, the enUre length of the
ceremony
during Shoe
main stem, from the con·
World's
grand
opening and
fluence of the west fork Sjld
middle fork near Glasgow, not Atty . Bill Eachus as lis led
Pa. Just over a mile
of the in rrlday's paper.
I

•,

�..
'
18 - The Sunday Times ·Senltn•!,Swtday, Oct.

Katie~s

•!Patty was .ready,

Korner

By Katie Crow

..

~ to

POMEROY - Guest of Mr. and .Mrs.
W. (BOOne)
Weaver, Jr., of Racine, for the past lO days has been Mrs .
. Otarley Hufbnan, former Lucille Weldon, of Pittsburgh. Mrs. ·
Huffman is th~ daughter of the late Willie Weldon, a former
pilot on the Ohio River who resided in Racine for many years,
.Last Sunda,Ya reunion of the four living Weldon descen·
dants was held at the Weaver home. Attending were Mr. and
Mr$. Richard Cott~man, former Josephine Hayman, Mr',s.
VIrginia Hayman R;enner, all of Parkersburg; Mrs. Huffman
and the host and hostess, Mr. and Mrs. Weaver.
Mrs. Cotlerman and Mrs, Renner are daughters of the late
Eber and Myrtle Weldon Hayman. Mr. Weaver's late mother ·
was the former lillian Weldon and the late Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Weldort were the grandparents of Lucille Huffman,
Josephine.(;ctterman, Virginia Renner and Boone Weaver and
at Qlle Iinne they all resided where the Weaver home is now
located in Racine.
·

..

Jfarrjs.

...

I

CELEBnA,TING BIRTHDAYS in October were Mr; and
,Mrs., Cliff Williams and Rosa Holstein, all of Syracuse. Mrs.
Holstein resides wjth her daugl!ter-ln·law, Enunogeoe.
CONGRATULATIONS!

,.

. •'

Mr. and Mrs. Owen's daughter, Judy, Is a freshman and
Mr, and Mrs. Diehl'sdaughter,Jo Ellen, !sa senlor.

•WiftiiCOitl
\

'

'

SHIRTs ·

, I

..

A great skirt fot flghtl~tg tho.. chiiiJ
huntina daya. Wokn. Nghtw-'&amp;ht Cll'ld
cf?otn't 1m..... molr;ljlf. Solid a..d
plaid detigns in aiiCif'fM colort.
ChOoM fr0111 auortld

•iz•. ·

'

ATTENDING P'AMD.. Y WEEKEND at Marietta College
this weekend are Mr. and Mrs. Richard Owen, Middleport, and
Mr. a!'d Mrs. James Dithl, Pomeroy.

, A go-between trying to
medlste between the 2J..year·
old newspaper heireas · and
the Harrlsea wu trailed by
the FBI to the two San
J.i'ranclsco houses where ihe
'lbng-«1"ht fugltlvee were
l)ldlng out, the magazine said
#I the second of two articles
~ut the case, A copy of the
second article, dlle to reach
newsstanda in about 10 days,
was . obtained by UPI
Saturday.
.: ~U~Illng Stone a11o llld
fPOriB activlal Jack . Scott
!mew of MIU Hearst's
~ectton with the SLA imd
worJdnc w!Ut her father;
· ~ndolph A. Hearst,
ll'tlident of the San rran·
lli.sco Euminer, to briJig her
)JJme. It aald Mila Hearst's
!JIOI!Ier,' Catherine, told the
FBI of the negoUat10111 and
IIIeY were ended.

FLANNEL

Wl•c••n•
22 CAL. RIFLE

'

.

H.lllliiiLE SHOT lllliTIUII
•

Choose from 12 or 14 gauges

$3188

SPORTS
. DEPT,

H.Cic's Reg.
$6.99

I:IECK'S '·REG. •(!9.99
.
SPORTS DEPT..

Hocl'o Rotr• $~9 .99•

"By late summer 1975, she

(Patricia) had lost almost all
fllsclnatloo for the intrigue of
the undergrou~Jd," said
authOl'll Howll'!i Kolin and
David Well'. "Most of her
time wu spent away from
the Harrillel, ·Who no tonger
seenied like the lrother Teko
and slater Yolandfi sh.e once

· ''PENNZOIL
MOTOR
· A
PENNZDil
OIL
..... . . . ?

'
COUMAN
4, LB.

· "SLEEPINI BAG .
.

'II

;oddtd weaJiwrMOt. loxtd CO!'ftlrl.,
R.inforctd ltre11 poinla. Ti• !opts for roll up
ltorogl:. &amp;.ch Opefll fully for oiring end mat..
with anotfltr bog Into double bog. ~

· lOW-30

1

rnultl-vll

\ · IIIOTOII OJ~ I

71.·1/ . . ., ;&gt;-

49~

.

HECK'S REG. 69'
.. AUTO DEPT.

/r f,

v
/

. '
...........~ '

.

'

FRONT
NYLON·N·FOAM

SEAT COVERS
Hy\N ond

(91'•

-'lei w.fl. ln llf11011wd wlvrt. ,

HECK'$ •17;99 '
SPORTS DEPT

,$29_9

'A11tiiiT.

HICK'S RIG,
$4.'?9 .

20''

BATON

y

.

.

·W. RENCH.

$.39"

9
HECK'S REG. 2.77

HECK'S REG. 99•
'.
•••
AUTO DEPT•.

1

AUTO DEPT.

' .. u. .
fU DUIROIIIT

HOI.

STEP SAYER1

'$129

.'
WATER.COOLED gas turbine capable ot'. doobllng
'generatillg power of convendonal turbinel ia inlpected by
lab researchers at General Elactrlc'a . Research and
Development Center in Schenectady, N. Y.' Tbe ultra·
high-temperature turbine prototype bums lower grade
fuel and ope~"ates at nearly 2,000 degrees F., more th8n
1,000 degrees higher than currently used tutbinee.

Heck's

'1.33

Hec:lc't

R-,. $1.65

HOUSEWAIE DE".

11-e.

' I •

'' . $2.99

I OZ.

...

,
ucuall ·

I

TAME

'

CIIMIIIINSE

Regular- With Bddy-l~ mon

TOOTHPASTE . '

61~;Hed'a R-e.
88c

- 78C
••
·--

,_

...

- llrl

l!iCIIrUda
had a M per cent majority of
the vom and hll neare1t
~nt only 15 per cent.
A mockelectlon of atudenta
~ several state co~ps
last ""k gave Edwardll 49.3.
)ler cent of the vom.
· " · Edwards, 48, Ia oppoled by
· 'lllate Sen. Robert Jones of
.. t,.ake Charles, Secretary of
State Wade 0. Martin Jr.,
'Cecilia Mary Pizzo, A.
' Rarwell ThomiJIOn, both of
. New Orleans, and Ken lewis
li Batoo RoUIJe.
• Saturday's primary
.~Uoo Is the first under
J,.oulllana's new open electiona law in which all voters
'- riJI!ardiNI of party af.
flllatlon _ can participate
and vom for candldalel of
my party. No RePublicans
· ve in the governor's race.
· '!be ballot also will include
112 candidates for Ueutensnt
governor, secretary of state,
agriculture commlsaioner,
lbaurance commluloner,
lidueatlcJn superintendent and
•lectlon commluioner as
lrell aa hundreds seeking
state legislative seat.s, and
two Public Service Com·
mlsaioo aeat.s.
H ~lected, Edwards will
become the aecood man this
century to be elected to two
consecutive terms as

HICK'S RIG •

•

• ' HECK'S REG. 14.95

coSMEnc DEPT.

ROUGE, La.
(UP!) - Gov. Edwin Ed·
wards, a colorful, smooUt·
talking Cajun who has
worked to build a nallonal
~e by hammerlllg away
at government ' energy
. policies, is espected to cout
10 an easy re-election Yic:IGry
~ flv• Olllllllitiltl Balm'-

cliy •
'll'wo pollllb

...

CHAIN ~ .aw ·. ···

.

By RAFAEL BERMUDEZ

'•

704

$1.21 .

'toiMITit,., .

JEWELRY DEPT

Applications are
. bei,ng accepted
' POMEROY' - The Ohio

'I

G. E. 8 TRACK
·mlm COMPONENT

3 ONLY
HE~I('S

•1.66-

TQY DEPT.

.1 .

'

WITH AMIFM STEREO RADIO
1
HECK'S REG. 13U8
899
JEWELRY DEPT.

,

I

;'7

Heck'. lleg. $1.18

COSNRC DEPT.

Louisiana governor.
Edwards has appeared on
national televiiiDil shows nu·
meroua tbnee to criticize
national energy polJctes.
He once flew to New York
wltb a baaquet of seafood
fished from the Lout.slana
coaat to demoaatrate to
IIO•••imellt," civic and in·
dustr1 ~~~otflhore
oil and PI
hid not
hurt the alate s valuable
fishing lndullry.
Edwards, 'IIllo often uses
bla fluent French when
·carnpalgning in Loulsiana's
Cajun areas, hu called for
deregulation of gas and C111de
oil prices and for Increased
oU and gas production off the
Eastern seaboard.
::::::~::f,;:::::::::.:.:::::::.:::::::.:::.:::::::.:::::::::::::::.::::::::::

Volunteen Awarded ...:.
Mary J, Walker, Director
of ' Vohllltetr Servlcet1 at
Holzer .Medical Cuter,
u
e~preued her apprecia on
Tltnrtday 10 approlllmateiy
90 volunteers at the
hospital. The director
spoke at a laneheoD for tbe
volunteen at Ute Holiday
IIUL

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

New contract
okeyed Friday
DAY'I'ON, Ohio (UP!)- A
new contract beetween the
UUI!ty Workers Union of
America, Local 176, and the
Dayton Power &amp; Ught Co.,
wu approved Friday night.
'!be new agreement, to
become · elfecUve at mid·
lligbt, &amp;lnday, provides a
wage Increase averaBing 8
. per cent. The agreement was
announced jointly by Harold
Moots, ~dent of lhe local,
and Wll1laill Miller, manager
of lnduairlal relations for ,
DPL.
Tile new conll'act 'fleets
2,259 unioo employes.
PLJ!;ASA!It'T VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Roy
Nitz and son,' Middleport;·
Mark Blankenship, Point
Pleasant; Jackie Waugh,
Crown City, 0.; Virginia
Jeffers, Southside; Mrs.
James Mitchell, West
Colwnbla; Cheryl call, Point
Pleasant; Mfs. John McDaniel, ~!!ton; Mrs. Glll'land
Mayes, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Roas Roush, Mason; Mervin
Norris, Lakin; Rena Johnson,
·New Haven; Mra. Cleo Smith,
Galllpolla FerrY; Mrs. Or·
ville- Ellis, Point Plea1111nt,
and Jamea Bell, Point

Bureau of Employment
Services, in conjunction with
the Gallia-Melgs Community
Action Agency, will be .ac·
c:,eptlng applicalioris lor
1mployment and tralolng
~pporttinities for Meigs
County residents.
This aervice is being
provided for those who have
not registered within the last
, 88 days .at the Empioylfll!nt
Office In Gallipolis.
Regt.stration ITlll take place
at the Ccimmunlly AclioJI
Agency offke to the Court. .
houae in Pomeroy oo Ocl. 11;
•• 30 and 31 from g I ,Ill. !Uitil
Vf.terUI Mf!IIIOI'Ial HOII(IItal
S~30 p.m. each day.
ADMITTED - Hobart
Pen0111 not hiiYing tranaDurham;
Pomeroy; Velma
IOrtatlon and wishing to
Jtgilter should contact the Pai'IOIII, kine.
DlSCHARIJED -' Marjorie
:!AA office in Meigs County at
Grlrnm, Evalena Pauley.
18U&amp;Q5. '
1

"'*-I. '

TIRED OUT might be 811 apt descrlptloo bi more
ways ·than one for two cllwn at work in Lake Erie. 11iey
are chaining together 1111111 11 dllc:arded lirea to fonn al
Ooating breakwater Cor the port of Dunkirk, N. Y.

•

•

.,

.F irst Lady continues
giving fr~ opinione

Emily

COWMBUS (UPI~ - State Auditor JeNpb E.
Feraa-llllld Sallll'day bll office was 1rimg 10 reeever
$1M from 11 IIJviiiGG· of h!Pnys 111pel"l'llon for dr·
culatillg Gov. Jamet A. Rhodet bGad luae petltlou 011
ltate time.
. Fergusoa Aid employes of the di'l'illoD Ill BowliDI
Gnea we!'t alied to 11gD petitD. ·cJuriD&amp; tlllb from
1qpervl10r, wlllch ranged from Ill mlmllel to an lioar lilt
JuDe.

Ferp1011 said the aqpervllon were attemptlu&amp; to
obtalo the S07,0oilalgoaturel needed to get the boDd ~~~­
placed 011 the November hallot.
FerpHD Aid eiiiJIIoyea were reqalred to bear tile
talb, beld on payroll time.
DIJtrlct
louts at llowliDg Gne11, coven ·die
COIDdel of Fallo11, Wood, Heary1 Llcal, OUna, s-,
Se""!'l'ky ud Wlllllm.t.

z.

Levitt finally
tells NYC no .
always said, "as of today,"
he could not advise federal
actioo.
U he were going to change
his poeltlon, hll testimony
Tltursday, u the last witnea
before the subcommittee
meeta to decide what to do
about New York, was lhe
time to do it.
'
Whlie be took a more
serious view of the impact of
default "than I did three
months ago or even three
weeks ago," Burns said, "the
naUonal intereat does not
require federal assistance."
As a respected, con·
servative eeonomlst, in·
dependent of the ad·
ministration, Burns probably
has more inOuence In
Congreas on economic
matters than any other

should prevent me · from 'taking place in America,"
she said. "And part of the job
expressing my views.
"I spoke out on this im· of those of us who support
portant lsaue because of my ERA is to help remove this
deep personal convictions. cloud offear and confusion."
She said the amendment ...
Why should my husband 's job
or yours prevent us from "will not be alter the fabric of
being ourselves? Being the Constitution - or force
ladylike does not require women away from their
famlllee."
silence."
She has been "distresSed,"
Mrs. Ford apparently ref~ed specifically to charges she said, that one outgrowth
by ERA opponent.s that the of the argument over era
First Lady illegally used "has been the J&amp;ck of ap.
government facliitles and preciaUon ,of · the role of
women as · wl ves and
staff to lobby for ERA. .
Mra. Ford said Ute con· mothers."
"In trying to open up
troversy has developed
among people who fear choices and opportunities,
change and she propoeed that women muilt not unERA proponents should lower derestimate their accom·
pllshments in the home," she
the tenor of the debate.
"The debate over ERA has · said. "We have to take that
become too emotional 'just' out of 'just a housewife'
because of the fears of some and show our pride in having
- both men and women - made the home and family
·
about the changes already our life's work."

COLUMBUS (UP!) -Gov.
"let me just point out !hat program (the four bond
James A. Rhodes Saturday in thla whole program, if we isaues) costl!."
defended his four econcmlc have 500,000 people working,
"In 1966 welfare cost the
bond issues appearing oo the they will pay ~million to $95 taxpayers of Ohio $217
November ballot during mlllioo more in sales tax m1lllon. in 1971 it was $488
taping of a radio program to revenue," he said. "They will m1lllon," said Rhodes. "This
be aired &amp;mday.
,
pay $38 million more in yell' we have appropriated $1
Rhodes, Interviewed by · personal Income tax. There's billion. The record shOWII that
WBNS lor lt.s "55 Minutes" $55 mllllon more In corporate welfare In Ohio doubles in
program, denied charge. the franchise tax because they Ohio every five years. It
bond issues, which he placed will be doing more business. means that by 1981 It will be
by pel!tion on the ballot, There's $60 mllllon more in • $2.1 biJUon dollars. And in
would not produce the 500,000 municipal inccme tues. All 1986 we are
about $4.2
new joblln Ohio which he has the money we collect, state billlon dollars."
claimed they will.
anatocally, is more than thla
Rhodes 1111id Ohioans,
"We have boulinl and I
between !_lOW and 1981, will

Ia-

lbe

.u.u• .• ,,.

we can ·create 16,000 jobllii
just the howdDg indllltry. We
have $1.75 bWlon bi highways
and, in the master plan for
transportation, we get $2.5
billion from the federal
government," the governor
said.
"According to the Lllbor
Development and Trans·
portatlon Department, lor
every blllioo dOllars we spend
in transportation we get
123,000 jobs," Rhodes said.
"So you just multiply that
and we are talking about
522,000 job&amp; and we are trying
to be CO!Illervative here.

A's' own
' er

tOpS SLA
.

kill list

SAN FRANCISOO (UP!) The flrlt euauinaUon target
figure.
of lhe Symblmell! Uberatioo
Tbenntday, Sen. Jacob K. Army wia Olarleli 0. Finley,
Jav!IIJ, R·N.Y., told reporters owner !i the Oakland A's
the city's proapects In baseball team, Rolling Stone
Congress are "grim." Later, magazine says.
he learned the Ford ad· The controversial sports·
mlnl8traUon, whUe oppoalng man was chosen ,for miD'der
New 'York's cause in by SLA leader Donald
Congress, propoeec1 a .., "Clnque" DeFreeze In the
m1lllon loan ror the African fan 1973, before it kidnaped
nation of Zaire. "I don't Patricia Hearst, but the tiny
undentand lhll callousness," terrorist group later changed
said Javlt.s.
Its mind, the magazine saki in
The House subcommittee the second of IWil articles
and tbe Senate Banking about the Patricia Hearst
eommlttee are to vote this caae.
week oo billa to provide
"In the faD of 1973 Onque
mulU~n loan guar,antee1• began aelectlng targets for
WlUt Burns advlalng against palitlcal a88818lnatlon," the
a ~ederal investment in New magazine ·salil bi the article
York, Levitt refuaing to in· by Howard Kobo and Oivld
vest pension lunda In New Weir. "His first choice was
York, and public and Charles 0. Finley, Ute
congr.easional , sentiment Oakland A's owner depleted
running agalnsl helping the on many sports pages as the
big . city, New York's petty tyrant of baseball.
prollplecil in Coogreu aren't Cinque expected Finley's
good.
execution to produce a media
splash for the SLA.
"But Cinque changed his
· ~ROMP
mind when be heard that the
LINCOLN, Neb. (UP!) - Black Panthers were
Nebraalla's fourth-ranked cr!Uclzlng the conduct of
cor11tullien lbocked by a , Marcus Foster, tbe first
74-yarcl acdring run by , black superintendent of
, Colorado quarterback Dave Olihlnd'a schooll."
Wllliaml 111 the third·play of
Foster wu a!!P"'inated
the game, 11111 ulbed bi oo Ute nlaht of Nov. 6, 1173. SLA
an almost unbelltvllblutrilll members Rusaell Utile and
of mistakes Saturday to IICOre Joaeph Rerniro were tried
a ~21 rout of the Buffaloes. and convicted of the killing.

or

t)

.

lunch with Madame Vijaya
Lakshmi Pandit, former
president of the U.N. General
Assembly, and il group of ·
Cleveland~s most influenUai
women.
Mrs. Ford was greeted at
the airport by Republican
Mayor Ralph i'erk, who
asked her to "tell the
President to stay well - we
need him .around ." She
replied "Well, be seemed just
fine today."
Her speech deplored
restrictions still placed on
woinen's behavior and said
the American !JJusewlfe has
been too much maligned.
"My own '!Uppol't of the
Equal- RlghiiJ Amendment
has shown · what h8ppens
when a definition of proper'
behavior collides wiUt an
Individual's right to per!DIIal
opinions," she said. "I do not
believe that being first lady

Rhodes defends bond issues

think "

By MIKE JI'EINSILBER
WASHINGTON (UPI)- At
mid-afternoon Thursday,
Arthur Levitt, who controls fl
bllllon; said no again.
A few hours later, in
another room on capitol Hill,
Arthur Burns said no again.
Thoae two no's, It may turn
out, doomed New York City to
a future of inaolvency and
IDlcertainty.
The whlte-llalred uvitl, 7S,
has been comptroller of New
York state for 20 years. 14e Is
the 10le trustee of New York
state 's employes pension
fund. He alone decides where
to Invest over fl bUUon.
He has purchased _.27S
rnllllon of bonds to help New
York City meet 1111 debts. He
told the Senate Banking
Committee Thursday no, he
would buy no more.
He 1111ld he is compelled by
taw to be prudent In wbere he
Invests the pension funds.
These are other people's
earnings, he noted. He
camot, he said, prudently
bivest in New York City
Securlues.
. levitt's refusal to invest 1n
New York at the very time
New York is asking CongreM
to rt.sk taxpayers' money oo
New York will8W'ely be cited
with damaging elfect when
New York's appeal Clmee to
a vote in House lind Senate.
Arthur Bums' no came as
the Federal Reserve Board
chalnnan testified before the
'House
banking
sub·
committee. Several monilia
ago, Burns adamantly opposed a federal rescue effort
for New York City. It w~ a
matter of principle; it would
involve the federal govern·
ment in the administration of
a dty.
Liter Burns modified his
poljtiOil. He started saying
New York City's default
Could hurt ret;over)' from the
recellllOil, could have un·
tettllng consequences on
financial markets; could
ralle Interest cosls f!ll' ev~
the molt ttedltworthy cities.
He said at one point that
default could touch off a
seriousreceaslon. But still, he

PAGE 19

SUNDAY. OCTOBER 2~, 1975

NO. 39

more to do with chauvinism reputation. Hearst listened,
than radical politics."
the magazine said, but Mrs.
The debate continued, the Hearst would not cooperate.
magazine said, and Kathy
The next day the FBI
Sollah was enlisted as a go· qpestloned the coup)e about
between to try to smooth over •their meeting with Scott.
the sittiaUon. Her bfolber, Hearst was noncommittal,
steve, was arrested the same Rolling Stone silld, "but the
day 88 Mlsa Hearst and the . FBI Blitlcipated •Catherine's By li.uc.A l"RffZ
Harrl!es.
•
cooperation and she provld~
CLEVELAND (UP!) Mlsa Sollah was under FBI an obliging account."
Betty Ford, whose frank
surveillance and a·gents
At the same tlme, the Los expressions of opinion have
watched as she commuted Angeles Times was tipped by stirred up the public oo more
between the two hideouts an FBI SOID'ce about the . than one occasion said
ldentWed Bill and
Hearst.scott negotiations and · Saturday she will cooUnue to
Harris, picked them up and ' ran a story· Hearst denied it · speak out because "being
then found Miss Hearst.
at Scott's insistence.
ladyUJte does not require
It was two and a half · "But the Hearst-Scott silence."
months earlier that Scott's negotlaUons had been ef,
Mrs. Ford has been
negotiations with, Ralxlolph fectlvely scuttled," the ·cr!Uclzed foe" her outspoken
Hearst began, the magazine magazine said. Mlsa Hearst's comments on a range of
said.
'
rejection of the SLA will be an lsaues from sex to marijuana.
"Jack had learned that element in her defense She defended the practice in a
Patty's loy!Jilies were drift.. against criminal chargee, the speech prepared for. an ·
ing .away from the SLA," magazine said. It said lbe audience of aeveral Utouaand
Rolling Stone said.
rejection will be cited even - 'possibly her biggest
"Patty had allo &amp;lltlaed ~.according to.lhe ,1111· audience to date - at the
an awakening homeslckneu lhors,lhe participated bi two · Greater Cleveland lntei'na·
for her family; she even had bank robberiel: One at a tiona! Women's Year
talbd of settetly vlaltlng Hibernia Bank !ranch in San Congress.
them."
Fr811C11co In April, 1974, and
She flew here from
At diluter wiUt the elder the other at a Crocker Bank Washington 'ror the day to
Hearsta last · July, Scott lranch in Carmichael, Calif., make the speech promoting
hinted that be might be able a year later In which a ratification of the Equal
to convince Mlsa Hearl! to woman customer was killed. Right.s Amendment, and to
retu(n, ' at the same time Both were designed to tie her
protecting his radical closer to the SLA.

'

~

GAS TREATMENT

-

Ellrly In September Mlsa
Heant confronted Harris
with her feelinga In a seven·
pap leiter.
'"fttey C8lliUI'ed Bill for his
machilmoandspggested that
.the SLA 'a pall violence had

"'111 .....

UN , fvr• ~Pif

STP

..•.

lOIIItrUii':IIOII

~-" ~ lllfl
91

.'

\

t.on.

lilot""'"""'•'"""-•t
_,
IIIIJ',l Q
""fit "*'vii"""
It
righl into lit
ar

machismo."

:'-" Edwards said
.
.
· easy.vzctor

"'!:

~

..

""' .

. '

admire~~."

While hiding out in the San
·Francllco !JJuse where she
wu arrested, Miss Hearst
came under the Influence of
her roommate, fellow
fugitive Wendy YoshlmiD'a, a
militant femln!Jt.
"W~en Wendy Initially
criUclzed the SLA as selist,
Patty had defended Cinque
(original SLA leader Donald .
DeFreeze)
and
Teko
• (Harrla)," Rolling .Stone
said. "But over the IIIIIIDier
her oplnloo changed. She wu
beginning 10 view the SLA as
a IIWI-toling gang heavy oo

wu'

SPORTS DEPT.

VOL. 10

.

;verge of rejecting .the Sym·
lilonese Liberation Army
"hen she was arrested, ac·
~rding !o ~oiling Stone
. magazine. ,~t said the FBI
loUnd her hecause of her
arguments with fellow
. fugitives William and Emily

SUNDAY

.

reject
·SLA
.

.••SAN FI!ANCISOO.(UPI) Palrli:la Hearst wu on the

MR. AND MRS. FERMAN MOORE, Lincoln. Hill,
Pomeroy, have returned home following a slx~ays visit in
New Vork, where Mr. Moore attended a convenUon. ' · ,

THURSDAY AT THE POMEROY Go!£ Course Harold
Lohse got a hole in oneQilthe number four green.lt was a drive·,
of 152 yards.
.
·
·
Playing With Lohae at the time were Perry Mitch, Ed
Nelaon· and Charles Gibbs.
Nice work ll you can get it.

.

.

~

'I

have to pay, peP. person,
$1,730 in federal and state
taxes just for welfare
programs.
"Now they (opponents of
the bond isaues) can call me
anything they so want, they
can demean me, they can
assasainate my character,
they can do everything,"
Rhodes said. ''All! am trying
to do t.s a job for the people of
Ohio. We can make Ohio, with ·
this program, the most ex·
citing stale in the nation."

.

'I

.

Second Soviet craft perishes
By CHARLES P. WAlLACE

MOSCOW (UP!) - A
second Soviet spacecraft
landed oo Venus Saturday
and sent back a ''panoramic"
view of a lave-like landscape
before it apparently perished
m lhe planet's fiery surface.
Scientists said the Venus 10
ttaft performed 85 minutes of
work after a soft touchdown,
the aerond wunanned Soviet
landing on Ute planet In four
days.
The official Tass news
agency 1111ld Venus 10 landed
about 1,300 miles froin lhe
llpQt where 811 identical sister
Slip, Venus · 9, · set . down
Wednesday.
Moscow Radio quoted
aclenUats at the space control
center as saying photographs
transmitted from the Venus
10 showed what ,seemed like
''molten lava." But Utey said
they had time only for a
pretlmlnar)' analysis.
'!bey said the photocrapha
trafllllllitted diD'ing the com·
munlcations period included
a "panoramic" view of lhe
swface. Thus far, the Venus
(ilotographs ba-Ye shown only
small regions of the ground.

"Photography of Ut~
aurface of . the planet,
measurement.s of light and
analysis of the physical
properties and lhe nature of
the rock at the landing site
were studied for 85 minutes
after the landing," Tass said.
Tass 1111id the searing
temperature of the surface
was 870 degrees and that
atm&lt;JIII)herlc pressure was
about 00 times stronger than
on earth. Winds were
reported to be about one-half
mile an holD'.
While the Soviets did not
state positively that Venus 10
ceased functioning , the
report on the 85-mlnute work
period did not raise the
possibility of further com·
munlcaUons. ·
Venus 9 lroadcast data
from the surface for 53
minutes and Soviet presa
account.s suggeat that It, too,
has ceaaed to operate.
The 65omlnute duration of·
the Venus 10 work oo the
surface was the longest of
any Soviet mission. The
Soviets landed craft on Venus
tn 1970 and again in 1172.
BoUt Venus 9 and 10 were

~ed

to better withstand
the Inhospitable climate of
the planet, earth's closest
planetary neighbor.
Both cfaft coosisted of an
orbital module and a descent
vehicle. The orbital capsules
of both shlpa have becmle
artlflclsllllltellites of Venus.
Tass Aid Venus 10 made
the descent to the swface by
parachute and during lhe 75
minutes before it reached the
ground was able to transmit
Important chemical and
physical data about the at·
mOaphere.
The historic dual-pronged
probe 'has so flu- produced
pictures showing discernible
rocks on the surface,
evidence which tends to .,..
disprove theories that the
surface was aroded Into sand
by higJl wind and heat.
Venua10,1aunched June 14,
made a 187-mlllion-mlie
Jol!mey to Venus, which is
often called the earth's sister
planet.
.
Venus and the earth make
elllpUcal orblt.s around the
8IDl and come within 26
million miles of each other at
the closest point.

d
National scenic river desi an ate
·

~--

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Little Beaver Creek In
Columbiana County will
officially become a national
scenic river next Tuesday,
state Natural Resources
Department Director Robert
W. Teater announced
Saturday.
Teater, along with James
Watt, dil'eclor of the U.S.
· Interior Department's
OOre&amp;u of outdoor recreation,
will fonnally designate 33
miles of the cree1t ·u the
~~teond natiooal scenic rlv.er
in Ohio.
A 64-mile portion of the
Utile Miami River ill south·
. western Ohio becaille the
first national scenic river In
the state in August, 1973.
The ceremony for the Little
Bener O'eek will be held at a
Pllrk picnic ares •djacent to
.Gaeton's Mill on the creek's
blnk at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday.
In January, 1974, a 2CHnile
portion of Little Beaver
\)

Creek, Including stretches of ·main stem Oows through
the west fork, the main stem Pennsyulvanla.
and the north fork, became
- Seven and two-thirds
the first wild river in Ohio mliee of the middle fork from
under the Ohio Scenic Rivers the Elkton Rd. bridge,
Law of 1968. At the same crossing to the confluence of
Ume, an additlonal16mlle8 of the middle fork with the west
Utile Beaver Creek was fork near Williamsport.
designated u scenlc.
- Four and one-fourth
Ohio will administer Little miles of the west fork from
Beaver O'eek as a component the y :c.;amp Rd . bridse,
of the National Wild and ttosaing east to the junction
Scenic Rivers System. The of the middle fork and the
Natural ResoiD'ces Depart· west fork near Wllllamaport.
ment l.s working with a 11}- Four and one-fourth
memher advisory council ancP miles of the north fork from
local sovernments to develop Brush Run, south to the main
a plan to preserve and protect stem at Fredericktown.
the river corridor.
The area of the tteek to be
included in the National Wild
CORRECTION
and SCenic Rivers System
GALLIPOLIS - II was
Includes :
Atty.
Dean Evans pictured in
- Sixteen anll two-thirds
Thursday's
ribbon cutting
miles, the enUre length of the
ceremony
during Shoe
main stem, from the con·
World's
grand
opening and
fluence of the west fork Sjld
middle fork near Glasgow, not Atty . Bill Eachus as lis led
Pa. Just over a mile
of the in rrlday's paper.
I

•,

�.. .

..

. .. ..
~·

~

21 - The SundayTimes· Sentinel, SWJday , Oct. 26;)975

.....

20 - The Stlll&lt;!ay Times· S.n(inel. Sunday, Oct . 26, 1975

Franco is losing
last big battle

I
·I
!

By JOSEPH w. !}RIGG
MADRID
(UPI)
Generalissimo Francisco
Franco, 82, showing lrl·
creasing signs ot ·heart
failure.after two major heart
attackl in a week, received
the laai rites of Ute Roman
Catholic j:hurch Saturday.
His family gathered at his
bedside In El Pardo palace
and medical experts said the
end muat be near.
'lbe ezperta said that the
old iiOldlilr, victor of Spain's
bloody civil war and Ita one·
map ruJet for ne~rly to years,
was fighting and losing his
last battle for survival.
They said death probably
would come In a matter of
hours, paving the way for the
transfer of power to Prince
Juan Carlot de Borbon, :rr,
Francq'a deaignited auccesaor. who Ia to ~~
Spain'a flrlt king 'ln 44 years.
Franco's, tncreaalngly
critical oondltion wa~
'

·
d' 1
•di sc Iose d m
a me tca
s.upreme consultative body, hours, the government. nv
bulletin issoed after noon, and many cabinet ministers longer faced the agoniZing
signed by his 11 doctors.
gat)lered with the. family in . deci.sl.cin whether to set In
It spok~ of "Increasing Franco's El Pardo Palace. !ftOtlon the .slow, . cum·
congestive heart failure" and
Then members of the. bersome J!Onstitutlonal
said this hild been government reiurned to the )!l'ocedure of hatavtedlng him
aggravated by fluid In the · prime minister's office, det:lared lncapaci
.
lungs, making breathing apparently for a suddenly
All that would be needed
difficult, distension of the convened cabinet meeting. now would be for a three.man
abdomen and temporary
Juan Carlos; who will Regency Cowlcil to take over
lnte$lnal paralysis.
become king of Spain after lriefly until the prince Is
About two hours later, the the old leader dies, did not sworn In as king. There Is no
dectors reported no change In caU at the palace. There was coronation ceremony under
Franco's condition l)'hich no explanation for his ab- · the present Spanish con,
they said remained ''grave." sence.
811 ti
With the news .of the
The palace said Franco
~ on. ,..ftft ln. .... be
.
·
..,e swea.u..,
m..,,
Caudlllo's apparently ap. received the last rites at noon completed within eight days
ll'Oaching end, . life slowed ·In the ll'e&amp;ence of members of the' caudllio's death.
thr,oughout Spain.
. , of his familY after passing a
There was no Indication yet
Small groupa assembled . peaceful morning.
. when or where the funeral
· outalde the El Parde Palace.
They were administered by :would take place. Spanish
Hushed crowds ~athered Mgr. Jose Marla Bulart, law provides that burial must
around television all(l radio chaplain of Franco's military · take place within 24 hours
.seta in ban and restaurants. hollllehold.
after tleath. But 1n Fr""co's
, Prime Minister carlos
•Apalace statement said he case pG
ormanta asld
~rlas Navarro, Alejanc!J'o w.aa lucid and · "In full this might
stretched to
Rodriguez de Valcarcel, posseaslon of his faculties. !' three days In · er to give
president of the Cortes
With Franco's death · now time for hi h foreign
(parliament) and of the apparently onlY a matter of dignitaries to r
Madrid.
Council of the Realm . S)'lflin's
I

.Sf4te Issues• ••

.i
II

(Continued from page I)
pitted another Democrat who bappeM to
favor the lasuea against Celeste, describIng the lieutenant governor's views as
"reckless and unlnfonned."
Finally, tactlca as llhabby as any seen In
the lf/4 gubernatorial campaign were dis·
played In the ~adow of Ute statehouse last
week when aome construction workers
ll'elending they wanted jobs .were sent
over to shout dewn an opponent of the
lsaues.
For Rhodes, the statewide Issues
IIIlO \IIIt tp 111other c~mpalgn for governor.
If they paas, he will have overthrown hla
enemies once more. He can IP'ftd the rest
of hts four years beckoning lndllllry into
Ohio and planning cmlllructlon projects In
every nook and cramy of the lllllte.
If they fail, the governor will, aa one.aide
putlt, "be able to stand up and say : 'Look,
I tried to· de aomethlng about these
·!l'oblemsandyou wouldn't buy it. Now it's
your tum.'"

CollllllhJsion may
still hold hearing
1

~

l

Mt DI:iLEPORT - The Interstate
C~ Commlsalon Ia reconaldering ·
Us deelalon not to hold a local public
hearing on the proposed abandonment of
the Cheale System (Chesapeake and
Ohio) rail line between Logan and
Pomeroy (via McArthur and Galllpolls).
'lbe commiaslon earlier this year
promiled a loeal hearing, then attempted
to withdraw by .claiming a lack of local
tn teres I, however, this decision was an·
nounced approllimately 10 days before the
protest deadlbte.
.
Local residents Interested In continued
growth and progress are urged to write to :
Chalnnan George Stafford, Interstate
Comlnerce COffillllsslon, Waslllngton; D.
C. 20423, requesting a local ~ring.

City school board.

.

questionaire coming
GALLIPOLIS - S.ven Individuals
running for U!ree seats on the Galllpolls
City School Board Nov. ~ wtu take part
quesfionna1re this week.
·
The questionnaire was prepared by
the civic reaponstblllty committee of the
Gallipolis Education Association.
The ques\jonnaire wlli appear In a five
part series In the Tribune, begtnning
Monday.

Co~ty Board

will
hold special meeting
Tuesday at North Gallia

:ail

Dovtr 22 Ashland 0
'
Loudonville .49 Crestline 8
Lexington 27 Crewslvlew o

:m

'

·

·

o

luscarawas Cen Cath 18

. FRANOO AND HIS WIFE, ~ Carmen Polo de
Franco, ackJ¥1wledged the cheen of·fa118 when they at·
tended the final Spanlah Football Cup game In 1971. 'lbe
couple was married In 1!!73.

RidgeWOOd 16
Crooksville 39 Riv er VIew 6
Newcomerstown 27 Garawav

DURING HIS FAM\')US 1940 meeting with
Franco carefuUy avoided direct mililary and dlpiomatlj;
commitment to Germany. After the meeting,
remarked tltat he would "as soon have thr'1f or four teeth
pulled" as go through another such bargaining session.

0)

Orrv ille 28 West Holmes 12

Philo 22 Tr t Volley 14
·ctn Woodward 31 Cln Tall lA
Reading 21 N College Hill 6
Dover 22 Ashland 0

Marlon Local 21 New Bremen
•'
6
' Edgewood d Preble Shawnee
6
.
Blanchester
12 Quinton

'1.

against the issues.
Meanwhil e, Ohioans for
.Jobll mtd Progress said it will
issue a statistical co\u!t of
exactly how many jobs the
propos81s would create if
approved .
,
Press!D'e was applied to the
committee by · Columbus
radio station WCOL, which
questioned wheth er the
committee has to substantiate its claims ·in
broadcast promotions just as
Commercial ~dvertlsers do.
.'lbe station took the query
to the Federal Trade Com·
mission, which said it had the
matter under advisement.
Committee radio ad·

vertising Claims the four
amendments will create
500,000 jobs in Ohio. Committee Chairman Keith
McNamara at first declined
to comment on whether the
fi gure was correct and later
said it was "just an edUcated
gues5.
.
"( can 't give you a!l the
t~chnicalifies that were usee
to compile the fi gures," said
McNamara. "I don 't know
how specific you can be. We
made an educated guess, a
good guess."
Gubernatorial aide Thomas
Moyer said ,' "Mathematicafl y, it is iin·oossible to say· 5oo.ooo jobs

will becreated. lt is a goal, no
deubt about that ," he added.
Moyer said the figures
were based on an estimate of
new joil6 created by new
construction in Ohio and
added he does not know if any
kind' of paperwork exists to
support the projection .

WHAT
YOUR

.

'

., OKLAHOMA CITY (UP!) •. receipt of their paycheck.
the officers.
missioner Roger Webb said
~ - TechnlcaUy, no one was . "We did not force the
FOP members said they about 1110 highway patrolmen
sure wheU!er Oklahoma City issue,:• Pollee Chief l.G . considered the action a .were brought in and were
policemen are on strike, have , Pui'Ser ·said. "I told the . voluntary suspension from being maintained at '10 a day
quit oc have resigned. But one ~nulnders not to force duty.
at the . patrol's training
thing Is certain - 550 of the them in any way. It was just
Police and cit): officials factllty .
.
city's 700 officers were not on an administrative tool for met Friday in im attempt to
Officials said the state
the job.
us."
settle the two-day dispute and troopers and sheriff's
The officers turned in their
City Manager Howard more
meetings
were deputies were doing a good
badges Thursday, 48 hours McMahan 88ld II'IJ.ad not been scheduled today. The joti·of maintaining security In
after'the city council refliled determined If Ute . walkout meetings were termed the capital city, even though
to grant a 10 per cent pay should he considered a strike, !l'oductlve, but no details their numbers were only
·lhcrease which bact been which would be illegal under were released.
about half to three-quarters
recommended by an ar- state law, or a resignation by
Public Safety Com· of the normal police force .
tiltratlon panel.
· Oklahoma County ·sheriff's
deputies and state iroopers
were on duty to supplement
' the remaining 200 officers.
An effort by the city to
force policemen to either
fonnally resign or return to
work failed Friday . Alternate
forms were prepared - one a
resignation and the other a
.
I
I
statement··the officer In·
By FRED r. FPGUSON
First Lady Betty Ford.
''
BARRElS OF FUN flowed in the good old days from .klng-11!zed beer kegs in the
the business at hand.
tended to go back to their jobs
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
"We should have a button
'' lrewery at Virginia City, Montana's restored Old West town . Visjtors can still quaff a pint in
"Then we have U!ta Utile
- and presented along with state Coalition for Equal Utat ' IIBys, 'I sleep · iitile
the cool brewery cellar.
thing over here on the side
,paychecks is!lued Friday.
Rights, with only ~.ooo in Ita better every night knowing called the Equal Rights
Howevi!l', Fraternal Order campaign Chest, bas been that Betty Ford Is s)ee)Mg
Amendment that was left
of Pollee chairman Jim tryingtoplckupellradollars with Uie President,'" she
over from 100 years ago,"
Parsons said an attorney bad for a final push to get the said. "She's the first woman
Ms. Stelnem, in blue
advised the officers to ignore Equal Rights Amendment in the White House since said
jeans,
her straight blonde
the forms and sign only the · passed Nov. 4 in N~ York , El~nor Roosevelt that has
.
hair
hanging
down to the
.
'
'
.
State.
•
SUP,ported
Ute
CCII~tutloo.
:'
ERA
Inscription
acrtl88 the
••
Gloria !l\elnem and a folk· The coalition's youthful front of her green T-shirt.
rock group entertained this leaders, agreed that their Ms. Steinem had just re·
week at one of th~ small worst enemies were apaU!y turned from Utah, which she
fundralsing affairs the and lack of knowledge of the called "Ml88lsalppl put in the
coalition has.been holding as amendment Imprinted In its · frontier," and Indiana, which
·NEW YORK (UPI) - A. Bank's decilioa Friday to cut serve Board Chairman Ar·
Sandy
Turner, 31, the only entirety on their ERA I· she termed "much more
ood of upbeat ecwomic ita rate to 7% per cent was thor Burns said Congress
~rled .worker, ~plained .shlJ:ts:
southern " In outlook than her
ws carried prlcea higher on overshadowed by New York should let the city default and
why
she
said
the'
c8mpalgn
"Equality
of
rights
under
neighboring, home state of
'Ute New York .stock Ex· City's deepening financial then enact legialatlon to pall
was
money
poor.
the
law
shall
not
be
denied
or
Ohio.
the city tlrough ba'*ruptcy.
~e thll week, but the crilis. The Cltlbank move
'The small take is due to abridged by Ute State of New
"C&amp;n you Imagine the ef.
. vance was blunted Frldsy triggered 1limi1ar red!lctlons His statement severely
bar~
tim~
In
an
off
year,
the
York,
or
any
subdivision
feet
on the women working
:,.,\l)' Cmgre88lonal reluctance In the benchmark rate by damaged the city's efforts to
campaigns
lack
of
a
stan·
thereof
on
account
of
sex."
U!ere
if New York State falls
obtain federal assistance to
• to rescue New York City froni banlm aca'oas the nation.
dard-bearing candidate and,
"A tdt of people just feel it to paSs Its amendment?" she
Investors eshlblted some avert a default.
' default.
worst of all, a lack of any will r'Ioat through. A lot den'( asked .
The Dow Jones Industrial nervousness at mid-week . Insolvency appeared
strong
opposition, according
know it's on the ballot,''
average roee Ut to 840.52 when the Labor Department almost ln.Vltable late Friday
' to Ms. Turner.'
said the coalition's fund·
over the five-day period rapcrted !he Consumer Price following the Senate Banking
Ms.
Turner;
a
native
of
raising "party person,"
.
despite a resounding losa of Inde1 climbed o.&amp; per cent in Committee's failure to agree
Oklahoma
City
and
a
former
attorney
Roslyn
Haas,
28.
14.84 polnta Friday. The blue September, liP from a r . ol on a bill to provide guaran·
worker in New York City's Her efforts to r~ corporate
chip indicator rolled up Ita 0.2 per cent In August . The teed loans to New York City.
Undsay administration, said contributions have produced
biggr&amp; gain of 10.07 points September bulge In consumer 'lbe bUJ appeared doomed,
what has come In is already only one maximum ~.ooo
Monday and picked .up J:"ices equalled ulx per cellt and Sen. Jacob Javtts, R.·
·committed to a little radio denatlon.
strength during the next annual rate of inflation. But N.Y., told all'ell conference
time and the direct malllngs
"Our strategy Is palm
WaD Street observers were the city's financial prospects
~ , three sesalona.
U!at
brought
most
of
It
in.
caJ'Ils
at the polling places,"
,
tn· Standard &amp; Poor's 600- quick to point out that the were "grim."
.,
..
,
\
'If
we
raise
enough
said
Mark
Gasardt, 34, the
In a marked depjlrture
""itock index wu ahead l.!N to Investment community still
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
tonight,"
she
said,
"I'll
buy
organization's
election day
·l•too.eo for the week. The New waa relieved the price spiral - from hla earlier optimism,
Attorney
General W1lllam J ,
some more time."
, coordinator. He said the
RUMORS of Soviet
hlvork Stock Exchange remained far below the Javlta called for a change In
Brown
has
urged Ohio voters
Ms. Stelnem said Ute lbne entire effort on Nov. 4 will be
bankruptcy laws to ac· .leader LeQald Brezb~v's
common stock index added deubledlgit marl!:.
study
claims
made by the
would be used for a tape to have workers handing out
Despite mounting evidence · commodate a probable Ill health long circulating In
2• '8.51 to 47.67. Advance~~ held a
recording of support from cards showing where the administratin of Gov. James
Moscow received a boost
q:aubatantlal lead
over the nation's recession wo!lllds default by the city. .
amendment Is on the ballot. A. Rhodes concerning the f4.5
Tenneco warranta "A" led when he .cancelled ·a
X'!decUnea, 1,156 to 1194, 1mong were on the mend, New York
"'l'bere are the few candi· billion hood proposals apfl 'the 2,032 lasues CI'OIIIiJ1Il the Clty'a looming default In the Big Board actives, up 3-J:! scheduled ,conference with
dates on the left side and the pearing on the November
early !lecember nagged at to 11:32 onl,lto,900 llh!lres. A visiting Freaeh President
tape.
amendments on the right balot "just as they would
Valery Glscard d'Estaing.
' o Volwne totaled 88,11»,~ Wall Street during the w~. } 'enneco unit and Standard
which looks like the entire study advertising for a used
''shares, compared with It Ia feared a default by the 0U of C&amp;Ufornla, which lost A spokesmau ·later
Bible written on the head of a car."
i%', amounced an oU find In acknowledged Brezhnev
b 80,975,995 last week and nation's Investment capital
Brown said Ohio conpin," he said .
was lll with a cold.
,:;,'15,978,410 the corresponding would Impair the econ0111lc California , Polaroid ·was
sumers
should be wary of
Ms. Sielnem, speaking to
recovery and create chaos In second active, off 3~ to 35%
possible
deceptive or
'~week a year ago.
young women seated on the
on 993,700 shares. Southern
dl · ~ upsurge in tile nation's the capital markets.
misleading
statements
in aU
floor at her feet, said the
By Friday Wall Street's Co. followed, up I to 14% on
types
of
advertising
used
to
grou national product set the
system could be used if the
1l'lbne for the first four dllya of underlyq llOIICIII'II over New
1101,000 lharea. The company
promote
the
bond
issues,
amendment failed to pass.
promotional
~•'the week with
buyers York City bad erapted Into reported Improved third·
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - The
She said she has a "fan- Including
average cash grain prices tasy:• that "an army of material from "Ohioans for
dominating the market ac- outrlaM llarm. Flderal Re· quarter results.
NEVADA • TEST SITE, (per bushel) paid to farmers
tion. The · Commerce
women would take over Saudi Jobs and Progress", the com/
Nev.
(UP!)
'lbe
United
by
grain
elevators
in
ihe
Department reported the
mittee chiefly concerned with
//
/
/
States Friday detonated the p:lncipal marketing areas of Arabia. Then we women urging pa888ge of the four
economy grew In the thin!
would say, 'You want the oU,
12th announced nuclear Ohio after 1111' markets closed
quarter at an annual rate of
issues.
now deal !'"
explosion
of.
~
year,
a
small
Friday
unW
·the
markets
I
"Our authority under the
11.2 per cent. The blggr&amp;
/
I
/ .
More seriously, she
blast In· a chamber far 'close Monday :
quarterly Increase In 20 yean
Consumer
Sales Practices
suggested
a
'
/
I
./
I
\
one-day
beneath the surface of the
Northeast Ohio : No. 2
Act
is
limited
to transactions
Indicated the economic
Women's Rights takeover at
•' recovery was . gaining
-th.
wheat f3.26; No, 2 shelled Ute United Nations on the last that Involve the sale of a
The blast, code named corn $2.28; No. 2 oatil $1.21; day of Women's Year and a product," l!rown said.
momentwn.
.
"Huskv, Pup," produced · a No. 1. so ybeana..,
...30.
/
/ J I • .,;
' Investora were encourag~
walkout of women workers at "However, this restriction on
·
yield
of
less
than
20,000
Northwest
Ohio
:
No.
2
: (l~ action of the Fedtril
the Pentagon. Then she got to me should not discourage
kilotons, the smallest wheat f3.41; No. ·2 shelled
consumers from studying the
Jl.fteaerve Board In Wnrlng ita
category · of nuclear ex- corn $2.30; No. 2 oats $1.29;
lrilrget range oo ~ fundi
advertisements just as they
ploslons ·In the deliberately No. 1 soybeans $4.40.
.~' lind relaldr18 ill monetary
would for a used car."
vague public descrlptlom
Central Ohio : No . 2 wheat
Brown specifically said
.s '1!0Ucy IIIII another notch. The
employed
by
federal
f3.36;
No.
2
shelled
corn
voters
should demand
·~ red acUon sparked hopes oo
spokesmen.
$2.31;
No.
2
oats
~
.3'1;
No.
1
evidence to support the ad·
" WaD Street the prime lending
OPERATOR DIES
The nuclear explosive was soybeans f4.34.
.
rate for bualneas bcrrowen
vertlsed claims that 500,000
NEW YORK (UPI )
I
I
buried 1,140 fe~t beneath
West Central Ohio : No. 2
O:•Would begin to faU from the
new jobs would be.generated
Rainier Mesa in the northern ·.wheat f:l.:rT: No. 2 shelled James Rieder , s United by pa888ge of the bond Issues.
t:.Jjrevaillng level of I per cent,
portion of \he Nevada Test · C:orn' $2.36: No. ioats 'i.:rT; Press International teletype
:' High lnterflflt rl\11 tn raclnt
" If a tire maker promises
Site,, a· ,vast · tract of 'No! 1 soybeans $U4. .
· and teletypesetter operator 40,000 miles , consumers
\
I
t months have rtltrlcted
I
uninhabited· desert in west
Southwest Ohio : No. 2 for 29 years, collapsed should demand to see test
c lisllneU ben 1owing, e-.tlal
I
central Nevada.
wheat f3.33· No. 2 shelled Saturday · and died of an results to support that
'"lo the economic rebound, and
I
Noradlatlon.lsaked Into the
" .33; N'o. 2 oats $1.-18: apparent heart attack. He claint,'' Brown said. "If U!la
~tiCteil u a maJor mmilll
I
was 64.
atmosphere, said the Energy · No. 1 scybeans f4.3&amp;.
organization promises 50,000
• detnuant.
Rieder. who had been on
CRISS
meet yle1da an interesting
and
Ruearch
Ad· Trend : No.2 wheat, lower;
~ AnUcipatlon of a ttop In the
to one million jobs, con·
sick
leave
since
January,
..
11«11
t1
thlnelads
fnm
the
Ulllwnlty
of
Millourl
In
ministration,
successor
to
the
No.
2shelled
corn
,
lower
;
No.
·~·jnnt penlll!lllld the
sumers should demand
Columbia btrn the bend while a judge casually check! out
,defunct Atomic Energy 2oats, unchanged;'No. 1 soy. joined the old Untied Press In evidenc e to support this
during the nell, but tnnd·
New York in February, 1946. claim also."
l
•·
,Commisslor. ,
beans, lower.
r..uq First National City the action frc!m bfhlnd,

sought in New York

SAVINGS

EARN
AT

FIRST
NATIONAL
3 Month Certificate

5 ~~AL

RATE
Minimum $1,000

Payable Quarterly

IYearCertificate

5 ~~AL

RATE
Minimum $1,000

Payable Quarterly

2 Year Certificate

6~NUAL

a

~Economic
new.
~
.
.

spurs
.

RATE
Minimum $1,000

Payable Quarter!

3 Year Certificate

6A~N~AL

m&amp;rket transactlons

FRANOO'S ONLY cmw, CARMENCITA (second from left) was married to
&lt;llrlstobal MartineK Bordhi, the Marquess of Villaverde, In .J950. At right Is the mother of
the lridegroom, Marchlooeas Argullio.
·

.PRINCE JUAN CARw s ·
of Bourbon, Frauen's
chosen successor.

"6

Manev 0

Marlins Ferry 12 Bellaire St
· John 6 ·
east Liverpool 21 Salem 7
Shadyside 12 Bridgeport s
We irton Madonna CW . Va.) 12
Buckeye o

.

. S~rv&lt;'y Sh11ws Appr11vat
&lt;M1io Opinion Ri.-seardo , a
service of Ohio State Uni ver· 's Bc1IBV!or
· a1 Sciences
·
stty
Laboratory, reported a lateSWJuner survey of 909 per·
sons showed three out of four
of the governor 's proposals
receh·;ng approval by a
majority .
The other proposal, a 75
biilion transportation bond
'Issue; was favored'by 48.8 per
cent of those respo0 djng,
cOmpared with 43.3 per cent
opposed; but 10 pet cent were
·undecided.
. The survey qirector emphasized the poll •was taken
. prior to campai~ns for and

Equal rights statue

Flndto7 7 Elyria Sr . 0
Monroev ille 12 Mapleton

Coshocton

.

ill badges .over 10 pet. wage hike

B
.
Onterio 35 Plymouth 6
Sh~~tlby 11 Bucyrus 7
Danville 3A'Lucas o

Mayfield 33 Willoughby SOUih
23
New
Philadelphia
28

'

.

·r:rederlcktown 13 Clear Fork

6
Buckeye Valley 20 Highland 0
Mohawk l5 Wfnford 6
Riverdale 33 R ldgeda~e 7
R !ver Vell~y 21 Car&amp;y 13
I ee'r kShire 30 Fairport 0
Lutheran East 6 Newbur·y 0

"backfired" because "people . week ·tl;tat it oppoSeS issues I, verifi~&gt;d facts ,to back their
ar~ insulted and upset at 2, 3, 4, and 5 on g rounds they · claims, we would like to,hear
what they 're being told about would have a serious effect on those instead of their vague
pilbllc school financing in the promises."
the issues.
"They're also seeln~ U!is state. ·'
Elsewhere, Economic and
.Spel!ding Reports Filed
multi-million dollar cam ·
Coll!inunity,. Development
Citizens Ag~inst Unfair Director James A. Duerk ·told
paign and asking why he has
to spend so muc~,'' oCasek Taxes contrasted ex- construction industry leaders
said.
penditures filed by opponents in Cincinnati that passage of
Also Thursday, Citizens and supporters of issues 2, 3, . R!iOdes' proposals will speed
Against Issues 2, 3, 4, &amp; 5 filed and 5. Ohioans for -lobs and up . economic recovery in
its statement of expeiulitures Progress, the committee Ohio. '
·
and contributions with the pushing the hood issues, had
Auditor of State 1homas E.
Franklin County Board a( spent $1.17 million and Ferguson said in · Napoleon
E.lectlons. Treasur'e r Rick Citizens Against Unfair thiJ I schools . and local
Sloan· said the citizens group , Taxes $1,08 miDion as of Oct. governments stand to lose
Nised $6,986 arid spent S4,927. 15.
substantial amounts of .tax
The 83,00Q.member Ohio . "Why are thi! supporters money should Rhodes '
Education Association joined spending so· much money if proposals be approved by the
the coalition of Citizens · their Issues would give people voters. 1
Against Unfair Taxes In the help they claim?" asked
opposing issues 2,3and 5. The. Warren Smith of the Ohio
OEA announced earlier U!ls AFL·CIO. ' "If they have

.ISsues

550
City policemen .tum
. Oklahoma
.

..

~

State-senator predicts doom for ·all. of Rhodes'

;:: OOLUMBUS(UPI ) - State
"f&gt;en. OUver Ocasek, D-Akron ,
opponen\ of the so-called .
"'"economic recovery" Issues
~aced on the Nov. 4 general
.. lection ballot by Gov. James
" . Rhodes, predicts all four of .
' the· constitutional amend·
·,' menta Will be defeated.
'"' ''lbe measures nnght pass
Cleveland and Toledo but
ifwill be d,efeated •'In . an
• overwhelming majority of
:o' counties," Ocasek told a
Thursday new~ conference.
Ocasek sald he has .discovered strong opposition to .
~ Rhodes 1 housing ,and In·
I dustrisl tax abatement plans
l in Ills travels around Ohio. He
• said he believes Rhodels•
multi-million:dollar ad ·
vertislng campaign has

Francisco Franco, the longest • tenured European dictator
of this·century, was the yowigest general in the Spanish Army
during the Spanish Civil War. DeSpite his youth, he led the
Nationalist forces to victory in 1936 - the year he was made
head of state. .
Born In 1892 to the family of a Spanish Navy clerk, Franco
enter•ri the Army Infanll')IAcademy at Toledo when he was 14.
He· graduated three years later with the rank of second .
lieutenant.
. .
, . As a leader of the Spanish Foreign Legion In the early
l9:b be became a national hero after quashing a revolt by
Moro¢can rebels.
·,
·
.
He feU from power In 1931 ..;,1th the fall of the Spanish
Monarchy when he was placed on the inactive list l!y Ute anti·
military Republican regime. But when conservative forces
gained C9Dtrol two years later, he was restored to active
·command and soon promoted to major general.
·
Following the Spanlah Civil War, the Gener~o
ll'eslded over a military dictatorship, reorganizing and ex·
panding the Spanish Fascist Party.
.
His most difficult period began after World War II, when
his r""lme was ostra~ by the United Nations. However, be .
...,
~
regained international favor as the Cold War intensified and,
· 111 1953 he signed a military·asslstance pact with the United
States ~lch has endured In revised form \U!Ul the present.
On July IB,.Iiis health ;,eakened by clrc;uatory and gastric
ailments the ftl·ye~r'Oid "Caudillo" handed his powers over to
his destg'nated succeSsor; Prince Juan Carlos of Bourbon.
What course Spain will iake, after 36 years of autocratic
rule and Increasing prosperity is anybody'&amp; guess. ·
'

·Grid Scores ·

· Madison 0·

""

==
:·

Spain by the Grace of God'

Woos ter1. · 19 · Mansfield

BIDWELL - Bruce S. Stout, president Colerain 28 Forest Park 11
Aiken 15 Cln Withrow 12
of the Gallia County Board of Education, Cln
Cln Country Day 20 Lex .Sayre
announced Saturday the board will hold a , (Ky) lA
Indian Hills 21 Gltn Este 8
special meeting at 7:30p.m. TuQday at Lovetand
21 Norlord 7'
North Galila High School for the sole Sycamore 7 Deer Park 0
20 Mariemont 0
purpose of dtsousalng a building progriiD.r Madeira
Princeton JC Ml,:jdletown 6
JB Northwest
Architect George Walter of Ligdont- • Cin7 McNicholas
•
Walter, Dayton, who was retained in Feb. Cln Elder 21 c'ln 51 xovltr 6
1974, wlll review procedures which must Medina 17 Avon Lake 15
27 Independence
be completed before placing a bond l8sue Brecksville
22
before the public. The pubUc Is invited to Strongsville 16 Par111a Padu•
14
attend.
'
' '
Lebanon 20 Franklin 20 (lie)
It 'was announced that ttie board's . Day Allor 14 Cln LoSelle u
tile I
regqlar monthly meeting has been
Vari"dilia But ler 10 Fairborn
changed from 9a.m. Saturday, Nov. llo 9
Baker 0
Day Chomlnade 1• Carroll 6
a.m., Nov. 8.
SAN JUAN (UPI)- World
Bo!dn&amp; Auoclation junior
Ughtwel8ht champion .,Ben
Vi1laflor of the Plilllppines
will defend hla title here Nov.
29 against Puerto Rican
Samuel ' Serrano; the
asscclatlon 'a first-ranked
challeng.-.
The contract assures
Vi1laflor a purse of .-,ooo,
while Serrano will get $10,000.

Francisco Franco: 'Caudillo of .

.

.

Cards ouilast Giants,· 20-13

Band

"'
'
performs .~
n

New York finally got on the
also tied Bakken's own club
NEW YORK (U~I)
"
scoreboard with 7: 40 left In at Logan tilt
record.
Halfback
Terry
Metcalf
fired
.o
Sprlhgfleld 12 Sebring o
Metcalf completed his first the game when Morton hit
LOGAN
Rod.)fly
a 51-yard I!Corlng pasa to Mel
Cambridge 20 'Meadowbrook
Gray for the first of his two pass of ,the year with the toss Ray Rhodes with a I 2-yard . Tolliver's Gallla Academy
6
East Palestine 26 Colum - touchdown receptions
to Gray early In the first slant-in for a touchdown, High School marching band
biana a ~
quarter,
flipping the ball over closing the gap io -13·7. The performed during the hilf·
Saturday
and
Jim
Bakken
United Local 19 lettonlil 7
Col South 10 Col Walnut Ridge kicked his ninO! and lOth field the head of Giants safety play was set up when time show at Bill Sauer Field
·Nation•• IISICIII tball Assocl•tlon
7
.,
TI:USTLEDOWN
Slondlnf!s
Col Northland 21 Col wnet. goals' wiU!out a m1as this Spider Lockhart, who was Thompson was called for here Friday night.
NORTH RANDALL. Ohio
By United Prtili lnttrna1ional
stone 10
,
. season to propel the St. Louis
coming up fast to shut off the d~fensive pa ~s interference, · The GAHS mus ici~ s
Eastern conftrtnct
Gehenne 3A Reynoldsburg I
(UPI) - TimeandAdvice,a
THURSDAY NIGHT
gtvtng t~e Gtanta possession opened with "Love Will K~p
sweep.
.
Atl1ntic Division
Worth ington 17 Westerville 0 Cardinals to a 20-13 victory
SKYLINE RS LEAGUE
W.
L.
Pet.
o
.
a
.
MI
.
Vernon
.6
Groveport
0
Ken
Reaves
set
up
aav-~··year-old !1011 of Gallant • Team
at
the Cardinals' 15.
.
. Us, Together," followed (,hy
over
the
New
York
Giants.
W L
I 0 l.QOI)
'Whitehall 24 Delaware II
Mill woo the featured ninO! Johnson's Mkt.
A! lA BOIIOfl,
Bakkeq's
first
field
go~l
.
by
·Bakken's
field
goals
were
The
Cardt~als
~me
rt~ht
"Gospel John" in con~~rt
Ph iladelphia
1 o I.I!Oil - Col Westland 1l Httllord 6
.' ...,.,_._ Frida Ctntral Supply
36 20 Buffalo
·
0
0
.000
•
;,
ColiS
I
Chorlts
20
Col
Wthrff
6
·
picking
off
a
Craig
Morton
back
to
regaan
thetr
.13·pomt
formation
.
J
of
3'
1
and
40
yarda
and
the
rate at &amp;UUIUCUVWU
y Ohio River R,alty
31 23
0 1 .ooq
1 t'tomlllon Twp 26 Dublin 6
by covering the all.furlonp URW Lqeo!W No. I 32 2• Now York
pass
~
plays
.
after
the
bulge
when
Hart
htt
Gray
Next
came
"
Skiblrd"
eight
points
gave
him
the
' Central Division
Teays Valley -42 Grandview 0
VFW
32 , 2A
W. L. Pdl 0.8. Mor~svlllt 13 West JtfftrtOII NFC I!Coring lead with ' 48 Cardinals touchdown. ·St. with a· 3~yard scoring pass on followed by "Have You Never
in 1·14
• ·
Heiner's Baker
30 26
I 0 1.000 10
.
'lbe well-bred thorough· Wooltn's Lounge
26 30 Woshlnglon
Louis ·cornerback Norm a third-and·17 play.
Be~n Mellow" with ., ,a
1 01.000 Col Academy 12 Centerburg 7 points, three more than
'-~ with Gary "'Simms' Prin ti ng
,2A 32 Allanta
Nt'w Orleans
1 1 .sao . 'h Canal
Winchester
12 Dallas kicker Toni •Fritsch.
Thompson tipped the pass
The Giants closed to the quadruple block formattpn.
~~,
\NUper up, Russ's Glass snop
2.3 33
Houston
0 1 .000
1 Pickerington 0
got Into the victory circle for URW Lotal640 No. 2 22 3A Cleveland
0 1 .000
1 Logan Elm 34 Bloom Carroll The IOconaecutlve field,goals and Reaves returned it nine final 20-13 margin on Mor- This was followed by '"Jibe
"-·sin
,_
...
May
Amerlcan
Legion
:zo
36
th e ftrst ....R:\ ce MilK
yards to the New York 3'1 .
ton 's six·ya rd to~!! h d own Sound o( Philadeiphla" with
West1rn
Conference
13
.
I
Bob Evans Firms
16 .40
Mldwtst Division
Lltklng Hts 12 Walkins fla._L.,;n ....;n•
and ..ld oft '10.10, ~.to,
Johnson 's 1,\orket, M· ·
The
field
goal
came
seven
pass
to Wal~er Gt~ette, a the majorettes featured. ,
w. L. Pet. G.B. ' Memorial 01
Vlltl'rll.,..• "•r"
.. 40 llnalo u.... WU aecond Ferguson 119·517, spill with Milwaukee
0
o
.000
Heath
28
Northridge
0
plays
later
as
the
Cardinals'
former Cardmal, wtth 2:03 As the Gallipolis band !eft
..,. ' ,--•do""'ll
third
RUIS 'S Gloss Shop, R., Stout Chicago
o 1 .000 V:z Lakewood 13 ·Licking Valley
drive stopped at the 20. ·
left. The extra point fa iled as the field musicians playedrihe
and Colora U W81
•
!99·SO•.
,
o 11 .ooo
v, Grenv
6
Wooster eleve~
'lbe 1-6-10 tr1fecta of Noisy
Heiner's Bakery. D. Petrie · Oetrott
Bakken's
second
field
Kansas
Clly
0
.000
v,
ille
36
Ullto
18
it bounded of! the upright.
GARS fight song. .
"
193 ·5•5 took 6 from Central
Padllc Dlvl•l•n
Zanuvlllt 42 Col North 3
It
was
the
Cardinals,
now
4·
Hamlet, Wings of Atoll and Supply, B. Show 203·525.
goal
eliDe
o.
n
St.
Louis'
first
w. L . "ct. G. B. Lim• Shawnee 14 We~tervllle WESTERVILLE, Ohio
pald .... IOtothe
Ohio River Realty , J .
"
Pink "'I 0 1.000
N 10
uu.on
..,..,
Fuller !P0.53A end C. White Golden Stoto
(UPI)- Otterbein captallled poaseaston of the second half, 2, second victory of the
1 o 1.000·
Wel•h Jesuit 41 Boxley 7
season
over
the
Giants,
who
.
"
holderaof144ticketa.'lbe 12-11 189·S3A took 6 from VFW , B. LO!i Angeles
capping
a
54-yard
drive.
'I'he
1 o 1,000
New Albany u soulheastorn Ill three III!COIICI-IIalf ....
Seante
daily double of Trample Oil Fleshman IU·460.
0
0
000
r;,
t• ltlt l
Phoenix
.
Lo c al 644 No . 1. H .
lnteroeptlonllo IIIIP a three key play c1me on a thlrtl-and· fell to 24.
u
0
1
..
000
1
LO$don
lA Sprlngflolij 0
Portland
and Leromar returned erownlng 200·566 took 8 from
The Giants' Jim Steinke Muskingum is
Buckeye :zo Hlghllnd 0
pm~ 1lllelk wUb a~ 10 play from the St. Louis 13.
'138.20.
fo~oten's Lounge, E . Gordner
when Jim Hart hit Gray with blocked a Jeff West P.unt to
....., Frlday'l Rosults
~onoihan Aldtr 20 ~ prlng 7win o- Wooater Saturday.
I!Mton
109
Houston
9A
Coth
7
'Jbecrowdof3,8811wagared
s'tmms ' Printing , R.
New Orleans IIA Detroll lllol
Urbana 13 Belttlontelne 6
Wooster acored In the a 53-yatd Jl888 to the Giant 33. give the Giants possession on
:11111
• ~lteo•on 112·096 look 6 rrom
the St. Louis 36 yard Une wit~)
,,
Philadelphia 110 Chleooo 103 ' f&gt;lorwalk 33 W111trd 1A
_....,period wben tailback
• ·
American Leaton . P. Cox 181 ·
saettle
105
Portland
91
Upper
Sandusky
17
Tiffin
.,...
••
,_..
.........0
......_rd
41
seconds
left,
but
Th'ompson
10-0
winner
•rs.
r'nlumblan 0
. GllryBie-.....,..,..a •r1•
Loto l UA No. 2, K. Fleming
Nollonol Hot~tY League Stand· Intercepted at the five to save
~ve ·on a tbree.,ard .nm,
19l ·S311ook 6.1rom Bob Evans
ings
the· Cardinals' victory.
Farms. T. Lloyd 196·•78.
BEULAH
GR.ANyiUE, Ohio (IJ81)
giving the Scots a 7-4 lead at
Bv United Pren lnt,ernationa,l
.
P1trlck Olvlshm
GROVE CITY, Ohio (UP!)
- Musklngum kicker Sc:ott
halftime.
w. I. I. Pis gf 91
- Strike the Anvil milled !he
Wallick's 34-yard field ggal
SKY Ll~ E LANES
Otterbein safety Bob Phlladetphl 5 I I ·II 28 18
NY l&amp;londtrs A I 3 II 21 17
Wtdnnclay Afternoon
Beau t y ·s alon . Edlttll Jackson
BeuiU Part tract reecrd for
and
fullback Dave C&amp;ldw~'a
'
Talpu'
lnteroeptlon
In
the
NY Rangtrs 3 3 I 1 21 2&lt;
F'ounomt
had high oame 1nd series 111 ·
one mile 70-yarda by only U
one-yard
scoring pluf!lle
~
Atle.,te
2
•
·
1
5
11
16
Othlbtr 22. m s
lhlrd
period
1ltartad
an
11·
•sa ror f:ountaln of Youth .
Smyllle
Division
W L
Htlen Lyons had high game
of a -.d Friday, IIIII Will Teem
ll'Ovlded
the
Muskles wilb a
!liar c1r1w capped by OttW. L: T. Pis GF. GA
GeorGe's Groctrv
.u ' 'lO l&amp;B and Luc ky Kerwood high
the featured ninth race by 15 F oun teln of Youth
NEW
YORK
(UPI)
10·0
non-c
onference
'*In
WtJJSVILI:E,
KJ.
IUPI)
terbtln
quartarblell
Bill
~0 24
Chicago
3
3
2
8
20
23
series 437 for Busy Beau t y
Busy Btauty Solon
Jl 26
Kansas
City
3
2
1
7
16
17
lengths.
Seton .
,
Qulncey,
with
an
11-4
record,
Saturday
over
Denison.
- Tbe Xenlfdr Colilne1l · llllli«'a one-yard ltllak over V1ncouver 3 5 1 7 27 34
11
Nlt . MineServlce
36 211
The Hoot .Owls spill four
It Wllthe wlnner'lltth win Lee ~ upply
The Musky defense, led,by
32 32 points each with National Friday placed rookie fanrard center to tie the game.
51, Louis
2 3 2 6 20 19 was ·a unanimous choice as
26 38 Mint Servi ce. Flo Stephens Jln)mle ~ 011 the 1Way
1 6 o 2 18 27 the No. 1 team in the weekly Mike Hadd01' three IJIIIII
In 15 111art1 as he covered the so"'ervlllo Re
TalJIIII'
aeoond
In· Minnesota
Sparky's S uno~o
26 30 hid high gtmt aod sertos 193 ·
Norris
Dl•lsjon
distance In 1:41 1-11 with The HOOf·OWIS
Soccer 'lntercep\lilns, Mike Millfr'a
i4 50 H2 for the Hool -0-.ylt. J lnnv Injured n t N lilt to raduce tert:epti0114 1ltartad another
W. L. T. PIS GF. GA Intercollegiate
The Hoo t Owls ned high Will iams 160·AOB tor Natldnal their nlller to tbl rtqUired ~ve In tbl third quarter, ·MontrNI
5 I I II •1 15 A'saoclatlon of America two paill interCeptions 1111d ·
Carlos Rodrldguea aboard.
game 717 and Fountain of
Angel" s 4 o 10 27 •s
Mine Service .
He ..id 12110, 12.40 and 12.20. You th high series 210 \.
limit Ill II )llayera.
with B1D1et again ICOrln&amp; Los
l&gt;lttlburgn • 1 o 8 26 19 college ratinga releaaed , Dave Shirer'• recovery ~ a ·
~ om e rv i llt A:e1l Es ta te
Flo Stephen s hid high took she poln!S and lOS! two 10
Detroit
0 S 3 3 12 31 Friday,
Second waa XIII Aurata and
~Red fumble ln the 8eCQIId
General Maaaaer Dave fnm the - ·
oam t 193 and Allee Chapman George's Grocery . RIt a Vance
Woshlng1on 0 I 1 I 21 &lt;S
third wu Granny Abby,
lllld
BIRr
hal
111en
In
tbe.,_.
quarter,
Otter·
Clemson
wsa
MOOIId
and
half
preaerved the Mlllkita'
high ser ies 11111 . Le e Supply
Adams 01v111on
Stump h•d high glmt 1nd
'lbe dally double rl Slightly took two poin ts and lost !.ht to 'serits 153 .no for Somerville bothered b7 a s••ro· linebacker 'Bob Ruble ln0
Philadelphia
Tmlle
third.
fourth
win In eeven outlnla.
Buflalo .w. ~· ~· ~~~~'lit ~
Sparky 's Sunoco . tren e
Real Est•te.
Irillh (7) IIIII Rf!ltleas Mellala Paul
ClldweU'a ICOI'e capped a
sen had high game and
• 3 0 I l'l 26 Hartwick was fourth 111d
Diana McCarley hid high lntllllaal dlader. Tbe S.. llletptad another WOCIIIIer Toron•o
stri f"S 112 • 24 lor Let Suppl y .
(:i) returned .to.
game and urles 171 ..-400 for
foot-1 product of the p1111, rae1n1 4S yarda fir a Calllornla 3 3 I 7 21 23 Brown fifth , followed In order aeven play drive after Uae
f ur Spar ky's . Sunoco It was
Boston
2 2 2 6 19 19
Geo r ge's Groctry . Rita
Jl'ridly'a attendance wu Al
by Brown, Howard, SIU· aecond half ldckoft.
tu
i ce Chapman w iJ h a 169
Frld1y' s lhsutts
Stump pitk tcl up lhe 5·10 l1111V111'1ity of Hawaii wu the toadldoiwn.
t,rn and the handle wu ~71.ro unta i., ( I t Yo uth toot( spi iJ M ar y Ann Sherp plcktd Cokrnelll' flnt ttafl choice Oterbtln 11 now 114-S while Allanla 7 Los Angeles 1
_Ed!rardavllle, San Francisco,
Denlaon .'ftollll'd to 3-IJ.on
Toron to 6 Weshlngton 3
upt h r!~~7
S429,729.
St, Louis and Cornell.
ihe year.
thla Yell'.
Wliolter dropped to 1~.
clq ht bo l nl 'l tr om BUsy
Vancovver 4 MiAnesola 2
.
I
~
Jl
I
Lisbon 27 Stanton Local 7
Southern Local 3C Crees tv lew

Local Bowling

~

even

p roposaJs'
studies
advised

Grain c.ash

U.' S. finishes

averages
annoWlced

RATE
Minimum $1,000

Payable Quarterly

4 Year Certificate

7~~AL

RATE
Minimum $1,000 )

Payable Quarterly

6 Year Certificate

7~~AL

RATE
Minimum $1,000

Payable Quarterly
.J in addition to o11111is ...

or qUArterly In·
come ... paid on one, two,
monthl~

three, four , or she. YHr

eertlfieates . tnterosl
pa~able monthly tf you
desire or certiflcotes with
fice

~mount

of $5,000.00 or

..,ore.
Federal Regulation•
require a substantial
penalty for premature
withdrawal of certificate
fund&lt; .

''THE OLD BANK
WITH NEW IDEAS"

another test .

.

//' t/{

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I I I I
I

I I

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-"et

&gt;I

I

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/1

I

'corn

"112 YEARS

OF SERVICE"

3 LOCATIONS
10 SERVE YOU!

MAIN:OFFICE •
SECOND AVE.
AUTO BANK· .
THIRD AVE.
VINlON BRANDi

VINTON•.OHIO
. '

lj

�.. .

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21 - The SundayTimes· Sentinel, SWJday , Oct. 26;)975

.....

20 - The Stlll&lt;!ay Times· S.n(inel. Sunday, Oct . 26, 1975

Franco is losing
last big battle

I
·I
!

By JOSEPH w. !}RIGG
MADRID
(UPI)
Generalissimo Francisco
Franco, 82, showing lrl·
creasing signs ot ·heart
failure.after two major heart
attackl in a week, received
the laai rites of Ute Roman
Catholic j:hurch Saturday.
His family gathered at his
bedside In El Pardo palace
and medical experts said the
end muat be near.
'lbe ezperta said that the
old iiOldlilr, victor of Spain's
bloody civil war and Ita one·
map ruJet for ne~rly to years,
was fighting and losing his
last battle for survival.
They said death probably
would come In a matter of
hours, paving the way for the
transfer of power to Prince
Juan Carlot de Borbon, :rr,
Francq'a deaignited auccesaor. who Ia to ~~
Spain'a flrlt king 'ln 44 years.
Franco's, tncreaalngly
critical oondltion wa~
'

·
d' 1
•di sc Iose d m
a me tca
s.upreme consultative body, hours, the government. nv
bulletin issoed after noon, and many cabinet ministers longer faced the agoniZing
signed by his 11 doctors.
gat)lered with the. family in . deci.sl.cin whether to set In
It spok~ of "Increasing Franco's El Pardo Palace. !ftOtlon the .slow, . cum·
congestive heart failure" and
Then members of the. bersome J!Onstitutlonal
said this hild been government reiurned to the )!l'ocedure of hatavtedlng him
aggravated by fluid In the · prime minister's office, det:lared lncapaci
.
lungs, making breathing apparently for a suddenly
All that would be needed
difficult, distension of the convened cabinet meeting. now would be for a three.man
abdomen and temporary
Juan Carlos; who will Regency Cowlcil to take over
lnte$lnal paralysis.
become king of Spain after lriefly until the prince Is
About two hours later, the the old leader dies, did not sworn In as king. There Is no
dectors reported no change In caU at the palace. There was coronation ceremony under
Franco's condition l)'hich no explanation for his ab- · the present Spanish con,
they said remained ''grave." sence.
811 ti
With the news .of the
The palace said Franco
~ on. ,..ftft ln. .... be
.
·
..,e swea.u..,
m..,,
Caudlllo's apparently ap. received the last rites at noon completed within eight days
ll'Oaching end, . life slowed ·In the ll'e&amp;ence of members of the' caudllio's death.
thr,oughout Spain.
. , of his familY after passing a
There was no Indication yet
Small groupa assembled . peaceful morning.
. when or where the funeral
· outalde the El Parde Palace.
They were administered by :would take place. Spanish
Hushed crowds ~athered Mgr. Jose Marla Bulart, law provides that burial must
around television all(l radio chaplain of Franco's military · take place within 24 hours
.seta in ban and restaurants. hollllehold.
after tleath. But 1n Fr""co's
, Prime Minister carlos
•Apalace statement said he case pG
ormanta asld
~rlas Navarro, Alejanc!J'o w.aa lucid and · "In full this might
stretched to
Rodriguez de Valcarcel, posseaslon of his faculties. !' three days In · er to give
president of the Cortes
With Franco's death · now time for hi h foreign
(parliament) and of the apparently onlY a matter of dignitaries to r
Madrid.
Council of the Realm . S)'lflin's
I

.Sf4te Issues• ••

.i
II

(Continued from page I)
pitted another Democrat who bappeM to
favor the lasuea against Celeste, describIng the lieutenant governor's views as
"reckless and unlnfonned."
Finally, tactlca as llhabby as any seen In
the lf/4 gubernatorial campaign were dis·
played In the ~adow of Ute statehouse last
week when aome construction workers
ll'elending they wanted jobs .were sent
over to shout dewn an opponent of the
lsaues.
For Rhodes, the statewide Issues
IIIlO \IIIt tp 111other c~mpalgn for governor.
If they paas, he will have overthrown hla
enemies once more. He can IP'ftd the rest
of hts four years beckoning lndllllry into
Ohio and planning cmlllructlon projects In
every nook and cramy of the lllllte.
If they fail, the governor will, aa one.aide
putlt, "be able to stand up and say : 'Look,
I tried to· de aomethlng about these
·!l'oblemsandyou wouldn't buy it. Now it's
your tum.'"

CollllllhJsion may
still hold hearing
1

~

l

Mt DI:iLEPORT - The Interstate
C~ Commlsalon Ia reconaldering ·
Us deelalon not to hold a local public
hearing on the proposed abandonment of
the Cheale System (Chesapeake and
Ohio) rail line between Logan and
Pomeroy (via McArthur and Galllpolls).
'lbe commiaslon earlier this year
promiled a loeal hearing, then attempted
to withdraw by .claiming a lack of local
tn teres I, however, this decision was an·
nounced approllimately 10 days before the
protest deadlbte.
.
Local residents Interested In continued
growth and progress are urged to write to :
Chalnnan George Stafford, Interstate
Comlnerce COffillllsslon, Waslllngton; D.
C. 20423, requesting a local ~ring.

City school board.

.

questionaire coming
GALLIPOLIS - S.ven Individuals
running for U!ree seats on the Galllpolls
City School Board Nov. ~ wtu take part
quesfionna1re this week.
·
The questionnaire was prepared by
the civic reaponstblllty committee of the
Gallipolis Education Association.
The ques\jonnaire wlli appear In a five
part series In the Tribune, begtnning
Monday.

Co~ty Board

will
hold special meeting
Tuesday at North Gallia

:ail

Dovtr 22 Ashland 0
'
Loudonville .49 Crestline 8
Lexington 27 Crewslvlew o

:m

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o

luscarawas Cen Cath 18

. FRANOO AND HIS WIFE, ~ Carmen Polo de
Franco, ackJ¥1wledged the cheen of·fa118 when they at·
tended the final Spanlah Football Cup game In 1971. 'lbe
couple was married In 1!!73.

RidgeWOOd 16
Crooksville 39 Riv er VIew 6
Newcomerstown 27 Garawav

DURING HIS FAM\')US 1940 meeting with
Franco carefuUy avoided direct mililary and dlpiomatlj;
commitment to Germany. After the meeting,
remarked tltat he would "as soon have thr'1f or four teeth
pulled" as go through another such bargaining session.

0)

Orrv ille 28 West Holmes 12

Philo 22 Tr t Volley 14
·ctn Woodward 31 Cln Tall lA
Reading 21 N College Hill 6
Dover 22 Ashland 0

Marlon Local 21 New Bremen
•'
6
' Edgewood d Preble Shawnee
6
.
Blanchester
12 Quinton

'1.

against the issues.
Meanwhil e, Ohioans for
.Jobll mtd Progress said it will
issue a statistical co\u!t of
exactly how many jobs the
propos81s would create if
approved .
,
Press!D'e was applied to the
committee by · Columbus
radio station WCOL, which
questioned wheth er the
committee has to substantiate its claims ·in
broadcast promotions just as
Commercial ~dvertlsers do.
.'lbe station took the query
to the Federal Trade Com·
mission, which said it had the
matter under advisement.
Committee radio ad·

vertising Claims the four
amendments will create
500,000 jobs in Ohio. Committee Chairman Keith
McNamara at first declined
to comment on whether the
fi gure was correct and later
said it was "just an edUcated
gues5.
.
"( can 't give you a!l the
t~chnicalifies that were usee
to compile the fi gures," said
McNamara. "I don 't know
how specific you can be. We
made an educated guess, a
good guess."
Gubernatorial aide Thomas
Moyer said ,' "Mathematicafl y, it is iin·oossible to say· 5oo.ooo jobs

will becreated. lt is a goal, no
deubt about that ," he added.
Moyer said the figures
were based on an estimate of
new joil6 created by new
construction in Ohio and
added he does not know if any
kind' of paperwork exists to
support the projection .

WHAT
YOUR

.

'

., OKLAHOMA CITY (UP!) •. receipt of their paycheck.
the officers.
missioner Roger Webb said
~ - TechnlcaUy, no one was . "We did not force the
FOP members said they about 1110 highway patrolmen
sure wheU!er Oklahoma City issue,:• Pollee Chief l.G . considered the action a .were brought in and were
policemen are on strike, have , Pui'Ser ·said. "I told the . voluntary suspension from being maintained at '10 a day
quit oc have resigned. But one ~nulnders not to force duty.
at the . patrol's training
thing Is certain - 550 of the them in any way. It was just
Police and cit): officials factllty .
.
city's 700 officers were not on an administrative tool for met Friday in im attempt to
Officials said the state
the job.
us."
settle the two-day dispute and troopers and sheriff's
The officers turned in their
City Manager Howard more
meetings
were deputies were doing a good
badges Thursday, 48 hours McMahan 88ld II'IJ.ad not been scheduled today. The joti·of maintaining security In
after'the city council refliled determined If Ute . walkout meetings were termed the capital city, even though
to grant a 10 per cent pay should he considered a strike, !l'oductlve, but no details their numbers were only
·lhcrease which bact been which would be illegal under were released.
about half to three-quarters
recommended by an ar- state law, or a resignation by
Public Safety Com· of the normal police force .
tiltratlon panel.
· Oklahoma County ·sheriff's
deputies and state iroopers
were on duty to supplement
' the remaining 200 officers.
An effort by the city to
force policemen to either
fonnally resign or return to
work failed Friday . Alternate
forms were prepared - one a
resignation and the other a
.
I
I
statement··the officer In·
By FRED r. FPGUSON
First Lady Betty Ford.
''
BARRElS OF FUN flowed in the good old days from .klng-11!zed beer kegs in the
the business at hand.
tended to go back to their jobs
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
"We should have a button
'' lrewery at Virginia City, Montana's restored Old West town . Visjtors can still quaff a pint in
"Then we have U!ta Utile
- and presented along with state Coalition for Equal Utat ' IIBys, 'I sleep · iitile
the cool brewery cellar.
thing over here on the side
,paychecks is!lued Friday.
Rights, with only ~.ooo in Ita better every night knowing called the Equal Rights
Howevi!l', Fraternal Order campaign Chest, bas been that Betty Ford Is s)ee)Mg
Amendment that was left
of Pollee chairman Jim tryingtoplckupellradollars with Uie President,'" she
over from 100 years ago,"
Parsons said an attorney bad for a final push to get the said. "She's the first woman
Ms. Stelnem, in blue
advised the officers to ignore Equal Rights Amendment in the White House since said
jeans,
her straight blonde
the forms and sign only the · passed Nov. 4 in N~ York , El~nor Roosevelt that has
.
hair
hanging
down to the
.
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.
State.
•
SUP,ported
Ute
CCII~tutloo.
:'
ERA
Inscription
acrtl88 the
••
Gloria !l\elnem and a folk· The coalition's youthful front of her green T-shirt.
rock group entertained this leaders, agreed that their Ms. Steinem had just re·
week at one of th~ small worst enemies were apaU!y turned from Utah, which she
fundralsing affairs the and lack of knowledge of the called "Ml88lsalppl put in the
coalition has.been holding as amendment Imprinted In its · frontier," and Indiana, which
·NEW YORK (UPI) - A. Bank's decilioa Friday to cut serve Board Chairman Ar·
Sandy
Turner, 31, the only entirety on their ERA I· she termed "much more
ood of upbeat ecwomic ita rate to 7% per cent was thor Burns said Congress
~rled .worker, ~plained .shlJ:ts:
southern " In outlook than her
ws carried prlcea higher on overshadowed by New York should let the city default and
why
she
said
the'
c8mpalgn
"Equality
of
rights
under
neighboring, home state of
'Ute New York .stock Ex· City's deepening financial then enact legialatlon to pall
was
money
poor.
the
law
shall
not
be
denied
or
Ohio.
the city tlrough ba'*ruptcy.
~e thll week, but the crilis. The Cltlbank move
'The small take is due to abridged by Ute State of New
"C&amp;n you Imagine the ef.
. vance was blunted Frldsy triggered 1limi1ar red!lctlons His statement severely
bar~
tim~
In
an
off
year,
the
York,
or
any
subdivision
feet
on the women working
:,.,\l)' Cmgre88lonal reluctance In the benchmark rate by damaged the city's efforts to
campaigns
lack
of
a
stan·
thereof
on
account
of
sex."
U!ere
if New York State falls
obtain federal assistance to
• to rescue New York City froni banlm aca'oas the nation.
dard-bearing candidate and,
"A tdt of people just feel it to paSs Its amendment?" she
Investors eshlblted some avert a default.
' default.
worst of all, a lack of any will r'Ioat through. A lot den'( asked .
The Dow Jones Industrial nervousness at mid-week . Insolvency appeared
strong
opposition, according
know it's on the ballot,''
average roee Ut to 840.52 when the Labor Department almost ln.Vltable late Friday
' to Ms. Turner.'
said the coalition's fund·
over the five-day period rapcrted !he Consumer Price following the Senate Banking
Ms.
Turner;
a
native
of
raising "party person,"
.
despite a resounding losa of Inde1 climbed o.&amp; per cent in Committee's failure to agree
Oklahoma
City
and
a
former
attorney
Roslyn
Haas,
28.
14.84 polnta Friday. The blue September, liP from a r . ol on a bill to provide guaran·
worker in New York City's Her efforts to r~ corporate
chip indicator rolled up Ita 0.2 per cent In August . The teed loans to New York City.
Undsay administration, said contributions have produced
biggr&amp; gain of 10.07 points September bulge In consumer 'lbe bUJ appeared doomed,
what has come In is already only one maximum ~.ooo
Monday and picked .up J:"ices equalled ulx per cellt and Sen. Jacob Javtts, R.·
·committed to a little radio denatlon.
strength during the next annual rate of inflation. But N.Y., told all'ell conference
time and the direct malllngs
"Our strategy Is palm
WaD Street observers were the city's financial prospects
~ , three sesalona.
U!at
brought
most
of
It
in.
caJ'Ils
at the polling places,"
,
tn· Standard &amp; Poor's 600- quick to point out that the were "grim."
.,
..
,
\
'If
we
raise
enough
said
Mark
Gasardt, 34, the
In a marked depjlrture
""itock index wu ahead l.!N to Investment community still
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
tonight,"
she
said,
"I'll
buy
organization's
election day
·l•too.eo for the week. The New waa relieved the price spiral - from hla earlier optimism,
Attorney
General W1lllam J ,
some more time."
, coordinator. He said the
RUMORS of Soviet
hlvork Stock Exchange remained far below the Javlta called for a change In
Brown
has
urged Ohio voters
Ms. Stelnem said Ute lbne entire effort on Nov. 4 will be
bankruptcy laws to ac· .leader LeQald Brezb~v's
common stock index added deubledlgit marl!:.
study
claims
made by the
would be used for a tape to have workers handing out
Despite mounting evidence · commodate a probable Ill health long circulating In
2• '8.51 to 47.67. Advance~~ held a
recording of support from cards showing where the administratin of Gov. James
Moscow received a boost
q:aubatantlal lead
over the nation's recession wo!lllds default by the city. .
amendment Is on the ballot. A. Rhodes concerning the f4.5
Tenneco warranta "A" led when he .cancelled ·a
X'!decUnea, 1,156 to 1194, 1mong were on the mend, New York
"'l'bere are the few candi· billion hood proposals apfl 'the 2,032 lasues CI'OIIIiJ1Il the Clty'a looming default In the Big Board actives, up 3-J:! scheduled ,conference with
dates on the left side and the pearing on the November
early !lecember nagged at to 11:32 onl,lto,900 llh!lres. A visiting Freaeh President
tape.
amendments on the right balot "just as they would
Valery Glscard d'Estaing.
' o Volwne totaled 88,11»,~ Wall Street during the w~. } 'enneco unit and Standard
which looks like the entire study advertising for a used
''shares, compared with It Ia feared a default by the 0U of C&amp;Ufornla, which lost A spokesmau ·later
Bible written on the head of a car."
i%', amounced an oU find In acknowledged Brezhnev
b 80,975,995 last week and nation's Investment capital
Brown said Ohio conpin," he said .
was lll with a cold.
,:;,'15,978,410 the corresponding would Impair the econ0111lc California , Polaroid ·was
sumers
should be wary of
Ms. Sielnem, speaking to
recovery and create chaos In second active, off 3~ to 35%
possible
deceptive or
'~week a year ago.
young women seated on the
on 993,700 shares. Southern
dl · ~ upsurge in tile nation's the capital markets.
misleading
statements
in aU
floor at her feet, said the
By Friday Wall Street's Co. followed, up I to 14% on
types
of
advertising
used
to
grou national product set the
system could be used if the
1l'lbne for the first four dllya of underlyq llOIICIII'II over New
1101,000 lharea. The company
promote
the
bond
issues,
amendment failed to pass.
promotional
~•'the week with
buyers York City bad erapted Into reported Improved third·
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - The
She said she has a "fan- Including
average cash grain prices tasy:• that "an army of material from "Ohioans for
dominating the market ac- outrlaM llarm. Flderal Re· quarter results.
NEVADA • TEST SITE, (per bushel) paid to farmers
tion. The · Commerce
women would take over Saudi Jobs and Progress", the com/
Nev.
(UP!)
'lbe
United
by
grain
elevators
in
ihe
Department reported the
mittee chiefly concerned with
//
/
/
States Friday detonated the p:lncipal marketing areas of Arabia. Then we women urging pa888ge of the four
economy grew In the thin!
would say, 'You want the oU,
12th announced nuclear Ohio after 1111' markets closed
quarter at an annual rate of
issues.
now deal !'"
explosion
of.
~
year,
a
small
Friday
unW
·the
markets
I
"Our authority under the
11.2 per cent. The blggr&amp;
/
I
/ .
More seriously, she
blast In· a chamber far 'close Monday :
quarterly Increase In 20 yean
Consumer
Sales Practices
suggested
a
'
/
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./
I
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one-day
beneath the surface of the
Northeast Ohio : No. 2
Act
is
limited
to transactions
Indicated the economic
Women's Rights takeover at
•' recovery was . gaining
-th.
wheat f3.26; No, 2 shelled Ute United Nations on the last that Involve the sale of a
The blast, code named corn $2.28; No. 2 oatil $1.21; day of Women's Year and a product," l!rown said.
momentwn.
.
"Huskv, Pup," produced · a No. 1. so ybeana..,
...30.
/
/ J I • .,;
' Investora were encourag~
walkout of women workers at "However, this restriction on
·
yield
of
less
than
20,000
Northwest
Ohio
:
No.
2
: (l~ action of the Fedtril
the Pentagon. Then she got to me should not discourage
kilotons, the smallest wheat f3.41; No. ·2 shelled
consumers from studying the
Jl.fteaerve Board In Wnrlng ita
category · of nuclear ex- corn $2.30; No. 2 oats $1.29;
lrilrget range oo ~ fundi
advertisements just as they
ploslons ·In the deliberately No. 1 soybeans $4.40.
.~' lind relaldr18 ill monetary
would for a used car."
vague public descrlptlom
Central Ohio : No . 2 wheat
Brown specifically said
.s '1!0Ucy IIIII another notch. The
employed
by
federal
f3.36;
No.
2
shelled
corn
voters
should demand
·~ red acUon sparked hopes oo
spokesmen.
$2.31;
No.
2
oats
~
.3'1;
No.
1
evidence to support the ad·
" WaD Street the prime lending
OPERATOR DIES
The nuclear explosive was soybeans f4.34.
.
rate for bualneas bcrrowen
vertlsed claims that 500,000
NEW YORK (UPI )
I
I
buried 1,140 fe~t beneath
West Central Ohio : No. 2
O:•Would begin to faU from the
new jobs would be.generated
Rainier Mesa in the northern ·.wheat f:l.:rT: No. 2 shelled James Rieder , s United by pa888ge of the bond Issues.
t:.Jjrevaillng level of I per cent,
portion of \he Nevada Test · C:orn' $2.36: No. ioats 'i.:rT; Press International teletype
:' High lnterflflt rl\11 tn raclnt
" If a tire maker promises
Site,, a· ,vast · tract of 'No! 1 soybeans $U4. .
· and teletypesetter operator 40,000 miles , consumers
\
I
t months have rtltrlcted
I
uninhabited· desert in west
Southwest Ohio : No. 2 for 29 years, collapsed should demand to see test
c lisllneU ben 1owing, e-.tlal
I
central Nevada.
wheat f3.33· No. 2 shelled Saturday · and died of an results to support that
'"lo the economic rebound, and
I
Noradlatlon.lsaked Into the
" .33; N'o. 2 oats $1.-18: apparent heart attack. He claint,'' Brown said. "If U!la
~tiCteil u a maJor mmilll
I
was 64.
atmosphere, said the Energy · No. 1 scybeans f4.3&amp;.
organization promises 50,000
• detnuant.
Rieder. who had been on
CRISS
meet yle1da an interesting
and
Ruearch
Ad· Trend : No.2 wheat, lower;
~ AnUcipatlon of a ttop In the
to one million jobs, con·
sick
leave
since
January,
..
11«11
t1
thlnelads
fnm
the
Ulllwnlty
of
Millourl
In
ministration,
successor
to
the
No.
2shelled
corn
,
lower
;
No.
·~·jnnt penlll!lllld the
sumers should demand
Columbia btrn the bend while a judge casually check! out
,defunct Atomic Energy 2oats, unchanged;'No. 1 soy. joined the old Untied Press In evidenc e to support this
during the nell, but tnnd·
New York in February, 1946. claim also."
l
•·
,Commisslor. ,
beans, lower.
r..uq First National City the action frc!m bfhlnd,

sought in New York

SAVINGS

EARN
AT

FIRST
NATIONAL
3 Month Certificate

5 ~~AL

RATE
Minimum $1,000

Payable Quarterly

IYearCertificate

5 ~~AL

RATE
Minimum $1,000

Payable Quarterly

2 Year Certificate

6~NUAL

a

~Economic
new.
~
.
.

spurs
.

RATE
Minimum $1,000

Payable Quarter!

3 Year Certificate

6A~N~AL

m&amp;rket transactlons

FRANOO'S ONLY cmw, CARMENCITA (second from left) was married to
&lt;llrlstobal MartineK Bordhi, the Marquess of Villaverde, In .J950. At right Is the mother of
the lridegroom, Marchlooeas Argullio.
·

.PRINCE JUAN CARw s ·
of Bourbon, Frauen's
chosen successor.

"6

Manev 0

Marlins Ferry 12 Bellaire St
· John 6 ·
east Liverpool 21 Salem 7
Shadyside 12 Bridgeport s
We irton Madonna CW . Va.) 12
Buckeye o

.

. S~rv&lt;'y Sh11ws Appr11vat
&lt;M1io Opinion Ri.-seardo , a
service of Ohio State Uni ver· 's Bc1IBV!or
· a1 Sciences
·
stty
Laboratory, reported a lateSWJuner survey of 909 per·
sons showed three out of four
of the governor 's proposals
receh·;ng approval by a
majority .
The other proposal, a 75
biilion transportation bond
'Issue; was favored'by 48.8 per
cent of those respo0 djng,
cOmpared with 43.3 per cent
opposed; but 10 pet cent were
·undecided.
. The survey qirector emphasized the poll •was taken
. prior to campai~ns for and

Equal rights statue

Flndto7 7 Elyria Sr . 0
Monroev ille 12 Mapleton

Coshocton

.

ill badges .over 10 pet. wage hike

B
.
Onterio 35 Plymouth 6
Sh~~tlby 11 Bucyrus 7
Danville 3A'Lucas o

Mayfield 33 Willoughby SOUih
23
New
Philadelphia
28

'

.

·r:rederlcktown 13 Clear Fork

6
Buckeye Valley 20 Highland 0
Mohawk l5 Wfnford 6
Riverdale 33 R ldgeda~e 7
R !ver Vell~y 21 Car&amp;y 13
I ee'r kShire 30 Fairport 0
Lutheran East 6 Newbur·y 0

"backfired" because "people . week ·tl;tat it oppoSeS issues I, verifi~&gt;d facts ,to back their
ar~ insulted and upset at 2, 3, 4, and 5 on g rounds they · claims, we would like to,hear
what they 're being told about would have a serious effect on those instead of their vague
pilbllc school financing in the promises."
the issues.
"They're also seeln~ U!is state. ·'
Elsewhere, Economic and
.Spel!ding Reports Filed
multi-million dollar cam ·
Coll!inunity,. Development
Citizens Ag~inst Unfair Director James A. Duerk ·told
paign and asking why he has
to spend so muc~,'' oCasek Taxes contrasted ex- construction industry leaders
said.
penditures filed by opponents in Cincinnati that passage of
Also Thursday, Citizens and supporters of issues 2, 3, . R!iOdes' proposals will speed
Against Issues 2, 3, 4, &amp; 5 filed and 5. Ohioans for -lobs and up . economic recovery in
its statement of expeiulitures Progress, the committee Ohio. '
·
and contributions with the pushing the hood issues, had
Auditor of State 1homas E.
Franklin County Board a( spent $1.17 million and Ferguson said in · Napoleon
E.lectlons. Treasur'e r Rick Citizens Against Unfair thiJ I schools . and local
Sloan· said the citizens group , Taxes $1,08 miDion as of Oct. governments stand to lose
Nised $6,986 arid spent S4,927. 15.
substantial amounts of .tax
The 83,00Q.member Ohio . "Why are thi! supporters money should Rhodes '
Education Association joined spending so· much money if proposals be approved by the
the coalition of Citizens · their Issues would give people voters. 1
Against Unfair Taxes In the help they claim?" asked
opposing issues 2,3and 5. The. Warren Smith of the Ohio
OEA announced earlier U!ls AFL·CIO. ' "If they have

.ISsues

550
City policemen .tum
. Oklahoma
.

..

~

State-senator predicts doom for ·all. of Rhodes'

;:: OOLUMBUS(UPI ) - State
"f&gt;en. OUver Ocasek, D-Akron ,
opponen\ of the so-called .
"'"economic recovery" Issues
~aced on the Nov. 4 general
.. lection ballot by Gov. James
" . Rhodes, predicts all four of .
' the· constitutional amend·
·,' menta Will be defeated.
'"' ''lbe measures nnght pass
Cleveland and Toledo but
ifwill be d,efeated •'In . an
• overwhelming majority of
:o' counties," Ocasek told a
Thursday new~ conference.
Ocasek sald he has .discovered strong opposition to .
~ Rhodes 1 housing ,and In·
I dustrisl tax abatement plans
l in Ills travels around Ohio. He
• said he believes Rhodels•
multi-million:dollar ad ·
vertislng campaign has

Francisco Franco, the longest • tenured European dictator
of this·century, was the yowigest general in the Spanish Army
during the Spanish Civil War. DeSpite his youth, he led the
Nationalist forces to victory in 1936 - the year he was made
head of state. .
Born In 1892 to the family of a Spanish Navy clerk, Franco
enter•ri the Army Infanll')IAcademy at Toledo when he was 14.
He· graduated three years later with the rank of second .
lieutenant.
. .
, . As a leader of the Spanish Foreign Legion In the early
l9:b be became a national hero after quashing a revolt by
Moro¢can rebels.
·,
·
.
He feU from power In 1931 ..;,1th the fall of the Spanish
Monarchy when he was placed on the inactive list l!y Ute anti·
military Republican regime. But when conservative forces
gained C9Dtrol two years later, he was restored to active
·command and soon promoted to major general.
·
Following the Spanlah Civil War, the Gener~o
ll'eslded over a military dictatorship, reorganizing and ex·
panding the Spanish Fascist Party.
.
His most difficult period began after World War II, when
his r""lme was ostra~ by the United Nations. However, be .
...,
~
regained international favor as the Cold War intensified and,
· 111 1953 he signed a military·asslstance pact with the United
States ~lch has endured In revised form \U!Ul the present.
On July IB,.Iiis health ;,eakened by clrc;uatory and gastric
ailments the ftl·ye~r'Oid "Caudillo" handed his powers over to
his destg'nated succeSsor; Prince Juan Carlos of Bourbon.
What course Spain will iake, after 36 years of autocratic
rule and Increasing prosperity is anybody'&amp; guess. ·
'

·Grid Scores ·

· Madison 0·

""

==
:·

Spain by the Grace of God'

Woos ter1. · 19 · Mansfield

BIDWELL - Bruce S. Stout, president Colerain 28 Forest Park 11
Aiken 15 Cln Withrow 12
of the Gallia County Board of Education, Cln
Cln Country Day 20 Lex .Sayre
announced Saturday the board will hold a , (Ky) lA
Indian Hills 21 Gltn Este 8
special meeting at 7:30p.m. TuQday at Lovetand
21 Norlord 7'
North Galila High School for the sole Sycamore 7 Deer Park 0
20 Mariemont 0
purpose of dtsousalng a building progriiD.r Madeira
Princeton JC Ml,:jdletown 6
JB Northwest
Architect George Walter of Ligdont- • Cin7 McNicholas
•
Walter, Dayton, who was retained in Feb. Cln Elder 21 c'ln 51 xovltr 6
1974, wlll review procedures which must Medina 17 Avon Lake 15
27 Independence
be completed before placing a bond l8sue Brecksville
22
before the public. The pubUc Is invited to Strongsville 16 Par111a Padu•
14
attend.
'
' '
Lebanon 20 Franklin 20 (lie)
It 'was announced that ttie board's . Day Allor 14 Cln LoSelle u
tile I
regqlar monthly meeting has been
Vari"dilia But ler 10 Fairborn
changed from 9a.m. Saturday, Nov. llo 9
Baker 0
Day Chomlnade 1• Carroll 6
a.m., Nov. 8.
SAN JUAN (UPI)- World
Bo!dn&amp; Auoclation junior
Ughtwel8ht champion .,Ben
Vi1laflor of the Plilllppines
will defend hla title here Nov.
29 against Puerto Rican
Samuel ' Serrano; the
asscclatlon 'a first-ranked
challeng.-.
The contract assures
Vi1laflor a purse of .-,ooo,
while Serrano will get $10,000.

Francisco Franco: 'Caudillo of .

.

.

Cards ouilast Giants,· 20-13

Band

"'
'
performs .~
n

New York finally got on the
also tied Bakken's own club
NEW YORK (U~I)
"
scoreboard with 7: 40 left In at Logan tilt
record.
Halfback
Terry
Metcalf
fired
.o
Sprlhgfleld 12 Sebring o
Metcalf completed his first the game when Morton hit
LOGAN
Rod.)fly
a 51-yard I!Corlng pasa to Mel
Cambridge 20 'Meadowbrook
Gray for the first of his two pass of ,the year with the toss Ray Rhodes with a I 2-yard . Tolliver's Gallla Academy
6
East Palestine 26 Colum - touchdown receptions
to Gray early In the first slant-in for a touchdown, High School marching band
biana a ~
quarter,
flipping the ball over closing the gap io -13·7. The performed during the hilf·
Saturday
and
Jim
Bakken
United Local 19 lettonlil 7
Col South 10 Col Walnut Ridge kicked his ninO! and lOth field the head of Giants safety play was set up when time show at Bill Sauer Field
·Nation•• IISICIII tball Assocl•tlon
7
.,
TI:USTLEDOWN
Slondlnf!s
Col Northland 21 Col wnet. goals' wiU!out a m1as this Spider Lockhart, who was Thompson was called for here Friday night.
NORTH RANDALL. Ohio
By United Prtili lnttrna1ional
stone 10
,
. season to propel the St. Louis
coming up fast to shut off the d~fensive pa ~s interference, · The GAHS mus ici~ s
Eastern conftrtnct
Gehenne 3A Reynoldsburg I
(UPI) - TimeandAdvice,a
THURSDAY NIGHT
gtvtng t~e Gtanta possession opened with "Love Will K~p
sweep.
.
Atl1ntic Division
Worth ington 17 Westerville 0 Cardinals to a 20-13 victory
SKYLINE RS LEAGUE
W.
L.
Pet.
o
.
a
.
MI
.
Vernon
.6
Groveport
0
Ken
Reaves
set
up
aav-~··year-old !1011 of Gallant • Team
at
the Cardinals' 15.
.
. Us, Together," followed (,hy
over
the
New
York
Giants.
W L
I 0 l.QOI)
'Whitehall 24 Delaware II
Mill woo the featured ninO! Johnson's Mkt.
A! lA BOIIOfl,
Bakkeq's
first
field
go~l
.
by
·Bakken's
field
goals
were
The
Cardt~als
~me
rt~ht
"Gospel John" in con~~rt
Ph iladelphia
1 o I.I!Oil - Col Westland 1l Httllord 6
.' ...,.,_._ Frida Ctntral Supply
36 20 Buffalo
·
0
0
.000
•
;,
ColiS
I
Chorlts
20
Col
Wthrff
6
·
picking
off
a
Craig
Morton
back
to
regaan
thetr
.13·pomt
formation
.
J
of
3'
1
and
40
yarda
and
the
rate at &amp;UUIUCUVWU
y Ohio River R,alty
31 23
0 1 .ooq
1 t'tomlllon Twp 26 Dublin 6
by covering the all.furlonp URW Lqeo!W No. I 32 2• Now York
pass
~
plays
.
after
the
bulge
when
Hart
htt
Gray
Next
came
"
Skiblrd"
eight
points
gave
him
the
' Central Division
Teays Valley -42 Grandview 0
VFW
32 , 2A
W. L. Pdl 0.8. Mor~svlllt 13 West JtfftrtOII NFC I!Coring lead with ' 48 Cardinals touchdown. ·St. with a· 3~yard scoring pass on followed by "Have You Never
in 1·14
• ·
Heiner's Baker
30 26
I 0 1.000 10
.
'lbe well-bred thorough· Wooltn's Lounge
26 30 Woshlnglon
Louis ·cornerback Norm a third-and·17 play.
Be~n Mellow" with ., ,a
1 01.000 Col Academy 12 Centerburg 7 points, three more than
'-~ with Gary "'Simms' Prin ti ng
,2A 32 Allanta
Nt'w Orleans
1 1 .sao . 'h Canal
Winchester
12 Dallas kicker Toni •Fritsch.
Thompson tipped the pass
The Giants closed to the quadruple block formattpn.
~~,
\NUper up, Russ's Glass snop
2.3 33
Houston
0 1 .000
1 Pickerington 0
got Into the victory circle for URW Lotal640 No. 2 22 3A Cleveland
0 1 .000
1 Logan Elm 34 Bloom Carroll The IOconaecutlve field,goals and Reaves returned it nine final 20-13 margin on Mor- This was followed by '"Jibe
"-·sin
,_
...
May
Amerlcan
Legion
:zo
36
th e ftrst ....R:\ ce MilK
yards to the New York 3'1 .
ton 's six·ya rd to~!! h d own Sound o( Philadeiphla" with
West1rn
Conference
13
.
I
Bob Evans Firms
16 .40
Mldwtst Division
Lltklng Hts 12 Walkins fla._L.,;n ....;n•
and ..ld oft '10.10, ~.to,
Johnson 's 1,\orket, M· ·
The
field
goal
came
seven
pass
to Wal~er Gt~ette, a the majorettes featured. ,
w. L. Pet. G.B. ' Memorial 01
Vlltl'rll.,..• "•r"
.. 40 llnalo u.... WU aecond Ferguson 119·517, spill with Milwaukee
0
o
.000
Heath
28
Northridge
0
plays
later
as
the
Cardinals'
former Cardmal, wtth 2:03 As the Gallipolis band !eft
..,. ' ,--•do""'ll
third
RUIS 'S Gloss Shop, R., Stout Chicago
o 1 .000 V:z Lakewood 13 ·Licking Valley
drive stopped at the 20. ·
left. The extra point fa iled as the field musicians playedrihe
and Colora U W81
•
!99·SO•.
,
o 11 .ooo
v, Grenv
6
Wooster eleve~
'lbe 1-6-10 tr1fecta of Noisy
Heiner's Bakery. D. Petrie · Oetrott
Bakken's
second
field
Kansas
Clly
0
.000
v,
ille
36
Ullto
18
it bounded of! the upright.
GARS fight song. .
"
193 ·5•5 took 6 from Central
Padllc Dlvl•l•n
Zanuvlllt 42 Col North 3
It
was
the
Cardinals,
now
4·
Hamlet, Wings of Atoll and Supply, B. Show 203·525.
goal
eliDe
o.
n
St.
Louis'
first
w. L . "ct. G. B. Lim• Shawnee 14 We~tervllle WESTERVILLE, Ohio
pald .... IOtothe
Ohio River Realty , J .
"
Pink "'I 0 1.000
N 10
uu.on
..,..,
Fuller !P0.53A end C. White Golden Stoto
(UPI)- Otterbein captallled poaseaston of the second half, 2, second victory of the
1 o 1.000·
Wel•h Jesuit 41 Boxley 7
season
over
the
Giants,
who
.
"
holderaof144ticketa.'lbe 12-11 189·S3A took 6 from VFW , B. LO!i Angeles
capping
a
54-yard
drive.
'I'he
1 o 1,000
New Albany u soulheastorn Ill three III!COIICI-IIalf ....
Seante
daily double of Trample Oil Fleshman IU·460.
0
0
000
r;,
t• ltlt l
Phoenix
.
Lo c al 644 No . 1. H .
lnteroeptlonllo IIIIP a three key play c1me on a thlrtl-and· fell to 24.
u
0
1
..
000
1
LO$don
lA Sprlngflolij 0
Portland
and Leromar returned erownlng 200·566 took 8 from
The Giants' Jim Steinke Muskingum is
Buckeye :zo Hlghllnd 0
pm~ 1lllelk wUb a~ 10 play from the St. Louis 13.
'138.20.
fo~oten's Lounge, E . Gordner
when Jim Hart hit Gray with blocked a Jeff West P.unt to
....., Frlday'l Rosults
~onoihan Aldtr 20 ~ prlng 7win o- Wooater Saturday.
I!Mton
109
Houston
9A
Coth
7
'Jbecrowdof3,8811wagared
s'tmms ' Printing , R.
New Orleans IIA Detroll lllol
Urbana 13 Belttlontelne 6
Wooster acored In the a 53-yatd Jl888 to the Giant 33. give the Giants possession on
:11111
• ~lteo•on 112·096 look 6 rrom
the St. Louis 36 yard Une wit~)
,,
Philadelphia 110 Chleooo 103 ' f&gt;lorwalk 33 W111trd 1A
_....,period wben tailback
• ·
American Leaton . P. Cox 181 ·
saettle
105
Portland
91
Upper
Sandusky
17
Tiffin
.,...
••
,_..
.........0
......_rd
41
seconds
left,
but
Th'ompson
10-0
winner
•rs.
r'nlumblan 0
. GllryBie-.....,..,..a •r1•
Loto l UA No. 2, K. Fleming
Nollonol Hot~tY League Stand· Intercepted at the five to save
~ve ·on a tbree.,ard .nm,
19l ·S311ook 6.1rom Bob Evans
ings
the· Cardinals' victory.
Farms. T. Lloyd 196·•78.
BEULAH
GR.ANyiUE, Ohio (IJ81)
giving the Scots a 7-4 lead at
Bv United Pren lnt,ernationa,l
.
P1trlck Olvlshm
GROVE CITY, Ohio (UP!)
- Musklngum kicker Sc:ott
halftime.
w. I. I. Pis gf 91
- Strike the Anvil milled !he
Wallick's 34-yard field ggal
SKY Ll~ E LANES
Otterbein safety Bob Phlladetphl 5 I I ·II 28 18
NY l&amp;londtrs A I 3 II 21 17
Wtdnnclay Afternoon
Beau t y ·s alon . Edlttll Jackson
BeuiU Part tract reecrd for
and
fullback Dave C&amp;ldw~'a
'
Talpu'
lnteroeptlon
In
the
NY Rangtrs 3 3 I 1 21 2&lt;
F'ounomt
had high oame 1nd series 111 ·
one mile 70-yarda by only U
one-yard
scoring pluf!lle
~
Atle.,te
2
•
·
1
5
11
16
Othlbtr 22. m s
lhlrd
period
1ltartad
an
11·
•sa ror f:ountaln of Youth .
Smyllle
Division
W L
Htlen Lyons had high game
of a -.d Friday, IIIII Will Teem
ll'Ovlded
the
Muskles wilb a
!liar c1r1w capped by OttW. L: T. Pis GF. GA
GeorGe's Groctrv
.u ' 'lO l&amp;B and Luc ky Kerwood high
the featured ninth race by 15 F oun teln of Youth
NEW
YORK
(UPI)
10·0
non-c
onference
'*In
WtJJSVILI:E,
KJ.
IUPI)
terbtln
quartarblell
Bill
~0 24
Chicago
3
3
2
8
20
23
series 437 for Busy Beau t y
Busy Btauty Solon
Jl 26
Kansas
City
3
2
1
7
16
17
lengths.
Seton .
,
Qulncey,
with
an
11-4
record,
Saturday
over
Denison.
- Tbe Xenlfdr Colilne1l · llllli«'a one-yard ltllak over V1ncouver 3 5 1 7 27 34
11
Nlt . MineServlce
36 211
The Hoot .Owls spill four
It Wllthe wlnner'lltth win Lee ~ upply
The Musky defense, led,by
32 32 points each with National Friday placed rookie fanrard center to tie the game.
51, Louis
2 3 2 6 20 19 was ·a unanimous choice as
26 38 Mint Servi ce. Flo Stephens Jln)mle ~ 011 the 1Way
1 6 o 2 18 27 the No. 1 team in the weekly Mike Hadd01' three IJIIIII
In 15 111art1 as he covered the so"'ervlllo Re
TalJIIII'
aeoond
In· Minnesota
Sparky's S uno~o
26 30 hid high gtmt aod sertos 193 ·
Norris
Dl•lsjon
distance In 1:41 1-11 with The HOOf·OWIS
Soccer 'lntercep\lilns, Mike Millfr'a
i4 50 H2 for the Hool -0-.ylt. J lnnv Injured n t N lilt to raduce tert:epti0114 1ltartad another
W. L. T. PIS GF. GA Intercollegiate
The Hoo t Owls ned high Will iams 160·AOB tor Natldnal their nlller to tbl rtqUired ~ve In tbl third quarter, ·MontrNI
5 I I II •1 15 A'saoclatlon of America two paill interCeptions 1111d ·
Carlos Rodrldguea aboard.
game 717 and Fountain of
Angel" s 4 o 10 27 •s
Mine Service .
He ..id 12110, 12.40 and 12.20. You th high series 210 \.
limit Ill II )llayera.
with B1D1et again ICOrln&amp; Los
l&gt;lttlburgn • 1 o 8 26 19 college ratinga releaaed , Dave Shirer'• recovery ~ a ·
~ om e rv i llt A:e1l Es ta te
Flo Stephen s hid high took she poln!S and lOS! two 10
Detroit
0 S 3 3 12 31 Friday,
Second waa XIII Aurata and
~Red fumble ln the 8eCQIId
General Maaaaer Dave fnm the - ·
oam t 193 and Allee Chapman George's Grocery . RIt a Vance
Woshlng1on 0 I 1 I 21 &lt;S
third wu Granny Abby,
lllld
BIRr
hal
111en
In
tbe.,_.
quarter,
Otter·
Clemson
wsa
MOOIId
and
half
preaerved the Mlllkita'
high ser ies 11111 . Le e Supply
Adams 01v111on
Stump h•d high glmt 1nd
'lbe dally double rl Slightly took two poin ts and lost !.ht to 'serits 153 .no for Somerville bothered b7 a s••ro· linebacker 'Bob Ruble ln0
Philadelphia
Tmlle
third.
fourth
win In eeven outlnla.
Buflalo .w. ~· ~· ~~~~'lit ~
Sparky 's Sunoco . tren e
Real Est•te.
Irillh (7) IIIII Rf!ltleas Mellala Paul
ClldweU'a ICOI'e capped a
sen had high game and
• 3 0 I l'l 26 Hartwick was fourth 111d
Diana McCarley hid high lntllllaal dlader. Tbe S.. llletptad another WOCIIIIer Toron•o
stri f"S 112 • 24 lor Let Suppl y .
(:i) returned .to.
game and urles 171 ..-400 for
foot-1 product of the p1111, rae1n1 4S yarda fir a Calllornla 3 3 I 7 21 23 Brown fifth , followed In order aeven play drive after Uae
f ur Spar ky's . Sunoco It was
Boston
2 2 2 6 19 19
Geo r ge's Groctry . Rita
Jl'ridly'a attendance wu Al
by Brown, Howard, SIU· aecond half ldckoft.
tu
i ce Chapman w iJ h a 169
Frld1y' s lhsutts
Stump pitk tcl up lhe 5·10 l1111V111'1ity of Hawaii wu the toadldoiwn.
t,rn and the handle wu ~71.ro unta i., ( I t Yo uth toot( spi iJ M ar y Ann Sherp plcktd Cokrnelll' flnt ttafl choice Oterbtln 11 now 114-S while Allanla 7 Los Angeles 1
_Ed!rardavllle, San Francisco,
Denlaon .'ftollll'd to 3-IJ.on
Toron to 6 Weshlngton 3
upt h r!~~7
S429,729.
St, Louis and Cornell.
ihe year.
thla Yell'.
Wliolter dropped to 1~.
clq ht bo l nl 'l tr om BUsy
Vancovver 4 MiAnesola 2
.
I
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Lisbon 27 Stanton Local 7
Southern Local 3C Crees tv lew

Local Bowling

~

even

p roposaJs'
studies
advised

Grain c.ash

U.' S. finishes

averages
annoWlced

RATE
Minimum $1,000

Payable Quarterly

4 Year Certificate

7~~AL

RATE
Minimum $1,000 )

Payable Quarterly

6 Year Certificate

7~~AL

RATE
Minimum $1,000

Payable Quarterly
.J in addition to o11111is ...

or qUArterly In·
come ... paid on one, two,
monthl~

three, four , or she. YHr

eertlfieates . tnterosl
pa~able monthly tf you
desire or certiflcotes with
fice

~mount

of $5,000.00 or

..,ore.
Federal Regulation•
require a substantial
penalty for premature
withdrawal of certificate
fund&lt; .

''THE OLD BANK
WITH NEW IDEAS"

another test .

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"112 YEARS

OF SERVICE"

3 LOCATIONS
10 SERVE YOU!

MAIN:OFFICE •
SECOND AVE.
AUTO BANK· .
THIRD AVE.
VINlON BRANDi

VINTON•.OHIO
. '

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• / grandsons and two grea t slop
K 8 th eryn Mc Danw
- grandsons.
·

t' I. t'L EASA'NT - Mrs.
Kalhery_n M. McDaniel, .S7,
1108 Viand Street, Po1nl
Pleasant, d l ~ unexpectedly
at 6 a.m. Saturday at her
horne.
.
Funeral services will be
conducfed Monday at 1: 30

. p.m . at t~e y.llkoxen Funeral

•.

,

Horne wlfh the Rev . . James
Bonn offlclaflng . Buroal will
follow In the Brighton
Cemetery al Brighton .
VIsitation hours will be al lhe
funeral home after 4 p.m.
Sund~y .

Mrs. McDaniel was born In
Point Pleasant September 22,
1918, a daughler .of the late
Harry E. and Bertha Hofl·
man Dunlap. She ·attended
the Church of Christ In
Christian
Un ion .
Her
huoband , Waller K.· McDaniel, died on August 3.
1965.

Survlvlrs Inc lude two
daughters, Mrs . BarbaraJean Parsons, and Mrs .
Margaret Wamsley , both
Point Pleasant; six sons,
' Larry W. and Leonard James
'l'lcOanlel , both Arbuckle ;
:harles E., Ruuell K.,
:harles Wayne and William
Roy, all of Point Pleasant;
three slslers, Mrs. Phyllis
Leact&gt;, Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
Faye Holcomb, Plftsburgh,
and Mrs. Erma Rollins ,
Lorain, 0 .; three brolhers,
Clyde Dunlap, Leon ; Orvin
Dunlar, Point Pleasant, and
Oertel Dunlap, Illinois, and
..,.. 14 grandchildren.

Ernest Lowe
ARIZONA - Ernest Lowe,

63, Buckeye, Arizona, died

Thuraday. Mr. Lowe was a
former resident of Meigs
County.
·
He It survived by his wife,
Nellie Price Lowe, five sons,
James William and Ernest
Jr·., both of Arizona; Paul
Gordon; Calif·.; Arlie Patrick,
Akron, and Roy · Edward.
Columbua; two daughters,
Mary Chapman, Arizona and
Ruth at home; two sisters,
Mrs. Olho · Jarvis, Rl. 2,
Albany and Mrs. Roy Nelson,
Rutland and several grandchildren.
.
Funeral arrangements are
Incomplete.

Genevieve Saxton
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs.
Genevieve E. Saxton, 88,
Locust St., Mlddleporl, dl~
SaturdaY morning at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mrs. Saxton was born Feb.
2, 1887 In Meigs County,
daughtl!r of the late John and
Mary Wlnn Carr. She wes
pre~ed In death by her
hulblnd, Raymond W.
Saxton, In 1962. and by five
brothers.
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs . Konrad (Ondlne) Scholl,
Boone, la.;a son, Leland of
Pomeroy; a sister, Mrs .
Clarence D. !Gertrude) Cash,
Athens; a brother, Emerson
Carr, Akron ; a grand ·
daughter, Mrs. Sonia Wilson.
Belmond, Ia.; three qreat-

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TWO IDJure
• • d C.ontest Wlnner
•
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BO

Sacred Heart Church
ANNUAL BAZAAR

We :wish to extend
a welcome to our
customers in West
Virginia, now that
the bridge is re-opened.
Stop in and visit with. us.
Your used mobile
home is worth more
now at ~bUry
Mobile Homes.
•

KINGSBURY MOBILE HOMES

Games &amp; Fancy Stan_d
Publ • .L. . d

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Attracll ..

. Ovefall
elfect In
natur•

lonet.

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woo a club record 102 games,
followed by a tlree;lame
sweep over Pittsburgh In the
championship aeries.
After alippU. to fourlb
place In It'll, which was his
mly losing llli88011 With 'the
Reds, Anderson led his team
back to another National
League vlciory In 1972, again
beating Pittsburgh In the
champlonlhlp aeries.
Tbe Reds wm !tie Western
Dlvlalon · In lt'13 and JUII
~ In•lt'14 when their 91-'
game 'victory total was
.-nd highest In the major
leagues, blit also second best
to Los Angeles' 102-iame win
In the Western Division.
This , year Cincinnati

:

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Dlin0i~

upsetS

''

Spartans, 21·19
!It

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.over all, while the HQ9siers
are 1-3 in the Conference and
2-5 for the season.
It took .only 55 seconds ~
the third play of the game for it to become apparent that
Michigan's 69-4 whipping of
Northwestern last week was
no Duke.
Junior wingback Jim Smith
ran a counter play 77 yards
for a touchdown on that play.
Less than eight minutes later

=

E •""' • •••siNG (UPI)
""' """'
~rterback Kurt Stepr and
~o!nd = r
touchdowh pmea following
tumovers Saturday to 11eep
Dllnoia aHVe In the Big Ten
race with 'll 21-18 upset of
Michigan State.
The Spartans failed In an
attempttotlathegunewitba
two-point conversion witb

;:e

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NOW AT
'

·GAROLI

3,
0
-0
"

Arnr,~-

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. field goal the only score in the
BIRMINGHAM,
Ala . (UPI)- Penn State shook off , first quarter. P~nn State did
(UPI) - Capltalilin~ on two - a severe case of fumbUIUs not get lis first touchdown
fumbles and a pass In- ;Saturday and when the UonsJ until less than a minute
le(~ept\ory ,.. fiJ.IIirranked , figally settled down Woody remained in the first half
Alibatba broke IOcie for 24 I Petcihel ran for 139 yards and when Petchell fumbled and
polnta In the third period two touchdowns for a Sl-4 the Uons recovered for a 10-0
Sliturday 'alld crushed TexJIS ' v!'ctory over outclassed .lead.
Christian 46~ In an In- Army.
, Penn State began to assert
te,rsectlonal game .
; The Uons fumbled seven itself In the third quarter .
Freshman , Quarterback limes ' and Army recovered · 'First Peij:hel tallied from two
Jeff Rutledge engineered two !tv\ of ~~s!~e of the yards out to cap a 74-yard
of the third· (lii~Jilll scorea i 11111b!es '!.l.:o,t~ re~(/Ve~ed drive. Petebel then c~pped a
before 52,000 fans at Legion was ~,lor' a touchdown , 46-yard drive by dashing over
Field, e~~th being set up by a when ,' the.l iOose ball was from the Army four.
TCU fumble on the kickoff recovefil! , In ' tue ~my end
A r m y ' s d e e Pe s t
after Ude scores. .,
zone ~Y ll!t:key Shuler.
penetration until the waning
Rutledge moved 1Alabama
For Pete~!. wh,..-career minutes was the Uon 26 yard
18 yards In five plays and ran ~
· 's ~,P'P~. gued' ~y lnjltrle~, line and that came after the
over from the ~nft alter ' w s ttt, l]:JOSI pyoifucUve Cadets had recovered a Uon
lineback Wayq Rhodes ~ pf ll(s career\ His bes\ fumble at 1/le Penn.State 30.
recovered a fitmbje.
p\'e\r1ous,_aho*ing was 120n One Penn State drive ended
The fumbled kickoff yards against West Virginia. with another Pelchel fumble
folloWed a 31,y'ai'd lOi!chdown
It took the ninth-ranked on the Army half-yard line,
run bY starting ljual:terback Uons some time to get un- and another was cut short by
RlchardToddwlthlwtbana tracki!d with Chris Bahr's a fumble inside the Army
minute gone r•'n the third
five.
period. The touchdown was
Late In the game Army got
setupby .l\lal'ltPrudhomme's from scrimmage by a Tide. to the Penn State 12 against
intercepllon at the CTU. 42. runner this season. Davis, the Uon subs. But three
'fCU ~ble!t 'again . aftet rushed for a total of J02' passes were Incomplete and
Dljhey Rld(e..,y's 23-yard yards, '¥/In the first half.
Penn State took over. Penn
field gOil for AlabBma and
TCU got only as far as the ' State is now 7-1.
Rutledge direCted the .Tide 22 Alabama 43 and never
yards In si1 plays, passing crossed the 50 in the second Shelby 18 Bucyrus 7
se~ yards 1\,Q.' tight end ',half, picking up only 71 yards, Bellevue 10 Gallon 6
George pugh for the score. total offense. Alabama coach, N~w London 32 Sou•h Centra l ,
1 Alabama. carrledt a 21~ "Bear" Bryant wred all 60 Norwalk st Paul 2• wes tern
halftime lead to the dressing players In the rWlaway.
Rese rve 8

j'

· picked ~p the loose hall after
the block and ran 13 yards
into the end zone.
A HWl ter to Kris Haines
pass for a- two-point conversion gave the Irish a 14-7
lead. _
But then the Irish made the
misl&lt;lkes and the Trojans
took advantage of them.
Quarterback Joe Montana
of the Irish couldn't complete
a pass in the first half, and, on
his first try in the second,
Southern califomials Doug
Hogan intercepted and was
downed on the Irish 37. It took
only seven plays lor the
Trojans, to cover the distance
for a lying touchdown, Bell
rWining over from the two,
Reeve gave the Irish a
short·lived lead at 17-141n the
last period on a 27-yard field
goal, but Southern cal then
covered 71 yards In nine
running plays, with Bell
getting 47 of them, in five
carries, before Evans' twOa Walker pWit and both ' yard run for the go ahead
times
defense
back touchdown .
Tom Lopienski recov·
Another Trojan pass inered for an apparent terception by Danny Reece
toUchdown. The first time, on the Notre Dame 35 set up
when the play was nullified Walker's 35-yard field goal
because JOhn Dubenetzky for the final poinls.
jumped offside, Lopienski
Bell with his 165 yards,
recovered in tha end zone. boosted his national leading
The second time Lopienski rushing total to 1,233 yards In
seven games. It was the
eighth win for the Trojan In
S JO
the last nine games.
game despite Bell's Individual effort.
Notre Dame's AI HWiter
sped 52 yards for a Notre
Dame touchdown on the
Irish's second play from
Scrimmage. But Kevin Bruce
deflected Dave Reeve 's
conversion attempt. And
when the Trojans marched 55
yards In eight plays after
Dave Lewis recovered a
fumble by Jerome Heavens
for a touchdown, Glen
Walker's conversion gave
USC a 1.;; lead.
Quarterback Vince Evans,
who ran two yards for the
Trojans last touchdown,
passed 21 yards to wide
receiver Shelton Diggs for the
first score.
Notre Dame went In front
again by twice blocking a
punt on the same play and
turning it into a touchdown .
On both pun!$, defensive
back Luther Bradley blocked

SUPPLY

PANY

':

6~11&amp;0 . POINT PLEASMT
. SJOIE HOUIS IIOIDAY.fiiDAY I:GO m5:00 SAlUIDAY 8:00 10 12:GO

321. &amp;111 SIRED

three yards out in the third
quarter.
· Unlike a week ago,
Michigan
worked for
everylhng it got as Indiana
commi tied only · two turnovers, a fumble and an mterceplion.

NEW YORK (UP!) - You
would think Commissioner ·
Bowie Kuhn had enou gh
baseball for one season.
Kuhn will help lnauguarate
the 38th Puerto Rican Winter
League season today when he
throws out the first ball at
Bayamon, P. R., pMor to the
Bayamon-Areclbo game.
The much traveled commissioner also is available to
Major League Club general
managers, who are holding
their annual meeting In
Puerto Rico this year .

DAN THOMAS &amp; SON

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A78-13
C78-13
D78-14
E78-14
F78·14
078-14
ll18·14
5.80-15
li78-15
H78 -15

1.00-13
1.50·13
1.95-14
7.36·14
7.75-14
8.26-14
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$41.97

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lnclud~

122.50
$25.11_
521.51
$U.13
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121.95
530.12
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Also Flta

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$44 .12

U3.96

$47.34
S37.1f
S44.19
$47.42

Slt.Jt
$11.76
S34.01
S36.44

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r••

tederal Excu1e

Prices includelnstllllllon
1nd hallnclng
Sears Expert Installation
Available, at. extra coet, for tires, batteries and shocke
Rt your nea rest Sears Ca1.8.log Automotive Center.

Seors Has a Credit Plln to Sufi Most Every Need

SALE ENDS DEC. 31st
Satil/lll:tion Guanlllfttd or Your Money B01:k

SILVER BRIDGE
PLAZA

SHOP AT SEARS
AND SAVE

PH.«&amp;-ZTIO

st:..\18, ~OIIUC'&amp; .lND CO•

continues

juJt It,.~
over two Itminutes
left. downs
room, in~eoarlng
two.minutes
touch·
"'1!"~~·-1111!"!!'1111--~-----------------~~~
Had
would have
~ las~~o
II!
been 4he second 21-21 · of the ball. , ,
deadloet between the two
Senior Qual'"rhaclt Robert
teama In as many years.
Fraley directed' ,the Tide 69
· TheiWni,now3-llntheBlt yarda In IB •pl!IY. In the
Tea, went ICOI'eleu 1111t.illate second Period, ~apptng the
1n the dtlrd quarter when drive with i ,dne-)ilii'd touchSt'fler bit r-ve tla'ht end down run wl1h 2:10
PhU Vernelsel !rith 1 :~Sfard remaining.
touchdown pau on a fake
Todd scored le~ than two
lleld goal attempt. He also minutes later' on a one-yard
had an earlier TD toll I'WI after GUll White In·
111111fled by a ~lty,
' · terc~l9d a P8!t·l~ TOU
Smalzer'il loUCJ!downa ~ ~c~ ~· .li:OIIk and '
COME FIND YOUR SIZE AT ·. ..
came oo paue1 ol13 and t! t fti
ttit ;Itt~ Horned
yan1a The flrlt follo.,..t a Frog 29. WtllDack Johnny
rum~ by Sparllll ~ Quia', Al~ti.pna•a' leading
Rich Bael deep In Mlddpn rushF· ~ 81 yjp'djr late
324 Second Ave.
State territory and the aecond In the first period for
Gallipolis. Ohio-·
I'M let up by • p111 In- Ala~s -.Qrst touchdown .
terceptiCII.
His rtll WIS the lonHesl
•; •
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Dynaglass .Belted
XST Snow Tires

Kuhn' • b

NtOif$/011
.2,....,,.._.__

14x6S MOBILE HOME
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The mobile home of your future . Check out th e floor plans, look at the
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I·AEDWINQ I1PI

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quarter, when he picked up
the Wolverines' last score on
a 12-yard jaunt. Lytle
finished with 141 yards on 22
rushes.
Freshman fullback Russell
Davis, of Woodbridge, Va.,
went over froin a yard and

another 65 as tha Rockel$ won
over Ohio University.
Swick, who connected on 12 their second game in a row
of 23 pass attempts for 186 after dropping five straight, ·
yards, also rushed for

SAFETY SHOE

@msiron9

Senior tailback Gordon Bell
sprinted 53 yards through the
middle to help ,Michigan roll
up 329 rushing yards In the
first half.
Lytle scored his first touchdown, a one-yarder from the
fullback position, and then
relieved Bell ai tailback and
made his next two on bursts
of seven yards and one yard.
Coach Bo Schembechler
ran out of tailbacks and had
to reinsert Lytle in the fourth

T'f Ool·• .... s wm
• sev·enth m
• · row

Alabama
~ :::g~ ~~n::~~!p~ n. rns
·rtil"'u
~~· Lions iv(ctim
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.

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Boilermakers then reached
the Ohio Stale 6 before Schmidt was again called upon to
kick a field goal.
Jolutson gained 131 yards il)
18 attempts, while Mike
Pruitt had I'll in 25 rushes for
Purdue. Vitali completed 11
of 32 passes for 172 yards and
had one intercepted.
The victory was the seventh
In a row for the Buckeyes

1 ·

lnarllWf

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touchdown strikes ol22 yards
to Brian Baschnagel and 41 to
Lenny Willis. He completed
OSU's scoring with a 2S-yard
run the fourth period.
Schmidt kicked his 22yarder In the first period and
a Tl-yarder in tbe second.
Before his firs~ boot, Purdue
drove to the Ohio State 2, its
deepest penetration, before
being thrown back. The

:
·
1
;Q!e4Q
surprises
OU
Bobcats
contract

..... ·l

E

touchdowns In the first period
on I'Wis of 60 and 3 yards. His
6().yard gallop came on Ohio
State's first play with the
game only I :37 old.
Johnson has scored 18
. touchdowns this season, just
two short of the conference
record of 20 held by former
OSU fullback Harold Henson.
Greene completed 5 of 8
passes for 103 yards and

I·

TOLEDO, . Ohio (UP!) - yard touchdown pass to Scott
' '
'
Gene Swick, the nation 's Resseguie Saturday to pace
CINCINNATI (UP!)- The showed a ,regular season 101 leading passer, scored on a 'Toledo to a 14-10 Mid-.
World · Otamplon Cincinnati victories, .third highest In one-yard rWI and fired a 2$- American Conference victory
Reds amounced Saturday the league
and tlie best by
signing of Sparky Anderson. a NatJonll Lea~ team since
· '
'
'
I
Ir
,'
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'
to a new two-year contract as' 1008. That was ooce again
·
,:J
the team'S manager, Which I follOWed by 'a three-game ' '., '
oll~ a.J.l
~n
-~ would extend through the 1977 sweep over Plttsbiu:gb.
-~ season.
In the World Series, where
·-· · Anderson, during his six the Reds were frustrated by
SOUrn BEND, lriH. (UPI) number of Urnes to surpass o.
"' ye81'11 IIi the Reds' field Baltimore In 1970 and :_ Southern Callfornht's J. Simpson for individual
leader, accumulated a oakland In 1972, the team Ricky Bell ran for 165 yards performances against ihe
·• winning~ 14 .1103 games captured the' , W!lfl~ Otam- and scored one . lo~~h~own11 fig~ting Irish.
and four , Weltern Division plonslilp from: Boston In , Satl!I~~Y ~~..~ ~~e.a,!l·.,tlitt , third1,1 • Bell's 40 carries surpassed
lllles,,three ,Nallonal League seven. ~aptd. '' ,;
·' rlih k'ed T~PJ,ans to their , the previous high of 38 by
championships and the 1975
At the concllllion.lif his new Mvenih victory . ,without a .1 Simpson against Notre Dame
~ Wcrld Series vlctcry.
contract, Ar\dersori will have loss, a 24-17 lriumph over in 1967 and his yardage
tl Anderson's coaching llaff been the Reds manager for Notie Dame in a nationally- bettered the 150 yards hung
"' of Alex Granimas, Ted' elght,season8. 'l'b8t total was , televised contest. '
up by 0 . J. ln the same game.
,. Klunewskl, George eJ:ceededlnCinclnllatiRedl' , ~~ W¥s , the 112th straight
BuiNotreDame,takingiiS
Scherger, ·and - Li~ry history , ~n)r by Bill ,•. ~jcf~UJ !pr the Tr.o)~. the secondlossagalnstfive wins,
9111181'4 ~ !Jave been ~th MclceC!*de, wbo,~""' field , ~ton~ lop~est."·' winning1, gave the Trojans all they
the
lin~-'!' ~~ j~ , leader' for rjlne, Years from ,, s.~~~ - ll")ong ..the ·nation's 1 could handle and 11 took alert
the Redl lfi lt'IO, .-, were 193~ to, 1~4~. McKechnie . ~jpr colleges, a}ld Bcell had defensive play by Southern
rehired. ·
produced the club's last to carry the ball a record california to get back In the
And«&lt;on, 41, ol 'I1IOuland rrevtoUB world championship
' '
·
1
In 94G.
• ,
Padres where he was a third
base coacb, won a National
· t
'
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""
"'
•·'
•"'

In 1971.
Griffin chalked up his
record on a 23-yard run with
8:2!1 left to play and was
mobbed by his teammates
before being lifted from the
game by Coach Woody
Hayes.
Johnson, the Buckeyes'
hard-charging fullback and
the nation's leading scorer,
smashed for the first two

humbles lndUJ. na 55-7

S-1·gn
_s

•

.~:. new
.,

5

Take advantage now.

f

111.

&gt;

..

Special -sale price.

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·
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overall l!fld 3-1

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1,

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vow home.

3.95
PER UNE FOOT
12 FOOT WIDE

( hJ )''

U stomps Qoilermakers

yard touchdown pass from set up br Bow!lng ·Green . ,. ' · ·, '
·'. '
,,,
"" Sherman Smith to Steve !umb!es, !1\e'~y IUJ!back Jim .' ,AI'f~ *Ri;lo'it, ,M)~);: (UP!) football tn demolishing the
,.. Joecken.
·
GaUBe ~ ~}',,1:\ln 'II and ,. - ,1'\\llicr ,Rob..I"Ytl~ scored Hoosier team ihat rims into
·"' The first Mlamilouchdown Jolutson s ftejd goal on a... ,two.lpuchdowns as~ fuilback, top-ranked Ohio State next
cam~ on a four-yard run by !Umble by Mill~ oh the B&lt;l _., theq. ~hlf~ tll ,taiU!ack and weekend.
.:; Mickey _(lreen In the se1;011d . 2!1.
.
. .
, 11 pit~ed up two more Sltlurday
Indiana did, however, score
·: period, while Johnson's
Preston led Bowling ' to lead Michigan's r "Baby the first rushing touchdown
·~·' seco~ field goal with 3:25 Green's_ground game with 73 . '&amp;Jues" ~t,· 55-7 slaus'hter of against Michigan in eight Big
"'' left II) tile game Iced the yards bi ~ trle~~. Carpenter Big Ten 'rlv!lllndiana.
Ten games when junior
" ' contest.
was Mlaml,s top_"!~~her with \ , ~~ ,.· was , seve.nth-ra.led quarterback Terry Jones
"' Bowling Green, now 6-1 89 yatds _ln 2'1 .a.ltefllpts.
, .1t&lt;flc!Jlgpn's . ~th cQnsecutive clicked on a one-yard dive
L.
gll'l'e a~)lome without a loss. ' eafly in the fourth quarter.
''"
And for· the , first time this
The victory gaye the
: I:
season the young Wolverines' Wolverines a 4-l) Big Ten
.~!
first string played errorless record and left them !i-n.•

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lmperiai®Accotone®
-floors. At these
prices. you can do
more than one room.

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:mu:~~~~g~a~~ SO:~ ;.!ta:~~ t~~J'· lf~ ',

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FDA fails to answer

pollem

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=~r~~~~d~~~~::~ :~~~thjustl:j/llleftinthe'.,'.,ll::z·c
" · h·r·~·on

:!:

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

AJovely

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· , ' WEST LAFAYID'M'E, Ind. season on Steve Sclunidt's
the con- (UPI•) ,_ ,AJl,Anterica Archie field goals of 22 and T1 yards.
.ferenc~, had tak~nthe le_ad 00 ., Grl!fut became maj«.COUege ' Griffin, held to 36 yards In
a ~7,p)8y •!JI)-Yard dr~ve m t"!; ,: football's 1all-time rushing' nine attempts In the first half,
, first. q~rter . !f.htch ,was. champion Saturday and Cor- . finished with 130 In 20 carries
r.: s ratg
Mtd -Am,e rlcan . capped ~Y I!!IV~ Preston'~, nellus Greene .and, Pete · - the 28th consecutive
~ Conference title_Saturday , fO!Ir·Yard toy_CI)d~'!fll run. · Johnson led the seorlng rregular season game In which
!• with a. ~17 victory ove~ . Don Tlj~lor:~ ,24-rard field ., Pltrade jn a ~ wl!t for lOll" he netted more than 100
.,. rr:I!Siy Wlbeaten Bol\'ling goal ~ave the Falcons a I~ 'lratedOhloStateovel'&lt;·Purdue. yards-giving him a career'
'" .
·
·· i!d!le, ,but. he · la~r mlsse4 , ·~e,l!ertbeleu, , Furdue total. of .4,730.
''" Thll RedskiJIS, nolf 6-1 fron;t ~ yardH!ll·
"· l!ecame ll)e first BJg Team to ' 11Je old record of 4,715 was
. o' overall and 3-G In the MAC, Pres,l~n , ·,~c9red the score on !.the ·Buckeyes this set by Cornell's Ed Marinaro
"; caugbttbeFalcopsat 10-10on, Falcons' f1\her, ID~hdown on
·
;:;; freshm4n Fred Johnson's a'flve-yaro ~!ram Mark ·. '· ·:.r · · '

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~NG GREE;J'i,, Ohio
(UPI) ~- Miami, o.vercoming
. a l~ first half deficit, too~ 1\
.t s:ant. ~de IQ~ards a third

in accident ·

questions on Red··Dye.

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Boy Scout Corincil needs held

RIO GRANDE - Rio
Grande College-Rio Grande
Community Colleg~ has
' packaged
a
unique
educational experience In
forming three different
illll
course offerings in a.planned
illll December trip to Andros
Island In the Bahamas.
Each course has been
"" dtslgned to offer two hours of
credit in Marine Invertebrate
Zoology, Ecology In the
• Subtroplcs, and outdoor
•• Education. The three wefk
: co\D'se Invites members of
• the'commWilty as well as Rio
: Grande College ·students and
: students from other in·
, stitutlons.
:
The trip Itinerary. calls for
the group to attend five days
of 'classes at RGC.CC lrom will vary slightly, depending
• Nov. 21-25. These classes will ·upon total amoWll Of course
: provide fundamental in - work to be selected. A par- duty , customs, foo d, in• struction and orientation ticipant must select at least struction, tuition, Insurance,
before departing to • the two courses ( 4 credit hours ) and a lifetime of memorable
Island. Following ' these but members may select all experiences.
A special registration
: sessions, the group will three courses ( 6 credit
period
on Wednesday, Nov. 9,
hours).
·The
cost
for
par·
: recess lor Thanksgiving
has
been
set aside for
• vacation Wllll Dec . 5, when tlcipants selecting · two
•
enrolling
at
the college's
' • departw-e to the Bahamas courses Is $520 while the
has ~ scheduled. After selection of,three courses will admissions o£flce. For fur·
; spending two hdl weeks In the cost $550. Tllis cost includes ther trip Information, contact
: Bahamas, the group will housing, transportation , Dr. George Wolfe, RGC.CC.
I return to Rio Grande by Dec.
22.
While on the Island, Prof.
Tom · Osborne, biology instructor, will leach field
study courses in marine
Invertebrate zoology and
ecology. Participants will
POMEROY, OHIO
have opporiiiJllties to collect
CHICKEN AND HAM DINNERS ·
Invertebrates from one of the
' largest ooral reefs . In the
SEE US TODAY I
·, world. The clear green ocean
THURSDAY, NOV. 6
We Handle Homes by
waters will provide ample
4:30 P.M.
Skyline · Castle- Memory by Elcona
, opportunity to collect a
: variety of cwall, starfish,
ADULTS \3.00, CHILD~EN 11.50
'
unddollars, ocean snails and
more. Observing nature 's
·~-t-t·----·~SAiftMitSERVICE_---·---..Jaws in the sublropics will
Pomeror
992-7034
Ohio
: provjdt conduciYe Ieeming
Hn.: ttotMon . lllrv Sit. Closed Sun.
entbOI_,.,. for ecological
lC RVlte
Po!ortAsh ttl-3m, Roger _O.viJm-mt
study. In lddilion, several
i11111'11Ciors will areompany
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by Rio Grande College

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. GALUPOUS - The Gallia
a new vehicle for the
ol the Middl eport Fir s!
C o ti n t y · v o 1u n t u r Vo)Witeer Emergency Squad.
. -·.
Baptist Church.
·
ilACINF. - The Southern approved the following : concerning the idrr!ificatlon Emergency Squad was
There are now three
Funeral se rvices wil l be
held altO a.m. Tuesday all he Local Ba nd will receive three granted permission for the of handicapped children on formed in September of 1972. emergency vehicles in use by_
Rawling s-Coats Funeral and one-half percent of the !Wcine Cub Scouts to use a Oct. 29 at Nelsonville; gave The originators of the Squad the Squad. Each of these
Home with the Re\i. Peler ruta l gate receip ts, from room in the junior !ugh
permission for a member of were BID Mitchell, Charles vehicles hail made many lifeGrandall offl clafln g.
football
and
basketball
building
every
Monday
from
Burial will be in Riverview
the Southern staff to attend a Camden, Jay Cremeens and saviJlg I'WIS in Gallla County .
Cemeter:y . Friends may call games, excludi ng tour- Slo 6 p.m. for pack meetings; workshop on the use of In- Ken Deckard. AI that time
Thilnks to the donations of
COLUMBUS - The Ohio
al lhe luneral home Irom 2 to nament games. This was gave permission to the Rev.
·
there
was
virtually
no
amindividuals,
clubs and
service
education
publication
4 and 7 ro 9 p.m. Monday.
Environmental
Protection
decided when the Sou thern Steve Wilson to use the high on Dec. 8 at the Hospil&lt;llity bulanej! service in Gallla businesses these vehicles
Agency
(Ohio
EPA)
an·
•Local Board of l'::ducation school gym tim evenings of Inn, Columbus, sponsored by CoWl ty.
contain many types of life
nounced Saturday that it
me l Thursday even ing Jane _ Nov. 29and 30from-6:30 to'IO .the State Department of
The first emergency saving and life sustaining proposes to ,Issue water
DOG TREATED
Wagner. clerk, reported.
p.m. for showing of the film Education; gave permiSsion vehicle was a 1967 CadUiac, . equipment. With marly
WEST BOYI.SrON, Mass.
The bapd was also given " Cross and the Switch to the Meigs County Senior which was purchased ivl th emergency runs being made pollution control permlta to
(UPI) - Elvis Presley's !(). permission to set up a con- Blade"; Syracuse Junior Girl Ci lizens to hold a square the Squad's first donation each week, replac'ement, nine applican 18, specifying
and limiting their discharge
month-old male dog, Getlo, cession sl&lt;lnd at the football Scouts were given permission dance on Nov. 8 at tl\e Port- from Miles Epting.
repair, and updating of this
of pollutants Into state
recently spent more than two sl&lt;ldium as long as it did not to use the Syracuse gym land gym; granted perThe second vehicle was a equipment Is often necessary.
waterways Including Ohio
months· at a veterinary inlerfere with the athle\ic every Tuesday from 3:30 to 5 mission to the band boosters 1954 Chevrolet donated by the
Since the first day of 1
hospital In this central boosters stand.
· p.m. for troop meetings ; to use the high school Kyger· Creek f"ower Plant. operation the Volunteer Valley Eleclric, Kyger Creek
Station.
·.
Massachusells conununity
In olher business the board ga ve permission to Carl facilities to serve lfie annual Alter . several months of Emergency Squad lu!s made
· The Ohio EJPNs proposal to
where he was treated for a increased sick lea ve ac- Wolfe and Howard caldwell
many over 3,200 emergency rWls. ·
Soil Conservation banquet on opera lion . and
issue NPDES permits Is
near fatal kidney aliment.
cumulation from 120 to 150, to attend the basketball Nov . 18.
donations (rom .the people of Each of the5e runs was made
The dog spent the first few for certified and non-certified coaching clinic· which they
based upon a preliminary
Attending' were Denny Gallia County, _the _Cadillac by volunteer personnel,
days at a posh Boston hotel personn el. They also ap- attended on Od. 17; gave Evans, president , Jack was replaced with a 1973 ddnallng their time to the staff review and application
and was cared for personally proved two personal days per permission to Lea Ord to
of state water pollution
Bostick, Robert Sayre, Dodge Van Ambulance. The people of GaiHa Cilunty.
at the home of Dr. S. Lynn school year and after two attend Guidance . Workshop
standafda and regulations.
The
Gallla
County
Grover Salser, Jr., and David demand for the Volunteer
Kittleson, director of the New years set·vice this is in- sponsored by the State
The decision to luue the
Nease, board members, Emergency Squad grew, Volunteer Emergency Squad
England Institute of Com- cre~se d to three personal Department of Education on
permlta wiD become Dna!
Bobby Ord, superintendent, making ilecessary another wU! once again be having Its
parative Medicine.
days a year.
Oct. 29 at Hocking College at Mrs. Wagner, clerk, Larry anlbulance. In 1973 the Squad annual fund raising Radi()o Nov. 23, 1975 Ul)leu an apWhen Getio was discharged
peals ~aring IS requested by
Two teachers were added Nelsonville; entered into a
this week, he was Down home to the list of subs titute contract with Southeast Ohio Wolfe , principal of Portland purchalled a 1971 'Chevrolet Thon Nov. 7 and 8. "Your the applicant or Interested
·
donal!ons are the Squad's
Elementary, Carl Wolfe, Van Ambulance. ·
to Memphis, Tenn., as the
teac hers. They were Nancy Media Center for film ser- athletic director, Jciy Bigler,
In
1974
the
Gallia
County only means of support. Plan citizens. The director of the
lone passenger on Presley's
Thompson Hill, English, vices which is part of the band ·director, Kathleen atlzens Band liadlo Club to donate Nov. 7 and 8. Help agency may also withdraw
Lear jet, Down by two pUots.
speech, history and social DPPF.; gave permission to Morris, representing the sponsored a Radlo-Thon to us help you,". a spokesman and revise the proposed
The dog had been rushed to
permita after consideration
Boston by jet 3 a.m. Aug. 12 studies and Ca rl Weese, Joyce Thoren, school nurse to band boosters. The next raise lunda for the purchase said Saturday.
of the record of a public
English, history and biology. a tt end a second meeting board meeting will be Nov. 20
when veterinarians "gave the
tneetlrig,
written comments,
In other business the board
.at 7:30p.m.
dog a poor prognosis," said
or disapproval by the u. s.
Kittleson.
EPA.
Troe Tri.State Area Council, assisting should call Cree at · Written commenta on the
"The dog was In real bad
shape when he came." she
Boy Scouts of America, · Is I304) 5%3-3408.
proposed permlta may be
said. "We were even thinking
·
·
·
rebuilding a facility that will
The Council mUll vacate ita sublnitted Wlt.il Nov. 8, 1975.
about a kidney transplant or
·
ROCK SPRINGS - Pam · repr,esentatlves to the serve as the Scout Service current centet loca~ at 1122 Comment&amp; may be sent to the
dlalyals. But,. the dog now
Holcomb has been chosen as national competition . Two Center for our local area. All · Third Avenue by no later than Ohio EPA, NPDES Permits
appears perfectly normal.
the Meigs High School winner winners from each state and work is being done by local Dec. 15.
Section, P. O. •Boxl0f9, 361 E.
He'll require only I~ minutes
GALLIPOLIS _ Two in the Bicentennial Seniors the District of Columbia wiD volunteers who need adTht new Scout Service BroadStreet, Columbwl, Ohio
of treatment daUy.
persons were injured in a scholarship competition. This recetve a scholarship of dltlooal help. Volunteer Center, located at 733 Seventh 43216, The Ohio EPA penult
The veterinarian refulled to rear end collision at 6,35 p.m. Meigs High competition is $1 ,000 and an all_expense paid electricians, carpenters, Avenue, Huntington, will number and,the public notice
discuss the cost , of the Friday on Rt. 7 at the en- · par t of a nationwide trip .. to Wtlhamsburg, plumbers, and others are enable the Councll to provide number should be Included on
treatment, but said 'this dog trance to the Silver Bridge scholarship program for high Vlrgmta from Janu~y 16-19, desperately needed, ac- better service to the Wlits and the envelope aDct on each
waa treated very specially. I Shopping Plaza.
school seniors currently 1976 to attend senunars · on cording · to W. Robert Cree, · adult leaders.
page of submitted comments.
kept the dog home and kept It
The Gallia-Melgs Post bei ~g conducte~ ?Y the educallonal and social Issues Scout Executive of the
The Council Building
A public meeting may be
with me. He ~,allY required Sta te Highway Patrol said an Nahonal Assoctahon of and to be on hand fo~ the Council. Anyone willing to do Committee Is comJ)9sed of held U sufficient inlereat
Intensive care.
auto driven by Mack D. Secondary School Principals selechon of the nallonal a "good turn" for Scouting by William M. Steen, Chairman, about the permit Ia shown.
Hed rick, 60, of Buffalo, w. with funds from the Shell ~II winher.
.
of' Ashland, Kentucky, plus
Robert D. carpenter, Uoyd
WALLACE NEEDLES
Va., struck the rear of a car Company . Runner·up ts T e gr&lt;~nd prtze winner
WS ANGELES (UPI)
operated by Charles H. Kathy Baker.
recelvesa$10,000scholarshlp cosmeucs:"
R. Frankel, Frank E. HanIrving Wallace, a~thor of a Perroud, 21, of Ga llipolis.
Pam's winning composition ~.n~ will . have ~Is-h~~
The FDA earlier thla 111011th shaw, Sr., Dr. Richard 0.
1962novel callecj "The Prize"
Patricia A. Hedrick 41 co~slsts of a "Bicentennial Btcentennlal Mtnute
formed a pane) of e~Pefts Comfort, L. B. 1\msbary and
which treated Nobel Prizes Buffalo, a passenger i~ th~ Minute" and a commentary pres~~ted on the CBS who will meet Nov. 2ll to Patrick- R. McDonald, all of
Irreverently, needled the Hedri ck vehicle and Terry L. discussing the relevance of televtst?n. network.
make a new cletermlnadon m HunUngton. Constru~tion
·On New Bean
Swedish 'Academy of Letters Hess, 14 , a passenger In this "~i~ute for t~ay and for
Pam ts ,the daughter of Mr. the future ol the «be:
coordinator for the eouncu is
·visuallner
11411ln Friday with an acid Perroud's car suffered minor Amenca s future . She also and Mrs. Everett Holcomb,
Dr. Sidney Wolle, dlnctor , Bernard Billups of Wayne
1 12.50
comment on Italy's Eugenio injuries. There was moderate scored high on a currenl Rt. 3, Po~eroy. .
·of the Ralplt Nader-ba\Sed County.
Montale as a law-eate.
damage. Hedrick was events test.
.
Kathy ts the d~ughter of,, Health~Gri!UP.IIId,
The Tri.State ¥ea f:ouncll
"The way It baa·been going harged with failing to stop
Pam will now compete wtth Mr . and Mrs. Raymond · "The only teepCIIIIIble aetlon Is a member c1f the CahellIn recent years," said ~ithln the assured clear other high school winners to Baker, 263 South Fifth St., for the FDA to talr!e 18 to Wa:yne United Community
Wallace, ''the Nobel Prize dlstnnce .
become one of the two slate Middleport.
lmmedlalely ban H. Tbere Ia Services and the Boyd County
should be called the ignoble
John S. West, 52 , Crown
now more than adequate United Fund.
prize. Eugenio Montale Is a . City, was cited to Municipal
evidence for banning lt."
One poet but he does not Court for failure to stop
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
belong In the com~y of within th e assured clear
auch previous winners as distance followin g a rear end
Sohhenltsyn • Sar~re,', 'collision at 4:10p.m. Friday
Hemingway and T. S. Ehot.
on Rt. 1 J!t the jWJction to . By MICHAEL J. CONLON
ts a dramatic eumple ol
industry
inDuence postponing
Garfield Ave.
WASffiNGTON (UPI) a
regulatidn
decl.iion12 years
Officers said the West car The Food and Drug' Adbeyond
the
time when It
struck the rear end of a mlnlatration may be exposing
·. vehicle driven by Marvin R. the American public to an should have been made,"
Bryant, 19, Eureka Star Rl . unnecessary health risk by said Sen. Gaylord NeiJoli, DBryant 'was cited fo:· unsafe allowing ' safety questions Wis., who asked the GAO to
vehicle.
about the natlon's most do the study.
"The real Issue Ia whether
A hit-sk ip acci dent oc- widely ulled food coloring the trip to each outdoor curred at 7 p.m. Friday on Red Dye No. 2 - to go the public wanll a dangerous
education skills in first aid, Georges Creek Rd. one tenth unanswered, according to a coloring In Ill food, drug and
crafts, camping techniques, of 8 mile west of .Rt. 7. The congressional study.
cosmetic supp!y for 'l:olmetlc
mnp and compass reading, patrol saio an unkn own
The report from ·the reasons or wbelher II will
and snorkllng and sk in vehicle stJ·uck the side of a ·General Accounting Office, accept a safer-, leu brllllanl
dlvln~.
car operated by Michael R. an lnvestlga!ive arm of IIUbstltute," he said.
The .report, said llOIIIInued
The group will live on the Lucas, 2Q, of Crown City.
Congress, raised for t~ nrst
use
of the dye - 'whlcb 'Ia
Island In cabins owned and
A deer was killed in an time questions about tbe
operated by ' International accident at 2:20 a.m. dye's potential for ca111ing found In everything from
Field Study of Columbus. IFS Saturday on th~ Kerr·Harris· genetic damage in test strawberry ice cream to
Upetlck - without reeolutlon ·
will also I!rovide truck trans· burg Rd. west ~~ Rt. 160. The animals.
of
the safety quest10111 Ia
porlatlon to several native animal rart into the path of a
But FDA off.iclals con·
exposing
"the p~bllc 'to unvillages and geological car driven by Linda K. tended further tests have
necessary
rlak."
features on the Island. Maxi Waugh , 25, of Bidwell.
convinced
them
any
It recommended the Food
buses will transport the
Afinal mishap occurred on chromO!lOmal damage Is not
expedition on route between Rt . 7, six tenths of nille of the type that would be and Drug Acbhinistratlon,
Rio Grande and Fort south of Gallipolis where passed on to future which. haa been studying the
Introducing Moravian Inset.
Lauderdale, Fla. Achartered Christopher Waugh, 18, generations In the form of Issue for ' 15 years, "act
ntiNI
for
promptly to ellabllah the
flight will then fly the group . Northup, lost control of his mutations.
between Fort Lauderdale and car which ran off the right
"It would appear that this safety of Red No. 2or prevent
..
its use In foods, drug! and
Andros Island.
side of the highway striking a
~1..,_
-.1
..
The cost of this experience guardrail.
1"""'"_______________,..,.
Mrs . Saxlot1 was a me mbe r

Bahamas trip offered
.
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OVECto
•
recezve
·p()llution
•
permzt

Southern band to get 3.% · Volunteer squad set
fun£!.
drive
event
for
·per cent l!fgate receipts
of

.Gr~ffin all-time rusher

r)liami nips

.....

22 ~ The SWiday Times -Sentinel. Sunday. ~·._._,t._.26~19=75'==-:---·----

~-----A~~;-o~~th~-

23 - The SWlday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Oct . 26, 1975

··.·

JOHNSON'S MOBILE HOMES
Eastern Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio
PH. 446-3547

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• / grandsons and two grea t slop
K 8 th eryn Mc Danw
- grandsons.
·

t' I. t'L EASA'NT - Mrs.
Kalhery_n M. McDaniel, .S7,
1108 Viand Street, Po1nl
Pleasant, d l ~ unexpectedly
at 6 a.m. Saturday at her
horne.
.
Funeral services will be
conducfed Monday at 1: 30

. p.m . at t~e y.llkoxen Funeral

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Horne wlfh the Rev . . James
Bonn offlclaflng . Buroal will
follow In the Brighton
Cemetery al Brighton .
VIsitation hours will be al lhe
funeral home after 4 p.m.
Sund~y .

Mrs. McDaniel was born In
Point Pleasant September 22,
1918, a daughler .of the late
Harry E. and Bertha Hofl·
man Dunlap. She ·attended
the Church of Christ In
Christian
Un ion .
Her
huoband , Waller K.· McDaniel, died on August 3.
1965.

Survlvlrs Inc lude two
daughters, Mrs . BarbaraJean Parsons, and Mrs .
Margaret Wamsley , both
Point Pleasant; six sons,
' Larry W. and Leonard James
'l'lcOanlel , both Arbuckle ;
:harles E., Ruuell K.,
:harles Wayne and William
Roy, all of Point Pleasant;
three slslers, Mrs. Phyllis
Leact&gt;, Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
Faye Holcomb, Plftsburgh,
and Mrs. Erma Rollins ,
Lorain, 0 .; three brolhers,
Clyde Dunlap, Leon ; Orvin
Dunlar, Point Pleasant, and
Oertel Dunlap, Illinois, and
..,.. 14 grandchildren.

Ernest Lowe
ARIZONA - Ernest Lowe,

63, Buckeye, Arizona, died

Thuraday. Mr. Lowe was a
former resident of Meigs
County.
·
He It survived by his wife,
Nellie Price Lowe, five sons,
James William and Ernest
Jr·., both of Arizona; Paul
Gordon; Calif·.; Arlie Patrick,
Akron, and Roy · Edward.
Columbua; two daughters,
Mary Chapman, Arizona and
Ruth at home; two sisters,
Mrs. Olho · Jarvis, Rl. 2,
Albany and Mrs. Roy Nelson,
Rutland and several grandchildren.
.
Funeral arrangements are
Incomplete.

Genevieve Saxton
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs.
Genevieve E. Saxton, 88,
Locust St., Mlddleporl, dl~
SaturdaY morning at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mrs. Saxton was born Feb.
2, 1887 In Meigs County,
daughtl!r of the late John and
Mary Wlnn Carr. She wes
pre~ed In death by her
hulblnd, Raymond W.
Saxton, In 1962. and by five
brothers.
Surviving are a daughter,
Mrs . Konrad (Ondlne) Scholl,
Boone, la.;a son, Leland of
Pomeroy; a sister, Mrs .
Clarence D. !Gertrude) Cash,
Athens; a brother, Emerson
Carr, Akron ; a grand ·
daughter, Mrs. Sonia Wilson.
Belmond, Ia.; three qreat-

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Bti Fal~OnS :

I&gt;

!.t'!'".', . ' '·,,.

TWO IDJure
• • d C.ontest Wlnner
•
named

BO

Sacred Heart Church
ANNUAL BAZAAR

We :wish to extend
a welcome to our
customers in West
Virginia, now that
the bridge is re-opened.
Stop in and visit with. us.
Your used mobile
home is worth more
now at ~bUry
Mobile Homes.
•

KINGSBURY MOBILE HOMES

Games &amp; Fancy Stan_d
Publ • .L. . d

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Attracll ..

. Ovefall
elfect In
natur•

lonet.

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woo a club record 102 games,
followed by a tlree;lame
sweep over Pittsburgh In the
championship aeries.
After alippU. to fourlb
place In It'll, which was his
mly losing llli88011 With 'the
Reds, Anderson led his team
back to another National
League vlciory In 1972, again
beating Pittsburgh In the
champlonlhlp aeries.
Tbe Reds wm !tie Western
Dlvlalon · In lt'13 and JUII
~ In•lt'14 when their 91-'
game 'victory total was
.-nd highest In the major
leagues, blit also second best
to Los Angeles' 102-iame win
In the Western Division.
This , year Cincinnati

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Spartans, 21·19
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.over all, while the HQ9siers
are 1-3 in the Conference and
2-5 for the season.
It took .only 55 seconds ~
the third play of the game for it to become apparent that
Michigan's 69-4 whipping of
Northwestern last week was
no Duke.
Junior wingback Jim Smith
ran a counter play 77 yards
for a touchdown on that play.
Less than eight minutes later

=

E •""' • •••siNG (UPI)
""' """'
~rterback Kurt Stepr and
~o!nd = r
touchdowh pmea following
tumovers Saturday to 11eep
Dllnoia aHVe In the Big Ten
race with 'll 21-18 upset of
Michigan State.
The Spartans failed In an
attempttotlathegunewitba
two-point conversion witb

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NOW AT
'

·GAROLI

3,
0
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UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. field goal the only score in the
BIRMINGHAM,
Ala . (UPI)- Penn State shook off , first quarter. P~nn State did
(UPI) - Capltalilin~ on two - a severe case of fumbUIUs not get lis first touchdown
fumbles and a pass In- ;Saturday and when the UonsJ until less than a minute
le(~ept\ory ,.. fiJ.IIirranked , figally settled down Woody remained in the first half
Alibatba broke IOcie for 24 I Petcihel ran for 139 yards and when Petchell fumbled and
polnta In the third period two touchdowns for a Sl-4 the Uons recovered for a 10-0
Sliturday 'alld crushed TexJIS ' v!'ctory over outclassed .lead.
Christian 46~ In an In- Army.
, Penn State began to assert
te,rsectlonal game .
; The Uons fumbled seven itself In the third quarter .
Freshman , Quarterback limes ' and Army recovered · 'First Peij:hel tallied from two
Jeff Rutledge engineered two !tv\ of ~~s!~e of the yards out to cap a 74-yard
of the third· (lii~Jilll scorea i 11111b!es '!.l.:o,t~ re~(/Ve~ed drive. Petebel then c~pped a
before 52,000 fans at Legion was ~,lor' a touchdown , 46-yard drive by dashing over
Field, e~~th being set up by a when ,' the.l iOose ball was from the Army four.
TCU fumble on the kickoff recovefil! , In ' tue ~my end
A r m y ' s d e e Pe s t
after Ude scores. .,
zone ~Y ll!t:key Shuler.
penetration until the waning
Rutledge moved 1Alabama
For Pete~!. wh,..-career minutes was the Uon 26 yard
18 yards In five plays and ran ~
· 's ~,P'P~. gued' ~y lnjltrle~, line and that came after the
over from the ~nft alter ' w s ttt, l]:JOSI pyoifucUve Cadets had recovered a Uon
lineback Wayq Rhodes ~ pf ll(s career\ His bes\ fumble at 1/le Penn.State 30.
recovered a fitmbje.
p\'e\r1ous,_aho*ing was 120n One Penn State drive ended
The fumbled kickoff yards against West Virginia. with another Pelchel fumble
folloWed a 31,y'ai'd lOi!chdown
It took the ninth-ranked on the Army half-yard line,
run bY starting ljual:terback Uons some time to get un- and another was cut short by
RlchardToddwlthlwtbana tracki!d with Chris Bahr's a fumble inside the Army
minute gone r•'n the third
five.
period. The touchdown was
Late In the game Army got
setupby .l\lal'ltPrudhomme's from scrimmage by a Tide. to the Penn State 12 against
intercepllon at the CTU. 42. runner this season. Davis, the Uon subs. But three
'fCU ~ble!t 'again . aftet rushed for a total of J02' passes were Incomplete and
Dljhey Rld(e..,y's 23-yard yards, '¥/In the first half.
Penn State took over. Penn
field gOil for AlabBma and
TCU got only as far as the ' State is now 7-1.
Rutledge direCted the .Tide 22 Alabama 43 and never
yards In si1 plays, passing crossed the 50 in the second Shelby 18 Bucyrus 7
se~ yards 1\,Q.' tight end ',half, picking up only 71 yards, Bellevue 10 Gallon 6
George pugh for the score. total offense. Alabama coach, N~w London 32 Sou•h Centra l ,
1 Alabama. carrledt a 21~ "Bear" Bryant wred all 60 Norwalk st Paul 2• wes tern
halftime lead to the dressing players In the rWlaway.
Rese rve 8

j'

· picked ~p the loose hall after
the block and ran 13 yards
into the end zone.
A HWl ter to Kris Haines
pass for a- two-point conversion gave the Irish a 14-7
lead. _
But then the Irish made the
misl&lt;lkes and the Trojans
took advantage of them.
Quarterback Joe Montana
of the Irish couldn't complete
a pass in the first half, and, on
his first try in the second,
Southern califomials Doug
Hogan intercepted and was
downed on the Irish 37. It took
only seven plays lor the
Trojans, to cover the distance
for a lying touchdown, Bell
rWining over from the two,
Reeve gave the Irish a
short·lived lead at 17-141n the
last period on a 27-yard field
goal, but Southern cal then
covered 71 yards In nine
running plays, with Bell
getting 47 of them, in five
carries, before Evans' twOa Walker pWit and both ' yard run for the go ahead
times
defense
back touchdown .
Tom Lopienski recov·
Another Trojan pass inered for an apparent terception by Danny Reece
toUchdown. The first time, on the Notre Dame 35 set up
when the play was nullified Walker's 35-yard field goal
because JOhn Dubenetzky for the final poinls.
jumped offside, Lopienski
Bell with his 165 yards,
recovered in tha end zone. boosted his national leading
The second time Lopienski rushing total to 1,233 yards In
seven games. It was the
eighth win for the Trojan In
S JO
the last nine games.
game despite Bell's Individual effort.
Notre Dame's AI HWiter
sped 52 yards for a Notre
Dame touchdown on the
Irish's second play from
Scrimmage. But Kevin Bruce
deflected Dave Reeve 's
conversion attempt. And
when the Trojans marched 55
yards In eight plays after
Dave Lewis recovered a
fumble by Jerome Heavens
for a touchdown, Glen
Walker's conversion gave
USC a 1.;; lead.
Quarterback Vince Evans,
who ran two yards for the
Trojans last touchdown,
passed 21 yards to wide
receiver Shelton Diggs for the
first score.
Notre Dame went In front
again by twice blocking a
punt on the same play and
turning it into a touchdown .
On both pun!$, defensive
back Luther Bradley blocked

SUPPLY

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6~11&amp;0 . POINT PLEASMT
. SJOIE HOUIS IIOIDAY.fiiDAY I:GO m5:00 SAlUIDAY 8:00 10 12:GO

321. &amp;111 SIRED

three yards out in the third
quarter.
· Unlike a week ago,
Michigan
worked for
everylhng it got as Indiana
commi tied only · two turnovers, a fumble and an mterceplion.

NEW YORK (UP!) - You
would think Commissioner ·
Bowie Kuhn had enou gh
baseball for one season.
Kuhn will help lnauguarate
the 38th Puerto Rican Winter
League season today when he
throws out the first ball at
Bayamon, P. R., pMor to the
Bayamon-Areclbo game.
The much traveled commissioner also is available to
Major League Club general
managers, who are holding
their annual meeting In
Puerto Rico this year .

DAN THOMAS &amp; SON

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D78-14
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1.50·13
1.95-14
7.36·14
7.75-14
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$41.97

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122.50
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521.51
$U.13
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$44 .12

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$47.34
S37.1f
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$47.42

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$11.76
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tederal Excu1e

Prices includelnstllllllon
1nd hallnclng
Sears Expert Installation
Available, at. extra coet, for tires, batteries and shocke
Rt your nea rest Sears Ca1.8.log Automotive Center.

Seors Has a Credit Plln to Sufi Most Every Need

SALE ENDS DEC. 31st
Satil/lll:tion Guanlllfttd or Your Money B01:k

SILVER BRIDGE
PLAZA

SHOP AT SEARS
AND SAVE

PH.«&amp;-ZTIO

st:..\18, ~OIIUC'&amp; .lND CO•

continues

juJt It,.~
over two Itminutes
left. downs
room, in~eoarlng
two.minutes
touch·
"'1!"~~·-1111!"!!'1111--~-----------------~~~
Had
would have
~ las~~o
II!
been 4he second 21-21 · of the ball. , ,
deadloet between the two
Senior Qual'"rhaclt Robert
teama In as many years.
Fraley directed' ,the Tide 69
· TheiWni,now3-llntheBlt yarda In IB •pl!IY. In the
Tea, went ICOI'eleu 1111t.illate second Period, ~apptng the
1n the dtlrd quarter when drive with i ,dne-)ilii'd touchSt'fler bit r-ve tla'ht end down run wl1h 2:10
PhU Vernelsel !rith 1 :~Sfard remaining.
touchdown pau on a fake
Todd scored le~ than two
lleld goal attempt. He also minutes later' on a one-yard
had an earlier TD toll I'WI after GUll White In·
111111fled by a ~lty,
' · terc~l9d a P8!t·l~ TOU
Smalzer'il loUCJ!downa ~ ~c~ ~· .li:OIIk and '
COME FIND YOUR SIZE AT ·. ..
came oo paue1 ol13 and t! t fti
ttit ;Itt~ Horned
yan1a The flrlt follo.,..t a Frog 29. WtllDack Johnny
rum~ by Sparllll ~ Quia', Al~ti.pna•a' leading
Rich Bael deep In Mlddpn rushF· ~ 81 yjp'djr late
324 Second Ave.
State territory and the aecond In the first period for
Gallipolis. Ohio-·
I'M let up by • p111 In- Ala~s -.Qrst touchdown .
terceptiCII.
His rtll WIS the lonHesl
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NtOif$/011
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14x6S MOBILE HOME
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The mobile home of your future . Check out th e floor plans, look at the
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•8,495 .

I·AEDWINQ I1PI

·LUMBER

quarter, when he picked up
the Wolverines' last score on
a 12-yard jaunt. Lytle
finished with 141 yards on 22
rushes.
Freshman fullback Russell
Davis, of Woodbridge, Va.,
went over froin a yard and

another 65 as tha Rockel$ won
over Ohio University.
Swick, who connected on 12 their second game in a row
of 23 pass attempts for 186 after dropping five straight, ·
yards, also rushed for

SAFETY SHOE

@msiron9

Senior tailback Gordon Bell
sprinted 53 yards through the
middle to help ,Michigan roll
up 329 rushing yards In the
first half.
Lytle scored his first touchdown, a one-yarder from the
fullback position, and then
relieved Bell ai tailback and
made his next two on bursts
of seven yards and one yard.
Coach Bo Schembechler
ran out of tailbacks and had
to reinsert Lytle in the fourth

T'f Ool·• .... s wm
• sev·enth m
• · row

Alabama
~ :::g~ ~~n::~~!p~ n. rns
·rtil"'u
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Boilermakers then reached
the Ohio Stale 6 before Schmidt was again called upon to
kick a field goal.
Jolutson gained 131 yards il)
18 attempts, while Mike
Pruitt had I'll in 25 rushes for
Purdue. Vitali completed 11
of 32 passes for 172 yards and
had one intercepted.
The victory was the seventh
In a row for the Buckeyes

1 ·

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touchdown strikes ol22 yards
to Brian Baschnagel and 41 to
Lenny Willis. He completed
OSU's scoring with a 2S-yard
run the fourth period.
Schmidt kicked his 22yarder In the first period and
a Tl-yarder in tbe second.
Before his firs~ boot, Purdue
drove to the Ohio State 2, its
deepest penetration, before
being thrown back. The

:
·
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surprises
OU
Bobcats
contract

..... ·l

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touchdowns In the first period
on I'Wis of 60 and 3 yards. His
6().yard gallop came on Ohio
State's first play with the
game only I :37 old.
Johnson has scored 18
. touchdowns this season, just
two short of the conference
record of 20 held by former
OSU fullback Harold Henson.
Greene completed 5 of 8
passes for 103 yards and

I·

TOLEDO, . Ohio (UP!) - yard touchdown pass to Scott
' '
'
Gene Swick, the nation 's Resseguie Saturday to pace
CINCINNATI (UP!)- The showed a ,regular season 101 leading passer, scored on a 'Toledo to a 14-10 Mid-.
World · Otamplon Cincinnati victories, .third highest In one-yard rWI and fired a 2$- American Conference victory
Reds amounced Saturday the league
and tlie best by
signing of Sparky Anderson. a NatJonll Lea~ team since
· '
'
'
I
Ir
,'
I '·'
'
to a new two-year contract as' 1008. That was ooce again
·
,:J
the team'S manager, Which I follOWed by 'a three-game ' '., '
oll~ a.J.l
~n
-~ would extend through the 1977 sweep over Plttsbiu:gb.
-~ season.
In the World Series, where
·-· · Anderson, during his six the Reds were frustrated by
SOUrn BEND, lriH. (UPI) number of Urnes to surpass o.
"' ye81'11 IIi the Reds' field Baltimore In 1970 and :_ Southern Callfornht's J. Simpson for individual
leader, accumulated a oakland In 1972, the team Ricky Bell ran for 165 yards performances against ihe
·• winning~ 14 .1103 games captured the' , W!lfl~ Otam- and scored one . lo~~h~own11 fig~ting Irish.
and four , Weltern Division plonslilp from: Boston In , Satl!I~~Y ~~..~ ~~e.a,!l·.,tlitt , third1,1 • Bell's 40 carries surpassed
lllles,,three ,Nallonal League seven. ~aptd. '' ,;
·' rlih k'ed T~PJ,ans to their , the previous high of 38 by
championships and the 1975
At the concllllion.lif his new Mvenih victory . ,without a .1 Simpson against Notre Dame
~ Wcrld Series vlctcry.
contract, Ar\dersori will have loss, a 24-17 lriumph over in 1967 and his yardage
tl Anderson's coaching llaff been the Reds manager for Notie Dame in a nationally- bettered the 150 yards hung
"' of Alex Granimas, Ted' elght,season8. 'l'b8t total was , televised contest. '
up by 0 . J. ln the same game.
,. Klunewskl, George eJ:ceededlnCinclnllatiRedl' , ~~ W¥s , the 112th straight
BuiNotreDame,takingiiS
Scherger, ·and - Li~ry history , ~n)r by Bill ,•. ~jcf~UJ !pr the Tr.o)~. the secondlossagalnstfive wins,
9111181'4 ~ !Jave been ~th MclceC!*de, wbo,~""' field , ~ton~ lop~est."·' winning1, gave the Trojans all they
the
lin~-'!' ~~ j~ , leader' for rjlne, Years from ,, s.~~~ - ll")ong ..the ·nation's 1 could handle and 11 took alert
the Redl lfi lt'IO, .-, were 193~ to, 1~4~. McKechnie . ~jpr colleges, a}ld Bcell had defensive play by Southern
rehired. ·
produced the club's last to carry the ball a record california to get back In the
And«&lt;on, 41, ol 'I1IOuland rrevtoUB world championship
' '
·
1
In 94G.
• ,
Padres where he was a third
base coacb, won a National
· t
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•"'

In 1971.
Griffin chalked up his
record on a 23-yard run with
8:2!1 left to play and was
mobbed by his teammates
before being lifted from the
game by Coach Woody
Hayes.
Johnson, the Buckeyes'
hard-charging fullback and
the nation's leading scorer,
smashed for the first two

humbles lndUJ. na 55-7

S-1·gn
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.,

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Special -sale price.

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overall l!fld 3-1

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3.95
PER UNE FOOT
12 FOOT WIDE

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U stomps Qoilermakers

yard touchdown pass from set up br Bow!lng ·Green . ,. ' · ·, '
·'. '
,,,
"" Sherman Smith to Steve !umb!es, !1\e'~y IUJ!back Jim .' ,AI'f~ *Ri;lo'it, ,M)~);: (UP!) football tn demolishing the
,.. Joecken.
·
GaUBe ~ ~}',,1:\ln 'II and ,. - ,1'\\llicr ,Rob..I"Ytl~ scored Hoosier team ihat rims into
·"' The first Mlamilouchdown Jolutson s ftejd goal on a... ,two.lpuchdowns as~ fuilback, top-ranked Ohio State next
cam~ on a four-yard run by !Umble by Mill~ oh the B&lt;l _., theq. ~hlf~ tll ,taiU!ack and weekend.
.:; Mickey _(lreen In the se1;011d . 2!1.
.
. .
, 11 pit~ed up two more Sltlurday
Indiana did, however, score
·: period, while Johnson's
Preston led Bowling ' to lead Michigan's r "Baby the first rushing touchdown
·~·' seco~ field goal with 3:25 Green's_ground game with 73 . '&amp;Jues" ~t,· 55-7 slaus'hter of against Michigan in eight Big
"'' left II) tile game Iced the yards bi ~ trle~~. Carpenter Big Ten 'rlv!lllndiana.
Ten games when junior
" ' contest.
was Mlaml,s top_"!~~her with \ , ~~ ,.· was , seve.nth-ra.led quarterback Terry Jones
"' Bowling Green, now 6-1 89 yatds _ln 2'1 .a.ltefllpts.
, .1t&lt;flc!Jlgpn's . ~th cQnsecutive clicked on a one-yard dive
L.
gll'l'e a~)lome without a loss. ' eafly in the fourth quarter.
''"
And for· the , first time this
The victory gaye the
: I:
season the young Wolverines' Wolverines a 4-l) Big Ten
.~!
first string played errorless record and left them !i-n.•

.

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lmperiai®Accotone®
-floors. At these
prices. you can do
more than one room.

1
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FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

AJovely

,,

· , ' WEST LAFAYID'M'E, Ind. season on Steve Sclunidt's
the con- (UPI•) ,_ ,AJl,Anterica Archie field goals of 22 and T1 yards.
.ferenc~, had tak~nthe le_ad 00 ., Grl!fut became maj«.COUege ' Griffin, held to 36 yards In
a ~7,p)8y •!JI)-Yard dr~ve m t"!; ,: football's 1all-time rushing' nine attempts In the first half,
, first. q~rter . !f.htch ,was. champion Saturday and Cor- . finished with 130 In 20 carries
r.: s ratg
Mtd -Am,e rlcan . capped ~Y I!!IV~ Preston'~, nellus Greene .and, Pete · - the 28th consecutive
~ Conference title_Saturday , fO!Ir·Yard toy_CI)d~'!fll run. · Johnson led the seorlng rregular season game In which
!• with a. ~17 victory ove~ . Don Tlj~lor:~ ,24-rard field ., Pltrade jn a ~ wl!t for lOll" he netted more than 100
.,. rr:I!Siy Wlbeaten Bol\'ling goal ~ave the Falcons a I~ 'lratedOhloStateovel'&lt;·Purdue. yards-giving him a career'
'" .
·
·· i!d!le, ,but. he · la~r mlsse4 , ·~e,l!ertbeleu, , Furdue total. of .4,730.
''" Thll RedskiJIS, nolf 6-1 fron;t ~ yardH!ll·
"· l!ecame ll)e first BJg Team to ' 11Je old record of 4,715 was
. o' overall and 3-G In the MAC, Pres,l~n , ·,~c9red the score on !.the ·Buckeyes this set by Cornell's Ed Marinaro
"; caugbttbeFalcopsat 10-10on, Falcons' f1\her, ID~hdown on
·
;:;; freshm4n Fred Johnson's a'flve-yaro ~!ram Mark ·. '· ·:.r · · '

i••

a

'

~NG GREE;J'i,, Ohio
(UPI) ~- Miami, o.vercoming
. a l~ first half deficit, too~ 1\
.t s:ant. ~de IQ~ards a third

in accident ·

questions on Red··Dye.

,

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Boy Scout Corincil needs held

RIO GRANDE - Rio
Grande College-Rio Grande
Community Colleg~ has
' packaged
a
unique
educational experience In
forming three different
illll
course offerings in a.planned
illll December trip to Andros
Island In the Bahamas.
Each course has been
"" dtslgned to offer two hours of
credit in Marine Invertebrate
Zoology, Ecology In the
• Subtroplcs, and outdoor
•• Education. The three wefk
: co\D'se Invites members of
• the'commWilty as well as Rio
: Grande College ·students and
: students from other in·
, stitutlons.
:
The trip Itinerary. calls for
the group to attend five days
of 'classes at RGC.CC lrom will vary slightly, depending
• Nov. 21-25. These classes will ·upon total amoWll Of course
: provide fundamental in - work to be selected. A par- duty , customs, foo d, in• struction and orientation ticipant must select at least struction, tuition, Insurance,
before departing to • the two courses ( 4 credit hours ) and a lifetime of memorable
Island. Following ' these but members may select all experiences.
A special registration
: sessions, the group will three courses ( 6 credit
period
on Wednesday, Nov. 9,
hours).
·The
cost
for
par·
: recess lor Thanksgiving
has
been
set aside for
• vacation Wllll Dec . 5, when tlcipants selecting · two
•
enrolling
at
the college's
' • departw-e to the Bahamas courses Is $520 while the
has ~ scheduled. After selection of,three courses will admissions o£flce. For fur·
; spending two hdl weeks In the cost $550. Tllis cost includes ther trip Information, contact
: Bahamas, the group will housing, transportation , Dr. George Wolfe, RGC.CC.
I return to Rio Grande by Dec.
22.
While on the Island, Prof.
Tom · Osborne, biology instructor, will leach field
study courses in marine
Invertebrate zoology and
ecology. Participants will
POMEROY, OHIO
have opporiiiJllties to collect
CHICKEN AND HAM DINNERS ·
Invertebrates from one of the
' largest ooral reefs . In the
SEE US TODAY I
·, world. The clear green ocean
THURSDAY, NOV. 6
We Handle Homes by
waters will provide ample
4:30 P.M.
Skyline · Castle- Memory by Elcona
, opportunity to collect a
: variety of cwall, starfish,
ADULTS \3.00, CHILD~EN 11.50
'
unddollars, ocean snails and
more. Observing nature 's
·~-t-t·----·~SAiftMitSERVICE_---·---..Jaws in the sublropics will
Pomeror
992-7034
Ohio
: provjdt conduciYe Ieeming
Hn.: ttotMon . lllrv Sit. Closed Sun.
entbOI_,.,. for ecological
lC RVlte
Po!ortAsh ttl-3m, Roger _O.viJm-mt
study. In lddilion, several
i11111'11Ciors will areompany
~

'

•

by Rio Grande College

~

•

. GALUPOUS - The Gallia
a new vehicle for the
ol the Middl eport Fir s!
C o ti n t y · v o 1u n t u r Vo)Witeer Emergency Squad.
. -·.
Baptist Church.
·
ilACINF. - The Southern approved the following : concerning the idrr!ificatlon Emergency Squad was
There are now three
Funeral se rvices wil l be
held altO a.m. Tuesday all he Local Ba nd will receive three granted permission for the of handicapped children on formed in September of 1972. emergency vehicles in use by_
Rawling s-Coats Funeral and one-half percent of the !Wcine Cub Scouts to use a Oct. 29 at Nelsonville; gave The originators of the Squad the Squad. Each of these
Home with the Re\i. Peler ruta l gate receip ts, from room in the junior !ugh
permission for a member of were BID Mitchell, Charles vehicles hail made many lifeGrandall offl clafln g.
football
and
basketball
building
every
Monday
from
Burial will be in Riverview
the Southern staff to attend a Camden, Jay Cremeens and saviJlg I'WIS in Gallla County .
Cemeter:y . Friends may call games, excludi ng tour- Slo 6 p.m. for pack meetings; workshop on the use of In- Ken Deckard. AI that time
Thilnks to the donations of
COLUMBUS - The Ohio
al lhe luneral home Irom 2 to nament games. This was gave permission to the Rev.
·
there
was
virtually
no
amindividuals,
clubs and
service
education
publication
4 and 7 ro 9 p.m. Monday.
Environmental
Protection
decided when the Sou thern Steve Wilson to use the high on Dec. 8 at the Hospil&lt;llity bulanej! service in Gallla businesses these vehicles
Agency
(Ohio
EPA)
an·
•Local Board of l'::ducation school gym tim evenings of Inn, Columbus, sponsored by CoWl ty.
contain many types of life
nounced Saturday that it
me l Thursday even ing Jane _ Nov. 29and 30from-6:30 to'IO .the State Department of
The first emergency saving and life sustaining proposes to ,Issue water
DOG TREATED
Wagner. clerk, reported.
p.m. for showing of the film Education; gave permiSsion vehicle was a 1967 CadUiac, . equipment. With marly
WEST BOYI.SrON, Mass.
The bapd was also given " Cross and the Switch to the Meigs County Senior which was purchased ivl th emergency runs being made pollution control permlta to
(UPI) - Elvis Presley's !(). permission to set up a con- Blade"; Syracuse Junior Girl Ci lizens to hold a square the Squad's first donation each week, replac'ement, nine applican 18, specifying
and limiting their discharge
month-old male dog, Getlo, cession sl&lt;lnd at the football Scouts were given permission dance on Nov. 8 at tl\e Port- from Miles Epting.
repair, and updating of this
of pollutants Into state
recently spent more than two sl&lt;ldium as long as it did not to use the Syracuse gym land gym; granted perThe second vehicle was a equipment Is often necessary.
waterways Including Ohio
months· at a veterinary inlerfere with the athle\ic every Tuesday from 3:30 to 5 mission to the band boosters 1954 Chevrolet donated by the
Since the first day of 1
hospital In this central boosters stand.
· p.m. for troop meetings ; to use the high school Kyger· Creek f"ower Plant. operation the Volunteer Valley Eleclric, Kyger Creek
Station.
·.
Massachusells conununity
In olher business the board ga ve permission to Carl facilities to serve lfie annual Alter . several months of Emergency Squad lu!s made
· The Ohio EJPNs proposal to
where he was treated for a increased sick lea ve ac- Wolfe and Howard caldwell
many over 3,200 emergency rWls. ·
Soil Conservation banquet on opera lion . and
issue NPDES permits Is
near fatal kidney aliment.
cumulation from 120 to 150, to attend the basketball Nov . 18.
donations (rom .the people of Each of the5e runs was made
The dog spent the first few for certified and non-certified coaching clinic· which they
based upon a preliminary
Attending' were Denny Gallia County, _the _Cadillac by volunteer personnel,
days at a posh Boston hotel personn el. They also ap- attended on Od. 17; gave Evans, president , Jack was replaced with a 1973 ddnallng their time to the staff review and application
and was cared for personally proved two personal days per permission to Lea Ord to
of state water pollution
Bostick, Robert Sayre, Dodge Van Ambulance. The people of GaiHa Cilunty.
at the home of Dr. S. Lynn school year and after two attend Guidance . Workshop
standafda and regulations.
The
Gallla
County
Grover Salser, Jr., and David demand for the Volunteer
Kittleson, director of the New years set·vice this is in- sponsored by the State
The decision to luue the
Nease, board members, Emergency Squad grew, Volunteer Emergency Squad
England Institute of Com- cre~se d to three personal Department of Education on
permlta wiD become Dna!
Bobby Ord, superintendent, making ilecessary another wU! once again be having Its
parative Medicine.
days a year.
Oct. 29 at Hocking College at Mrs. Wagner, clerk, Larry anlbulance. In 1973 the Squad annual fund raising Radi()o Nov. 23, 1975 Ul)leu an apWhen Getio was discharged
peals ~aring IS requested by
Two teachers were added Nelsonville; entered into a
this week, he was Down home to the list of subs titute contract with Southeast Ohio Wolfe , principal of Portland purchalled a 1971 'Chevrolet Thon Nov. 7 and 8. "Your the applicant or Interested
·
donal!ons are the Squad's
Elementary, Carl Wolfe, Van Ambulance. ·
to Memphis, Tenn., as the
teac hers. They were Nancy Media Center for film ser- athletic director, Jciy Bigler,
In
1974
the
Gallia
County only means of support. Plan citizens. The director of the
lone passenger on Presley's
Thompson Hill, English, vices which is part of the band ·director, Kathleen atlzens Band liadlo Club to donate Nov. 7 and 8. Help agency may also withdraw
Lear jet, Down by two pUots.
speech, history and social DPPF.; gave permission to Morris, representing the sponsored a Radlo-Thon to us help you,". a spokesman and revise the proposed
The dog had been rushed to
permita after consideration
Boston by jet 3 a.m. Aug. 12 studies and Ca rl Weese, Joyce Thoren, school nurse to band boosters. The next raise lunda for the purchase said Saturday.
of the record of a public
English, history and biology. a tt end a second meeting board meeting will be Nov. 20
when veterinarians "gave the
tneetlrig,
written comments,
In other business the board
.at 7:30p.m.
dog a poor prognosis," said
or disapproval by the u. s.
Kittleson.
EPA.
Troe Tri.State Area Council, assisting should call Cree at · Written commenta on the
"The dog was In real bad
shape when he came." she
Boy Scouts of America, · Is I304) 5%3-3408.
proposed permlta may be
said. "We were even thinking
·
·
·
rebuilding a facility that will
The Council mUll vacate ita sublnitted Wlt.il Nov. 8, 1975.
about a kidney transplant or
·
ROCK SPRINGS - Pam · repr,esentatlves to the serve as the Scout Service current centet loca~ at 1122 Comment&amp; may be sent to the
dlalyals. But,. the dog now
Holcomb has been chosen as national competition . Two Center for our local area. All · Third Avenue by no later than Ohio EPA, NPDES Permits
appears perfectly normal.
the Meigs High School winner winners from each state and work is being done by local Dec. 15.
Section, P. O. •Boxl0f9, 361 E.
He'll require only I~ minutes
GALLIPOLIS _ Two in the Bicentennial Seniors the District of Columbia wiD volunteers who need adTht new Scout Service BroadStreet, Columbwl, Ohio
of treatment daUy.
persons were injured in a scholarship competition. This recetve a scholarship of dltlooal help. Volunteer Center, located at 733 Seventh 43216, The Ohio EPA penult
The veterinarian refulled to rear end collision at 6,35 p.m. Meigs High competition is $1 ,000 and an all_expense paid electricians, carpenters, Avenue, Huntington, will number and,the public notice
discuss the cost , of the Friday on Rt. 7 at the en- · par t of a nationwide trip .. to Wtlhamsburg, plumbers, and others are enable the Councll to provide number should be Included on
treatment, but said 'this dog trance to the Silver Bridge scholarship program for high Vlrgmta from Janu~y 16-19, desperately needed, ac- better service to the Wlits and the envelope aDct on each
waa treated very specially. I Shopping Plaza.
school seniors currently 1976 to attend senunars · on cording · to W. Robert Cree, · adult leaders.
page of submitted comments.
kept the dog home and kept It
The Gallia-Melgs Post bei ~g conducte~ ?Y the educallonal and social Issues Scout Executive of the
The Council Building
A public meeting may be
with me. He ~,allY required Sta te Highway Patrol said an Nahonal Assoctahon of and to be on hand fo~ the Council. Anyone willing to do Committee Is comJ)9sed of held U sufficient inlereat
Intensive care.
auto driven by Mack D. Secondary School Principals selechon of the nallonal a "good turn" for Scouting by William M. Steen, Chairman, about the permit Ia shown.
Hed rick, 60, of Buffalo, w. with funds from the Shell ~II winher.
.
of' Ashland, Kentucky, plus
Robert D. carpenter, Uoyd
WALLACE NEEDLES
Va., struck the rear of a car Company . Runner·up ts T e gr&lt;~nd prtze winner
WS ANGELES (UPI)
operated by Charles H. Kathy Baker.
recelvesa$10,000scholarshlp cosmeucs:"
R. Frankel, Frank E. HanIrving Wallace, a~thor of a Perroud, 21, of Ga llipolis.
Pam's winning composition ~.n~ will . have ~Is-h~~
The FDA earlier thla 111011th shaw, Sr., Dr. Richard 0.
1962novel callecj "The Prize"
Patricia A. Hedrick 41 co~slsts of a "Bicentennial Btcentennlal Mtnute
formed a pane) of e~Pefts Comfort, L. B. 1\msbary and
which treated Nobel Prizes Buffalo, a passenger i~ th~ Minute" and a commentary pres~~ted on the CBS who will meet Nov. 2ll to Patrick- R. McDonald, all of
Irreverently, needled the Hedri ck vehicle and Terry L. discussing the relevance of televtst?n. network.
make a new cletermlnadon m HunUngton. Constru~tion
·On New Bean
Swedish 'Academy of Letters Hess, 14 , a passenger In this "~i~ute for t~ay and for
Pam ts ,the daughter of Mr. the future ol the «be:
coordinator for the eouncu is
·visuallner
11411ln Friday with an acid Perroud's car suffered minor Amenca s future . She also and Mrs. Everett Holcomb,
Dr. Sidney Wolle, dlnctor , Bernard Billups of Wayne
1 12.50
comment on Italy's Eugenio injuries. There was moderate scored high on a currenl Rt. 3, Po~eroy. .
·of the Ralplt Nader-ba\Sed County.
Montale as a law-eate.
damage. Hedrick was events test.
.
Kathy ts the d~ughter of,, Health~Gri!UP.IIId,
The Tri.State ¥ea f:ouncll
"The way It baa·been going harged with failing to stop
Pam will now compete wtth Mr . and Mrs. Raymond · "The only teepCIIIIIble aetlon Is a member c1f the CahellIn recent years," said ~ithln the assured clear other high school winners to Baker, 263 South Fifth St., for the FDA to talr!e 18 to Wa:yne United Community
Wallace, ''the Nobel Prize dlstnnce .
become one of the two slate Middleport.
lmmedlalely ban H. Tbere Ia Services and the Boyd County
should be called the ignoble
John S. West, 52 , Crown
now more than adequate United Fund.
prize. Eugenio Montale Is a . City, was cited to Municipal
evidence for banning lt."
One poet but he does not Court for failure to stop
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
belong In the com~y of within th e assured clear
auch previous winners as distance followin g a rear end
Sohhenltsyn • Sar~re,', 'collision at 4:10p.m. Friday
Hemingway and T. S. Ehot.
on Rt. 1 J!t the jWJction to . By MICHAEL J. CONLON
ts a dramatic eumple ol
industry
inDuence postponing
Garfield Ave.
WASffiNGTON (UPI) a
regulatidn
decl.iion12 years
Officers said the West car The Food and Drug' Adbeyond
the
time when It
struck the rear end of a mlnlatration may be exposing
·. vehicle driven by Marvin R. the American public to an should have been made,"
Bryant, 19, Eureka Star Rl . unnecessary health risk by said Sen. Gaylord NeiJoli, DBryant 'was cited fo:· unsafe allowing ' safety questions Wis., who asked the GAO to
vehicle.
about the natlon's most do the study.
"The real Issue Ia whether
A hit-sk ip acci dent oc- widely ulled food coloring the trip to each outdoor curred at 7 p.m. Friday on Red Dye No. 2 - to go the public wanll a dangerous
education skills in first aid, Georges Creek Rd. one tenth unanswered, according to a coloring In Ill food, drug and
crafts, camping techniques, of 8 mile west of .Rt. 7. The congressional study.
cosmetic supp!y for 'l:olmetlc
mnp and compass reading, patrol saio an unkn own
The report from ·the reasons or wbelher II will
and snorkllng and sk in vehicle stJ·uck the side of a ·General Accounting Office, accept a safer-, leu brllllanl
dlvln~.
car operated by Michael R. an lnvestlga!ive arm of IIUbstltute," he said.
The .report, said llOIIIInued
The group will live on the Lucas, 2Q, of Crown City.
Congress, raised for t~ nrst
use
of the dye - 'whlcb 'Ia
Island In cabins owned and
A deer was killed in an time questions about tbe
operated by ' International accident at 2:20 a.m. dye's potential for ca111ing found In everything from
Field Study of Columbus. IFS Saturday on th~ Kerr·Harris· genetic damage in test strawberry ice cream to
Upetlck - without reeolutlon ·
will also I!rovide truck trans· burg Rd. west ~~ Rt. 160. The animals.
of
the safety quest10111 Ia
porlatlon to several native animal rart into the path of a
But FDA off.iclals con·
exposing
"the p~bllc 'to unvillages and geological car driven by Linda K. tended further tests have
necessary
rlak."
features on the Island. Maxi Waugh , 25, of Bidwell.
convinced
them
any
It recommended the Food
buses will transport the
Afinal mishap occurred on chromO!lOmal damage Is not
expedition on route between Rt . 7, six tenths of nille of the type that would be and Drug Acbhinistratlon,
Rio Grande and Fort south of Gallipolis where passed on to future which. haa been studying the
Introducing Moravian Inset.
Lauderdale, Fla. Achartered Christopher Waugh, 18, generations In the form of Issue for ' 15 years, "act
ntiNI
for
promptly to ellabllah the
flight will then fly the group . Northup, lost control of his mutations.
between Fort Lauderdale and car which ran off the right
"It would appear that this safety of Red No. 2or prevent
..
its use In foods, drug! and
Andros Island.
side of the highway striking a
~1..,_
-.1
..
The cost of this experience guardrail.
1"""'"_______________,..,.
Mrs . Saxlot1 was a me mbe r

Bahamas trip offered
.
,.

OVECto
•
recezve
·p()llution
•
permzt

Southern band to get 3.% · Volunteer squad set
fun£!.
drive
event
for
·per cent l!fgate receipts
of

.Gr~ffin all-time rusher

r)liami nips

.....

22 ~ The SWiday Times -Sentinel. Sunday. ~·._._,t._.26~19=75'==-:---·----

~-----A~~;-o~~th~-

23 - The SWlday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, Oct . 26, 1975

··.·

JOHNSON'S MOBILE HOMES
Eastern Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio
PH. 446-3547

�•
,.
•'

25 - The Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday, Olt. 26,197S

24 - The Sunday Times -S.ntinel, Sunday, Oct . 26, 1975

Rozelle's decision ·booed by Pirates romp
I\ Tigers win over Athens, 14-13. .\
Miami coach Don Shula
·

IRONTON - Rick Howard
crashed over from J1 yards
out wilh 6:21 remaining in the
game to give Coach Bob
Lutz's Fighting Tigers a
thrilling 14-13 Southeastern
Ohio League victOry over
visiting Athens here Friday
night.
·
It was the league leaders'
30th consecuti~e SEOAL
:r.tctory over a five-year span .
: Ironton, now 1·1 overall,
J&gt;ped llli 1975 conference
.rrk. to 5.0 with only Meigs
ttnd LOgan remaining on this
~ar's schedule. ·
.: Athens .dropped to 3-5

j

overall and 2-3 io:side the
Athen&amp; dominated the
conference.
statistics·. r~o •king up 1:1 first
Athen•' Arnie Chonko downs to Iru.,lon's eight,
opened the game's scoring by rushing lor 121 yards to
blasting over from the one in Ironton's 151 and pru;.&lt;ing for
the second period. Tom 61 oo three of five attempts to
Lavery kicked the extra Ironton's 31 on one of one,
point.
. ..
giving AHS 21l2total•yards to
Ironton came right bllck to Jron!Qn's 182.
take ar\ 8-7 lead. Jeff
Ed Pennell had 59 yards in
Kriebel's one-yard plunge. J7trips and Neil mrberlck ~.1
Mike Brown ran the extra yards in 12 carries for
points.
Athens. Kriebel had 87 yards
Athens grabbed .a 13-Siead in 22 trips for Ironton.
on the first play of the final
Friday ,Ironton is at Meigs.
·period on a 47-yard pass from Athens will host Jackson.
t:honko to Scott Lawrence. · By quarters :
Then came Howard's
Ironton
0 8 li i--14
~ame-winnlng score.
,Athens
0 7 0 6-13

By KEN ROSENBERG
UPI Sporl!l Writer
.
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
unemployed players from thf
defunct World Football
League were not the only
people unhappy Friday when
Pete RozeUe ruled the NFL
could not sign them.
The NFL commissioner's
ruling also drew criticism
from within his own league,
particularly from Coach Don
Shula, whose Miami Dolphins
own the NFL rights to the
WFL's big-name trio.

Wahama victimized in
·27-8 loss to Ripley
~IPLEY -

In a game
marred by turnovers and
penaltle.t here .Friday night,
the Wahama White Falcons
feU to Ripley ~ iri the lat.
ter's homecoming game.
The Vikings struck lor
three long touchdowN on
runa of 33, a yards and an at
yard pass Interception return
enroute to their fourth victory
of the year. The win lor
Ripley did not come that
*~('a·:~

The Poet's
. Corner
- "THE '7S REDS
The Cincinnati Reds of "75"
Were very strong and much
alive
,.
They won "The Weal" the 7th
of September
A day we all wlll long
remember.
And they they walled around
to see
Juat who It wis going to be
That they would play in the
championship games
To win was their only aim.

They beat the Pirates In three
straight
And then for Bos!Qn they did
walt
In the first game everything
went wrong
But In the second they came
.bacll slrong.
The third game ended six to
five
The Reda big bats finally
came alive.
Game nwnber lour didn't go
just right ·
So they'll have to "go get
'em" again tonight.
By the score six to two the
filth game they won
Now they inust win it aU In
."Qld Boston."
After three days of rain
Then came the pain
The game ended seven to six
When in the 12th there came a
home run off the bat .of
Ca~llon Flak.
It was abnast like "Heaven"
In game nwnber seven
And when they made that last
out
There was really no doubt
That the Reds were the be!lt
And the World Champs at
last. ·
I've promo!~ "The Reda" all
aeason long
And just ha&lt;!; to pay my
respects
With this UIUe poem
To the 1975 World Champions
Long may you roam.
Louise Gilmore, Pomeroy
October 1975,

Reds-Houston

Sltula obviouSly naa neen
c;ounling on . getting l.arry
C:&gt;ilnka back this season, and
maybe Paul Warfield, too.
Now he gets nobody.
"111 ~ way it reads-the
Rozelle statemen1.- it was
predominantly a ruling
· against the Miami Dolphins,"
said Shula. "It also involved,
maybe, Calvin Hill aod Ted
Kwallck."
.
Csonka, Warfield aitd ~bn
Klick played out their option
wilh Miami last season and
joined the Memphlll South.
men of the WFL.
Kwallck, an All-Pro tight
end for San Francisco, a
team that sorely misses his
receiving talentB, jumped w
the Philadelphia Bell, and
had been negotiating to rejoin
the 49ers· since the WFL's
collapse on Wednesday. Hill,
the Dallas Cowboys' running
back, Is out for tbe year
anyway with a broken leg
sustained early in the WFL
season.

easy.lt wu nol decided until opportunity early In the final yard line, via three comthe final two minutes.
quarter when Brei Holbrook pletions and a 15 yard penally
Although the · score · in- recovered 41 fumbled punt at but that was as far as they got
4lca.tea a runaway by Ripley the Viking 19 yard line. ·A because on the next play
this was not Ute caae. The five-yard delay of game Tracey Sayre Intercepted a
game wu atiU In doubt unW penalty was then assessed the Goldsberry pass and raced 89
1:221eft In the fourth quarter White Falcons before Golds- yards down the right sideline
when a Mike Goldaberry pus berry found Rick Dye over for a Ripley score. Once
again Gossett split the , By United Preaa ID·
was intercepted at lhe Ripley the middle. Two men hit Dye
1
• be in .or
,
II yard U~e and returned 89 causing a fumble which was uprights
, . giving the.Viklngs a ternaBilltlooaW
a1tonmay
27
-uWtn,
·
.v
yards for the game's final recovered by the Vikings.
Scott Kebler was the anotber rough season..
touchdqwn.
Ripley. then drove 99 yards
dina ground gainer for
Walton suffered Injury
Wahama got off to a good In eight plays with ·Winters 1ea •
d . upon mjury last year, made
25 h yar s . 10 ex trapro blems for h'unseIf by
.start following the opening going the final 43 for the third Wahama with
.
klckoU when a Ripley fumble Viking touchdown of the seven cames, In t e pass10g airin his lilies without
waa recovered by Marty night. Gossett's boot was department Mike Goldsberry muc· hg dl ppolomacy a nd
.
Holbrook lithe VIking forty- good making the score 20-0 hit nine of 17 for 92 yards and genera
11 y · rna de hi mself
k
k
b
nine yard · U~. The White juat 6:25left to play.
Kevin Hona er '·. ac ~p disliked b teammates and
yIa rs as well as
Falcons moved the ball down
Wahama received the quarterback came 10 and dtd
a
floe
job
completing
three
of
op~
P
ye
IQ the 30 yard llne but Ripley ensuing kick-off but could go
making an effort
look over on doWIII.
nowhere and were forced IQ fivP for 28 yards. Tim Sayre, ~J
After an exchange of punts punt. Once again ll)e punt Scott Roush a?d Rick Dye to ch~ge his image this year.
Ripley began a drive· that · was fumbled with Scott w~re the leadmg receiVers He added bulk to his body and
produced the finltacore of the Roush recovering for wtth ~· 35 and 33 yards has been showing more
game. It only took the Wahama on the Ripley 29. respecltv.ely · .
aggressiveness on the court.
Defenstveiy t.l was Scott · Walton was involved in
Vikings, thirteen playa to Goldsberry ihen promptly hit
cover 70 yards with Rod Roush lor six yards IQ the 23. Kebler once agam leading the several minor scrapes wtlh
Winters scampering 33 yards On second down Tim Sayre charges wtth eleven tackles. opposition centers this
ln!Q the end zone for six look a Goldaberry pass In the . He was followed by Scott summer most notably
polnla. Bruce Gouelt spllt end zone lor Wahama's first Roush, Rick D~e and _Joe . Kareen Abdul-Jabbar, who
Shepard with etght aptece SWWlg a fierce ·eltiow at ihe
the uprights lor the PAT to score.
whtle
Brei Holbrook a~d overzealous redhead.
·
give Ripley a 7.0 lead.
. Goldsberry took to the air
10
Friday night In Portland's
The Vlldnga upped their again on the pat conversion G~gg _ Ble5l!10g chipped
.
season ·opener, 'the 8-foot·ll
lead to 13-0 juat before In- this time to- Roush good for wtth s1x each,
STATISTICS
Walton got into a third period
termlsslon when they the two points bringing the
covered 66 yards in eight score to 20-8 with 4:09 left.
W R brawl with &amp;-9, 23().pcllmd
plays with Tracy Sayre going
Wahama tried an onsides First Downs
~ 21776 Seattle forward John
Yards
Rushing
the final three yards. kick on the ensuing kick and
I
Hwruner In a game even·
G01111elt's attempt lor the for the fifth lime in the game Yards passing
120 101' tually won 1(M;.97 by tbe
I 37 377 Sonics.
conversion failed and so came up with the loose Total Yards
12
Passing
Ripley took a lS.O lead ln!Q foolball. This lime it was
-24 7•11
Hwruner, apparenUy boththe dreaslng room at the hall. Rick Stafford clutching the Fumbles Lost
!-I
1H&gt; ered by Walton's elbowing,
6-40 9-95 landed the first In a serlea of
Wahama managed to pigskin giving Wahama a Penalties Yds
Interceptions
contain the Ripley eleven first down at mid-field.
. 2
I blows as the two men traded
7•34 ·6 2•30·5 several shots before the~
throughout the third period
The White Falcons moved Puntsavg .
and got an excellent scoring the ball down IQ U1e eighteen Offensive plays · 59 55 were separated by other

When the WFI. Otlcago
Wind folded earUer In lhe
season and John Gllllam's
attorney's threatened to sue
the NFL on his behalf,
Rozelle approved his return
IQ tbe Mimesota Vlkingll and
estabUshed nexi Tuesday u
the 1aat day a ·NFL team
could sign a WFL player.
"I'm not really surprlaed
·by the ruling," Shula !IBid .
"In talldng IQ (play'er agent
Ed) Keating, Csonka and
Warfield this morning, they
all exp-essed concern about
their conlractual obligation
to Memphlll. lt'supto them to
clear . themselves of their
conttactual obUgatlona and
then ·we can talk to lhem."
AJthotigb the WFL folded
Wednesday, attorneys representing Mempbls owner joJm
Basae~t-who has the former
Dolphins under contract threatened tile NFL in a
telegram wilh an anti-trust
suit if It alloWed Ita teams·to
sign any WFL players.

«

:;:;

(UP! I.

over ·Hannan

Colonels still need ·Gilmore
Amerlcall

Bukelb1ll
Alloda- tlcll Rollllllap
By BOB WBSI'ON
Ulllted Prell lmruticllal
Artis GilmOI'e Is still the
strength of the Kentucily
Colonels but the defendlnc
ABA ch1mplona will be
relying on depth lhla year in
their bid to repeat.
Bird Averitt let the tone
whell be came~ the bench to
replace Injured Ted Mca.in
IDd ICOI't 18 pointl to help the
Kentuclly Colonei8 beat the
San Antonio ~ IOMf in
lhe ABA a~aon opener
Frldly nilbt.
Avtrllt wu aecond ooly to
Glhoore in acoring lor the
Colonels. The "Ill&amp; A" racked
~ 211 polnta and 21 reboundl
IQ lop everyoae In both
departments.
McClain hobbled out
midway lhrolllb the second
91arter with I tspnlned right
anllle.
The ~ were led by
lArry Kenon with 18 polnta,
Georse GerYln with II and
Silas with 17. 'But both Gervla .
and Sllu"were way off in
their lhootq, acmblrUng for
only 15 baalt:eta· in ~ at·

lempfl.

EllewherelntheABA,New
York whipped st. lAlula 109M, Denver belt San Diego
aDDOUDce SW8p 1-.111 IDd Indiana downed
Virginia 111-101.
CINCINNATI (UPIJ Nell HI, BplriiiM
Rlghthanded pitcher Joaquin
JuiiUI ErvlnC ~ 27
Andujar was traded by the polntl u New York -Ita
ClnclnnaU Reds Saturday to 12th retwar pme
the Houston Aslras In ex· wllhoutaloalap!Nt~
change fll' two players to be year St. IAiala, wi*b 11111111111
named at a later date.
the Nets with 1 llv;.clllli ~
Andujar, 22, of the vlct«y In Jut ygr'1 11ra1
Dominican Republl", hu round playol.la. ErviDI
plfehed fOI' the Ra' 'l'lne I!.'OI'ed 21 polnta Ia tbl llral
Rlvet'll F.nn Oub ln the belf when the Nets opened a
EuternlAtlcaelctrliiJIIII'I. u.point IRd.
He aCCWIIulaled 1 4--1 record NIIQIII Ill, llallllll
with an earned run average
Ralph lllmP""' bit lor 10
o( 4.06.
polnta and rookie Dave

ThmiJ*MI added 28 In his Salls center Caldwell Jones scored ;!II points In the seconcl
lint regular- pro game 21~ and Issei and ThompSon half as the Pacers twice built
u Denver downed San Diego. led Nugget rebounders with up leads of as much as 16

points. Gerald Govan scored
Pat McFarland had 29 points nine eacb.
Pacen
112,
Squires
111
18 points and grabbed 22
fll' lhe Salla wblle another
Billy
Knight
scored
36
rebounds lor VIrginia wb11e
promising rookie, Mark
points
and
grabbed
17
.
JanVanBredaKolffhltforl8
Olberding, had 21. Nugget
center Dan Issei oullcored rebounds for Indiana, whlcb points.
led most of the game. Knight
•

AL Manager of Year honor
goes to Boston's ]f!hnson
NEW YORK (UPI) DarreU Joll11110n, the quiet,
"Grt!8t Stone Facie" of the
lloltltn Red Sox, Is the UPI's
American League manager
of the year.
The 41-year old Joll111011,
who led the Red Sox to their
first American League
pemant Iince 1887, was voted
the award Friday in balloting
by 20 UPI baseball
correapondents around the
country.
Johnson received 14 votes

VINTON - ·Led by juniof 1:38leftinthequarter. Apass
quarterbllck M~rk Theiss, for lhe conversion was Inthe North Gallia Pirates complete.
rolled IQ their sixth vic wry in · With ll:S3left In ihpecond ·
eight starla this fall here period, Theiss' stunned ihe
Friday night winning 2U Hannan defense wlih a 41
over Hannan, W.Va. in a non- yard romp up the. middle.
league encounter.
Sophomore Mike Casey ran
Friday night, North Gallia the"converslon.
travels to Eastern for a game· ·In the third canto, Theiss'
·which could decide the final four-yard run and conversion
outcolne of this year's SVAC run made the scOI'e 20.0 North
race.
Gallia. The Pirates of Coach
A Pirate victory would give Jofin Blake got !heir final sixNG undisputed second place. pointer with 2:32 left on the
and Kyger Creek th.e· clock on a SO yard aerial from
championship. A I~ would · Theis$ w l,ogan. Hannan
give Eastern a sluire of the averted a shutout when Blake
title. The Pirates would still fell on a blocked punt in the
finish second. ·
eod zone.
Friday night, Theiss rushed
Offensively, Logan had
for 104 yards In eight tries, four receptions for 135 yarda.
passed for 174 . yards and.' Mike Casey had II~ yards
scored two touchdowns.
rushing 'ln 17 attemp'll, Greg
North Gallia got things Hill led Hannan with 54 yards
going in the first quarter as on the ground.
Theiss hit tailback Fred
STATISTICS
Logan on a 41 yard bomb with Departmeal
H NG .
First downs
9 15 •
Yardsruahlng
6'1, 291
Yardspasslng
89 174 .
Tot. Yardage
156 465
Fumbles
3
2
Fumbles lost
I
2
Interceptions
'0
I
Penalties
~ 1().100
form.
By Quarters:
officials and players.
New
Orleans,
last year's · Hannan, W.Va. 0 0 0 6- 6
Both players were ejected,
6 8 8 6-28
prompting Blazer Coach expansion lrBRFhiae and the _l'jorlh Gallia
worst
team
in
th~
leaBUe,
Lenny Wilkins to play the
game under omclal protest. evened Its record at 1-1 with a
The Incident took place with 114-108 victory over Detroit.
Doug CoiUns (26 points)
CHICAGO (UP!) - The
2:21left In the third quarter.
and rookie Uoyd Free, with a Chicago Bears announced
and Seatue leading 74-73.
Httle belp from newcomer today wide receiver Ron
There are strong signs of a
George
McGinnis, pace~ Shanlllln will undergo ,knee
changing of the gUard In the
PbUadelphla,
\he worst team surgery Tuesday and be lost
NBA this 'seaaon as teams
In
league
history
a lew years for the season.
weak in the recent past
ago,
to
a
11o.t03
triumph
over
Shanklin came wthe Bean
cliallenge the traditionally
strong but the Boston Celtica the aucago Bulls, 1aat year's · from the Pittaburgh Steelers
are stepping right along as Midwest Divilldn champloo. this year and was Injured
But Houston, lmocked out after catching a pass In an
they usually do- in winning
of the playoffs by Boston last exhibition game with the
seuon, never had a chance Miami Dolphlna.
against the ag~ but .still ·· Shanklin
had
been
powerful Ce!Uca. ·
scheduled for surgery Oct. 13
John Havlicek was as but II was then decided he ''"
threatening u ev~ with :II could rehabilitate himself '.
jlolnta, JoJo White hit 21 and and play ln the later stages of
the CeiUca blew the game the season. Doclin now have
HILTON HEAD IS~D, open In !he aecond period decided differenUy.
S.C. (UPIJ - Rod Laver Is enroute to a 11J8.M romp.
. To replace Shanklin, the
eii,UOOrldllrtoday lhankllll
Charlie Scott, acquired Bears signed rooldi! ' aalety
lellow AIII!J'I]lan temll JI'O ' from Phoenix for · Paul Earl oOuthltt from Iowa, a
Evonne Gooiag0118 Clwley · Westpbalin a stunmer trade seventh rOund draft pick who
Laver wu tied with Die to replace Don (baney in the was dropped near the end of· ,
Nutase of Romania fll' the backcourt, especially en- preseason play. He is ex·
Individual crown at the Wll'ld joyed hill first reguial: . peeled ·w see service on :
fll)'ltational TenJIIa Cllulc game in a Ce!Uc · unlfonn, special teams during Monday ~·:·
going Into the final doubles lhough he ICOI'ed only 18 night's game with lhe Min·
matcb Friday. He teamed points
·
nesota Vikings
'
"
wilh Mn. ·CiwleJ to defeat
'
·
'
Nastase · and Roaemary
Ca11818ln straight seta, 6-3, &amp;3, for the mbed double~ title
and flnilh oo top in overall
polnta.
Nutue had downed Laver
for the men's slnilel final on
Thunday.
Mrs. Clwley !oat the
w&lt;imen'slinlllel title to Ouia
BEREA, Ohio (UPI) Wuhin8t4JII, on the other "
Evert, &amp;-1, &amp;-1,in a match that Cleveland coach Forrest hand, has lll'ee ou!Jtandlng
luted leu Ulan an hour·
G-• who Uled a threeoman recelvera, Cbarley Taylor,
"I wu .._·ten .........,..
.,.. ,_.., """ nilh with elira defensive Roy Jeffersoo and' Jerry
Cawfey aald. "I slarted ~ becks auccutlfu))y ag11nlt Smith. Redlkina' quarbad. I wouldn't have mlnded Denver in pua1ng lllluatbll terback BIDy Kilmer already
ao mud! If I had given ber a Jut -~~. 11 spectec1 to baa thtown eigbl toucl\down
·good pme,l'
refiDe that clef- further PIIBtlin the flrllllve games, "'
She wu never any iul when hill 8I'QWlll meet lhe agalnlt only 10 Wring aU of
competilloo 1.- Mill Evert, Wuhin8t4JII Redlldnl &amp;In· Jut HUOn.
who'DGtdled ber 1ttlutnltlbt da
Larry · Brown
of
win and her 9th match oo a
&amp;ve~anc~, 04, wcned on Wuhlng!Qn Ia recovering
cla~la~Evert combined pan defense Friday . in from knee lllll'gery and lhe
windlnc dOIPD preparallana Redlldnt! IJI'OUIICI game has
beRI.Iae ~ llbota with lor Ill alsth Naticilal FootbaU not been as aolld as llluallhla
cloee-in net llbotl to com~ league ~~. The Biowna
pletely dev11tate Mrs. rank 131h in pus clelenle 11811011·
Wuhlngton Ia 3-2 alll a
Cawley' who won ooly the " 111101111 American Focithall (laJile behind Dal!aa In the
third game of the flrlllll.
,_.___
AFC Eastern Dlvlalon.
"Evonne had an off day," ""'u"'"'""' lelllll.
Mill Evert aald. "She didn't ,__ _ _ _ _ __.._ _ _ _ _...,._ __
e.

Shanklin lost

Laver nets
tenm·s wm·.

Browns out to
stop .drought

u-. ...,.,

for the honor iollowed by thought another Baltimore
Frank Robinson of the Oriole "Garrison Flnlah"
Cleveland Indians and Alvin would deny them the divllllon
Dark of the Oakland A's, who tiUe lor the second straight
had two votes each, and Earl seaar\n. The Orlolee WCIII 28 of
Weaver of the Baltimore their last 34 games in 1174, II! want Ill plaf. She
Orioles and Whitey Herzog of Johnson's first ' year as lrted • "" lbotll that lalled
the Kansas City Royals with manager of the Red Sox, to and appeared to beoome frul.
'one ·vote apiece.
win lhe division title.
lrated."
·
It was a special year of ·
triumph
for
Johnson
lnasmucb as the Red Sox held
on In !he final weeks of the
season when many experts

r---'---"'-----:--------,

•

· ALLIANCE, Ohio (UP!) Wittenberg tool! advantage of
two flrat quarter Mount
UaioD m••ht Saturday for
a 17·10 victCI')' over the
IIUien In a batUe of unbeaten ONo Conlennce Blue
lllvlalaa teams. · ·
The'ncen,now7.0overall
and s.o in the dlvlalon race
a.t 1 23-yard field 1011 by
BUb JAvy 1o11ow1n1 a fumble
r~C~M~y • .._ MGUnt six
11fd11De and lllOitleiU later
tura1C1 1 blOcked pual on the
Raider three Into. one-yard
touchdown run by Roy
Wilt•.
'The Tigers' otltft' touch.I

SEE OOR BIG DISPLAY OF '

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Tigers .on top after victory
down, which gave them a 17.0
lead in the second quarter,
came 011 a two-yard run
Brian Alcbenbren ·
following a lhort Mount
Union pmt.
Mount cut the margin to 11·
Slater In the 118Cond quarter
on a 21-yard field goal by Bob
Russell and scored Its only
TO of the day on an eightyerd run by Gary FI'OIIt in tbe
final quarter.
Wittenberg picked up tn
yarda on the day, 92 COilling
on the sroood, willie Mount
Union had 219 yardJ total
olfenae wiih 158 of It on the

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.
JACKSON- Playing without
Waverly dropped to 1·7
1
he servtces of All-State overall and o-5 inside the
Hal~ack canclidate David P. SEOAL.
.
Davts the final three and oneIn the .first period, Jeff
half ·quarters, Jackson still Conroy scored from one yard
managed to blank visiting . out to 'give Jackson a 6-0 lead.
":'averly 2().{) here Friday . Steve Morrow scored from
mght
.
six yards out in the second
Davts,the area 's top scorer period to give Jackson a 12-0
and ·rusher 1 suffered a advantage.
stra10ed knee the third time
Conroy scored from 12
he earn~ lite ball and i!Bt out yards out in ,the third period
the ~emamder of the game. and added' the extra pOints to
~e Ptcked upl6 yards on the complete the game's scoring.
mght.
Jackson Is at Athens
Jackson upped ,its season Friday. Waverly will host
mark to 5·3. Inside the . Gallipolis.
·
~EOAL, Jackson kept its slim
By quarters :
title hopes alive with a 4-1 Jackson
6 6 8 &lt;1-20
record.
·
Waverly
0 0 0 &lt;1- 0
.~ .

Walton's woes continue
·
b
•
as new seas.on tu:JnS
e '"'

:!t

J::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:::,;:;:;:;:;:;:;::;::::;:;:;:::::::;:::::::::;:;:::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:::~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::: ;:;:;:;:;:::~:~:;:: .

·.Jack~on trips Waverly i~)Jempsey~ hospitalized:\\
I
.
w
Nb:W YORK .
later in the day.
20·0.? Da~~ -~jpr~
Former heavyweight boxing · Dempsey knocked out Jess

:::::::~:::::::::::::::;::::::~=:~::::::·:·:·:·::::::::::~::::::~::::: ::::::::::::::::~·:·:::·:·:·:~:·:·:·:~::::::;.;.;.;.;.;.::::;.;.;.;.;.;:;:;.;:;.;.;:;;;:~;;::~::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;i;.;;:~:::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::

(

\

champion Jack Dempsey was
reported. · "stable · and
satisfactory" Saturday at
New •York University
Medical Center.
Dempsey, 80, was rushed
by ambulance to the facillty
eariy Saturday from his
midtown apartment. ~
hospital. spokesman refused
to comment on a report that
Dempsey , the
famed
" Manassa Mauler," had
suffered a mild heart attack.
The spokesman said there
was no "official diagnosis.
we· don't want to say
anything that would lead to
premature conclusions." He
said, ' however, that a
statement would be Issued

Willard in 1919 to .become
. heavyweight champion. He
held the title until he lost a
decision to Gene Tunney in
1926.
For more than four
decades, Dempsey ran a
popular restaurant that bOre
his n'aine in the Broadway
Theater District.
Friends have said ·he has
been in poor health lrOIP time
to time since lh.e Inch .Corp.,
owner of · the building that
housed
Dempsey's
Restaurant, began eviction
proceedings in early 1974
over a lease dispute. Demp· ·sey lost the legal battle a year
ago.

Big Blacks up.set.4th

Magnolia

@THO~
. By JACK ROGERS
PT. PLEASANT - It was
Parents' Night at Sanders
Memorial Stadium Friday
night and the ¥oms and Pops
had a ringside seat to qne of
the toughest and most important victories perpetrated
by the Poln't Pleasant Big
Blacks this season.
An overflow crowd yelled
Itself hoar!if ~~ Coach Steve
Safford's Big Jllaclls came
from behind In llje final
quarter' to hand 'SkipPer Fred
Taylor's battling Red Devils
their first losS of the
paign,l6-13. Ravenswood had
been rated No. 41n Class AAA
circles.
Fact is, the defeat was only
thesecondlnthelast23starts
for the Red Devils, and their
first regular ~ason loss since
midway of the 1973 campaign. PPHS had not beaten
them since 1970.
The Big Blacks winning
their sixth slralght, are now
7-and-2 on lhtl Y,ear. R&amp;vera:,
wood is &amp;.and-!. Not, many
folb knew it but a revised
rating ln Parkersburg this
week had Point Pleasant lied
for 9th in triple-A llallngs.
The Big Blacb buill an
early 9-0 lead, feU behind ~13·
In the third period, then. won
It In the fourth on a 31-yard
pass from Andy Wilson, with
Jim Tatterson making a
elimb-lhe-la«¥er grab in a
corner of the end zone.
Isarasak Patumanon, the
sucker kicker from the former country of Bangkok,
drilled a 26-yard field goal
and a conversion placement
to help the wlnnlng cause.
Andy Wilson &lt;lid a Pete
ROle dive from the one for the
first PPHS touchdown.
Again, It was Blll Rardin,
hard-aocldng halfback, who
led both teams In ruahlng
wllh 88 Yarda net In 22
carries. He alao made a key
fUillble recovery in the fourth
quarter after Terry Krebs
knocked the ~?all loose from
Gary Blair following _» 53yard pasa-run from QB Ma~k
. Holley.
Truth is, Ravenswood had
most of the stat~Ucs but
suffered from five key turn-.
overs. They led in first
downs and in yards from
scrimmage mainly because
of Holley's' eight pa&amp;a completions for 169 yards. End
Gary Blair grabbed five of
them f9r a total of '124.
On tile tag end of a pretty
pass from Holley to Blair,
then 1 lateral, J~hn Morgan
scored the !irsl Rfd Devil m.
'l'he pljly cOvered 21 yards.
HB Greg Keffer got the
second scorewh!ln he boiled 9
yards to cap a 91 yard ihlrd
quarter dl-lve. Jim Thompson
booted an extra point.

Chris Swann and Steve andhisslxlhofthecampaign. Durst, Ron
Burdette,.
Bateman made fourth
Patumanom kicked true Bellamy and company, was
quarter Interceptions to and it was 1!1-13, with 9:35 sUII lierce at times, but faltered
thwart the rallying Ravens· to go.
at others. .Else Ravenswood
wood. 11 was Swann's fifth
Swan~ made a pass in- would n,ol have put together
steal of the year and terceplion but Ravenswood's 305 yards net from scrimBateman's seventh . The Greg J,llalr got il ~ighl back 111age. But we'll let the
locals now have 23 In- with a sll!ailn the end zone. coaches view the game films
terceplions for t11e season.
Holley faded back to pass, and point out the good
Ron Durst made his sixth found Blair streaking, hit him features and the mistakes.
fumble recovery following a on the dead run aqd Blair
Now comes the season
punt in the first quarter, and raced for 58 to the Black 22 finale Friday against the
Rardin got the other.
where Terry Krebs creamed , oncemightyParkersburgBig
Andy Wilson, who likes to hlm.Blainwashurt,fumbled, Reds.
scramble with llje ball, ~et~ and Rardin fell on•il. Then the 1
STATISTICS
77 yards In 14 IICI'anibles, Big Blacks drove 54 yards to •Dept.
R PP
including a 38 yard dash. the RavenswoOct 9 where they lsiDowns
16 10
Rocky Goodnite belted for 33 were held.
Net Yds. Ruah
136 194
in 7 bells.
With
only
seconds ·Passes
8-17 3-,;
Greg Keller ripped off 66 remaining, Holley hit Blair Intercepted by
I 2
for the losers, In 12 rips: with a 25 yard strike. He cut Yds. Passing
169 61
Morgan, scoring ~ , 70th loose anottt.er long on~ and SqimmageYds.
305 255
.points of the season, netted Bateman·steppedlnfrontolll R~nYdge.
43 42
only 17. Jei!Stalanov plunged to end the game on the 41.
Fumbles
3 3
lor 30 net and Bob Searls had · The Big Black de- Fumbles lost
3 0
29
fense
led by Scott Punta, Yds. Ave.
3-36 5-37
The Big Blacb drove 60 Burri~, Charlie Grimes, Penalties, Yds.
107 45
yards in 11 plays to open the Mike Legg, Krebs, Ron Qffenalve Plays
53 60
game,wlth Wilson.diving for
1
the TD from 01¥! · yard, out
over the 1ett side. Rardin
carrle4 fOI' 46 of 11t01e yarda
and Timbo Roberta grabbed
14yardpasa. With 7:14still on
the clock PPHS led 6-0 when
Patumanom's placement
missed to the right.
The Red Devlla made the
first costly fwnble thereafter.
Charles Perry pWited 33 w
midfield and Bellamy
separated ball and receiver.
Durst hugged the oval to his
bosom.
Early in the second
quarter, the Blacks moved w
the Ravenswood I, with
Rardin's 26-yard dash the big
gainer. But the Devils stiffened. Patwnanom came on
for a kick frqm the 16 (26
overall), wlljl Mike Burgess
holding. II was perfect and
the locals led 9-0;
.
But the aecond period found
Ravenswood controWng the
ball for 21 playa. One drive
covered~ yards to the local6
before a disputed call on a
lateral gaye the bali!Q PPHS.
Perry got of! a '52-yard punt
to the Devlla 21 and they went
73 yarda in three plays to
score. Holley nailed Stafanov
with a 37 yard lhot and a
penally moved the ball (()
the local 21. Holley then
passed fOI' ·u to Blair who .
lateraled off to Morgan
tratllng and John w111t.ln with
ooly 0:20 ~tin the half.1!11e
pass for conversloo failed.
It wa• H, PPHS, •t halflime, but the Ravtlllwoods
were not about to give up.
Mike Lee&amp; ~overed a
Devil twnble in the third
period. ShOI't &gt;-ardage by both
teams and three punts ensued, Finally, Ravt,nawood
found itself on thelr own 9,
time of the essence. They
drove 91 yards. A II yard·
gallop by Keffer; a 13-yd.
pass w. Blair; then pasa Interference on PfHS to tile
' WvEGAI.Nev. (uPl)- 14. Keffer bolted lor 3
BIIBe Jean ~ and Matty "then 2, then apllntertd ' pie
last 9 through the left aide to
ru- will team againlt score.
Thompson llltked and
Olris Ever1t pnd Jbnmy
Ravenswood
wu on top, 11-13,
Olnnll's In i fl50,000 mb:ed .
doubl• match at Caillarl with 0:22 on the-clock.
So the Blaclla came back
rawce Dec. 8, It wu an·
storming
In the fourth period.
,no!llced Friday.
Thla
drive
all up If/ ytd'ds,
The winning team 1dll set
with
Wllaon
breakinll 100M
flOO,OOO and the loalns doo
for 38, then finding Rocky
fOG,OOO.
CIIIBI'I P1llce ann!lallt Roach with a 16 J'ard llll'ial to
llageathe $11G,II08 Alan Kina the Devil 31, Frora tt.IIOlnt
'j'ennl.l Clalllc and hal put oo And~ wound ~ lll1d Ired lnln
two bill cballenge ma~i­ the end zone. Ta\IC'rt!CJII n1ade
Ccjnnll'l va. Rod Laver and • like a pole vauliPr ijnd hawed
Connora vs. John Newcombe. it In (ur thia filth TO off a pass
•

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RT. 2 BYPASS, POINT
I

.,

�•
,.
•'

25 - The Sunday Times. Sentinel, Sunday, Olt. 26,197S

24 - The Sunday Times -S.ntinel, Sunday, Oct . 26, 1975

Rozelle's decision ·booed by Pirates romp
I\ Tigers win over Athens, 14-13. .\
Miami coach Don Shula
·

IRONTON - Rick Howard
crashed over from J1 yards
out wilh 6:21 remaining in the
game to give Coach Bob
Lutz's Fighting Tigers a
thrilling 14-13 Southeastern
Ohio League victOry over
visiting Athens here Friday
night.
·
It was the league leaders'
30th consecuti~e SEOAL
:r.tctory over a five-year span .
: Ironton, now 1·1 overall,
J&gt;ped llli 1975 conference
.rrk. to 5.0 with only Meigs
ttnd LOgan remaining on this
~ar's schedule. ·
.: Athens .dropped to 3-5

j

overall and 2-3 io:side the
Athen&amp; dominated the
conference.
statistics·. r~o •king up 1:1 first
Athen•' Arnie Chonko downs to Iru.,lon's eight,
opened the game's scoring by rushing lor 121 yards to
blasting over from the one in Ironton's 151 and pru;.&lt;ing for
the second period. Tom 61 oo three of five attempts to
Lavery kicked the extra Ironton's 31 on one of one,
point.
. ..
giving AHS 21l2total•yards to
Ironton came right bllck to Jron!Qn's 182.
take ar\ 8-7 lead. Jeff
Ed Pennell had 59 yards in
Kriebel's one-yard plunge. J7trips and Neil mrberlck ~.1
Mike Brown ran the extra yards in 12 carries for
points.
Athens. Kriebel had 87 yards
Athens grabbed .a 13-Siead in 22 trips for Ironton.
on the first play of the final
Friday ,Ironton is at Meigs.
·period on a 47-yard pass from Athens will host Jackson.
t:honko to Scott Lawrence. · By quarters :
Then came Howard's
Ironton
0 8 li i--14
~ame-winnlng score.
,Athens
0 7 0 6-13

By KEN ROSENBERG
UPI Sporl!l Writer
.
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
unemployed players from thf
defunct World Football
League were not the only
people unhappy Friday when
Pete RozeUe ruled the NFL
could not sign them.
The NFL commissioner's
ruling also drew criticism
from within his own league,
particularly from Coach Don
Shula, whose Miami Dolphins
own the NFL rights to the
WFL's big-name trio.

Wahama victimized in
·27-8 loss to Ripley
~IPLEY -

In a game
marred by turnovers and
penaltle.t here .Friday night,
the Wahama White Falcons
feU to Ripley ~ iri the lat.
ter's homecoming game.
The Vikings struck lor
three long touchdowN on
runa of 33, a yards and an at
yard pass Interception return
enroute to their fourth victory
of the year. The win lor
Ripley did not come that
*~('a·:~

The Poet's
. Corner
- "THE '7S REDS
The Cincinnati Reds of "75"
Were very strong and much
alive
,.
They won "The Weal" the 7th
of September
A day we all wlll long
remember.
And they they walled around
to see
Juat who It wis going to be
That they would play in the
championship games
To win was their only aim.

They beat the Pirates In three
straight
And then for Bos!Qn they did
walt
In the first game everything
went wrong
But In the second they came
.bacll slrong.
The third game ended six to
five
The Reda big bats finally
came alive.
Game nwnber lour didn't go
just right ·
So they'll have to "go get
'em" again tonight.
By the score six to two the
filth game they won
Now they inust win it aU In
."Qld Boston."
After three days of rain
Then came the pain
The game ended seven to six
When in the 12th there came a
home run off the bat .of
Ca~llon Flak.
It was abnast like "Heaven"
In game nwnber seven
And when they made that last
out
There was really no doubt
That the Reds were the be!lt
And the World Champs at
last. ·
I've promo!~ "The Reda" all
aeason long
And just ha&lt;!; to pay my
respects
With this UIUe poem
To the 1975 World Champions
Long may you roam.
Louise Gilmore, Pomeroy
October 1975,

Reds-Houston

Sltula obviouSly naa neen
c;ounling on . getting l.arry
C:&gt;ilnka back this season, and
maybe Paul Warfield, too.
Now he gets nobody.
"111 ~ way it reads-the
Rozelle statemen1.- it was
predominantly a ruling
· against the Miami Dolphins,"
said Shula. "It also involved,
maybe, Calvin Hill aod Ted
Kwallck."
.
Csonka, Warfield aitd ~bn
Klick played out their option
wilh Miami last season and
joined the Memphlll South.
men of the WFL.
Kwallck, an All-Pro tight
end for San Francisco, a
team that sorely misses his
receiving talentB, jumped w
the Philadelphia Bell, and
had been negotiating to rejoin
the 49ers· since the WFL's
collapse on Wednesday. Hill,
the Dallas Cowboys' running
back, Is out for tbe year
anyway with a broken leg
sustained early in the WFL
season.

easy.lt wu nol decided until opportunity early In the final yard line, via three comthe final two minutes.
quarter when Brei Holbrook pletions and a 15 yard penally
Although the · score · in- recovered 41 fumbled punt at but that was as far as they got
4lca.tea a runaway by Ripley the Viking 19 yard line. ·A because on the next play
this was not Ute caae. The five-yard delay of game Tracey Sayre Intercepted a
game wu atiU In doubt unW penalty was then assessed the Goldsberry pass and raced 89
1:221eft In the fourth quarter White Falcons before Golds- yards down the right sideline
when a Mike Goldaberry pus berry found Rick Dye over for a Ripley score. Once
again Gossett split the , By United Preaa ID·
was intercepted at lhe Ripley the middle. Two men hit Dye
1
• be in .or
,
II yard U~e and returned 89 causing a fumble which was uprights
, . giving the.Viklngs a ternaBilltlooaW
a1tonmay
27
-uWtn,
·
.v
yards for the game's final recovered by the Vikings.
Scott Kebler was the anotber rough season..
touchdqwn.
Ripley. then drove 99 yards
dina ground gainer for
Walton suffered Injury
Wahama got off to a good In eight plays with ·Winters 1ea •
d . upon mjury last year, made
25 h yar s . 10 ex trapro blems for h'unseIf by
.start following the opening going the final 43 for the third Wahama with
.
klckoU when a Ripley fumble Viking touchdown of the seven cames, In t e pass10g airin his lilies without
waa recovered by Marty night. Gossett's boot was department Mike Goldsberry muc· hg dl ppolomacy a nd
.
Holbrook lithe VIking forty- good making the score 20-0 hit nine of 17 for 92 yards and genera
11 y · rna de hi mself
k
k
b
nine yard · U~. The White juat 6:25left to play.
Kevin Hona er '·. ac ~p disliked b teammates and
yIa rs as well as
Falcons moved the ball down
Wahama received the quarterback came 10 and dtd
a
floe
job
completing
three
of
op~
P
ye
IQ the 30 yard llne but Ripley ensuing kick-off but could go
making an effort
look over on doWIII.
nowhere and were forced IQ fivP for 28 yards. Tim Sayre, ~J
After an exchange of punts punt. Once again ll)e punt Scott Roush a?d Rick Dye to ch~ge his image this year.
Ripley began a drive· that · was fumbled with Scott w~re the leadmg receiVers He added bulk to his body and
produced the finltacore of the Roush recovering for wtth ~· 35 and 33 yards has been showing more
game. It only took the Wahama on the Ripley 29. respecltv.ely · .
aggressiveness on the court.
Defenstveiy t.l was Scott · Walton was involved in
Vikings, thirteen playa to Goldsberry ihen promptly hit
cover 70 yards with Rod Roush lor six yards IQ the 23. Kebler once agam leading the several minor scrapes wtlh
Winters scampering 33 yards On second down Tim Sayre charges wtth eleven tackles. opposition centers this
ln!Q the end zone for six look a Goldaberry pass In the . He was followed by Scott summer most notably
polnla. Bruce Gouelt spllt end zone lor Wahama's first Roush, Rick D~e and _Joe . Kareen Abdul-Jabbar, who
Shepard with etght aptece SWWlg a fierce ·eltiow at ihe
the uprights lor the PAT to score.
whtle
Brei Holbrook a~d overzealous redhead.
·
give Ripley a 7.0 lead.
. Goldsberry took to the air
10
Friday night In Portland's
The Vlldnga upped their again on the pat conversion G~gg _ Ble5l!10g chipped
.
season ·opener, 'the 8-foot·ll
lead to 13-0 juat before In- this time to- Roush good for wtth s1x each,
STATISTICS
Walton got into a third period
termlsslon when they the two points bringing the
covered 66 yards in eight score to 20-8 with 4:09 left.
W R brawl with &amp;-9, 23().pcllmd
plays with Tracy Sayre going
Wahama tried an onsides First Downs
~ 21776 Seattle forward John
Yards
Rushing
the final three yards. kick on the ensuing kick and
I
Hwruner In a game even·
G01111elt's attempt lor the for the fifth lime in the game Yards passing
120 101' tually won 1(M;.97 by tbe
I 37 377 Sonics.
conversion failed and so came up with the loose Total Yards
12
Passing
Ripley took a lS.O lead ln!Q foolball. This lime it was
-24 7•11
Hwruner, apparenUy boththe dreaslng room at the hall. Rick Stafford clutching the Fumbles Lost
!-I
1H&gt; ered by Walton's elbowing,
6-40 9-95 landed the first In a serlea of
Wahama managed to pigskin giving Wahama a Penalties Yds
Interceptions
contain the Ripley eleven first down at mid-field.
. 2
I blows as the two men traded
7•34 ·6 2•30·5 several shots before the~
throughout the third period
The White Falcons moved Puntsavg .
and got an excellent scoring the ball down IQ U1e eighteen Offensive plays · 59 55 were separated by other

When the WFI. Otlcago
Wind folded earUer In lhe
season and John Gllllam's
attorney's threatened to sue
the NFL on his behalf,
Rozelle approved his return
IQ tbe Mimesota Vlkingll and
estabUshed nexi Tuesday u
the 1aat day a ·NFL team
could sign a WFL player.
"I'm not really surprlaed
·by the ruling," Shula !IBid .
"In talldng IQ (play'er agent
Ed) Keating, Csonka and
Warfield this morning, they
all exp-essed concern about
their conlractual obligation
to Memphlll. lt'supto them to
clear . themselves of their
conttactual obUgatlona and
then ·we can talk to lhem."
AJthotigb the WFL folded
Wednesday, attorneys representing Mempbls owner joJm
Basae~t-who has the former
Dolphins under contract threatened tile NFL in a
telegram wilh an anti-trust
suit if It alloWed Ita teams·to
sign any WFL players.

«

:;:;

(UP! I.

over ·Hannan

Colonels still need ·Gilmore
Amerlcall

Bukelb1ll
Alloda- tlcll Rollllllap
By BOB WBSI'ON
Ulllted Prell lmruticllal
Artis GilmOI'e Is still the
strength of the Kentucily
Colonels but the defendlnc
ABA ch1mplona will be
relying on depth lhla year in
their bid to repeat.
Bird Averitt let the tone
whell be came~ the bench to
replace Injured Ted Mca.in
IDd ICOI't 18 pointl to help the
Kentuclly Colonei8 beat the
San Antonio ~ IOMf in
lhe ABA a~aon opener
Frldly nilbt.
Avtrllt wu aecond ooly to
Glhoore in acoring lor the
Colonels. The "Ill&amp; A" racked
~ 211 polnta and 21 reboundl
IQ lop everyoae In both
departments.
McClain hobbled out
midway lhrolllb the second
91arter with I tspnlned right
anllle.
The ~ were led by
lArry Kenon with 18 polnta,
Georse GerYln with II and
Silas with 17. 'But both Gervla .
and Sllu"were way off in
their lhootq, acmblrUng for
only 15 baalt:eta· in ~ at·

lempfl.

EllewherelntheABA,New
York whipped st. lAlula 109M, Denver belt San Diego
aDDOUDce SW8p 1-.111 IDd Indiana downed
Virginia 111-101.
CINCINNATI (UPIJ Nell HI, BplriiiM
Rlghthanded pitcher Joaquin
JuiiUI ErvlnC ~ 27
Andujar was traded by the polntl u New York -Ita
ClnclnnaU Reds Saturday to 12th retwar pme
the Houston Aslras In ex· wllhoutaloalap!Nt~
change fll' two players to be year St. IAiala, wi*b 11111111111
named at a later date.
the Nets with 1 llv;.clllli ~
Andujar, 22, of the vlct«y In Jut ygr'1 11ra1
Dominican Republl", hu round playol.la. ErviDI
plfehed fOI' the Ra' 'l'lne I!.'OI'ed 21 polnta Ia tbl llral
Rlvet'll F.nn Oub ln the belf when the Nets opened a
EuternlAtlcaelctrliiJIIII'I. u.point IRd.
He aCCWIIulaled 1 4--1 record NIIQIII Ill, llallllll
with an earned run average
Ralph lllmP""' bit lor 10
o( 4.06.
polnta and rookie Dave

ThmiJ*MI added 28 In his Salls center Caldwell Jones scored ;!II points In the seconcl
lint regular- pro game 21~ and Issei and ThompSon half as the Pacers twice built
u Denver downed San Diego. led Nugget rebounders with up leads of as much as 16

points. Gerald Govan scored
Pat McFarland had 29 points nine eacb.
Pacen
112,
Squires
111
18 points and grabbed 22
fll' lhe Salla wblle another
Billy
Knight
scored
36
rebounds lor VIrginia wb11e
promising rookie, Mark
points
and
grabbed
17
.
JanVanBredaKolffhltforl8
Olberding, had 21. Nugget
center Dan Issei oullcored rebounds for Indiana, whlcb points.
led most of the game. Knight
•

AL Manager of Year honor
goes to Boston's ]f!hnson
NEW YORK (UPI) DarreU Joll11110n, the quiet,
"Grt!8t Stone Facie" of the
lloltltn Red Sox, Is the UPI's
American League manager
of the year.
The 41-year old Joll111011,
who led the Red Sox to their
first American League
pemant Iince 1887, was voted
the award Friday in balloting
by 20 UPI baseball
correapondents around the
country.
Johnson received 14 votes

VINTON - ·Led by juniof 1:38leftinthequarter. Apass
quarterbllck M~rk Theiss, for lhe conversion was Inthe North Gallia Pirates complete.
rolled IQ their sixth vic wry in · With ll:S3left In ihpecond ·
eight starla this fall here period, Theiss' stunned ihe
Friday night winning 2U Hannan defense wlih a 41
over Hannan, W.Va. in a non- yard romp up the. middle.
league encounter.
Sophomore Mike Casey ran
Friday night, North Gallia the"converslon.
travels to Eastern for a game· ·In the third canto, Theiss'
·which could decide the final four-yard run and conversion
outcolne of this year's SVAC run made the scOI'e 20.0 North
race.
Gallia. The Pirates of Coach
A Pirate victory would give Jofin Blake got !heir final sixNG undisputed second place. pointer with 2:32 left on the
and Kyger Creek th.e· clock on a SO yard aerial from
championship. A I~ would · Theis$ w l,ogan. Hannan
give Eastern a sluire of the averted a shutout when Blake
title. The Pirates would still fell on a blocked punt in the
finish second. ·
eod zone.
Friday night, Theiss rushed
Offensively, Logan had
for 104 yards In eight tries, four receptions for 135 yarda.
passed for 174 . yards and.' Mike Casey had II~ yards
scored two touchdowns.
rushing 'ln 17 attemp'll, Greg
North Gallia got things Hill led Hannan with 54 yards
going in the first quarter as on the ground.
Theiss hit tailback Fred
STATISTICS
Logan on a 41 yard bomb with Departmeal
H NG .
First downs
9 15 •
Yardsruahlng
6'1, 291
Yardspasslng
89 174 .
Tot. Yardage
156 465
Fumbles
3
2
Fumbles lost
I
2
Interceptions
'0
I
Penalties
~ 1().100
form.
By Quarters:
officials and players.
New
Orleans,
last year's · Hannan, W.Va. 0 0 0 6- 6
Both players were ejected,
6 8 8 6-28
prompting Blazer Coach expansion lrBRFhiae and the _l'jorlh Gallia
worst
team
in
th~
leaBUe,
Lenny Wilkins to play the
game under omclal protest. evened Its record at 1-1 with a
The Incident took place with 114-108 victory over Detroit.
Doug CoiUns (26 points)
CHICAGO (UP!) - The
2:21left In the third quarter.
and rookie Uoyd Free, with a Chicago Bears announced
and Seatue leading 74-73.
Httle belp from newcomer today wide receiver Ron
There are strong signs of a
George
McGinnis, pace~ Shanlllln will undergo ,knee
changing of the gUard In the
PbUadelphla,
\he worst team surgery Tuesday and be lost
NBA this 'seaaon as teams
In
league
history
a lew years for the season.
weak in the recent past
ago,
to
a
11o.t03
triumph
over
Shanklin came wthe Bean
cliallenge the traditionally
strong but the Boston Celtica the aucago Bulls, 1aat year's · from the Pittaburgh Steelers
are stepping right along as Midwest Divilldn champloo. this year and was Injured
But Houston, lmocked out after catching a pass In an
they usually do- in winning
of the playoffs by Boston last exhibition game with the
seuon, never had a chance Miami Dolphlna.
against the ag~ but .still ·· Shanklin
had
been
powerful Ce!Uca. ·
scheduled for surgery Oct. 13
John Havlicek was as but II was then decided he ''"
threatening u ev~ with :II could rehabilitate himself '.
jlolnta, JoJo White hit 21 and and play ln the later stages of
the CeiUca blew the game the season. Doclin now have
HILTON HEAD IS~D, open In !he aecond period decided differenUy.
S.C. (UPIJ - Rod Laver Is enroute to a 11J8.M romp.
. To replace Shanklin, the
eii,UOOrldllrtoday lhankllll
Charlie Scott, acquired Bears signed rooldi! ' aalety
lellow AIII!J'I]lan temll JI'O ' from Phoenix for · Paul Earl oOuthltt from Iowa, a
Evonne Gooiag0118 Clwley · Westpbalin a stunmer trade seventh rOund draft pick who
Laver wu tied with Die to replace Don (baney in the was dropped near the end of· ,
Nutase of Romania fll' the backcourt, especially en- preseason play. He is ex·
Individual crown at the Wll'ld joyed hill first reguial: . peeled ·w see service on :
fll)'ltational TenJIIa Cllulc game in a Ce!Uc · unlfonn, special teams during Monday ~·:·
going Into the final doubles lhough he ICOI'ed only 18 night's game with lhe Min·
matcb Friday. He teamed points
·
nesota Vikings
'
"
wilh Mn. ·CiwleJ to defeat
'
·
'
Nastase · and Roaemary
Ca11818ln straight seta, 6-3, &amp;3, for the mbed double~ title
and flnilh oo top in overall
polnta.
Nutue had downed Laver
for the men's slnilel final on
Thunday.
Mrs. Clwley !oat the
w&lt;imen'slinlllel title to Ouia
BEREA, Ohio (UPI) Wuhin8t4JII, on the other "
Evert, &amp;-1, &amp;-1,in a match that Cleveland coach Forrest hand, has lll'ee ou!Jtandlng
luted leu Ulan an hour·
G-• who Uled a threeoman recelvera, Cbarley Taylor,
"I wu .._·ten .........,..
.,.. ,_.., """ nilh with elira defensive Roy Jeffersoo and' Jerry
Cawfey aald. "I slarted ~ becks auccutlfu))y ag11nlt Smith. Redlkina' quarbad. I wouldn't have mlnded Denver in pua1ng lllluatbll terback BIDy Kilmer already
ao mud! If I had given ber a Jut -~~. 11 spectec1 to baa thtown eigbl toucl\down
·good pme,l'
refiDe that clef- further PIIBtlin the flrllllve games, "'
She wu never any iul when hill 8I'QWlll meet lhe agalnlt only 10 Wring aU of
competilloo 1.- Mill Evert, Wuhin8t4JII Redlldnl &amp;In· Jut HUOn.
who'DGtdled ber 1ttlutnltlbt da
Larry · Brown
of
win and her 9th match oo a
&amp;ve~anc~, 04, wcned on Wuhlng!Qn Ia recovering
cla~la~Evert combined pan defense Friday . in from knee lllll'gery and lhe
windlnc dOIPD preparallana Redlldnt! IJI'OUIICI game has
beRI.Iae ~ llbota with lor Ill alsth Naticilal FootbaU not been as aolld as llluallhla
cloee-in net llbotl to com~ league ~~. The Biowna
pletely dev11tate Mrs. rank 131h in pus clelenle 11811011·
Wuhlngton Ia 3-2 alll a
Cawley' who won ooly the " 111101111 American Focithall (laJile behind Dal!aa In the
third game of the flrlllll.
,_.___
AFC Eastern Dlvlalon.
"Evonne had an off day," ""'u"'"'""' lelllll.
Mill Evert aald. "She didn't ,__ _ _ _ _ __.._ _ _ _ _...,._ __
e.

Shanklin lost

Laver nets
tenm·s wm·.

Browns out to
stop .drought

u-. ...,.,

for the honor iollowed by thought another Baltimore
Frank Robinson of the Oriole "Garrison Flnlah"
Cleveland Indians and Alvin would deny them the divllllon
Dark of the Oakland A's, who tiUe lor the second straight
had two votes each, and Earl seaar\n. The Orlolee WCIII 28 of
Weaver of the Baltimore their last 34 games in 1174, II! want Ill plaf. She
Orioles and Whitey Herzog of Johnson's first ' year as lrted • "" lbotll that lalled
the Kansas City Royals with manager of the Red Sox, to and appeared to beoome frul.
'one ·vote apiece.
win lhe division title.
lrated."
·
It was a special year of ·
triumph
for
Johnson
lnasmucb as the Red Sox held
on In !he final weeks of the
season when many experts

r---'---"'-----:--------,

•

· ALLIANCE, Ohio (UP!) Wittenberg tool! advantage of
two flrat quarter Mount
UaioD m••ht Saturday for
a 17·10 victCI')' over the
IIUien In a batUe of unbeaten ONo Conlennce Blue
lllvlalaa teams. · ·
The'ncen,now7.0overall
and s.o in the dlvlalon race
a.t 1 23-yard field 1011 by
BUb JAvy 1o11ow1n1 a fumble
r~C~M~y • .._ MGUnt six
11fd11De and lllOitleiU later
tura1C1 1 blOcked pual on the
Raider three Into. one-yard
touchdown run by Roy
Wilt•.
'The Tigers' otltft' touch.I

SEE OOR BIG DISPLAY OF '

MODULAR and
SECTIONAL HOMES
,eMMLffiE eaCONA
eREDMAN •WHITMAN

Tigers .on top after victory
down, which gave them a 17.0
lead in the second quarter,
came 011 a two-yard run
Brian Alcbenbren ·
following a lhort Mount
Union pmt.
Mount cut the margin to 11·
Slater In the 118Cond quarter
on a 21-yard field goal by Bob
Russell and scored Its only
TO of the day on an eightyerd run by Gary FI'OIIt in tbe
final quarter.
Wittenberg picked up tn
yarda on the day, 92 COilling
on the sroood, willie Mount
Union had 219 yardJ total
olfenae wiih 158 of It on the

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I

.
JACKSON- Playing without
Waverly dropped to 1·7
1
he servtces of All-State overall and o-5 inside the
Hal~ack canclidate David P. SEOAL.
.
Davts the final three and oneIn the .first period, Jeff
half ·quarters, Jackson still Conroy scored from one yard
managed to blank visiting . out to 'give Jackson a 6-0 lead.
":'averly 2().{) here Friday . Steve Morrow scored from
mght
.
six yards out in the second
Davts,the area 's top scorer period to give Jackson a 12-0
and ·rusher 1 suffered a advantage.
stra10ed knee the third time
Conroy scored from 12
he earn~ lite ball and i!Bt out yards out in ,the third period
the ~emamder of the game. and added' the extra pOints to
~e Ptcked upl6 yards on the complete the game's scoring.
mght.
Jackson Is at Athens
Jackson upped ,its season Friday. Waverly will host
mark to 5·3. Inside the . Gallipolis.
·
~EOAL, Jackson kept its slim
By quarters :
title hopes alive with a 4-1 Jackson
6 6 8 &lt;1-20
record.
·
Waverly
0 0 0 &lt;1- 0
.~ .

Walton's woes continue
·
b
•
as new seas.on tu:JnS
e '"'

:!t

J::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:::,;:;:;:;:;:;:;::;::::;:;:;:::::::;:::::::::;:;:::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:::~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::: ;:;:;:;:;:::~:~:;:: .

·.Jack~on trips Waverly i~)Jempsey~ hospitalized:\\
I
.
w
Nb:W YORK .
later in the day.
20·0.? Da~~ -~jpr~
Former heavyweight boxing · Dempsey knocked out Jess

:::::::~:::::::::::::::;::::::~=:~::::::·:·:·:·::::::::::~::::::~::::: ::::::::::::::::~·:·:::·:·:·:~:·:·:·:~::::::;.;.;.;.;.;.::::;.;.;.;.;.;:;:;.;:;.;.;:;;;:~;;::~::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;i;.;;:~:::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::

(

\

champion Jack Dempsey was
reported. · "stable · and
satisfactory" Saturday at
New •York University
Medical Center.
Dempsey, 80, was rushed
by ambulance to the facillty
eariy Saturday from his
midtown apartment. ~
hospital. spokesman refused
to comment on a report that
Dempsey , the
famed
" Manassa Mauler," had
suffered a mild heart attack.
The spokesman said there
was no "official diagnosis.
we· don't want to say
anything that would lead to
premature conclusions." He
said, ' however, that a
statement would be Issued

Willard in 1919 to .become
. heavyweight champion. He
held the title until he lost a
decision to Gene Tunney in
1926.
For more than four
decades, Dempsey ran a
popular restaurant that bOre
his n'aine in the Broadway
Theater District.
Friends have said ·he has
been in poor health lrOIP time
to time since lh.e Inch .Corp.,
owner of · the building that
housed
Dempsey's
Restaurant, began eviction
proceedings in early 1974
over a lease dispute. Demp· ·sey lost the legal battle a year
ago.

Big Blacks up.set.4th

Magnolia

@THO~
. By JACK ROGERS
PT. PLEASANT - It was
Parents' Night at Sanders
Memorial Stadium Friday
night and the ¥oms and Pops
had a ringside seat to qne of
the toughest and most important victories perpetrated
by the Poln't Pleasant Big
Blacks this season.
An overflow crowd yelled
Itself hoar!if ~~ Coach Steve
Safford's Big Jllaclls came
from behind In llje final
quarter' to hand 'SkipPer Fred
Taylor's battling Red Devils
their first losS of the
paign,l6-13. Ravenswood had
been rated No. 41n Class AAA
circles.
Fact is, the defeat was only
thesecondlnthelast23starts
for the Red Devils, and their
first regular ~ason loss since
midway of the 1973 campaign. PPHS had not beaten
them since 1970.
The Big Blacks winning
their sixth slralght, are now
7-and-2 on lhtl Y,ear. R&amp;vera:,
wood is &amp;.and-!. Not, many
folb knew it but a revised
rating ln Parkersburg this
week had Point Pleasant lied
for 9th in triple-A llallngs.
The Big Blacb buill an
early 9-0 lead, feU behind ~13·
In the third period, then. won
It In the fourth on a 31-yard
pass from Andy Wilson, with
Jim Tatterson making a
elimb-lhe-la«¥er grab in a
corner of the end zone.
Isarasak Patumanon, the
sucker kicker from the former country of Bangkok,
drilled a 26-yard field goal
and a conversion placement
to help the wlnnlng cause.
Andy Wilson &lt;lid a Pete
ROle dive from the one for the
first PPHS touchdown.
Again, It was Blll Rardin,
hard-aocldng halfback, who
led both teams In ruahlng
wllh 88 Yarda net In 22
carries. He alao made a key
fUillble recovery in the fourth
quarter after Terry Krebs
knocked the ~?all loose from
Gary Blair following _» 53yard pasa-run from QB Ma~k
. Holley.
Truth is, Ravenswood had
most of the stat~Ucs but
suffered from five key turn-.
overs. They led in first
downs and in yards from
scrimmage mainly because
of Holley's' eight pa&amp;a completions for 169 yards. End
Gary Blair grabbed five of
them f9r a total of '124.
On tile tag end of a pretty
pass from Holley to Blair,
then 1 lateral, J~hn Morgan
scored the !irsl Rfd Devil m.
'l'he pljly cOvered 21 yards.
HB Greg Keffer got the
second scorewh!ln he boiled 9
yards to cap a 91 yard ihlrd
quarter dl-lve. Jim Thompson
booted an extra point.

Chris Swann and Steve andhisslxlhofthecampaign. Durst, Ron
Burdette,.
Bateman made fourth
Patumanom kicked true Bellamy and company, was
quarter Interceptions to and it was 1!1-13, with 9:35 sUII lierce at times, but faltered
thwart the rallying Ravens· to go.
at others. .Else Ravenswood
wood. 11 was Swann's fifth
Swan~ made a pass in- would n,ol have put together
steal of the year and terceplion but Ravenswood's 305 yards net from scrimBateman's seventh . The Greg J,llalr got il ~ighl back 111age. But we'll let the
locals now have 23 In- with a sll!ailn the end zone. coaches view the game films
terceplions for t11e season.
Holley faded back to pass, and point out the good
Ron Durst made his sixth found Blair streaking, hit him features and the mistakes.
fumble recovery following a on the dead run aqd Blair
Now comes the season
punt in the first quarter, and raced for 58 to the Black 22 finale Friday against the
Rardin got the other.
where Terry Krebs creamed , oncemightyParkersburgBig
Andy Wilson, who likes to hlm.Blainwashurt,fumbled, Reds.
scramble with llje ball, ~et~ and Rardin fell on•il. Then the 1
STATISTICS
77 yards In 14 IICI'anibles, Big Blacks drove 54 yards to •Dept.
R PP
including a 38 yard dash. the RavenswoOct 9 where they lsiDowns
16 10
Rocky Goodnite belted for 33 were held.
Net Yds. Ruah
136 194
in 7 bells.
With
only
seconds ·Passes
8-17 3-,;
Greg Keller ripped off 66 remaining, Holley hit Blair Intercepted by
I 2
for the losers, In 12 rips: with a 25 yard strike. He cut Yds. Passing
169 61
Morgan, scoring ~ , 70th loose anottt.er long on~ and SqimmageYds.
305 255
.points of the season, netted Bateman·steppedlnfrontolll R~nYdge.
43 42
only 17. Jei!Stalanov plunged to end the game on the 41.
Fumbles
3 3
lor 30 net and Bob Searls had · The Big Black de- Fumbles lost
3 0
29
fense
led by Scott Punta, Yds. Ave.
3-36 5-37
The Big Blacb drove 60 Burri~, Charlie Grimes, Penalties, Yds.
107 45
yards in 11 plays to open the Mike Legg, Krebs, Ron Qffenalve Plays
53 60
game,wlth Wilson.diving for
1
the TD from 01¥! · yard, out
over the 1ett side. Rardin
carrle4 fOI' 46 of 11t01e yarda
and Timbo Roberta grabbed
14yardpasa. With 7:14still on
the clock PPHS led 6-0 when
Patumanom's placement
missed to the right.
The Red Devlla made the
first costly fwnble thereafter.
Charles Perry pWited 33 w
midfield and Bellamy
separated ball and receiver.
Durst hugged the oval to his
bosom.
Early in the second
quarter, the Blacks moved w
the Ravenswood I, with
Rardin's 26-yard dash the big
gainer. But the Devils stiffened. Patwnanom came on
for a kick frqm the 16 (26
overall), wlljl Mike Burgess
holding. II was perfect and
the locals led 9-0;
.
But the aecond period found
Ravenswood controWng the
ball for 21 playa. One drive
covered~ yards to the local6
before a disputed call on a
lateral gaye the bali!Q PPHS.
Perry got of! a '52-yard punt
to the Devlla 21 and they went
73 yarda in three plays to
score. Holley nailed Stafanov
with a 37 yard lhot and a
penally moved the ball (()
the local 21. Holley then
passed fOI' ·u to Blair who .
lateraled off to Morgan
tratllng and John w111t.ln with
ooly 0:20 ~tin the half.1!11e
pass for conversloo failed.
It wa• H, PPHS, •t halflime, but the Ravtlllwoods
were not about to give up.
Mike Lee&amp; ~overed a
Devil twnble in the third
period. ShOI't &gt;-ardage by both
teams and three punts ensued, Finally, Ravt,nawood
found itself on thelr own 9,
time of the essence. They
drove 91 yards. A II yard·
gallop by Keffer; a 13-yd.
pass w. Blair; then pasa Interference on PfHS to tile
' WvEGAI.Nev. (uPl)- 14. Keffer bolted lor 3
BIIBe Jean ~ and Matty "then 2, then apllntertd ' pie
last 9 through the left aide to
ru- will team againlt score.
Thompson llltked and
Olris Ever1t pnd Jbnmy
Ravenswood
wu on top, 11-13,
Olnnll's In i fl50,000 mb:ed .
doubl• match at Caillarl with 0:22 on the-clock.
So the Blaclla came back
rawce Dec. 8, It wu an·
storming
In the fourth period.
,no!llced Friday.
Thla
drive
all up If/ ytd'ds,
The winning team 1dll set
with
Wllaon
breakinll 100M
flOO,OOO and the loalns doo
for 38, then finding Rocky
fOG,OOO.
CIIIBI'I P1llce ann!lallt Roach with a 16 J'ard llll'ial to
llageathe $11G,II08 Alan Kina the Devil 31, Frora tt.IIOlnt
'j'ennl.l Clalllc and hal put oo And~ wound ~ lll1d Ired lnln
two bill cballenge ma~i­ the end zone. Ta\IC'rt!CJII n1ade
Ccjnnll'l va. Rod Laver and • like a pole vauliPr ijnd hawed
Connora vs. John Newcombe. it In (ur thia filth TO off a pass
•

cam-

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REGULAR
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497

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·ct.on. and disinleclt as it
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cle&lt;rl alrt Save on·fvoll

Two·. -. kit. COntains two
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·"MORE THAN A LUMBER Y

St.ore

Hour~

"LOTS MORE"

Mon., Tues .. Wed. 9 tv 6
p.m. Thun.. Frt .. Sat. 9 to
' p.m. Su_,.v 1 tv 7 p.m.

RT. 2 BYPASS, POINT
I

.,

�~::-:.11J~ ~IUldayTinws -Sent inlli, Sunday, OC't. 2ti, 1975

..

.

r;;;:,~;,~::;:;;;n.

Golden Rockets trim ·Marauders 19-10

lJCincy. expetience woltitli'.

W£-;j,LSTON
The
Wells ton (!o lden Rockets,
rwice coming from behind,
subdued
the
Meigs
Marauders 19-10 here Friday
night.
The Rocket attack, led by a
balanced running ga me,
seemed to pick up momen·
tum as the game progressed.
Tony Grey, sophOmore full;
back, rushed for 101 yards in·
18 carries. Following closely
was all-leaguer Randy
Peoples with 97 yards in 16
attempts.
.
The Marauders .were again
led by 6-1, 165 pound tailback
Terry Qualls, who ground out
67 yards in 20· ,carrie.s.
Quar.terback Jim Anderson
chipped in 34 yards an d
Danny Buff!ngton had 22.
Meigs took · the opening
kickoff and staying on the
ground, moved inside the
Rockel 10. On fourth down,
Duane Weber split the
uprights with a 27-yard field
goal with plenty to spare.
After an exchange of pun Is,
the quarter ended with Meigs
leading 3-0.
The second quarter
belonged to the Golden
Rockets. With Grey, Peoples
and senior Pete Ruper t
grinding out the yardage,
Wellston moved to the
Marauder 26. Quarterback
Richard Arthur, attempting
his £irst pass, fowld ·left end
.John Johnson in a crowd of
Marauder defenders .
Johnson broke to the inside
and was finally tackled as he
fell into the endzone at the
5: 01 mark of lhe second
quarter. Peoples added the
PAT and the Rockets took the
advantage 7-3.
The Marauders were
unable to move the ball and
Rick George lined up in punt
formation. Rocket Pete
Rupert broke through the
middle and blocked the kick,
Rupert fell on the .ball at the
Marauder 25.
The Rockets quickly moved
the ball to the Marauder 7.

By FRED McMANE
-mistakes," said shortstop
UPI Sports Writer
· .Rick Burle.son. "They beat us
NEW VORK (UP!) - In on fundamental baseball."
the final analysis, the CinWhen people talk about the
clnnatl Reds won the World 1975 World Series in years to
Series because they were the come, . however, they will
more experienced team and remember Isolated Incidents
perhaps better equipped and individuals more than
mentally to handle the strain final scores. That 's usually
prodUced·by one of the most the way it Is.
'
dramatic postseaSon classics . And this Series had plenty
L.ARRY HOWELL,
in history.
to talk about. Larry Barnett,
former athlete at North
It took seven games for the Ed Armbrister, Luis Tlant,
GalUa High School was the '
Reds to prove that they, were, Dwight Evans, Berrue Carbo,
winner of the II th week 100 _
as their manager Sparky Tony Perez, Joe Morgan and
pet. trophy given to
Anderson had maintained all Pete Rose. Those names took
members
of the Gallla ·
season, the "best darn team theirplaceon thehonorrollof
County Disciples. Howell is
in baseball," but in the e_nd great World Series moments.
they made , fewer mistakes
Barnett, an umpire, and a member of the Disciples'
than the ~ounger Boston R~ Armbrister, a Reds' utility offensive unit. He will also
Sox. That s what the game IS player, were involved in one be pla¥ing basketball for
,(Ill about .
of .the most controversial the Disciples' fuad raising
The Reda, who ended up Issues in World Series' team. The Dtselples have
Inning US games this history, and the argument an open elate this week but
aaon, could ealdly have over whether or not Arm- wtll attempt to keep Its
tolled OVI\' and died ilfter the lrister did Interfere with Fisk undefeated sireak going
\thrill-packed sixth game ln the lOth inning of the third Nov, 2 at Cheshire. The
which the Red Sox won in 12 game will be a subject of Gallla team wlll pla·y
lnninp on Carlton Fisk's discussions for years to Waahlngton County
beginning at 2 p.m. on the
me. But It w•s the Reds' come.
Illude liter that heart- ,. Barnett's claim that there Kyger Creek field. Gallla
llre¥1118 loss that perhaps was no Interference on the won the laat game between
ileiiCI'lbed best their winning play not Ol)ly cost the Red Sox the two squads, 13-12.
attitude.
.
the game, 7-8, but also led to a
!nlteatl of brooding over threat on his life.
the defeat, the Reds exThen there was Tlant, the
presled joy at having been a mustachioed Cuban rightparticipant 1n such a bander with the herky-jerky
memorable Series game. '!be delivery who blanked the
ottl exuberant, of all, was Reds, 6-0, in the Drat game
te ~, a gutsy com- then came back to stop them
tJietltor who has a distaste for agalri, 5-4, In the fourth game .. I
~efeat, but nevertheless
And there was Evans
i!~lled It "the gr~test. game whose glime-611vlng catch
I ve evtr played.
the nth inning of the sixth
ATLANTA (UP!) - Ctn·
·, It waa this mature game ranks as one of the
character of the club that finest In Series' play; Carbo, clnnatl quarterback Ken
~&amp;bled II to come from whose two pinchhlt homers Anderson wlll be out to make
~'!"hind repeatedly all season. equalled a Series record · and up for lotll ground Sunday
And this maturity shown Perez, who started off' in a when the unbeaten Bengals
lhrough best In the last game horrible slump but ended up visit the Atlanta Falcons.
Anderson, the leading
when they bounced back from hitting three clutch home
a 3-Gdeflclt lo win in the ninth run s.
passer In the AFC over the
,jnning, 4-3, on Joe Morgan's
It was Morgan and Rose, past four seasons, had an off
llOW famous ''bloop single ." the Reds' two scrappiest day last Sunday even though
The Red Sox, comprised players, who made the final the Bengals picked up their
oatly of players who were difference, however. Morgan, fifth straight win against the
participating In their Drst the favorite lor the National O&amp;kland Raiders.
Going into the game rated
World Series, wer~ mentally 'League's most valuable
'~Ptnt In that declldve seventh player award, got the whi: the No. 3 passer In the NFL,
1ame. They had played their ning hit in both the third and the 1974 NFL passing champ
10
s out the .night bl!fore final games while Rose led all completed only four of 19 Sl. Mary 21- Ottawa G landorf
7
'
their star catcher, Fisk , Series' perfonners in hits passes for 75 yards and bad Benchman
Logan 26 Wftynes itted as much when It with 10 and wound up as the four Intercepted.
fi eld 6 ·
That was a drastic change Bluffl on 19 Columbus Grove 6
as all over.
Series' most valuable player.
Miami East 28 Leh man Ca th
"I was drained," admitted
from his first lour games
7
Fisk, who struck out three
when Anderson connected on Minster 14 St . H enry 7
Coldwa ter 33 Brad ford 0
64 per cent of his passes for Marion Local 21 New Brem en
limes in the final game. "We
6
ill were and that's probably
an average of 241 yards per
Fi ndlay 7 E lyria o
trhy we coilllin't take .advangame with only ONE in- Parkway 41 Ansonia 6
•
1
Van .Bu r en 12 Hardi n Nor ge of the opportunltl~s we
sco~es terception.
th ern 8
d early In tl)e game."
• '
" The Bengals are 7 point Ce l ina 23 Kenton 6
The Red So• alao mu.st
.
·
favorites over the Falcons (2- M aple Heights 10 Eastlak e N
0
10 Ctie)
,
fead guUty to a failure to
F oH6~aH~EN~~8~fs
3).
Bay Village 23 Westlake 10
execute properly the basic
U nlted PrtU International
N . Oim ste d 35 Rocky River 12
... _~
talsofbaseba 1
ere Eosl 7 ere Eosl Tech 6
Orange 42 Au r ora 6
IIWIU&amp;men
1 that ere Sl. rgnall us 47 e re Lincoln
Chag r in Fal ls 7 K'enston 0
Ki rtland 14 cardi na l o
had gotten them to the World
wesr o
L1!1nCIIster 35 Marietta 30
· ferles. While they made crfr r ~todes 21 ere south 21 Zanesville 42 Columbus North Geneva 20 As ht abula Harbor
0
3
me spectacular plays Boree IS Garfie ld Heig hts 14 Olmsted F alls 8 Fairview 7 Amhe r st 21 Midview 20
· ed Euclid 17 Mentor 0
Clearvlew
l3 Ashtabu la St. Lorain
1 I th ey commttt
, fensvey,
Oclphls s•. John 's q Madison
Brooksid e 6
John 0
;x errors in the Series (the Defiance o
Co nn eaut 24 Pelnesvllle Bu cke ye 1.4 Fireland s o
Cle Bened ic tine 38 Cle St.
Rivers id e o
J'eds made just two ) and grr~~~~~ri:~ Jd ~~r,r;,~oio o
Joseph 35
South Am herst 14 Avon 13
M!veral times were unable to Wheelersburg 7 Ports Wesr 6 L ora in 1• L ora in Admira l Brun swick 22 Clove rl eaf B
Wickliffe 32 Canton L ehman 7
King 0
/nove runners along with
Wel lslon 19 Meigs 10
Adena 53 Zane Trace o
Oak Harbor 28 Woodmer e 16 N Ca n ton Hoover 10 G l enoak
6
!¥lOrlfice bunts •
W 8Shlngton C H 22 Pa ri S· Danbury. 19 Seneca East 6
McKinley
25
sandusky Perkin s 1 Huron 2 Ca nton·
t_ "We played the same kind
moulh 16
Steu benv ille 12
Bellevue 20 Ga llon 6
~ baseball all year long~..~s~~·~~·.J:.~~r: hrSI l4 Norwalk 33 Willard 1A
Canton Tim ken 22 Marling ton
5
good, SOJld fundamental Chi ll iCOThe 6 Grove CIIV 6 L i ma senior 13 Da y ton Massillon
17 warren H ar di ng
Dunbar 0
.__...__ 11
••
lliel
0
.......,...._ wten we get here Paris N o 26 Ports East 1&lt; Lima Ba th 22 Eli da 6
and we make all those Newa rk 9 Upper Mling lon 7 Shawnee 1A WPst ervllle North Louisville 35 Perry 16

Anderson

~

hopes to

u;

zmprove

E

t.

Friday'S
grzd

t

Then Peoples "'"' "Ail~h t
llcltind rhc line for a 2 )'"nl
loss. 1\r.thur threw 2 passes,
both falling incomplete. On
fourth down, Qualls broke
lhroueh from his defensive
right end positio n and
dropped Arthur for a five
yard !oss; the Marauders
held and the half ended with
Wellston leading 7-3.
Peoples returned th e
second half kickoff over 40
yards, but the Rockel• were
guilty.of clipping and the ball
was put in play at the
Wellston 15. Wellston was
forced to punt and senior
win gback Mike Ma gnotta
fielded Don Patton's punt on
the Marauder 45, streaked
across midfield, and returned
the ball38yards to the Rocket
17. Qualls And Buffington
picked up a first down at the
5. Two plays later Bullington
bulled his way over from the 2
and the Marauders regained
the lead 9-7. 'weber's perfect
placement upped the score to
10-7.
Wellston could not move
the ball and Patton punted to
the Marauder 25. On the first
play, the Rockets' Doug
Conger dove in Iron t of the
intended pass receiver and
' picked ·off Anderson's pass at
the 30. Four plays later,
Randy Peoples crashed over
from the 2 and Wellston
jumped back on top 13-10 at
2: 17 of the third quarter.
Peoples' point after kick was
wide to the left.
Paul Hollingsead's kickoff
squirted out of bounds and the
Marauders took over at their
own 40. Behind the running of
Qualls' and Bullington, Meigs
drove to the Wellston 36 when
· the quarter ended. Meigs
continued their march, aided
by a face mask penalty ort
Wellston, moving inside the
Rocket 10. Anderson 's fourth
down pass was batted away
in the endzone by Peoples.
The following series proved
to be the most important of
the game. On a third and one
from the Rockets 16,.

has on-top, up-

Harv ey

o

133

Qua l Is

Car . Yds .
20
67

A nderson
Mag no tta

Bu ffin g ton
Totals

WELLSTON

· Peopl es

3
10
9 22
40 I 33

16
10

Rupe r t

.

3d

B

97

28

-4

Totals

46

222

Pass Rece iving

MEIGS

No. Ytls TO

Qua ll s
Davenport

2 26
1 9

o

Joh nson

.1 26
1 6

0

WELLSTON

Peop l es

0

1.

By Quart ers:
Meigs

3 0 7 0- 10
We l lston
0 7 6 6- 19
Sc ori ng : IMJ D. Weber 27
yd . FG, 6:42 151 quarter; IWJ
J . John son 26 yd. pa ss from
R. 1 Ar thur, 5: 01 2n d Quarter,
Peop l es ki c k ; (MJ D . Buf fi ngton, 1 vd run. Weber kick ;
(WJ T. Gr ey 2yd . run , 2: 17 Jrd

Quarter . kick hilled: (W J T .
Grey 5 yd . run, · 3:58 4t h
quart er , kick failed .

.

PIa Y·

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3

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west
Muskingum 12
Sheridan 6 New Co ncord
G lenn 0
Philo 22 Trl vattev 14
East
Knox
1.4
Zanes
Rosecrans 13
Miller 39 Conation Valley 0
New Lexington 24 Morgan · 0
Sandusky 0 Mansfle ld Sr . 0
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2)99*

Pass receptions : GAHS -

I Gallipolis!
PlayerPos. TCB
YG Avg
B. Saunders
15 39 2.6
Sca rberry
10 26 2.6
M ink
2
1
.5
Johnson
11
7 .. 6
Totals
J8 59 t.s
( Logan)
PLAY.ER
TCB. YG Avg
Davidson
11 37. 3.3
Peppers
20 60 3 0
spechl
13 35 2:6
smith
J
B 2.6
Nelson
4
6 15
Hubbard
1
. 7 ·.7
TOTALS
52 139 2.6
1Gallipolis!
PLAYER
C-A I YG TO

l

Oct. 26-2·4 p.m. Open Rec.
7-9 p.m. College R~c. ·
Oct. 27- 7-B: 30 p.m. Open Rec.
Oct. 28-7-': 30 p.m. College Rec .
Ocp9- 8: JO.IO p.m. Coli . Rec.
Oct. Jo---7-8: 30 p.m. Open ~ec .
Oct. 31-7·8: 30 p.m. Open Rec.
Nov. 1-r2·4 p.m. Open Rec.

on reasonable notice of withdrawa l.
This is exactly what ·Ohio Valley

2·4p.m. Open Swim
1·9 p.m. Coil. SWim
7-8:30 p.m. Open Swim
Closed
8' 30·10 p.m. Coil. Swim
7-8:30 p.m. Open Swim
7-8:30 p.m. Open Swim
2-4 p.m. Open Swim

Bank wants 'and promis~ their depositilrs. No . wonder savings. de-

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all-time high.

.

Gallipolis . Ohio

•I

&lt;cLosE-oun

13-14 Age Dil biuu
GAI.I.IPOLIS
The
Robin Smith, Chesapeake,
following Individuals caplured cross country hOnors . 8:41.4; Greg Nelson , Patriot,
during the recent meet on 9:22; Alan Rutz, Galllp(,lis,
9:34 and George Coriard,
Memorial Field.
Twenty persons, !n~ludlng Amanda ; 10:'10.
Hand Under
two girls, participated .
Afnanda Runner, 7.:45,
Ribbons, medals and certificates were presented to all mile.
1H8 Division
finishers by the Qalllpolls
Mike
Skaggs, Rio Grande,
Areawide Striders Track
II :16;
Eugene
Rutz,
Club.
Ga)lipolls, 11 :57.5 and Kenny
Winners were:
Welch, Rio Grande. 12 :02.0.

Mtmbt!r FDIC

the leading savings bank.

....

~.
~

.

.

Scoring : GAHS 6.
Sa unders , 15-yard pass fro m
Johnson , 3: 19 first (Johnso n
to Wilson) ; Wilson, 47 -yard
pass from · Johnson , 4 : 34,
seco nd , (Johnson, run );
Mink , 1-yard run , :58, fourth,
Uohnson to Wi l son l . Logan
- Peppers, 5 -yard run , 6 : 49 ,
fi rst (J. Smith, kick );
Davidson, 2-ya rd ru n , 8 :21
seco nd U . Smi th , kick);
Hubbard , 17 -yard pass in ter ception return , 7 : 19, third
(r un f ail) ; Specht . 1-yard
run , : IS. four th U . Smith,

kick I.
TEAM STATISTICS
Departm ent
First downs
Yards rushi ng
Lost rushing
Net rushing
Passes attempted
Passes com pleted
Intercepted by
Yards passing
To tal yards
Return var dage

G OP
9 14
92 167
l3

59
13
9
2

2e
139

e

s

1
11
203 210
133
95
Plays
51
60
Fumbl es
2
1
Lost fumbles
1
1
Penalties
3-45
l -5
Pun ts
5-1636-199
Score by quarters :
Gallipol is
8 8 o B- 24
Logan
1 7 6 7- 27

J.u

NEXT GAHS GAME

Oc t . 31, at Waver l y .

SAVE

Wiseman has

DieHard~

concussion
GALLIPOLIS - DBYid
Wiseman, 160-pound junior
defensive halfback, suffered
a slight concussion and loss of
memory when injured In first
half play of Friday's
Gallipolis-Logan football
game at Logan.
Wiseman was taken to
Hocking Valley Hospital by a
SEOEMS ambulance, then
later Friday night was taken
lo Holzer- Medical Center by
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E.
M. (Ike) Wiseman .
Voung Wiseman was at
home resting Saturday.
UNIONDALE, N.V. (UP!)
- The ABA New Vork Nets
have placed rookie George
Bucci on the disabled list with
a pulled groin muscle suffered at practice Thursdsy.
The injury Is expected to
keep Bucci, a 6-2 guard from
Manhattan College, out of
action until Nov. 8. The move
brought.tbe Nets' roster down
to II players.

'7

Battery
•4045

Was S47.45

The DieHard "' has the power to start
your car when most batteries won't! It's
packed with more power-producing lead
and acid t han any other battery we sell.
Rugged p olypropo lene case resists.
damage from extreme temperatures.

"Melt Sizes in Stock"

Seartt Hao a Credit Plan to

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FINAL WEEK ON SALE
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SHOP AT SEARS ~ Silver Bridge
AND SAVE
Plaza

ears

.. Ph. 446-2770

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Oct. 27th thru Nov. 1st

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FEATURING

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PHONE

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posits contin ue to be at an

Sa unders, 5-7-72 -1 ; Wilson, 34-74 -l; Sc arberry , 1-1 (m inus
2) 0: Logan - Hubbard, 4-561 -0; Peppers, 1-1-10-0.

HONEY PANELING.................... :.......~-~~. . ~~:~~.... SALE s4~29

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·
WNk of Ocfober 26, 1975
DATE- GYMNASIUM
.
POOL

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Double insulated drill has detachable 6' cord, polished geor
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Pro

GAHS 40 on fourth down paid Logan a 211-16lead with 7:19 Peppers got outside for
eight with 41 seconds left.
off as the Chiefs marched 58 remaining.
FOURTH PERIOD
Peppers got four and then
yards in 15 plays to take a 14-8
After
an
exchange
of
punts
Smith
hit lluqbard with a 1().
l.ead with 8:2i left in the hall.
and
fumbles,
GAHS
gained
yard
strike
to the GAHS 36. A
Todd Davidson crashed over
possession
on
its
own
20
with
15-yard
penalty
on the play
from the two and Smith
1:55
remaining
in
the
game.
against
GAHS
put
it on the
kicked ihe extra p;;;nt. Big
Johnson
hit
Saunders
for
Blue
Devil
21
with
31
seconds
gainers included· an 11-yard
run by John Specht and a II· . eigh t, then . for 38. Wilson left.
yard pass from Smith to Scott caught another for 17 and Smith hit Peppers down
Saunders nabbed another for ·· and out for 10. Peppers rolled
Hubbard.
After Bruce Scarberry's 26- · six. Wilson made a spec- for eight and then ·two.
yard ki ckoff return , GAHS tacular cat.ch gOOd for 10 to Twenty -one second's
marched 66 yards in nine put the ball on Logan 's one. remained.
Fullback Brian Mink bulled Specht crashed over from
plays. Johnson, hit ·wilson
with a 47-yard TD strike, then over from the one with 58 the one. ·Smith kicked the ·
ran the extra points to give seconds left. Johnson passed extra point with 18 seconds
GAHS a 16-14 halftime ad· to Wilson for the extras to left to give Logan Its fits! win
over Gallipolis since 1967.
vantage with 4:34 showing on give GARS a 24-20 lead .
Hubbard
returned
Steve
GAHS Is at Waverly
·the clock.
Wallis'
flat
kick
from
Logan's
Friday
. Logan will host
THIRD PERIOD
34
to
the
Chieftain
42.
Wellston.
Scott Hubbard intercepted
a Brent Johnson pass and
returned it I 7 yards to give

GAHS-Logan stats. . ·•

Grid

16

Nor th Royalto n 20 Brooklyn
12
Warrensville 14 Cuyahoga
HIS 6
West Geauga 25 Solon 16
Ba rb er ton 35 Lorain So uth .
view 0
Paint Valley 20 south eas t 6
la nesvi lle 42 Col umb us Nor th

game opening 1\ickofl and
drove 68 yards in 13 plays.
Harold Peppers crashed over
from the five with 6:49 left on
the clock.·Jeff Smith ki cked
the extra point to give Logan
a 7-0 advantage. Big gainer in
the drive· was an Ill-yard
scam per by Peppers on . a
pitchout.
After G,AHS was forced to
pun.t.,---1lrett . Wilson in tercepted Jell Smith's first
aerial of the game and
returned it to the·Chieftain 18.
On third down, Johnson
tossed a 15-yilrd pass io Brent
Saunders and it was 7.&lt;; with
3:19 left in the period.
Johnson then passed to Brett
Wilson to give GAHS an 6-7
lead.
SECOND PERIOD
A gamble by Logan on the
'

Coach Wlllard (Buddy)
Moore 's lads dropped to 4-4
JOHNSON GETS TWO - GAHS Quarterback Brent Johnson scored tw~ points on this
overall and 1-4 Inside the
play following a lake conversion kick during Friday's GAHS.Logan football game at Bill
Southeastern Ohio League.
Sauer Field at ,Logan. It gave GAHS a 16-14 halftime lead. Reaching for the junior signal
One of the big heroes for
caller Is Logan s Harold Peppers (42 ). - Steve Wilson photo.
Logan Friday night was 6-1
senior end Scott Hubbard.
0
The two-way performer in- ~~~~~5°
ti~ i
tercepted one GAHS pass and
ILoga nl
returned it 17 yards for a ~L~~i~hR
S AJ y7~ T~
1
touchdown. Offensively, Total•
5·8 2 11 o
1
I!Standin~S I Hubbard caught four passes
Recovered enemy tumbles:
g00dlor61yards,lncludinga GAH S- Fi nn icu m. Logan Tucker .
1
10-yarder in the game's
Kickott returnso GAHS winning drive. He returned Sca rberry . • 97 -0; Wi lson, f.s
International Hockey
3 56
three punts for 14 yards and ~.~~~~~. "i' s~~ppers , · 0•
. League Standings
Un1ted Preu International
one kickoff for eight yards. · Punt ret urns: GA HS North
. A d
II
W• lson , H ·O. Lo gan -·
For Gall ta
ca emy, was Hubbard . J. u .o.
w . I. t; pts gf ga
Fli nt
32061417 seniors Brett Wilson and
Pass interception roturns:
Muskegon
GAH S ·- Wi lson , 2-2J .O.
2 1 0486
B
rent Sa unders with out- L oga n ~ Hubbard , 1·11 ·1.
Sag lnaw
110 253
Ka l amazoo I 2 0 2 7 12 standing efforts once again.
Punh : GAHS - Scarberry ,
Pt . Huron
'ls
5-163 132.6 1. Logan - Sc h1 3 0 1 12 16
W1 on caught three Brent mi ller, •.12s &amp; Byers. 2-741or
South
w . I. t pts gf ga Johnson aerials for 74 yards totals 6·199 133.11.
Toledo
3 I 0 6 12 6
Dayton
2 1 o 4 10 4 and one touchdown. Saunders
Ft . wayne
1 1 o 2 9 7 nabbed five catches for 72
C()lumbus
0 2 0 o· 2 8
yards and one touchdown.
Fridu 's R-esults
Flin t 4 Port Huron 3
Senior Bruce Scarberry
Day ron) Toledo 1
turned In one of his finest
Muskegon 4 Ka lam azoo 2
of the season,
Am erican Ba sketball Assocla· games
tlon Standings
returning four kickoffs for 97
Bv UniteCI Pren International
yards. Scarberry played his
East
W. L. Pet. GB usual good defensive game . .
ALL GAMES
I 0 1.000
New Yor k
Tea m
WL T P OP
Wllsoa
returaed
oae
I
0
1.000
Kent ucky
Iro nton
1 1 0 100 68
01
.0001
St . Louis
kickoff for five yarcll, two
Wellston
6 2 0 154 79
0
I .000 I
VIrginia
Rock Hill
S 2 I 119 77
puall
for
eight
yards
and
WPd
Ja ckson
S 3 0 218 114
W . L. Pel. GB .,
retumtd two Intercepted
Logan
5 3 0 141 98
Denver
1 o 1.000
Meigs
4 d 0 146 79
passes 23 yard1.
I nd'h\na
I 0 1.000
Ga llip oli S
4 4 o 160 110
UTah
0 0 .000
';
Junior Harold Peppers, At hens
3 5 0 82 89
San Antonio
0 I .000
So ulh Point
2 6 0 62 151
Sa n Diego
o I .000 1 who returned three kickoffs Coal
Gr ove
1 5 2' 67 142
Frldav's Results
for 56 yards, led Chieftain Waverly
I 7 0 33 165
New York 109 St . Louis 94
Non- L eague R &amp;Jults :
ball
carriers
with
60
yards
in
Indiana 112 VIrginia 101
South Point 28 Greenup 12
KenluCk.Y 100 San Antonio 94
20 attempts. Brent Saunders Rock Hill 14 Chesapeake 6
Denver 120 San D ieg o lOB
paced Gallla Academy with 0Coal Gro&gt;Je 28 Iron ton St. Joe
Am e r i c i n Hockey League 39 yards In 15 carries.
Standings
Logan QB Jeff Smith Team SEOALW.ONLY
By United Press tnternatianal
L. T
P OP
Nnrth
completed five of eight Ironton
s 0 0 79 49
W L T Pt o gt ga
Jackson
4 I 0 148 58
Nova Sco!la 4 2 1
9 29 20 passes (two Intercepted ) for
Well ston
J 2 0 73 71
Rochester
3 2 1
7 29 19 71 yards. Gallla's Brent Logan
3 2 0 101 98
Providence 3 1 o 6 20 16 Johnson connected on nine of Meigs
2 3 o 68 57
Springfield I 6 0 2 18 36
Athens
2 3 0 63 61
13 (one Intercepted) for 144 Gallipoli s
South
1 4 o 64 104
w. f. t. gf go yards and two touchdowns. · Wav~ r Jy
0 5 0 7 11 2
Baltimor e
4 2 0 8 22 19
TOTALS
20 20 0 6DJ 60J
·Logan dominated the
RichmOnd
2 0 0
4 9 4
Friday 's Results :
· New Haven t J 0 l I 11 _game's statistics In its Logan 17 Gallipolis 24
Hershey
1 3, 0
2 5 13
Ironton 14 Athe ns 13
homecoming victory. , LHS We l lston 19 Meigs 10
Friday' s Results
Baltimor e 3 New Haven 2
20 Waverly 0
rushed for 139 yards and Jackson
~ SENSATIONAL CATCH - Gallla's Brett Wilson
Hershey 3 Springfield 2
Oct. 11 Games:
Providence ~ Rochester • picked up a total of 210 yards Ga ll ip olis at ' waverly
made a sensational catch on this 10-yard pass from Brent
(overtime)
at Logan
with II first downs. Logan Wellston
Johnson with 1:14left In the game to give GAHS a first
Ironton at Meigs
wwn on Logan's one. GAHS scored on the next play with
World H o c k e y Association ran 60 plays from scrim- Jackson at Athe ns
I ro nton St . Joe at south Point
Standings
58 seconds left, giving the Blue Devils a 24-20 advantage
mage.
Manchester at Coal Grove
By United Pre ss International
but Logan bounced back to score with 18 seconds
Gallipolis rushed for 59 Rock. Hill at Kyger Creek
East
w. t. t. pts gf va yards to give the Blue Devils
remaining to down the Galllans, 27-24.
Cincin nati J 2 0 6 IS 17 203 total yards. The GalliiUls
New Englnd 3 2 0
6 141 20
j
lnd lanapol s 2 5 0
• 24 23 managed . only nine first
·
telephoned
to
reiterate
the
BUFFALO, N.V. (UP! ) Cleveland 1 2 o 2 13 11 downs against Logan's
Wet 1
The U.S. Immlgr•lion and rule coveriilg hockey players,
w. t. t. ph gf ga rugsed
defense .
Naturalization Service has which says ·li Canadian Phoenix
420 82424
Each team loat one
J 2 I
7 17 17
o~ dered Buffalo Sabres playing with a U.S. hockey Minnesota
3 3 0
6 19 2B fumble. Paul Finnicum
Denver
captain Jim Schoenfeld, a. team under a temporary visa san Diego 2 2 I 5 16 IS recovered the LHS bobble
2 3 0
4 16 IB
Canadian citizen, to stop can not hold another job. Houston canadian
Sabres
general
man.
a
ger
w. I. 1. pis gl 91 and Brad Tucker pouaced
tending bar at a nightspot he
5 2 o 10 34 16 OD a GAllS fumble.
Punch lmlach ordered Winnipeg
partly owns.
Quebec
4 I 0
8 17 16
Here's how it happened at
Benedict J . Ferro, deputy Schoenfeld to stop appearing Edmonton 3 4 1 7 31 35
Bill
Sauer Field Friday night.
Toronto
1
3
1
3
18
23
district INS director, said the at the bar after the INS com- Ca lg&amp;ry
1 A 0
'2 li 17
FIRST PERIOD
Sabres management was plaint.
Friday's Results
Logan
took Steve Wallis'
New England 5 Toronto 4

o

Sturdy metolleg stond. 6" dodo adjusts from Vo'' 1o 13/16" .

RT. 2 BYPASS, POINT PWSMT

0
2

222

MEIGS

• Pli,a~lt QurtuiJ • Ml81rulft'SI .OOO.OO

1818

1
3

Passing Ya r dage
32
JS
T o ta l Yardag e
254 168
Punts Ya rd s
2-JI 4 119
Individu a l Ru shing

UH

SALEPRICE

10
3

0

Rushing Ya rd age

L

7504

"MORE .THAN A LUMBER YARD''
"LOTS MORE"

Lost

6
2

2

lB 101

Gr ev

Sy l vania 42 Bowling Green 21
Parma Normandy 21 Parma

REG. 27H5

HARDMAN'S HOME CENTER

Fumbles

2

9
7
1
1

mor e 9

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controls, plus a · metal
leg stand and hi;t carbon steel
dodo blade. Terrific B&amp;D value I

Penalti es

••

M Ar thur

14
11
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Pa ss Attempted
Completed
Intercepted by

• Co"'''~"" hli'fl

Perfect for fine · finis~ing
wood, metal or plastic. Flush
sands on three sides.

W

First Down
Rushing
Pa ssi ng

LOGAN -- Down 24-20 with
·only 58 seconds remaining in
the game after G~lllpolis had
marched 80 yards in six plays
to take the lead and an ap·
parent victory, host Logan
drove 58 yards in just 40
seconds to defeat the visiting
Blue Devils, 27-24, here
Friday night.
'J ohn Specht, 161-pound
senior halfbacil, clima.xed
Logan's game-winning drive
by smashing over from the
one with just 18 seconds
showing on. the scoreboard
ClJCk..
It was one of those wild
\hrillers with clutch plays.
and lots of hard hitting by
both clubs.
The Blue Devils lost junior
defensive back David
~Wiseman via injury in the
· first half. Logan lost its
outstanding senior linebacker
and punter Mark Schmitter'
midway in the second half
due
to
an
Injury .
The win for Coach Bill
Biggers' crew soapped an
etgb~year Ga. lllpolls J'lnx
and upped the Chieftains
record to 5-3 on the year.
Logan Is 3-2 in coaference

Ak ron Eitel 6 Ak r on Buch tel 3
woos ter 9 Man sfie ld Madi son
0
wes t Branch 41 canf!e l ~ 14
Ba rberton 35 Lorain South .
v iew 0
T a lm a dge 20 Stow o
Green 14 Copley 0
Ak ron St Vln 28 1Pa lnesvl ll e

From the Friendly Onel

Radial arm

Meigs-Wellston stats.

~IrE

FINISHING SANDER

but the Ma~auders lost the
ball on downs .at the Rocket
33. Wellston stayed on the
ground holding the ball the
remainder o( the game.
The loss dropped the
Marauders to 2-3 in SEOAL
action and 4-4 overall. The
Rockets upped their record •.o
3-2 in the loop and an ;m.
pressive 6-2 during the 1975
football campaign . The
Marauders will host ·a strong
Ironton learn on ~r iday .
Wellston travels to Logan.

the l'eceiver just before the
pass sa iled over his head.
.Even though the receiver had
rio chance of ca tchi ng the
bail, Wellston received a fir st
down at the Marauder 13. A5·
yard offside'penalty on Meigs
moved the ball to the 8. Two
plays later, Grey 'crashed
over from the 5 making the
score 19-10. Peoples' kick was
ti pped at the line and fell
away.
Anderson did complete two
passes in the ensuing series,

can ton south 27 Jackson 20
Sandy Valley 7 Eas t Can to n 6
Minerva 22 Cl aymo nt 19
Fa irl ess 13 Akro n Hoban 2
Northwest JO Beaver Loca l 20
Ak r on Garfield 14 Akron •
North 0
Akron East 22 Ak ro n Ken -

11/ack &amp; OeckeP®

fr&lt;~~~t

PeopleS skirted t.hc right erid,
broke two la~kles, and was
finally pushed out of bounds
after gaining 30 yards at the
46. An additional IS yards
were tacked on when the
Marauders were penalized
for a personal foul. Grey ·
carried twice for a fir st down ·
at the 25.
George Carper, 180 pound
senior tackle,, broke into the'
backfield and dropped Grey
for a 1-ya rd loss. As the
players got to their leer, one
Marauder remained on the
ground. Middle guard Stan
Starcher was unable to get up
as he had seriously in jured
his left leg. Play was stopped
for approximately 20 minutes
as the SEOEMS ambulance
moved Starcher from the
field. He was transported to
Holzer'Medical Center where
he was later released when
the doctors diagnosed ,his
injury as a seve'e bruise.
When the ball was put in
play at the 26, Arthur picked
up one on a broken play after
a fumbled snap. Peoples was
stopped for a · yard loss
bringing ilp fourth down.
Arthur lolled a pass that was
high over the receiver's head,
but Magnotta bumped into

.

Power up with

10" DElUXE
POWERsow SHOP

Chiefs ·edge Devils, 27-24

'

.

•

'•

�~::-:.11J~ ~IUldayTinws -Sent inlli, Sunday, OC't. 2ti, 1975

..

.

r;;;:,~;,~::;:;;;n.

Golden Rockets trim ·Marauders 19-10

lJCincy. expetience woltitli'.

W£-;j,LSTON
The
Wells ton (!o lden Rockets,
rwice coming from behind,
subdued
the
Meigs
Marauders 19-10 here Friday
night.
The Rocket attack, led by a
balanced running ga me,
seemed to pick up momen·
tum as the game progressed.
Tony Grey, sophOmore full;
back, rushed for 101 yards in·
18 carries. Following closely
was all-leaguer Randy
Peoples with 97 yards in 16
attempts.
.
The Marauders .were again
led by 6-1, 165 pound tailback
Terry Qualls, who ground out
67 yards in 20· ,carrie.s.
Quar.terback Jim Anderson
chipped in 34 yards an d
Danny Buff!ngton had 22.
Meigs took · the opening
kickoff and staying on the
ground, moved inside the
Rockel 10. On fourth down,
Duane Weber split the
uprights with a 27-yard field
goal with plenty to spare.
After an exchange of pun Is,
the quarter ended with Meigs
leading 3-0.
The second quarter
belonged to the Golden
Rockets. With Grey, Peoples
and senior Pete Ruper t
grinding out the yardage,
Wellston moved to the
Marauder 26. Quarterback
Richard Arthur, attempting
his £irst pass, fowld ·left end
.John Johnson in a crowd of
Marauder defenders .
Johnson broke to the inside
and was finally tackled as he
fell into the endzone at the
5: 01 mark of lhe second
quarter. Peoples added the
PAT and the Rockets took the
advantage 7-3.
The Marauders were
unable to move the ball and
Rick George lined up in punt
formation. Rocket Pete
Rupert broke through the
middle and blocked the kick,
Rupert fell on the .ball at the
Marauder 25.
The Rockets quickly moved
the ball to the Marauder 7.

By FRED McMANE
-mistakes," said shortstop
UPI Sports Writer
· .Rick Burle.son. "They beat us
NEW VORK (UP!) - In on fundamental baseball."
the final analysis, the CinWhen people talk about the
clnnatl Reds won the World 1975 World Series in years to
Series because they were the come, . however, they will
more experienced team and remember Isolated Incidents
perhaps better equipped and individuals more than
mentally to handle the strain final scores. That 's usually
prodUced·by one of the most the way it Is.
'
dramatic postseaSon classics . And this Series had plenty
L.ARRY HOWELL,
in history.
to talk about. Larry Barnett,
former athlete at North
It took seven games for the Ed Armbrister, Luis Tlant,
GalUa High School was the '
Reds to prove that they, were, Dwight Evans, Berrue Carbo,
winner of the II th week 100 _
as their manager Sparky Tony Perez, Joe Morgan and
pet. trophy given to
Anderson had maintained all Pete Rose. Those names took
members
of the Gallla ·
season, the "best darn team theirplaceon thehonorrollof
County Disciples. Howell is
in baseball," but in the e_nd great World Series moments.
they made , fewer mistakes
Barnett, an umpire, and a member of the Disciples'
than the ~ounger Boston R~ Armbrister, a Reds' utility offensive unit. He will also
Sox. That s what the game IS player, were involved in one be pla¥ing basketball for
,(Ill about .
of .the most controversial the Disciples' fuad raising
The Reda, who ended up Issues in World Series' team. The Dtselples have
Inning US games this history, and the argument an open elate this week but
aaon, could ealdly have over whether or not Arm- wtll attempt to keep Its
tolled OVI\' and died ilfter the lrister did Interfere with Fisk undefeated sireak going
\thrill-packed sixth game ln the lOth inning of the third Nov, 2 at Cheshire. The
which the Red Sox won in 12 game will be a subject of Gallla team wlll pla·y
lnninp on Carlton Fisk's discussions for years to Waahlngton County
beginning at 2 p.m. on the
me. But It w•s the Reds' come.
Illude liter that heart- ,. Barnett's claim that there Kyger Creek field. Gallla
llre¥1118 loss that perhaps was no Interference on the won the laat game between
ileiiCI'lbed best their winning play not Ol)ly cost the Red Sox the two squads, 13-12.
attitude.
.
the game, 7-8, but also led to a
!nlteatl of brooding over threat on his life.
the defeat, the Reds exThen there was Tlant, the
presled joy at having been a mustachioed Cuban rightparticipant 1n such a bander with the herky-jerky
memorable Series game. '!be delivery who blanked the
ottl exuberant, of all, was Reds, 6-0, in the Drat game
te ~, a gutsy com- then came back to stop them
tJietltor who has a distaste for agalri, 5-4, In the fourth game .. I
~efeat, but nevertheless
And there was Evans
i!~lled It "the gr~test. game whose glime-611vlng catch
I ve evtr played.
the nth inning of the sixth
ATLANTA (UP!) - Ctn·
·, It waa this mature game ranks as one of the
character of the club that finest In Series' play; Carbo, clnnatl quarterback Ken
~&amp;bled II to come from whose two pinchhlt homers Anderson wlll be out to make
~'!"hind repeatedly all season. equalled a Series record · and up for lotll ground Sunday
And this maturity shown Perez, who started off' in a when the unbeaten Bengals
lhrough best In the last game horrible slump but ended up visit the Atlanta Falcons.
Anderson, the leading
when they bounced back from hitting three clutch home
a 3-Gdeflclt lo win in the ninth run s.
passer In the AFC over the
,jnning, 4-3, on Joe Morgan's
It was Morgan and Rose, past four seasons, had an off
llOW famous ''bloop single ." the Reds' two scrappiest day last Sunday even though
The Red Sox, comprised players, who made the final the Bengals picked up their
oatly of players who were difference, however. Morgan, fifth straight win against the
participating In their Drst the favorite lor the National O&amp;kland Raiders.
Going into the game rated
World Series, wer~ mentally 'League's most valuable
'~Ptnt In that declldve seventh player award, got the whi: the No. 3 passer In the NFL,
1ame. They had played their ning hit in both the third and the 1974 NFL passing champ
10
s out the .night bl!fore final games while Rose led all completed only four of 19 Sl. Mary 21- Ottawa G landorf
7
'
their star catcher, Fisk , Series' perfonners in hits passes for 75 yards and bad Benchman
Logan 26 Wftynes itted as much when It with 10 and wound up as the four Intercepted.
fi eld 6 ·
That was a drastic change Bluffl on 19 Columbus Grove 6
as all over.
Series' most valuable player.
Miami East 28 Leh man Ca th
"I was drained," admitted
from his first lour games
7
Fisk, who struck out three
when Anderson connected on Minster 14 St . H enry 7
Coldwa ter 33 Brad ford 0
64 per cent of his passes for Marion Local 21 New Brem en
limes in the final game. "We
6
ill were and that's probably
an average of 241 yards per
Fi ndlay 7 E lyria o
trhy we coilllin't take .advangame with only ONE in- Parkway 41 Ansonia 6
•
1
Van .Bu r en 12 Hardi n Nor ge of the opportunltl~s we
sco~es terception.
th ern 8
d early In tl)e game."
• '
" The Bengals are 7 point Ce l ina 23 Kenton 6
The Red So• alao mu.st
.
·
favorites over the Falcons (2- M aple Heights 10 Eastlak e N
0
10 Ctie)
,
fead guUty to a failure to
F oH6~aH~EN~~8~fs
3).
Bay Village 23 Westlake 10
execute properly the basic
U nlted PrtU International
N . Oim ste d 35 Rocky River 12
... _~
talsofbaseba 1
ere Eosl 7 ere Eosl Tech 6
Orange 42 Au r ora 6
IIWIU&amp;men
1 that ere Sl. rgnall us 47 e re Lincoln
Chag r in Fal ls 7 K'enston 0
Ki rtland 14 cardi na l o
had gotten them to the World
wesr o
L1!1nCIIster 35 Marietta 30
· ferles. While they made crfr r ~todes 21 ere south 21 Zanesville 42 Columbus North Geneva 20 As ht abula Harbor
0
3
me spectacular plays Boree IS Garfie ld Heig hts 14 Olmsted F alls 8 Fairview 7 Amhe r st 21 Midview 20
· ed Euclid 17 Mentor 0
Clearvlew
l3 Ashtabu la St. Lorain
1 I th ey commttt
, fensvey,
Oclphls s•. John 's q Madison
Brooksid e 6
John 0
;x errors in the Series (the Defiance o
Co nn eaut 24 Pelnesvllle Bu cke ye 1.4 Fireland s o
Cle Bened ic tine 38 Cle St.
Rivers id e o
J'eds made just two ) and grr~~~~~ri:~ Jd ~~r,r;,~oio o
Joseph 35
South Am herst 14 Avon 13
M!veral times were unable to Wheelersburg 7 Ports Wesr 6 L ora in 1• L ora in Admira l Brun swick 22 Clove rl eaf B
Wickliffe 32 Canton L ehman 7
King 0
/nove runners along with
Wel lslon 19 Meigs 10
Adena 53 Zane Trace o
Oak Harbor 28 Woodmer e 16 N Ca n ton Hoover 10 G l enoak
6
!¥lOrlfice bunts •
W 8Shlngton C H 22 Pa ri S· Danbury. 19 Seneca East 6
McKinley
25
sandusky Perkin s 1 Huron 2 Ca nton·
t_ "We played the same kind
moulh 16
Steu benv ille 12
Bellevue 20 Ga llon 6
~ baseball all year long~..~s~~·~~·.J:.~~r: hrSI l4 Norwalk 33 Willard 1A
Canton Tim ken 22 Marling ton
5
good, SOJld fundamental Chi ll iCOThe 6 Grove CIIV 6 L i ma senior 13 Da y ton Massillon
17 warren H ar di ng
Dunbar 0
.__...__ 11
••
lliel
0
.......,...._ wten we get here Paris N o 26 Ports East 1&lt; Lima Ba th 22 Eli da 6
and we make all those Newa rk 9 Upper Mling lon 7 Shawnee 1A WPst ervllle North Louisville 35 Perry 16

Anderson

~

hopes to

u;

zmprove

E

t.

Friday'S
grzd

t

Then Peoples "'"' "Ail~h t
llcltind rhc line for a 2 )'"nl
loss. 1\r.thur threw 2 passes,
both falling incomplete. On
fourth down, Qualls broke
lhroueh from his defensive
right end positio n and
dropped Arthur for a five
yard !oss; the Marauders
held and the half ended with
Wellston leading 7-3.
Peoples returned th e
second half kickoff over 40
yards, but the Rockel• were
guilty.of clipping and the ball
was put in play at the
Wellston 15. Wellston was
forced to punt and senior
win gback Mike Ma gnotta
fielded Don Patton's punt on
the Marauder 45, streaked
across midfield, and returned
the ball38yards to the Rocket
17. Qualls And Buffington
picked up a first down at the
5. Two plays later Bullington
bulled his way over from the 2
and the Marauders regained
the lead 9-7. 'weber's perfect
placement upped the score to
10-7.
Wellston could not move
the ball and Patton punted to
the Marauder 25. On the first
play, the Rockets' Doug
Conger dove in Iron t of the
intended pass receiver and
' picked ·off Anderson's pass at
the 30. Four plays later,
Randy Peoples crashed over
from the 2 and Wellston
jumped back on top 13-10 at
2: 17 of the third quarter.
Peoples' point after kick was
wide to the left.
Paul Hollingsead's kickoff
squirted out of bounds and the
Marauders took over at their
own 40. Behind the running of
Qualls' and Bullington, Meigs
drove to the Wellston 36 when
· the quarter ended. Meigs
continued their march, aided
by a face mask penalty ort
Wellston, moving inside the
Rocket 10. Anderson 's fourth
down pass was batted away
in the endzone by Peoples.
The following series proved
to be the most important of
the game. On a third and one
from the Rockets 16,.

has on-top, up-

Harv ey

o

133

Qua l Is

Car . Yds .
20
67

A nderson
Mag no tta

Bu ffin g ton
Totals

WELLSTON

· Peopl es

3
10
9 22
40 I 33

16
10

Rupe r t

.

3d

B

97

28

-4

Totals

46

222

Pass Rece iving

MEIGS

No. Ytls TO

Qua ll s
Davenport

2 26
1 9

o

Joh nson

.1 26
1 6

0

WELLSTON

Peop l es

0

1.

By Quart ers:
Meigs

3 0 7 0- 10
We l lston
0 7 6 6- 19
Sc ori ng : IMJ D. Weber 27
yd . FG, 6:42 151 quarter; IWJ
J . John son 26 yd. pa ss from
R. 1 Ar thur, 5: 01 2n d Quarter,
Peop l es ki c k ; (MJ D . Buf fi ngton, 1 vd run. Weber kick ;
(WJ T. Gr ey 2yd . run , 2: 17 Jrd

Quarter . kick hilled: (W J T .
Grey 5 yd . run, · 3:58 4t h
quart er , kick failed .

.

PIa Y·

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Sandusky 0 Mansfle ld Sr . 0
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Pass receptions : GAHS -

I Gallipolis!
PlayerPos. TCB
YG Avg
B. Saunders
15 39 2.6
Sca rberry
10 26 2.6
M ink
2
1
.5
Johnson
11
7 .. 6
Totals
J8 59 t.s
( Logan)
PLAY.ER
TCB. YG Avg
Davidson
11 37. 3.3
Peppers
20 60 3 0
spechl
13 35 2:6
smith
J
B 2.6
Nelson
4
6 15
Hubbard
1
. 7 ·.7
TOTALS
52 139 2.6
1Gallipolis!
PLAYER
C-A I YG TO

l

Oct. 26-2·4 p.m. Open Rec.
7-9 p.m. College R~c. ·
Oct. 27- 7-B: 30 p.m. Open Rec.
Oct. 28-7-': 30 p.m. College Rec .
Ocp9- 8: JO.IO p.m. Coli . Rec.
Oct. Jo---7-8: 30 p.m. Open ~ec .
Oct. 31-7·8: 30 p.m. Open Rec.
Nov. 1-r2·4 p.m. Open Rec.

on reasonable notice of withdrawa l.
This is exactly what ·Ohio Valley

2·4p.m. Open Swim
1·9 p.m. Coil. SWim
7-8:30 p.m. Open Swim
Closed
8' 30·10 p.m. Coil. Swim
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Bank wants 'and promis~ their depositilrs. No . wonder savings. de-

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Gallipolis . Ohio

•I

&lt;cLosE-oun

13-14 Age Dil biuu
GAI.I.IPOLIS
The
Robin Smith, Chesapeake,
following Individuals caplured cross country hOnors . 8:41.4; Greg Nelson , Patriot,
during the recent meet on 9:22; Alan Rutz, Galllp(,lis,
9:34 and George Coriard,
Memorial Field.
Twenty persons, !n~ludlng Amanda ; 10:'10.
Hand Under
two girls, participated .
Afnanda Runner, 7.:45,
Ribbons, medals and certificates were presented to all mile.
1H8 Division
finishers by the Qalllpolls
Mike
Skaggs, Rio Grande,
Areawide Striders Track
II :16;
Eugene
Rutz,
Club.
Ga)lipolls, 11 :57.5 and Kenny
Winners were:
Welch, Rio Grande. 12 :02.0.

Mtmbt!r FDIC

the leading savings bank.

....

~.
~

.

.

Scoring : GAHS 6.
Sa unders , 15-yard pass fro m
Johnson , 3: 19 first (Johnso n
to Wilson) ; Wilson, 47 -yard
pass from · Johnson , 4 : 34,
seco nd , (Johnson, run );
Mink , 1-yard run , :58, fourth,
Uohnson to Wi l son l . Logan
- Peppers, 5 -yard run , 6 : 49 ,
fi rst (J. Smith, kick );
Davidson, 2-ya rd ru n , 8 :21
seco nd U . Smi th , kick);
Hubbard , 17 -yard pass in ter ception return , 7 : 19, third
(r un f ail) ; Specht . 1-yard
run , : IS. four th U . Smith,

kick I.
TEAM STATISTICS
Departm ent
First downs
Yards rushi ng
Lost rushing
Net rushing
Passes attempted
Passes com pleted
Intercepted by
Yards passing
To tal yards
Return var dage

G OP
9 14
92 167
l3

59
13
9
2

2e
139

e

s

1
11
203 210
133
95
Plays
51
60
Fumbl es
2
1
Lost fumbles
1
1
Penalties
3-45
l -5
Pun ts
5-1636-199
Score by quarters :
Gallipol is
8 8 o B- 24
Logan
1 7 6 7- 27

J.u

NEXT GAHS GAME

Oc t . 31, at Waver l y .

SAVE

Wiseman has

DieHard~

concussion
GALLIPOLIS - DBYid
Wiseman, 160-pound junior
defensive halfback, suffered
a slight concussion and loss of
memory when injured In first
half play of Friday's
Gallipolis-Logan football
game at Logan.
Wiseman was taken to
Hocking Valley Hospital by a
SEOEMS ambulance, then
later Friday night was taken
lo Holzer- Medical Center by
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E.
M. (Ike) Wiseman .
Voung Wiseman was at
home resting Saturday.
UNIONDALE, N.V. (UP!)
- The ABA New Vork Nets
have placed rookie George
Bucci on the disabled list with
a pulled groin muscle suffered at practice Thursdsy.
The injury Is expected to
keep Bucci, a 6-2 guard from
Manhattan College, out of
action until Nov. 8. The move
brought.tbe Nets' roster down
to II players.

'7

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Sa unders, 5-7-72 -1 ; Wilson, 34-74 -l; Sc arberry , 1-1 (m inus
2) 0: Logan - Hubbard, 4-561 -0; Peppers, 1-1-10-0.

HONEY PANELING.................... :.......~-~~. . ~~:~~.... SALE s4~29

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WNk of Ocfober 26, 1975
DATE- GYMNASIUM
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GAHS 40 on fourth down paid Logan a 211-16lead with 7:19 Peppers got outside for
eight with 41 seconds left.
off as the Chiefs marched 58 remaining.
FOURTH PERIOD
Peppers got four and then
yards in 15 plays to take a 14-8
After
an
exchange
of
punts
Smith
hit lluqbard with a 1().
l.ead with 8:2i left in the hall.
and
fumbles,
GAHS
gained
yard
strike
to the GAHS 36. A
Todd Davidson crashed over
possession
on
its
own
20
with
15-yard
penalty
on the play
from the two and Smith
1:55
remaining
in
the
game.
against
GAHS
put
it on the
kicked ihe extra p;;;nt. Big
Johnson
hit
Saunders
for
Blue
Devil
21
with
31
seconds
gainers included· an 11-yard
run by John Specht and a II· . eigh t, then . for 38. Wilson left.
yard pass from Smith to Scott caught another for 17 and Smith hit Peppers down
Saunders nabbed another for ·· and out for 10. Peppers rolled
Hubbard.
After Bruce Scarberry's 26- · six. Wilson made a spec- for eight and then ·two.
yard ki ckoff return , GAHS tacular cat.ch gOOd for 10 to Twenty -one second's
marched 66 yards in nine put the ball on Logan 's one. remained.
Fullback Brian Mink bulled Specht crashed over from
plays. Johnson, hit ·wilson
with a 47-yard TD strike, then over from the one with 58 the one. ·Smith kicked the ·
ran the extra points to give seconds left. Johnson passed extra point with 18 seconds
GAHS a 16-14 halftime ad· to Wilson for the extras to left to give Logan Its fits! win
over Gallipolis since 1967.
vantage with 4:34 showing on give GARS a 24-20 lead .
Hubbard
returned
Steve
GAHS Is at Waverly
·the clock.
Wallis'
flat
kick
from
Logan's
Friday
. Logan will host
THIRD PERIOD
34
to
the
Chieftain
42.
Wellston.
Scott Hubbard intercepted
a Brent Johnson pass and
returned it I 7 yards to give

GAHS-Logan stats. . ·•

Grid

16

Nor th Royalto n 20 Brooklyn
12
Warrensville 14 Cuyahoga
HIS 6
West Geauga 25 Solon 16
Ba rb er ton 35 Lorain So uth .
view 0
Paint Valley 20 south eas t 6
la nesvi lle 42 Col umb us Nor th

game opening 1\ickofl and
drove 68 yards in 13 plays.
Harold Peppers crashed over
from the five with 6:49 left on
the clock.·Jeff Smith ki cked
the extra point to give Logan
a 7-0 advantage. Big gainer in
the drive· was an Ill-yard
scam per by Peppers on . a
pitchout.
After G,AHS was forced to
pun.t.,---1lrett . Wilson in tercepted Jell Smith's first
aerial of the game and
returned it to the·Chieftain 18.
On third down, Johnson
tossed a 15-yilrd pass io Brent
Saunders and it was 7.&lt;; with
3:19 left in the period.
Johnson then passed to Brett
Wilson to give GAHS an 6-7
lead.
SECOND PERIOD
A gamble by Logan on the
'

Coach Wlllard (Buddy)
Moore 's lads dropped to 4-4
JOHNSON GETS TWO - GAHS Quarterback Brent Johnson scored tw~ points on this
overall and 1-4 Inside the
play following a lake conversion kick during Friday's GAHS.Logan football game at Bill
Southeastern Ohio League.
Sauer Field at ,Logan. It gave GAHS a 16-14 halftime lead. Reaching for the junior signal
One of the big heroes for
caller Is Logan s Harold Peppers (42 ). - Steve Wilson photo.
Logan Friday night was 6-1
senior end Scott Hubbard.
0
The two-way performer in- ~~~~~5°
ti~ i
tercepted one GAHS pass and
ILoga nl
returned it 17 yards for a ~L~~i~hR
S AJ y7~ T~
1
touchdown. Offensively, Total•
5·8 2 11 o
1
I!Standin~S I Hubbard caught four passes
Recovered enemy tumbles:
g00dlor61yards,lncludinga GAH S- Fi nn icu m. Logan Tucker .
1
10-yarder in the game's
Kickott returnso GAHS winning drive. He returned Sca rberry . • 97 -0; Wi lson, f.s
International Hockey
3 56
three punts for 14 yards and ~.~~~~~. "i' s~~ppers , · 0•
. League Standings
Un1ted Preu International
one kickoff for eight yards. · Punt ret urns: GA HS North
. A d
II
W• lson , H ·O. Lo gan -·
For Gall ta
ca emy, was Hubbard . J. u .o.
w . I. t; pts gf ga
Fli nt
32061417 seniors Brett Wilson and
Pass interception roturns:
Muskegon
GAH S ·- Wi lson , 2-2J .O.
2 1 0486
B
rent Sa unders with out- L oga n ~ Hubbard , 1·11 ·1.
Sag lnaw
110 253
Ka l amazoo I 2 0 2 7 12 standing efforts once again.
Punh : GAHS - Scarberry ,
Pt . Huron
'ls
5-163 132.6 1. Logan - Sc h1 3 0 1 12 16
W1 on caught three Brent mi ller, •.12s &amp; Byers. 2-741or
South
w . I. t pts gf ga Johnson aerials for 74 yards totals 6·199 133.11.
Toledo
3 I 0 6 12 6
Dayton
2 1 o 4 10 4 and one touchdown. Saunders
Ft . wayne
1 1 o 2 9 7 nabbed five catches for 72
C()lumbus
0 2 0 o· 2 8
yards and one touchdown.
Fridu 's R-esults
Flin t 4 Port Huron 3
Senior Bruce Scarberry
Day ron) Toledo 1
turned In one of his finest
Muskegon 4 Ka lam azoo 2
of the season,
Am erican Ba sketball Assocla· games
tlon Standings
returning four kickoffs for 97
Bv UniteCI Pren International
yards. Scarberry played his
East
W. L. Pet. GB usual good defensive game . .
ALL GAMES
I 0 1.000
New Yor k
Tea m
WL T P OP
Wllsoa
returaed
oae
I
0
1.000
Kent ucky
Iro nton
1 1 0 100 68
01
.0001
St . Louis
kickoff for five yarcll, two
Wellston
6 2 0 154 79
0
I .000 I
VIrginia
Rock Hill
S 2 I 119 77
puall
for
eight
yards
and
WPd
Ja ckson
S 3 0 218 114
W . L. Pel. GB .,
retumtd two Intercepted
Logan
5 3 0 141 98
Denver
1 o 1.000
Meigs
4 d 0 146 79
passes 23 yard1.
I nd'h\na
I 0 1.000
Ga llip oli S
4 4 o 160 110
UTah
0 0 .000
';
Junior Harold Peppers, At hens
3 5 0 82 89
San Antonio
0 I .000
So ulh Point
2 6 0 62 151
Sa n Diego
o I .000 1 who returned three kickoffs Coal
Gr ove
1 5 2' 67 142
Frldav's Results
for 56 yards, led Chieftain Waverly
I 7 0 33 165
New York 109 St . Louis 94
Non- L eague R &amp;Jults :
ball
carriers
with
60
yards
in
Indiana 112 VIrginia 101
South Point 28 Greenup 12
KenluCk.Y 100 San Antonio 94
20 attempts. Brent Saunders Rock Hill 14 Chesapeake 6
Denver 120 San D ieg o lOB
paced Gallla Academy with 0Coal Gro&gt;Je 28 Iron ton St. Joe
Am e r i c i n Hockey League 39 yards In 15 carries.
Standings
Logan QB Jeff Smith Team SEOALW.ONLY
By United Press tnternatianal
L. T
P OP
Nnrth
completed five of eight Ironton
s 0 0 79 49
W L T Pt o gt ga
Jackson
4 I 0 148 58
Nova Sco!la 4 2 1
9 29 20 passes (two Intercepted ) for
Well ston
J 2 0 73 71
Rochester
3 2 1
7 29 19 71 yards. Gallla's Brent Logan
3 2 0 101 98
Providence 3 1 o 6 20 16 Johnson connected on nine of Meigs
2 3 o 68 57
Springfield I 6 0 2 18 36
Athens
2 3 0 63 61
13 (one Intercepted) for 144 Gallipoli s
South
1 4 o 64 104
w. f. t. gf go yards and two touchdowns. · Wav~ r Jy
0 5 0 7 11 2
Baltimor e
4 2 0 8 22 19
TOTALS
20 20 0 6DJ 60J
·Logan dominated the
RichmOnd
2 0 0
4 9 4
Friday 's Results :
· New Haven t J 0 l I 11 _game's statistics In its Logan 17 Gallipolis 24
Hershey
1 3, 0
2 5 13
Ironton 14 Athe ns 13
homecoming victory. , LHS We l lston 19 Meigs 10
Friday' s Results
Baltimor e 3 New Haven 2
20 Waverly 0
rushed for 139 yards and Jackson
~ SENSATIONAL CATCH - Gallla's Brett Wilson
Hershey 3 Springfield 2
Oct. 11 Games:
Providence ~ Rochester • picked up a total of 210 yards Ga ll ip olis at ' waverly
made a sensational catch on this 10-yard pass from Brent
(overtime)
at Logan
with II first downs. Logan Wellston
Johnson with 1:14left In the game to give GAHS a first
Ironton at Meigs
wwn on Logan's one. GAHS scored on the next play with
World H o c k e y Association ran 60 plays from scrim- Jackson at Athe ns
I ro nton St . Joe at south Point
Standings
58 seconds left, giving the Blue Devils a 24-20 advantage
mage.
Manchester at Coal Grove
By United Pre ss International
but Logan bounced back to score with 18 seconds
Gallipolis rushed for 59 Rock. Hill at Kyger Creek
East
w. t. t. pts gf va yards to give the Blue Devils
remaining to down the Galllans, 27-24.
Cincin nati J 2 0 6 IS 17 203 total yards. The GalliiUls
New Englnd 3 2 0
6 141 20
j
lnd lanapol s 2 5 0
• 24 23 managed . only nine first
·
telephoned
to
reiterate
the
BUFFALO, N.V. (UP! ) Cleveland 1 2 o 2 13 11 downs against Logan's
Wet 1
The U.S. Immlgr•lion and rule coveriilg hockey players,
w. t. t. ph gf ga rugsed
defense .
Naturalization Service has which says ·li Canadian Phoenix
420 82424
Each team loat one
J 2 I
7 17 17
o~ dered Buffalo Sabres playing with a U.S. hockey Minnesota
3 3 0
6 19 2B fumble. Paul Finnicum
Denver
captain Jim Schoenfeld, a. team under a temporary visa san Diego 2 2 I 5 16 IS recovered the LHS bobble
2 3 0
4 16 IB
Canadian citizen, to stop can not hold another job. Houston canadian
Sabres
general
man.
a
ger
w. I. 1. pis gl 91 and Brad Tucker pouaced
tending bar at a nightspot he
5 2 o 10 34 16 OD a GAllS fumble.
Punch lmlach ordered Winnipeg
partly owns.
Quebec
4 I 0
8 17 16
Here's how it happened at
Benedict J . Ferro, deputy Schoenfeld to stop appearing Edmonton 3 4 1 7 31 35
Bill
Sauer Field Friday night.
Toronto
1
3
1
3
18
23
district INS director, said the at the bar after the INS com- Ca lg&amp;ry
1 A 0
'2 li 17
FIRST PERIOD
Sabres management was plaint.
Friday's Results
Logan
took Steve Wallis'
New England 5 Toronto 4

o

Sturdy metolleg stond. 6" dodo adjusts from Vo'' 1o 13/16" .

RT. 2 BYPASS, POINT PWSMT

0
2

222

MEIGS

• Pli,a~lt QurtuiJ • Ml81rulft'SI .OOO.OO

1818

1
3

Passing Ya r dage
32
JS
T o ta l Yardag e
254 168
Punts Ya rd s
2-JI 4 119
Individu a l Ru shing

UH

SALEPRICE

10
3

0

Rushing Ya rd age

L

7504

"MORE .THAN A LUMBER YARD''
"LOTS MORE"

Lost

6
2

2

lB 101

Gr ev

Sy l vania 42 Bowling Green 21
Parma Normandy 21 Parma

REG. 27H5

HARDMAN'S HOME CENTER

Fumbles

2

9
7
1
1

mor e 9

NEW I

controls, plus a · metal
leg stand and hi;t carbon steel
dodo blade. Terrific B&amp;D value I

Penalti es

••

M Ar thur

14
11
1

Pa ss Attempted
Completed
Intercepted by

• Co"'''~"" hli'fl

Perfect for fine · finis~ing
wood, metal or plastic. Flush
sands on three sides.

W

First Down
Rushing
Pa ssi ng

LOGAN -- Down 24-20 with
·only 58 seconds remaining in
the game after G~lllpolis had
marched 80 yards in six plays
to take the lead and an ap·
parent victory, host Logan
drove 58 yards in just 40
seconds to defeat the visiting
Blue Devils, 27-24, here
Friday night.
'J ohn Specht, 161-pound
senior halfbacil, clima.xed
Logan's game-winning drive
by smashing over from the
one with just 18 seconds
showing on. the scoreboard
ClJCk..
It was one of those wild
\hrillers with clutch plays.
and lots of hard hitting by
both clubs.
The Blue Devils lost junior
defensive back David
~Wiseman via injury in the
· first half. Logan lost its
outstanding senior linebacker
and punter Mark Schmitter'
midway in the second half
due
to
an
Injury .
The win for Coach Bill
Biggers' crew soapped an
etgb~year Ga. lllpolls J'lnx
and upped the Chieftains
record to 5-3 on the year.
Logan Is 3-2 in coaference

Ak ron Eitel 6 Ak r on Buch tel 3
woos ter 9 Man sfie ld Madi son
0
wes t Branch 41 canf!e l ~ 14
Ba rberton 35 Lorain South .
v iew 0
T a lm a dge 20 Stow o
Green 14 Copley 0
Ak ron St Vln 28 1Pa lnesvl ll e

From the Friendly Onel

Radial arm

Meigs-Wellston stats.

~IrE

FINISHING SANDER

but the Ma~auders lost the
ball on downs .at the Rocket
33. Wellston stayed on the
ground holding the ball the
remainder o( the game.
The loss dropped the
Marauders to 2-3 in SEOAL
action and 4-4 overall. The
Rockets upped their record •.o
3-2 in the loop and an ;m.
pressive 6-2 during the 1975
football campaign . The
Marauders will host ·a strong
Ironton learn on ~r iday .
Wellston travels to Logan.

the l'eceiver just before the
pass sa iled over his head.
.Even though the receiver had
rio chance of ca tchi ng the
bail, Wellston received a fir st
down at the Marauder 13. A5·
yard offside'penalty on Meigs
moved the ball to the 8. Two
plays later, Grey 'crashed
over from the 5 making the
score 19-10. Peoples' kick was
ti pped at the line and fell
away.
Anderson did complete two
passes in the ensuing series,

can ton south 27 Jackson 20
Sandy Valley 7 Eas t Can to n 6
Minerva 22 Cl aymo nt 19
Fa irl ess 13 Akro n Hoban 2
Northwest JO Beaver Loca l 20
Ak r on Garfield 14 Akron •
North 0
Akron East 22 Ak ro n Ken -

11/ack &amp; OeckeP®

fr&lt;~~~t

PeopleS skirted t.hc right erid,
broke two la~kles, and was
finally pushed out of bounds
after gaining 30 yards at the
46. An additional IS yards
were tacked on when the
Marauders were penalized
for a personal foul. Grey ·
carried twice for a fir st down ·
at the 25.
George Carper, 180 pound
senior tackle,, broke into the'
backfield and dropped Grey
for a 1-ya rd loss. As the
players got to their leer, one
Marauder remained on the
ground. Middle guard Stan
Starcher was unable to get up
as he had seriously in jured
his left leg. Play was stopped
for approximately 20 minutes
as the SEOEMS ambulance
moved Starcher from the
field. He was transported to
Holzer'Medical Center where
he was later released when
the doctors diagnosed ,his
injury as a seve'e bruise.
When the ball was put in
play at the 26, Arthur picked
up one on a broken play after
a fumbled snap. Peoples was
stopped for a · yard loss
bringing ilp fourth down.
Arthur lolled a pass that was
high over the receiver's head,
but Magnotta bumped into

.

Power up with

10" DElUXE
POWERsow SHOP

Chiefs ·edge Devils, 27-24

'

.

•

'•

�.

,_

· '!8 - The Snndav Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Oct_. 26, 1975

~- ------------- - - ----------- ,
I
Letters of oplnlon art• welp• med. They should be I ~Y the. '.'648" Board the Community, 11le. Per:wnal Advocacy On the Farm Frtuit·
1. leu·than 300 words long tur be subject to reduction by 1. ;ogram and tbe drug educatton program ts bemg expanded at
I the editor) aod must be signed with the signee's. ad- I he present tune.
.
1
£
1
I drtss. Names niay be withheld upon pitbllcatlon. I
_Hundreds of peoplehave been and are belllg served ~y the
tOO
I
I1 However on request names will be disclosed. Lett~rs I Metgs ~ounty Communtty Mental Health Center located tn tbe
ho
•.
_ • .•
.
.
1 Old Metgs General Hospttal.
.
·
I .
lu good taste, addressing Issues, not per- I
I feel !hat it is important that people understand that !be .
By Bryson R.. &lt;Bud) Carter '
I
·
I "648" Board is responsible for planning, funding, contracting
.£ _ _
for services and developing all types of Menial Health services
WASHINGTON (UP! )' - slightly with lower piiceslot
Gallia Cotiuty Extension AJ(ent
1
an d is not limited to any one particular area of servic!!S.
The Agrictilture Department beef, poultry, fresh fruit and
h
•
An example ol Utis would be the Community School says the outlook for farmers l!fllatoes offsetting hik• ln
SHUT IT OFF ! This is one of the most important rules to I
I
•
•
•
program
a1ao on the ballot. This
is limited ln 1976 hinges on the health of the prices of pork, eggs, datry
observe in the safe use of farin machinery. Whether the
to the training of the Mentally Rel!lrded
as the "648" the economy, ,the state of !be . prol!t!cts and ftsh. ,For all of .
machine is simple or complex, and regardless of its size, I
·I
Board renewal levy deals with all ages and types of treatment livestock industry and the 1975, retail foodprll:es should
speed,or power - always shut!! off before working on ll.
ana programs dealing with total mentalllealth care such as level ·of U.S. agriculturaf average about 9 per cent
Alot of field work such as com picking remains to be done
great shock. ..
,(divorce, dn!gs, alcholism, CO~~Dseling Individuals, family and exports. .
above 19'14.
on flll'llis yet this fall. Any of us, including myself, take risks,
short cuts and get in a hurry.
groups).
.
·
The
USDA's
Outlook
and
But through mid 1976, the
Dear Editor :
Three years ago this levy was passed in our county by a 2 Situation Board says a economists believe there are
Making a habit of always following a particular safety
It came as no great shock that Vice-President Nelson to 1 majority and at that time services were not being offered number of key factors in• three
paths
possible
practice until It becomes automatic is what we really need to
Rockefeller
has endorsed Issues 2, 3, 4, and 5 which are to be but were being deyeloped and now services are being off~red ftuencing the prospects for depending on what happens, .
do. As we all know this is easier said than,done.
agriculture · are
now to economic recovery, tbe
~e way that we can help ourselves observe safety brought before the electorate of Ohio next ·month. As it is five days a week to over .400 people.
known,
Governor
James
Rhodes
and
his
powerful
financialWithout the passage of this renewal, services will be materiallzing, 'including the livestock Industry and the
Jl'&amp;ctlces and al~ those Who work for us or other family
poliUcal clique are engaged in extensive (and expensive) curtailed and tho~ presently being seen _will be without ser- long4erm grain agreement , level of U,S. agricultural
members is to display some kind of warning on farm promotion
of these proposals.
'
vices. This will result in an even greater burden to tbe tax. signed earlier this week with exports.
machinery. This rnlghl only be a reminder about being careful
Historically, it might be expected of Mr. Rockefeller lo payer because the local community monies secured through the Soviet Union.
The outlook board said Its
in large print attached to a dash of the tractor or ln con·
Ariother major factor is ''most likely" forecast in·
spicuous places on machinery Where danger exists. This is not bestow ,his approval upon the issues. However, one has to ·this renewal will no longer be available.
always possible I know but sefll!ls to me anything we can do Wonder at those Who proclaim both SUpport Of these proposals
So I urge you to support this renewal.
crop production, which has volves a substantially larger
along this line helps to jolt us back into reality when we are and fiscal conservatism in the same breath. An illustration of
Mary M. Seaman stabilized after some export volume ihan In the
carelesa around moVing machinery. None of us likes to have an this may be ihe fact thai '!tfle over seventy million dollars
deterioration this SIDllmer 197~75 crop year and a
accident and particularly a serious accident I urge you to do worth of bonds for highwa~ construction raised by Governor Not in favor of program
and
is now headed for record pickup In livestock feeding.
all you Clll to prevent farm accidents on your farm this fall. Rhodes in his previous tenure as Governor were nol sold, he
levels.
This would brighten !he farm
' '
expects the state citizenry to believe that Issue Three ~an sell Dear Editor :
+++
Uvestock
producUon
also
income
prospects throUgh the
two billion dollars worth of new bonds along with a 4.5 percent
While we are talking about fall work, it won't be long interest.
In our present day, confused, state of affairs of trials and is picking up, the situation first half of 1976, allow ·tbe
before everyone 'Ifill be involved in stripping tobacco. I want to
tribulations many a parent who are concerned with their .report said, but any ex- depressed livestock sector to
remind you that your Extension Office does have access to · The nine~enths of a cent gas tax increase for the funding of children are confronted with a situation of what's right and pansion of the livestock continue recovery and Iring
plana lor mating a wall-type tobacco press. t have a copy Ute bonds would have the capacity to finance approximately what's \vrong.
·
feeding industry next year about 110me easing of, crop
available that you may want to look at and you may wish to ·the revenue required to pay the Involved interest. The
We have no school ilo!Jk problem or busing problems ln our will depend on how strong pr!ces In the face of record
order one from the University of Kentucky. Stop by the office retirement of these bonds is another hitch. It may become a school districts as other cities do. '
oonsumer demand is ·and on output.
.
probability that an Increase in the sales and-or income tax
or give ua a calli! you are Interested.
the
availability and cost of
II moderate economic
Then Why do we have to be confronted with a problem on
may be necessary and, in typical Rhodes mamer, it will be the
+++
drug and alcohol being pushed into our school system. If it had feed. The domestic market recovery continues, retail
A question came up the other day about using muriate of lower and mldille economic classes which will be called to bear been an elective course offered to the students then tbere will depend on how well food priee Increases In the
the brunt of the situation.
potash on tobacco fielda rather than the sulfate form of potash.
general economic recovery first half- of 1976 would be
It would appear to me that if Governor Rhod'es really would be a time and place for it. But ll w~sn't offered, the
1\ecause of ita chloride content, muriate of potash · is not
can
be sustained in 1976.
below the rate of Increase in
. believes that the measures of his perpetration in respect to the studepts have full schedules and their study halls are being
uaually recommended for fertilizing tobacco.
ln
its
first
finn
estimate,
nonfood
items, Pork output
used to study the courses they have chosen. ·
However, aa much as 200 pouncia of muriate of pOtash per •proposals would be sincerely justified In regard to the welfare
the
outlook
board
also
said
will
probably
remain below
I don't think the student's UJJie should be taken away from
acre Clrt be,used safely In the fall (before December 15) on of the populace, he would attempt to conVince the public by any classroom or study hal1 to have something of this sort net farm Income in 1975 may year-earlier levels, the report
lielda Where no manure has been spread. When tobacco field means other than sensationally ominous slogans, costly media brought Into the school. If it's not an elective course then I total about $25 billion com- said, but . s._,plies of other
fertilization II done In the ll)rlng, no more than 100 pounds.of plugs, and other devices which, for the most part, reflect a don't thillk it should be ln the school at all.
pared 'With f.l7 billion in 1974. livestock products would
muriate ~f potash fertillzer per acre should be used, if you hodgepodge of silly girrunickry and other forms of dubious
Total
cash receipts from Increase, and erop-related
What attention the teachers get out of the students should
oon't ll8e any manure. Otherwise, enough chloride may be persuasive value. He keeps from having the. proposals
farming
will be slightly " food JI'Oducts should be In
iresenled in a debate forwn as suggested by Lt. Governor be on what we send them to school to learn. That is what tbe higher, with gross income large sujJply.
preaent In the aoil to reduce tobacco quaUty.
Richard Celeste wbo has referred to the Rhodes proposals as teachers went to college to team. I think ll is very unfair to
' +++
aroiDld $102 billion, but exHowever, if grain elljlllrts
them 88 well as the students.
Fall (preferably by mld.()ctober) is an ideal time to "blueprints lor bankruptcy." The queStion remains why
penses
are
also
up
suhstanturn
out milch higher than
I am certainly not in favor of the O.V.F. drug and alcohol
prepare tobacco plant bed for the coming year's burley Rhodes shuns this type of a (hopefully) intelligent perspective JI'Ogram in Racine:
·
tially.
currenUy anUeipaled, this
tobacco crop, Th_e weed control treatments most commonly of the issues. Does Mr. Rhodes believe that the Ohio. citizen Is
Although
farmers
are
not
would
result in higher grain
Avery concerned parent
used ln the fall lor plant beds are methyl bromide (cold method 10 apathetic and WlciviciTiinded that he will buy the issue
purchasing
as
much
feed,
·
prices
and dampen the
Name withheld by request.
only), Vorlex, and burning, Any ol these treatments will do a campaign unskeptically? Does he feel that the electorate is
feeder livestock and fertilizer production response in the
satilfactory job if the aoil temperature is above 50 degrees and incapable of WJderstanding an intelligent approach to the
this year, Jl'ices of produc- Uvestock sector. Beef sup.
the110ilisnot wet or too dry. Vorlex can be used successfully at issues? Or does he fear that the average voter is above par.
lion
Inputs coiulnue to rise, piles would Increase ln early
tisan politics and willing to take an open approach ?'I don't ·
a lower temperature than the other lreatments.
and
total
production expenses 1976 but would tighten in the
know. ·
+++
will be up $3 to $4 bWipn, tbe second half of the year
Whatever the outcome, I hope it is impressed upon every
Last Friday evening I waa Invited to present a program for
report said.
·
beeall8e of reduced feeding.
the'l'ri·Advisory Fann Bureau Council at the home of Mr. and voter to be well-Informed 88 he casts his ballot for or against ~
For the remainder ol 1975, And much larger Increases ln
Mrs. Denver Yoho. I decided to dlscuaa our Metropolitan Park
the report said, retaJJ food food prices could be expected
Diltrlct here ln Gallia County and took Tom Jones, one of the
prices should increaae only to
in b next spring.
1'..-k Comrn!asloners, along with me.
,Rather than give a lecture on part diltricts we Invited the
W, Keith Cooper
Farm Bureau CoiUlCil to discuu any quelllions they had about
the Park Diatrlct with us. We devoted most of our UJJie to
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - the pros."
finding out ~me ol the thinking of these folks concerning what United Nations is questioned
Fonner President Richard The three television netthings they would like to 11ee come about 88 a result of the Park
M. Nixon has discussed works were less enthusiastic.
Dlltrict.
Dear Editor:
becoming a broadcast Richard
C.
Wald,
~e of Ute items that was mentlooed quite a bit was need
People who have never questioned the United Nations .commentator with the man Jl'esldent, NBC News, said in
for factliUes and a place to have family reunions. I mention before are now beginning to do so, and we intend to provide whose firm syndicates New York tha,t putting Nixon '
thil to rirnlnd any of the readers that they may forward · aome of 'the answers.
Ronald Reagan's radio on the air was something be
0. F. ,Wheeler, the local leader of the John Birch Society, shows.
sualllllona to !he Extenaion Office and to Park District
had not considered .
Commlaaioners, Tom Jones, Clyde Evans and Bill Thomas states, "We feel that this. growing wave of discontentment
Harry O'Connor
of
"His opinions are of ln·
cont'eflling ideas Utey have that might be Included ln the Park developing over the U. N. is due to the way U.S. support of the O'Connor Creative Services terest, certainly," Wald said.
Di.strict plan.
·
United Nations has been exploited and used against our best said Saturday he met with "I'm not sure Pd be par·
Interests. And we're going to bring up some very realistic Nixon at San Clemente Sept. ticularly_lnterested ln him as
reasons why the United States should revoke its membership 9.
PURITY
a journalist- his efforts ln
ln the United Nations."
"He
(Nixon)
said
that
he
the past have not been parof the Land ·
The first reason cited by Mr. Wheeler, lor much of the thought radio might be the ticularly sympathetic to tbe
criticism against the U. N. was "the expulsion of the Republic strongest mediwn lor him, general run of what people in
of tblna from membership, and the seating, instead, of the rather than writing a this buslnel!ll do for a liVing."
murderous regime of Mao Tse.tung and Chou En:Lai. Another newspaper colwnn or going CBS and ABC had no comreason mentioned was "the General Assembly's vote of 89 to 8 on television," O'Connor inent.
to approve of thti terrorist Palestine Uberation Organization 's ' said.
LOW IN
' '
claim to statehood, and a further U. N. vote of95 to 17 granting
"He said it was better than
Ute group of Permanent Observer Status," ·
COST
TV because it didn't have the
BY JOHN COOPER
servation technician of SCS,
The
Local
Birch
leader
charges
that
"the
P
.L.O.,
led
by
NOW
YOU
KNOW
element
that
people
would
be
Soli Cons. Service
visited the D. E. HarUey
Plans for the Western Soil farm on Baden Ridge. One of Yasir Arafat, has ln recent years been responsible lor cold- turned · off by the kind of If Alaska had the same
population density as
Conservation District ' s the items discussed was two blooded murder at the Munich Olympic Games, slaughter of necktie he was wearing."
Innocent
children
ill
Israel,
assassinations
of
diplomats,
Manhattan,
the state would
O'Connor
said
Utere
had
awarda dinner are nearing rectangular concrete
hljacklngs, kidnapping, and terrorilrn - all as a matter of been no conunltment of any have more than 36,900,000,000
cornpleUon. It will be held watering tanks that had been
VINE STREET
·policy. Close oooervers of the U.N. should riOt be usrprised, kind ahd it appeared Nixon residents.
GALLIPOLIS, 0.
October 27 at 7 o'clock at built Jn 1952. These tanlai
though, to see the glorification of the pro"'mmunist P.L.O. was talking a year or · 18
Cedar Lakes' banquet hall. have been in constant use
Just as they would not be surprised over the U.N.'s failure to mon~ in the future after be
Charles Boyles, farm since thai Umeaild are still in
utter a single word to protest about North Vietnam's completes his memoirs and
manager of the Eastem Ohio a good state of preservation.
aggressive conquest and butchery of South Vietnam."
already contracted television
Agricultural Experiment The water for both of these
The
Birchers
believe
that
because
of
the
U.N.'s
record
interviews
with David Frost.
Station will be the speaker. tanks is supplied from
especially the admission of Red China on October 24, 1971, that
Reagan's
radio programs
Mr. Boyles is a West Virginia springs. It was necessary to
the day should beJI'oclalmeda "Day of ~arne." Help! Get Us consist of three.mlnute comnative and was graduated revise the plan and redo the Out.''
mentaries, live days a week.
from
West
Virginia collection basin at one ot the
Name
'Wi!Nield
by
request
..
The
program is called "View· University, but for several springs a few years ag_o, but
points,"
and is beard on 314
years has been with Ohio thatisalltherepalrworkthat
radio
staUons
in every state
renewal urged
State University at the Ohio has been necessary on these Support
expect
Delaware.
Stations
Experiment Station. He is systems. Mr. Hartley said
pay
anywhere
from
$20 to
.All a concerned citizen I would like to let you know that I
renowned for his home-spun that they have been quite
wit and hwnor.
satisfactory and plans to believe In and support the work that is being done •by tbe $300per week, O'Connor said.
The Conservation Farm improve anolherspring in the Melgs.Gallia.Jackson Community Mental Health and" "AllY producer who has any
RetardaUm Board "648" Board lhrOI!ilt the Meigs Mental business aense would want to
winners from each of the near future.
Hea!Ut
Center which is a contract agency of the ''843" Board. do it," he said, referring to a
counties will be recognized
DESIGN ' WORK
is
In addiUon to the Meigs Commu!1ity Mental Health Center Nixon' show. "I'm not conalong with other winners in progressing in preparation
cerned about the cona of such
youth programs sponsored by for the ditching machine that the Board has also JI'Ovlded services to Meigs residents
a proi!ram, I think they would
the district.
is .expected to star! work in through the Meigs Care Line which -has been supported joinlly
definitely be outweighed by
This year's banquet is open Mason
County
about
to all district cooperators or November I. Detailed sur- to 36.50.
other people interested in the veys have been made on tbe
HEIFE;R CALVES- 250 to
district program. Banquet George Hoffman farm near 300 Ibs. 16 to 21, 300 to 400 lbs,
tickets are $3.50 each. they Vernon Church, the 'Robert 16 to 23, 400 to 500 lbs. 17 to 25,
may be purchased from the Burdette farm on Oldtown 500 to 600 lbs. 18 to 25, 600 to
district office, 230~ Mal~ Creek, the Joe Forbes farm 700 lbs. 18 to 25, 700 lbs. and
Street, or from Edward on Oldtown Creek, the Junior over 17 lo 24.
Bwngarner, Grace Brown or Newberry farm- on Oldtown
Sl'OCK COWS &amp; BULLS
Forrest Nibert, district t.:reek, the Vicki VanMete.r (by the Head ) - Stock Cows
supervisors.
farm on Robinson Run and 85 to 165, Stock Cows and
'DALE NIBERT installed a _ Dana Durst farm on Sandhill · Calv~s 110 to 170, Stock Bulls
'
concrete watering trough in Road.
90 to 145, Baby Calves 5 to 29;
the barnlot at his farm at
I By the Pound ) Canners &amp;
Apple Grove. This · trough
A Behlen· Corn Crib k.;;;ps Its. high resale value year after
Cutters Cows . 12 to 21,
' Land
replaced another trough that
Holstein Cows 19 to 24.50,
manager of your local Federal
year ... because It's built for a llfeti't'e of rugged service. Every
had disintegrated as a result
Commercial Bulls 20 to 26 !"'•"'" Association is there to help you. He
Behlen Crib Is Hot-Dip Galvanized after welding· ... completely
of constant ,use and freezing
r1,000 lbs. and over ),
covering all surfaces (Including weld spots) with up to 6 times the
the local agricultural situation. He's
and thawing over a period of
VEAL CALVES- Tops 220
amount of zinc found on ordinary cribs. The · Behlen Crib is made of
SALES REPORT
years. Leslie Parsons, farm
,
........
liar
with
the
money
market.
He's
'
an
lbs.
to
250
54
to
59,
Mediwn
No. 2·gauge Bar Mesh Steel ~over 14" in diameter). Weather-tlgnt
Ohio Valley Uvestock Co.
manager , ' made ·
200
lbs.
to
300
34
to
42.50,
Culls
Oct 15, 1975 '
"Steep Pitch" roof fills to the ,peak without hand leveling. · Extra
ribusiness man who talks your language.
arrangements lor the
30 duwn, Sh~ts 17 to 40.
wide crib doors. In sizes from 679to 1684 bushels.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Get to know him,
replacement. The portable
STOCKER CATTLE
steel forms, belonging to the STEERS - 250 to 300 iba. 17
district, were used to pour tbe to27,300to :oolbs. 18to28.50,
228 Upper River Road
trough. Water for the trough 400 to 500 lbs.19to 32.50, 500 to
P. 0. Box 207, Gallipolis ·
is supplied by a w•ll.
Phone 446-0203
600 lbs. 21 to 36, 600 to 700 lbs.
OKEY R. KING , con- 20 to 36.50, 7001bs. and over 20
Clyde B. Walker, Mgr.

Agriculture and

k fior .'""'u h rnges
..
On h_ea..l't..h 01 economy

Out

our community

:On!~~~

£l~.h
N'~F4ilh

I

~
''1/l•

. · •

w~lch ~

p~ogrmam

wher~

No

:• 29 __: The SWlday Times . Sentine 1, Stmday, Oct . 26, 1975

F_oote

earning~ show decrease

::==-··'"'-""""'"··-·:: 1 or ,ixon?
1

Lay

CALF MILK REPLACER

Soil awards dinner

scheduled October 27

=

J. D. NORTH PRODUCE

~:;e ~~~~~~~ua;~~:a~=~sP~:~u.~~~~tw~:~~lfo~dr;

with $31,858,000 during the

industries.

same period in .1974. 1975
third quarter earnings
totaled $1,305,000 equivalent
to $15 per common share
af
ter payment of ~ the
Pre
ferred dlvidend.l974
third
quarter
earnl
'ngs were
$3.
120,000
equivalent
Per Common Shar'e' to $.41
Nl·ne months sales were
$78,804,0QO. in 1975 compared
·
699 000
to
$84,
,
for
the
same·
perl
1974
In
_ Net earnin. a•
for. 'od
the 1975 nine months were
....
124
•• , ,000 , equivale. nt to $1.05
Per Co mmon share after
..,
dl
payment of the preferred
'vidend, compared , with

w·•RD
UNIT EARNS A ;.
KARAMURSEL, Turkey Co
Airman First Class note
·
f · c
M
Eifler, daughterI o b rs.
0f
Mildred E. Ho co,m
·
be
. fan
Air Force
Ewington,
is Communtca
a mem · r ot'tons
Service unit t~at as earne
h
d
the u. s. Atr Force. Out:
stan,ding Unit Award .. Atrm_an
Eifler is an admi nIstra ttve
specialist at Karamursel
Common
De ense.
nf
1
stallatipn, Turkey, WI th th
.e
logistics detachment_ which
f
t
$8,368,000 ($.81 per share) . was cited or men ??OUS
from continuing
service in support of mthtary

operati~ns

$7an,d49a3 ,000
6 s~~;:)s_ ~~
total(f$r.o9mpeal~

74~r:e a:;an\st.~
~~:~~:
2

gradual~ ~ort

h G 1118
the 19'14 period.
. 19'1
of
a.
Lower third quarter 1975 High Schoolm Vmton, Ohto.

Market Report

/

KING OF CORN CRIBS

.

··

a}

::
.::,;•_::':.; ""'

WICHITA FIIU .&lt;;, Tex . -

·

li~htningfbol1t

Airman Charles D. Ashworth,
of retired USAF' Senior

: .}_.
:;::
:-:·
:::

buildings in an area of approximately 2,000 acres, killed 300
000 h 1
and

·,:_,: ,•,: Phoenix whereal hedi ':"as
weather is being perfected. But the
reported in critic con 1ton .
weath er con di tions which were .... Roger Young, assistant
t f'
urred ·.·. special agent in charge of the

of

m Phoenix FBI office , satd

tr~med

~c~r:r c~~s::~s~ ~;!~~d l~k a;1 ~~~~8~4 ~~~s\r~~~~royed 17,450 :~~ter~~~:~i~n~0:;r~~i~ting fire

each other and say "Someone s go
to be kldding. 11 couldn't burn, now."
d
uld burn

~:~c:~ll~~~'enanhel~ alon g b; ~:~;:~dlef;2:• milli~~e::th

r::~:;~h=np~hs~i~~~y Ire occ

}

.·:.·_'·.:,__
::::···
:_.',·.· '.-·
}
···

St. Rt. 554, Cheshire, O. •
Ga'llpolls Rt. 7
• '"
Phone 367-7329

SATURDAY, NOV. 1
'

1100 AM TIL 5:00 PM

FARM CENTER
SOUlltEASTERN OHIO FARMERS «nnP

FORMER BIDWELL MILL
S.SIDE 554 IN BJDWELL, 0.
BOX 81, BIDWELL - 388-8700

REGISTER FOR
GRAND PRIZE
00 NOT HAVE 10 BE PRESENT .
TO WIN.

· COFFEE &amp;DONUTS

.FREE
DRAWINGS HOURLY
MEET CO.OP MEMBERS - YOUR NEIGHBORS

PAU.V Ica
•

(j&gt;~.(j)~
PERfORIIIANCE

CUSTOM ORINDING
FERTILIZER • SEED ·

Ohi'o 1'~elon
,
h· t m' Tempe
S 0
,

sh

TEMPE , Ariz. (UP!) - A
man wanted in Ohio was ot
and critically wounkndefd
FBIa I et
Friday when he drew
and approached an
agen
who was trying to arrest him,
theDavid
FBI said.
Bruce Connell, 26,
th left
was shot below e
eye
and was taken to Maricopa
County General Hospital at

: :~:

:~:

POMEROY _ This winter, limes a check of the ·system, over. To avoid severe burns
Ohio residents are relying on after an unfortunate tragedy, or electrical shocks, . warn
space heaters and other has shown that the duct-work c.hildr en to never msert
mall heating appliances to goes only as far as the attic or fmgers or objects through the
~arm their homes and take . an unused room - causing · )jeater's protecltve guard.
thechilloutofcoldmornings. poisonous air to be _ ;e· Another safety step IS to
In their anxiety and circulated back into the hvmg make sure electrtc heaters
discomfort over the mor· areas. The heating apphance and electrtcal cords are kept
nlng's cold chill, many people must be yented to the outside away from all sources of
forget to read directions or and above the roof edge.
water, such as the bathroom
heed warnings clearly If you are going to buy a tub or sink.
,
,
rinted on either the heater new heating appliante, make
Thtrd, all heahng equtp·
packaging. As a result, sure it is approved and do
ment should be _thoroughly
serious injury and death from tamper with it. All m· mspected by quahf1ed ~rvtce
bW'ns and poisonous gases stallations and repairs should personnel before 11ts ftred up
'II take their toll across the be done by qualified servtce for that ftrsl cold mormng .
' personnel.
Consumers who suspect they
Realizing the potential for Second, it is also very have faulty heatmg equt~·
such butns and poisonings in important to locate all ment should contact their
M igs County Dr. Selim heating applian ces away local health department ,
Bl~zewicz, Health Com· from furniture, draperies ~nd utility service or ,fuel supmissioner recently ex- other combustible malertals plter .
_
essed cdncern for county to reduce the risk of fires and
Anyone wanhng to report a
Deaths In Ohio bW'nS. · Children and adults serious product . defect or
resulting from poisonous should stay far enough away product-related mjury can
gases escaping from home- from heaters to avoid cat· contact
th e Acctdent
heating equipment have been ching clothing on fire. Young Pre vention. and_ .P~oduct
on the increase over the past children · need close super· Saf~ty _ Umt •. DIVIsion of
few years. Hundreds of vision while playing in a room Samlatton, Ohto Department
Ohioans have sought hospital warmed by the use of a space of Health, Colunobus, (614)
emergen.cy treatment for heater.
466-2544. Two bu~~ehns,
injuries associated with gas,
Asafe electric heater has a "Carbon Monoxtde ~nd
kerosene and electric space thermostat control and an "How Safe .'.s Your He.atmg
heaters . According to Dr. automatic device that turns Equtpment, are avatlable
Blazewicz, "more than two- the healer off if it is turned free of charge upon request to
thirds of heater-related injuries are for burns and about
hall of these burn victims are .
children under the age of
five."
Haz.a rds from space
heaters are real and
threatening , When not
properly vented to the outside, dangerous amounts of
poisonous gases (carbon
monoxide) can build up to a
level capable of killing a
sleeping person in less than
two hours. Housewives
should be aware that using .
the kitchen oven for extra
heat is very dangerous, as ,
this uses up the oxygen·
needed for breathing.
When placed ln an area
easily accessible to children
or in the dally traffic path of
adults, space heaters can be
an eyer-threatening cause or
fires and burns. Loose
clothing may come in contact
with the heater , setting
clothing on fire and resulting
in painful, slow to heal burns.
Constant bumping and
jarring of the heater will
reduce the elllciency of the
burning fuel and raise the
cost of the appliance,'s
operation, and also increase
the possibility of carbon
monoxide gas escaping Into
the room.
FOR THE PRO AND THE MAN
The Meigs County Health
Department, in cooperation
WHO WANTS TO CUT LIKE ONE.
with the Accident Prevention
and Product Safety Unit,
Your Dltcount Hotpolnt Dealer
Ohio Department of Health,
strongly recommends ' the
fuel 011 Heating Stove•'
following steps be taken to
provide maximum safety as
well as heat for your family
this winter:
First, check to see if your
exhaust and venting system
is adequate. This includes
checking to make sun• there
Slrvlnt Mtlt•• O.llia ·and
is no build'up of black carbon
Mlson Counties. ·
deposits around heating
Jack W. C.rHy, Mer.
appliances or their venting
PH. tt2-21tl
systems. Also, it is very
s.....
Min.-Sat
important to make sure the
exhaust and vent systems are
workin g correctly . M•ny

~ot

the mentioned Stale unit or
through the Meigs County
Health Department, 11412 E.
Main St., Pomeroy 992·3723.
Dr. Blazewicz hopes that
all Meigs Coun ty residen ts
will take the lime to check the
safety of their heating
systems and make plans for
getting all occupants out
quickly in case of fire. Such
precautions are even more
necessary for those residents
heating their homes with coal
·or wood stoves. ·A few
minutes tOday may save you
costly repairs and medical
bills in the future, as well as
unnecessary pain · and suffering to your family.

:~te.

AUTOMATIC OILING
LIGHTWEIGHT

FAST STARTING

WITH 10" BAR AND CHAIN

A bench warrant was issued
in Toledo, Ohio, for his arrest
. last March when he failed to
appear for sentencing.

.

.

Th e
. wh o was
lralned 1In 1
betng
estl ma es an
financ1a topans,
ts AFB,
.
Lan gley
Va ., fordutyw}thaumtofthe
Tactical Atr
Airman A:;hworlh IS a 1974
graduate of Point Pleasant
I IV . Va .) High School.
H'
·r c tance is the
M nd• Mrs
1s w1 e, r ons
R o r.f 61a LeMansdaughter
Dean
o Oh1'o His
gsto•"n
· youssos
rtve, oun
·
" •
·
0 ther, Mrs. J oh n H· Paul •
mo
. St•, Clat'rsvt'lle '
res1.des m
Ohio.

Comma~d.

'

.

'

You 'll need a heater this
winter ... and now during
this special sale you hive
an opportunity to buy th e
heater of your choice at sale
prices.
6 models from which to
choose, 55,000 to t50,000
BTU's. Vented and non-

vented. Burn kerosene, or

INSTALLED
. GAMBIER, Ohio (UP!) Philip Harding Jordan Jr.
was installed Saturday as the
16th president of Kenyon
College here.
.
About 1,000 persons, tn·
eluding 'delegates from 50
colleges, universities and
other groups, heard Jordan
defend the college's liberal
arts philosophy.

No.1 fu el oil.
Drop by and seelhe
KNIPCO quality line of
portable heaters, all guaranteed to keep you comfort ably wa1m , • , where and
when you need II.

'

SWISHER
IMPLEME~T CO.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Fut

OVERSTOCK
CLOSEOUT!

'

The 1-row Superpicker
It's the big capacity, cost-saving favorite.

',

Don 't let its r1-row gathering unit fool you . Th is machine is pure
Superpicker from its long, tapered floattng potn ts and tts aggressive snapping rolls-all th e way back to 1ts wtde wagon elevat?r.
It 'll bring in more of your crop with less field loss, whether you ve
got a bumper crop or if it's one of those lean years when every
.
ear counts.
Bui lt lor long , trouble-free se rvice, you 'll find slip clutch pro lecl ton
on main drives - and roller chains lor smooth , qUtet operatton . And
with the liberal use of sealed bearings and wease filled gearboxes,
15 minutes a day is all it takes for lubrt catton .
Heavy, formed channel steel hitch adjusts sideways by mo~in9 a
single bolt to various posttton s. Tht s shtlts th e ptcker to p;cktng
positions and for Iran sport .
.
Hi h capacity, 6- roll husking bed has 3 rubber rolls, 3 cast tron .
it 's equipped with powered rubber Flexi-Fingers thai align the
ears on the husking bed and keep them movtng along the rolls .
Here 's a picker that does an outstanding job of brtngtng tn your
crop-even when it's down and tangled .

A~d

·POMEROY
LANDMARK
Open'"

~thid t~':':ll w:~
~~!:~:::~~lilt~b~~e;:m.:;yd

a~rman,prep~ratton ~~
bud~el_
as.•i~ned
man d.

Lowest Price of the
Year!

~sidents.

GRAND
OPENING!

Y

and advanced on the agent at
the Trade Winds motel here.
Younged
m
charg wt
e ro

~its

TRADING CENTER

~cia.list

Coagennntelalfwtearshsehodrtebwy aan~~!

Hazards .from space heaters
are real and threatening

Small payment will
hold till May 1976 at
75 prices. Use our
lay-away plan now.
,,

Sl~~~pard

:,.: :,.: ,

:;: ~~~i:

ale

Maste r Se rgeant Alfred H.
A
th of New
Haven,
v·shworhas
gradua
ted W.
at
AFB, Tex., from
lh. U S 'Air Force budget '
s
course cond ucted
bp the. Air Training Cnm-

By T. Allan Wolll'r
OistrlctRangcr
This week's article was written by
Raymond J. S.choener. Tim bel'
Management Forester .
, Al the present time the Ironton
h f 11
District is in the middle of t eb a·
·fire season. With the weather11 emg
h'
as wet as it has been, especia
Y
t
· k th t ts
Past week, you would th1n
a db
we
could kiss the fall fire season goo Y
1
and forget about fire fig ht'mg un t'l.f
springtime. But that 's no_t h_ow 0tl
works in this country at this ttme
year when the falling leaves Win·
crease the chance Of wildfire.· •e
half-jokingly say that it can ram m
d 1
the morning, the sun can come ou
and the windf' comet at
we
3 noon,
• 10 ckanI say
can have a 1re a o c • f'
'half-jokingly" because a few tres
have almost followed that schedule .
:·:· ,
h
· to this of

knav~.

:·:·
:}
:;::
\
}
;:;;
;::;
..
;_;_;
::::
·:-:
:,'·, ',·
:·:·
::::
::::
:_;:_;
:_:.:_:.
(
:_:_:
,•,..•

carelessness or hincendiartisfm, vtht_re property; certaidnlyd ~n evenhtttohrayt
You say that the fulpeoptlhe fl_roef :::;
t f ctors whic accoun or · should be recor e 1n our ts
America are more care WI
····
every fire that we have.
books.
in the forest today than they ever :_,:_: ·',,.:
1:::
To stage a forestfire you need only
But how many have heard of the
were in the old days' Let's hope so!
a few things _ a forest, the righ t great Peshtigo forest fire which
·;;;: atmospheric conditions, and a
... ...... .... .. ........-.-...........................,.,,
{,:,:::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.-.·.-.-..,.,....................

ALSO TRADE INS
ACCEPTED

A irnia n Ash worth recent griJ(l uat(!

norlheaslern
spark, either from a
or erupted
that veryin same
day ' AWisconsin
to tal of
a match in the hand of a oo m·
1,280,000 acres was qurned over,
The formula is simple; the homes, towns, . settlements swept
wonder is that we have not had more away, and an estimated 800 . 1500
and bigger £ires.
.
persons lost their lives.
The list of gigantic forest fires m
In Wisconsi n, also, occurred the
d
ooo
1
America.isa long one. Their recor s
Pht' llt'ps fir e of July 1894 when 100,h
1
"'
are stories of appaling loo~ of rea
""res were burned and more t anf
wea!t,h, of the cremation of coun
tess
300 persons killed. In Septem
h
H_ber
kl o
wild creatures, of charred urr.an . that same year, the great m ey,,
corpses, a story of roaring thunder,f
Mi.nn., forest fire occurred. Millionsf
dd
of darkened skies at mi ay, o
of acres were laid 'waste, somen12
blackened and cindered remains o
towns wiped out, 160,000 acres o
what was for est green - but they
forest burned and 418lives lost. 1e
are soon forgotten.
smoke from the Phillips and Hinklehy
f'
Most of us have heard of thehGreat
['Ires that year was so dense on t 1e
Chicago Fire of 1871. This is t fe tre
Great Lakes as to interfere se rious Y
b M
0
that broke out on the evening o ct.
with the movement of vesse 1s.
8, 1871 , when
a
cow
owned
y
rs.
Can such conflagrations
Le
dl kicked
h
more occur
roads
Patrick 0 ' ary suppose Y
again? Today t ere are
_
ov'er a lighted lanJern in a barn .
and trails, protective agenctes are
Fanned by strong winds, the flames
more nwnerous&lt; and better
· kl
· g for more
d
· ation ts

111'

of

. with your agribusiness needsf

F
.:: Your wayne N. at.Ion·_ orest.
:::

EXTON
, Pa. announced
- Foote . sales
andreduced
earnings
are· ora ::::
Mineral
Company
r.esull of
demand
19 .
.
f
d th _

Mew
·

career
7\. T.

,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,: : : : : : : : : : : : : : i: : : : : : : : : ;:;:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:, :,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,: ,:,:,:,~:,:,: ,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,: ,:,:,:, : : : : : : : : : :;:;:;:;:;:;: : : : : : :;:;: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :./

We'll Tradef ·
Buy Now. &amp; Savel

MEIGS ·EQUIPMENT CO•
l..!!,992·2176

POMEROY, OHIO

�.

,_

· '!8 - The Snndav Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Oct_. 26, 1975

~- ------------- - - ----------- ,
I
Letters of oplnlon art• welp• med. They should be I ~Y the. '.'648" Board the Community, 11le. Per:wnal Advocacy On the Farm Frtuit·
1. leu·than 300 words long tur be subject to reduction by 1. ;ogram and tbe drug educatton program ts bemg expanded at
I the editor) aod must be signed with the signee's. ad- I he present tune.
.
1
£
1
I drtss. Names niay be withheld upon pitbllcatlon. I
_Hundreds of peoplehave been and are belllg served ~y the
tOO
I
I1 However on request names will be disclosed. Lett~rs I Metgs ~ounty Communtty Mental Health Center located tn tbe
ho
•.
_ • .•
.
.
1 Old Metgs General Hospttal.
.
·
I .
lu good taste, addressing Issues, not per- I
I feel !hat it is important that people understand that !be .
By Bryson R.. &lt;Bud) Carter '
I
·
I "648" Board is responsible for planning, funding, contracting
.£ _ _
for services and developing all types of Menial Health services
WASHINGTON (UP! )' - slightly with lower piiceslot
Gallia Cotiuty Extension AJ(ent
1
an d is not limited to any one particular area of servic!!S.
The Agrictilture Department beef, poultry, fresh fruit and
h
•
An example ol Utis would be the Community School says the outlook for farmers l!fllatoes offsetting hik• ln
SHUT IT OFF ! This is one of the most important rules to I
I
•
•
•
program
a1ao on the ballot. This
is limited ln 1976 hinges on the health of the prices of pork, eggs, datry
observe in the safe use of farin machinery. Whether the
to the training of the Mentally Rel!lrded
as the "648" the economy, ,the state of !be . prol!t!cts and ftsh. ,For all of .
machine is simple or complex, and regardless of its size, I
·I
Board renewal levy deals with all ages and types of treatment livestock industry and the 1975, retail foodprll:es should
speed,or power - always shut!! off before working on ll.
ana programs dealing with total mentalllealth care such as level ·of U.S. agriculturaf average about 9 per cent
Alot of field work such as com picking remains to be done
great shock. ..
,(divorce, dn!gs, alcholism, CO~~Dseling Individuals, family and exports. .
above 19'14.
on flll'llis yet this fall. Any of us, including myself, take risks,
short cuts and get in a hurry.
groups).
.
·
The
USDA's
Outlook
and
But through mid 1976, the
Dear Editor :
Three years ago this levy was passed in our county by a 2 Situation Board says a economists believe there are
Making a habit of always following a particular safety
It came as no great shock that Vice-President Nelson to 1 majority and at that time services were not being offered number of key factors in• three
paths
possible
practice until It becomes automatic is what we really need to
Rockefeller
has endorsed Issues 2, 3, 4, and 5 which are to be but were being deyeloped and now services are being off~red ftuencing the prospects for depending on what happens, .
do. As we all know this is easier said than,done.
agriculture · are
now to economic recovery, tbe
~e way that we can help ourselves observe safety brought before the electorate of Ohio next ·month. As it is five days a week to over .400 people.
known,
Governor
James
Rhodes
and
his
powerful
financialWithout the passage of this renewal, services will be materiallzing, 'including the livestock Industry and the
Jl'&amp;ctlces and al~ those Who work for us or other family
poliUcal clique are engaged in extensive (and expensive) curtailed and tho~ presently being seen _will be without ser- long4erm grain agreement , level of U,S. agricultural
members is to display some kind of warning on farm promotion
of these proposals.
'
vices. This will result in an even greater burden to tbe tax. signed earlier this week with exports.
machinery. This rnlghl only be a reminder about being careful
Historically, it might be expected of Mr. Rockefeller lo payer because the local community monies secured through the Soviet Union.
The outlook board said Its
in large print attached to a dash of the tractor or ln con·
Ariother major factor is ''most likely" forecast in·
spicuous places on machinery Where danger exists. This is not bestow ,his approval upon the issues. However, one has to ·this renewal will no longer be available.
always possible I know but sefll!ls to me anything we can do Wonder at those Who proclaim both SUpport Of these proposals
So I urge you to support this renewal.
crop production, which has volves a substantially larger
along this line helps to jolt us back into reality when we are and fiscal conservatism in the same breath. An illustration of
Mary M. Seaman stabilized after some export volume ihan In the
carelesa around moVing machinery. None of us likes to have an this may be ihe fact thai '!tfle over seventy million dollars
deterioration this SIDllmer 197~75 crop year and a
accident and particularly a serious accident I urge you to do worth of bonds for highwa~ construction raised by Governor Not in favor of program
and
is now headed for record pickup In livestock feeding.
all you Clll to prevent farm accidents on your farm this fall. Rhodes in his previous tenure as Governor were nol sold, he
levels.
This would brighten !he farm
' '
expects the state citizenry to believe that Issue Three ~an sell Dear Editor :
+++
Uvestock
producUon
also
income
prospects throUgh the
two billion dollars worth of new bonds along with a 4.5 percent
While we are talking about fall work, it won't be long interest.
In our present day, confused, state of affairs of trials and is picking up, the situation first half of 1976, allow ·tbe
before everyone 'Ifill be involved in stripping tobacco. I want to
tribulations many a parent who are concerned with their .report said, but any ex- depressed livestock sector to
remind you that your Extension Office does have access to · The nine~enths of a cent gas tax increase for the funding of children are confronted with a situation of what's right and pansion of the livestock continue recovery and Iring
plana lor mating a wall-type tobacco press. t have a copy Ute bonds would have the capacity to finance approximately what's \vrong.
·
feeding industry next year about 110me easing of, crop
available that you may want to look at and you may wish to ·the revenue required to pay the Involved interest. The
We have no school ilo!Jk problem or busing problems ln our will depend on how strong pr!ces In the face of record
order one from the University of Kentucky. Stop by the office retirement of these bonds is another hitch. It may become a school districts as other cities do. '
oonsumer demand is ·and on output.
.
probability that an Increase in the sales and-or income tax
or give ua a calli! you are Interested.
the
availability and cost of
II moderate economic
Then Why do we have to be confronted with a problem on
may be necessary and, in typical Rhodes mamer, it will be the
+++
drug and alcohol being pushed into our school system. If it had feed. The domestic market recovery continues, retail
A question came up the other day about using muriate of lower and mldille economic classes which will be called to bear been an elective course offered to the students then tbere will depend on how well food priee Increases In the
the brunt of the situation.
potash on tobacco fielda rather than the sulfate form of potash.
general economic recovery first half- of 1976 would be
It would appear to me that if Governor Rhod'es really would be a time and place for it. But ll w~sn't offered, the
1\ecause of ita chloride content, muriate of potash · is not
can
be sustained in 1976.
below the rate of Increase in
. believes that the measures of his perpetration in respect to the studepts have full schedules and their study halls are being
uaually recommended for fertilizing tobacco.
ln
its
first
finn
estimate,
nonfood
items, Pork output
used to study the courses they have chosen. ·
However, aa much as 200 pouncia of muriate of pOtash per •proposals would be sincerely justified In regard to the welfare
the
outlook
board
also
said
will
probably
remain below
I don't think the student's UJJie should be taken away from
acre Clrt be,used safely In the fall (before December 15) on of the populace, he would attempt to conVince the public by any classroom or study hal1 to have something of this sort net farm Income in 1975 may year-earlier levels, the report
lielda Where no manure has been spread. When tobacco field means other than sensationally ominous slogans, costly media brought Into the school. If it's not an elective course then I total about $25 billion com- said, but . s._,plies of other
fertilization II done In the ll)rlng, no more than 100 pounds.of plugs, and other devices which, for the most part, reflect a don't thillk it should be ln the school at all.
pared 'With f.l7 billion in 1974. livestock products would
muriate ~f potash fertillzer per acre should be used, if you hodgepodge of silly girrunickry and other forms of dubious
Total
cash receipts from Increase, and erop-related
What attention the teachers get out of the students should
oon't ll8e any manure. Otherwise, enough chloride may be persuasive value. He keeps from having the. proposals
farming
will be slightly " food JI'Oducts should be In
iresenled in a debate forwn as suggested by Lt. Governor be on what we send them to school to learn. That is what tbe higher, with gross income large sujJply.
preaent In the aoil to reduce tobacco quaUty.
Richard Celeste wbo has referred to the Rhodes proposals as teachers went to college to team. I think ll is very unfair to
' +++
aroiDld $102 billion, but exHowever, if grain elljlllrts
them 88 well as the students.
Fall (preferably by mld.()ctober) is an ideal time to "blueprints lor bankruptcy." The queStion remains why
penses
are
also
up
suhstanturn
out milch higher than
I am certainly not in favor of the O.V.F. drug and alcohol
prepare tobacco plant bed for the coming year's burley Rhodes shuns this type of a (hopefully) intelligent perspective JI'Ogram in Racine:
·
tially.
currenUy anUeipaled, this
tobacco crop, Th_e weed control treatments most commonly of the issues. Does Mr. Rhodes believe that the Ohio. citizen Is
Although
farmers
are
not
would
result in higher grain
Avery concerned parent
used ln the fall lor plant beds are methyl bromide (cold method 10 apathetic and WlciviciTiinded that he will buy the issue
purchasing
as
much
feed,
·
prices
and dampen the
Name withheld by request.
only), Vorlex, and burning, Any ol these treatments will do a campaign unskeptically? Does he feel that the electorate is
feeder livestock and fertilizer production response in the
satilfactory job if the aoil temperature is above 50 degrees and incapable of WJderstanding an intelligent approach to the
this year, Jl'ices of produc- Uvestock sector. Beef sup.
the110ilisnot wet or too dry. Vorlex can be used successfully at issues? Or does he fear that the average voter is above par.
lion
Inputs coiulnue to rise, piles would Increase ln early
tisan politics and willing to take an open approach ?'I don't ·
a lower temperature than the other lreatments.
and
total
production expenses 1976 but would tighten in the
know. ·
+++
will be up $3 to $4 bWipn, tbe second half of the year
Whatever the outcome, I hope it is impressed upon every
Last Friday evening I waa Invited to present a program for
report said.
·
beeall8e of reduced feeding.
the'l'ri·Advisory Fann Bureau Council at the home of Mr. and voter to be well-Informed 88 he casts his ballot for or against ~
For the remainder ol 1975, And much larger Increases ln
Mrs. Denver Yoho. I decided to dlscuaa our Metropolitan Park
the report said, retaJJ food food prices could be expected
Diltrlct here ln Gallia County and took Tom Jones, one of the
prices should increaae only to
in b next spring.
1'..-k Comrn!asloners, along with me.
,Rather than give a lecture on part diltricts we Invited the
W, Keith Cooper
Farm Bureau CoiUlCil to discuu any quelllions they had about
the Park Diatrlct with us. We devoted most of our UJJie to
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - the pros."
finding out ~me ol the thinking of these folks concerning what United Nations is questioned
Fonner President Richard The three television netthings they would like to 11ee come about 88 a result of the Park
M. Nixon has discussed works were less enthusiastic.
Dlltrict.
Dear Editor:
becoming a broadcast Richard
C.
Wald,
~e of Ute items that was mentlooed quite a bit was need
People who have never questioned the United Nations .commentator with the man Jl'esldent, NBC News, said in
for factliUes and a place to have family reunions. I mention before are now beginning to do so, and we intend to provide whose firm syndicates New York tha,t putting Nixon '
thil to rirnlnd any of the readers that they may forward · aome of 'the answers.
Ronald Reagan's radio on the air was something be
0. F. ,Wheeler, the local leader of the John Birch Society, shows.
sualllllona to !he Extenaion Office and to Park District
had not considered .
Commlaaioners, Tom Jones, Clyde Evans and Bill Thomas states, "We feel that this. growing wave of discontentment
Harry O'Connor
of
"His opinions are of ln·
cont'eflling ideas Utey have that might be Included ln the Park developing over the U. N. is due to the way U.S. support of the O'Connor Creative Services terest, certainly," Wald said.
Di.strict plan.
·
United Nations has been exploited and used against our best said Saturday he met with "I'm not sure Pd be par·
Interests. And we're going to bring up some very realistic Nixon at San Clemente Sept. ticularly_lnterested ln him as
reasons why the United States should revoke its membership 9.
PURITY
a journalist- his efforts ln
ln the United Nations."
"He
(Nixon)
said
that
he
the past have not been parof the Land ·
The first reason cited by Mr. Wheeler, lor much of the thought radio might be the ticularly sympathetic to tbe
criticism against the U. N. was "the expulsion of the Republic strongest mediwn lor him, general run of what people in
of tblna from membership, and the seating, instead, of the rather than writing a this buslnel!ll do for a liVing."
murderous regime of Mao Tse.tung and Chou En:Lai. Another newspaper colwnn or going CBS and ABC had no comreason mentioned was "the General Assembly's vote of 89 to 8 on television," O'Connor inent.
to approve of thti terrorist Palestine Uberation Organization 's ' said.
LOW IN
' '
claim to statehood, and a further U. N. vote of95 to 17 granting
"He said it was better than
Ute group of Permanent Observer Status," ·
COST
TV because it didn't have the
BY JOHN COOPER
servation technician of SCS,
The
Local
Birch
leader
charges
that
"the
P
.L.O.,
led
by
NOW
YOU
KNOW
element
that
people
would
be
Soli Cons. Service
visited the D. E. HarUey
Plans for the Western Soil farm on Baden Ridge. One of Yasir Arafat, has ln recent years been responsible lor cold- turned · off by the kind of If Alaska had the same
population density as
Conservation District ' s the items discussed was two blooded murder at the Munich Olympic Games, slaughter of necktie he was wearing."
Innocent
children
ill
Israel,
assassinations
of
diplomats,
Manhattan,
the state would
O'Connor
said
Utere
had
awarda dinner are nearing rectangular concrete
hljacklngs, kidnapping, and terrorilrn - all as a matter of been no conunltment of any have more than 36,900,000,000
cornpleUon. It will be held watering tanks that had been
VINE STREET
·policy. Close oooervers of the U.N. should riOt be usrprised, kind ahd it appeared Nixon residents.
GALLIPOLIS, 0.
October 27 at 7 o'clock at built Jn 1952. These tanlai
though, to see the glorification of the pro"'mmunist P.L.O. was talking a year or · 18
Cedar Lakes' banquet hall. have been in constant use
Just as they would not be surprised over the U.N.'s failure to mon~ in the future after be
Charles Boyles, farm since thai Umeaild are still in
utter a single word to protest about North Vietnam's completes his memoirs and
manager of the Eastem Ohio a good state of preservation.
aggressive conquest and butchery of South Vietnam."
already contracted television
Agricultural Experiment The water for both of these
The
Birchers
believe
that
because
of
the
U.N.'s
record
interviews
with David Frost.
Station will be the speaker. tanks is supplied from
especially the admission of Red China on October 24, 1971, that
Reagan's
radio programs
Mr. Boyles is a West Virginia springs. It was necessary to
the day should beJI'oclalmeda "Day of ~arne." Help! Get Us consist of three.mlnute comnative and was graduated revise the plan and redo the Out.''
mentaries, live days a week.
from
West
Virginia collection basin at one ot the
Name
'Wi!Nield
by
request
..
The
program is called "View· University, but for several springs a few years ag_o, but
points,"
and is beard on 314
years has been with Ohio thatisalltherepalrworkthat
radio
staUons
in every state
renewal urged
State University at the Ohio has been necessary on these Support
expect
Delaware.
Stations
Experiment Station. He is systems. Mr. Hartley said
pay
anywhere
from
$20 to
.All a concerned citizen I would like to let you know that I
renowned for his home-spun that they have been quite
wit and hwnor.
satisfactory and plans to believe In and support the work that is being done •by tbe $300per week, O'Connor said.
The Conservation Farm improve anolherspring in the Melgs.Gallia.Jackson Community Mental Health and" "AllY producer who has any
RetardaUm Board "648" Board lhrOI!ilt the Meigs Mental business aense would want to
winners from each of the near future.
Hea!Ut
Center which is a contract agency of the ''843" Board. do it," he said, referring to a
counties will be recognized
DESIGN ' WORK
is
In addiUon to the Meigs Commu!1ity Mental Health Center Nixon' show. "I'm not conalong with other winners in progressing in preparation
cerned about the cona of such
youth programs sponsored by for the ditching machine that the Board has also JI'Ovlded services to Meigs residents
a proi!ram, I think they would
the district.
is .expected to star! work in through the Meigs Care Line which -has been supported joinlly
definitely be outweighed by
This year's banquet is open Mason
County
about
to all district cooperators or November I. Detailed sur- to 36.50.
other people interested in the veys have been made on tbe
HEIFE;R CALVES- 250 to
district program. Banquet George Hoffman farm near 300 Ibs. 16 to 21, 300 to 400 lbs,
tickets are $3.50 each. they Vernon Church, the 'Robert 16 to 23, 400 to 500 lbs. 17 to 25,
may be purchased from the Burdette farm on Oldtown 500 to 600 lbs. 18 to 25, 600 to
district office, 230~ Mal~ Creek, the Joe Forbes farm 700 lbs. 18 to 25, 700 lbs. and
Street, or from Edward on Oldtown Creek, the Junior over 17 lo 24.
Bwngarner, Grace Brown or Newberry farm- on Oldtown
Sl'OCK COWS &amp; BULLS
Forrest Nibert, district t.:reek, the Vicki VanMete.r (by the Head ) - Stock Cows
supervisors.
farm on Robinson Run and 85 to 165, Stock Cows and
'DALE NIBERT installed a _ Dana Durst farm on Sandhill · Calv~s 110 to 170, Stock Bulls
'
concrete watering trough in Road.
90 to 145, Baby Calves 5 to 29;
the barnlot at his farm at
I By the Pound ) Canners &amp;
Apple Grove. This · trough
A Behlen· Corn Crib k.;;;ps Its. high resale value year after
Cutters Cows . 12 to 21,
' Land
replaced another trough that
Holstein Cows 19 to 24.50,
manager of your local Federal
year ... because It's built for a llfeti't'e of rugged service. Every
had disintegrated as a result
Commercial Bulls 20 to 26 !"'•"'" Association is there to help you. He
Behlen Crib Is Hot-Dip Galvanized after welding· ... completely
of constant ,use and freezing
r1,000 lbs. and over ),
covering all surfaces (Including weld spots) with up to 6 times the
the local agricultural situation. He's
and thawing over a period of
VEAL CALVES- Tops 220
amount of zinc found on ordinary cribs. The · Behlen Crib is made of
SALES REPORT
years. Leslie Parsons, farm
,
........
liar
with
the
money
market.
He's
'
an
lbs.
to
250
54
to
59,
Mediwn
No. 2·gauge Bar Mesh Steel ~over 14" in diameter). Weather-tlgnt
Ohio Valley Uvestock Co.
manager , ' made ·
200
lbs.
to
300
34
to
42.50,
Culls
Oct 15, 1975 '
"Steep Pitch" roof fills to the ,peak without hand leveling. · Extra
ribusiness man who talks your language.
arrangements lor the
30 duwn, Sh~ts 17 to 40.
wide crib doors. In sizes from 679to 1684 bushels.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Get to know him,
replacement. The portable
STOCKER CATTLE
steel forms, belonging to the STEERS - 250 to 300 iba. 17
district, were used to pour tbe to27,300to :oolbs. 18to28.50,
228 Upper River Road
trough. Water for the trough 400 to 500 lbs.19to 32.50, 500 to
P. 0. Box 207, Gallipolis ·
is supplied by a w•ll.
Phone 446-0203
600 lbs. 21 to 36, 600 to 700 lbs.
OKEY R. KING , con- 20 to 36.50, 7001bs. and over 20
Clyde B. Walker, Mgr.

Agriculture and

k fior .'""'u h rnges
..
On h_ea..l't..h 01 economy

Out

our community

:On!~~~

£l~.h
N'~F4ilh

I

~
''1/l•

. · •

w~lch ~

p~ogrmam

wher~

No

:• 29 __: The SWlday Times . Sentine 1, Stmday, Oct . 26, 1975

F_oote

earning~ show decrease

::==-··'"'-""""'"··-·:: 1 or ,ixon?
1

Lay

CALF MILK REPLACER

Soil awards dinner

scheduled October 27

=

J. D. NORTH PRODUCE

~:;e ~~~~~~~ua;~~:a~=~sP~:~u.~~~~tw~:~~lfo~dr;

with $31,858,000 during the

industries.

same period in .1974. 1975
third quarter earnings
totaled $1,305,000 equivalent
to $15 per common share
af
ter payment of ~ the
Pre
ferred dlvidend.l974
third
quarter
earnl
'ngs were
$3.
120,000
equivalent
Per Common Shar'e' to $.41
Nl·ne months sales were
$78,804,0QO. in 1975 compared
·
699 000
to
$84,
,
for
the
same·
perl
1974
In
_ Net earnin. a•
for. 'od
the 1975 nine months were
....
124
•• , ,000 , equivale. nt to $1.05
Per Co mmon share after
..,
dl
payment of the preferred
'vidend, compared , with

w·•RD
UNIT EARNS A ;.
KARAMURSEL, Turkey Co
Airman First Class note
·
f · c
M
Eifler, daughterI o b rs.
0f
Mildred E. Ho co,m
·
be
. fan
Air Force
Ewington,
is Communtca
a mem · r ot'tons
Service unit t~at as earne
h
d
the u. s. Atr Force. Out:
stan,ding Unit Award .. Atrm_an
Eifler is an admi nIstra ttve
specialist at Karamursel
Common
De ense.
nf
1
stallatipn, Turkey, WI th th
.e
logistics detachment_ which
f
t
$8,368,000 ($.81 per share) . was cited or men ??OUS
from continuing
service in support of mthtary

operati~ns

$7an,d49a3 ,000
6 s~~;:)s_ ~~
total(f$r.o9mpeal~

74~r:e a:;an\st.~
~~:~~:
2

gradual~ ~ort

h G 1118
the 19'14 period.
. 19'1
of
a.
Lower third quarter 1975 High Schoolm Vmton, Ohto.

Market Report

/

KING OF CORN CRIBS

.

··

a}

::
.::,;•_::':.; ""'

WICHITA FIIU .&lt;;, Tex . -

·

li~htningfbol1t

Airman Charles D. Ashworth,
of retired USAF' Senior

: .}_.
:;::
:-:·
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buildings in an area of approximately 2,000 acres, killed 300
000 h 1
and

·,:_,: ,•,: Phoenix whereal hedi ':"as
weather is being perfected. But the
reported in critic con 1ton .
weath er con di tions which were .... Roger Young, assistant
t f'
urred ·.·. special agent in charge of the

of

m Phoenix FBI office , satd

tr~med

~c~r:r c~~s::~s~ ~;!~~d l~k a;1 ~~~~8~4 ~~~s\r~~~~royed 17,450 :~~ter~~~:~i~n~0:;r~~i~ting fire

each other and say "Someone s go
to be kldding. 11 couldn't burn, now."
d
uld burn

~:~c:~ll~~~'enanhel~ alon g b; ~:~;:~dlef;2:• milli~~e::th

r::~:;~h=np~hs~i~~~y Ire occ

}

.·:.·_'·.:,__
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:_.',·.· '.-·
}
···

St. Rt. 554, Cheshire, O. •
Ga'llpolls Rt. 7
• '"
Phone 367-7329

SATURDAY, NOV. 1
'

1100 AM TIL 5:00 PM

FARM CENTER
SOUlltEASTERN OHIO FARMERS «nnP

FORMER BIDWELL MILL
S.SIDE 554 IN BJDWELL, 0.
BOX 81, BIDWELL - 388-8700

REGISTER FOR
GRAND PRIZE
00 NOT HAVE 10 BE PRESENT .
TO WIN.

· COFFEE &amp;DONUTS

.FREE
DRAWINGS HOURLY
MEET CO.OP MEMBERS - YOUR NEIGHBORS

PAU.V Ica
•

(j&gt;~.(j)~
PERfORIIIANCE

CUSTOM ORINDING
FERTILIZER • SEED ·

Ohi'o 1'~elon
,
h· t m' Tempe
S 0
,

sh

TEMPE , Ariz. (UP!) - A
man wanted in Ohio was ot
and critically wounkndefd
FBIa I et
Friday when he drew
and approached an
agen
who was trying to arrest him,
theDavid
FBI said.
Bruce Connell, 26,
th left
was shot below e
eye
and was taken to Maricopa
County General Hospital at

: :~:

:~:

POMEROY _ This winter, limes a check of the ·system, over. To avoid severe burns
Ohio residents are relying on after an unfortunate tragedy, or electrical shocks, . warn
space heaters and other has shown that the duct-work c.hildr en to never msert
mall heating appliances to goes only as far as the attic or fmgers or objects through the
~arm their homes and take . an unused room - causing · )jeater's protecltve guard.
thechilloutofcoldmornings. poisonous air to be _ ;e· Another safety step IS to
In their anxiety and circulated back into the hvmg make sure electrtc heaters
discomfort over the mor· areas. The heating apphance and electrtcal cords are kept
nlng's cold chill, many people must be yented to the outside away from all sources of
forget to read directions or and above the roof edge.
water, such as the bathroom
heed warnings clearly If you are going to buy a tub or sink.
,
,
rinted on either the heater new heating appliante, make
Thtrd, all heahng equtp·
packaging. As a result, sure it is approved and do
ment should be _thoroughly
serious injury and death from tamper with it. All m· mspected by quahf1ed ~rvtce
bW'ns and poisonous gases stallations and repairs should personnel before 11ts ftred up
'II take their toll across the be done by qualified servtce for that ftrsl cold mormng .
' personnel.
Consumers who suspect they
Realizing the potential for Second, it is also very have faulty heatmg equt~·
such butns and poisonings in important to locate all ment should contact their
M igs County Dr. Selim heating applian ces away local health department ,
Bl~zewicz, Health Com· from furniture, draperies ~nd utility service or ,fuel supmissioner recently ex- other combustible malertals plter .
_
essed cdncern for county to reduce the risk of fires and
Anyone wanhng to report a
Deaths In Ohio bW'nS. · Children and adults serious product . defect or
resulting from poisonous should stay far enough away product-related mjury can
gases escaping from home- from heaters to avoid cat· contact
th e Acctdent
heating equipment have been ching clothing on fire. Young Pre vention. and_ .P~oduct
on the increase over the past children · need close super· Saf~ty _ Umt •. DIVIsion of
few years. Hundreds of vision while playing in a room Samlatton, Ohto Department
Ohioans have sought hospital warmed by the use of a space of Health, Colunobus, (614)
emergen.cy treatment for heater.
466-2544. Two bu~~ehns,
injuries associated with gas,
Asafe electric heater has a "Carbon Monoxtde ~nd
kerosene and electric space thermostat control and an "How Safe .'.s Your He.atmg
heaters . According to Dr. automatic device that turns Equtpment, are avatlable
Blazewicz, "more than two- the healer off if it is turned free of charge upon request to
thirds of heater-related injuries are for burns and about
hall of these burn victims are .
children under the age of
five."
Haz.a rds from space
heaters are real and
threatening , When not
properly vented to the outside, dangerous amounts of
poisonous gases (carbon
monoxide) can build up to a
level capable of killing a
sleeping person in less than
two hours. Housewives
should be aware that using .
the kitchen oven for extra
heat is very dangerous, as ,
this uses up the oxygen·
needed for breathing.
When placed ln an area
easily accessible to children
or in the dally traffic path of
adults, space heaters can be
an eyer-threatening cause or
fires and burns. Loose
clothing may come in contact
with the heater , setting
clothing on fire and resulting
in painful, slow to heal burns.
Constant bumping and
jarring of the heater will
reduce the elllciency of the
burning fuel and raise the
cost of the appliance,'s
operation, and also increase
the possibility of carbon
monoxide gas escaping Into
the room.
FOR THE PRO AND THE MAN
The Meigs County Health
Department, in cooperation
WHO WANTS TO CUT LIKE ONE.
with the Accident Prevention
and Product Safety Unit,
Your Dltcount Hotpolnt Dealer
Ohio Department of Health,
strongly recommends ' the
fuel 011 Heating Stove•'
following steps be taken to
provide maximum safety as
well as heat for your family
this winter:
First, check to see if your
exhaust and venting system
is adequate. This includes
checking to make sun• there
Slrvlnt Mtlt•• O.llia ·and
is no build'up of black carbon
Mlson Counties. ·
deposits around heating
Jack W. C.rHy, Mer.
appliances or their venting
PH. tt2-21tl
systems. Also, it is very
s.....
Min.-Sat
important to make sure the
exhaust and vent systems are
workin g correctly . M•ny

~ot

the mentioned Stale unit or
through the Meigs County
Health Department, 11412 E.
Main St., Pomeroy 992·3723.
Dr. Blazewicz hopes that
all Meigs Coun ty residen ts
will take the lime to check the
safety of their heating
systems and make plans for
getting all occupants out
quickly in case of fire. Such
precautions are even more
necessary for those residents
heating their homes with coal
·or wood stoves. ·A few
minutes tOday may save you
costly repairs and medical
bills in the future, as well as
unnecessary pain · and suffering to your family.

:~te.

AUTOMATIC OILING
LIGHTWEIGHT

FAST STARTING

WITH 10" BAR AND CHAIN

A bench warrant was issued
in Toledo, Ohio, for his arrest
. last March when he failed to
appear for sentencing.

.

.

Th e
. wh o was
lralned 1In 1
betng
estl ma es an
financ1a topans,
ts AFB,
.
Lan gley
Va ., fordutyw}thaumtofthe
Tactical Atr
Airman A:;hworlh IS a 1974
graduate of Point Pleasant
I IV . Va .) High School.
H'
·r c tance is the
M nd• Mrs
1s w1 e, r ons
R o r.f 61a LeMansdaughter
Dean
o Oh1'o His
gsto•"n
· youssos
rtve, oun
·
" •
·
0 ther, Mrs. J oh n H· Paul •
mo
. St•, Clat'rsvt'lle '
res1.des m
Ohio.

Comma~d.

'

.

'

You 'll need a heater this
winter ... and now during
this special sale you hive
an opportunity to buy th e
heater of your choice at sale
prices.
6 models from which to
choose, 55,000 to t50,000
BTU's. Vented and non-

vented. Burn kerosene, or

INSTALLED
. GAMBIER, Ohio (UP!) Philip Harding Jordan Jr.
was installed Saturday as the
16th president of Kenyon
College here.
.
About 1,000 persons, tn·
eluding 'delegates from 50
colleges, universities and
other groups, heard Jordan
defend the college's liberal
arts philosophy.

No.1 fu el oil.
Drop by and seelhe
KNIPCO quality line of
portable heaters, all guaranteed to keep you comfort ably wa1m , • , where and
when you need II.

'

SWISHER
IMPLEME~T CO.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Fut

OVERSTOCK
CLOSEOUT!

'

The 1-row Superpicker
It's the big capacity, cost-saving favorite.

',

Don 't let its r1-row gathering unit fool you . Th is machine is pure
Superpicker from its long, tapered floattng potn ts and tts aggressive snapping rolls-all th e way back to 1ts wtde wagon elevat?r.
It 'll bring in more of your crop with less field loss, whether you ve
got a bumper crop or if it's one of those lean years when every
.
ear counts.
Bui lt lor long , trouble-free se rvice, you 'll find slip clutch pro lecl ton
on main drives - and roller chains lor smooth , qUtet operatton . And
with the liberal use of sealed bearings and wease filled gearboxes,
15 minutes a day is all it takes for lubrt catton .
Heavy, formed channel steel hitch adjusts sideways by mo~in9 a
single bolt to various posttton s. Tht s shtlts th e ptcker to p;cktng
positions and for Iran sport .
.
Hi h capacity, 6- roll husking bed has 3 rubber rolls, 3 cast tron .
it 's equipped with powered rubber Flexi-Fingers thai align the
ears on the husking bed and keep them movtng along the rolls .
Here 's a picker that does an outstanding job of brtngtng tn your
crop-even when it's down and tangled .

A~d

·POMEROY
LANDMARK
Open'"

~thid t~':':ll w:~
~~!:~:::~~lilt~b~~e;:m.:;yd

a~rman,prep~ratton ~~
bud~el_
as.•i~ned
man d.

Lowest Price of the
Year!

~sidents.

GRAND
OPENING!

Y

and advanced on the agent at
the Trade Winds motel here.
Younged
m
charg wt
e ro

~its

TRADING CENTER

~cia.list

Coagennntelalfwtearshsehodrtebwy aan~~!

Hazards .from space heaters
are real and threatening

Small payment will
hold till May 1976 at
75 prices. Use our
lay-away plan now.
,,

Sl~~~pard

:,.: :,.: ,

:;: ~~~i:

ale

Maste r Se rgeant Alfred H.
A
th of New
Haven,
v·shworhas
gradua
ted W.
at
AFB, Tex., from
lh. U S 'Air Force budget '
s
course cond ucted
bp the. Air Training Cnm-

By T. Allan Wolll'r
OistrlctRangcr
This week's article was written by
Raymond J. S.choener. Tim bel'
Management Forester .
, Al the present time the Ironton
h f 11
District is in the middle of t eb a·
·fire season. With the weather11 emg
h'
as wet as it has been, especia
Y
t
· k th t ts
Past week, you would th1n
a db
we
could kiss the fall fire season goo Y
1
and forget about fire fig ht'mg un t'l.f
springtime. But that 's no_t h_ow 0tl
works in this country at this ttme
year when the falling leaves Win·
crease the chance Of wildfire.· •e
half-jokingly say that it can ram m
d 1
the morning, the sun can come ou
and the windf' comet at
we
3 noon,
• 10 ckanI say
can have a 1re a o c • f'
'half-jokingly" because a few tres
have almost followed that schedule .
:·:· ,
h
· to this of

knav~.

:·:·
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}
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·:-:
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:·:·
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::::
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:_:.:_:.
(
:_:_:
,•,..•

carelessness or hincendiartisfm, vtht_re property; certaidnlyd ~n evenhtttohrayt
You say that the fulpeoptlhe fl_roef :::;
t f ctors whic accoun or · should be recor e 1n our ts
America are more care WI
····
every fire that we have.
books.
in the forest today than they ever :_,:_: ·',,.:
1:::
To stage a forestfire you need only
But how many have heard of the
were in the old days' Let's hope so!
a few things _ a forest, the righ t great Peshtigo forest fire which
·;;;: atmospheric conditions, and a
... ...... .... .. ........-.-...........................,.,,
{,:,:::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.-.·.-.-..,.,....................

ALSO TRADE INS
ACCEPTED

A irnia n Ash worth recent griJ(l uat(!

norlheaslern
spark, either from a
or erupted
that veryin same
day ' AWisconsin
to tal of
a match in the hand of a oo m·
1,280,000 acres was qurned over,
The formula is simple; the homes, towns, . settlements swept
wonder is that we have not had more away, and an estimated 800 . 1500
and bigger £ires.
.
persons lost their lives.
The list of gigantic forest fires m
In Wisconsi n, also, occurred the
d
ooo
1
America.isa long one. Their recor s
Pht' llt'ps fir e of July 1894 when 100,h
1
"'
are stories of appaling loo~ of rea
""res were burned and more t anf
wea!t,h, of the cremation of coun
tess
300 persons killed. In Septem
h
H_ber
kl o
wild creatures, of charred urr.an . that same year, the great m ey,,
corpses, a story of roaring thunder,f
Mi.nn., forest fire occurred. Millionsf
dd
of darkened skies at mi ay, o
of acres were laid 'waste, somen12
blackened and cindered remains o
towns wiped out, 160,000 acres o
what was for est green - but they
forest burned and 418lives lost. 1e
are soon forgotten.
smoke from the Phillips and Hinklehy
f'
Most of us have heard of thehGreat
['Ires that year was so dense on t 1e
Chicago Fire of 1871. This is t fe tre
Great Lakes as to interfere se rious Y
b M
0
that broke out on the evening o ct.
with the movement of vesse 1s.
8, 1871 , when
a
cow
owned
y
rs.
Can such conflagrations
Le
dl kicked
h
more occur
roads
Patrick 0 ' ary suppose Y
again? Today t ere are
_
ov'er a lighted lanJern in a barn .
and trails, protective agenctes are
Fanned by strong winds, the flames
more nwnerous&lt; and better
· kl
· g for more
d
· ation ts

111'

of

. with your agribusiness needsf

F
.:: Your wayne N. at.Ion·_ orest.
:::

EXTON
, Pa. announced
- Foote . sales
andreduced
earnings
are· ora ::::
Mineral
Company
r.esull of
demand
19 .
.
f
d th _

Mew
·

career
7\. T.

,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,: : : : : : : : : : : : : : i: : : : : : : : : ;:;:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:, :,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,: ,:,:,:,~:,:,: ,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,: ,:,:,:, : : : : : : : : : :;:;:;:;:;:;: : : : : : :;:;: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :./

We'll Tradef ·
Buy Now. &amp; Savel

MEIGS ·EQUIPMENT CO•
l..!!,992·2176

POMEROY, OHIO

�. .... .-...
-

~ · ··

... .

,,...

.:. ·

.10 - The SWlday Tim~s - &amp;&gt;mine!, Sunday , Ot'l. :W, 1 ~75

-

'. ··)ill

Leave Nov. 28

'

,'

..

~~} ~

. . :)0· '

).-

'

'

By VERNON SOOfi
book."
.
. , :-: :, ~
BV RICHARD LERNER
that date.
HOLLYWOOD· (UPI }
"Ufe.Goes to 1ile Movies" &lt;'' ·
assistance to offset American CongreSs as a package," is not the result of· any take it easy again Sunday and
WASHINGTON (UPI ) Kissinger said he inrormed aid to Israel.
Kissinger said.
is costly - $19.95. llUt thlft... -~-- ·
agreement hut is the fCllUlt Of resume his normally hectic Ufe isn't dead yet.
Secretary or State Henry A. Ford during their meeting
"But there will not be any
Ufe
Magazine
(
1936-72)
has
was
an advance printing of . . ~
Under terms of the new long-term Arperican in- pace by going to Arlington
Kissinger Said Saturday that that "our relationship with announcement.'! or any deci- interim Sinai accord, terests," Kissinger said.
·
published,
through
Time
Inc.,
100,000
oopies with l!OO,qllO_ ~~;;
National Cemetery e!lrly
President Ford plans to go to China is basically sound."
sions as , to a program for Kissinger promised the .. And \ve hope very much that Monday morning to par· a spellbinding photographic more in the works. . . ·.. . ... .
China around Nov. 28 ·and ' On the talks with Sadat, military aid to !&gt;gypt at this United . States would give the Congress will see it the
·~our first such b'ook, 'Tile·: 1
ticipate in a Veterans Day cavalcade of Hollywood, its
that he round U.S..Chinese Kissinger said the Uhited time," he said.
Israel about 12:6 billion worth same way and grant what ~~:e ceremony at the Tomb of the stars and movies, which Is . Best of Ufe,"' SchenJl:ID o&lt;"' ::~ ·
relations "basically sound" States "will look very
In about a week, Ford will of economic and military aid request.~~
destined to repose on hun· said, "cost the ~e amllllll ~: .
Unknown Soldier.
·
during his own Peking visit . sympathetically at Egyptian present his full request for and provide Egypt with about , Ford seems almost fully
He welcomes Sadat to the dreds of thousands of · and sold -more than a million . ;,, ''?
Ford met with Kissinger requests" .for economiC aid foreign aid, Including $600 million in economic recovered from a sinus cold
' "
. ". . ·· ., . .
White House later Monday America's living room coifee cop1es.
for 90 minutes at the White and ''we are prepared to have amounts for Israel and assistance ollly,
or Ufe's 1,864 ~U~, .'''.1'1
and infection that fo~ced him and hosts a state dinner for tables.
House to get a full report on a general discussion " of Egypt, "and I think it will
Among the outstanding· moviepeopleappearedori .250 ... ·
"We believe that what we to rest a good I&gt;Brt of this the Egyptian president in the
the secretary's trip and to Cairo's bid for U.S. military have to be considered by the are doing in the Middle East week .
journalist!~ .photographers covers. Leading the Parade·.
evening.
prepare for talks Monday
represented are Philippe was Eli;abeth Taylor wi!Ji 1t
Aides s;~i~ h• i• pl•nnlng to
with Egyptian President
Halsman, Peter Stackpole,
"The most contrqvemal •01
.
.
Anwar Sadat.
Bob Landry, John Florea, cover," said Eisenstaedt,.
Kissinger returned Friday'
[)on Omit:z and perhaps tile ·"was one l took of Sopbla .;· r1
alter five days of eonferrlng
most distinguished elf them . ·Loren. · The magazine
with Chinese leaders to lay
all, Alfred Eisenstaedt · .
reeelved 2,Q00 !etten of ob- '···v·. rr
the groWldwork for Ford 's
The 304-page picture book , jectloil ·and a thOUsand .:·
trip. He told reporters after
titled '"Life Goes · to TIM! :eancellatliliif."· ·
· ···. · '~ cr
the Ford brjefing that the
Movies" ...; ,with m!nimu,m . :Inside the :,Covers 'raylor:a: •.• ·
official schedule for the
text- is a processiOII'Of all. ·nkeneas apPears no ' fe)Jer · ';
.
President's journey would
the stars worthy of the tiUe, !ban 37 ,tfmes,' totlowell 1!7 , ,,, :•!
not be aMounced for about a
plus starlets, heavies, ~ncer · 'iTiley wltll ·• pic~ " . .
week.
weirdos 'and the rest of the . lllres.
·
' , : , ~ ::, t r
"But there's no substantive
Hollywood cast from D. \It'. .sClierman thinb the ·moill · -~.' 1
problem," he said, at•
Griffith to Raquel .We)ch.
famoua plJoto~aPI! In ·t~it! ·::.. ·
tributing the delay to "some
All
of
the
712
photographs
book Is one of Judy Garland.. ;' '
' By DONAL U'HIWIN~
he was jerked from the
technical scheduling
appeared
io
Ufe
durin¥
its
36and
Mickey Rooney taken In · ~- .1
·
MONASTEREVIN, Ireland window,
problems" that have not been ·
year
lifespan.
1!163
when Jlldy was reviving :~J~&gt;
(UP!} - The Irish governHerrema, .chief executive
resolved yet.
David
E
Scherffi!in,
who
her.
career In a ·•eal ,,
ment refused to act Saturday of the Dutch ·owned Ferenka
Asked about a. possible
·
"'' ~
on a Dutch businessman's company, was kidnaped 23 began at Ufe as a glortfled television series.
Nov. 28 departure, he said it
office
boy
and
who
.serve'd
as
·
·The.hauntlng,
wi&gt;rld-weary
':'! :i
screamed-Qui plea for a new days ago near his· home In
would be "In that general
a
senior_
editor
at
its_
d!lffila~.-&gt;lsag~
of.
the
_
two
fl!rm4!r
"
mediator to negotiate with his Limerick.
_
tlme frame" and "within a
abductors
on
the
grounds
that
Pollee
traced
him
·.to
.
the produced the spectacill•t·. child . st•ra : will forever
three or four-day period" of
-.
.;. ' temaln'
indiCtment ·l!f ·•·
one hostage is enough.
Monasterevln house .. earlier . IA!me.
"larii'
the
only
person.whQ
'eitploitatioci
of
chlldi-en In ,,
"The kidn11pers already this week. But .before · they
worked
for
Ufe
from
the
tlrrie
a
how
biz.
.
.......
have one hostage," a could burst In ,tl)ey were
Schermair hirnlielf ljlelit: 11 •
government source sal&lt;\. "We driven back by ahQts fired by ~fits Inception until-It cea~
publicatill!l,"
he
said.
of
·bls yean.with Ufe
-aa" a. · '''&gt; I
PHILADELPHIA (UPI}
don't want to hand them Eddie Gallagher, 21, and
''
'
- Politics In the partisan
Sclierman
personifies
the
pl)otographer
althilugh
,he, · .,:l
another."
Marian Coyle, 19.
qumtessence
of
what
Ufe
never
reached
the
eminence
.,..
blg·clty
tradiUon
'Dutch businessman Tiede
Army troops and armed
represented
at
its
peak.
He
is
of
an
Elsenatiledt.
He
liable,
·
:t;'&lt;
dominated the 8th annual
Herrema , 52, made his police ringed the house Wld
convention of the National'
desperate plea for a mediator waited, beginning a war of an aggressive native New however, to dlstingul.il! llW·: ")"
Orga.nlzatlon for Women
Friday, shouting it from the __ j l&lt;!rves now In its fifth day. Yorker,cocksure and imbued qualities- that separate a· •
Saturday as delegates
upstairs bedroom of a modest '.:;By Saturday, a senior with the journalistic elitlsni great photographer
•
selected a new NOW
row house where two kid- palice officer Said security that marke~ most Life journeyman.
staffers.
·
.
·
"It's
a
seJise
of
tlming,"
·
;,.,.,
president
napers were holding him at chiefs were confident ·an
He and -the revered Said. "Allred knows when
u
Two major downtown
gtinpoint.
three occupants of the house
Elsenstaedt,
riot
unlike
a
pair
click
the
shutter.
·
•· q
hotels In what was being
Herrema got his head would be taken out safely . .
of
Ufe
pallbearers,
came
"There
Is
only
8
;~
called "The City of Sisterly
barely above the .window s!U
"No one is going to be
west recently to hustle the mlllisecond when the perfect · 11
Love" lacked only the odor
of his bedroom prison and killed," he said.
of clgan as about · 3,000
shouted his appealto "please,
The kidnapers were now book in Hollywood where it photograph Is taken. He lh, ' -' '-'
delegates milled about
please help."
taking
food · supplies has foWld a wann r~pt(on. stinctively recognizes that .', I '
SIGN ·GOING UP - Workers are pictured here placing a new sign on the French City
"This Ia not a conllcientlinl8 , isolated 111001ent. He .aile
·:: 1J
lobbies and meeting rooms
"Get the mediator,.'' were regularly from detectives
Fabric
Shoppe,
58
Court
St.,
Gallipolis
as
expansion
and
remodeling
of
that
downtown
history
of
the
movies,"
said
,a
bullt
In'
light
·mete:,
·
'
pushing their candidates.
Herrema 's final words before occupying the downstairs
business firm continued last week.
Scherman
.
"
I
gueu
It's
innate
8enae_
l
lf
l!%p&lt;IIIW'e.
And
·
rooms of the house In this
really about a love atfair tOuseliJewlabexpreuiCII ' he ~;~;
small marketing village.
.,
But police said the room in . between the movies and a bas plenty of chutzpah." '
How
one
imThe
ancient
Elsellllaedt-.....
~1 ·
magazine.
which Dr. Herrema was
portant
culture
medium
·
demurred.
"Thit's
not
quite
··"'·~t
imprisoned must now be
"Incredibly filthy" because covered another cplture right. My picture ed!Uir .toJct· ·~: r
.
me I was a king in nly ".- 'l
of the lack of sanitary medium.
"The
book
wu
my
Idea,
profession and should hold rio . 1-"''
facilities,
,Wld
I
devoted
six
months
to
man
in awe.
Ireland 's government
" If lam good It is because I
The doctor said medicate repeatedly rejected demands producting it. I pored over ·
BEACHWOOD, Ohio (UPI )
every
page
in
all
1,864
cpples
always
try tO unde1'8tand my
shampoos
kill
lice
and
eggs,
made by Gallagher, leader of
- Up to 20 per cent of the
of
Ufe,
amounting
to
about
subject,
the human being ~ 1
Head
lice,
he
said,
can
also
be
W1 Irish RepubliCan Army
against ll.sher of Brazil's "0 Estado children attending this
SAO PAULQ, Brazil (UPI) denunciations
half a million photographs, whose picture I am taking, -~;;!
killed by laundering sheets,
- Raymond E. rnx; co· freedom of press violations. tie Sao Paulo" newspaper fashionable northeastern towels and clothi~g in hot and group, that three IRA
"Hollywood was a 'favoclte That is the real trick "
,,, -~
prisoners be freed froin Irish
Among some of the other saying '' Mesqul ta •s· Ohio· city's three elementary
publisher and senior editor of
Ufe
subject.
I
had
to
put
Tricks
or
no
"Ufe
Goes
to
soapy water and by dry jails in exchange for
the Wooster (Ohio) DaUy objectives which Dill hopes to courageous stance against schools have been infected cleaning.
aside at least as many great ')'he Movies" ~ a trwure 11 "''' :~
Herrema's life.
Record, assumed the accomplish are the expansion censorship has made us all with head lice, according to a
pictures as I c.hoee for the · American moVIe !are unlike , .• , ~
Saturday report by the
presidency of the Inter of lAP A's scholarship more courageous."
·
any other.
.
·
~! : 3
Dtx Is a third generation of Cleveland Pi&lt;Un Dealer.
'
'
It '
~ ·~
American Press Association programs In the U.S. and
.• . Bit P~: Danny Kaye will G ·
Dr. Harold L. Blumenthal,
(lAPA) Friday, and pledged Latin America "for those who his family to be publisher of
' Vlsit85'Amerleanclllealli,tbe - ~'!·\
the
Daily
Record,
started
in
a
dermatologist,
said
he
the organization to continue want to go into the com·
.
• span of five days to pu\)lldle .~! 8
1890.
checked
classrooms
and
to
"fighl - censorship munication business", and
A
graduate
of
Wooster
High
found 3-20 per cent of the
. the 25th ennlversary of uNt:.- j,·,.•8
the expal)sion of IAPA's
wherever we find It".
CEF ... Barbara Feldoll Will,
.
School,
Dix
attended
Ohio
students
IVere
ln.fested
with
"We must increase our technical center In Miami,
guea;, star in ..
,Hilt- . 6? ~ ~
membership In order to be Fla., "where journalists Wesleyan University and the the parasites,
University
of
Missouri,
where
·
pltaJ
...
Dan
"It
is
only
~guess,"
more effective tn our fight could learn the newest tooiB
he received his journalism Blumenthal
hss been a~ed to the call 11 . :o:. 1
tola
the
against censorship wherever of the trade."
He
was
editor
of
the
"The Outlaw
Josey · ~ •
degree.
newspaper,
"but
I
would
say
Dill said within the neltt few
we find It," Dtx said during
Wales."
,
"''or
Ravenna
(Ohio)
Evening
Reabout
10
per
cent
of
all
the
. T
the organization's 31st weeks lAP A's executive
cord
and
In
1931
became
children have lice."
.., •()f
committee would meet to
general assembly here.
advertising
manager
of
the
The
Cuyahoga
County
.;:) . rl
He said he hoped to get discuss "our strategies for
Dally
Record
In
Wooster.
Health
Deparbnent
has
more U.S. newspapers in· the coming year."
He became manager and assigned extra city· nurses to
• .II
He praised his predecessOr,
terested in·IAPA In order to
, .,
, 'I
publisher
of
the
paper
when
help
check
children
and
talk
give it more strength in its Julio de Mesquita Neto, pubFunds
distributed .. " .
his father, E.C. Db:: died In with parents.
'
1953.
"The school is not actuaUy
He currently Is on the board the source of the head Uce,"
of trustees of Ohio Wesleyan Robert L, Holloway, school
EDINBURGH, Se~d (UP!) -Alabama GGvl!l'llor
'.Theological School. He has superintendent, said. "The
George C. Wallace ended his two-week Eureopean tour
been president of the Rotary source is from slumber
/
Salurday still looklag Uke a presidential caadldate but
Club In Wooster, the loeal · parties, birthday partles and
saying oothlog to coaflrm he lain the race.
chamber of commerce and whenever chUdren get their
"I doll'! lmow whether I'm even golog to be Involved
the Wooster Businessmen's heads together."
yet" In the l!l'lt campal«n, Wallace told reporters before
Blumenthal wd the lice,
Asso~iation . He has also been
he was wheeled aboard the chartered jet that took him
president of the Ohio which cause Itching and ·
home. "!bat luis to be decided ofliciaUy."
Newspaper Association and ' irritation which can lead to
Wallace wo1111d up a formal program of vlalta to
currenUy Is a trustee of that infection, attach to ihe licalp.
Britain, Belgium, Italy, West Germany and France with a
association. He was also Their eggs - ovid-tibaped
NEW BUSINESS LOCATION - Mr. and Mrs. Paul Pauley are pictured at the counter
"sentimental visit" to Scotland, the land o~ his forebears.
president of the Ohio Select nits - are glued to hair shafts
of their new business locaton at 804 West Maio St.,'Pomeroy, the former home of Mr. aild
Ust of Daily N~wspapers.
and are. difficult to dislodge.
Mrs. Guy Shuler. Pauley Is the Nationwide Insurance Co. agent and Mrs. Pauley Is branch
sales manager of the Stout Realty Co. Both buslnesaee have p_reviously been operated -In
offices at their home at 307 Spring Ave. The new location is being redecorated and plBN are
being made to Rrovide more parkiilg. Offices are being furnlahed in antiques. Mrs. Pauley is
the former Lois Williams.

Irish will not

give kidnappers
another hostage

Ji,;;

en

~,. ,

Ohio editor leads
• •
press association ·

"[)octgo:•
auer aeorse ,

Court battle over Right to Die
hears final ~tnesses this week
.

Already, new fort'tl! are
BY JUDI HASSON
MORRISTOWN , N.J . gathering with the state
(UPI ) - The last witnesses branch ol the American Civll
will be heanj tjlis week in the Uberties Union indicating
Karen Ann Quinlan case, that It may seek to enter In
center of a legal battle over the appeal In support of the
the right to die.
right to die.
1ile witnesses will appear
Whatever the ruling , it will
in an ,austere little courtroom set national precedent acbefore Judge Rob!!rt Muir cording to at least one of the
Jr., 43: Summations will lawyers in the case, Ralph
follow on the plea of Joseph PQrzio , . an attorney fOr
and Julia Quinlan that the Karen 's doctors and a·
life-~~UStaining respirator be
medical law expert.
removed from their 21-yearFor Karen's parents, it has
old adoptive daughter; that been the most IM·ing time of
iihe be allowed to "puB into their lives. But Mrs. Quinlan
the loving hands of the Lord." said the) w~re ''llilq up
Whatever Muir's Superior v·ell."
Court ruling, there is the
Both agreed they ne.,er
prospect of an appeal.
811pected ·~eir plea would
att:.tct the worldwide at·

'

tention it l111s - the acores of
reporters packing the
courtroom, the camera crews
under the trtes outside.
The questions of law, medicine and religion spawned by
the case have grown In
number and complexity.
Morris County Prosecutor
Donald Coilester filed
separate court papers asking
the court to define how he
should handle homicides if
the Quinlans win.
•
St. Clare's Hospital, where
Karen Ia being treated, asked
the cowi to determine if
.doctors can use the "brain
death" criteria establlahed
by tlle ad hoc committee of
the Hm·1·11rd Medical School
in l!J61and no~&gt;· rtcr gmzed by

.

"

.

IW) ~1,

... 'Jt.; t '

LoUisvillii residents · ·~ ·:

only fo1r states.
An easel chart of the brain
dominated lhe courtroom
during medical testimony
that ~en's present state
was comparable to that of a
baby bQrn without a brain',
And the definition Itself catne
Into question. ·
Six neurologists, describing
WASHINGTON (UP!) Karen's condition as a
,''chronic, vegetative state, " Nearly 3,000 white reSidents
said the medical profe981on of Loulaville, Ky., dampened
remained divided and by a light drizzle and chsn·
troubled by the lack of ling "we won't bus," mar·
guidelines lor the terminally ched on the U.S. Capitol
Sllturday to protei( court·
Ill:
·Judge tdulr rejected a motion ordered school busing In the
J(entucky city.
that he view Karen because
'
Tile demonstratoMJ, many
the effect might unduly incarrying
nags .as well as
fluence his decision .
.protest sir· fonned Into line

.

r .

'~!~'/),
·, '
••/ .

..... • : '

.

.

.. ·.

• ,,. •

'

'

~

.11·

• '

'

.• '

J

· ,,.

march in;;. Washi~n · t':
.. ,

.. l .

I

near
ihe
Washington
Monument to !legin the
march to Capitol Hill.
Pollee estimated the crowd
at 2,700. However, some
demonstrators walled for tbe ·
marchers beside, their
chartered bu.. parbd DI!U
the Capitol.
'
While top AFUIO officials
disavowed the demonstration, mafijl ol lhe mar·

chers carried signs elt·
pressing the oppollitlon of
local unions to busing.
·
Themarcheiulio lnclulled
a feW fnlm other areia, In·
cludlnJ a 111180 8J'I!IIP . .
said It 1'ti!AMJted I ~

:

I '~

'·

nag and a . sign .·aylng l ~ :· .•
"700,000 say no bua in Ken- --w :~
lucky."
,
9. ;
' A few othllr clernanalraton ·~10-~
i110 ·. !lad. troll~le wttb ·• ·

. IJIIW..,- l!llillbtJ a..
JII'O~

•'fCrced 'bullne·"

t? :_ ,·
'~"' '

~~~Workera local,-. ~·" ..,....:~Q'::Jb:.•llb..
.q
u..,..,.,
_
frolll , &lt;·
v.:•
The national flag Wll mudi, Will .VIrlhU. D1blota ·1114 .'~

in evidence but one llllll'~her

_carried

1

large

Pelllll)'lvarua.

•,

Confederi~· ..•

.'

·'

. •·

'

'

.

... .
.

ii

•

"':01

,.

WILLOW WOOD - Kyger
Creek captured at least a
share of the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference title here
Friday night with a 36-12
victory over Symmes Valley.
It was the Bobcats' third
straight championship.
Kyger Creek must now
await the outcome of the
North Gallia-Eastern game
scheduled Friday night to see
if the Litle is shared or undisputed.
Both Eastern· and Kyger
Creek have unbeaten league
marks, lnclu&lt;)ing a 20.20 tie,
but a victory by tile Eagles
over North Gallia would give
Coach Spike Berkhimer's
team a sliare 6f the. championship.
Coach Greg Bailie 's
Symmes Valley Vikings took
the opening kickoff and
surprised the Bobcat defense
with two first downs before
being forced to punt at the 45.
The ball was fumbled with
the
Symmes
Valley
recovering at the 25. Four
plays later, senior fullhack
John Berry rambled in from
15 yards out for the score. A
run for the conversion was
stopped.
Kyger Creek bounced right
back following the ensuing
kickoff. Senior tailback Chris
Preston picked up 11 yards on
his first carry then broke
loose for 45 yards around his

6roo-Thls Is the Life 10.
6:30-Two-Way Street 4; Viewpoint 8; Public Polley .
Forum 10; Newsmaker '75 13 .
7:00-Church by the Side of the Road 4; Rev. Calvin
Evans 8; Sp;rlng Street USA 13.
··

-~-~ :. ~-

·,,

Share of .crown assured 'Cats whip Symmes Valley

SUND4Y, OCTOBER 26. 1975

.
There's life in the
. ·:
,
.'
ol~ magazine yeh e · • . . .

China visit after Thanksgiving

Television Log

;

: -~

Scott's World

31- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sundav. Oct , 26. 1975

7:30-This Is The Life 3; Cadle Cliapel4; Revival Fires
6; Jerry F-alwell 8; Camera Three 10; Lower
Lighthouse 13.
~ : DO-Mormon Choir 3; Day of Discovery 4; Gospel
Caravan 6; Church Service 10; Mamre Church 13.
B : ~ral Roberts 3; Yours for the Asking 4; Kathryn
Kuhlman 6; Day of Dlscove~y 8; James Robison
Presents 10; Rex Humbard 13; See the U.S.A. 13.
9:oo-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3; Hour of Power 4; Oral
Roberts 10; Rex Hum bard 6; .Rev. Leonard Repass
8: Across the. Fence 15.
9:3!hWhat Does the Bible Plainly Say 8; Ills Written
· 10; Christ Is the Answer 13; Insight 15, . · ·
10 :oo-Big Blue M'arble 3; Church Service 4; Leroy
Jenkln1 .6; Chrlsllan Center 8; Movie "Voyage to
the Bottom of the Sea" 10; Jmmy Swaggart 13;
Faith tor 1Today 15·.
10:30-Bullwlnkle 3; Garner , Ted Armstrong 4; Rex
Humbard 8; Jimmy Swaggart 6; Tesllmony Time
13; This Is the Life 15.
n :oo-TV Chapel :r, Focus on Columb-us 4; Point of
VIew 6; Rex Humbard 15; Rev. Henry Mahan 13.
11 :30-At Issue .3; Make a Wish 6; OSU Football
Highllghls~; Face the Nallon 8; Rev. Calvin Evans
. 13.
12:DO-Meet The Press 3,15; CBPA Bowling 6·
Thlnk!ng In the Black I; Columbus Town Meeting
10; Medlx 13.
·
12:3G-Grandstand 3,4; NFL Pre-Game Show 8; Make
a Wish 1~; Wreslllng 15.
· 12:5S.:Fiile M-Inutes to Kick-Off 10.
l:oo-NFL Football 3,4; NFL Football 8,10; Next
Generallon 13; Family.Theatre 33.
1:oo-Area High School Football (Point Pleasant vs
Ravenswood) 5
1:30-lnues &amp; ·An-swers 6.13; Grandstand 1s.
2:oo-NFL Football 15; Communique 6; College
Football 1975 13; Axelforlh Angel 33.
2:30-Aware 6.
3:oo-Formby'sAnllque Workshop6; Town Topics 13;
· Rivals of Sherlock Holmes 33.
3:30-That Good Ole ·Noshvllle Music 6; Kid Talk 13.
4:oo-NFL Football 3,4; Friends of Man 6; Sports
Spectacular 8,10: Friends of Man 13; Know Your
Anllques 33:i . ·
.4:30-Misslon: Impossible 6; NFL Football 15;; Nash·
ville on the Road 13; Ploy Chess 33.
5:oo-Movle "Carousel" ·13; Erica 33.
5:15-Theonle '33.
5:30-FBI 6; Preserving Good 33.
6:oo-Gellln' Over 33.
6 : ~News 6; Wllnel$ to Yesterday 33,
7:oo-Morrts Cerullo Help Line S; World of Disney
3.~.15; Swiss. Family Robinson 6,13; WCHS·TV
ReJiorta; World Press 20;33; Lions Are Free 10.
7:30-High School Bowl8; Lowell Thomas Remembers
20,33.
8:oo-SI• Million Dollar Miln 6,13; Cher 8,10; Evening
at Symphony 20,33.
9:oo-McMIIIan &amp; Wile 3,4, 15; ABC Theatre 6,13;
Ko(ak 8,10; Maaterplece Theatre 20,33.
IO :oo-Bronk 8,10; Ascent of Man 20,33.
11 :oo-News 314,8,10,15; Monty Python's Flying Circus
20; Kup's Show 33.
11:15-CBS News 8.10; PMA Pulse 15.
1.1:3o-Salnt 3; Bonanza 4; Notre Dame Highlights 8;
Face the Nation 10; Don Kirshner's Rock Concert
15;-Soundstage 20.
12:oo-Movle "Babe" 10; Janakl 33.
12:05-Notre Dame Highlights 6; News 13.

..
1

12:30-Bonanra 4; Sammy
12:35-700-Ciub 13.

&amp;

Company 8; News 20.

I : IXI--A&amp;~,C N~~ 6.

1:30-Peyton Place 4.
2:05-ABC News 13.

' 70s 10; News 20; Bl Ways 33.
10: 3o-catch-33 33.
11 :DO-News 3,4,8,10,15; World Congress.of the Deaf 33.
11 :3o-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie "Walk on the Wild
Side" 8; Movie "The Thin Man" 10' Janakl33.

6:00-Columbus Today 4; Sunrise Semester 10.
6:15-Folk Literature 3.
6:25-Farm Report 13.6:30-New Zoo Revue 4; News 6 ; Bible Answers 8;
Farmllme 10; Good News 13.
6:ol0-&lt;lunce of Prevention 10.
6:45-Moi-nlng Report 3.
6:55-Chuck While Reports 10; News 13.
7:oo-Todey 3,4,15; A.M. Amerlca6,13; CBS News&amp;;
Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:30-Schoolles tO.
t:oo-Lucy Sfl~Jw 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Saseme St.
33.
.
8:30-Big VaJI~ 6.

yards and a touchdown. A
pass for lhe cx.tra points fell
incomplete.
With Preston and junior
Sieve :Baird adding real
cslalc on the ground and
Lucas hi tting Metzner and

Mid@lhipmen
upset Pitt
PITTSBURGH I UPI} Gerry Goodwin and Bob
Jackson contributed touchdowns and a doomsday Navy
defense shut down Pittsburgh's high-powered attack
Saturday, leading the Mid·
shipmen to a 17-0 upset of,
the Panthers.
•
Jackson , who gained 80.
yards, went over from three
yards out In the first periOd to
cap an 84-yard scoring drive
while Goodwin, who totaled
109 rushing yards, scored
from two yards out in the
tllird periOd.
WASHINGTON SHINES
NORMAN, Okla. (UPI} Halfba ck Joe Washington
scored two touchdowns and
three Oklahoma backfields
combined for 368 yards
rl!Shing in a 39-1 runaway
over Iowa State in a fumbleplagued Big Eight Conference football game
Saturday.
r. ~ ... Iiii i~·:~- r• .-. ~. llllr ..,
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tciRF oro : '•':11 , t- ;: :o •
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whate'er she advises, do the
very reverse and you're sure
to be wise."

~ ~-/·

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~on

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• .~~~~~~

'"~•~•

M•rcus Geiger with passes
Symmes Valley 's final
uver the middle, KyMer Creek score came on a one-yard run
got its final touchdown with by Berry with I : 10 left in the
5: 05 lefl in the four th quarter. contest. Preston unofficiallf
Junior tailb~ck TOdd Taylor led the Bobca~ with 110
darted in from 10 yards away yards rushing ,
for the TD.

Saturday's
college
results
United Press International
Bucknell 14 Gettysburg 7
Hobart 21 Union (NY} 0
Navy 17 Plt~burgh 0
Penn St. 31 Army 0
Rutgers 41 Columbia 0
Syracuse 22 Boston College 14
West Virginia 10 Virginia
Tech 7
East Carolina 38 North
Carolina 17
No, Carolina St. 45 Clemson 7
Delaware St. 17 Morgan St. 3
Grove City 14 Kenyon 6
Harvard 24 Dartmouth 10
Holy Cross 21 Brown 20
Indiana (Pa.) 13 Slippery
Rock9
Massachusetts · 29 Con.
· neclicut 14
Penn 24 Princeton 20
Yale 20 Cornell 14
Alabama 45
0
Furman 21 William &amp; Mary 6
Georgja 21 Kentucky 13
No. Texas St. 21 Tennessee 14
So Carolina St. 10 Newberry 0
Virginia St. 26 Hampton Ins!.
14
,Wake Forest 66 Virginia 21
Dlinois 21 Michigan St. 19
Michigan 55 Indiana 7 .
No. Michigan 20 Saginaw
Valley 15
So. California 24 Notre Dame
17
Wayne St. 21 Butler (Ind.) 17

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···'·':•/ .- .-, ,·;-';,•

&amp;na.r, ;,;;,u ••n·.:.

A thought for the day : Irish
poet ThoiR88 Moore said,
"Ask a woman's advice and

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111a11• II 1llll- i-II RIIIJII . ]II~ f.!lJio'
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nr,·· 1 "•Ill-:~~

12 :oo-News 6,13.
12 :3o-FBI 6; Untouuchables 13.
1:oo:- Tomorrow 3,4.
I :30-News 13.

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~OIJ.il'IOS

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER
FOR RELEASE SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1975

ACROSS
1 Canon
e TrM of mynlt
fom~y

11 Clothing
18 Citrus buh

II Kind ol fobdc

MONDAY, OCTO&amp; ER 27, 1975

ril(hl side fm' Ihe lying score .
Senior quarterback · place ·
. ki cker Tim Lucas booted the
extra point for a 7-ll lead.
· The Bobcal~ marched 67
yards in seven plays for their
second six-pointer of Lhc
night. Junior fullback Ralph
Baylor carried the ball the
final six yards. Lucas' boot
sailed wide to the right.
Symmes Valley came right
back behind the hard running
of Berry and Phil Hilgenberg.
SV moved the pigskin from
its 25 yard line to the Bobcat
16 before ·senior linebacker
Tim ·Moles grabbed a Ted
Glade au pass killing the
drive.
The Gallians took to the air
in the third quarter. With 8:55
left in the period, Lucas wenJ
over from one-yard out. The
TD was set-up on two long
runs by Lucas and a 12-yard
pass from Lucas to senior Bill
.Metzner.
Lucas' kick pushed the
score to 20-&lt;1. Kyger Creek
reached the scoreboard with
4:25left on a live-yard run by
Preston. Two big passing
plays, a 27-yard aerial to Jim
(Monk) Ward and a tO yard
completion to Metzner aided
the drive.
Following a Jim Armbruster Interception, an ISyard pass to Metzner, Lucas
connected with the 185 pound
senior once again for five·

eo

Mook loft by
wound

61 Urge on
62 II borne

ee Two-toed tloth

87 Slumber

73 Bogged down
24 Grlluhy
74 Winter vehlclo
29 Toll
78 Profittd
27 Brhillllabbr.l
79 Small bottle
29 Ytllowlsh orgsnle '81 Commsnd 10

23 Contoll

horae

132 Uqukl m.. turt

133 F1onch foo
134
136
137
136

"summer"

Grttk lott10
Wn in debt
Apponion
Muolcol
eompasitlon
139 Stumohip labbr,l
140 Row

30

Crlppltd
31 Sotf-eonlfol

Rogillot labbr.l 141 Atpreiont
64 More unuouel
t42 Top of hoed

l2 Lebel
33 Mohammedan
neme
34 Greek mountain
35 Fru ticket

85
87
90
92

38 WlltftOUIIf

93 Shoo bottomo

150 Laughable

31 Dlecourte

95 Tanned 1kin

151 Snake

82

Stellw.
143
Heavenly body
144
Recalls to memory 146
One, no matter
148
which
149

40 Secrellgent
97 Mild l&gt;plotlve
41 Wet
98 Suppo~ng that
9:oo-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy Show 8; Mike 42 S-ohopod molding 99 p,.flx: down
43 hdorolegoncy 101 Atnotlm•
Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . t3.
llnlt.l
103 MeloJhi"P
9:30-Not For Women Only 3; One Lift to Live 6;
45 Foodprog01ms 104 Gupforbrooth
Musical Chairs 8; New Zoo Revue 13.
GrHk Ioiiar
tO&amp; Cublemoter
10:00-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Dinah 6; Give-N- 4t
47 MUIIeal
108 Old tpoet.l
Take 8, 10; Mike Douglaa 13.
lnltrumont
110 Indefinite number
10:3!'-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, IS; Price Is Right 8,10.
48 Smooth
112 Mtktl lice
ll :oo-High Rollers 3,t5; I Dream of Jeannie 4; 48 Mounlllnool
113 ToM
Gambill; Let's Face II 10; Elec. Co. 20.
·
South Amorles 114 Prlntor't mHoure
61 One oppolld
115 Conflagrollon
11 :25-Polltlcal Telk 4.
11 :30-Hollywood Squaraa 3,15; Happy Days 13; 52 Latin conjunction 117 Lowful
63 BaVIfoge
118 Burrowing onlmsl
Midday 4; Love of Life1,10; Sesame St. 20,33.
64 Hurrlod
119 Ray
'11:55-Talce kerr I; Dan lmel'l World 10.
t20 Nolo olocalo
12:«»-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3,15; Showoffs 13; 66 Provotcod
67
lolr
121 C•uotlc
Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; Newa 6,8,10.
II
Song
-and-dance
tubttencn
12:30-3 For the Mt!trtey 3,15; Ali My Children 6.13;
thaw
123 Rodent
Search for Tomorrow a, 10
12:45-Eiec. Co. 33.'
12:55-NBC News3,15.

90 Noll ohcole

91 College degree

126 Tiny amount
' 25 ln11rnationalllbor
tabbr.l
127 Ct11ikl tnimallpU
group !abbr.)
94 Cut

64 Decigrom labbl.l 129 Smoll
e5 Man't nickneme 131 Mtn't rtlckntme

20 Body of nobltmtn e9 Rom1n deittn
21 Talkod Idly
71 IIIII

aubl1anct

124 lndofinito number 22 Rut
125 S10ono
23 Stroin tor breoth

Fashioned
Deeth
Weird
Big
Colonized

27 B-ttorod

88 OocimotodobbrJ

28 Wllhing lightly
30 llntern

98 Newspaper
paragreph

31 Singing bifd

33 Correct

35
36
37
39
41
42

Pool
Motu rod
Commend
tnlot
Small volley
Above

Impel onward

Apportioned
Heavy volume
Tumbled
Dutch town
Forrn
Bundle
St'ern

55 Poriodo of time

124 Cooked slowly

56 Hinders

125 Quote

59 App01iou
5ll Projecting tooth
1 SI'/Wih lolengl
61 Sponloh orticle·
2 N•rvenotworko 63 Brlotle
3 So be It I
66 Guldo'olow noll
4 Buohyclump
67 Stewardlebbr.l
5 Printtr'o me11uro 66 Porvede
8 Blvelve molluoko 70 Bombard tiorcoiy
7 Chruo fruh
71 Perform '
B Number
72 Angar
9 BootherotOdln
73 Gravlltonts
10 All
75 Cond11condo
11 Piecing In contoct 77 Evening lpaot.l
12 Hob•- tott•r
78 Arid
13 Sovey
110 Short i•ckot
14 Soloo
83 lnMcl
15 Roamed
811 Morrymsking
16 U1ged o.
88 P•rtoinlng to tho.

21 Thrive

102 Royal
104 Wan
105 Junctura
106 Troin of
attendants
107 Sontforth

44 Fine line of a letter 109
47 Doog
Ill
48 Shoulder
112
ornament•
113
11(9 Heavenly being
116
60 Style of
118
automobile
119
64 Weighing devicel 122

DOWN

17 French ertlc"'

99 Oisflgurll

100 Draw• out

ear

89 Actuol

126
128
130
131
132

L••u••
Piece of bed linen
Couple
Spociooofpoppor
Ctoar of
defilemonl
135 Spoken
137 Post
138 U.S. President
140 Golf mound
1421nlavorot
143 Novelty
144 Symbotfor
dyoprosium
145 Symbol for
oelonlum
147 Teutonic
dolly
148 Note of

tcllo

I :t!O-News 3; Ryan's Hqpe 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless lOr Not for Women Only 15.
1:30-DaysoiOur Lives 3,4,15; Let's Make a Daal6,13.
2:QO-S10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding Light 8,10.
2:JO-Oodors 3,4,15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13; Edge of
Night 8,10.
3:oo.-:Another' WOrld 3,4,t5; General Hospital 6,13;
Match Game 1,1 0; W oman 20.
3:»--ne Life' to Live 13; Bewitched 6; Tattletales
8,10; Consumer Survival Kit 20.
4:QO-¥r. Cartoon' 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Mickey Mouse Club 6,8; Mister Rogers 20,33; Dinah
13.
4:30-Bewllchtd 3; MOO Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Get Smart 15.
5:0G-Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
'5:30-Adam-t2 4; News 6; Beverly Hlitbltltes 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33; Adam-12 13.
6:110-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 20;' Speclal Education 33.
6:30-NBC Ntw13,4,1S; ABC News13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Truth or Cons. 12; Making II Count
20.
7:1»-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Buck Owena8; News10; Candid Camera
13; Family Affair 15; On Aging 20; Classic Theatre
Prtvltw 33.
,
7:30-That Geod Ole Nalllvllle Music 3; Don Adams
Sct'ftll Tftl 4; Match Game PM 6; Price is Right 8;
· Evening Edition with Marlin Agronaky 20; High
Ro.d toAIIveqtureiO; To Tell the Truth 13; Frltnda
of Man 15; Marco Sportltte: Football 33.
! :oo-Aru Hlgl) School Footbell Pol~! PIHHnl vs
Ravenswood 5.
'
8:ti0-Babbv V1111on 3; Mobile One 6,13; F.,.,lly !1olvek
. 4; Red, WitHe &amp; WrtW 15; Gunsmoke I; L1sl Gr1ve
a! Dlmbarl 20.33; Rhoda 10. ·
1:30--W. Tlllnk You Should k - 3; Phyllls10.
9:QO Movie "ThaLl- of Jlillly Oollllw 3,4,15; NFL
Footlllll 6.U; Allin The family a. to.
9:30-Z- Grey Theltre 5; Maude 8,10; Life &amp; the
Structure of Hefi'KI91obln 20· Realldldt; 33.
10:011-Burke's L1w 5; tMGlcal Ctnllr I; Science in the

'

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NINNtE WINKLE
I I SHOJIDN'T HAVE
LET ZE i.L1'\ 00 OUT
""HER CIM&lt; mvINGlOFINDU&amp;

tl'I1E5 FOR 10·
NIC/IT'S 131(7
SI'DN.

•••

\,

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Marietta bombed

by B-W, 59-14
MARlETT A, Ohio (UP!) Baldwin-Wallace rolled up a
record 32 points in the second
half to break open a 10.7
game and easily move out to
a 59-a win over Ohio Athletic
Conference rival Marietta
Saturday.
Two touchdowns by Jeff
Johnson for tWo and 2f yards,
and two first half touchdown
passes by Ken Preseren, of 47
yards to Scott Olds and 16
yarda to Sam Crumptoo, gave
Baldwin-Wallace their fifth
win in seven starts this
season.
Both teams now are Z.I in
the OAC.
With 23 seconds left in the
balf, Baldwin-Wallace' Greg
Rufus blocked a Jim Davies
[iunt, caught the ball In mid·
air and raced 27 yarda for a
score.
Balllwin-Wallace rolled 497
total yards compared to
Marietta's 327.
AGGIES EDGE BEARS

COLLEGE STATION, Tex.
(UP!) - Safety Lester Hayes
ran 11 yards with a ball
fumbled in the air to score
and Ignite the sixth-ranked
Texas A&amp;M Aggies to a 19-10
Southwest Conference victory over the Baylor Bears .
Saturday.

Friday night, Kyger closes
its 1975 season at home
against rugged Rock Hill.
Symmes Valley visits
Hannan Trace.
STATISTICS
DEPARTMENT
KC SV
First Downs
13 9
Yards Rushing
243 188
Yards Passing
188 11
Total Yardage
361 199
Passes Attempted
16 4
Passes Completed
11
I
Fumbles
1 I
Fumbles Lost
0 0
Interceptions
2 0·
Penalties
8-28 ~
By Quarters :
KC
7 6 19 1&gt;-38
sv
6 0 0 1&gt;-12

BEARCA·l'SWJN
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Jay
Bond's scoring plunge from
the one In the fourth quarter
and Dave Slepherd'a three
first-quarter field goals gave
the Bearcats a 23-17 win
Saturday over Southwest
Louisiana.

TO MEET NOV.ll

VINTON - Officials of the
Southern Valley Athletic
Conference will meet at 7:30
p.m. Tueaday, Nov. 11 at
North Gallla High School
near here to select the all
league football team. Other
Items on the Hllenda will be
the 1975 balketball preview
set Nov. 21 at Rio Grande
College and the ~slunen
basketball tournament. All
auperlntendents, prlnctpals
ilnd coaches are Invited.

�. .... .-...
-

~ · ··

... .

,,...

.:. ·

.10 - The SWlday Tim~s - &amp;&gt;mine!, Sunday , Ot'l. :W, 1 ~75

-

'. ··)ill

Leave Nov. 28

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~~} ~

. . :)0· '

).-

'

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By VERNON SOOfi
book."
.
. , :-: :, ~
BV RICHARD LERNER
that date.
HOLLYWOOD· (UPI }
"Ufe.Goes to 1ile Movies" &lt;'' ·
assistance to offset American CongreSs as a package," is not the result of· any take it easy again Sunday and
WASHINGTON (UPI ) Kissinger said he inrormed aid to Israel.
Kissinger said.
is costly - $19.95. llUt thlft... -~-- ·
agreement hut is the fCllUlt Of resume his normally hectic Ufe isn't dead yet.
Secretary or State Henry A. Ford during their meeting
"But there will not be any
Ufe
Magazine
(
1936-72)
has
was
an advance printing of . . ~
Under terms of the new long-term Arperican in- pace by going to Arlington
Kissinger Said Saturday that that "our relationship with announcement.'! or any deci- interim Sinai accord, terests," Kissinger said.
·
published,
through
Time
Inc.,
100,000
oopies with l!OO,qllO_ ~~;;
National Cemetery e!lrly
President Ford plans to go to China is basically sound."
sions as , to a program for Kissinger promised the .. And \ve hope very much that Monday morning to par· a spellbinding photographic more in the works. . . ·.. . ... .
China around Nov. 28 ·and ' On the talks with Sadat, military aid to !&gt;gypt at this United . States would give the Congress will see it the
·~our first such b'ook, 'Tile·: 1
ticipate in a Veterans Day cavalcade of Hollywood, its
that he round U.S..Chinese Kissinger said the Uhited time," he said.
Israel about 12:6 billion worth same way and grant what ~~:e ceremony at the Tomb of the stars and movies, which Is . Best of Ufe,"' SchenJl:ID o&lt;"' ::~ ·
relations "basically sound" States "will look very
In about a week, Ford will of economic and military aid request.~~
destined to repose on hun· said, "cost the ~e amllllll ~: .
Unknown Soldier.
·
during his own Peking visit . sympathetically at Egyptian present his full request for and provide Egypt with about , Ford seems almost fully
He welcomes Sadat to the dreds of thousands of · and sold -more than a million . ;,, ''?
Ford met with Kissinger requests" .for economiC aid foreign aid, Including $600 million in economic recovered from a sinus cold
' "
. ". . ·· ., . .
White House later Monday America's living room coifee cop1es.
for 90 minutes at the White and ''we are prepared to have amounts for Israel and assistance ollly,
or Ufe's 1,864 ~U~, .'''.1'1
and infection that fo~ced him and hosts a state dinner for tables.
House to get a full report on a general discussion " of Egypt, "and I think it will
Among the outstanding· moviepeopleappearedori .250 ... ·
"We believe that what we to rest a good I&gt;Brt of this the Egyptian president in the
the secretary's trip and to Cairo's bid for U.S. military have to be considered by the are doing in the Middle East week .
journalist!~ .photographers covers. Leading the Parade·.
evening.
prepare for talks Monday
represented are Philippe was Eli;abeth Taylor wi!Ji 1t
Aides s;~i~ h• i• pl•nnlng to
with Egyptian President
Halsman, Peter Stackpole,
"The most contrqvemal •01
.
.
Anwar Sadat.
Bob Landry, John Florea, cover," said Eisenstaedt,.
Kissinger returned Friday'
[)on Omit:z and perhaps tile ·"was one l took of Sopbla .;· r1
alter five days of eonferrlng
most distinguished elf them . ·Loren. · The magazine
with Chinese leaders to lay
all, Alfred Eisenstaedt · .
reeelved 2,Q00 !etten of ob- '···v·. rr
the groWldwork for Ford 's
The 304-page picture book , jectloil ·and a thOUsand .:·
trip. He told reporters after
titled '"Life Goes · to TIM! :eancellatliliif."· ·
· ···. · '~ cr
the Ford brjefing that the
Movies" ...; ,with m!nimu,m . :Inside the :,Covers 'raylor:a: •.• ·
official schedule for the
text- is a processiOII'Of all. ·nkeneas apPears no ' fe)Jer · ';
.
President's journey would
the stars worthy of the tiUe, !ban 37 ,tfmes,' totlowell 1!7 , ,,, :•!
not be aMounced for about a
plus starlets, heavies, ~ncer · 'iTiley wltll ·• pic~ " . .
week.
weirdos 'and the rest of the . lllres.
·
' , : , ~ ::, t r
"But there's no substantive
Hollywood cast from D. \It'. .sClierman thinb the ·moill · -~.' 1
problem," he said, at•
Griffith to Raquel .We)ch.
famoua plJoto~aPI! In ·t~it! ·::.. ·
tributing the delay to "some
All
of
the
712
photographs
book Is one of Judy Garland.. ;' '
' By DONAL U'HIWIN~
he was jerked from the
technical scheduling
appeared
io
Ufe
durin¥
its
36and
Mickey Rooney taken In · ~- .1
·
MONASTEREVIN, Ireland window,
problems" that have not been ·
year
lifespan.
1!163
when Jlldy was reviving :~J~&gt;
(UP!} - The Irish governHerrema, .chief executive
resolved yet.
David
E
Scherffi!in,
who
her.
career In a ·•eal ,,
ment refused to act Saturday of the Dutch ·owned Ferenka
Asked about a. possible
·
"'' ~
on a Dutch businessman's company, was kidnaped 23 began at Ufe as a glortfled television series.
Nov. 28 departure, he said it
office
boy
and
who
.serve'd
as
·
·The.hauntlng,
wi&gt;rld-weary
':'! :i
screamed-Qui plea for a new days ago near his· home In
would be "In that general
a
senior_
editor
at
its_
d!lffila~.-&gt;lsag~
of.
the
_
two
fl!rm4!r
"
mediator to negotiate with his Limerick.
_
tlme frame" and "within a
abductors
on
the
grounds
that
Pollee
traced
him
·.to
.
the produced the spectacill•t·. child . st•ra : will forever
three or four-day period" of
-.
.;. ' temaln'
indiCtment ·l!f ·•·
one hostage is enough.
Monasterevln house .. earlier . IA!me.
"larii'
the
only
person.whQ
'eitploitatioci
of
chlldi-en In ,,
"The kidn11pers already this week. But .before · they
worked
for
Ufe
from
the
tlrrie
a
how
biz.
.
.......
have one hostage," a could burst In ,tl)ey were
Schermair hirnlielf ljlelit: 11 •
government source sal&lt;\. "We driven back by ahQts fired by ~fits Inception until-It cea~
publicatill!l,"
he
said.
of
·bls yean.with Ufe
-aa" a. · '''&gt; I
PHILADELPHIA (UPI}
don't want to hand them Eddie Gallagher, 21, and
''
'
- Politics In the partisan
Sclierman
personifies
the
pl)otographer
althilugh
,he, · .,:l
another."
Marian Coyle, 19.
qumtessence
of
what
Ufe
never
reached
the
eminence
.,..
blg·clty
tradiUon
'Dutch businessman Tiede
Army troops and armed
represented
at
its
peak.
He
is
of
an
Elsenatiledt.
He
liable,
·
:t;'&lt;
dominated the 8th annual
Herrema , 52, made his police ringed the house Wld
convention of the National'
desperate plea for a mediator waited, beginning a war of an aggressive native New however, to dlstingul.il! llW·: ")"
Orga.nlzatlon for Women
Friday, shouting it from the __ j l&lt;!rves now In its fifth day. Yorker,cocksure and imbued qualities- that separate a· •
Saturday as delegates
upstairs bedroom of a modest '.:;By Saturday, a senior with the journalistic elitlsni great photographer
•
selected a new NOW
row house where two kid- palice officer Said security that marke~ most Life journeyman.
staffers.
·
.
·
"It's
a
seJise
of
tlming,"
·
;,.,.,
president
napers were holding him at chiefs were confident ·an
He and -the revered Said. "Allred knows when
u
Two major downtown
gtinpoint.
three occupants of the house
Elsenstaedt,
riot
unlike
a
pair
click
the
shutter.
·
•· q
hotels In what was being
Herrema got his head would be taken out safely . .
of
Ufe
pallbearers,
came
"There
Is
only
8
;~
called "The City of Sisterly
barely above the .window s!U
"No one is going to be
west recently to hustle the mlllisecond when the perfect · 11
Love" lacked only the odor
of his bedroom prison and killed," he said.
of clgan as about · 3,000
shouted his appealto "please,
The kidnapers were now book in Hollywood where it photograph Is taken. He lh, ' -' '-'
delegates milled about
please help."
taking
food · supplies has foWld a wann r~pt(on. stinctively recognizes that .', I '
SIGN ·GOING UP - Workers are pictured here placing a new sign on the French City
"This Ia not a conllcientlinl8 , isolated 111001ent. He .aile
·:: 1J
lobbies and meeting rooms
"Get the mediator,.'' were regularly from detectives
Fabric
Shoppe,
58
Court
St.,
Gallipolis
as
expansion
and
remodeling
of
that
downtown
history
of
the
movies,"
said
,a
bullt
In'
light
·mete:,
·
'
pushing their candidates.
Herrema 's final words before occupying the downstairs
business firm continued last week.
Scherman
.
"
I
gueu
It's
innate
8enae_
l
lf
l!%p&lt;IIIW'e.
And
·
rooms of the house In this
really about a love atfair tOuseliJewlabexpreuiCII ' he ~;~;
small marketing village.
.,
But police said the room in . between the movies and a bas plenty of chutzpah." '
How
one
imThe
ancient
Elsellllaedt-.....
~1 ·
magazine.
which Dr. Herrema was
portant
culture
medium
·
demurred.
"Thit's
not
quite
··"'·~t
imprisoned must now be
"Incredibly filthy" because covered another cplture right. My picture ed!Uir .toJct· ·~: r
.
me I was a king in nly ".- 'l
of the lack of sanitary medium.
"The
book
wu
my
Idea,
profession and should hold rio . 1-"''
facilities,
,Wld
I
devoted
six
months
to
man
in awe.
Ireland 's government
" If lam good It is because I
The doctor said medicate repeatedly rejected demands producting it. I pored over ·
BEACHWOOD, Ohio (UPI )
every
page
in
all
1,864
cpples
always
try tO unde1'8tand my
shampoos
kill
lice
and
eggs,
made by Gallagher, leader of
- Up to 20 per cent of the
of
Ufe,
amounting
to
about
subject,
the human being ~ 1
Head
lice,
he
said,
can
also
be
W1 Irish RepubliCan Army
against ll.sher of Brazil's "0 Estado children attending this
SAO PAULQ, Brazil (UPI) denunciations
half a million photographs, whose picture I am taking, -~;;!
killed by laundering sheets,
- Raymond E. rnx; co· freedom of press violations. tie Sao Paulo" newspaper fashionable northeastern towels and clothi~g in hot and group, that three IRA
"Hollywood was a 'favoclte That is the real trick "
,,, -~
prisoners be freed froin Irish
Among some of the other saying '' Mesqul ta •s· Ohio· city's three elementary
publisher and senior editor of
Ufe
subject.
I
had
to
put
Tricks
or
no
"Ufe
Goes
to
soapy water and by dry jails in exchange for
the Wooster (Ohio) DaUy objectives which Dill hopes to courageous stance against schools have been infected cleaning.
aside at least as many great ')'he Movies" ~ a trwure 11 "''' :~
Herrema's life.
Record, assumed the accomplish are the expansion censorship has made us all with head lice, according to a
pictures as I c.hoee for the · American moVIe !are unlike , .• , ~
Saturday report by the
presidency of the Inter of lAP A's scholarship more courageous."
·
any other.
.
·
~! : 3
Dtx Is a third generation of Cleveland Pi&lt;Un Dealer.
'
'
It '
~ ·~
American Press Association programs In the U.S. and
.• . Bit P~: Danny Kaye will G ·
Dr. Harold L. Blumenthal,
(lAPA) Friday, and pledged Latin America "for those who his family to be publisher of
' Vlsit85'Amerleanclllealli,tbe - ~'!·\
the
Daily
Record,
started
in
a
dermatologist,
said
he
the organization to continue want to go into the com·
.
• span of five days to pu\)lldle .~! 8
1890.
checked
classrooms
and
to
"fighl - censorship munication business", and
A
graduate
of
Wooster
High
found 3-20 per cent of the
. the 25th ennlversary of uNt:.- j,·,.•8
the expal)sion of IAPA's
wherever we find It".
CEF ... Barbara Feldoll Will,
.
School,
Dix
attended
Ohio
students
IVere
ln.fested
with
"We must increase our technical center In Miami,
guea;, star in ..
,Hilt- . 6? ~ ~
membership In order to be Fla., "where journalists Wesleyan University and the the parasites,
University
of
Missouri,
where
·
pltaJ
...
Dan
"It
is
only
~guess,"
more effective tn our fight could learn the newest tooiB
he received his journalism Blumenthal
hss been a~ed to the call 11 . :o:. 1
tola
the
against censorship wherever of the trade."
He
was
editor
of
the
"The Outlaw
Josey · ~ •
degree.
newspaper,
"but
I
would
say
Dill said within the neltt few
we find It," Dtx said during
Wales."
,
"''or
Ravenna
(Ohio)
Evening
Reabout
10
per
cent
of
all
the
. T
the organization's 31st weeks lAP A's executive
cord
and
In
1931
became
children have lice."
.., •()f
committee would meet to
general assembly here.
advertising
manager
of
the
The
Cuyahoga
County
.;:) . rl
He said he hoped to get discuss "our strategies for
Dally
Record
In
Wooster.
Health
Deparbnent
has
more U.S. newspapers in· the coming year."
He became manager and assigned extra city· nurses to
• .II
He praised his predecessOr,
terested in·IAPA In order to
, .,
, 'I
publisher
of
the
paper
when
help
check
children
and
talk
give it more strength in its Julio de Mesquita Neto, pubFunds
distributed .. " .
his father, E.C. Db:: died In with parents.
'
1953.
"The school is not actuaUy
He currently Is on the board the source of the head Uce,"
of trustees of Ohio Wesleyan Robert L, Holloway, school
EDINBURGH, Se~d (UP!) -Alabama GGvl!l'llor
'.Theological School. He has superintendent, said. "The
George C. Wallace ended his two-week Eureopean tour
been president of the Rotary source is from slumber
/
Salurday still looklag Uke a presidential caadldate but
Club In Wooster, the loeal · parties, birthday partles and
saying oothlog to coaflrm he lain the race.
chamber of commerce and whenever chUdren get their
"I doll'! lmow whether I'm even golog to be Involved
the Wooster Businessmen's heads together."
yet" In the l!l'lt campal«n, Wallace told reporters before
Blumenthal wd the lice,
Asso~iation . He has also been
he was wheeled aboard the chartered jet that took him
president of the Ohio which cause Itching and ·
home. "!bat luis to be decided ofliciaUy."
Newspaper Association and ' irritation which can lead to
Wallace wo1111d up a formal program of vlalta to
currenUy Is a trustee of that infection, attach to ihe licalp.
Britain, Belgium, Italy, West Germany and France with a
association. He was also Their eggs - ovid-tibaped
NEW BUSINESS LOCATION - Mr. and Mrs. Paul Pauley are pictured at the counter
"sentimental visit" to Scotland, the land o~ his forebears.
president of the Ohio Select nits - are glued to hair shafts
of their new business locaton at 804 West Maio St.,'Pomeroy, the former home of Mr. aild
Ust of Daily N~wspapers.
and are. difficult to dislodge.
Mrs. Guy Shuler. Pauley Is the Nationwide Insurance Co. agent and Mrs. Pauley Is branch
sales manager of the Stout Realty Co. Both buslnesaee have p_reviously been operated -In
offices at their home at 307 Spring Ave. The new location is being redecorated and plBN are
being made to Rrovide more parkiilg. Offices are being furnlahed in antiques. Mrs. Pauley is
the former Lois Williams.

Irish will not

give kidnappers
another hostage

Ji,;;

en

~,. ,

Ohio editor leads
• •
press association ·

"[)octgo:•
auer aeorse ,

Court battle over Right to Die
hears final ~tnesses this week
.

Already, new fort'tl! are
BY JUDI HASSON
MORRISTOWN , N.J . gathering with the state
(UPI ) - The last witnesses branch ol the American Civll
will be heanj tjlis week in the Uberties Union indicating
Karen Ann Quinlan case, that It may seek to enter In
center of a legal battle over the appeal In support of the
the right to die.
right to die.
1ile witnesses will appear
Whatever the ruling , it will
in an ,austere little courtroom set national precedent acbefore Judge Rob!!rt Muir cording to at least one of the
Jr., 43: Summations will lawyers in the case, Ralph
follow on the plea of Joseph PQrzio , . an attorney fOr
and Julia Quinlan that the Karen 's doctors and a·
life-~~UStaining respirator be
medical law expert.
removed from their 21-yearFor Karen's parents, it has
old adoptive daughter; that been the most IM·ing time of
iihe be allowed to "puB into their lives. But Mrs. Quinlan
the loving hands of the Lord." said the) w~re ''llilq up
Whatever Muir's Superior v·ell."
Court ruling, there is the
Both agreed they ne.,er
prospect of an appeal.
811pected ·~eir plea would
att:.tct the worldwide at·

'

tention it l111s - the acores of
reporters packing the
courtroom, the camera crews
under the trtes outside.
The questions of law, medicine and religion spawned by
the case have grown In
number and complexity.
Morris County Prosecutor
Donald Coilester filed
separate court papers asking
the court to define how he
should handle homicides if
the Quinlans win.
•
St. Clare's Hospital, where
Karen Ia being treated, asked
the cowi to determine if
.doctors can use the "brain
death" criteria establlahed
by tlle ad hoc committee of
the Hm·1·11rd Medical School
in l!J61and no~&gt;· rtcr gmzed by

.

"

.

IW) ~1,

... 'Jt.; t '

LoUisvillii residents · ·~ ·:

only fo1r states.
An easel chart of the brain
dominated lhe courtroom
during medical testimony
that ~en's present state
was comparable to that of a
baby bQrn without a brain',
And the definition Itself catne
Into question. ·
Six neurologists, describing
WASHINGTON (UP!) Karen's condition as a
,''chronic, vegetative state, " Nearly 3,000 white reSidents
said the medical profe981on of Loulaville, Ky., dampened
remained divided and by a light drizzle and chsn·
troubled by the lack of ling "we won't bus," mar·
guidelines lor the terminally ched on the U.S. Capitol
Sllturday to protei( court·
Ill:
·Judge tdulr rejected a motion ordered school busing In the
J(entucky city.
that he view Karen because
'
Tile demonstratoMJ, many
the effect might unduly incarrying
nags .as well as
fluence his decision .
.protest sir· fonned Into line

.

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..... • : '

.

.

.. ·.

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'

'

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J

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march in;;. Washi~n · t':
.. ,

.. l .

I

near
ihe
Washington
Monument to !legin the
march to Capitol Hill.
Pollee estimated the crowd
at 2,700. However, some
demonstrators walled for tbe ·
marchers beside, their
chartered bu.. parbd DI!U
the Capitol.
'
While top AFUIO officials
disavowed the demonstration, mafijl ol lhe mar·

chers carried signs elt·
pressing the oppollitlon of
local unions to busing.
·
Themarcheiulio lnclulled
a feW fnlm other areia, In·
cludlnJ a 111180 8J'I!IIP . .
said It 1'ti!AMJted I ~

:

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'·

nag and a . sign .·aylng l ~ :· .•
"700,000 say no bua in Ken- --w :~
lucky."
,
9. ;
' A few othllr clernanalraton ·~10-~
i110 ·. !lad. troll~le wttb ·• ·

. IJIIW..,- l!llillbtJ a..
JII'O~

•'fCrced 'bullne·"

t? :_ ,·
'~"' '

~~~Workera local,-. ~·" ..,....:~Q'::Jb:.•llb..
.q
u..,..,.,
_
frolll , &lt;·
v.:•
The national flag Wll mudi, Will .VIrlhU. D1blota ·1114 .'~

in evidence but one llllll'~her

_carried

1

large

Pelllll)'lvarua.

•,

Confederi~· ..•

.'

·'

. •·

'

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.

ii

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"':01

,.

WILLOW WOOD - Kyger
Creek captured at least a
share of the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference title here
Friday night with a 36-12
victory over Symmes Valley.
It was the Bobcats' third
straight championship.
Kyger Creek must now
await the outcome of the
North Gallia-Eastern game
scheduled Friday night to see
if the Litle is shared or undisputed.
Both Eastern· and Kyger
Creek have unbeaten league
marks, lnclu&lt;)ing a 20.20 tie,
but a victory by tile Eagles
over North Gallia would give
Coach Spike Berkhimer's
team a sliare 6f the. championship.
Coach Greg Bailie 's
Symmes Valley Vikings took
the opening kickoff and
surprised the Bobcat defense
with two first downs before
being forced to punt at the 45.
The ball was fumbled with
the
Symmes
Valley
recovering at the 25. Four
plays later, senior fullhack
John Berry rambled in from
15 yards out for the score. A
run for the conversion was
stopped.
Kyger Creek bounced right
back following the ensuing
kickoff. Senior tailback Chris
Preston picked up 11 yards on
his first carry then broke
loose for 45 yards around his

6roo-Thls Is the Life 10.
6:30-Two-Way Street 4; Viewpoint 8; Public Polley .
Forum 10; Newsmaker '75 13 .
7:00-Church by the Side of the Road 4; Rev. Calvin
Evans 8; Sp;rlng Street USA 13.
··

-~-~ :. ~-

·,,

Share of .crown assured 'Cats whip Symmes Valley

SUND4Y, OCTOBER 26. 1975

.
There's life in the
. ·:
,
.'
ol~ magazine yeh e · • . . .

China visit after Thanksgiving

Television Log

;

: -~

Scott's World

31- The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sundav. Oct , 26. 1975

7:30-This Is The Life 3; Cadle Cliapel4; Revival Fires
6; Jerry F-alwell 8; Camera Three 10; Lower
Lighthouse 13.
~ : DO-Mormon Choir 3; Day of Discovery 4; Gospel
Caravan 6; Church Service 10; Mamre Church 13.
B : ~ral Roberts 3; Yours for the Asking 4; Kathryn
Kuhlman 6; Day of Dlscove~y 8; James Robison
Presents 10; Rex Humbard 13; See the U.S.A. 13.
9:oo-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3; Hour of Power 4; Oral
Roberts 10; Rex Hum bard 6; .Rev. Leonard Repass
8: Across the. Fence 15.
9:3!hWhat Does the Bible Plainly Say 8; Ills Written
· 10; Christ Is the Answer 13; Insight 15, . · ·
10 :oo-Big Blue M'arble 3; Church Service 4; Leroy
Jenkln1 .6; Chrlsllan Center 8; Movie "Voyage to
the Bottom of the Sea" 10; Jmmy Swaggart 13;
Faith tor 1Today 15·.
10:30-Bullwlnkle 3; Garner , Ted Armstrong 4; Rex
Humbard 8; Jimmy Swaggart 6; Tesllmony Time
13; This Is the Life 15.
n :oo-TV Chapel :r, Focus on Columb-us 4; Point of
VIew 6; Rex Humbard 15; Rev. Henry Mahan 13.
11 :30-At Issue .3; Make a Wish 6; OSU Football
Highllghls~; Face the Nallon 8; Rev. Calvin Evans
. 13.
12:DO-Meet The Press 3,15; CBPA Bowling 6·
Thlnk!ng In the Black I; Columbus Town Meeting
10; Medlx 13.
·
12:3G-Grandstand 3,4; NFL Pre-Game Show 8; Make
a Wish 1~; Wreslllng 15.
· 12:5S.:Fiile M-Inutes to Kick-Off 10.
l:oo-NFL Football 3,4; NFL Football 8,10; Next
Generallon 13; Family.Theatre 33.
1:oo-Area High School Football (Point Pleasant vs
Ravenswood) 5
1:30-lnues &amp; ·An-swers 6.13; Grandstand 1s.
2:oo-NFL Football 15; Communique 6; College
Football 1975 13; Axelforlh Angel 33.
2:30-Aware 6.
3:oo-Formby'sAnllque Workshop6; Town Topics 13;
· Rivals of Sherlock Holmes 33.
3:30-That Good Ole ·Noshvllle Music 6; Kid Talk 13.
4:oo-NFL Football 3,4; Friends of Man 6; Sports
Spectacular 8,10: Friends of Man 13; Know Your
Anllques 33:i . ·
.4:30-Misslon: Impossible 6; NFL Football 15;; Nash·
ville on the Road 13; Ploy Chess 33.
5:oo-Movle "Carousel" ·13; Erica 33.
5:15-Theonle '33.
5:30-FBI 6; Preserving Good 33.
6:oo-Gellln' Over 33.
6 : ~News 6; Wllnel$ to Yesterday 33,
7:oo-Morrts Cerullo Help Line S; World of Disney
3.~.15; Swiss. Family Robinson 6,13; WCHS·TV
ReJiorta; World Press 20;33; Lions Are Free 10.
7:30-High School Bowl8; Lowell Thomas Remembers
20,33.
8:oo-SI• Million Dollar Miln 6,13; Cher 8,10; Evening
at Symphony 20,33.
9:oo-McMIIIan &amp; Wile 3,4, 15; ABC Theatre 6,13;
Ko(ak 8,10; Maaterplece Theatre 20,33.
IO :oo-Bronk 8,10; Ascent of Man 20,33.
11 :oo-News 314,8,10,15; Monty Python's Flying Circus
20; Kup's Show 33.
11:15-CBS News 8.10; PMA Pulse 15.
1.1:3o-Salnt 3; Bonanza 4; Notre Dame Highlights 8;
Face the Nation 10; Don Kirshner's Rock Concert
15;-Soundstage 20.
12:oo-Movle "Babe" 10; Janakl 33.
12:05-Notre Dame Highlights 6; News 13.

..
1

12:30-Bonanra 4; Sammy
12:35-700-Ciub 13.

&amp;

Company 8; News 20.

I : IXI--A&amp;~,C N~~ 6.

1:30-Peyton Place 4.
2:05-ABC News 13.

' 70s 10; News 20; Bl Ways 33.
10: 3o-catch-33 33.
11 :DO-News 3,4,8,10,15; World Congress.of the Deaf 33.
11 :3o-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie "Walk on the Wild
Side" 8; Movie "The Thin Man" 10' Janakl33.

6:00-Columbus Today 4; Sunrise Semester 10.
6:15-Folk Literature 3.
6:25-Farm Report 13.6:30-New Zoo Revue 4; News 6 ; Bible Answers 8;
Farmllme 10; Good News 13.
6:ol0-&lt;lunce of Prevention 10.
6:45-Moi-nlng Report 3.
6:55-Chuck While Reports 10; News 13.
7:oo-Todey 3,4,15; A.M. Amerlca6,13; CBS News&amp;;
Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7:30-Schoolles tO.
t:oo-Lucy Sfl~Jw 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Saseme St.
33.
.
8:30-Big VaJI~ 6.

yards and a touchdown. A
pass for lhe cx.tra points fell
incomplete.
With Preston and junior
Sieve :Baird adding real
cslalc on the ground and
Lucas hi tting Metzner and

Mid@lhipmen
upset Pitt
PITTSBURGH I UPI} Gerry Goodwin and Bob
Jackson contributed touchdowns and a doomsday Navy
defense shut down Pittsburgh's high-powered attack
Saturday, leading the Mid·
shipmen to a 17-0 upset of,
the Panthers.
•
Jackson , who gained 80.
yards, went over from three
yards out In the first periOd to
cap an 84-yard scoring drive
while Goodwin, who totaled
109 rushing yards, scored
from two yards out in the
tllird periOd.
WASHINGTON SHINES
NORMAN, Okla. (UPI} Halfba ck Joe Washington
scored two touchdowns and
three Oklahoma backfields
combined for 368 yards
rl!Shing in a 39-1 runaway
over Iowa State in a fumbleplagued Big Eight Conference football game
Saturday.
r. ~ ... Iiii i~·:~- r• .-. ~. llllr ..,
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zr:• '•~··r:,:;~;l; ;or~;- 10 .;. r1

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tciRF oro : '•':11 , t- ;: :o •
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whate'er she advises, do the
very reverse and you're sure
to be wise."

~ ~-/·

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~on

r;c; ~,;~ ·r F · :'!

• .~~~~~~

'"~•~•

M•rcus Geiger with passes
Symmes Valley 's final
uver the middle, KyMer Creek score came on a one-yard run
got its final touchdown with by Berry with I : 10 left in the
5: 05 lefl in the four th quarter. contest. Preston unofficiallf
Junior tailb~ck TOdd Taylor led the Bobca~ with 110
darted in from 10 yards away yards rushing ,
for the TD.

Saturday's
college
results
United Press International
Bucknell 14 Gettysburg 7
Hobart 21 Union (NY} 0
Navy 17 Plt~burgh 0
Penn St. 31 Army 0
Rutgers 41 Columbia 0
Syracuse 22 Boston College 14
West Virginia 10 Virginia
Tech 7
East Carolina 38 North
Carolina 17
No, Carolina St. 45 Clemson 7
Delaware St. 17 Morgan St. 3
Grove City 14 Kenyon 6
Harvard 24 Dartmouth 10
Holy Cross 21 Brown 20
Indiana (Pa.) 13 Slippery
Rock9
Massachusetts · 29 Con.
· neclicut 14
Penn 24 Princeton 20
Yale 20 Cornell 14
Alabama 45
0
Furman 21 William &amp; Mary 6
Georgja 21 Kentucky 13
No. Texas St. 21 Tennessee 14
So Carolina St. 10 Newberry 0
Virginia St. 26 Hampton Ins!.
14
,Wake Forest 66 Virginia 21
Dlinois 21 Michigan St. 19
Michigan 55 Indiana 7 .
No. Michigan 20 Saginaw
Valley 15
So. California 24 Notre Dame
17
Wayne St. 21 Butler (Ind.) 17

rcu

II

~ -· j,:

···'·':•/ .- .-, ,·;-';,•

&amp;na.r, ;,;;,u ••n·.:.

A thought for the day : Irish
poet ThoiR88 Moore said,
"Ask a woman's advice and

[,;~

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111a11• II 1llll- i-II RIIIJII . ]II~ f.!lJio'
nu ~~~~.-•.-.. , ~··.1 ·
nr,·· 1 "•Ill-:~~

12 :oo-News 6,13.
12 :3o-FBI 6; Untouuchables 13.
1:oo:- Tomorrow 3,4.
I :30-News 13.

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~OIJ.il'IOS

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER
FOR RELEASE SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1975

ACROSS
1 Canon
e TrM of mynlt
fom~y

11 Clothing
18 Citrus buh

II Kind ol fobdc

MONDAY, OCTO&amp; ER 27, 1975

ril(hl side fm' Ihe lying score .
Senior quarterback · place ·
. ki cker Tim Lucas booted the
extra point for a 7-ll lead.
· The Bobcal~ marched 67
yards in seven plays for their
second six-pointer of Lhc
night. Junior fullback Ralph
Baylor carried the ball the
final six yards. Lucas' boot
sailed wide to the right.
Symmes Valley came right
back behind the hard running
of Berry and Phil Hilgenberg.
SV moved the pigskin from
its 25 yard line to the Bobcat
16 before ·senior linebacker
Tim ·Moles grabbed a Ted
Glade au pass killing the
drive.
The Gallians took to the air
in the third quarter. With 8:55
left in the period, Lucas wenJ
over from one-yard out. The
TD was set-up on two long
runs by Lucas and a 12-yard
pass from Lucas to senior Bill
.Metzner.
Lucas' kick pushed the
score to 20-&lt;1. Kyger Creek
reached the scoreboard with
4:25left on a live-yard run by
Preston. Two big passing
plays, a 27-yard aerial to Jim
(Monk) Ward and a tO yard
completion to Metzner aided
the drive.
Following a Jim Armbruster Interception, an ISyard pass to Metzner, Lucas
connected with the 185 pound
senior once again for five·

eo

Mook loft by
wound

61 Urge on
62 II borne

ee Two-toed tloth

87 Slumber

73 Bogged down
24 Grlluhy
74 Winter vehlclo
29 Toll
78 Profittd
27 Brhillllabbr.l
79 Small bottle
29 Ytllowlsh orgsnle '81 Commsnd 10

23 Contoll

horae

132 Uqukl m.. turt

133 F1onch foo
134
136
137
136

"summer"

Grttk lott10
Wn in debt
Apponion
Muolcol
eompasitlon
139 Stumohip labbr,l
140 Row

30

Crlppltd
31 Sotf-eonlfol

Rogillot labbr.l 141 Atpreiont
64 More unuouel
t42 Top of hoed

l2 Lebel
33 Mohammedan
neme
34 Greek mountain
35 Fru ticket

85
87
90
92

38 WlltftOUIIf

93 Shoo bottomo

150 Laughable

31 Dlecourte

95 Tanned 1kin

151 Snake

82

Stellw.
143
Heavenly body
144
Recalls to memory 146
One, no matter
148
which
149

40 Secrellgent
97 Mild l&gt;plotlve
41 Wet
98 Suppo~ng that
9:oo-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy Show 8; Mike 42 S-ohopod molding 99 p,.flx: down
43 hdorolegoncy 101 Atnotlm•
Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . t3.
llnlt.l
103 MeloJhi"P
9:30-Not For Women Only 3; One Lift to Live 6;
45 Foodprog01ms 104 Gupforbrooth
Musical Chairs 8; New Zoo Revue 13.
GrHk Ioiiar
tO&amp; Cublemoter
10:00-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Dinah 6; Give-N- 4t
47 MUIIeal
108 Old tpoet.l
Take 8, 10; Mike Douglaa 13.
lnltrumont
110 Indefinite number
10:3!'-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, IS; Price Is Right 8,10.
48 Smooth
112 Mtktl lice
ll :oo-High Rollers 3,t5; I Dream of Jeannie 4; 48 Mounlllnool
113 ToM
Gambill; Let's Face II 10; Elec. Co. 20.
·
South Amorles 114 Prlntor't mHoure
61 One oppolld
115 Conflagrollon
11 :25-Polltlcal Telk 4.
11 :30-Hollywood Squaraa 3,15; Happy Days 13; 52 Latin conjunction 117 Lowful
63 BaVIfoge
118 Burrowing onlmsl
Midday 4; Love of Life1,10; Sesame St. 20,33.
64 Hurrlod
119 Ray
'11:55-Talce kerr I; Dan lmel'l World 10.
t20 Nolo olocalo
12:«»-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3,15; Showoffs 13; 66 Provotcod
67
lolr
121 C•uotlc
Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; Newa 6,8,10.
II
Song
-and-dance
tubttencn
12:30-3 For the Mt!trtey 3,15; Ali My Children 6.13;
thaw
123 Rodent
Search for Tomorrow a, 10
12:45-Eiec. Co. 33.'
12:55-NBC News3,15.

90 Noll ohcole

91 College degree

126 Tiny amount
' 25 ln11rnationalllbor
tabbr.l
127 Ct11ikl tnimallpU
group !abbr.)
94 Cut

64 Decigrom labbl.l 129 Smoll
e5 Man't nickneme 131 Mtn't rtlckntme

20 Body of nobltmtn e9 Rom1n deittn
21 Talkod Idly
71 IIIII

aubl1anct

124 lndofinito number 22 Rut
125 S10ono
23 Stroin tor breoth

Fashioned
Deeth
Weird
Big
Colonized

27 B-ttorod

88 OocimotodobbrJ

28 Wllhing lightly
30 llntern

98 Newspaper
paragreph

31 Singing bifd

33 Correct

35
36
37
39
41
42

Pool
Motu rod
Commend
tnlot
Small volley
Above

Impel onward

Apportioned
Heavy volume
Tumbled
Dutch town
Forrn
Bundle
St'ern

55 Poriodo of time

124 Cooked slowly

56 Hinders

125 Quote

59 App01iou
5ll Projecting tooth
1 SI'/Wih lolengl
61 Sponloh orticle·
2 N•rvenotworko 63 Brlotle
3 So be It I
66 Guldo'olow noll
4 Buohyclump
67 Stewardlebbr.l
5 Printtr'o me11uro 66 Porvede
8 Blvelve molluoko 70 Bombard tiorcoiy
7 Chruo fruh
71 Perform '
B Number
72 Angar
9 BootherotOdln
73 Gravlltonts
10 All
75 Cond11condo
11 Piecing In contoct 77 Evening lpaot.l
12 Hob•- tott•r
78 Arid
13 Sovey
110 Short i•ckot
14 Soloo
83 lnMcl
15 Roamed
811 Morrymsking
16 U1ged o.
88 P•rtoinlng to tho.

21 Thrive

102 Royal
104 Wan
105 Junctura
106 Troin of
attendants
107 Sontforth

44 Fine line of a letter 109
47 Doog
Ill
48 Shoulder
112
ornament•
113
11(9 Heavenly being
116
60 Style of
118
automobile
119
64 Weighing devicel 122

DOWN

17 French ertlc"'

99 Oisflgurll

100 Draw• out

ear

89 Actuol

126
128
130
131
132

L••u••
Piece of bed linen
Couple
Spociooofpoppor
Ctoar of
defilemonl
135 Spoken
137 Post
138 U.S. President
140 Golf mound
1421nlavorot
143 Novelty
144 Symbotfor
dyoprosium
145 Symbol for
oelonlum
147 Teutonic
dolly
148 Note of

tcllo

I :t!O-News 3; Ryan's Hqpe 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless lOr Not for Women Only 15.
1:30-DaysoiOur Lives 3,4,15; Let's Make a Daal6,13.
2:QO-S10,000 Pyramid 6,13; Guiding Light 8,10.
2:JO-Oodors 3,4,15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13; Edge of
Night 8,10.
3:oo.-:Another' WOrld 3,4,t5; General Hospital 6,13;
Match Game 1,1 0; W oman 20.
3:»--ne Life' to Live 13; Bewitched 6; Tattletales
8,10; Consumer Survival Kit 20.
4:QO-¥r. Cartoon' 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Mickey Mouse Club 6,8; Mister Rogers 20,33; Dinah
13.
4:30-Bewllchtd 3; MOO Squad 6; Partridge Family 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Get Smart 15.
5:0G-Bonanza 3; Family Affair 8; Star Trek 15.
'5:30-Adam-t2 4; News 6; Beverly Hlitbltltes 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33; Adam-12 13.
6:110-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Hodgepodge
Lodge 20;' Speclal Education 33.
6:30-NBC Ntw13,4,1S; ABC News13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Truth or Cons. 12; Making II Count
20.
7:1»-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Buck Owena8; News10; Candid Camera
13; Family Affair 15; On Aging 20; Classic Theatre
Prtvltw 33.
,
7:30-That Geod Ole Nalllvllle Music 3; Don Adams
Sct'ftll Tftl 4; Match Game PM 6; Price is Right 8;
· Evening Edition with Marlin Agronaky 20; High
Ro.d toAIIveqtureiO; To Tell the Truth 13; Frltnda
of Man 15; Marco Sportltte: Football 33.
! :oo-Aru Hlgl) School Footbell Pol~! PIHHnl vs
Ravenswood 5.
'
8:ti0-Babbv V1111on 3; Mobile One 6,13; F.,.,lly !1olvek
. 4; Red, WitHe &amp; WrtW 15; Gunsmoke I; L1sl Gr1ve
a! Dlmbarl 20.33; Rhoda 10. ·
1:30--W. Tlllnk You Should k - 3; Phyllls10.
9:QO Movie "ThaLl- of Jlillly Oollllw 3,4,15; NFL
Footlllll 6.U; Allin The family a. to.
9:30-Z- Grey Theltre 5; Maude 8,10; Life &amp; the
Structure of Hefi'KI91obln 20· Realldldt; 33.
10:011-Burke's L1w 5; tMGlcal Ctnllr I; Science in the

'

•J

NINNtE WINKLE
I I SHOJIDN'T HAVE
LET ZE i.L1'\ 00 OUT
""HER CIM&lt; mvINGlOFINDU&amp;

tl'I1E5 FOR 10·
NIC/IT'S 131(7
SI'DN.

•••

\,

I

'

·• I

Marietta bombed

by B-W, 59-14
MARlETT A, Ohio (UP!) Baldwin-Wallace rolled up a
record 32 points in the second
half to break open a 10.7
game and easily move out to
a 59-a win over Ohio Athletic
Conference rival Marietta
Saturday.
Two touchdowns by Jeff
Johnson for tWo and 2f yards,
and two first half touchdown
passes by Ken Preseren, of 47
yards to Scott Olds and 16
yarda to Sam Crumptoo, gave
Baldwin-Wallace their fifth
win in seven starts this
season.
Both teams now are Z.I in
the OAC.
With 23 seconds left in the
balf, Baldwin-Wallace' Greg
Rufus blocked a Jim Davies
[iunt, caught the ball In mid·
air and raced 27 yarda for a
score.
Balllwin-Wallace rolled 497
total yards compared to
Marietta's 327.
AGGIES EDGE BEARS

COLLEGE STATION, Tex.
(UP!) - Safety Lester Hayes
ran 11 yards with a ball
fumbled in the air to score
and Ignite the sixth-ranked
Texas A&amp;M Aggies to a 19-10
Southwest Conference victory over the Baylor Bears .
Saturday.

Friday night, Kyger closes
its 1975 season at home
against rugged Rock Hill.
Symmes Valley visits
Hannan Trace.
STATISTICS
DEPARTMENT
KC SV
First Downs
13 9
Yards Rushing
243 188
Yards Passing
188 11
Total Yardage
361 199
Passes Attempted
16 4
Passes Completed
11
I
Fumbles
1 I
Fumbles Lost
0 0
Interceptions
2 0·
Penalties
8-28 ~
By Quarters :
KC
7 6 19 1&gt;-38
sv
6 0 0 1&gt;-12

BEARCA·l'SWJN
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Jay
Bond's scoring plunge from
the one In the fourth quarter
and Dave Slepherd'a three
first-quarter field goals gave
the Bearcats a 23-17 win
Saturday over Southwest
Louisiana.

TO MEET NOV.ll

VINTON - Officials of the
Southern Valley Athletic
Conference will meet at 7:30
p.m. Tueaday, Nov. 11 at
North Gallla High School
near here to select the all
league football team. Other
Items on the Hllenda will be
the 1975 balketball preview
set Nov. 21 at Rio Grande
College and the ~slunen
basketball tournament. All
auperlntendents, prlnctpals
ilnd coaches are Invited.

�#'

~ F;;-;;;-;'R~;ults Us.e The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
WANT ADS
INFORMATION
. DEAD ~INES

P .M .

Day

Befo re

WIN AT

r

Notice ·

Card of Thanks

.

To Buv

Wanted

Auto

Sales

Pub

_______ __ _

Mobiie Homes for Sale

--

-- -- ·- - ·---

Notice

LARRY

In Memory

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

Real Estate for Sale

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue

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

For Rent or Sate

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

lf:

..

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

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

found

Ira

---

for Rent

Pets

GIFT.

-·-------------

seembii!

+++

- ·-------------

Strout Realty

Yard Sale

Since the explanation Is long and compHcated,

+++ .

..

$4~,000.

10-2J -31p

see your

Dear K.:
I still cotton to the old way: " You play the g11me and you
take your chances" ill much more fun than all this planning,
counting days, taking temperatures, abstaining, or forcing
yolll'!lelvings when yo11 aren't really in the mood,
Besides, surprises are the spice of life. In your case,
perhaps "sugar and spice." - HELEN
Dear Helen :
I just heard ol a new kind of religion : The Frlsbeterians.
They believe that when you die, you go up on the roof ~nd never
come down. - H. H. (For Ha·Ha)

Dear H.H. :
Thanks, you made our day. - HELEN AND SUE

367-7177.

t0-26-6tc

-------------BEDRM . mobile home .

2

Phone 992-3429 .

10-22-61p

10-26-21p

~

-------------YARD SALE , 30' Spring Ave ..

1? -lfc

TRA iL Ek space tor rent. All
uti lit les . . Phone 992 -5535.
9-16-lfc
10-2J-31C

. Pomeroy , Sa turday and
Sunday , Oct. 25 and 26.

-------------Misc . Sale

J BEDROOM

house. electric
heat, near No . 3 mine .
•Phone 1-669 -:WSlafter 6 p .m .

OCT . 27 , 28, 91111? Misc . Sale.
Walnut lumber , all steel
10-24-31p
pl&amp; 1form scales, wringer
tWasher , elec. trolling motor ,
.....
refrig . ,Two 100 ft . coils of 2 BEDROOM trailer. Reeds.
ville. Phone (614) 378-6384.
J.-" rope . small tra ct or , 56

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

Chevy Pickup , clothing ,

shoes and lots of stuff . Tom
Hayml!ln , Long Bo l! om ,
OhiO , Last house behind P .
0 . at Red Barn .

10-24-61p

-------------2 BEDROOM trailer , real
nice. Phone 992-3324 .

l&lt;l -24.tfc

10-23 -Ji p

Bollen

-------------Help

P~SSED AWA((

BEFORE 'ITS

service

on

•

Phone 742:2331
Roger Wamsley -Rutland
10-15-1 mo.

Wanted

l

eeDRM . house . un ·
furnished . Also, I furnished
trailer . Phone 992·2780 or

992-3432.
fence .

10-19-lfc

10-21 -61c
--------------

'I'U RNI SHE D. apartmeni,
adults only 1ft Middleport.
Phone 992-J874 .
3-15-lfc

SOMEONE to build
Phone 992 -5247 .

"BE A SENTINEL
CARRIER ON
UNCOLN

HILL"

Have lust the route
open fvr you. Win
prizes.
Learn
respon sibllity .
E•rn Extra
Spending Money I

CAll TODAY
- 992·2158'
fema le

m iniatur e • poodle
for
breeding purposes . Phone

992- 390 1.

Middleport. Phone 992·5•34.
10-21 -261C

-·------------3 ROOM furnished hoUse .
Phone 992-5535.

10-21 -lfc

N't

ctH '
R Y ' MObile Home
Park, Rt. 33, ten m iles north
of Pomeroy . Larg e lots w i th,
conc rete patiO!'( si ctcwalks. 1
runners etnd off street,
parking , Phone 9'n 1!.7 9:
'
12 31 tft.

MnRtLE home located Ia
Middleport, adulta only .
Phone 992-5535.
10·8-ttc

Wanted To_Buy
REGISTERED

--------~----- I
TRA.ILER 'sP. ac ~ tor rfmt In

10-22-41C

------------·---

LOG S Pomerov t-orest
PrOdU(IS if paying top
prlcts 101 togs del ivered to
the millS on Battey Run Rd .

off Hlvhwor 124, between
Pomeroy and Rutland , Ohio .
Phone 992 !965 for delivery
and ~nstrucllons .
10 -23 61C

-------------GERT'S e gay girt ' - read y
tor a whlll aflel cleaning

carpets wilh ' Blue Lustre .
Rent etectrlc shampooer.
Nelson 's Drug Store .

10-23-6tc

PROFITABLE
BEER &amp;WINE
CARRYOUT
BUSINESS
lncludea all equipment,

•3

4J10H

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

Auto Sales

~

1961 1- u k u Convertible, runs
good , S22l.. Phont 992 -5301 .

· 10-23 -10tc

1 OWNER, 1971 Monte Corio,
..00 V 8. Buto ., p .l ., p .b., air
cond .,

bvcktt 111ts, am ,
sttrto tape player! .
green wlltl dirk green vlny
r~dlo ,

'""· Phone 992 -6192 otter '
10231fC

p.m .

4Q 2

·--

4AK95 3
· ~at-West vulnerable

From th e largest Truck or '
Bulldozer Radiator to the ·
s ~allest Heater Core.
·

Johnson Masonry
&amp; Remodeling
Siding

Aican, Alcoa &amp; .Wolverine
Aluminum Siding
· Bird Vinyl Gutters
and Downspouts
Sottits ot all kinds

SM.~TH NELSON

M.OTORS, INC.

24
3"
••
Pass

Opening lead - 4 •

EX tA'iJATt NG, dozer·. loader
swee pers , toatlers , Irons ,
and back hoe - work ; sep tic
tan k s in stalle d : du mP • all small applia nces. Lawn
mower , next to Stat e Hlg~
trucks and to boys tor hire .
way Garage on Route 1 r.
wi ll haul fi ll dirt. top soil ,
Pt)one 985 ·3825.
l imestone and grave l,.- Call
[~ob or Roger Jeffe r s. day'
-· -·----.- --;phone 992 7089 , night phone
~E· PTI C T A NK S ctea119'..:.
9'12 3525 or 99 2 523 2
·
2 11 tic
Modern San itation . 992 · 39~.4
or 99'2 1Jd9.
_. 1
9-18-hc
WE ~ t'ECIALiz e ·In niuotte
__ ,. · - - - t
home turn c. ce repair . Phone
BA\.tlMUt: tor rent , hour 0'
992 -5858.
.
con tra ct. ReQ . or e,., .
9-18-lfc
cav at lng type . Septic tanks
Willlrfm- or-=c~fir;e;- and
Instal led . Bill Pull ins. Pho~e
shrubbery . Phone 94 9-2545
992 ·2478 .
'
8-27·11C
or 742 ·3167 .
10 -8-261C
NE 00~ CHUmtnum Siding,
·c . BRA DFORD . At.kt10neer.
gutter
wo r k 1
roof i ng ,
Complete service. Phone
paneling , pa inting, plun1 949 .2487 or 949 -2()00 . Racin e.
b lng , we fi )( the whole
Ohio, Cr itt Bradford.
house. AI Tromm. H2 -23U .
. 10·9·tfC
-,9-24-lfc

--

Virgil B., Sr.

TEAFORD
1 ',',

i'

'I

.

(}

2 FAMILY - 4 B.R. brick, 2
baths, nat. gas heat . Want
only $12,000.

-----------------------73 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

full power, AM -FM, stereo tape. T. 8. T. wheel , cruise
control. rad ial tires. factory air, 24,000 miles.

SHARP

'5400

Yellow with white vinyl top and white leather Interior ,
full pow, -AM-FM-stereo tape, T8. T wheel, factory air ,

radial tires .

MACHINE,,

'5100

73 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

3-29.tfc

White, blue vinyl top, blue cloth Interior, full power,
Climate Control air, T&amp; T wheel. AM-FM stereo tape,
radial tires.

WAS $5100

NOW

•4995

DON'T WASTE YOUR TIME
SEE US FIRST.

KARR &amp; VAN ZAN-DT
992-SJ42

Astro~

-- --

'Ext AVA 11'NV , - bdckhoe,
dozer and difcher . Ga j,
el ectric llnd water lir,e
buria·i , basements, foot P. rs ,
septic systems and br uih
cleaning . WUI haul fill aie,t,
top soli. sand and gravel ,
limestone tor driveways and
roads . Phone Charles R .
Hatfield , Backhoe Servlc;_e,

'

• B·et11rice Bede Oaol
For Sundoy, Oct. 28, 1875
ARIES (Merch 21 -Aprll It}
You have a !endency loday to
spread youroelltoo lhln. It Isn't
likely things will receive their
proper allentlon.
TAURUS (APfll 20-Moy 20}
Keep your mind on lhe road today ·ll you·re going to be buzzing ebout ln your car. Observe
all trafl lc rules as welL
GEMINI (filer 21-June 20}

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

D 8. D TREE Trimming,

)0
yean experience. Insured,

lre·e e•llmates. Call 992 -3057
or ( 11 667-30", Coolville./
10-15- fc
·/•

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

Yesterday you were p ru dent !n

your material aflalrs. The op·

CONTACT:
Lois Pauley
Branch Manager

ALL INVITED TO SHoP OUR BARGAINS
---------------------50 WOOD FRAME

PlATE·GIASS MIRRORS
Sftt5

· l styles, Reg. 39.95 ( NEWl

NOW ON SALE, ONLY

poslte Is now !rue. Sit on your
extravagant whims today.
CANCER (June 21.July 22) If
th ings don' t go your way on the

firs! try today you 're apt to give
up. VIctory Is there, but II won 't
come easily.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be your
usual warm, outgoing sell to·
day. Don't let the m ood of one

you'll be essoclallng wllh get
you down .

VtRilO (Aug. 23-Stpl. 22) If

Old Fuhloned Porut.ln Top Wooden
Kitchen Cabinet, excelt.nl condltlot&gt;--- - - - .6US
(21 Lovo S.ah. Reg. 139.95, Now----..:.-. u. H .t5
(2} Bran.t Now 2 Pltct
• ·
Livlna Room Suite, gnten &amp;gold'----- -il. 249.95
'.

abou l ll prematurely. It slllllsn't
locked-down comple!ely.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 23}
Unless you 're extra alert today,

100 per ce nt of the time, a big
opporl un lty wilt slip past unnoticed.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You're apt to try something to~
day, knowing full well from past
ex perie nce your chances of

BIG MAN
BIG -DEALS

ALL 1975 New Ford Demos. &amp; Used Cars offered
at sacrifice price: Compare anywhere. The
closer you look the beHer we look!

1972 PONnAC GRAN PRIX ........... '3195
2 Dr: hardtop, a perfect low mileage car if there ever was
one. Fully equipped with stereo radio with tape, air c~ ­
dlt lon lng and all goodies. New 76 Ford trade-ln. Pontiac s
tin es! .

1974 FORD GRAN TORIN0 ......... :.}3295
4 Or. hardtop, air conditioning, 8. full
local owner, new Ford trade-ln.

.Department In The Area

DARTS

·.

2-'75'

'76 DODGES
ARE HEREI

I DRESSER·---------- - - - - - -19.95
I SOFA-------------------JUS
I SOFA------------------- IUO

1 SOFA. CHAIR-----.:.-------- · 15.00
1 WARDROBE--------------- 10.10
1 PORTABLE TELEVISION--------- · D.t5
.I OOLDUSEDHAIRDRYER--------..: US
I NIGHT 5TAND----- ------·---- --10,110 ·~
SET OF 3 TAILES..----- .,-- --·
I!O
121 COTTON MATTRESSES---------H .

UP TO 1300 REBATE ON MOST '75 MODELS

----·-lt.

CORONETS
3-'75
MONACOS
5-'75
TRUCKS
1-'75 VAN

"Charlie Webster, Sales Manager"

(

.

'

CARROlt NORRIS DODGE
'

.

50 STATE STREET
GAWPOUS, OHIO

Fords every two years.

1972 FORD LTD 4 DR.................. '1895

Hardtop. air condltfon lng and full equipment. Shows good
care.

(

•I

I

9' Stake. ·

:
I

V-B with std. or automatic trans.

I

I
:

L----- 7~-- ------- -------~

ON DISPLAY

NEW -CHEVROLET LARK
MINI HOME
NEW LUV PICKUP
• •

.WE HAVE THE RIGHT DEAl
FOR YOU

POMEROY MOTOR COi
"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. Til B

992-2126

1972 FORD GAL 500 .................... '1795 ....__ _..__ _....._.......
4 Dr. Sedan, air conditioning and lull equipment. Worth mu ch
more.

1970 FORD 6 CYL MAVERICK...........$795 ~11~~~~11 ~;~:::~.!,_,C
2 Dr . Sedan, a real value.
~ ~ ~~
.
Jti95
UmcrambletheoefourJumble.,
e~h
1968 atEV JMPAlA 2 DR.............. ,
h'Jj H t!\11111\llN!HIJ

one letter ta

1

Hardtop, auto. trans., small V-B. You' ll be surprised you can
buy th iS qood of a cartorthis low price.
5ee: Freel BlaeHnar, Pat Hill
Melvin Little, or Dan Thompson
Opljn Evenings Til7: oo
Except Thurs. and Sat. Til5:00

onoll"&gt;ltltf

square, to
words.

form lour ordtnary

HAFFC

II

II
YINJET

LID/AN
V' 'I

LE.TIERS COME
FIRST 10 &amp;HON

Tt-tF'&lt;;!'

II

II I I

!716APPIIDVAL.

Now UTlf\Jt the clrc:ltd 1etten
to Corm the aurprlee anawer, u
In 1914, President Ford ~=~~A=~~~-~~·:;,:=:_
· ~·=•~l~(nttd b7 the thove cartoon.
succeeding are nil.
agreed to meet Russian
SII.GITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dtc. leader Leonid Brezhnev Nov .
21} Be caretul today if olfered
{Allow•" llloodoy)
somelhlng for nothing from a 23-24 in the Vladivoslok area
person who doesn 't usually .:;of;.th;;,;.e,.;So,_vi•et,u•ru•·ol"n•. _ __,
Jumhl•" SNOWY VOUCH FRII.CAS GENTRY
l' etlerdty'•
.
treat y ou I n suc h a r
m~gn a n l m o u s

An•wert II_~ unf~uta lat ,POilltllt:I-HE "'OWNS'"

manne r.

CAPRICORN (Deo. 22-Jan,
111 In order 10 placate a
member of your family IOday
you may do something you
shouldn 't despite your bolter
judgm ent.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Fob. II)
You often let thin gs go till lhe
lasl minu te and lucki ly gel

PIONEER®
CHAIN SAWS

th em In under the wire .

However, today It would be folly 10 follow this practice.
PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch ,20}
Be .caref ul tod ay or your
generous nature w ill be taken
advantage of by o n e who
doesn't give a hoot hbw much it

~~~~~"day
Oct. 28, IV75

Take advantage of any !raining
or educall ona l opportu nity
olfered you lhis com ing year.
Later .!here will be a very
pro fllable markol lor lhe
knowledge you gain.

) .

SAVE I:

~~~~~=·~·~--~•
--~ID-0-D-D

12 .:.'75

'

'
1CHEST·-------- - - - - - - - - - -lf.fS

1

I

I

Best Service

.

V-8, automatic trans.

I

1973 FORD GRAN TORINO ............ '2595

4 Dr. hardtop, one local owner, power steer ing 8. automatic,
302 V-8, a good looking and running car. This man trades

The closer you look,
The beHer we look.

,

;.

I

trans., power

NEW 75 4 WHEEL DRIVE
SUBURBAN............................

equ ipment. One careful

992·2196

WITH

driVf'l automa1ic

· 5- NEW 75 lh TON MODELS ...... SAVE

PHONE

ODDS &amp; ENDS SPECIALS

SATURDAYS

you have a financial venture on
th e burners now, don't talk

4 w~ .

steertng and brakes. Great Savings Can Be
Yours.

Your Dollar Will

DA~N

';}

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

Pomeroy

I 2 NEW 75 CHEV.
% TON ............. SAVE, I
.
I

NEW 75-1 TON WITll DUAL .... ... SAVE

Never Buy More
Value I

COME SEE THE

Celebration Sale of
Bridge Re.:()pening

Cadillac-Oldsmobile
GMAC Financing Available

Open Eves . Til6:- Til5 p.m. Sat.
"You 'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business"
See one of these courteous sales mel\ :
Pete Burris
Lloyd Mclaughlin
·
Marvi~ Keebaugll

Grapt=l

Oh io, 712·
7-11 -901c

'

Duty B180 Tandem axle, cab and chassis.

PRICES ARE FAWNG
WITll THE LEAVES

· 73 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

___ ____ _

~ulland ,

SALE

Green wit h green vinyl and green lea1her i nterior -

Repa irs , se rvice, all makes .
992 228 4. Th e Ffbr lc, Shop , , ·
Pomeroy . Auth o rted Singer
~. a l es
and Service . We
sharp en Scisso r s.

Rt. 1,
6092 .

1975 .CHEVROLET PICKUP. .......13495 .

1

~

NEW LISTING - 10 roomc
bath, hot water heat, foro., •
kitchen, 4 bedrooms and
dining. Large lot In Racl~e .

8' Fleetside, 6 cyL, std. trans ., R. b~~per , good tires,

r----------------------NEW '75 CHEV. TRUCK Q.EARANCE
~

.
'
M IA CU ~ C kc. •J:
12 ROOMS - Older home with 'R EI\OY
de ti "ered r ight to yodr
bath, gas and city water: project. r ast and easy . F r ~e
estimat es . Phone 99'2·1284,
$7,500.00.
Goegtein Ready Mi)( Co . •
POMEROY - 3 B.R.s bath,
Middleport , OhiO..
'
6-3o .uC
and large family room . $8500.
. ... .
·.- --· ::.: ~- --~ ·'S BUild ing and
RENO'lAUD- 2 B.R. home NEIGLER
Supply. We specialize In
on 3:i North . Bath, garage and
bullc:l ing houses . Also, do
large lot , $16,000.
·
repair work and cabinett,
alum lnum Siding . Call Guy
Nelgler, 949 -2508; If no
RIVER FRONT LOT - and 7 an!wer
call 949-2813 or 94 .
room house, 2 ba1hs,. furnace,
2457 .
' 10-5-26tp
on nice corner. 123,500.

12 ROOMS - Nice older home,
2 baths, gas furnace, and 2
nice level lots. S27 ,000.

ww ti res, dark b!ue fin ish.

1973 CHEVROLET 1lz TON. ...... }2795

H.

BELIEV ~?
Bu ild an all steel building at
Pole Barn pri ces? Golden
Giant All Steel Build ings,
Rt . .t , Box 148, Waverly,
Oh io. Phon e 9-H -229 6.
7-l.t .lfc
- ,-___ ,
__,
.
. . ~.. ,_ .;

.

Fl eetslde, 6 cyl., std. trans ., radio , R step bumper,

1961 INTERNATIONAL ..........!1295

WOULb YOU

S EWIN G

I.,,,.

1974 CHEVROLET 1lz TON ....... '3150

....

-

REALTOR

&amp; never hauled heavy loads, 292-6 cyl., 15000 lb., 2
speed rear axle, 825x20 . 10 ply t ir es .

61f2 ' Body · 6 cyl., std .. tran s., alum . cover , less than
5,500 mil es, radio. Sharp as new truc k.

-------------- -------------.,..-..--------------

~

102"· CA, b lue cab &amp; clean interior, fine ser vice record

g~

Open Evenings Till7 P.M. Weekdays. Till 5 P.M. Sat.
Service Till4 :30 Mon. thru Fri. Service Closed Sat .

ELWOOD 60WEA SllEPAIR I

1972 CHEVROLET 2 TON...... }2995
.

8'

SAVINGS! SO COME IN AND GET A GREAT BUY NOWI
Don'fyouwanttodo Business with a FRIENDLY DEALER. Yes,
stop by and talk to us &amp; see just how Friendly we are at SMITH
NELSON M.OTORS. .
See: Ceward Calvert, J.D. Story or Bill Nelson.

I •

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

$2595

WE STILL HAVE FIVE 1975 BUICKS AND PONTIACS IN STOCK AT A BIG

So•tb

Pomeroy

Ph. 992.2174

10-5-H

North East

Pass ••
Pass 3 •
Pass ••
Paos 6 •
Pass

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

Bird &amp; Mastic VInyl

West

TRUCK BUYS

1973 Ford Gran Torino 2 Dr .
H.T •• auto .• P.S., P. B., local
own er , extra low mileag e.

1972 Opel 1900 Wagon, auto .•
fact . air . lo.c al owner , we s old
this one new. ·

I

Cpe., less than 7,000 m iles. delu,;;e belts. ti n t glass, air
condit ioned , deluxe bum pers and guards, remot e LH &amp;
RH mi rr o r ~ A00-.48 Bl eng ine. AM radi o and tape, aux .
li gh l lng. com fodilf whe_el. Lik 'e new and a r eal sha rp tc.

$1895

$3595

• A 105l2

992·7608

$3595

1974 Chev. V2 Ton _Pickup, long
wideside bed, auto ., P. S.• P. B., ·
local owner. Nice Truck.

SOUTH !Dl

1971 Pontiac Cat .• 4 dr . H. T .•
vinyl top. air. 38,621 miles.
L9cal owner. Sharp!

1972 Ford T· Bird, vinyl top,
P. S.• P .W., P ,S ., auto ., air,
cruise. This is one sharp car.

$2995

'

•JBs

Pomeroy
992 -2298
After Hours call
992-7133

POMEROY - 7'1o acres, 4
BR, bath, carpeting,
NOW selling Fuller Brush
paneling, tile, N. gas, hot
Products . Phone 992 -3410.
water heat, storm doors &amp;
10 -6-lfc
windows, water softner,
GREEii beans 1pick your own.
$15,000.
Andrew Cross, Le tart Fal ls.
POMEROY - 3 BR, bath,
241 -2852.
TV room, uflllty R.i H..W.
10-17-6t c
floors, N. gas heat, full
basement, large lot. $9,500.
WARM Morning cool and
wood healer, S_.O and 3
MIDDLEPORT - 2 BR,
Si amese kittens . Phone 992 bath,
carpeting, paneling,
5307.
tile,
full
basement, utility
10-18-121p
R., N. gas FA heat, car Sf~liADIO , am -fm , 4
port, storm doors 8. win speed changer, 8 track tape
dows.
In excellent concombinatron .
Balance
1106.40 or terms . Call 992- dition . S13,000.
3965.
RUTLAND - 2 BR, dining
10 -16-tfc R, bath, fireplace In LR,
carpeting. paneling, tile, N.
1914 YAMAHA 360 MX - S!OO, gas heat, porches, garage.
1971 scout 4 wD - 51.650. $9,500.
Phone (614) 667 -37!9 or 667 3653.
POMEROY - 5 acres, 3
10-20-ltc BR, bath, N. gas heat, city
- .
water , porches, storg, bldg.
REMINGTON~OO auln,
new 12 or "ftr'va. 1172.50. In good condition. S7.900.
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story
F Itt's, Mlddleoort, 9.!!1~ . .
10-1-361c frame, . J BR, 2 baths,
dining R., utility R., N. gas
ONE new Trombone, $425
furnace
, storage bllfg.
vat'ue , 'slightly damaged ,
suo. Also. 1 used cornet, Walk to shop, sa.300.
$25, Phone 992-5786
TO BUY OR SELL - CALL
· 10-21-Aic US FOR YOUR
IN
REAL
I'TfA,••
197' HONDA 750. Phone 992Htnry
3658 .
.
10-22-6tc

--------------.J

,63

.

1975 CHEVROLET CAPRICE ...... .' 5298

PH; 992·2174

1973 Pontiac Cat., 2 dr . H. T.,.tilt
wheel, air cond., local owner,
low mileage .

EAST
• A 10 98 5 3

•QJ9l

PHONE

804 W. Main

CONTACT .GUIDO
AI Shimmy's C.i'ryovt
605 w. Main Pllmaroy, 0 .
Betwe.n 2 p.m. and 6 p.m.
only.

'

• K 108

Close on Thursdays
9to 12 Saturday

picnic tables and boat dock
facilities. , Stock sold
separately. Long lease on
building.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

25

• 87

( WEST
• • K 7 6t

4 door, Co . Dem o. sandstone fi n i.sh , vinyl top &amp; vi nyl
trim, AM r adio&amp; ta pe, air con~ .• autom atic. P.S .. P. B.,
P. door lock s. P. wi ndow~, Cr'uise Control. comfortilt,
delu xe bumper &amp; guards. Th is car is r ea lly loaded &amp;
carr ies new ca r title&amp; bal. of war ran ty. Save
·

FROM YOUR "FRIENDLY DEALER"

•QJ2
• A 752
• K Q97

1600 Nye St.
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-3313
or 992-5880
10 -1-JOIC

R&amp;J COINS

.1975 CAPRICE ClASSIC ........... '5495

SOME GREAT USED CAR BUYS

NORTH

Sales &amp; SeJvice
.

estates and collections:

.--------------

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

TI-lE ARTIST

Appraisal

· BIG SPECIAL SALE TO ALL OF OUR GOOD CUSTOMERS
BOTH IN OHIO AND WEST VIRGINIA
'

I

'

Buy. Sell or Trade

for Sale

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

doctorfordetaUs.-SUE

and Supplies

M.ONTH-END CLEARANCE

relther way

for Sales

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

.

D&amp;M
APPUANCE

Coins, .Curtency

To

·--··-·

'

develops
I

FREE ESTIMATES

---

·! Squeeze

Business Services

1964 .. UI.TIC K Wlld c. at, QO'J d
c ondi t i o n .
Pri ce d
r eas onabl e , Call Arthu.r
Barr , or phone 992 -7252 :

WELCOME BACK WEST VIRGINIA

·BRIDGE

·I

'RACINE M l"t hodist Church ,JlD turnthire , .o iCe boxes,
wE WOULQ like to th'ank all
ic;, . asking for donar 1ons or brass beds , or_ complete 1
our
neig
hbors
an
d
friends
·
·
·
b
households : wnte M . 0·..,
Mo n day De~cll ine 9 a .m .
conSI(Inl)lent
dems to _e Miller . Rt. 4, Pomeroy ,
w.ho sent cards and f low(lr s.
Cancell ation -· Correclions
a uc_llone d off at Oob H.til
Ohio Call 99 7 7760.
'
.
10-26 -llp
the nur $eS and do cto r~ at
Will be accepted until 9 a .m .
restdence . Nov . 8, Cr t!!
·
10 7-74 .
Medica
l
Ce
nt
er
,
Ho
l
zer
tor Oav of Publi calion
BradfOrd , 1\uc!i on ce r . A ll
.-.·_
__ _ _
.J
1
Ewing Funeral Home . the
1967 NOV /\ 283 e n gi ne ,~ speed
REGULATIONS
proceeds IO go to replace · w
· a· n· t~.lpallb
earers
,
and
Rev
.
tran smissio n, S175 . Phone
church root . Call Bob Hill or
1CU
The Publisher r eserves 1he
' Hiiyden for their kindness
949 -2170 after 5 p .rn .
r ight to l!dit or r eject anv ad s
phone
949
~ UI J
Walch
t:"ASH
pa
td
tor
all
makes
ana
'
10.26 31 p
c:turing th e toss of our
d ee med . obi ecti onal. Th e
Nov . 2nd paper tor lisling .
models of moblte homes .
·Blown
br other . Joseph Marli n .
publ is he r
wllf no t
be
10
n
.ct
c
Phone
area
code
414
-423
1967
INTERN ATIO NAL
Mrs . Edgar Greenlee.
Insulation
Services
r esponsi bl e for more than one
95 31 .
'
Pic kup with ca ttl e rack s.
Mil dr ed Tubb s. H erman and WI NTER 'S ' hill in the air -4 13-tfc
Incorrec t insertion .
Blown
into
Walls
&amp;Allies
Phone
742
·2146.
Leo Martin·,
lime to th ink "~ kin - Care ." _ .
. . ··-····RATES
.
STORM
.
10-26 -Jip
_...,: 10-26 -ll p
K osco! Cosme!ics. Ann
-:--:--=:--::For Want Ad Service
WINDOWS
&amp;
'
DOORS
sce nts pc·r word one lnser lion I WOULD like tO thank Or .
Sauvage, Independe nt Wanted
Rent
REPLACEMENT
1971 VEGA Hatchb8 ck, radia l
Dis tributor , Syra cuse, 992 M inim um Cha rge Sl.OO
Wh i te ly , Dr . Walker . th e
tires, real sharp for $1,100:
DRY
GARAGE
space tor
WINDOWS
J171.
14 cents per • word three
nur ses , es peci ally th ose in
sme~tl
imported c j!lr , (IP ·
Phone 992 -3259 .
ALUMINUM
10-2J.61p
co nsecui lve inserti ons .
t .C.U .. th e m inisters , and
10-21-6tc
proximately 6 to a weeks .
--.....:.
SIDl NG •SOF F ITT
26 ce nt s p er word siK con fr i end s , f or th ei r vis its, . -·-- ~·-····--·- .
Call after 5 p.m . 992 -.352 2.
E
FF
ECTIVE
Sunday
,
Oct.
26
.
sec ullve Inser ti ons
(;UTTERS-AWNINGS
pra yers , card s. fl owers . and
10-24-31p
197
5
FOR
D
F
IOO
truck
.
Phone
No more shooting mat ches ·
25 P er Cent Discount on paid
gifts wh ile 1 was a patient at
9927447 .
at Happy Hollow Gun Club . - ·- -· - - - ---*-----ads an d ads paid with in 10
J,AVE~DER
Ho lzer M ed ica l Cente r . May
10 -21-12tp
2' 2'P
days .
God bl ess vou all.
S·trdcu &lt;.. e, Ohio
10
CAROOF THANKS
-· ··------- - -~-Doro thy Law s_on
19ii -RAMfiLE R. $1'50 . Phone
Ph . 992-3993
SHO OTING
Mat c h
Corn
&amp; Obituarv
10-26-llp
99 2·2892 or can be seen at 957
21
J ACRES In Flatwoods arta
11 10 I mo
Hollow Gun Club , 1 p .m .
$2 .00 for 50 word m inimum .
Broadway . Middleport.
L-----llnd 1974 14 .., x 65 mobile
Sunday , Oc t. 26, 1 mite past
E~r.~ a.jtliliona t word Jc .
10-24 -71C
home , sell separately ,or
Mile Ceme tery out of
BLIND ADS
together : Phone 992 7J3B .
Rutland . F ree retres~
Additional 25c Charge p er
10-26-llc
Advertiseme nt .
ments.
I F YOU ' VE ever purc t1ased
IN OA SH 23 Channel Citizen ' s
OF~ICE HOURS
Kosco!
cosme t ics
and
Band transceiver , am -fm
8 : JO a .m . to 5: 00p .m . Oa l ly,
h_
a ven 't been reservlced ,
19 74 CASTLE 12 K 65 , 2
mpx radio , 8 track stereo .
8 : 30 e .m . to 11 :00 No o n
phone Helen Jane Brown , FLEA Mllrket going out of
bedrms ..
take
·over 9 PC . C . R . Suite , S150 ; D.
Ca ll 992-3965.
business, Oct. 31 at the
Ind ependent
Ols tributer ,
Sa turdllv .
paymen ts. Phon e 949 ·2749 or
table and 5 chairs, $35 ; B .R.
9-5-tfc
crossroe ds
between
(6 14) 992 -5113 . Or maybe you
992-7671
.
suite , comple te, SSO ; 220 v .
would like to take ord er s.
Pomeroy and Ru tl and on Rt.
10-21 -6tc
air conditioner , SSO . Other
full or spar e lime in either
124. Everyth ing reduced . ·- -- - - -·- - - - - - - '--WE HAVE shotgun sh ells ,
items . Phone 992 -5706.
10-2.4 -2tc 1971 BUDDY 12' X 60' partially
west V Irginia or Ohio .
ri fl e she lls , cleanihg ac ·
10-24
-Jip
10-26 -lfc
cessorle s, hunting clothes ,
furni~hed . Porch and un r H'E'--M"EIG'sAiumnlare derpinning
boots , bla ck· powder gun s
. Phone (614) 698·
sponsoring a masquerade
NO H U NTIN G on my fl!lrm ,
WINCHE
STER
model
12
and accessories , reloading
53.49 .
Dan ce, Sll turdey , Nov . 1.
day or night on th e .N ew
n
ickel
steeL
12
gauge
pump
,
10·2.4 -Jtc
mater.lal s, scoPes , mounts ,
trom 9 p .m . 101 a. m . o1t th.e
Lima Road , Alma Peterspn .
v entilated rib and new
kniv es, sleeping bags , boa!
Rutland
. Gy mnesium .
10-26 -31c
woa:d. excellent condition,
jacke ts
and
c ushi on s,
1211: 70 H-lAILER , 2 bedroom ,
isslon
52
person.
S3
Adm
$350 .
Contact
Marvin
IN MEMORY of Mearl Bath -------- ~- - ----hol ster s, belts. rif le strap s
central air, total elec. ,
coup
le.
Several
rock
bands
.
Keebauoh , 992·53.42 days ,
who passed away 9 year s NO HUNTIN G or trespQsslng
and much , much more al
u!lll!y building , take over
bring b even'l ges . Games
evenings (614) 985 -3913 .
on my pr operty w ithout
ago, Oct. 25. Sadly mlssed
Ind ian Joe's Sport s- and
payments . Ph one ( 304) 882 ·
artd
priz
es
.
Adults
18
and
l&lt;l -19·7tc
permi ssi on . Leo Tay lor .
by all his r ela tives .
CB's, l OS Page St. , Mid ·
33
-40
after
5
p
.m
.
10-26 -3tc over .
10-26-ltc
d teport.
10-22 -121c
10-19 .12tc
REG . Polled Heref ord Bulls,
10· 17 -lOtc
- -- -~----- ------ one 5 vr . old, two yearlings .
'
ROOM and bol!lrd for senior 1973 v 1NDALE Trailer and tot
d i spositions .
e xce llent
located in Tuppers Plains .
citizens , very nice . P~one
.Phone 992·5565 or 992 -2826 .
Phone !6W 66n817 .
992 -3509.
10-19 -7tc
10-16-12tc
3 BEDRM . house in Racine .
H &amp; N' day old or started
Phone 949 -2671 .
~~*W~-~·~~·;·;.:.:.:.~"
....·o:·~;·;o;.o;·~;·;•,•.•.•.............................·.····················:....············;•;•,O:.•.•.'
Leghorn pulle ts. Both floor
~
..............:. ........_._.;o.........o.;.~.···
·.········!·.·-·-···~~
t0 -5·26tc
Employment Wanted
or cage grown available .
Poultry
housing
and
CARPENTRY , paneling,
FOR RENT oR SA LE. 2 f looring and ceiling . Phone automation . Modern 3 BEDRM : home, fus r
fin ished, r~modellng , S~L~LTJ
Pou l try, J99 w. Ma in ,
:!:: bedrm . home . For more 992-2759,
St., Rutland . Phone 74.2 - »IJ~
·
·
::::
lriformatlon .Call742 ·3183.or
Pomeroy, 992 -2164 .
10-21 -30tc
aft er 4 p .m . or see Milo B ,
10-26 li e
Btlllcl
:::: contocl Lee Lef~ber .
Hut chison .
'
::::
Harrisonville .
9-2J .tfc
10 26-6tc ll'E.MODELING, Plumbing', 1975 YAMAHA J60 MX . E• ·
heating and al! types of,
cellent condition , ne..,er
general
repatr .
Wor:~
raced . Phone 1614 I 985 -3302 HOU SE on- 1672 Lincoln Hgts .
~uaranteed . 20 yeers e
4 r oom s. large kitchen ,
even ings after S p .m .
perience . Phone 992 -2409 .
basement , nice backyard ,
5- 1 - lf~ ---- -1---.:._--~ ~~IC
raker-Giver
Nleee
F OUNO house ke';' at a porch
and low p r iced . See be twee n
-·-·-·--- · --· ·--- ·
sale , 160 Soufh Se venth -·-·10 a .m .·3 p .m .
Rap:
HAY
and
straw
.
Phone
742
Ave nue . Phone 992 ·3158 .
10-20 -121c
JI52
.
Two years ago my aunt gave me some drapes that she
10.24 -Jtc
10-26-31p
couldnlt use any more, and I put them In my bedroom. I ofFREE RENT AT VILLAGE
MIDDLEPORT - Compl etely
MANOR
IN
·MID
remodeled bulld ing , 2,000
32 .000 BTU gas hea te r with
fered to pay, but she wouldn 'I take any money.
DLEPORT ! we ·are so sure
feel of business space and
fan , auto . controls , uo .
.ReCently she moved to a new apartment, and couldn't find AK C. Doberman Ploc h er pups ,
that you will love our apar t .
two furn ished apartments .
Phone 742 -2856 .
ments that we give yOu two
• 10-26-Jip Very tow ma i nte na nce .
drapes to sult her. She remembered ''mine," called up and
male. 7 weeks, black and
weeks RENT FREE . Just
Good investmen t income . ·
r ust, sho ts and wormed . Call
asked for them back - right away!
pay your security dej?osil CAMPER top complete in ·
Ex c ell ent opportunity to
!11 133-0761 atter 5 p.m.
and slay six months and the
sulated , wilh bubble glass ~lmi nat e rent paymen1 for
!Die didn't even give me time to find replacements. Making
·10-22 .41 c
flrsl2weeks Is free . You will
your
present
busin ess
w i ndows
and
sc r eens,
-------~---no colnmenl, I returned them lo her, but think IIlla was very -monthly teases, all
space. Phon e 992 ·7889.
paneled ins ide. Ph one 992 TWO YEAR OLD mol e Collie , enjoy
ejectr !c living, carpeting ,
10·21 ·6tc
/774,
chintzy, lMld I just don~ want to have anything more to do with
S25. Phone 949-2739.
range and refrioerbtor, tree
l0-2.4
.J1c
10-22 -41c
her. This W8811't a loan, but a
Others In my family say
trash pickup, cable TV
J BR HUME , just ' finlsh•u
(optional ) and laundry GOL 0 sparkle snare drum In
I'm making a too big deal out of II.
r emodelin g . Sal em St .,
tacilifies . Conven ie nt to
WELL trained Beagles , also
good condit ion . Phone 992 Rutland . Phone 742 ·2306
Wbal do you think of this "Indian giving?" - RIPPEDshopp ino on Third and Mill
white guineas . Phone 742 ·
7276 .
after 4 p . m . or see Milo ~ ­
In
Middlepor
t
.
VILLAGE
2521
or
will
trade
for
any
10-26
-7tc
OFF (the windows)
,Hutchinson .
MANOR is your! for one
kind of guns .
1Q .. 9.1fc
bedroom
apartments SC HOOL bus converted into
10-2HIC
si
arting
a
t
$1()4
mon
thly
plu
s
camper. Steeps 6, gos, elec .
Dear Ripped:
5 RM . HOU SE and bath, large
eiec . we pay tor everything
IST ERED red and wh ite
nlc . Phone 992 -3388 .
Gifts with a ''take-back" clause turns me off, but : are used REG
tot . Can be eas il y f inanced .
else . See the Manager a t
Beegle Puppies . Phone 992 ·
10·26 -31C
Inqui r e a t Shammy's carry Riverside Apartments or
2740.
drapes enough to cause a rift in Ihe family? look alit this way:
out , 60S 'N . Main St .,
call 992 -3273 . This offer will AMMO )"!hotesale . Deer sl ugs,
l0·2.4 -3tC
after two years, maybe you'd he happier with brand new
Pom eroy , Oh lo.
end soon, so move In now
S1.29 ; Brenneke slugs , S-4 .95
10·'22·6tc
and seve SSSS.
per box . all shot she'lls
window dreaslngs. .._ SUE
FIRST
Li'1e Always 10-23-tfc
wholesale . Black powder ,
"A
THENS
BOARDING
NOTE FROM HELEN: Look, if you're upset, SAY IT! Get
52.90 lb . Lots of new and BI-LEVEL 5 bedrm .. family
KENNEL ." I. Open Mon - 2 - BEDROOM- tu;:;,ished
used g1.,1ns, Fife 's back of
room , air
conditioned .
your feeling out in the !JPen - not to other famlly members, but
day -Saturday 10 a. m . 1111 6
apar t ment In Middleport .
Speed Queen Laundrymat,
baths , country selling lot,
phone 593 -7960 . 2.
Phone 992.s434_
to yoll' aunt. This is the only way you'll avoid a qulet feud that p.m.
Mldtlleport. Phone 992 -7494 •
walk to sc hools . Pomeroy
Profes!llonal all
breed
j
we trade for anyth i ng .
area , best of finan cing low
could pennanenUy ruin friendships. W)len you level with
groom i ng , reservat ions ,
10 -2 -lt c
10-25-121 c
40s . Phone A thens 592-3()52
!6U) 593 .1960. 3. Heated - - - - - - - - - - - - - people about
hurts, you often discover TIIEIR side
for information .
l ndoor .outdoor
runs ,
t H:AILER space, , ,. mile
10-26 -11c
illn't as bad as you sllpposed.
reservet lons, (6U) 593 -7960 .
nor th of Mefgs High School BUY FOR CHRIS.TMA Sl
Talking doll and tiger, S7
4, Individual unlrs tor cats
on old R t . 33 . Phone 992-,29cl .
.
each ; toys ; games ; book s; 4 ROOM and bath , with car .
plus play area . Phone (614)
10·26· ltc
Rap:
port . Phone 992 -5871.
stuffed
animals ;
tap e
593-7960. 5. We care about -------------I0-26·6t c
recorder , SID ; and record
your pet , Phone (61-4) 593 · ONE bedroom trailer apart We want our first baby to be a boy, 11nd I hear somewhere
player
,
$15.
Phone
Bre
nda
1V60. 6. 30 m lnutes north ot
ment. Phone·992 .52 48 or 992·
that you can choose the sex of your child by the time of the
,Ross . 992.1263 .
Pomeroy on RL 33. Phone
J436.
!614) 593 -7960. 7. Min iature
10-26-61c
month etc. you have intercourse. This Is hard to believe, bot if
Sc hn•uzer Stud service, . - - - - - - - - - - - - - you know something I don't, please clue me ln. - K . T.
.(614) 593 -7960. 8. Dog and cat NICE trailer lot far rent In 3 • CHAROLAIS steer ,, ex ce llent for .ti ·H Club ste er .
boarding . Phone (6UI 593 ·
Middleport. Corner lot wllh
Phone 949 -2822.
7960.
brick ut lllty building . Phone
K. :
10-2&lt;-261C
94 ACRE FARM - 2 acre
992 -5433 or stop bY 276 Ash
You can not guarantee producing a boy, but with a method
St., M iddleport.
·
lake, suited for recreation .
10-26-31&lt; DAISY B. B. gun for sale, good
Some remodeling done ,
described In the book, "YoiD' Baby's Sex, How You Can
condition . Shoo ts up to 75
feet . Has a wooded stock,
Chooae,"by DavldM. Rorvlk with Landrum B. SheUies, M.D.,
HOUSE for rent wllh 7 rooms,
r i fle , 417 Sp ring Ave .,
YARD Sa le in Welch town Hill ,
tl/2 baths, gas heat , garage
you can learn 11 method that may increase your chances from
Pomeroy, or calf 992·3561.
Minersville . Phone 992 -3516,
in Middleport. Adults. no
10-23-Jtc
Oct. 22 till 1
• Hours: 9 to 5
50 to 85 per cent.
pets. For app\., call !6UI
5

Joc at lon,

·~:-~&amp;muyTimes-~mmerl•&amp;m._~•••o•a•.~•·•J9•75.__.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . .- .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~

We service all, saws
and precision grind
chain.

WILKINSON
SMALL ENGINES

498 Locust Street
Middleport, Ohio
.992 -3092

fhe Almanac
By Uniled Press In· Wanted To Do
lernatlonal
BABYSI TT I NG in my home .
Any shill, to ts ot exp . Good
Today is Sunday, Oct. ~.
ref . d46-d946.
the 299th day o! 1975 with 66 to
252 -1
follow.
The moon is approaching CARE tor el derly peop l e in my
home . 379 -2243 .
its last quarter.
251 12
The morning stars are
Venus , Mars, Saturn and
Help Wanted
Mercury.
. bartender needed , apply
.The evening star Is Jupiter . E XinPpers
on ar the Holiday Inn .
Those born on this date are
252-1
under the sign of Scorpio.
GUYS AND GA LS
America~ gospel singer
SEE the· U SA work end tr ali.e t
wllh group your own age ,
Mahalia Jackson was born
lob traini ng, lodging and

Oct. 26, 1912.

On this day in history:
In 1825, the Erie Canal,
America 's first man-made
- waterway, was opened for
lra!!ic between Buffalo and
Albany, N.Y.

'

transportation
f urn ished ,
above average earn i ngs . ·
plu s bonus . For interview
see Mrs . Landis 11 to 4
Tuesday l!lt Best Western
Motet. seco nd 1\ v e nue .
F'l!lrents welcomed a t in
rerview

1522

�#'

~ F;;-;;;-;'R~;ults Us.e The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
WANT ADS
INFORMATION
. DEAD ~INES

P .M .

Day

Befo re

WIN AT

r

Notice ·

Card of Thanks

.

To Buv

Wanted

Auto

Sales

Pub

_______ __ _

Mobiie Homes for Sale

--

-- -- ·- - ·---

Notice

LARRY

In Memory

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

Real Estate for Sale

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue

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

For Rent or Sate

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

lf:

..

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

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

found

Ira

---

for Rent

Pets

GIFT.

-·-------------

seembii!

+++

- ·-------------

Strout Realty

Yard Sale

Since the explanation Is long and compHcated,

+++ .

..

$4~,000.

10-2J -31p

see your

Dear K.:
I still cotton to the old way: " You play the g11me and you
take your chances" ill much more fun than all this planning,
counting days, taking temperatures, abstaining, or forcing
yolll'!lelvings when yo11 aren't really in the mood,
Besides, surprises are the spice of life. In your case,
perhaps "sugar and spice." - HELEN
Dear Helen :
I just heard ol a new kind of religion : The Frlsbeterians.
They believe that when you die, you go up on the roof ~nd never
come down. - H. H. (For Ha·Ha)

Dear H.H. :
Thanks, you made our day. - HELEN AND SUE

367-7177.

t0-26-6tc

-------------BEDRM . mobile home .

2

Phone 992-3429 .

10-22-61p

10-26-21p

~

-------------YARD SALE , 30' Spring Ave ..

1? -lfc

TRA iL Ek space tor rent. All
uti lit les . . Phone 992 -5535.
9-16-lfc
10-2J-31C

. Pomeroy , Sa turday and
Sunday , Oct. 25 and 26.

-------------Misc . Sale

J BEDROOM

house. electric
heat, near No . 3 mine .
•Phone 1-669 -:WSlafter 6 p .m .

OCT . 27 , 28, 91111? Misc . Sale.
Walnut lumber , all steel
10-24-31p
pl&amp; 1form scales, wringer
tWasher , elec. trolling motor ,
.....
refrig . ,Two 100 ft . coils of 2 BEDROOM trailer. Reeds.
ville. Phone (614) 378-6384.
J.-" rope . small tra ct or , 56

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

Chevy Pickup , clothing ,

shoes and lots of stuff . Tom
Hayml!ln , Long Bo l! om ,
OhiO , Last house behind P .
0 . at Red Barn .

10-24-61p

-------------2 BEDROOM trailer , real
nice. Phone 992-3324 .

l&lt;l -24.tfc

10-23 -Ji p

Bollen

-------------Help

P~SSED AWA((

BEFORE 'ITS

service

on

•

Phone 742:2331
Roger Wamsley -Rutland
10-15-1 mo.

Wanted

l

eeDRM . house . un ·
furnished . Also, I furnished
trailer . Phone 992·2780 or

992-3432.
fence .

10-19-lfc

10-21 -61c
--------------

'I'U RNI SHE D. apartmeni,
adults only 1ft Middleport.
Phone 992-J874 .
3-15-lfc

SOMEONE to build
Phone 992 -5247 .

"BE A SENTINEL
CARRIER ON
UNCOLN

HILL"

Have lust the route
open fvr you. Win
prizes.
Learn
respon sibllity .
E•rn Extra
Spending Money I

CAll TODAY
- 992·2158'
fema le

m iniatur e • poodle
for
breeding purposes . Phone

992- 390 1.

Middleport. Phone 992·5•34.
10-21 -261C

-·------------3 ROOM furnished hoUse .
Phone 992-5535.

10-21 -lfc

N't

ctH '
R Y ' MObile Home
Park, Rt. 33, ten m iles north
of Pomeroy . Larg e lots w i th,
conc rete patiO!'( si ctcwalks. 1
runners etnd off street,
parking , Phone 9'n 1!.7 9:
'
12 31 tft.

MnRtLE home located Ia
Middleport, adulta only .
Phone 992-5535.
10·8-ttc

Wanted To_Buy
REGISTERED

--------~----- I
TRA.ILER 'sP. ac ~ tor rfmt In

10-22-41C

------------·---

LOG S Pomerov t-orest
PrOdU(IS if paying top
prlcts 101 togs del ivered to
the millS on Battey Run Rd .

off Hlvhwor 124, between
Pomeroy and Rutland , Ohio .
Phone 992 !965 for delivery
and ~nstrucllons .
10 -23 61C

-------------GERT'S e gay girt ' - read y
tor a whlll aflel cleaning

carpets wilh ' Blue Lustre .
Rent etectrlc shampooer.
Nelson 's Drug Store .

10-23-6tc

PROFITABLE
BEER &amp;WINE
CARRYOUT
BUSINESS
lncludea all equipment,

•3

4J10H

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

Auto Sales

~

1961 1- u k u Convertible, runs
good , S22l.. Phont 992 -5301 .

· 10-23 -10tc

1 OWNER, 1971 Monte Corio,
..00 V 8. Buto ., p .l ., p .b., air
cond .,

bvcktt 111ts, am ,
sttrto tape player! .
green wlltl dirk green vlny
r~dlo ,

'""· Phone 992 -6192 otter '
10231fC

p.m .

4Q 2

·--

4AK95 3
· ~at-West vulnerable

From th e largest Truck or '
Bulldozer Radiator to the ·
s ~allest Heater Core.
·

Johnson Masonry
&amp; Remodeling
Siding

Aican, Alcoa &amp; .Wolverine
Aluminum Siding
· Bird Vinyl Gutters
and Downspouts
Sottits ot all kinds

SM.~TH NELSON

M.OTORS, INC.

24
3"
••
Pass

Opening lead - 4 •

EX tA'iJATt NG, dozer·. loader
swee pers , toatlers , Irons ,
and back hoe - work ; sep tic
tan k s in stalle d : du mP • all small applia nces. Lawn
mower , next to Stat e Hlg~
trucks and to boys tor hire .
way Garage on Route 1 r.
wi ll haul fi ll dirt. top soil ,
Pt)one 985 ·3825.
l imestone and grave l,.- Call
[~ob or Roger Jeffe r s. day'
-· -·----.- --;phone 992 7089 , night phone
~E· PTI C T A NK S ctea119'..:.
9'12 3525 or 99 2 523 2
·
2 11 tic
Modern San itation . 992 · 39~.4
or 99'2 1Jd9.
_. 1
9-18-hc
WE ~ t'ECIALiz e ·In niuotte
__ ,. · - - - t
home turn c. ce repair . Phone
BA\.tlMUt: tor rent , hour 0'
992 -5858.
.
con tra ct. ReQ . or e,., .
9-18-lfc
cav at lng type . Septic tanks
Willlrfm- or-=c~fir;e;- and
Instal led . Bill Pull ins. Pho~e
shrubbery . Phone 94 9-2545
992 ·2478 .
'
8-27·11C
or 742 ·3167 .
10 -8-261C
NE 00~ CHUmtnum Siding,
·c . BRA DFORD . At.kt10neer.
gutter
wo r k 1
roof i ng ,
Complete service. Phone
paneling , pa inting, plun1 949 .2487 or 949 -2()00 . Racin e.
b lng , we fi )( the whole
Ohio, Cr itt Bradford.
house. AI Tromm. H2 -23U .
. 10·9·tfC
-,9-24-lfc

--

Virgil B., Sr.

TEAFORD
1 ',',

i'

'I

.

(}

2 FAMILY - 4 B.R. brick, 2
baths, nat. gas heat . Want
only $12,000.

-----------------------73 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

full power, AM -FM, stereo tape. T. 8. T. wheel , cruise
control. rad ial tires. factory air, 24,000 miles.

SHARP

'5400

Yellow with white vinyl top and white leather Interior ,
full pow, -AM-FM-stereo tape, T8. T wheel, factory air ,

radial tires .

MACHINE,,

'5100

73 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

3-29.tfc

White, blue vinyl top, blue cloth Interior, full power,
Climate Control air, T&amp; T wheel. AM-FM stereo tape,
radial tires.

WAS $5100

NOW

•4995

DON'T WASTE YOUR TIME
SEE US FIRST.

KARR &amp; VAN ZAN-DT
992-SJ42

Astro~

-- --

'Ext AVA 11'NV , - bdckhoe,
dozer and difcher . Ga j,
el ectric llnd water lir,e
buria·i , basements, foot P. rs ,
septic systems and br uih
cleaning . WUI haul fill aie,t,
top soli. sand and gravel ,
limestone tor driveways and
roads . Phone Charles R .
Hatfield , Backhoe Servlc;_e,

'

• B·et11rice Bede Oaol
For Sundoy, Oct. 28, 1875
ARIES (Merch 21 -Aprll It}
You have a !endency loday to
spread youroelltoo lhln. It Isn't
likely things will receive their
proper allentlon.
TAURUS (APfll 20-Moy 20}
Keep your mind on lhe road today ·ll you·re going to be buzzing ebout ln your car. Observe
all trafl lc rules as welL
GEMINI (filer 21-June 20}

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

D 8. D TREE Trimming,

)0
yean experience. Insured,

lre·e e•llmates. Call 992 -3057
or ( 11 667-30", Coolville./
10-15- fc
·/•

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

Yesterday you were p ru dent !n

your material aflalrs. The op·

CONTACT:
Lois Pauley
Branch Manager

ALL INVITED TO SHoP OUR BARGAINS
---------------------50 WOOD FRAME

PlATE·GIASS MIRRORS
Sftt5

· l styles, Reg. 39.95 ( NEWl

NOW ON SALE, ONLY

poslte Is now !rue. Sit on your
extravagant whims today.
CANCER (June 21.July 22) If
th ings don' t go your way on the

firs! try today you 're apt to give
up. VIctory Is there, but II won 't
come easily.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be your
usual warm, outgoing sell to·
day. Don't let the m ood of one

you'll be essoclallng wllh get
you down .

VtRilO (Aug. 23-Stpl. 22) If

Old Fuhloned Porut.ln Top Wooden
Kitchen Cabinet, excelt.nl condltlot&gt;--- - - - .6US
(21 Lovo S.ah. Reg. 139.95, Now----..:.-. u. H .t5
(2} Bran.t Now 2 Pltct
• ·
Livlna Room Suite, gnten &amp;gold'----- -il. 249.95
'.

abou l ll prematurely. It slllllsn't
locked-down comple!ely.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 23}
Unless you 're extra alert today,

100 per ce nt of the time, a big
opporl un lty wilt slip past unnoticed.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
You're apt to try something to~
day, knowing full well from past
ex perie nce your chances of

BIG MAN
BIG -DEALS

ALL 1975 New Ford Demos. &amp; Used Cars offered
at sacrifice price: Compare anywhere. The
closer you look the beHer we look!

1972 PONnAC GRAN PRIX ........... '3195
2 Dr: hardtop, a perfect low mileage car if there ever was
one. Fully equipped with stereo radio with tape, air c~ ­
dlt lon lng and all goodies. New 76 Ford trade-ln. Pontiac s
tin es! .

1974 FORD GRAN TORIN0 ......... :.}3295
4 Or. hardtop, air conditioning, 8. full
local owner, new Ford trade-ln.

.Department In The Area

DARTS

·.

2-'75'

'76 DODGES
ARE HEREI

I DRESSER·---------- - - - - - -19.95
I SOFA-------------------JUS
I SOFA------------------- IUO

1 SOFA. CHAIR-----.:.-------- · 15.00
1 WARDROBE--------------- 10.10
1 PORTABLE TELEVISION--------- · D.t5
.I OOLDUSEDHAIRDRYER--------..: US
I NIGHT 5TAND----- ------·---- --10,110 ·~
SET OF 3 TAILES..----- .,-- --·
I!O
121 COTTON MATTRESSES---------H .

UP TO 1300 REBATE ON MOST '75 MODELS

----·-lt.

CORONETS
3-'75
MONACOS
5-'75
TRUCKS
1-'75 VAN

"Charlie Webster, Sales Manager"

(

.

'

CARROlt NORRIS DODGE
'

.

50 STATE STREET
GAWPOUS, OHIO

Fords every two years.

1972 FORD LTD 4 DR.................. '1895

Hardtop. air condltfon lng and full equipment. Shows good
care.

(

•I

I

9' Stake. ·

:
I

V-B with std. or automatic trans.

I

I
:

L----- 7~-- ------- -------~

ON DISPLAY

NEW -CHEVROLET LARK
MINI HOME
NEW LUV PICKUP
• •

.WE HAVE THE RIGHT DEAl
FOR YOU

POMEROY MOTOR COi
"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. Til B

992-2126

1972 FORD GAL 500 .................... '1795 ....__ _..__ _....._.......
4 Dr. Sedan, air conditioning and lull equipment. Worth mu ch
more.

1970 FORD 6 CYL MAVERICK...........$795 ~11~~~~11 ~;~:::~.!,_,C
2 Dr . Sedan, a real value.
~ ~ ~~
.
Jti95
UmcrambletheoefourJumble.,
e~h
1968 atEV JMPAlA 2 DR.............. ,
h'Jj H t!\11111\llN!HIJ

one letter ta

1

Hardtop, auto. trans., small V-B. You' ll be surprised you can
buy th iS qood of a cartorthis low price.
5ee: Freel BlaeHnar, Pat Hill
Melvin Little, or Dan Thompson
Opljn Evenings Til7: oo
Except Thurs. and Sat. Til5:00

onoll"&gt;ltltf

square, to
words.

form lour ordtnary

HAFFC

II

II
YINJET

LID/AN
V' 'I

LE.TIERS COME
FIRST 10 &amp;HON

Tt-tF'&lt;;!'

II

II I I

!716APPIIDVAL.

Now UTlf\Jt the clrc:ltd 1etten
to Corm the aurprlee anawer, u
In 1914, President Ford ~=~~A=~~~-~~·:;,:=:_
· ~·=•~l~(nttd b7 the thove cartoon.
succeeding are nil.
agreed to meet Russian
SII.GITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dtc. leader Leonid Brezhnev Nov .
21} Be caretul today if olfered
{Allow•" llloodoy)
somelhlng for nothing from a 23-24 in the Vladivoslok area
person who doesn 't usually .:;of;.th;;,;.e,.;So,_vi•et,u•ru•·ol"n•. _ __,
Jumhl•" SNOWY VOUCH FRII.CAS GENTRY
l' etlerdty'•
.
treat y ou I n suc h a r
m~gn a n l m o u s

An•wert II_~ unf~uta lat ,POilltllt:I-HE "'OWNS'"

manne r.

CAPRICORN (Deo. 22-Jan,
111 In order 10 placate a
member of your family IOday
you may do something you
shouldn 't despite your bolter
judgm ent.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Fob. II)
You often let thin gs go till lhe
lasl minu te and lucki ly gel

PIONEER®
CHAIN SAWS

th em In under the wire .

However, today It would be folly 10 follow this practice.
PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch ,20}
Be .caref ul tod ay or your
generous nature w ill be taken
advantage of by o n e who
doesn't give a hoot hbw much it

~~~~~"day
Oct. 28, IV75

Take advantage of any !raining
or educall ona l opportu nity
olfered you lhis com ing year.
Later .!here will be a very
pro fllable markol lor lhe
knowledge you gain.

) .

SAVE I:

~~~~~=·~·~--~•
--~ID-0-D-D

12 .:.'75

'

'
1CHEST·-------- - - - - - - - - - -lf.fS

1

I

I

Best Service

.

V-8, automatic trans.

I

1973 FORD GRAN TORINO ............ '2595

4 Dr. hardtop, one local owner, power steer ing 8. automatic,
302 V-8, a good looking and running car. This man trades

The closer you look,
The beHer we look.

,

;.

I

trans., power

NEW 75 4 WHEEL DRIVE
SUBURBAN............................

equ ipment. One careful

992·2196

WITH

driVf'l automa1ic

· 5- NEW 75 lh TON MODELS ...... SAVE

PHONE

ODDS &amp; ENDS SPECIALS

SATURDAYS

you have a financial venture on
th e burners now, don't talk

4 w~ .

steertng and brakes. Great Savings Can Be
Yours.

Your Dollar Will

DA~N

';}

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

Pomeroy

I 2 NEW 75 CHEV.
% TON ............. SAVE, I
.
I

NEW 75-1 TON WITll DUAL .... ... SAVE

Never Buy More
Value I

COME SEE THE

Celebration Sale of
Bridge Re.:()pening

Cadillac-Oldsmobile
GMAC Financing Available

Open Eves . Til6:- Til5 p.m. Sat.
"You 'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business"
See one of these courteous sales mel\ :
Pete Burris
Lloyd Mclaughlin
·
Marvi~ Keebaugll

Grapt=l

Oh io, 712·
7-11 -901c

'

Duty B180 Tandem axle, cab and chassis.

PRICES ARE FAWNG
WITll THE LEAVES

· 73 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

___ ____ _

~ulland ,

SALE

Green wit h green vinyl and green lea1her i nterior -

Repa irs , se rvice, all makes .
992 228 4. Th e Ffbr lc, Shop , , ·
Pomeroy . Auth o rted Singer
~. a l es
and Service . We
sharp en Scisso r s.

Rt. 1,
6092 .

1975 .CHEVROLET PICKUP. .......13495 .

1

~

NEW LISTING - 10 roomc
bath, hot water heat, foro., •
kitchen, 4 bedrooms and
dining. Large lot In Racl~e .

8' Fleetside, 6 cyL, std. trans ., R. b~~per , good tires,

r----------------------NEW '75 CHEV. TRUCK Q.EARANCE
~

.
'
M IA CU ~ C kc. •J:
12 ROOMS - Older home with 'R EI\OY
de ti "ered r ight to yodr
bath, gas and city water: project. r ast and easy . F r ~e
estimat es . Phone 99'2·1284,
$7,500.00.
Goegtein Ready Mi)( Co . •
POMEROY - 3 B.R.s bath,
Middleport , OhiO..
'
6-3o .uC
and large family room . $8500.
. ... .
·.- --· ::.: ~- --~ ·'S BUild ing and
RENO'lAUD- 2 B.R. home NEIGLER
Supply. We specialize In
on 3:i North . Bath, garage and
bullc:l ing houses . Also, do
large lot , $16,000.
·
repair work and cabinett,
alum lnum Siding . Call Guy
Nelgler, 949 -2508; If no
RIVER FRONT LOT - and 7 an!wer
call 949-2813 or 94 .
room house, 2 ba1hs,. furnace,
2457 .
' 10-5-26tp
on nice corner. 123,500.

12 ROOMS - Nice older home,
2 baths, gas furnace, and 2
nice level lots. S27 ,000.

ww ti res, dark b!ue fin ish.

1973 CHEVROLET 1lz TON. ...... }2795

H.

BELIEV ~?
Bu ild an all steel building at
Pole Barn pri ces? Golden
Giant All Steel Build ings,
Rt . .t , Box 148, Waverly,
Oh io. Phon e 9-H -229 6.
7-l.t .lfc
- ,-___ ,
__,
.
. . ~.. ,_ .;

.

Fl eetslde, 6 cyl., std. trans ., radio , R step bumper,

1961 INTERNATIONAL ..........!1295

WOULb YOU

S EWIN G

I.,,,.

1974 CHEVROLET 1lz TON ....... '3150

....

-

REALTOR

&amp; never hauled heavy loads, 292-6 cyl., 15000 lb., 2
speed rear axle, 825x20 . 10 ply t ir es .

61f2 ' Body · 6 cyl., std .. tran s., alum . cover , less than
5,500 mil es, radio. Sharp as new truc k.

-------------- -------------.,..-..--------------

~

102"· CA, b lue cab &amp; clean interior, fine ser vice record

g~

Open Evenings Till7 P.M. Weekdays. Till 5 P.M. Sat.
Service Till4 :30 Mon. thru Fri. Service Closed Sat .

ELWOOD 60WEA SllEPAIR I

1972 CHEVROLET 2 TON...... }2995
.

8'

SAVINGS! SO COME IN AND GET A GREAT BUY NOWI
Don'fyouwanttodo Business with a FRIENDLY DEALER. Yes,
stop by and talk to us &amp; see just how Friendly we are at SMITH
NELSON M.OTORS. .
See: Ceward Calvert, J.D. Story or Bill Nelson.

I •

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

$2595

WE STILL HAVE FIVE 1975 BUICKS AND PONTIACS IN STOCK AT A BIG

So•tb

Pomeroy

Ph. 992.2174

10-5-H

North East

Pass ••
Pass 3 •
Pass ••
Paos 6 •
Pass

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

Bird &amp; Mastic VInyl

West

TRUCK BUYS

1973 Ford Gran Torino 2 Dr .
H.T •• auto .• P.S., P. B., local
own er , extra low mileag e.

1972 Opel 1900 Wagon, auto .•
fact . air . lo.c al owner , we s old
this one new. ·

I

Cpe., less than 7,000 m iles. delu,;;e belts. ti n t glass, air
condit ioned , deluxe bum pers and guards, remot e LH &amp;
RH mi rr o r ~ A00-.48 Bl eng ine. AM radi o and tape, aux .
li gh l lng. com fodilf whe_el. Lik 'e new and a r eal sha rp tc.

$1895

$3595

• A 105l2

992·7608

$3595

1974 Chev. V2 Ton _Pickup, long
wideside bed, auto ., P. S.• P. B., ·
local owner. Nice Truck.

SOUTH !Dl

1971 Pontiac Cat .• 4 dr . H. T .•
vinyl top. air. 38,621 miles.
L9cal owner. Sharp!

1972 Ford T· Bird, vinyl top,
P. S.• P .W., P ,S ., auto ., air,
cruise. This is one sharp car.

$2995

'

•JBs

Pomeroy
992 -2298
After Hours call
992-7133

POMEROY - 7'1o acres, 4
BR, bath, carpeting,
NOW selling Fuller Brush
paneling, tile, N. gas, hot
Products . Phone 992 -3410.
water heat, storm doors &amp;
10 -6-lfc
windows, water softner,
GREEii beans 1pick your own.
$15,000.
Andrew Cross, Le tart Fal ls.
POMEROY - 3 BR, bath,
241 -2852.
TV room, uflllty R.i H..W.
10-17-6t c
floors, N. gas heat, full
basement, large lot. $9,500.
WARM Morning cool and
wood healer, S_.O and 3
MIDDLEPORT - 2 BR,
Si amese kittens . Phone 992 bath,
carpeting, paneling,
5307.
tile,
full
basement, utility
10-18-121p
R., N. gas FA heat, car Sf~liADIO , am -fm , 4
port, storm doors 8. win speed changer, 8 track tape
dows.
In excellent concombinatron .
Balance
1106.40 or terms . Call 992- dition . S13,000.
3965.
RUTLAND - 2 BR, dining
10 -16-tfc R, bath, fireplace In LR,
carpeting. paneling, tile, N.
1914 YAMAHA 360 MX - S!OO, gas heat, porches, garage.
1971 scout 4 wD - 51.650. $9,500.
Phone (614) 667 -37!9 or 667 3653.
POMEROY - 5 acres, 3
10-20-ltc BR, bath, N. gas heat, city
- .
water , porches, storg, bldg.
REMINGTON~OO auln,
new 12 or "ftr'va. 1172.50. In good condition. S7.900.
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story
F Itt's, Mlddleoort, 9.!!1~ . .
10-1-361c frame, . J BR, 2 baths,
dining R., utility R., N. gas
ONE new Trombone, $425
furnace
, storage bllfg.
vat'ue , 'slightly damaged ,
suo. Also. 1 used cornet, Walk to shop, sa.300.
$25, Phone 992-5786
TO BUY OR SELL - CALL
· 10-21-Aic US FOR YOUR
IN
REAL
I'TfA,••
197' HONDA 750. Phone 992Htnry
3658 .
.
10-22-6tc

--------------.J

,63

.

1975 CHEVROLET CAPRICE ...... .' 5298

PH; 992·2174

1973 Pontiac Cat., 2 dr . H. T.,.tilt
wheel, air cond., local owner,
low mileage .

EAST
• A 10 98 5 3

•QJ9l

PHONE

804 W. Main

CONTACT .GUIDO
AI Shimmy's C.i'ryovt
605 w. Main Pllmaroy, 0 .
Betwe.n 2 p.m. and 6 p.m.
only.

'

• K 108

Close on Thursdays
9to 12 Saturday

picnic tables and boat dock
facilities. , Stock sold
separately. Long lease on
building.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

25

• 87

( WEST
• • K 7 6t

4 door, Co . Dem o. sandstone fi n i.sh , vinyl top &amp; vi nyl
trim, AM r adio&amp; ta pe, air con~ .• autom atic. P.S .. P. B.,
P. door lock s. P. wi ndow~, Cr'uise Control. comfortilt,
delu xe bumper &amp; guards. Th is car is r ea lly loaded &amp;
carr ies new ca r title&amp; bal. of war ran ty. Save
·

FROM YOUR "FRIENDLY DEALER"

•QJ2
• A 752
• K Q97

1600 Nye St.
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-3313
or 992-5880
10 -1-JOIC

R&amp;J COINS

.1975 CAPRICE ClASSIC ........... '5495

SOME GREAT USED CAR BUYS

NORTH

Sales &amp; SeJvice
.

estates and collections:

.--------------

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

TI-lE ARTIST

Appraisal

· BIG SPECIAL SALE TO ALL OF OUR GOOD CUSTOMERS
BOTH IN OHIO AND WEST VIRGINIA
'

I

'

Buy. Sell or Trade

for Sale

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

doctorfordetaUs.-SUE

and Supplies

M.ONTH-END CLEARANCE

relther way

for Sales

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

.

D&amp;M
APPUANCE

Coins, .Curtency

To

·--··-·

'

develops
I

FREE ESTIMATES

---

·! Squeeze

Business Services

1964 .. UI.TIC K Wlld c. at, QO'J d
c ondi t i o n .
Pri ce d
r eas onabl e , Call Arthu.r
Barr , or phone 992 -7252 :

WELCOME BACK WEST VIRGINIA

·BRIDGE

·I

'RACINE M l"t hodist Church ,JlD turnthire , .o iCe boxes,
wE WOULQ like to th'ank all
ic;, . asking for donar 1ons or brass beds , or_ complete 1
our
neig
hbors
an
d
friends
·
·
·
b
households : wnte M . 0·..,
Mo n day De~cll ine 9 a .m .
conSI(Inl)lent
dems to _e Miller . Rt. 4, Pomeroy ,
w.ho sent cards and f low(lr s.
Cancell ation -· Correclions
a uc_llone d off at Oob H.til
Ohio Call 99 7 7760.
'
.
10-26 -llp
the nur $eS and do cto r~ at
Will be accepted until 9 a .m .
restdence . Nov . 8, Cr t!!
·
10 7-74 .
Medica
l
Ce
nt
er
,
Ho
l
zer
tor Oav of Publi calion
BradfOrd , 1\uc!i on ce r . A ll
.-.·_
__ _ _
.J
1
Ewing Funeral Home . the
1967 NOV /\ 283 e n gi ne ,~ speed
REGULATIONS
proceeds IO go to replace · w
· a· n· t~.lpallb
earers
,
and
Rev
.
tran smissio n, S175 . Phone
church root . Call Bob Hill or
1CU
The Publisher r eserves 1he
' Hiiyden for their kindness
949 -2170 after 5 p .rn .
r ight to l!dit or r eject anv ad s
phone
949
~ UI J
Walch
t:"ASH
pa
td
tor
all
makes
ana
'
10.26 31 p
c:turing th e toss of our
d ee med . obi ecti onal. Th e
Nov . 2nd paper tor lisling .
models of moblte homes .
·Blown
br other . Joseph Marli n .
publ is he r
wllf no t
be
10
n
.ct
c
Phone
area
code
414
-423
1967
INTERN ATIO NAL
Mrs . Edgar Greenlee.
Insulation
Services
r esponsi bl e for more than one
95 31 .
'
Pic kup with ca ttl e rack s.
Mil dr ed Tubb s. H erman and WI NTER 'S ' hill in the air -4 13-tfc
Incorrec t insertion .
Blown
into
Walls
&amp;Allies
Phone
742
·2146.
Leo Martin·,
lime to th ink "~ kin - Care ." _ .
. . ··-····RATES
.
STORM
.
10-26 -Jip
_...,: 10-26 -ll p
K osco! Cosme!ics. Ann
-:--:--=:--::For Want Ad Service
WINDOWS
&amp;
'
DOORS
sce nts pc·r word one lnser lion I WOULD like tO thank Or .
Sauvage, Independe nt Wanted
Rent
REPLACEMENT
1971 VEGA Hatchb8 ck, radia l
Dis tributor , Syra cuse, 992 M inim um Cha rge Sl.OO
Wh i te ly , Dr . Walker . th e
tires, real sharp for $1,100:
DRY
GARAGE
space tor
WINDOWS
J171.
14 cents per • word three
nur ses , es peci ally th ose in
sme~tl
imported c j!lr , (IP ·
Phone 992 -3259 .
ALUMINUM
10-2J.61p
co nsecui lve inserti ons .
t .C.U .. th e m inisters , and
10-21-6tc
proximately 6 to a weeks .
--.....:.
SIDl NG •SOF F ITT
26 ce nt s p er word siK con fr i end s , f or th ei r vis its, . -·-- ~·-····--·- .
Call after 5 p.m . 992 -.352 2.
E
FF
ECTIVE
Sunday
,
Oct.
26
.
sec ullve Inser ti ons
(;UTTERS-AWNINGS
pra yers , card s. fl owers . and
10-24-31p
197
5
FOR
D
F
IOO
truck
.
Phone
No more shooting mat ches ·
25 P er Cent Discount on paid
gifts wh ile 1 was a patient at
9927447 .
at Happy Hollow Gun Club . - ·- -· - - - ---*-----ads an d ads paid with in 10
J,AVE~DER
Ho lzer M ed ica l Cente r . May
10 -21-12tp
2' 2'P
days .
God bl ess vou all.
S·trdcu &lt;.. e, Ohio
10
CAROOF THANKS
-· ··------- - -~-Doro thy Law s_on
19ii -RAMfiLE R. $1'50 . Phone
Ph . 992-3993
SHO OTING
Mat c h
Corn
&amp; Obituarv
10-26-llp
99 2·2892 or can be seen at 957
21
J ACRES In Flatwoods arta
11 10 I mo
Hollow Gun Club , 1 p .m .
$2 .00 for 50 word m inimum .
Broadway . Middleport.
L-----llnd 1974 14 .., x 65 mobile
Sunday , Oc t. 26, 1 mite past
E~r.~ a.jtliliona t word Jc .
10-24 -71C
home , sell separately ,or
Mile Ceme tery out of
BLIND ADS
together : Phone 992 7J3B .
Rutland . F ree retres~
Additional 25c Charge p er
10-26-llc
Advertiseme nt .
ments.
I F YOU ' VE ever purc t1ased
IN OA SH 23 Channel Citizen ' s
OF~ICE HOURS
Kosco!
cosme t ics
and
Band transceiver , am -fm
8 : JO a .m . to 5: 00p .m . Oa l ly,
h_
a ven 't been reservlced ,
19 74 CASTLE 12 K 65 , 2
mpx radio , 8 track stereo .
8 : 30 e .m . to 11 :00 No o n
phone Helen Jane Brown , FLEA Mllrket going out of
bedrms ..
take
·over 9 PC . C . R . Suite , S150 ; D.
Ca ll 992-3965.
business, Oct. 31 at the
Ind ependent
Ols tributer ,
Sa turdllv .
paymen ts. Phon e 949 ·2749 or
table and 5 chairs, $35 ; B .R.
9-5-tfc
crossroe ds
between
(6 14) 992 -5113 . Or maybe you
992-7671
.
suite , comple te, SSO ; 220 v .
would like to take ord er s.
Pomeroy and Ru tl and on Rt.
10-21 -6tc
air conditioner , SSO . Other
full or spar e lime in either
124. Everyth ing reduced . ·- -- - - -·- - - - - - - '--WE HAVE shotgun sh ells ,
items . Phone 992 -5706.
10-2.4 -2tc 1971 BUDDY 12' X 60' partially
west V Irginia or Ohio .
ri fl e she lls , cleanihg ac ·
10-24
-Jip
10-26 -lfc
cessorle s, hunting clothes ,
furni~hed . Porch and un r H'E'--M"EIG'sAiumnlare derpinning
boots , bla ck· powder gun s
. Phone (614) 698·
sponsoring a masquerade
NO H U NTIN G on my fl!lrm ,
WINCHE
STER
model
12
and accessories , reloading
53.49 .
Dan ce, Sll turdey , Nov . 1.
day or night on th e .N ew
n
ickel
steeL
12
gauge
pump
,
10·2.4 -Jtc
mater.lal s, scoPes , mounts ,
trom 9 p .m . 101 a. m . o1t th.e
Lima Road , Alma Peterspn .
v entilated rib and new
kniv es, sleeping bags , boa!
Rutland
. Gy mnesium .
10-26 -31c
woa:d. excellent condition,
jacke ts
and
c ushi on s,
1211: 70 H-lAILER , 2 bedroom ,
isslon
52
person.
S3
Adm
$350 .
Contact
Marvin
IN MEMORY of Mearl Bath -------- ~- - ----hol ster s, belts. rif le strap s
central air, total elec. ,
coup
le.
Several
rock
bands
.
Keebauoh , 992·53.42 days ,
who passed away 9 year s NO HUNTIN G or trespQsslng
and much , much more al
u!lll!y building , take over
bring b even'l ges . Games
evenings (614) 985 -3913 .
on my pr operty w ithout
ago, Oct. 25. Sadly mlssed
Ind ian Joe's Sport s- and
payments . Ph one ( 304) 882 ·
artd
priz
es
.
Adults
18
and
l&lt;l -19·7tc
permi ssi on . Leo Tay lor .
by all his r ela tives .
CB's, l OS Page St. , Mid ·
33
-40
after
5
p
.m
.
10-26 -3tc over .
10-26-ltc
d teport.
10-22 -121c
10-19 .12tc
REG . Polled Heref ord Bulls,
10· 17 -lOtc
- -- -~----- ------ one 5 vr . old, two yearlings .
'
ROOM and bol!lrd for senior 1973 v 1NDALE Trailer and tot
d i spositions .
e xce llent
located in Tuppers Plains .
citizens , very nice . P~one
.Phone 992·5565 or 992 -2826 .
Phone !6W 66n817 .
992 -3509.
10-19 -7tc
10-16-12tc
3 BEDRM . house in Racine .
H &amp; N' day old or started
Phone 949 -2671 .
~~*W~-~·~~·;·;.:.:.:.~"
....·o:·~;·;o;.o;·~;·;•,•.•.•.............................·.····················:....············;•;•,O:.•.•.'
Leghorn pulle ts. Both floor
~
..............:. ........_._.;o.........o.;.~.···
·.········!·.·-·-···~~
t0 -5·26tc
Employment Wanted
or cage grown available .
Poultry
housing
and
CARPENTRY , paneling,
FOR RENT oR SA LE. 2 f looring and ceiling . Phone automation . Modern 3 BEDRM : home, fus r
fin ished, r~modellng , S~L~LTJ
Pou l try, J99 w. Ma in ,
:!:: bedrm . home . For more 992-2759,
St., Rutland . Phone 74.2 - »IJ~
·
·
::::
lriformatlon .Call742 ·3183.or
Pomeroy, 992 -2164 .
10-21 -30tc
aft er 4 p .m . or see Milo B ,
10-26 li e
Btlllcl
:::: contocl Lee Lef~ber .
Hut chison .
'
::::
Harrisonville .
9-2J .tfc
10 26-6tc ll'E.MODELING, Plumbing', 1975 YAMAHA J60 MX . E• ·
heating and al! types of,
cellent condition , ne..,er
general
repatr .
Wor:~
raced . Phone 1614 I 985 -3302 HOU SE on- 1672 Lincoln Hgts .
~uaranteed . 20 yeers e
4 r oom s. large kitchen ,
even ings after S p .m .
perience . Phone 992 -2409 .
basement , nice backyard ,
5- 1 - lf~ ---- -1---.:._--~ ~~IC
raker-Giver
Nleee
F OUNO house ke';' at a porch
and low p r iced . See be twee n
-·-·-·--- · --· ·--- ·
sale , 160 Soufh Se venth -·-·10 a .m .·3 p .m .
Rap:
HAY
and
straw
.
Phone
742
Ave nue . Phone 992 ·3158 .
10-20 -121c
JI52
.
Two years ago my aunt gave me some drapes that she
10.24 -Jtc
10-26-31p
couldnlt use any more, and I put them In my bedroom. I ofFREE RENT AT VILLAGE
MIDDLEPORT - Compl etely
MANOR
IN
·MID
remodeled bulld ing , 2,000
32 .000 BTU gas hea te r with
fered to pay, but she wouldn 'I take any money.
DLEPORT ! we ·are so sure
feel of business space and
fan , auto . controls , uo .
.ReCently she moved to a new apartment, and couldn't find AK C. Doberman Ploc h er pups ,
that you will love our apar t .
two furn ished apartments .
Phone 742 -2856 .
ments that we give yOu two
• 10-26-Jip Very tow ma i nte na nce .
drapes to sult her. She remembered ''mine," called up and
male. 7 weeks, black and
weeks RENT FREE . Just
Good investmen t income . ·
r ust, sho ts and wormed . Call
asked for them back - right away!
pay your security dej?osil CAMPER top complete in ·
Ex c ell ent opportunity to
!11 133-0761 atter 5 p.m.
and slay six months and the
sulated , wilh bubble glass ~lmi nat e rent paymen1 for
!Die didn't even give me time to find replacements. Making
·10-22 .41 c
flrsl2weeks Is free . You will
your
present
busin ess
w i ndows
and
sc r eens,
-------~---no colnmenl, I returned them lo her, but think IIlla was very -monthly teases, all
space. Phon e 992 ·7889.
paneled ins ide. Ph one 992 TWO YEAR OLD mol e Collie , enjoy
ejectr !c living, carpeting ,
10·21 ·6tc
/774,
chintzy, lMld I just don~ want to have anything more to do with
S25. Phone 949-2739.
range and refrioerbtor, tree
l0-2.4
.J1c
10-22 -41c
her. This W8811't a loan, but a
Others In my family say
trash pickup, cable TV
J BR HUME , just ' finlsh•u
(optional ) and laundry GOL 0 sparkle snare drum In
I'm making a too big deal out of II.
r emodelin g . Sal em St .,
tacilifies . Conven ie nt to
WELL trained Beagles , also
good condit ion . Phone 992 Rutland . Phone 742 ·2306
Wbal do you think of this "Indian giving?" - RIPPEDshopp ino on Third and Mill
white guineas . Phone 742 ·
7276 .
after 4 p . m . or see Milo ~ ­
In
Middlepor
t
.
VILLAGE
2521
or
will
trade
for
any
10-26
-7tc
OFF (the windows)
,Hutchinson .
MANOR is your! for one
kind of guns .
1Q .. 9.1fc
bedroom
apartments SC HOOL bus converted into
10-2HIC
si
arting
a
t
$1()4
mon
thly
plu
s
camper. Steeps 6, gos, elec .
Dear Ripped:
5 RM . HOU SE and bath, large
eiec . we pay tor everything
IST ERED red and wh ite
nlc . Phone 992 -3388 .
Gifts with a ''take-back" clause turns me off, but : are used REG
tot . Can be eas il y f inanced .
else . See the Manager a t
Beegle Puppies . Phone 992 ·
10·26 -31C
Inqui r e a t Shammy's carry Riverside Apartments or
2740.
drapes enough to cause a rift in Ihe family? look alit this way:
out , 60S 'N . Main St .,
call 992 -3273 . This offer will AMMO )"!hotesale . Deer sl ugs,
l0·2.4 -3tC
after two years, maybe you'd he happier with brand new
Pom eroy , Oh lo.
end soon, so move In now
S1.29 ; Brenneke slugs , S-4 .95
10·'22·6tc
and seve SSSS.
per box . all shot she'lls
window dreaslngs. .._ SUE
FIRST
Li'1e Always 10-23-tfc
wholesale . Black powder ,
"A
THENS
BOARDING
NOTE FROM HELEN: Look, if you're upset, SAY IT! Get
52.90 lb . Lots of new and BI-LEVEL 5 bedrm .. family
KENNEL ." I. Open Mon - 2 - BEDROOM- tu;:;,ished
used g1.,1ns, Fife 's back of
room , air
conditioned .
your feeling out in the !JPen - not to other famlly members, but
day -Saturday 10 a. m . 1111 6
apar t ment In Middleport .
Speed Queen Laundrymat,
baths , country selling lot,
phone 593 -7960 . 2.
Phone 992.s434_
to yoll' aunt. This is the only way you'll avoid a qulet feud that p.m.
Mldtlleport. Phone 992 -7494 •
walk to sc hools . Pomeroy
Profes!llonal all
breed
j
we trade for anyth i ng .
area , best of finan cing low
could pennanenUy ruin friendships. W)len you level with
groom i ng , reservat ions ,
10 -2 -lt c
10-25-121 c
40s . Phone A thens 592-3()52
!6U) 593 .1960. 3. Heated - - - - - - - - - - - - - people about
hurts, you often discover TIIEIR side
for information .
l ndoor .outdoor
runs ,
t H:AILER space, , ,. mile
10-26 -11c
illn't as bad as you sllpposed.
reservet lons, (6U) 593 -7960 .
nor th of Mefgs High School BUY FOR CHRIS.TMA Sl
Talking doll and tiger, S7
4, Individual unlrs tor cats
on old R t . 33 . Phone 992-,29cl .
.
each ; toys ; games ; book s; 4 ROOM and bath , with car .
plus play area . Phone (614)
10·26· ltc
Rap:
port . Phone 992 -5871.
stuffed
animals ;
tap e
593-7960. 5. We care about -------------I0-26·6t c
recorder , SID ; and record
your pet , Phone (61-4) 593 · ONE bedroom trailer apart We want our first baby to be a boy, 11nd I hear somewhere
player
,
$15.
Phone
Bre
nda
1V60. 6. 30 m lnutes north ot
ment. Phone·992 .52 48 or 992·
that you can choose the sex of your child by the time of the
,Ross . 992.1263 .
Pomeroy on RL 33. Phone
J436.
!614) 593 -7960. 7. Min iature
10-26-61c
month etc. you have intercourse. This Is hard to believe, bot if
Sc hn•uzer Stud service, . - - - - - - - - - - - - - you know something I don't, please clue me ln. - K . T.
.(614) 593 -7960. 8. Dog and cat NICE trailer lot far rent In 3 • CHAROLAIS steer ,, ex ce llent for .ti ·H Club ste er .
boarding . Phone (6UI 593 ·
Middleport. Corner lot wllh
Phone 949 -2822.
7960.
brick ut lllty building . Phone
K. :
10-2&lt;-261C
94 ACRE FARM - 2 acre
992 -5433 or stop bY 276 Ash
You can not guarantee producing a boy, but with a method
St., M iddleport.
·
lake, suited for recreation .
10-26-31&lt; DAISY B. B. gun for sale, good
Some remodeling done ,
described In the book, "YoiD' Baby's Sex, How You Can
condition . Shoo ts up to 75
feet . Has a wooded stock,
Chooae,"by DavldM. Rorvlk with Landrum B. SheUies, M.D.,
HOUSE for rent wllh 7 rooms,
r i fle , 417 Sp ring Ave .,
YARD Sa le in Welch town Hill ,
tl/2 baths, gas heat , garage
you can learn 11 method that may increase your chances from
Pomeroy, or calf 992·3561.
Minersville . Phone 992 -3516,
in Middleport. Adults. no
10-23-Jtc
Oct. 22 till 1
• Hours: 9 to 5
50 to 85 per cent.
pets. For app\., call !6UI
5

Joc at lon,

·~:-~&amp;muyTimes-~mmerl•&amp;m._~•••o•a•.~•·•J9•75.__.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . .- .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~

We service all, saws
and precision grind
chain.

WILKINSON
SMALL ENGINES

498 Locust Street
Middleport, Ohio
.992 -3092

fhe Almanac
By Uniled Press In· Wanted To Do
lernatlonal
BABYSI TT I NG in my home .
Any shill, to ts ot exp . Good
Today is Sunday, Oct. ~.
ref . d46-d946.
the 299th day o! 1975 with 66 to
252 -1
follow.
The moon is approaching CARE tor el derly peop l e in my
home . 379 -2243 .
its last quarter.
251 12
The morning stars are
Venus , Mars, Saturn and
Help Wanted
Mercury.
. bartender needed , apply
.The evening star Is Jupiter . E XinPpers
on ar the Holiday Inn .
Those born on this date are
252-1
under the sign of Scorpio.
GUYS AND GA LS
America~ gospel singer
SEE the· U SA work end tr ali.e t
wllh group your own age ,
Mahalia Jackson was born
lob traini ng, lodging and

Oct. 26, 1912.

On this day in history:
In 1825, the Erie Canal,
America 's first man-made
- waterway, was opened for
lra!!ic between Buffalo and
Albany, N.Y.

'

transportation
f urn ished ,
above average earn i ngs . ·
plu s bonus . For interview
see Mrs . Landis 11 to 4
Tuesday l!lt Best Western
Motet. seco nd 1\ v e nue .
F'l!lrents welcomed a t in
rerview

1522

�·;;;p;~'(R;ults Use The Sunday Times:.Sentinel Classifieds
OPALS CERAM ICS

OPE N

Tue s

Wed

Ap p ls only F r l

MQI'l

Su pplies Greenware f rmg

POWER PLANTS
TO PAY
ALL THEIR
SCHuOl TAXES.

,R eg
for cl as ses
Cc rt
teacher L 11da Harmo 1 4.t6
~467 or 145 9463

252J
RUMMAGE SALE
CLO T HI N G all ktn ds atl
shes good w tnter (Oa ts 9
tilt dark Mon Sat 39 Tell AS

Rd

252 3

---

r ent can be bouQht on land

contrac

37 9 2676

----------

3319

2SO 3

S"'OP
17
V nton
St
Gal li pol is Ohio Phon e no
446 86 28 or 675 1930 to r
a p po ntm e nt s
24B 6

TR I STA l E MOB ILE

HOME S

on

19

K

cs

Capallea J BR

x 50 N a 1CO ?

1965 10

1961 10

)C

so

204 If

J~

t9i0 A ll:

1

B~

nu ke ., 1\R

1q5
R )(
t? E lc ar
Trrt ler
19 '5 .,, 11 satan
196 1 '~0 It rro h c
1966 I
II Utop a

Travel

MOB ILE

Serv i ce

Home

Sk irting

roof

coa ting pat ios awnln\1S
an chors ce ment work Free
es timate s

u sed Book Store

Call 245 9411 or

245 9472 after 4 30 p m

Uppe r

'237 1f
_, ________ - - - - TWO WAY Rad 10S Sal es &amp;
Ser-vice New &amp; used C Bs
pall et! m omtor s antennas
e t c B9b s Cit ize n Ba nd
RadiO EQU IP
Georges
Creel&lt;. Rd Gal lipoli s Ohio
'46 &lt;517
212 If

215 If

197 1 Concord l2&gt;i65 M H 1968
Com madore 12x52 M H
1959 Colonial 10JIC.50 M H
B&amp;S Mobile
Home hies
Pt P leas ant w va
237 If
- - - - - - -.- - - - -

12x52 2 BR

MOBILE Hom ,

r eady lo move Into at Crown

Clly S3 500 256 1180

251 3
and
sew 1ng
ma chin e repair parts a n~
TRISTATE
supplies
Pick up and
MOBILE HOME SALES
delive ry Davis Vac uum
Cl ean er 1~ m lie up Georges 1973 Coventry 3 Br
197 3 Kirkwoo d 3 Br
Creek Rd Ph 446 0294
163 II 1972 Greenbri er 3 Br
1957 Nausha 1 Br
...... ~ .....
FQR MeMimum Securi ty use 1957 Tra-ve l T railer
Tie Down Anchors to 1971 Old s V ~ ta Cruiser low
mileage
Protect Your Mobile Hom e
BANK F INANCING
Complete Service c,u Ron
PH 446 7572
Skidmore J7911Sl or 446
23 9 I f
1156
SWE&amp;:PER

-- -------.--

_____ _______ _
220 II

._...

LOW we ekl y and month l y
rate s at libby Hote l 446

1743

244 If

HOMEMADE 8~81'1 .&gt;oup or
chill dally at The Burger
Hut Jackson Pike
22' II

1972 COVN 1K' ~ qu ire Pmto
Wagon 4 spd stand r adio
heater new stee l betted
t ires exc cond nslae and
oul S2 200 Ph 446 1316
.__ 252 3

___________ __

65 CHEV 1 1 ton pickup 327
engine stand tran s
25 6
1443

____________ _

1968

Sale -

w

Va

1950

2SO 6

FORD Galaxle 500

m lleage

'23 mi tes per ga!!on

$600

252 3

197? F'ONT I AC Grand e Pr X

446 2266

252 5

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

Pets

,P.KC Doerman puppt eS mole
and fem al e chamP IOn line
New Haven W Va 882 3'268

252 6

se ll

chea p

446 7dl2

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

low
Call
250 3

1962 CHEVY P , ton truck 4'f6

448'4

mob il e home
tota l
elec tr ic dep re q 446 4303
252 3

21! 8 6

2 BR mobil e hom e wit h auto
washer south of Ga ll tpolls
sao per m on lh 256 69'22

m Gal pol s
Ph .t.t6 0~38

rlllcs

252 3

PINE RIDGE tOLL IES

At&lt;.C Reg

Collies sable ahd

while 16Ul 25 6 1261

BOBBI

283 II

mil es 245 5064

250 3

~ 9 11 PINTO $1 000

Ph

3634

1575

25 1 26

S Poodl e Boytlq ue

.\-------------__________ __ _

__________ __

...... 252 3

3 BR home In east Ga lli PO li S
S140 per month 446 0603

252 3

60 II

-----------

BOARDING&amp; AKC PUPPIES
p Kenne lS 388 827 4 R I

K

SS4

2 ml

east of Porter

305 II

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

J UA N ItA S POOd le Parlor
exper i enced groommg will
do &amp;II bre eds Ph 446 7878

1972 DODGE Sta t1on Wagon
al so 1975 Montt Carlo Ph
day 446 4889 or eve
446

3780

251 2
OWNER

1911 Monle

Ca rlo 400 V 8 eutomel!c
lransmiSS IOn P S p 8 air
condll onlng bucket suts
A M rad i o
stereo tap e
plaver green with dar k
green v iny l to p Cen be sl!!e.n
at The Galli PO liS Da lly
Tribune
825 Th ird Ave
be fore 3 30 p m or call 992
6192 after 4 p m

AKC Reg m n poodle
1
black I champagne S75
446 0536

-

251 6

----- --- -~

H !MAL A Y A N and SIB m ese
kltlcns .. "everal co lors CFA
reg Co li 446 3844
248 6

Wanted To Buy

Brough .!1m 4 500 actua l
mi tes ra&lt;11al tires AM FM
stere o fe c tory 81r $2 675

Ph 388 9983

-1960 CHR YSLER

249 6

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

4 dr

nice

con d
S500 or best offer
I. eav e wor d at Ga iJII!I Hotel

248 6

-1971- --F IAT- --------sports Spyd er 124
con-vert1ble
38 ooo miles
sharp S2 000 446 1&lt;125

251 6

LOG S
Pomeroy Forest
Products pay ing top pr ices ~ O A: your T re and Ba ttery
needs co me to Sears T ~re
tor to gs delivered to th e1r
Shop .n The Silver Bridge
m lis on Bailey Ru n Rd Off
Plaza
H ig hway
12 4
be tw ee n
3311
Pom eroy and Rutland OhiO
Call ~92 596 5 for dell-very
IOSirUC l lon i
19 71MGM IDGET .tspd eH
250 6 cond loW m11eage Marge
black wH h b lack Interior
Ph 304 273 3690
OLD toy trans anv pi eces
250 3
par Ls or accessories
No
~o

"6 1822 Ca ll a11cr 6
251 6

liifYiNG

U ll

2HI Mercerv1ll e w1lh 1 or 2
small childr en 256 654 4

For Lease

r oom
hoUse ro ca ted on Rt 141
Jus out of c y 11m I s w h
lois -. o f shade t r ees
ba se(T1ent
modern k 1
cKen na t g as fu r nac e
water
lar ge n tc e
111 ce \6 x 18
but ld.ng ga rden
Call now
~ .. 68ACRES ..,.
Beacrt lful o d Styl e hom
1n exce llent co nd on
moder n B rooms f ul l
gooct fu rnitur e barn
ot h er
o utb u ICH
ca rpet ed locat ed ""'" '"" ' '•
1 nul e off Slate H
325 near th e
Bollpm land C.=t ll new

br! i't UI f ul

96 acres of goad t.rnbe r 1n
MC 19 S Co All qas and o I
r qh s ncluded

19'l I I

LI GH T nousrk eep ng
Pclrk Ce 1tral Hot el

•- HOUSE

Nkfe .&lt;: Qm fort abl e 5

TIMBER LAND

Sp ec al
w eek ly
rate s
Ctrc le sMo te 1380 E e~st c r n
AvP. 4 16 7501

[;

NEA R TOWN

rwp

P OSSf'~StOn

MILLS VILLAGE
3 BR 1
bath bu It n
252 3
CAR PE-TS an d I tc too can he lc. 1 ne n p a t o doors n
FU RN 3 r..oom hoUse near
bt! aut1fu1
b eau fut tf yo u u~e Blur d n n &lt;l ro om
town 10 1 or 2 adu lt s no
ga rag e
f u ll
Lu st c
Rcnl
c l ec r 1.: 'I d p e.,
pets dept re q 446 25 43
shampoo er
1
Cc l fr il! h ht? m ent 2 pa hos WPII
252 3
1a1' d"n o eo tr:Jwn
Supply Cu
93 ACRES
752 6
Good 5 ro om a1 cl bath
J2x60 3 BR carp eted m ob1 l C hom e lar ue ba r n pt entv
ou tbu1ldt n.9 s
al l
home central a r e1 nd ht&gt;a l
m a c htn-ery ttiC i ud 1ng 2
beau fu ll v loc&lt;II Pd 77J 5 ~61
25? 1 tra c on. B he ad of call lc
IMQe IObac co buse located
NOW OP EN Car l s Produ ce 10 11 ' fr om town
'
M ark el former y S1gt er s
1 &amp;2 BEDROOM
LIS T TODA'i" ~ I T Wl j...L 1
M arke t Slone gr ound c.orn
APARTMENTS
w 10 1esa1 e an &lt;J P AY WE SEL L BETTfO R
m ea t
LI V I N G
From 1140 per ma
Reta I 0pf!n9 6 n;:~ly 111
Sundays 7t.J2 Th rd Ave
Open Dally Ito 5
2521
Saturday 12 fo5

ted

SPRING VALLEY
GREEN APARTMENTS

_____,

Closed on Sundav

BR OW N s Hardw~r e v nton
388 8179
W~rm
Oh1o
Morn ng 701 wo od burn ng
Located Vt mile west ol
st oves w th b!Owt'r Sl iS
Holzer Hospital on Rf 3S.
Rem 1gton Cha nsaws 14
$139 95 11
$119 9'i elec
tr tc S4&lt;1 95 wood bur n er&amp;
$17 99 S?9 99 Buc k ey e co t~ I
1\5d 1&gt;184
9 l&lt; 12
s l aves
SLEEPING Room we ek ly
tm ol eum ruqs StO 9S
rate Gallla Hote l
1.5 1. I

Ph. 446·1599

n a Res lrtc led
Estate
uy 1
ome and get a
$2 000
com e ta x cre d1f
II has ~ a tamlly roo m wiltwood 'burnin g f•t epl ace
1' ba ths 2 ca r garage 2
story modern hom e wtlh
dish w asher Located on a
lar'ge lot Mu st see th 1S
home to apr ec at e

TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townhouses
Jl/2 Baths
Pay Only One Utthly
Addtson. Ohto
For lntormahDn
Call Shirley Adkm s

Oh o

lso 3

.

P1 ECE I vm g roo 1l "i ullr
S75

219 II

--------------MO B ILE home spa ce for re nt
~46 0008

23711

? ~6

605B

2SO 6

-5 ------------ROOM house turn near
HM C S120 mo adu lt s 446
44 16 after 1 p m

___,. __

2SO 6
-------TRAILER space 1 mil e above
Sli ver Bridge Plaza on R 1 7
water furn ished Ca ll 446

2SO 3

In c &amp;9art
ment 2 BR carpet ed to tal
electric Ph 675 51 0.4 or 675
5386 Sand Hill Rd
Potn1
Plea sant w va
32 II

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

FURN apiS 1 BR ond 2 BR
In PI Pleasano 675 429)
25 1 3

25 1 3

GOOD cl ean lump and stoke
coa l Car l Winters
Grande Ph 145 5 t 1.5

R io

,

.

245 It

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets
~6

&lt;U &lt; 009

USED OFFSE T PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20'

61or 51 00

~alii polis
421 Third Av e
Ga llipohs 0

243 11

-------------OOWNTOWN Eff
U6 4905

-

_,__..

~PI

Ph

_______ _

74 6 11

BRADBUR Y eff apartm ent
No l adults only no pels

Ph 4&lt;6 095 7

246 If

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

FURNI SHED apartmen ! off
street park1ng I or 2 ltdult!i
cenlrallv lOCatE-d 446 0336

01. 0 Stiver co ins. 1964 and A PARl 'o\ENT fo r lease 3281 ~
208 If
Second Ave
overiooklpg
under Sl tor halves SOc tor
c
11
y
pNk
'
2
B
R
liv
1
ng
room
Quarters
20c fo r dimes
k tt chen with range rt&gt;frig .-tARGE room facln~ park
Premium for sliver dollar s
and d n.ng area both 1135
l •ghl
housekee pi ng
Naomi W•gs 405 2nd Ave
per mon ltl vear s tease
elewator
fa c l!l ttes f or
Ph 4~6 8533 Hrs
Tues
Call PJ S .toll6 1819 OF 4f6
reltttd person Park Central
Wed
Ti&gt;urs Sal 10 30
Hole!
44!5
1
5 30 F r 10 30 lo 7 p m
245 tf
9B If
709 II

------.-- -------.-

65

LOTS OF

LOTS -

All

d n ecl loo s
Whether
bu ld ng or buy mg a mob lie
hom e call 446 0008 Joday

owN E A: WAs 1ra nsterred
an d offe!'s th 1s J BR r anch
n c ty sc hool d lst w l h 2
ba ths modern kllchen
la undry rm
ww carpet
garage and l arge to t

ai

LIS TING S NEEDED WE
ADVERTISE
NATIONAL~Y- WE BUY
- SEL L - TRADE
FIN ANC IN G AVAILABLE
- Lovely brick and fr am e
bi l eve l fea tu res 3 BR s P 2
ba ths fam tly rm
larg e
d1nmg area 2 car garage
cent air and kitchen w1lh
bu It In ra n ge hood dish
washer an d di sp S31 900

6

Large flal

3 BR

ran ch has lot s to offer for
on ly
$15 000
Spec ial
f ea tu res are redwoo d
s dtng cedar lin ed closets
m odern k1lchen basement
and a large lo t o-v erlooking
!he OhtO Rlver at th e edge
of tow n

FOR RENT -

•

•

....•
•

155 Acre

pasture land barn pond
no house located 6 ml
fr om lawn

PERRY TWP - 218 acre
farm comp lete l y fenced
so A ltllable 2 ponds 2
barn s corn cr bs good 7
rm home S60 000

the f rst to see this
beaut tul m od ern 2 story
n ea r town Owner hes
bo ught a farm and agreed
to part with the 4 large
BRs 2V2 baths 2 wood
burn ng fir epla ces formal
d1n 1"19 rm new carpet hot
wa ter heat phone lacks
nt er com system
full
basement and 2 ca r
garage Th e dream kitchen
.ncludes a Corn ing cooktop
eye level oven ref diSh
washer and new oak
cabi ne ts Th1s 1S one of the
n ces l homes on the market
and
pnc ei:l
below
r epl acement cost

""
""
,..

We

se ll

n nyth1
,,nvbod~ at our
Barn or 1n vo ur hom e
in form .' lfion c~nd pte
se rv1c C Cil lt H66967
5 ~lo Every Sc1 tu rday
N lg tlt at7 p m

l tl O 11

RUSSELL WOOD
REALTOR
446-1066

232 If
1\ L I TY P ES ol b !JI Idmq
ma t er r:~t s blo Ck br ck
se wer ptp es
w1ndow s
I nt el!&gt; etc Claude W nters
R 10 C. r a Hi e 0 Phone 245
~ 1 ? 1 311 cr 5

SWAIN
AUCTION SERVICE
Swam Aucl
Co,rner Tt11rd &amp; Oh vc

K ~o: nlt c th

......1\...

-.-- 'J~ -_;;--;..{,)

I

front

of

the

I ~rl c ed 518 000

small do Wn payment will
lei you take Immediat e
possession of thi s almost
new J BR ranch Special
features are a modern
k1tchen wt th r ange and
d1sp nKe laundry cent
atr and oaragc

12)(5 5 NEW Moon trailer on ~"'
100ll 160 lol G&lt;t ih polls F err y
ecl! on 30 H arrison Twp
!li7 ooo 675 39119 1
~
!(1
4 ac res fo r 56 ooo can be
' .. I' , 7&lt;17 7 J ~lnan c ed «lose (p Ra ccoon
~L..,__..o...!o,__;tre ek ~ • ) \
~~
LIME STONf:: for drtv ewayS_.4C5n~
..
lo1
lefh
on I( @o rn pe~
Cur l 1 Wln terS t PJlWfft"" 245"'"
Hollow priced s ~ 825
,
;l iS
,
, ~ :....
~
V"£45 fl .
11 Burger Stree t ., two
bedro oms up and down gas
New GMC
M
rurnace storm doors and
Truc k Headqvarters ~
torm windows $14 000
1970 Da tsun ?tc kup tru ck
HA loan can be as su m ed
1971
1 T Che-v Cab &amp; Cassis "
! 7 • per cen t with down
1971 7 1 T GMC Ca b and
paymen•
Chas sis
1968 1 l l GMC Pickup
of Bulavill e Road
197 1 GMC Suburban
n d R o ut e ~60
thre Et,
19)3 ' t GMC Pick up
e droOI')) A ~bu je fai\IIIY

....

1.1..-4-

11910 For d

P l ci~PI ' ~ ~

1970 MOnte Ca~ fO&lt;r t t.
1974 Dodge S ports ma~ wa~cn
SOMEAS G M
J
Trucks tnc ,
133 Pme St

c,

44612532

i
un cnon~
i

~oom l~gO. u( olll y rOOI!I
f~ r ge arn t prYce redu ced
fOr,"' Ji ~''~ ~a le $~3 lOO

Jus OUI ;/de

the et l; I mI s

ver,y 1 n ice 1hrce, bedlam

)'1(/met on .. hCtle ca be
lflnanced Yfllh 11 000 ow n

!P•ymen l

INSULATE

14 Third

YOUR HOME~f
&gt;I

We blow msulahon '"walls and attu;s Fre
Eslimates ' Call
,,

PASQUALE ELECTR[C
AND lftSULATIQN
DAY 0~ NIGHT
103 Cedar St , Galhpohs
Ph. 44._~7t•

•
Avenue

Th ree
bedroom frame dwelling
a th storm doors and
window s sh ing led outstde

pr iced S\1 QOO

t.fls ~oom~ bath~J9Cited

66
Ch111t cotne Road pr ic ed ll l

ooo foo • ~w c K sa le

,.,,

,1(

l

73 S pru e~ Stree'l, d large:
rooms
batt'!

utllll'l r"oom an(f
com pl et ely
fu r

n liho&lt;J S9 000

,

,EV~NJNGS

RU$SELL WOOD
-r 4.4.46NI

'

2 Dr. 6 cyl enaine 3 soeed floorshlft corMk vlnvl - • •-flo, vinyl side mould ,
d lp rail mould , clgarefle lighter, deluxe wkeel cbver.

OHIO RIVER

Realty, 32 State St.
Tel. 614-446-1998 I

Realty Inc.

flo!

IN TOWN N let older
nome wllh l bedrooms li'J
baths partial baseme.nt
large garage nice l eve l rot
Located close to stores
Price $27 500

family

BOX 250

lot

Good !es
In c lud e air
cond drapes &amp; stainless
steel stove If vou want
quality location &amp; pr ice
~ this Is the one
: PINE ST - 5 rm ~ br ick &amp;
frame with partie! bue
This property Is In good

!

s.

GOOD

older tlome tile block
storage bid g &amp; g~rage
Louted on a b i g l ot

Bargain at S17 000
4

If you re
looking for a good farm
this 11 the best term we ve
had for sele The house Ia 1
1wo story 13 room brltk
home has 2 baths plentv of
bedrooms
!Ovelv new
kltcnen
Property has
several build ings 4 800 tob

F A fur ana F B Idee I for
couple

or

newlyweds Asking 111 000
GEORGES CR

RD

Good 6 rm
ho u se all
carpet plentv klt cab 2
baths F A Nat gas hea t
Sll) rage bldg and big lot

E• lra

PUBLIC AUCTION

corpel

Price S!SS ooo

VACANT

2

acres

~5

POMEROY -

storm

GOOD GAS

F A turn good roof good
hoi w tank Lot .. x360 1

River vieW On ly S16 000
• GREEN A · 1 yr old 3 bd_

•a~ rm

fram e hOm e

• Win

Th ermo

plenfy s!orage

tran sferred and has priced
thi s
hom e
be low

lnvellmenf
)c; 80 brick

build your plans or ours

ACREAGE -

YINTO N

ANY HR 446 ltfl

ra nges

qpportunity
roo~

f r ontage on Sho est r i ng
R ldge with rural water will
se ll an ~ pa~t or all 446 4335
2~ 9

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

PRICE

perfect

NEW

LISTING -

exttllenl

PRICE

buy

FINANCING

NEW LISTING -

PRICE REDUCED -

MAKE OFFER -

bedroom h om e car pet
tnrougnout !som e bran d
new) fu ll basernent large
lot edge of tow n tow down
payment

PRICE REDUCED -

38'1&gt;

balance

posture

and

City school

dlst

now 138 500
PRICE
Owner

REDUCED

tranSferred
J
bedroom b1 level huge
kltehen
2 fireplaces
family room 21ft baths l
c ar garege
excelltnl
loctflon close to Hot zer

PRICE

Spring

REDUCED

Valley 101

One

of the best bu ys In Gallla
County at $36~000 Verv
well
constructe d
J
bedroom
fully carpeted
hom e with 2 f i r ep laces 2
baths rec room family
room 2 car garage and full
basement There lsn t a
better buy and you 11 agree
upon seemg It

acres extra good ~ bedroom
home 10 acre crop l and
woods

Nice 3

-

Large

e!

~d

379 2676
250 6

1 LOTS In Kanauge Near
Shopping center Natural
gas available for heal
Would make wonderful

Mobile home lots can 406
9662
250 "

ATTN' HOME BUYERS

OVER 500 Home plans to
choose from your tot or
ours We seve yo u lime and
money up to 12 000 t~M
credit Rencho Co ,.Addison

Ph 379 2133

361 0300 Gallipolis 446 000 1

199 If

243 If

•

.:USTOM REMODE LI NG 20
years exper ience 388 8308
New dry wall cel hng w1th
SWtrl or tex tur e des gns
Othe r dry wall repa r vmy l
new baths
wa ll papermg
new kt tchens Anyth ng m
remode l ng or repa~r

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY Pamt ng
KOTAL" LANDSCAPING
residential and commerc1al
RIO GRANDE OH 10
lllf
Interior and e~~:tenor Barns
COMPLETE PROGRESSIVE
&amp;nd roofs alrless spray ng
LANDSCAPING
tr ee
es ti mate
Pa 1n t FUR NITURE
'S HR UBS TREES
ROC K
UPHOLSTER IN G prompl
anywhere 25 6 14.49
GARDE N S
ALL
service reasonable rates
61 If
GUARA NTEED Patio an d
poo l Jand sce pmg Stone
sand
roo !
shrubbery
tr, mm1 ng
Dump tru ck
ser-v1ces 245 91 31
187 If

. _ - - -...----------

F OR
THE best 1n ar
chltectural des1gn and plans
tor new homes
small
comme r c 1al building!. apts
6ACK HOE and do;r:er work.
or remodeling call Btl!
Sept ic tanks and leach beds
Walker Thurman Oh 10 1
38! 88 65 or JBB 8230
68'2 7498
140 If
198 If
D A LE
Sa nder s
Deliver y 256 6667

Wate r
211 If

Servrces Offered

BO RDER Garage Ou1lders
r r ee eshma tes ?56 6dl"
189 If

!.AND Y AND BEAVER In nORDER S GIIRIIGE

234 26

CALL Roger 'Nh1te for plumb
tng and re pa Irs Ph 25u 1'232
or 156 6411
S3 If

we 1nv1te you to v1s!t our
modern shop located tl
Mason Co Fatrground I T&amp;T
area l or call for tree
eslimllte s
Mowrey s
Upholst er i ng
Po i nt
Pl easant 675 415.4
219 If

Plumb1ng &amp; Heating
STANDARD

Plumbing Heating
214 Th lrd A-ve 446 3782

187 If

Door

suri!lnce Co has offered
servtce Commerc 1al and
ser-v ices for F tre Insurance
n
r es d ent 1al spe c1al z ng
coverage in Gat lla County
op erators L oca l 75 6 6J'?
for almost a century
189 If
F arms homes and personal
property coverages are
PORTABLE TOILET
avatlable to meet 1nd1-v ldua1
RENTAL
needs
Contacl
Ra y CON STR UC TION
Ouldoor
Wedemeye r your netghbor
Events Ph Galltpft ~ 446
and agent
41 87 Russells Plumbmg &amp;
252 6
Heatmg
190 "
DOZER work ex cavat i ng
land
cl e ar~ng
ponds COUGHE~'OUR
water
basements landscaping
Delivery 446 3962 446 4262
Call 446 0051
anv ti m e
163 If
244 tf

P &amp; P HOME Improvement
Roofing gutttrfng pain
tl ng f!ree estimates Phone

388 9927

Elec tr cal &amp;
lnsvtat•ng 103 Cedar ~ t
Ga llipolis F'h '46 271&amp;
126 ff

Wa te r Del verv Servtee
Patnot Star Ga tllpol•s

Bud McGhee 446 12S5

tron!age on Bulevllle Rd
4&lt;6 4570
252 6

P ~ S Q U ALE

AlBERT EJIMAN

We need listing s Call the
Wtsemen Agency 446 J6•J
G~llla Co s L1rgest Real
Est1te Salu Agency
Off1ce 446 3H3
Even l nqs Call
Ike Wium an 446 3796
E N Wiseman ••• C500

Semces Offered

Services Offered

Servrces Offered

LOVELY l Br Home on 2
K&amp;M construct1on
acres land near Pa trio t
Companv
250 6
Ohio SlOO down payment
Tvpes o f Construction
we will finance Call 1 614 ALL
free estimates 4•6 9202
3 BR TRAILE~ end house 2 1676693
249 "
acres ot around 17 .500 on
2S2 6

Gorman Ridge

FINANCING

Sunday Shoppers Welcome
Come In and Browse Around

Spring

Valley - A very nice 3
bedroom ranch with la rge
family r oom Most of th s
home Is newly carpeted
Nice
kitchen
formal
din i ng , wood
burning
fireplace Owner bUild ing
new home

u'

land In
Ph ~"

GOT SOME MORE, TOOl

Now S33 000

REAL ESTATE LOANS
II BR CAPE Cod st)lle home
for sale over 2 400 sq fl VA - No Down Pav ment
Most Veterans still Qual fy
plus 2 car garage patio and
check to be sure FHA - As
1 6 x27 porch Has a
low as 3 percent down fireplace utili ty rbom air
Bl LEVEL s bedrooms
Everybody qualifies 30
cond built In kitchen with
fam lty room
air con
year lerms Refi na ncing
D w ana diSposa l City
dltloned 21, b1lh1 country
also avatlable First Mort
wate r and gas on one acre
ltltlng IOI Wllk to IChoolt1
gage Services 77 E Sl ate
101 lor only 136 000 4~6 4570
Pomerov 1re1
best of
Athens
Ph
592 20S2 for
2526
financing low 40s
Ph
Informat
ion
Alhens 592 30S2 lor In
245 If
VACANT land In Galllpoll$
rormatlon
lownsh lp 4 2 acres
596
251 2
vacanl

'2497

36 MONTHS

J Mochttl Netl446 1501
S.m Nut
flSI

Green Township
4216

LeSabre 4 Dr Air cond marlin blue
white fop We sold ol new Was S289l 00

15 000

'2997

REDUCED

Betu t •fu l large country
home 3 bedr oom s 2 bat tls
2 car garage 1 800 sq ft
llv •ng spate large flat lot
county rd and c ity schoo ls

neighborhood

large lot edge of town
S22 900
Low
down
payment 1 This is a good

a or cond

Duster 2 Or Hdtp

mtles new Prem Tires Nice

AI

trectlce .4 bedroom horne
built In kttchen carpet
throughout H w floors

'3997
1973 BUICK

REDUCED

Evenings
CharlesM NeeltUlSU

7 ACRE S

Darf Custom 4 Dr automatic P
steerong v nyl top 778 moles 76 Buock
lrade

1974 PLYMOUTH

Oil lee Ph 441 ""

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

M&lt;inl a 2+2 air cond automatic P
sleerong sold new for S5500 Sharp

'3997

large older 2 slorv plenty
of rooms for any size
family countr y setting on
Rt 71n Ky ger Cr Sc Dlst
S23 500 Make offer

and priced al U6 900 Like I
SOld
YOU II say II S

CARTER S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth &amp; P1ne
Phone 446 3888 or .446 •477
16) If

GENE PLAN TS&amp; SON

PLU MB I NG - Heatmg - A r
Condli iOnlng 300 Four th
Ave Ph d46 1637
48 If

DEWITT S PLUMBING
AND HE ATIN G

Route 160 at E-vergreen
Phone 446 2735
187 If

ANNOUNCING THE ANAL CLEARANCE SALE ON All NEW 75 UNITS IN STOCK. COME IN AND LOOK THEM OVER,
1

\

BUY THEM FOR WHAT WE PAID FOR THEM. COME IN •EARLY WHILE THE SELECTION IS GOOD.

Open Evenings Till 8 P.M.
1972 RID

f.100

1973 atEVIIU£T.
:usroM 10 PICKU
V \. t~ ltltft rldto

r ~--

$2195

$2595

1971 DATSUN

1974IORO
GRAN TORINO

·--·IZOO

vinyl roof new wtlltl
tldtWIII tlrtt.

lptrt VI 1vtom1tlc
allorlno vinyl rao1
riKI"' mtrrorl tlr ltndtr
llr.lrtt rid with black vk'lyl
top. nd and "'Kic tnttrtor

1975 PLYMOtml
DUSTER

1970 lORD
MAVERICK

1974 OIEVROI.ET
VEGI.

f' cy linder

2 door 6 C)'llndu stand
shift vettow finish bladt
lnftrlor tlttra st\trp

automal c
.,wtr sleerlng maroon
ttn •h with wh te vinyl top
sllv~ stripes new spring
special 'lltrtor tess than
lOO
m•'"' Factory
warranty

Station wagon • speed
!~gage

biV"'

rack air medium

flntsh

$3995

of

1974 IHVRCUr

VEGA

can

See

G T Htlcht.d. A lplllld

llualntu

Prlt:t

1

business lnctudlnl real
tstate end equipment Cell

1970 DATSUN
U'L IIISiliR
Pickup A speed
fin sh bucket Sf&lt;' II

blut

1395

5

good

home will buy this tood

3 ACRES wllh 600 fl

-

1975 DODGE

S49 900

formal entrance large
livlno room dining 2112
baths 2 car garage 1'12 lots

We gol II All

Keystone Road . You
make mo ney here
today

Asking

• $27 lOO

•

ES!obll s hed

NEAR MINES
14 ACRES leve ll~nd Cretk 3
BR mobile home 2 BR block
home La! of tron 1age on

quallly build hOme Own er

~ replacemenl cos!

You re

tractive
3
bedroom
Colonial ranch firepla ce
1112 baths full b11ement

laM yeiiM end brawn
BrMutiM concltfton

- Bldg lol• - Mobllo
home lois we got !hem we

r lc e
r.oeatlon
s

cop

; plumbing
att gar elec
fur &amp; all carpet Th Ia Is a

I

'tRADE

' ~OTS

o

!,

REDUCED

1975 CHEVY

fully carpetea home with

Vol ,....,d thHt two

opportunity •o
bus i ne ss bldg
corner
locatron ;ood tenants OOOCI
r elurn Call Jay Sheperd
today

OCTOBER SPECIA~
Garfield Ave, S rm.s, bath &amp;
&amp; WIN

NEW LISTING -

gotng to sav 1t s perfec t almost new 4 bedroom

WANT$
YOUR
PJIOPE RTY SOLD LIST
WITH US

acres

refiring Call tor details

mobile homes Sl7,500

drs

PRICE

You II never buy this s1zed
house for th1 s man v dollars
ever
agatn
Huge
4
bedr oom
hou se
o-verlooktng th e river 3
baths
forma l d ln tng
ftr epfac e family room
cen t air 2 car gara ge
Excellent co n stru c tion
You must see l h1 s no w

'3997

1973 GRAN

1974 FORD PINlO
STATION WAGON •
• Cylinder 1u ome tlc
radio IUOt&amp;Cit rtck 8 ooo

""""
Baby blut
tertor

with blue In

lOR INO
~
doer se d/I n
V8
autom,.Hc por¥er steering
power bfek K laclory a r

v nyl root low m ltage

$3295

business opportunlly Sl50 M
oross S23 M net Owner

A wl!h

siding

20

4~

~•• ~ohnson 256 6740
Doug Wetherhall44t 4244

fenc .. Only 113 500 Wl!h 2

Alum

BLDG

Owner transferred

Eventngs Cell
John Fuller 446 Ul7

73 model Mob ile home b ig
barn tob bne and good

ba se

S10 000

POMEROY -

VICTORY RD -

Du~

LAND -

WE BUY, SEll.

lOT - 1 rm frame 2

S18 000
~

fireplaces 3112 baths room s1zed cedar closets perfec t
kttchen and I guara ntee the bedrooms Are large
enough Lot runs to the riv er and offers a magn lf1cent
view Don t miss th• s opportuntty We wtll arrange for
you to see It at your conven1ence

NEAL REALTY

s10 ooo 40 acres 11 200

story home w lth base fur
heat cen air ball'! carpet
over H W floors 2.5 n ice
kit cabinets
has barn
oar ~nd 'h A lor Price

Located on State Route 93 approximately 3
m11es South of Jackson, Oh1o Watch for
Public Auct1on S1gns Posted

'4497

Shown by

appointment

tlreplacts and elec heat
Located an a 3 A wooded
lot P( fCed In the teen s
PAT~

a

lofellme We have reduco&lt;J the proce S11 500 on fhos
home because Morris Hask ins says to sell ol th os
month This home cannot be dupl ocated for 5150 000
Approxomately 4 000 sq ft of l1vong area wo th 3

AND HOME - Mercantile
Upsta irs c ould be con
ver1ed Into an apartmenl
Firs I floor sale room 48JIC 12
and a Iaroe wart- room
large basement Home 5
r ooms and bath far ge
garden spot

AM FM

19 000 mtles showroom cond 1flon

bose app 90 llllable acres

nice &amp; rms and bath
countr v home ha s b een
Jcompletely redone Ins ide

wl!h paneling

PRICE REDUCED

MERCANTILE

Royale 2 Dr Hdtp ai r cond

new m June balance factor y warranty

LadleS and Gentlemen you re mtssmg the buy of

wllh 36 acres river boltOfl'l
Lois of frontage on Ohio
Ri ver and both sides of Rt
7 Locllted below Gallipolis

Price S25 SOO
BULLSKIN RO -

3

187 ACRES -

rm house with bath base
attic storaoe new carpet
retired

Nice

121 ACRES - Good farm
with l bedroom house has
a 2 000 lb lobocco base 2
tool sheds 1 large new
barn land hi!l s good fence
Located on Rt 418 Shown
by ~ppolntment

2ND AVE - 2 story 6 rm

N IC~

BUY -

bedroom
double wide
mobile home balh liv
room kllt hen w ith range
refrigerator Loca ted on 1
acre close to Holzer
Hospital

cheap at 112 ooo

CENTENARY -

Golljpolls 0
LISTING - Nice

NEW

! rm panel mete\ storage
bl dg

Osur Bllrd
John Fuller
Doug Wethtrholt
4Sl Second Ave

1974 OLDS

Rallye Spe rl a or cond 5620 miles sold

12 500 down

home w1th 2 or 3 bedrooms
bath flY rm k t1chen full
basement garage J"'ouse
has alum i num siding
basement needs work on
Can be purchased with or
wHnout furn iture Located
on Chill colhe Rd

: rm frame home llh ba1h s
1- new carpet over H W

copper plumOing

446-3434

(H

CENTENARY - Beauty 6

Approved by fhe Ohio
Slate Board of School
and
College
Rego s lraloon
11
Columbus Ohio
R09ostrallan No 71 12
0284H
Phone Golilpolos
446 2911

Real Estate for Sale

REALTORS CONSULTANT

WOW I 2

t*

Auctioneering

radio sliver bllcll In

"'"'

1973 lORD

MAVERICK
JI:N llnlsh 302 V 1
ltlftidtrd
rMioctmn
wf'lh.
well
HrM"''"
.._,

1973 OOOOE
I).ZIJO
Aut.n•ttc poww ttetrlng
power brlktt riCIIo bhA
n wl&gt;llo flnlol\

1971 PLYMOUTH

1972 DODGE
OIARGER

Two door hardtop VI
automatic power s leerlng
power brallt\ ta ctoryl!lr
viny l roof red wlf h blaCk
lop &amp; black n!er lor R!!lll
~e rp machine

FURY
door hard top, V I
brakes
power steering atr 90ld
I nlsh brown vtn., top Al l
aotd vtnv t Interior
I

A\.!l omattc power

1973 PLYMOUTH
VALIANT
• door
cyt l'ld&amp;r

Wanted To Do

room tam 11y room kitchen
dining room New cerptt

Fencea to! Low 120 s

PI ,O,NO ~nd flute lessons for
chlldn,m end ll dulls Mrs
Mark Harl 446 3792

244 12

------------Y-'

Will tlnance, 7 rm hOust wllh
bath In cUy limits Carport
2 porches large lot Call U6

4127

Brolcers Builders

-.'f 5 occorDt!ng pa~nl ng

wa ll par,er l n9 paneling
1 ree est mli! OS 61'1 5689

Auctioneers

RANCHO COMPANY
Addison H7 0310
Gtlll1 oils 441 0101
-'--~---- ~

automatic

CRICKET
6

~Itt ln l ~lor gold

I!Kter or

Two do or 4 cyl nde r
au tom at c g o d I n sh
ad o Sharp

1595

5

2395

5

1973 BUICK
LESABRE
H•rdtcp
v 1 powtr
ttterlng power brakes
vinyl roof • r AM radio
l•ctory t•pe

1974 QtEVR(lET
C.30
t Ton cMnls cab wl1h ftat
bed • •peed. v 1 power
st..rlng A t " l sharp one

1972 PlYMOU11i
FURY Ill
• lkiOr V 8

~tu tomallc

POWI!f' !!olcerlng factory air
vinyl roo! rrd tlnlsh bllldo
ln l.'rlor black vl ny lop
m~~

tltm

Jty Shepptrd lor dtlolls
GREEN SCHOOLS
3 THREE or lour bedroom
home on Rl 141 Living

53 I

I,

Jt.

1975 CAMARO

Off. 446·3643

Hospllol Now 139 900

MASSIE

fl llv area on main f1 r 3
best
baths 4 bd rms
grade of cerpe f and
Chan del iers thai make
your eyes pop open Fu ll
equipped kllc.hen with Club
Bar Slldlng gf&amp;ll Cff'S '" OPtn
on to deck from din area
F utt finished base w ith
fam ll y rm
Rec
rrn ,
laundry and 2 car oar w ith
etec dr Big lot &amp;nd Pr iced
replacement co st

School of

' :

i~
:

Real Estate For Sale

elec I heal pump I 2 100 sq

to discontinuing operation of the J1ck- Covotv
Home, we will sell the entore contents contlsllflt In
pari
2- ldea l611 x eII Walk In Coolers Frigidaire Electric
Range (still under warranty) , Ta~pan Electric ~ange,
6 II Range Hood Relrlgeralors Norge Chest Type '
Deep Freezers Square Tub Wuhlng Machines.
American Electric Meat Slicer Commercial Electric
Mixer Slalniess Cooking Kettles Dining Tables, 38
Iron Half Beds (complete) Metal Olllce Dnk, Sam
sonlfe Metal Folding Chairs Curtains Bed Llnans
Melal 2 door Wardrobes Chest of Drawers, Bed Pans
Walkers Oak Washslands Coovalescenl Chairs, Cable
Upright Plano Towels &amp; Washcloths Eleclrlc Gas
Pump &amp; 500 gal Tank Old Dressers wlfh Beveled
Mirror s Wicker Chain Ladder Back Chairs Rocking
Chairs Chifforobe Wood Folding Bed Brass Sholl
Bed Judges Chairs Old Bread Box Camel Beck
Trunk s Meal Block Blacksmith VIse &amp; Anvil, Chairs
of all kinds Brass School Bell Glass Tapped Fruit
Jars ~arge Oak Library Table Tjn Doored Pit Sales
Fooled Casl lror Balh Tub Porch Swings Oak Ladies
Wrlflng Desk Old Night Stands Wooden &amp; Porcelain
llllrber Ct&gt;elrs Stone Jars &amp; Jugs Gr~ln Bin Dining
Room Sullo J unk F111e Antiques &amp; Collector's Hems
too numerous Ia mention Truly a large salt with
verity Scmelhlng lor everyone
TeRMS CASH
Lunch Will Be Served
BY THE ORDER OF
THE JACKSON COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Dory I Alban
- AUCTION E ER5Kenny Sw1in ••
Oak Hill, Ohio
Galllpotlr, Olllo

••
•

1976 PLYMOUTH DUSTER

DEBBY OR -

SAnJRDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1975
STARTING AT 10:30 A.M.

i

SPECIAL

vn old all brick and all

Travel trailers, mob1le homes, truck
campers. Now on display. Special pr1ces on
a few remamrng 1975 models and used units
Open 7 days a week. One m1le west of
Jackson oro U5 35.
Phone 2116-5700

prope r ty

•

•

Real Estate For Sale

GREE N ACRES - PRICE
REDUCED TO 125.900 A

Apple City RV Sales

bne oraol i# hook up o1n 11
j- ural waler iusl a dded lo

:•

'

REALTOR

...

i

repolr

aG e5, of1 thel ground!
ocaled ad tacent to Tycoon
ake ca n Hf! fman ced has

lHIS
WE ~K
0 l.;t ~
RICES NEW &amp;
SED
- - --

ul loly

'

..

\ •••••••!~31.~~}!~!!!~~1~!~~~~}1!\•••••••••1

t&lt;~

N E W 2 pi edi
vtng 'r06I
sut te l 16 9 vs R EG , n~l9 9~,

-~ ~ - --

('

room
large
fron t room
jern k1t
chen p le n ty of cabinets
corner •oJ P'nted $36 000

F I R EWOOO to r sale $15 per
1rv c k
load
446 753d
any! m e
rt.. .. 23;kij

FURN 446 H23

"L D m
..,.,. ..

ba lh

TJ ..

SE Y U

America's No. 1 name
in Recreational Vehicles
New three bedroom bn c~
on Rou 1'i fu lly ca r pe ted

0:

•3450
*
i*
~
l
i GALLI POLIS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTHi

Introduces the 1976 Coachman

123 II

,.

I

KNOnS

fl rc tr c
l?or
tcc tr 1c f\ t or ,,;dar
PI 'n '&gt; P
I 16

..,

'

i
i
i

.,..

r

,

The WISEMAN Agency

t

:* 72 GREMLIN 2 DR 3 Speed 6 engine .............. .. ... .... ........~1595 *~
72 DODGE QtALl.ENGER 340 auto frons yellow black lop • • ... , ... 12395 :
*~ 72 QtEVY NOVA 2 DR Blue while lop '" .... " " " " " • • • "" ... .!1695 :
72 DODGE CORONET Custom 4 Dr Sedan Special Price ............11695 *
*~ 71 DODGE DEMON 340 auto p s ..................................·'1695 ~~
70 PLY, DUSTER 2 Dr 1 owner 6 auto, P S ... ... .... .. ...... ........11495

**
*
~
1

IF YOU WANT THE BEST
FOR YOUR FAMILY be

._

Real Estate For Sale
;-----=---- ------'--~---,-

: 75 PONT, GRAN PRIX 3,000 miles Brand new condition .............14395
~ 75 OLDS CUTlASS SUPREME 2 Dr H T Extra sMrp . ......... J4595 ~
*74 BUICK LeSABRE Luxus 2 Dr H T 1owner local musf see to oppreclafe '3895 *~
~
*~74 DODGE DART CUSlOM 4 DR Alrcond PS , PB .......... J3J95~*
~
* 74 QtEVY MALIBU QASSIC 2 Dr H T extra nice ................ J369S *~

RANNY BLACJ&lt;BURN,
BRANCH MANAGER

150 6

HO USE
~:~11a !able NOV .., )
c lose to Kyoer Creek H S re
dep req Call 367 7167 fo r

appl

l arg e Jol wit h
p l ~ntY
gard en tl spa ce
Por ch Tota l pn ce $6 500
3 OR 4 BEDROOM
7 r oorns and ba th f ull
basement
garba ge
sa l
ctty water
• r ar&lt;oort n1ce level tot
sp ace porc h A
and nice hom e
• :c·c.·c·c ~ to sell

AP PLE Clly RV Sale s 2 - NEW Aman aD S Cl C by S de
Amerl ci'l s No I ~;oac h~··
22 c u fl rE!fnger4;'t ors a
veh icl e on(! m rlc We$
(
grea t ba r ga in a SS99 Dill(' s
Jil ckson on li S '35 Ph
G
Kilchcn
Center
21\9
5100
Jackson A ve Pl Pl cr. sant
242 16

-- ---------' ---ai r Daily Tribune
446
244 II

HARRI SO N TWP

ec.res of wooded ht lls wtlh
tro ntage on 2 roads aboul
10 m 1 fr om town S12 900

15 1 3

w v.

20 A

plus a 7 BR mobile nome
Th e land 1s mos tly I liabl e
an d front s en 1 ro ads

TR AILER lor salo Call 4116 CH IMNEY Blocks Ga llipoli s
0562 before 11 a n or a fte r I
Block co 'd6 2783
•
pm
231

2 BR

MOBI LE home
, ..,unt y wat er
cond

NEAR VINTON -

wa shers and dryer s
r e pa r ed "''d g 1a r i'lnh:: ed
\3 5 and vp L&amp; ~ app l ence
s1 rv Ct&gt; 300 F ou r l h Ave
Re 1r
b ehlf)d
Pla nts
Plu n b i n g

75 I 3

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

10x41 MOBILE hom e w w
carpet $150 utl l lttes pd
Flh 446 4416 after I p m

1

252 J

F EET
1
nch p lr1 5h c
water ! n e 100 lb s prcS':i llr e
$1 600 R h1 ? l\o:c. SA Pa1n o1

Lov ely 3 BR ran c h has HW
floor s gas heat a1r cond
and gara ge The ki tchen Is
co mpl el e w th ga rb age
&lt;1 sp d1shwasher eve le-ve t
oven r ange hood and r ef
P r ce d 1o se ll at S23 000

'

vacan tot s on Chestnut St
zon es r es 1dCn l at 112 000

RIVER VIEW -

.- .-

,,

U~E O

100

F URN APT a ll ultl llles pd
Adults only .1\ 46 9523

029&lt;

5 roqms

1 ht 40 CA BIN Two bed room
1 V1ng r oorn
kitchen bath
tn-;u l ill cd fu l y carpeted
KIMBALL Swi nger 100 or gan
$3 100 In c lud es clelt v ery
doubl e key board r ny fhm
r ho 1e 67 5 40 79 Btl! Sturd l
se c t10 n S900 P t 4116 316
House Mason Co Ai rp or t
'152 J
Poi n t Pl easant
26SI

367-7250

851 3

WHAT A BUY

OL 1\L E

PINT O Run abO \J I 197:1 BIJIO
lik e new 8 000 m IF' wh c
w1th gr een 11lnv t top rad1 o
deluxe nt er or an d cxte r 01
7 rad1a ttre s S2 bB ~ Ph 6 /~

TARA

For Sale

TOWN

S22 500

•1\o\eaoo~,,gre ~ n

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

!

~

A Bt;;AUTIFUL
NEW HOME ,

For Sale

TO

NEA R CE NTENARY -

SA CRES

S Room House perc h
patlo)L rur.at wat(!r b uilt
1n c ab n e l s db ! s nk
loca ted 1n Kyg er Creek
S&lt;IJOO I D ls t.. "'dd 1son

N ce co1ne
lo1 3 B'R
b eauti ful kl!c h en
Jnd
d nln q r:~re a n any ex rns
st ora qe And ca rporl Qu ic k

roo .n

2 BR HOU SE lor rent on Rt

249 If NEW Regency

251 19 73 MERCURY Montego

If

WL: I'k. IV
It o c l

78 If

exc cond S1 495 also M 1
30 Ca l iber car b1ne deer r1fle OFFICE sp ace for rent
•90 675 5S11
dow ntown Ph 446 0008
_,.
25 1 5
231 If

ONE

?07 I

.

CLOSE

1

fr om

!'! &lt;;

lots on th e longes t creek In
the world These lots have
lets of shade lrees and
targe
g arde
spac es
L oca te d on a pn-vate road

Tw p

tow n
10
rc es 4
BR
ranch styl e w w
c arp ~!
2
I r ep laces.
ban Que s 1c k ! ch en w1 th
all
th e
ext r a s
f t II
b a semr!nl
p at a 2 eM
~ara ge outbu 1tdmg
barn
u nd p o1d a beaut lui home
tor Ct n stm :.s

UE ASO N /\tll) pr Cr'd ! OOI!"'IS

se ll

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

Profess,onal groom lng by
appo ln1m ent Ph 446 1944

t1 m
ac r es

Ad ult s only

I~J G
Room s
Pt~rJ... ({
r f!l

L, t E. I

1972 Dodge MODERN 3 BR ranch w w
Cha rg er 39 000 miles ·U6
carpet garage located 3
REG Beag le pupp ies Ca ll
1380
mtles tram town S200 per
'245 5&amp; 14 ell er 5
251 5 month plus deposit Ph d46
252 3
0008
ON E owner 1970 Ponl!ac tn
---------~237 If
REG
Wa l ker coon - hound
ma le 9 mo old S75 Red
bonde coon hound 3 yr old
tema te 1100 367 0795

WOODED ACREAG E

-JeW all elect ri c mobt iC hOilH'

6 ROOM fur n ished hou se 1n
Ga llipolis Ph 446 4507
252 3

250 3

19 72 GR !EML IN good con
ttltlon PS ai r cond 28 000

1.\UST

BR

.

72 FOR 0 ~ Ton PU Ranger
XL T 390 l!llr li UIO tran s
P S Pl3
AM F M Slereo
r adio r adia l !Ires 34 000
mi les Call after 9 p m or
weekends any time 4.46

72

257 J

VE RY n lce 3 b1 hom e rttn y c
and
retr ' I
c arp e t nq
hroug huu t $100 mo plu
depo s 1 Call i ke w serr cm 1
The W1scman Ag en cy
46
1643

NO DOWN PAYMENT IF

BUY AND DEVELOP -

t

1t

COM ME •CIA~
BUILDING WITH LIVING
QUARTERS
2 g arag es
ofl ce showr oom and th
balh downsta rs p lu s a
lovely 6 rm apt upstairs
Located obo ut 1m li es f rom
I ow n

YOU QUAL IFY If yo u
hav e a good 10b an d good
cr ed t be su!'e to see th s
new doubl e w1d e mob le
home w th 3 8R s b uilt m
k I chen shag ca rpel and a
large flat tat m Ad d1son

a good two res ae nna,
p r opt r ly 1 a r g a 2 story ; 3
l\1-l
lion c w!th modern
k c h eu and forma l DR ~
bsml gas fur Also 2 BR
g;;~ r a gc apr.r m ent
w1l h
beaLI ful k. ! chen 2 car
g ar and slorage
G RAC IOUS LIVING
W II be vovr way of ltfe n ,.
th s wo slory br d._hom e 4
large BR fOrt1rll OR w w
car p e
plu s an cx lr{t , t
100m apt fo r tha t ex tr a
ncome New Jtnk fenced
p cty yard
cnrport and
storag e Buy now and cal
T hanksq1v ng d nner h ~fe

203 I f

MUS TANG 6 cy l 3 spd

367 7101

-

Fall

H1ghest D iscount In Tr1
Stale we sell ser-vice and
quatilv compl ete package
deal
financ ing arranged
Ca mp Conley Star Craft
Sates Rt 6'2 N Pt Plea san t

Auto Sales

Auto Sales

..._

STARCRA FT

furn ace hea
tnq a t 631

252 3

189 I

A ULT S

257 3

I yr

ol d ran ch In exce ll ent
cond 110n ha s lot s o offe r
fo r or l y $71 900 Total
el ec tr c hom e features 3
BRs l aundry rm
l arge
k!lch en wt th dt shw asher
12X34 l am ty rm w th pa o
doors cent ral wa ter and
se wag e and a fl at tot n
Rodney V ll age II

CAMPSITES -

THIRD AVE

M OB ILE ho m c nRt oG rand(l
Oh io 2 Br PI ono 2&lt;1 5 9 131
7 8b

from town Ph 446 115B

Tr av e ler

1 wo s lor y 3 l3R home
over too k.n g W Va li !I s
N 1c e L R and for ma l DR
ov er s 1e stor aqe r ll and 3
por e! es Large lot w1th
o H d tno;nace $22500

UNFURN I SHED apar!m cnt
43
Co urt Strce Cilll 8 5
J46 1'37&lt;1 af ter S c all~ 6 0971
2118 6

2 BR mobile hom e 5 mil es

ph 446 7S72
Ba nk Fmilntlnq

SHOOTING MATCH
AI Raccoon Creek Hunting
Club 2 miles south of Vinton
an Raccoon Creek Sunday,
Od 26 all DO

2 BR Furn apt
u I lies pd
Four th Ave

NEA R SC HOOL

U RNI SH ED apartn en
j
roo ms pr va e b alh firs
fl oor 845 Sec ond I venue
Ph d 16 2? 15
2 8 I

I

252.

63 1 Four th Ave

H~

E l&lt; ll

-----------2 BR M H adults pr ef erred

Mob1le Homes lor Sale

446 1412

I

212 6

NI CE Unfurn apt 4 rm s and
bath ce n tr all y locat ed &lt;14 6
0444 aft er 6 p m

are

MARY

11 12 il

S02l G ~lhp o h s an
99 27777 Pom £' tO 'r' il i C' il

P~

BR House w w car p et
yard and
count y water
garden 367 71 67 lor appt
252 1f

4

now open ftl MI!J ry s Beauty

BY Profe ss iona ls Re std entlal
•nd Com mer ci al I n s id e
you r hom e or bu siness
Clean qu 1e t and effic ient
Out side In our tru ck Noi se
E)(trat:ted Wl!ler
Heavy
Equipment Free est1mates
For Q"'Ore lnfor conta c t
Scotdl Clean Clellner 656
2nd Av~ Ph 446 90'1:7 Duke
Cleaners 248 2nd Ave Ph

Buy u! l t ra de
R: lver R d .446 0002

0115

hook Up 1

Rod ney Co ra R d
Rod ney 01 o

6 RM HOU SE m Clipper
Mil ts S7S c 1ty wate r 446

Yard Sale
MUTT SV A ND

BEST JET STEAM
CARPET CLEA NIN G

s

252 6

recr c t~IIOn

I Crt:

252 If

1 BR MOB I LE Hom e Ph 446

Woll be closed beglnnong
Tuesdov for Equipment
lnsla llaloon Will be Open 2
PM lol 6 PM lor Drv
Clean1ng PICK~P ONLY.

HIGLE Y

0008

120 ACRE f arm for sa l e or

s hows 1 ltu s 3 B R o e floor
pio n A drean k1l chetYw1 th
a 1 II(' ex tr as f r E: plncc n
l R 1 d fa 11 1Y rn'l
full
d v d ed b!il1 1 car por t and
s lora gc ... urrounded w th
tJ eaul l ui !ihrubs end l ctw n

I~C IItln c lu ctc ~
SCWilCJI2
tr lSll

T V

FHA APPR OVED -

TLC
Te nd er krv ny care alway s

l Ots l or I'Cnl

Wd t cr
CO II CC f1 0n

it

25 Lo cus t st
Howar d Bran non Br oker
Ott &lt;146 2674
LUCill e Brannon
Eve 446 1226 or 446 2674

LOTS FOR RENT

NICE 5 rm and bath garag e
apt n tow n 5150 per man h
plu s !iec ur.ty deposit 446

or Sale

SPRING VALLEY
CLEANING CARE
CENTER

.lllJ•J•- ,

MOBILE COMMUNITY

For Rent

i
i•

~ PLY MOUTH
i Southeastern Ohio's ~ ~Ch!'-ler·P~ Dealer

QUAIL CREEK

248 •

•

~ ~·

GALLIPOLIS

i• CHRYSLER·

-1

8621

JIM BLEVINS
Pd Pol Adv

NOTICE

-

f A MILY w th one c tJIIu
desir es n1c el y furn tshed
home must be close to No ?
mm e rea so nab l y pr ced
need lmm ed1 ate ty Ca ll 3lHI

VOTE

•

- --· ----·- ---

Wanted To Rent

I

~

IN !; CQTTOWN Rl ?18 Clr ('a 'J [ R l o a 1 cl t l r c at Ol,lfHI
mal e bl ue I ck hound $SO
Creek Mob le Par k. Ph 7tS
10?
r r ward 130 1 522 8171
747 6
70

WANTED

Thurs

Sat

•************~~ ~~***** ••**********************•

•

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate for Sale

For Rent

~

NotiCe

35 - The SWlday Times Senlnll'l Sw d.l), 0&lt;1 26,1975

I
dOOr ~ II 0!'1 'w"W""
" ,.
, utcm•l c power sl ..rlng
pow~ brakes redia tii.Cttlertt
t11m11y car • 1691

ott fr

!actor~

09

�·;;;p;~'(R;ults Use The Sunday Times:.Sentinel Classifieds
OPALS CERAM ICS

OPE N

Tue s

Wed

Ap p ls only F r l

MQI'l

Su pplies Greenware f rmg

POWER PLANTS
TO PAY
ALL THEIR
SCHuOl TAXES.

,R eg
for cl as ses
Cc rt
teacher L 11da Harmo 1 4.t6
~467 or 145 9463

252J
RUMMAGE SALE
CLO T HI N G all ktn ds atl
shes good w tnter (Oa ts 9
tilt dark Mon Sat 39 Tell AS

Rd

252 3

---

r ent can be bouQht on land

contrac

37 9 2676

----------

3319

2SO 3

S"'OP
17
V nton
St
Gal li pol is Ohio Phon e no
446 86 28 or 675 1930 to r
a p po ntm e nt s
24B 6

TR I STA l E MOB ILE

HOME S

on

19

K

cs

Capallea J BR

x 50 N a 1CO ?

1965 10

1961 10

)C

so

204 If

J~

t9i0 A ll:

1

B~

nu ke ., 1\R

1q5
R )(
t? E lc ar
Trrt ler
19 '5 .,, 11 satan
196 1 '~0 It rro h c
1966 I
II Utop a

Travel

MOB ILE

Serv i ce

Home

Sk irting

roof

coa ting pat ios awnln\1S
an chors ce ment work Free
es timate s

u sed Book Store

Call 245 9411 or

245 9472 after 4 30 p m

Uppe r

'237 1f
_, ________ - - - - TWO WAY Rad 10S Sal es &amp;
Ser-vice New &amp; used C Bs
pall et! m omtor s antennas
e t c B9b s Cit ize n Ba nd
RadiO EQU IP
Georges
Creel&lt;. Rd Gal lipoli s Ohio
'46 &lt;517
212 If

215 If

197 1 Concord l2&gt;i65 M H 1968
Com madore 12x52 M H
1959 Colonial 10JIC.50 M H
B&amp;S Mobile
Home hies
Pt P leas ant w va
237 If
- - - - - - -.- - - - -

12x52 2 BR

MOBILE Hom ,

r eady lo move Into at Crown

Clly S3 500 256 1180

251 3
and
sew 1ng
ma chin e repair parts a n~
TRISTATE
supplies
Pick up and
MOBILE HOME SALES
delive ry Davis Vac uum
Cl ean er 1~ m lie up Georges 1973 Coventry 3 Br
197 3 Kirkwoo d 3 Br
Creek Rd Ph 446 0294
163 II 1972 Greenbri er 3 Br
1957 Nausha 1 Br
...... ~ .....
FQR MeMimum Securi ty use 1957 Tra-ve l T railer
Tie Down Anchors to 1971 Old s V ~ ta Cruiser low
mileage
Protect Your Mobile Hom e
BANK F INANCING
Complete Service c,u Ron
PH 446 7572
Skidmore J7911Sl or 446
23 9 I f
1156
SWE&amp;:PER

-- -------.--

_____ _______ _
220 II

._...

LOW we ekl y and month l y
rate s at libby Hote l 446

1743

244 If

HOMEMADE 8~81'1 .&gt;oup or
chill dally at The Burger
Hut Jackson Pike
22' II

1972 COVN 1K' ~ qu ire Pmto
Wagon 4 spd stand r adio
heater new stee l betted
t ires exc cond nslae and
oul S2 200 Ph 446 1316
.__ 252 3

___________ __

65 CHEV 1 1 ton pickup 327
engine stand tran s
25 6
1443

____________ _

1968

Sale -

w

Va

1950

2SO 6

FORD Galaxle 500

m lleage

'23 mi tes per ga!!on

$600

252 3

197? F'ONT I AC Grand e Pr X

446 2266

252 5

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

Pets

,P.KC Doerman puppt eS mole
and fem al e chamP IOn line
New Haven W Va 882 3'268

252 6

se ll

chea p

446 7dl2

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

low
Call
250 3

1962 CHEVY P , ton truck 4'f6

448'4

mob il e home
tota l
elec tr ic dep re q 446 4303
252 3

21! 8 6

2 BR mobil e hom e wit h auto
washer south of Ga ll tpolls
sao per m on lh 256 69'22

m Gal pol s
Ph .t.t6 0~38

rlllcs

252 3

PINE RIDGE tOLL IES

At&lt;.C Reg

Collies sable ahd

while 16Ul 25 6 1261

BOBBI

283 II

mil es 245 5064

250 3

~ 9 11 PINTO $1 000

Ph

3634

1575

25 1 26

S Poodl e Boytlq ue

.\-------------__________ __ _

__________ __

...... 252 3

3 BR home In east Ga lli PO li S
S140 per month 446 0603

252 3

60 II

-----------

BOARDING&amp; AKC PUPPIES
p Kenne lS 388 827 4 R I

K

SS4

2 ml

east of Porter

305 II

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

J UA N ItA S POOd le Parlor
exper i enced groommg will
do &amp;II bre eds Ph 446 7878

1972 DODGE Sta t1on Wagon
al so 1975 Montt Carlo Ph
day 446 4889 or eve
446

3780

251 2
OWNER

1911 Monle

Ca rlo 400 V 8 eutomel!c
lransmiSS IOn P S p 8 air
condll onlng bucket suts
A M rad i o
stereo tap e
plaver green with dar k
green v iny l to p Cen be sl!!e.n
at The Galli PO liS Da lly
Tribune
825 Th ird Ave
be fore 3 30 p m or call 992
6192 after 4 p m

AKC Reg m n poodle
1
black I champagne S75
446 0536

-

251 6

----- --- -~

H !MAL A Y A N and SIB m ese
kltlcns .. "everal co lors CFA
reg Co li 446 3844
248 6

Wanted To Buy

Brough .!1m 4 500 actua l
mi tes ra&lt;11al tires AM FM
stere o fe c tory 81r $2 675

Ph 388 9983

-1960 CHR YSLER

249 6

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

4 dr

nice

con d
S500 or best offer
I. eav e wor d at Ga iJII!I Hotel

248 6

-1971- --F IAT- --------sports Spyd er 124
con-vert1ble
38 ooo miles
sharp S2 000 446 1&lt;125

251 6

LOG S
Pomeroy Forest
Products pay ing top pr ices ~ O A: your T re and Ba ttery
needs co me to Sears T ~re
tor to gs delivered to th e1r
Shop .n The Silver Bridge
m lis on Bailey Ru n Rd Off
Plaza
H ig hway
12 4
be tw ee n
3311
Pom eroy and Rutland OhiO
Call ~92 596 5 for dell-very
IOSirUC l lon i
19 71MGM IDGET .tspd eH
250 6 cond loW m11eage Marge
black wH h b lack Interior
Ph 304 273 3690
OLD toy trans anv pi eces
250 3
par Ls or accessories
No
~o

"6 1822 Ca ll a11cr 6
251 6

liifYiNG

U ll

2HI Mercerv1ll e w1lh 1 or 2
small childr en 256 654 4

For Lease

r oom
hoUse ro ca ted on Rt 141
Jus out of c y 11m I s w h
lois -. o f shade t r ees
ba se(T1ent
modern k 1
cKen na t g as fu r nac e
water
lar ge n tc e
111 ce \6 x 18
but ld.ng ga rden
Call now
~ .. 68ACRES ..,.
Beacrt lful o d Styl e hom
1n exce llent co nd on
moder n B rooms f ul l
gooct fu rnitur e barn
ot h er
o utb u ICH
ca rpet ed locat ed ""'" '"" ' '•
1 nul e off Slate H
325 near th e
Bollpm land C.=t ll new

br! i't UI f ul

96 acres of goad t.rnbe r 1n
MC 19 S Co All qas and o I
r qh s ncluded

19'l I I

LI GH T nousrk eep ng
Pclrk Ce 1tral Hot el

•- HOUSE

Nkfe .&lt;: Qm fort abl e 5

TIMBER LAND

Sp ec al
w eek ly
rate s
Ctrc le sMo te 1380 E e~st c r n
AvP. 4 16 7501

[;

NEA R TOWN

rwp

P OSSf'~StOn

MILLS VILLAGE
3 BR 1
bath bu It n
252 3
CAR PE-TS an d I tc too can he lc. 1 ne n p a t o doors n
FU RN 3 r..oom hoUse near
bt! aut1fu1
b eau fut tf yo u u~e Blur d n n &lt;l ro om
town 10 1 or 2 adu lt s no
ga rag e
f u ll
Lu st c
Rcnl
c l ec r 1.: 'I d p e.,
pets dept re q 446 25 43
shampoo er
1
Cc l fr il! h ht? m ent 2 pa hos WPII
252 3
1a1' d"n o eo tr:Jwn
Supply Cu
93 ACRES
752 6
Good 5 ro om a1 cl bath
J2x60 3 BR carp eted m ob1 l C hom e lar ue ba r n pt entv
ou tbu1ldt n.9 s
al l
home central a r e1 nd ht&gt;a l
m a c htn-ery ttiC i ud 1ng 2
beau fu ll v loc&lt;II Pd 77J 5 ~61
25? 1 tra c on. B he ad of call lc
IMQe IObac co buse located
NOW OP EN Car l s Produ ce 10 11 ' fr om town
'
M ark el former y S1gt er s
1 &amp;2 BEDROOM
LIS T TODA'i" ~ I T Wl j...L 1
M arke t Slone gr ound c.orn
APARTMENTS
w 10 1esa1 e an &lt;J P AY WE SEL L BETTfO R
m ea t
LI V I N G
From 1140 per ma
Reta I 0pf!n9 6 n;:~ly 111
Sundays 7t.J2 Th rd Ave
Open Dally Ito 5
2521
Saturday 12 fo5

ted

SPRING VALLEY
GREEN APARTMENTS

_____,

Closed on Sundav

BR OW N s Hardw~r e v nton
388 8179
W~rm
Oh1o
Morn ng 701 wo od burn ng
Located Vt mile west ol
st oves w th b!Owt'r Sl iS
Holzer Hospital on Rf 3S.
Rem 1gton Cha nsaws 14
$139 95 11
$119 9'i elec
tr tc S4&lt;1 95 wood bur n er&amp;
$17 99 S?9 99 Buc k ey e co t~ I
1\5d 1&gt;184
9 l&lt; 12
s l aves
SLEEPING Room we ek ly
tm ol eum ruqs StO 9S
rate Gallla Hote l
1.5 1. I

Ph. 446·1599

n a Res lrtc led
Estate
uy 1
ome and get a
$2 000
com e ta x cre d1f
II has ~ a tamlly roo m wiltwood 'burnin g f•t epl ace
1' ba ths 2 ca r garage 2
story modern hom e wtlh
dish w asher Located on a
lar'ge lot Mu st see th 1S
home to apr ec at e

TOWNHOUSE
APARTMENTS
2 Bedroom
Townhouses
Jl/2 Baths
Pay Only One Utthly
Addtson. Ohto
For lntormahDn
Call Shirley Adkm s

Oh o

lso 3

.

P1 ECE I vm g roo 1l "i ullr
S75

219 II

--------------MO B ILE home spa ce for re nt
~46 0008

23711

? ~6

605B

2SO 6

-5 ------------ROOM house turn near
HM C S120 mo adu lt s 446
44 16 after 1 p m

___,. __

2SO 6
-------TRAILER space 1 mil e above
Sli ver Bridge Plaza on R 1 7
water furn ished Ca ll 446

2SO 3

In c &amp;9art
ment 2 BR carpet ed to tal
electric Ph 675 51 0.4 or 675
5386 Sand Hill Rd
Potn1
Plea sant w va
32 II

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

FURN apiS 1 BR ond 2 BR
In PI Pleasano 675 429)
25 1 3

25 1 3

GOOD cl ean lump and stoke
coa l Car l Winters
Grande Ph 145 5 t 1.5

R io

,

.

245 It

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets
~6

&lt;U &lt; 009

USED OFFSE T PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

20'

61or 51 00

~alii polis
421 Third Av e
Ga llipohs 0

243 11

-------------OOWNTOWN Eff
U6 4905

-

_,__..

~PI

Ph

_______ _

74 6 11

BRADBUR Y eff apartm ent
No l adults only no pels

Ph 4&lt;6 095 7

246 If

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

FURNI SHED apartmen ! off
street park1ng I or 2 ltdult!i
cenlrallv lOCatE-d 446 0336

01. 0 Stiver co ins. 1964 and A PARl 'o\ENT fo r lease 3281 ~
208 If
Second Ave
overiooklpg
under Sl tor halves SOc tor
c
11
y
pNk
'
2
B
R
liv
1
ng
room
Quarters
20c fo r dimes
k tt chen with range rt&gt;frig .-tARGE room facln~ park
Premium for sliver dollar s
and d n.ng area both 1135
l •ghl
housekee pi ng
Naomi W•gs 405 2nd Ave
per mon ltl vear s tease
elewator
fa c l!l ttes f or
Ph 4~6 8533 Hrs
Tues
Call PJ S .toll6 1819 OF 4f6
reltttd person Park Central
Wed
Ti&gt;urs Sal 10 30
Hole!
44!5
1
5 30 F r 10 30 lo 7 p m
245 tf
9B If
709 II

------.-- -------.-

65

LOTS OF

LOTS -

All

d n ecl loo s
Whether
bu ld ng or buy mg a mob lie
hom e call 446 0008 Joday

owN E A: WAs 1ra nsterred
an d offe!'s th 1s J BR r anch
n c ty sc hool d lst w l h 2
ba ths modern kllchen
la undry rm
ww carpet
garage and l arge to t

ai

LIS TING S NEEDED WE
ADVERTISE
NATIONAL~Y- WE BUY
- SEL L - TRADE
FIN ANC IN G AVAILABLE
- Lovely brick and fr am e
bi l eve l fea tu res 3 BR s P 2
ba ths fam tly rm
larg e
d1nmg area 2 car garage
cent air and kitchen w1lh
bu It In ra n ge hood dish
washer an d di sp S31 900

6

Large flal

3 BR

ran ch has lot s to offer for
on ly
$15 000
Spec ial
f ea tu res are redwoo d
s dtng cedar lin ed closets
m odern k1lchen basement
and a large lo t o-v erlooking
!he OhtO Rlver at th e edge
of tow n

FOR RENT -

•

•

....•
•

155 Acre

pasture land barn pond
no house located 6 ml
fr om lawn

PERRY TWP - 218 acre
farm comp lete l y fenced
so A ltllable 2 ponds 2
barn s corn cr bs good 7
rm home S60 000

the f rst to see this
beaut tul m od ern 2 story
n ea r town Owner hes
bo ught a farm and agreed
to part with the 4 large
BRs 2V2 baths 2 wood
burn ng fir epla ces formal
d1n 1"19 rm new carpet hot
wa ter heat phone lacks
nt er com system
full
basement and 2 ca r
garage Th e dream kitchen
.ncludes a Corn ing cooktop
eye level oven ref diSh
washer and new oak
cabi ne ts Th1s 1S one of the
n ces l homes on the market
and
pnc ei:l
below
r epl acement cost

""
""
,..

We

se ll

n nyth1
,,nvbod~ at our
Barn or 1n vo ur hom e
in form .' lfion c~nd pte
se rv1c C Cil lt H66967
5 ~lo Every Sc1 tu rday
N lg tlt at7 p m

l tl O 11

RUSSELL WOOD
REALTOR
446-1066

232 If
1\ L I TY P ES ol b !JI Idmq
ma t er r:~t s blo Ck br ck
se wer ptp es
w1ndow s
I nt el!&gt; etc Claude W nters
R 10 C. r a Hi e 0 Phone 245
~ 1 ? 1 311 cr 5

SWAIN
AUCTION SERVICE
Swam Aucl
Co,rner Tt11rd &amp; Oh vc

K ~o: nlt c th

......1\...

-.-- 'J~ -_;;--;..{,)

I

front

of

the

I ~rl c ed 518 000

small do Wn payment will
lei you take Immediat e
possession of thi s almost
new J BR ranch Special
features are a modern
k1tchen wt th r ange and
d1sp nKe laundry cent
atr and oaragc

12)(5 5 NEW Moon trailer on ~"'
100ll 160 lol G&lt;t ih polls F err y
ecl! on 30 H arrison Twp
!li7 ooo 675 39119 1
~
!(1
4 ac res fo r 56 ooo can be
' .. I' , 7&lt;17 7 J ~lnan c ed «lose (p Ra ccoon
~L..,__..o...!o,__;tre ek ~ • ) \
~~
LIME STONf:: for drtv ewayS_.4C5n~
..
lo1
lefh
on I( @o rn pe~
Cur l 1 Wln terS t PJlWfft"" 245"'"
Hollow priced s ~ 825
,
;l iS
,
, ~ :....
~
V"£45 fl .
11 Burger Stree t ., two
bedro oms up and down gas
New GMC
M
rurnace storm doors and
Truc k Headqvarters ~
torm windows $14 000
1970 Da tsun ?tc kup tru ck
HA loan can be as su m ed
1971
1 T Che-v Cab &amp; Cassis "
! 7 • per cen t with down
1971 7 1 T GMC Ca b and
paymen•
Chas sis
1968 1 l l GMC Pickup
of Bulavill e Road
197 1 GMC Suburban
n d R o ut e ~60
thre Et,
19)3 ' t GMC Pick up
e droOI')) A ~bu je fai\IIIY

....

1.1..-4-

11910 For d

P l ci~PI ' ~ ~

1970 MOnte Ca~ fO&lt;r t t.
1974 Dodge S ports ma~ wa~cn
SOMEAS G M
J
Trucks tnc ,
133 Pme St

c,

44612532

i
un cnon~
i

~oom l~gO. u( olll y rOOI!I
f~ r ge arn t prYce redu ced
fOr,"' Ji ~''~ ~a le $~3 lOO

Jus OUI ;/de

the et l; I mI s

ver,y 1 n ice 1hrce, bedlam

)'1(/met on .. hCtle ca be
lflnanced Yfllh 11 000 ow n

!P•ymen l

INSULATE

14 Third

YOUR HOME~f
&gt;I

We blow msulahon '"walls and attu;s Fre
Eslimates ' Call
,,

PASQUALE ELECTR[C
AND lftSULATIQN
DAY 0~ NIGHT
103 Cedar St , Galhpohs
Ph. 44._~7t•

•
Avenue

Th ree
bedroom frame dwelling
a th storm doors and
window s sh ing led outstde

pr iced S\1 QOO

t.fls ~oom~ bath~J9Cited

66
Ch111t cotne Road pr ic ed ll l

ooo foo • ~w c K sa le

,.,,

,1(

l

73 S pru e~ Stree'l, d large:
rooms
batt'!

utllll'l r"oom an(f
com pl et ely
fu r

n liho&lt;J S9 000

,

,EV~NJNGS

RU$SELL WOOD
-r 4.4.46NI

'

2 Dr. 6 cyl enaine 3 soeed floorshlft corMk vlnvl - • •-flo, vinyl side mould ,
d lp rail mould , clgarefle lighter, deluxe wkeel cbver.

OHIO RIVER

Realty, 32 State St.
Tel. 614-446-1998 I

Realty Inc.

flo!

IN TOWN N let older
nome wllh l bedrooms li'J
baths partial baseme.nt
large garage nice l eve l rot
Located close to stores
Price $27 500

family

BOX 250

lot

Good !es
In c lud e air
cond drapes &amp; stainless
steel stove If vou want
quality location &amp; pr ice
~ this Is the one
: PINE ST - 5 rm ~ br ick &amp;
frame with partie! bue
This property Is In good

!

s.

GOOD

older tlome tile block
storage bid g &amp; g~rage
Louted on a b i g l ot

Bargain at S17 000
4

If you re
looking for a good farm
this 11 the best term we ve
had for sele The house Ia 1
1wo story 13 room brltk
home has 2 baths plentv of
bedrooms
!Ovelv new
kltcnen
Property has
several build ings 4 800 tob

F A fur ana F B Idee I for
couple

or

newlyweds Asking 111 000
GEORGES CR

RD

Good 6 rm
ho u se all
carpet plentv klt cab 2
baths F A Nat gas hea t
Sll) rage bldg and big lot

E• lra

PUBLIC AUCTION

corpel

Price S!SS ooo

VACANT

2

acres

~5

POMEROY -

storm

GOOD GAS

F A turn good roof good
hoi w tank Lot .. x360 1

River vieW On ly S16 000
• GREEN A · 1 yr old 3 bd_

•a~ rm

fram e hOm e

• Win

Th ermo

plenfy s!orage

tran sferred and has priced
thi s
hom e
be low

lnvellmenf
)c; 80 brick

build your plans or ours

ACREAGE -

YINTO N

ANY HR 446 ltfl

ra nges

qpportunity
roo~

f r ontage on Sho est r i ng
R ldge with rural water will
se ll an ~ pa~t or all 446 4335
2~ 9

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

PRICE

perfect

NEW

LISTING -

exttllenl

PRICE

buy

FINANCING

NEW LISTING -

PRICE REDUCED -

MAKE OFFER -

bedroom h om e car pet
tnrougnout !som e bran d
new) fu ll basernent large
lot edge of tow n tow down
payment

PRICE REDUCED -

38'1&gt;

balance

posture

and

City school

dlst

now 138 500
PRICE
Owner

REDUCED

tranSferred
J
bedroom b1 level huge
kltehen
2 fireplaces
family room 21ft baths l
c ar garege
excelltnl
loctflon close to Hot zer

PRICE

Spring

REDUCED

Valley 101

One

of the best bu ys In Gallla
County at $36~000 Verv
well
constructe d
J
bedroom
fully carpeted
hom e with 2 f i r ep laces 2
baths rec room family
room 2 car garage and full
basement There lsn t a
better buy and you 11 agree
upon seemg It

acres extra good ~ bedroom
home 10 acre crop l and
woods

Nice 3

-

Large

e!

~d

379 2676
250 6

1 LOTS In Kanauge Near
Shopping center Natural
gas available for heal
Would make wonderful

Mobile home lots can 406
9662
250 "

ATTN' HOME BUYERS

OVER 500 Home plans to
choose from your tot or
ours We seve yo u lime and
money up to 12 000 t~M
credit Rencho Co ,.Addison

Ph 379 2133

361 0300 Gallipolis 446 000 1

199 If

243 If

•

.:USTOM REMODE LI NG 20
years exper ience 388 8308
New dry wall cel hng w1th
SWtrl or tex tur e des gns
Othe r dry wall repa r vmy l
new baths
wa ll papermg
new kt tchens Anyth ng m
remode l ng or repa~r

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY Pamt ng
KOTAL" LANDSCAPING
residential and commerc1al
RIO GRANDE OH 10
lllf
Interior and e~~:tenor Barns
COMPLETE PROGRESSIVE
&amp;nd roofs alrless spray ng
LANDSCAPING
tr ee
es ti mate
Pa 1n t FUR NITURE
'S HR UBS TREES
ROC K
UPHOLSTER IN G prompl
anywhere 25 6 14.49
GARDE N S
ALL
service reasonable rates
61 If
GUARA NTEED Patio an d
poo l Jand sce pmg Stone
sand
roo !
shrubbery
tr, mm1 ng
Dump tru ck
ser-v1ces 245 91 31
187 If

. _ - - -...----------

F OR
THE best 1n ar
chltectural des1gn and plans
tor new homes
small
comme r c 1al building!. apts
6ACK HOE and do;r:er work.
or remodeling call Btl!
Sept ic tanks and leach beds
Walker Thurman Oh 10 1
38! 88 65 or JBB 8230
68'2 7498
140 If
198 If
D A LE
Sa nder s
Deliver y 256 6667

Wate r
211 If

Servrces Offered

BO RDER Garage Ou1lders
r r ee eshma tes ?56 6dl"
189 If

!.AND Y AND BEAVER In nORDER S GIIRIIGE

234 26

CALL Roger 'Nh1te for plumb
tng and re pa Irs Ph 25u 1'232
or 156 6411
S3 If

we 1nv1te you to v1s!t our
modern shop located tl
Mason Co Fatrground I T&amp;T
area l or call for tree
eslimllte s
Mowrey s
Upholst er i ng
Po i nt
Pl easant 675 415.4
219 If

Plumb1ng &amp; Heating
STANDARD

Plumbing Heating
214 Th lrd A-ve 446 3782

187 If

Door

suri!lnce Co has offered
servtce Commerc 1al and
ser-v ices for F tre Insurance
n
r es d ent 1al spe c1al z ng
coverage in Gat lla County
op erators L oca l 75 6 6J'?
for almost a century
189 If
F arms homes and personal
property coverages are
PORTABLE TOILET
avatlable to meet 1nd1-v ldua1
RENTAL
needs
Contacl
Ra y CON STR UC TION
Ouldoor
Wedemeye r your netghbor
Events Ph Galltpft ~ 446
and agent
41 87 Russells Plumbmg &amp;
252 6
Heatmg
190 "
DOZER work ex cavat i ng
land
cl e ar~ng
ponds COUGHE~'OUR
water
basements landscaping
Delivery 446 3962 446 4262
Call 446 0051
anv ti m e
163 If
244 tf

P &amp; P HOME Improvement
Roofing gutttrfng pain
tl ng f!ree estimates Phone

388 9927

Elec tr cal &amp;
lnsvtat•ng 103 Cedar ~ t
Ga llipolis F'h '46 271&amp;
126 ff

Wa te r Del verv Servtee
Patnot Star Ga tllpol•s

Bud McGhee 446 12S5

tron!age on Bulevllle Rd
4&lt;6 4570
252 6

P ~ S Q U ALE

AlBERT EJIMAN

We need listing s Call the
Wtsemen Agency 446 J6•J
G~llla Co s L1rgest Real
Est1te Salu Agency
Off1ce 446 3H3
Even l nqs Call
Ike Wium an 446 3796
E N Wiseman ••• C500

Semces Offered

Services Offered

Servrces Offered

LOVELY l Br Home on 2
K&amp;M construct1on
acres land near Pa trio t
Companv
250 6
Ohio SlOO down payment
Tvpes o f Construction
we will finance Call 1 614 ALL
free estimates 4•6 9202
3 BR TRAILE~ end house 2 1676693
249 "
acres ot around 17 .500 on
2S2 6

Gorman Ridge

FINANCING

Sunday Shoppers Welcome
Come In and Browse Around

Spring

Valley - A very nice 3
bedroom ranch with la rge
family r oom Most of th s
home Is newly carpeted
Nice
kitchen
formal
din i ng , wood
burning
fireplace Owner bUild ing
new home

u'

land In
Ph ~"

GOT SOME MORE, TOOl

Now S33 000

REAL ESTATE LOANS
II BR CAPE Cod st)lle home
for sale over 2 400 sq fl VA - No Down Pav ment
Most Veterans still Qual fy
plus 2 car garage patio and
check to be sure FHA - As
1 6 x27 porch Has a
low as 3 percent down fireplace utili ty rbom air
Bl LEVEL s bedrooms
Everybody qualifies 30
cond built In kitchen with
fam lty room
air con
year lerms Refi na ncing
D w ana diSposa l City
dltloned 21, b1lh1 country
also avatlable First Mort
wate r and gas on one acre
ltltlng IOI Wllk to IChoolt1
gage Services 77 E Sl ate
101 lor only 136 000 4~6 4570
Pomerov 1re1
best of
Athens
Ph
592 20S2 for
2526
financing low 40s
Ph
Informat
ion
Alhens 592 30S2 lor In
245 If
VACANT land In Galllpoll$
rormatlon
lownsh lp 4 2 acres
596
251 2
vacanl

'2497

36 MONTHS

J Mochttl Netl446 1501
S.m Nut
flSI

Green Township
4216

LeSabre 4 Dr Air cond marlin blue
white fop We sold ol new Was S289l 00

15 000

'2997

REDUCED

Betu t •fu l large country
home 3 bedr oom s 2 bat tls
2 car garage 1 800 sq ft
llv •ng spate large flat lot
county rd and c ity schoo ls

neighborhood

large lot edge of town
S22 900
Low
down
payment 1 This is a good

a or cond

Duster 2 Or Hdtp

mtles new Prem Tires Nice

AI

trectlce .4 bedroom horne
built In kttchen carpet
throughout H w floors

'3997
1973 BUICK

REDUCED

Evenings
CharlesM NeeltUlSU

7 ACRE S

Darf Custom 4 Dr automatic P
steerong v nyl top 778 moles 76 Buock
lrade

1974 PLYMOUTH

Oil lee Ph 441 ""

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

M&lt;inl a 2+2 air cond automatic P
sleerong sold new for S5500 Sharp

'3997

large older 2 slorv plenty
of rooms for any size
family countr y setting on
Rt 71n Ky ger Cr Sc Dlst
S23 500 Make offer

and priced al U6 900 Like I
SOld
YOU II say II S

CARTER S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth &amp; P1ne
Phone 446 3888 or .446 •477
16) If

GENE PLAN TS&amp; SON

PLU MB I NG - Heatmg - A r
Condli iOnlng 300 Four th
Ave Ph d46 1637
48 If

DEWITT S PLUMBING
AND HE ATIN G

Route 160 at E-vergreen
Phone 446 2735
187 If

ANNOUNCING THE ANAL CLEARANCE SALE ON All NEW 75 UNITS IN STOCK. COME IN AND LOOK THEM OVER,
1

\

BUY THEM FOR WHAT WE PAID FOR THEM. COME IN •EARLY WHILE THE SELECTION IS GOOD.

Open Evenings Till 8 P.M.
1972 RID

f.100

1973 atEVIIU£T.
:usroM 10 PICKU
V \. t~ ltltft rldto

r ~--

$2195

$2595

1971 DATSUN

1974IORO
GRAN TORINO

·--·IZOO

vinyl roof new wtlltl
tldtWIII tlrtt.

lptrt VI 1vtom1tlc
allorlno vinyl rao1
riKI"' mtrrorl tlr ltndtr
llr.lrtt rid with black vk'lyl
top. nd and "'Kic tnttrtor

1975 PLYMOtml
DUSTER

1970 lORD
MAVERICK

1974 OIEVROI.ET
VEGI.

f' cy linder

2 door 6 C)'llndu stand
shift vettow finish bladt
lnftrlor tlttra st\trp

automal c
.,wtr sleerlng maroon
ttn •h with wh te vinyl top
sllv~ stripes new spring
special 'lltrtor tess than
lOO
m•'"' Factory
warranty

Station wagon • speed
!~gage

biV"'

rack air medium

flntsh

$3995

of

1974 IHVRCUr

VEGA

can

See

G T Htlcht.d. A lplllld

llualntu

Prlt:t

1

business lnctudlnl real
tstate end equipment Cell

1970 DATSUN
U'L IIISiliR
Pickup A speed
fin sh bucket Sf&lt;' II

blut

1395

5

good

home will buy this tood

3 ACRES wllh 600 fl

-

1975 DODGE

S49 900

formal entrance large
livlno room dining 2112
baths 2 car garage 1'12 lots

We gol II All

Keystone Road . You
make mo ney here
today

Asking

• $27 lOO

•

ES!obll s hed

NEAR MINES
14 ACRES leve ll~nd Cretk 3
BR mobile home 2 BR block
home La! of tron 1age on

quallly build hOme Own er

~ replacemenl cos!

You re

tractive
3
bedroom
Colonial ranch firepla ce
1112 baths full b11ement

laM yeiiM end brawn
BrMutiM concltfton

- Bldg lol• - Mobllo
home lois we got !hem we

r lc e
r.oeatlon
s

cop

; plumbing
att gar elec
fur &amp; all carpet Th Ia Is a

I

'tRADE

' ~OTS

o

!,

REDUCED

1975 CHEVY

fully carpetea home with

Vol ,....,d thHt two

opportunity •o
bus i ne ss bldg
corner
locatron ;ood tenants OOOCI
r elurn Call Jay Sheperd
today

OCTOBER SPECIA~
Garfield Ave, S rm.s, bath &amp;
&amp; WIN

NEW LISTING -

gotng to sav 1t s perfec t almost new 4 bedroom

WANT$
YOUR
PJIOPE RTY SOLD LIST
WITH US

acres

refiring Call tor details

mobile homes Sl7,500

drs

PRICE

You II never buy this s1zed
house for th1 s man v dollars
ever
agatn
Huge
4
bedr oom
hou se
o-verlooktng th e river 3
baths
forma l d ln tng
ftr epfac e family room
cen t air 2 car gara ge
Excellent co n stru c tion
You must see l h1 s no w

'3997

1973 GRAN

1974 FORD PINlO
STATION WAGON •
• Cylinder 1u ome tlc
radio IUOt&amp;Cit rtck 8 ooo

""""
Baby blut
tertor

with blue In

lOR INO
~
doer se d/I n
V8
autom,.Hc por¥er steering
power bfek K laclory a r

v nyl root low m ltage

$3295

business opportunlly Sl50 M
oross S23 M net Owner

A wl!h

siding

20

4~

~•• ~ohnson 256 6740
Doug Wetherhall44t 4244

fenc .. Only 113 500 Wl!h 2

Alum

BLDG

Owner transferred

Eventngs Cell
John Fuller 446 Ul7

73 model Mob ile home b ig
barn tob bne and good

ba se

S10 000

POMEROY -

VICTORY RD -

Du~

LAND -

WE BUY, SEll.

lOT - 1 rm frame 2

S18 000
~

fireplaces 3112 baths room s1zed cedar closets perfec t
kttchen and I guara ntee the bedrooms Are large
enough Lot runs to the riv er and offers a magn lf1cent
view Don t miss th• s opportuntty We wtll arrange for
you to see It at your conven1ence

NEAL REALTY

s10 ooo 40 acres 11 200

story home w lth base fur
heat cen air ball'! carpet
over H W floors 2.5 n ice
kit cabinets
has barn
oar ~nd 'h A lor Price

Located on State Route 93 approximately 3
m11es South of Jackson, Oh1o Watch for
Public Auct1on S1gns Posted

'4497

Shown by

appointment

tlreplacts and elec heat
Located an a 3 A wooded
lot P( fCed In the teen s
PAT~

a

lofellme We have reduco&lt;J the proce S11 500 on fhos
home because Morris Hask ins says to sell ol th os
month This home cannot be dupl ocated for 5150 000
Approxomately 4 000 sq ft of l1vong area wo th 3

AND HOME - Mercantile
Upsta irs c ould be con
ver1ed Into an apartmenl
Firs I floor sale room 48JIC 12
and a Iaroe wart- room
large basement Home 5
r ooms and bath far ge
garden spot

AM FM

19 000 mtles showroom cond 1flon

bose app 90 llllable acres

nice &amp; rms and bath
countr v home ha s b een
Jcompletely redone Ins ide

wl!h paneling

PRICE REDUCED

MERCANTILE

Royale 2 Dr Hdtp ai r cond

new m June balance factor y warranty

LadleS and Gentlemen you re mtssmg the buy of

wllh 36 acres river boltOfl'l
Lois of frontage on Ohio
Ri ver and both sides of Rt
7 Locllted below Gallipolis

Price S25 SOO
BULLSKIN RO -

3

187 ACRES -

rm house with bath base
attic storaoe new carpet
retired

Nice

121 ACRES - Good farm
with l bedroom house has
a 2 000 lb lobocco base 2
tool sheds 1 large new
barn land hi!l s good fence
Located on Rt 418 Shown
by ~ppolntment

2ND AVE - 2 story 6 rm

N IC~

BUY -

bedroom
double wide
mobile home balh liv
room kllt hen w ith range
refrigerator Loca ted on 1
acre close to Holzer
Hospital

cheap at 112 ooo

CENTENARY -

Golljpolls 0
LISTING - Nice

NEW

! rm panel mete\ storage
bl dg

Osur Bllrd
John Fuller
Doug Wethtrholt
4Sl Second Ave

1974 OLDS

Rallye Spe rl a or cond 5620 miles sold

12 500 down

home w1th 2 or 3 bedrooms
bath flY rm k t1chen full
basement garage J"'ouse
has alum i num siding
basement needs work on
Can be purchased with or
wHnout furn iture Located
on Chill colhe Rd

: rm frame home llh ba1h s
1- new carpet over H W

copper plumOing

446-3434

(H

CENTENARY - Beauty 6

Approved by fhe Ohio
Slate Board of School
and
College
Rego s lraloon
11
Columbus Ohio
R09ostrallan No 71 12
0284H
Phone Golilpolos
446 2911

Real Estate for Sale

REALTORS CONSULTANT

WOW I 2

t*

Auctioneering

radio sliver bllcll In

"'"'

1973 lORD

MAVERICK
JI:N llnlsh 302 V 1
ltlftidtrd
rMioctmn
wf'lh.
well
HrM"''"
.._,

1973 OOOOE
I).ZIJO
Aut.n•ttc poww ttetrlng
power brlktt riCIIo bhA
n wl&gt;llo flnlol\

1971 PLYMOUTH

1972 DODGE
OIARGER

Two door hardtop VI
automatic power s leerlng
power brallt\ ta ctoryl!lr
viny l roof red wlf h blaCk
lop &amp; black n!er lor R!!lll
~e rp machine

FURY
door hard top, V I
brakes
power steering atr 90ld
I nlsh brown vtn., top Al l
aotd vtnv t Interior
I

A\.!l omattc power

1973 PLYMOUTH
VALIANT
• door
cyt l'ld&amp;r

Wanted To Do

room tam 11y room kitchen
dining room New cerptt

Fencea to! Low 120 s

PI ,O,NO ~nd flute lessons for
chlldn,m end ll dulls Mrs
Mark Harl 446 3792

244 12

------------Y-'

Will tlnance, 7 rm hOust wllh
bath In cUy limits Carport
2 porches large lot Call U6

4127

Brolcers Builders

-.'f 5 occorDt!ng pa~nl ng

wa ll par,er l n9 paneling
1 ree est mli! OS 61'1 5689

Auctioneers

RANCHO COMPANY
Addison H7 0310
Gtlll1 oils 441 0101
-'--~---- ~

automatic

CRICKET
6

~Itt ln l ~lor gold

I!Kter or

Two do or 4 cyl nde r
au tom at c g o d I n sh
ad o Sharp

1595

5

2395

5

1973 BUICK
LESABRE
H•rdtcp
v 1 powtr
ttterlng power brakes
vinyl roof • r AM radio
l•ctory t•pe

1974 QtEVR(lET
C.30
t Ton cMnls cab wl1h ftat
bed • •peed. v 1 power
st..rlng A t " l sharp one

1972 PlYMOU11i
FURY Ill
• lkiOr V 8

~tu tomallc

POWI!f' !!olcerlng factory air
vinyl roo! rrd tlnlsh bllldo
ln l.'rlor black vl ny lop
m~~

tltm

Jty Shepptrd lor dtlolls
GREEN SCHOOLS
3 THREE or lour bedroom
home on Rl 141 Living

53 I

I,

Jt.

1975 CAMARO

Off. 446·3643

Hospllol Now 139 900

MASSIE

fl llv area on main f1 r 3
best
baths 4 bd rms
grade of cerpe f and
Chan del iers thai make
your eyes pop open Fu ll
equipped kllc.hen with Club
Bar Slldlng gf&amp;ll Cff'S '" OPtn
on to deck from din area
F utt finished base w ith
fam ll y rm
Rec
rrn ,
laundry and 2 car oar w ith
etec dr Big lot &amp;nd Pr iced
replacement co st

School of

' :

i~
:

Real Estate For Sale

elec I heal pump I 2 100 sq

to discontinuing operation of the J1ck- Covotv
Home, we will sell the entore contents contlsllflt In
pari
2- ldea l611 x eII Walk In Coolers Frigidaire Electric
Range (still under warranty) , Ta~pan Electric ~ange,
6 II Range Hood Relrlgeralors Norge Chest Type '
Deep Freezers Square Tub Wuhlng Machines.
American Electric Meat Slicer Commercial Electric
Mixer Slalniess Cooking Kettles Dining Tables, 38
Iron Half Beds (complete) Metal Olllce Dnk, Sam
sonlfe Metal Folding Chairs Curtains Bed Llnans
Melal 2 door Wardrobes Chest of Drawers, Bed Pans
Walkers Oak Washslands Coovalescenl Chairs, Cable
Upright Plano Towels &amp; Washcloths Eleclrlc Gas
Pump &amp; 500 gal Tank Old Dressers wlfh Beveled
Mirror s Wicker Chain Ladder Back Chairs Rocking
Chairs Chifforobe Wood Folding Bed Brass Sholl
Bed Judges Chairs Old Bread Box Camel Beck
Trunk s Meal Block Blacksmith VIse &amp; Anvil, Chairs
of all kinds Brass School Bell Glass Tapped Fruit
Jars ~arge Oak Library Table Tjn Doored Pit Sales
Fooled Casl lror Balh Tub Porch Swings Oak Ladies
Wrlflng Desk Old Night Stands Wooden &amp; Porcelain
llllrber Ct&gt;elrs Stone Jars &amp; Jugs Gr~ln Bin Dining
Room Sullo J unk F111e Antiques &amp; Collector's Hems
too numerous Ia mention Truly a large salt with
verity Scmelhlng lor everyone
TeRMS CASH
Lunch Will Be Served
BY THE ORDER OF
THE JACKSON COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Dory I Alban
- AUCTION E ER5Kenny Sw1in ••
Oak Hill, Ohio
Galllpotlr, Olllo

••
•

1976 PLYMOUTH DUSTER

DEBBY OR -

SAnJRDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1975
STARTING AT 10:30 A.M.

i

SPECIAL

vn old all brick and all

Travel trailers, mob1le homes, truck
campers. Now on display. Special pr1ces on
a few remamrng 1975 models and used units
Open 7 days a week. One m1le west of
Jackson oro U5 35.
Phone 2116-5700

prope r ty

•

•

Real Estate For Sale

GREE N ACRES - PRICE
REDUCED TO 125.900 A

Apple City RV Sales

bne oraol i# hook up o1n 11
j- ural waler iusl a dded lo

:•

'

REALTOR

...

i

repolr

aG e5, of1 thel ground!
ocaled ad tacent to Tycoon
ake ca n Hf! fman ced has

lHIS
WE ~K
0 l.;t ~
RICES NEW &amp;
SED
- - --

ul loly

'

..

\ •••••••!~31.~~}!~!!!~~1~!~~~~}1!\•••••••••1

t&lt;~

N E W 2 pi edi
vtng 'r06I
sut te l 16 9 vs R EG , n~l9 9~,

-~ ~ - --

('

room
large
fron t room
jern k1t
chen p le n ty of cabinets
corner •oJ P'nted $36 000

F I R EWOOO to r sale $15 per
1rv c k
load
446 753d
any! m e
rt.. .. 23;kij

FURN 446 H23

"L D m
..,.,. ..

ba lh

TJ ..

SE Y U

America's No. 1 name
in Recreational Vehicles
New three bedroom bn c~
on Rou 1'i fu lly ca r pe ted

0:

•3450
*
i*
~
l
i GALLI POLIS CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTHi

Introduces the 1976 Coachman

123 II

,.

I

KNOnS

fl rc tr c
l?or
tcc tr 1c f\ t or ,,;dar
PI 'n '&gt; P
I 16

..,

'

i
i
i

.,..

r

,

The WISEMAN Agency

t

:* 72 GREMLIN 2 DR 3 Speed 6 engine .............. .. ... .... ........~1595 *~
72 DODGE QtALl.ENGER 340 auto frons yellow black lop • • ... , ... 12395 :
*~ 72 QtEVY NOVA 2 DR Blue while lop '" .... " " " " " • • • "" ... .!1695 :
72 DODGE CORONET Custom 4 Dr Sedan Special Price ............11695 *
*~ 71 DODGE DEMON 340 auto p s ..................................·'1695 ~~
70 PLY, DUSTER 2 Dr 1 owner 6 auto, P S ... ... .... .. ...... ........11495

**
*
~
1

IF YOU WANT THE BEST
FOR YOUR FAMILY be

._

Real Estate For Sale
;-----=---- ------'--~---,-

: 75 PONT, GRAN PRIX 3,000 miles Brand new condition .............14395
~ 75 OLDS CUTlASS SUPREME 2 Dr H T Extra sMrp . ......... J4595 ~
*74 BUICK LeSABRE Luxus 2 Dr H T 1owner local musf see to oppreclafe '3895 *~
~
*~74 DODGE DART CUSlOM 4 DR Alrcond PS , PB .......... J3J95~*
~
* 74 QtEVY MALIBU QASSIC 2 Dr H T extra nice ................ J369S *~

RANNY BLACJ&lt;BURN,
BRANCH MANAGER

150 6

HO USE
~:~11a !able NOV .., )
c lose to Kyoer Creek H S re
dep req Call 367 7167 fo r

appl

l arg e Jol wit h
p l ~ntY
gard en tl spa ce
Por ch Tota l pn ce $6 500
3 OR 4 BEDROOM
7 r oorns and ba th f ull
basement
garba ge
sa l
ctty water
• r ar&lt;oort n1ce level tot
sp ace porc h A
and nice hom e
• :c·c.·c·c ~ to sell

AP PLE Clly RV Sale s 2 - NEW Aman aD S Cl C by S de
Amerl ci'l s No I ~;oac h~··
22 c u fl rE!fnger4;'t ors a
veh icl e on(! m rlc We$
(
grea t ba r ga in a SS99 Dill(' s
Jil ckson on li S '35 Ph
G
Kilchcn
Center
21\9
5100
Jackson A ve Pl Pl cr. sant
242 16

-- ---------' ---ai r Daily Tribune
446
244 II

HARRI SO N TWP

ec.res of wooded ht lls wtlh
tro ntage on 2 roads aboul
10 m 1 fr om town S12 900

15 1 3

w v.

20 A

plus a 7 BR mobile nome
Th e land 1s mos tly I liabl e
an d front s en 1 ro ads

TR AILER lor salo Call 4116 CH IMNEY Blocks Ga llipoli s
0562 before 11 a n or a fte r I
Block co 'd6 2783
•
pm
231

2 BR

MOBI LE home
, ..,unt y wat er
cond

NEAR VINTON -

wa shers and dryer s
r e pa r ed "''d g 1a r i'lnh:: ed
\3 5 and vp L&amp; ~ app l ence
s1 rv Ct&gt; 300 F ou r l h Ave
Re 1r
b ehlf)d
Pla nts
Plu n b i n g

75 I 3

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

10x41 MOBILE hom e w w
carpet $150 utl l lttes pd
Flh 446 4416 after I p m

1

252 J

F EET
1
nch p lr1 5h c
water ! n e 100 lb s prcS':i llr e
$1 600 R h1 ? l\o:c. SA Pa1n o1

Lov ely 3 BR ran c h has HW
floor s gas heat a1r cond
and gara ge The ki tchen Is
co mpl el e w th ga rb age
&lt;1 sp d1shwasher eve le-ve t
oven r ange hood and r ef
P r ce d 1o se ll at S23 000

'

vacan tot s on Chestnut St
zon es r es 1dCn l at 112 000

RIVER VIEW -

.- .-

,,

U~E O

100

F URN APT a ll ultl llles pd
Adults only .1\ 46 9523

029&lt;

5 roqms

1 ht 40 CA BIN Two bed room
1 V1ng r oorn
kitchen bath
tn-;u l ill cd fu l y carpeted
KIMBALL Swi nger 100 or gan
$3 100 In c lud es clelt v ery
doubl e key board r ny fhm
r ho 1e 67 5 40 79 Btl! Sturd l
se c t10 n S900 P t 4116 316
House Mason Co Ai rp or t
'152 J
Poi n t Pl easant
26SI

367-7250

851 3

WHAT A BUY

OL 1\L E

PINT O Run abO \J I 197:1 BIJIO
lik e new 8 000 m IF' wh c
w1th gr een 11lnv t top rad1 o
deluxe nt er or an d cxte r 01
7 rad1a ttre s S2 bB ~ Ph 6 /~

TARA

For Sale

TOWN

S22 500

•1\o\eaoo~,,gre ~ n

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

!

~

A Bt;;AUTIFUL
NEW HOME ,

For Sale

TO

NEA R CE NTENARY -

SA CRES

S Room House perc h
patlo)L rur.at wat(!r b uilt
1n c ab n e l s db ! s nk
loca ted 1n Kyg er Creek
S&lt;IJOO I D ls t.. "'dd 1son

N ce co1ne
lo1 3 B'R
b eauti ful kl!c h en
Jnd
d nln q r:~re a n any ex rns
st ora qe And ca rporl Qu ic k

roo .n

2 BR HOU SE lor rent on Rt

249 If NEW Regency

251 19 73 MERCURY Montego

If

WL: I'k. IV
It o c l

78 If

exc cond S1 495 also M 1
30 Ca l iber car b1ne deer r1fle OFFICE sp ace for rent
•90 675 5S11
dow ntown Ph 446 0008
_,.
25 1 5
231 If

ONE

?07 I

.

CLOSE

1

fr om

!'! &lt;;

lots on th e longes t creek In
the world These lots have
lets of shade lrees and
targe
g arde
spac es
L oca te d on a pn-vate road

Tw p

tow n
10
rc es 4
BR
ranch styl e w w
c arp ~!
2
I r ep laces.
ban Que s 1c k ! ch en w1 th
all
th e
ext r a s
f t II
b a semr!nl
p at a 2 eM
~ara ge outbu 1tdmg
barn
u nd p o1d a beaut lui home
tor Ct n stm :.s

UE ASO N /\tll) pr Cr'd ! OOI!"'IS

se ll

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

Profess,onal groom lng by
appo ln1m ent Ph 446 1944

t1 m
ac r es

Ad ult s only

I~J G
Room s
Pt~rJ... ({
r f!l

L, t E. I

1972 Dodge MODERN 3 BR ranch w w
Cha rg er 39 000 miles ·U6
carpet garage located 3
REG Beag le pupp ies Ca ll
1380
mtles tram town S200 per
'245 5&amp; 14 ell er 5
251 5 month plus deposit Ph d46
252 3
0008
ON E owner 1970 Ponl!ac tn
---------~237 If
REG
Wa l ker coon - hound
ma le 9 mo old S75 Red
bonde coon hound 3 yr old
tema te 1100 367 0795

WOODED ACREAG E

-JeW all elect ri c mobt iC hOilH'

6 ROOM fur n ished hou se 1n
Ga llipolis Ph 446 4507
252 3

250 3

19 72 GR !EML IN good con
ttltlon PS ai r cond 28 000

1.\UST

BR

.

72 FOR 0 ~ Ton PU Ranger
XL T 390 l!llr li UIO tran s
P S Pl3
AM F M Slereo
r adio r adia l !Ires 34 000
mi les Call after 9 p m or
weekends any time 4.46

72

257 J

VE RY n lce 3 b1 hom e rttn y c
and
retr ' I
c arp e t nq
hroug huu t $100 mo plu
depo s 1 Call i ke w serr cm 1
The W1scman Ag en cy
46
1643

NO DOWN PAYMENT IF

BUY AND DEVELOP -

t

1t

COM ME •CIA~
BUILDING WITH LIVING
QUARTERS
2 g arag es
ofl ce showr oom and th
balh downsta rs p lu s a
lovely 6 rm apt upstairs
Located obo ut 1m li es f rom
I ow n

YOU QUAL IFY If yo u
hav e a good 10b an d good
cr ed t be su!'e to see th s
new doubl e w1d e mob le
home w th 3 8R s b uilt m
k I chen shag ca rpel and a
large flat tat m Ad d1son

a good two res ae nna,
p r opt r ly 1 a r g a 2 story ; 3
l\1-l
lion c w!th modern
k c h eu and forma l DR ~
bsml gas fur Also 2 BR
g;;~ r a gc apr.r m ent
w1l h
beaLI ful k. ! chen 2 car
g ar and slorage
G RAC IOUS LIVING
W II be vovr way of ltfe n ,.
th s wo slory br d._hom e 4
large BR fOrt1rll OR w w
car p e
plu s an cx lr{t , t
100m apt fo r tha t ex tr a
ncome New Jtnk fenced
p cty yard
cnrport and
storag e Buy now and cal
T hanksq1v ng d nner h ~fe

203 I f

MUS TANG 6 cy l 3 spd

367 7101

-

Fall

H1ghest D iscount In Tr1
Stale we sell ser-vice and
quatilv compl ete package
deal
financ ing arranged
Ca mp Conley Star Craft
Sates Rt 6'2 N Pt Plea san t

Auto Sales

Auto Sales

..._

STARCRA FT

furn ace hea
tnq a t 631

252 3

189 I

A ULT S

257 3

I yr

ol d ran ch In exce ll ent
cond 110n ha s lot s o offe r
fo r or l y $71 900 Total
el ec tr c hom e features 3
BRs l aundry rm
l arge
k!lch en wt th dt shw asher
12X34 l am ty rm w th pa o
doors cent ral wa ter and
se wag e and a fl at tot n
Rodney V ll age II

CAMPSITES -

THIRD AVE

M OB ILE ho m c nRt oG rand(l
Oh io 2 Br PI ono 2&lt;1 5 9 131
7 8b

from town Ph 446 115B

Tr av e ler

1 wo s lor y 3 l3R home
over too k.n g W Va li !I s
N 1c e L R and for ma l DR
ov er s 1e stor aqe r ll and 3
por e! es Large lot w1th
o H d tno;nace $22500

UNFURN I SHED apar!m cnt
43
Co urt Strce Cilll 8 5
J46 1'37&lt;1 af ter S c all~ 6 0971
2118 6

2 BR mobile hom e 5 mil es

ph 446 7S72
Ba nk Fmilntlnq

SHOOTING MATCH
AI Raccoon Creek Hunting
Club 2 miles south of Vinton
an Raccoon Creek Sunday,
Od 26 all DO

2 BR Furn apt
u I lies pd
Four th Ave

NEA R SC HOOL

U RNI SH ED apartn en
j
roo ms pr va e b alh firs
fl oor 845 Sec ond I venue
Ph d 16 2? 15
2 8 I

I

252.

63 1 Four th Ave

H~

E l&lt; ll

-----------2 BR M H adults pr ef erred

Mob1le Homes lor Sale

446 1412

I

212 6

NI CE Unfurn apt 4 rm s and
bath ce n tr all y locat ed &lt;14 6
0444 aft er 6 p m

are

MARY

11 12 il

S02l G ~lhp o h s an
99 27777 Pom £' tO 'r' il i C' il

P~

BR House w w car p et
yard and
count y water
garden 367 71 67 lor appt
252 1f

4

now open ftl MI!J ry s Beauty

BY Profe ss iona ls Re std entlal
•nd Com mer ci al I n s id e
you r hom e or bu siness
Clean qu 1e t and effic ient
Out side In our tru ck Noi se
E)(trat:ted Wl!ler
Heavy
Equipment Free est1mates
For Q"'Ore lnfor conta c t
Scotdl Clean Clellner 656
2nd Av~ Ph 446 90'1:7 Duke
Cleaners 248 2nd Ave Ph

Buy u! l t ra de
R: lver R d .446 0002

0115

hook Up 1

Rod ney Co ra R d
Rod ney 01 o

6 RM HOU SE m Clipper
Mil ts S7S c 1ty wate r 446

Yard Sale
MUTT SV A ND

BEST JET STEAM
CARPET CLEA NIN G

s

252 6

recr c t~IIOn

I Crt:

252 If

1 BR MOB I LE Hom e Ph 446

Woll be closed beglnnong
Tuesdov for Equipment
lnsla llaloon Will be Open 2
PM lol 6 PM lor Drv
Clean1ng PICK~P ONLY.

HIGLE Y

0008

120 ACRE f arm for sa l e or

s hows 1 ltu s 3 B R o e floor
pio n A drean k1l chetYw1 th
a 1 II(' ex tr as f r E: plncc n
l R 1 d fa 11 1Y rn'l
full
d v d ed b!il1 1 car por t and
s lora gc ... urrounded w th
tJ eaul l ui !ihrubs end l ctw n

I~C IItln c lu ctc ~
SCWilCJI2
tr lSll

T V

FHA APPR OVED -

TLC
Te nd er krv ny care alway s

l Ots l or I'Cnl

Wd t cr
CO II CC f1 0n

it

25 Lo cus t st
Howar d Bran non Br oker
Ott &lt;146 2674
LUCill e Brannon
Eve 446 1226 or 446 2674

LOTS FOR RENT

NICE 5 rm and bath garag e
apt n tow n 5150 per man h
plu s !iec ur.ty deposit 446

or Sale

SPRING VALLEY
CLEANING CARE
CENTER

.lllJ•J•- ,

MOBILE COMMUNITY

For Rent

i
i•

~ PLY MOUTH
i Southeastern Ohio's ~ ~Ch!'-ler·P~ Dealer

QUAIL CREEK

248 •

•

~ ~·

GALLIPOLIS

i• CHRYSLER·

-1

8621

JIM BLEVINS
Pd Pol Adv

NOTICE

-

f A MILY w th one c tJIIu
desir es n1c el y furn tshed
home must be close to No ?
mm e rea so nab l y pr ced
need lmm ed1 ate ty Ca ll 3lHI

VOTE

•

- --· ----·- ---

Wanted To Rent

I

~

IN !; CQTTOWN Rl ?18 Clr ('a 'J [ R l o a 1 cl t l r c at Ol,lfHI
mal e bl ue I ck hound $SO
Creek Mob le Par k. Ph 7tS
10?
r r ward 130 1 522 8171
747 6
70

WANTED

Thurs

Sat

•************~~ ~~***** ••**********************•

•

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate for Sale

For Rent

~

NotiCe

35 - The SWlday Times Senlnll'l Sw d.l), 0&lt;1 26,1975

I
dOOr ~ II 0!'1 'w"W""
" ,.
, utcm•l c power sl ..rlng
pow~ brakes redia tii.Cttlertt
t11m11y car • 1691

ott fr

!actor~

09

�w~.ather

f

36 - The Sunday Time$. Sentinel, SWlday, Oct. :IS, 1975
·;:::::::::::;:::;.,•••.·.·.•.•.•:·:·:•:·:.:·::·:·~:~:;:~;:~:~~::::;:::t::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:::::;:~:;:;:;:;:;~!;~~:;:;:;:;:::;:::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:}

.
~~~~~~-;;,&gt;.:~::;;)')::-;·.· ..

I N S l G H T \~\ ~·
':
. .' .
·· I

::1.

. BYG. M.CRAIG,JR.
·
iii\
In a recent article, · reasons for President Lincoln's •
Emancip~Uon Proclamation were discussed. It w9s also
stated that it WAS not the intent of the administration to enter
blacks into 11 full prOductive citizenship. In fact ·the circumstances which freed blacks actually hindered their cause.
The single most important factor. of freedom is the op.
portunity to achieve. This factor was totally Ignored ·bY the
federal government in issuing its proclamation. The go~ern­
ment made no effort to provide the essential aimosphere for
existence to the freed people. Their failure to provide resulted
in a stronger bondage of slavery than can ever be achieved by
chains.
·
Enslavement by ch~ins results in a temporary 'condition
that can be corrected. But In economic slavery their looms
absolutely no chanceof escape. By purposely failing to educate
or train blacks, the goverllll)ent doomed blacks to menial work
with little hope of advancement or achievement.
The federal government, after freeing blacks, did nothing
to solve their problem. They made no effort to provide housing,
to offer equal education, or to erase the negative attitudes
which they had to face. They offered no retribution for the
years of slavery -which stimulated American economics. The
government also stood idly by while blacks were l,vnched at the
discretion of the KKK.
.
At this time •the South was going through the Reconstru.ction period. Before the South ,could re-enter the Union,
they had to ratify the 131!1 and the 14th amendments; and to
allow bla~ks to wte. During this time It was f10t uncommon In
many states for blacks to outnumber registered white voters.
This resulted In many blacks and northern wh[tes being
elected to public office. Blacks, who before were denied any
chance of education, certainly did not have the el[pel'tlle to
vote. Consequently, the atate governments were wasteful and
the southern whites blamed the ex-slaves f91' this waste. This
was the beglmlng of the brutal treaiment ata~ed upon blacks
by the newly formed KKK.
Their Intent was to scare blacks out of practicing their
right to vote. The work of the KKJ( helped to remove the Negro
and the northern whites from !19Uthern state offices. This
enabled the Southern whites to regain powers and blacks to
lose another chance to gain full .cltizenshlp. And once again the
federal government did absolutely, nothing. .
·Certainly all citizens should po~~~ess the opportunity and
fulfill the responsibility to vote. However, the federal government failed both blacks and whites by not first educat,ing the
blacks to vote. It faDed In providing land or any type of
retribution to enable them ·a right to a decent Ufe. They faDed
to protect southern blacks from the hatred that the clvD war
and defeat had len to Dixie. The government In freeing blacks
certainly did not open the door to the ' ~lting pot."
::::

18 fined, 10 others
forfeit bonds in court

•
•
~:
·

·····:'

Be•..

Of

'

I L,

Hv L" '

,.
i

~

·
·
Mrs. Ella Kimes, formerly of Cpester, will mark her 100tll
birthday annive.rsary at the Maple Heights Nursing Home.in
W~llston on Thursday of this week.
born to David
Mrs, Kimes Is the eldest of eight chUdren
I'
Sbe
and Hannah Cleland ip Chester Township on Oct. 30• I 875 ·
married Charles Kimes of Cliester on Oct. 30, 1896 at the
Chester Methodist Parsonage and they had a son, Cecil R.

Dates
suggested
for
"
,
h~liciJJy mail overseas
~.

'

.

.

POMEROY
Meigs
Countians are encouraged to
begin mailing holiday parcels
and greetings as e~r1Y as
possible. Pomeroy P.ostJ
sou1s bY
mas 1er
ames
recommends the following
dates by which mail should be
·
·
deposited to points as
follows:
t 25
te 1· 1
' 0c :
.,.. · 1n rna rona
surface greeting cards to the
Far East.
Oct. 28 _ Surface mail to ,
· ·
Armed Forces in Antarctica,
I' lnd
· J

Kimes who died ill October of 1963.
·· ·
Mrs. Kimes lived in Chester for many years and then
""' to Columbus. She has .two !roUters living, ,Denzil M.,
mov""
Cleland of Chester and Darrel D, Oeland of Columbus. Her
nieces Include Clarice Allen of Chester and Doris Davis
1 dand
of
Phyllis Rowan, both of Tuppers Plains, and Ross Cle an
Chester and John'Benson, .Columbus.
·~~~~=:a, Ne~ne~r~ar:~~:
SGT. RA,NDY B. BECKER ·Or· Middleport was recently Okinawa , Philippines,
!15Signed to the 6570th Aerospace Medicine Division at the Taiwan and Thailand.
Brooks Air Force Base, San Antonio, Tex.
Nov. 1- Surface a'nd Space
Sgt. Becker .bas been chosen to operate the rejects com- · Ava,ilable Mail · (SAM) to
puler for the San Antonio Development Center and is also Armed Forces in Ethiopia,
attending St. Mary's University wbere'he.is a junior majoring Iran, Israel, Saudi Arabia
In financial management,
and Turkey .. International
surface parcels to Africa and
MRS. EDWARDLeMASJ;ERismore than grateful lor the the Near East.
response to a pu~llc fund drive. to belp ·wiQI the hospital ex- Nov. 4 ..::. International
penses of her SII)8U stm who underWent brain surgery at a surface greeting cards to
Parkenburg hospital.
.
Africa and the Near East.
'lbe son, Lonnie, Ia doing well these days and has a tutor Nov. 7 _ Parcel Air Lift
'provided by the Meigs Locirl School Dlatrlct since he Is UD4ble r PAL) mall to' Armed Forces
to a\Wnd achool ss yet. Mlas Eleanor Robsol! headed the fund in Ethiopia, Iran, Israel,
drive with some $1,IDI being contributed and Jli'OI!I'.dlleS are Saudi Arabia and TUrkey.
now Wlderway to delerml!ie-the amount of expenses Involved Nov. 11 _ Surface and
which were not. covered by Insurance.
Space Available Mail (SAM)

Europe.
Nov. 20 - Space Available
Mail I SAM) to Armed Forces
in Belgium , Denmark,
England, t:;iniand, France,
Germany, Greece, Italy,
Norway,
Net~erla.J!ds ,
Portugal and Spain. Space
Available Mail (SAM) to
.
Armed Forces.in Antarctica·,
Australia, · Indonesia, Ja.pan,
Korea, New zealand,
,
Okinawa, Philippines,
Taiwan and Thailand.
Nov'.: 25 _ Surface Mar'! and
Space Available Mail (SAM)
to Armed Forces in canada,
Greenland , Labrador,
Newfoundland and the
Azores.
.
N.ov. 27 - Parcel Airlift
(PAL ) to Armed Forces in
Belgium, Denmark, En~land.
Fjnland, France, Germany,
Greece, Italy, Norway,
Netherlands, Portugal and
Spain. Parcel Air Lift (PAL)
mail to Armed Forces In
Antarctica, Australia, !n·donesia, Japan, Korea, New
Zealand, Okinawa, Philippines, Taiwan and Thailand.
Nov. , 30 - All surface
parcels to Alaska and
Hawaii.

a

A

:Special

near."

f

Best in Live Entertainment
APPEARING NIGHTLY
TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY

9:30 • 2 AM Fri. &amp; Sat.

Only

PH. 992-362'

.

.

...,.
'

SQUAD CALLED
•:
RACINE - The Racine E~
Squad was called Friday a\!,
2:15 p.m. for Lucy Whiter,
Bashan, a medical patient
who was taken to St. Josepti.
Hospital, Parkersburg, and
at5p.m. for Opal Taylor, Rt •
2, Racine, who had .a fraciUred elbow. She was taken IQ •
Veterans Memorial Hospital:'

One-Of·A~Kind

Sale

.Kroehler Uving Room Furniture
Fumiture Department, 3rd Floor

Label collection
drive un'derway ·
SHADE
Shade
Elementary School is in the
midst of a special collection
drive aimed at obtaining
greatly needed audio-visual
equipment. The program,
Labels for Educatio!l, is
sponsored by Campbell Soup
Company. "Between now and
Dec. 31 we hope to colle~t
enough Campbell's Soup and
Bean Lebels to earn a record
player", said Jack Ley,
. Principal. ''Our students are·
saving their labels, and they
would appreciate it if friends
of the school would do the
~me.''

Any Campbell's soup or
beans label counts In the
drive.

Meeting reset
Mondsy evening' ·
RIO GR~NPE , - 'l'he
meeting of parents and
teachers of the couh ty school
dlstriet thai w~s scheduled
for last .Thursday hall been
rescheduled for Monday, Oct.
'!/ at 7:30 p.m. at the Rio
Grande College cafeteria.
The meeting had to be
rescheduled due to a conflict
in time with the Hannan
·Trace-Southwestern football
game.
•
, .,
All parents, teachers, •
admlnlstrato'rs and interested citizens are 'urged to
attend.

MIDDLEPORT -The OhKan Coin Club will conduct a
regular business meeting on
Monday evening In 1he social
roc:ms of the .Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric1
Company building on Mill ·
Street In Middleport.'
A soelal hour and tndlng
session will precede ~ 8
p.m. meeting when out-oftown coin dealers, will be
preaent, to bily, sell or trade
collector's items. A 39lot coin
aiiCtiOO follows the meeting,
10d retrestiments will be
served. All lnltrested area 1
residents are Invited to at- •
tend the event.
~

Reg. 1848.00 Sofa and Love Seat,
Gold Velvet Stripe............ ~ ••••••••••• SALE '58r'
Reg..5489.00 Sofa and Dlair.
s

Gold, black, blue, white Hertulon•••••••••••SALE

29f'
Reg. $429.00 Sofa, Gold Velvet high back. SALE 52Br
Reg. 5519.00 Sofa and Chair. Gold Vetvet••••SALE 533f'
·.

I I

Reg. '598.00 Sofa.
.
·
Brown and beige vebet pattern............. SALE

$39f'
Reg. ss98.oo Sofa, Green • ve~ve~.•••••• SALE $39f'
'

Reg. '298.00 Sofa. Blue, green nylon•••••••• SALE

19f'
Reg. '449.00 ~ and Chair. Herculon •••••• SALE $28f'.
5

·Reg. 5588.00 ~ and Love Seat.
s
Blue, brown, beige Houndstuh.............SALE 38r'
'
Reg. $5= 4 Cushion Sola and Olair. SA s ftOO

•• •• •••••••• ••• •••••••••• ••• •• LE. 39;,- Reg. r1598.oo 'SQfa and Ollir.
Red and gOld velvet slfipe.................. SALE s39f'

Green ~
'

'

1

Reg. 329.00 Relaxer a.air.
.
·.
Red
.
· , blue, beige, gold plid................. SALE 519f'
Ree, 5289.00 Rocker Recliper.
.
Black, beige, brown velvet..
SALE $19f'
I I I I I I I I.I I I I ••••

Reg. '198.00 Lounge Chair. Gold velvet......SALE

11goo

5

Reg. '298.00 Swivel rocker.
519f'
Brown,and blige
veMd.... ~ •••••••••••••••• SALE
.
'
Reg. '279.00 Lcutge Chair.
G~ ~ vehNt•• ~ ••••••••••••••••
~
•••••• ~IE 519!f0
•
Reg. '323.00 Rocker Recliner. .
" .$
Pine trim, ied' t and blue plaid................ SALE 19f'
'

'

.

5

Reg. 139.00 Occasional Dlairs.
'

.

I I II ••••• I I I I I .

.

SALE $ggoo

OPEN WEEKDAYS 9S30 TO 5 PM
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9130 TO I PM

IN

High today In up!)i!r 50s to
mid IIOa. Fair and•not so cool
tonight. Low in upper :lOs ,to
upper ~Os. Tue!iday mostiy
sunny. High in upper 00s and
low 70s.

.

VOL. XXVII NO. 137

•

at y

e

'

•

enttne

Devoted To The lnterests of' The Meigs-Mason Ar&amp;l
POMEROY,MIODLEPORT, _OHIO

The 4,000 native residents
of the southwest Pacific
island of Nauru receive a per
capita revenue equivalent to
$6,000 a year from phosphate
exports.

MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1975

,,

PRICE 15'

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

i

Elberfelds .In Pome

Club to meet ·

Reservations
Friday and
Saturday

association and LUTC.
Rio Grande Coliege, as a•
community service, is again
providing the classroom~
facilities for the course at n"'l
' t'tclll .
~•
cost to the assocra
Class members are Nathan
Darst National Ll~e and,
Accid~nt ; Emory Monroe ~·
Nation wide; Michael,,
Langona, Peoples . Life;
David McCoy, Western an •
southern; Don · . w~lch a'
Peoples Life; Allen Yoho,o
Indianapolis Life; Kenneth;
Bass, National Life aml;'
Accident; Edward Gardner
Peoples Life and Willi~
Quickel, Western an~
Southern.
:)

'

Oh·Kan Coin

Geo. Hall &amp; The Hallmarks

GALLIPOLIS - The
S·o utheastern Ohio
Association of Life Un·
.derwriters is sponsoring a six
month course In personal ife
insurance.
The Personal Insurance
course coneentrates on the
career aspects of . the
business, with emphasis on
the agent's attitude and the
clients' problems, problems
that can be solved by life
insurance and on , the
development of skills and the
practical application of
knowledge.
·The course also contains a
series of sales planning
projects designed to help the
agent . ,become
'!lore
professional both in atbtude
and in practice. Empgasis is
on work habits, career altitudes, 'prospecting, record
keeping and communicativ~
ability.
It is sponsored by the
National Life Underwriters
Training Council (LUTC).
Don Thomas, gener4i agent.
for Indianapolis Life Insurance of Gallipolis, has
been appointed Instructor for
the course by the local

Mn.
LeMaster
conunenll
"!want
thank
all the
to ArmedAmerica,
Forces in the
South
and . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - · ··------------~
dertul
people
who gave
of their :time,
efforttoand
money
andwonwho Central
Congo
prayed and sent cards for our son, Lonnie. It's hard to mention and Lit~riil. Surface mail to·
'
everyooe rut there are a few very special people who came to Armed Forces lrt Belg!um,
Parkersburg and made our stay a little easier and were a big Denmark, England, Finland,
help during the variotll! crisis. I want them to know how much Fra.nce, Germany'· Greece,
we 'appl'eclated their help: Also thanks to the friends who kept Italy, Norway, Netherlands, ,
In touch In so many different ways.
· . Portugal and Spain. In: '
'
"1 think God for my family. He lets us know lbe joys ahd ternationai surface parcels to
the heartaches of Ufe rut He helps us In many ways ·and not South and Central America,
ooly when trouble is
and Europe.
Nov. 18 - Parcel Air Lift
'lliE ANNUAL SHRINE BOWL GAME In Columbus for 1PAL) mail to Armed Forces
the benefit of crippled children and children marked with in South and Central ·
burll8 has been set for Dec. 8 at the Ohio State, Stadium In America, the Congo and
Coliunbua. The game atarll at 12:30. Tickets can be purchased Liberia. lnterpational · surlocally at the New York Clothing House, Davis Insurance Co., face greeting cards to South
and from Walter Grireser.
and Central America, and

THE ANNUAL SACRED HEART Church baZaar, always
so well attended, has been set for Nov. 6 beginning with a
chicken and ham dinner, serving beginning at 4:30 p.m. The
POMEROY - Eighteen
Roger Smith, R;t. I, Reeds- bazaar will feature games as well as the usual stands where
defendants were fined and 10 ville and John Chevalier, Ill. handmade Items can be' purchased.
' others forfeited bon'ds in I, Reedsville, appeared
'
Meigs County Court Friday. before Meigs County Court
POST OFFICES OF THE OOUNTY will be closed Monday
Judge Robert E. Buck on In observance of Veterans Day. Banks and the courthouse will
charges of destruction of be open on Monday choosing Instead to close on Nov. 11 which
property, · mailboxes. They Is the traditional Armistice Day. Tomorrow Is one of those
were each sentenced · to 60 Congre$slonal holiday swilchlng.s so "adequately" handled by
Like
days confinement, 30 days Congress a couple of years ago.
UAU , •• M
good
suspended, six months
neighbor.
probation, make restitution
within six months and put up Canter, Syracuse, $25 and &gt;intoxicated, costs only, six
State Farm
the mailboxes.
·
costs, take test within 60 months probation, fi~eing an
is there.
Others fined were Forrest days, no cycle endorsement; officer.
'
Nelgier, Rt. 2, Racine, and Adam · B. Collins, Rt. 4,
Forfeiting bonds were Pam
With State farm insurance.j'OU get
Caural.
Kimes,
Rt.
1,
Long
Pomeroy,
$100
and
costs,
$SO
H~nton,
Wellston, $25,
last. friendly servrce wherever and
suspended,
take
test
within
60
trespassing;
John E.
Bottom,
$11
and
costs
each,
whenever )'(Ill need II from15.500
agents and claim representatives speeding ; Robert L. Macklin, days, no operators license; · Loveday, Vinton, Roger
across too llllioQI'm one of Ihem
Massvllle, Ill., and Theron Cecil D. Frye, Rt I, Rutland, Smith, Millfield, Ronald
and I'll be the rewhen you"needme. Mullins, Ironton, $8 and costs· $5 and costs, high rear Thomas, Rt. 4, Pomeroy and
Cynthia Ord, bumper; Charles F. Kim, Charles Chaffin, Flatwood,
Car-rol K. each,,speeding;
Rt. 3, Pol)leroy, and Michael Tuppers Plains, $25 . and Ky., $27.50 each, speeding;
Snowden W. Stevens, Little Hocking, costs, speeding; Donald · Theriee Randolph, Rt. I,
24 Stale St.
$15 and costs each, speeding; Sedgwick, Tuppers Plains, · Reedsville, $27.50, passing at
Galtlpotls
Mark W. Tienviert, Athens, $50 and costs, fleeing an of- intersection; Mifhael E.
446-4290
$12 and costs, speeding ; ficer, $5 and costs, failure to Eingle,. Carey, Ohio, $&amp;9.55,
Calvin D. Pickens, Rt. 2, submit to.inspection; Dennis spotlighting deer; R~chel
Racine, $50 and costs, Adkins, Syracuse, $150 and .Hutton, Rt. 1, Rutland, $!!&lt;1.50,
spotlighting deer: Daryl w. costs, 30 days confinement, illegal parking; Jean E.
Salisbury, Gallipolis and six months probation, fine , Sammons, Forrest Hills, Ky.,
State Farm !n&amp;ulance Comoanltl
Randy J. Mulford, Cheshire, suspended,
15
days $57.50, fictitious registration;
ttom• Olll(ln Bloomington. Mhnoia
suspended,
attend
school
for William Slayton, Clifton,
$15
and
costs
each,
illegal
PH01
duck hunting; Charl.es M. three days, driving while $27.50, failure to yield!

·8:30 PM • t· AM Tues. • Thul$.

Insurance course
·is schedule~

Now You Know

·~~~:::::::::::w.-:=::::~:;:;:;:;:;:::;:::::;:;:~:::::~:~:::::·:::::::::::~::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::?o:::::::::=:--::~

fNews ...in Briefsl
I

Critics have no
program-Rhodes

t&gt;lit

By UDited PJsaiDtematloaal
SACRAMENTO, CALIF. - THE FBI Is checking out
leadllln Ita lnvestlgatlm of the Symblonese UberaUon Army
based on a trafllc Ucllet laued to Steven sOllah, Patricta
Hearllt's lover who Is charged with harboring her before her
arrellt.
One key lesd Involves a yOW\g San Francisco nurse whose
(:81' Solllih was driving when he was lltQPped for speeding Feb,
;Ill about 45 miles north o! Redding, CBUf., near a Hearst
famUy estate. "They want to talk to her, bu\ so far they have
been unable to lind her," ooe law enforcementomctaJ said.

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio
(UPI) - Gov. James A.
Rhodes said today critics of
his bond proposal package
are ''trying to hoodwlnlr: the
public into forgetting that
they have no program of their
own."
Rhodes, In remarks
prepared for a Chamber of
Conunerce breakfast here,
said a portion of his bond
package is designed to
alleviate the. natural gas

SAcRAMENTO, CALIF. -PROSECUTORS Tuesday will
argue that a jqe should r~~!ll' his order that President
Ford must give videotaPed testimony In the ctile of Lyhette·
Frooune, the Manson culti8t acCIIIed of attempting to );Ill him.
· U.S. District Jqe Thomas J. MacBride Issued Ute an·
precedented subpoena last week for Ford's deposition for
possible Ule In ~ Frommme's scheduled Nov. 4 trial.
MacBride said the testimony, to Include croas a:amlnaUon by
Mlas Fromme's ~unset, co~d be taken at any place convenient to the President before next Frldy.

SAN FRANCISCO- SARA JANE MOORE, 45, a onetime
FBI informer, wUl be arraigned Tuesday In federal court on
charges of trying to );Ill President Ford as he left a downtown
hotel Sept. 22.
Miss Moore was transferred to the San Malo County Jail in
nearby RedwoOd City dtirlng the weekend from San Diego,
where i!lle had been 111dergolng a psychiatric evaluaUon to
determine whether she was mentally competent to stand trial.
ClEVELAND - REP. RONALD M. MOTTL, ~hio,

says he will Introduce leglalaUoo In Congress this week urging
U.S. cltlzeruJ to boycott tourism in Mexico "because of shabby
treatment received by U. S. athletes during the Pan American
Games In Melico aty."
"I'm tired of seeing the United States and Ita citizens
kicked around by IICH!8lled allies llie Melico," Mottl said
today,
· Mottl was referring to reports U. S. athletes were jeered
and spat upon during the games by Melican ~ators.
KINGS MILLS, OIUO - EVEL KNIEVEL Is mellowing.
ThedaredevD wUlbe lessdar1J18. That's the Image the 37-yearold motorcycle Jmnper created for himaell alter he lldmltted
he hedged m a jump to be sale and began talking about shorter
jumps and more "responalblllty."
.
"Thla Harley-Davldlon doesn't have wings and I think
that'a!u- enough," Knlevel said after lnt«rtlonally landing oo
a ''lafety" platform atop Ute llnJl bus In an attempt to span 14
Greyhound buies Saturday evenin«.
· CXlLUMBUS - THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY eu-~ nest
year could receive leglaiatlon drafted by the Ohio State
Medlcsl Alloclltlon to define death and head off court cases

qtlellioolng whether doctors are keeping patlenll alive or
"trealinl corpses."
.
' &amp;ipport lor a legal deflnltlm of death II building among
&lt;Jrlo phyaiclans. Flw states have adopted such laws already:
The asaocl.atlon and moat of Ita memben believe court cases
based oo the Issue will continue unlll death illegally defined,
says David Rader, chief of the aSIOCiatlon's Legal Affairs
Bureau.
OOLUMBUS - DEPENDENCE on natural gaa by Ohio
lndWiry cmlronts the atate with a llteadlly worsening energy

llhortage unUI at leallt 19110, says the Ohio Energy Emergency

Commlatdon.
. "The overall shoit and loog-term energy forecast for Ohio
is ooe In which we are going to cootinually travel oo Ute ragged
edge ol adequscy of our basic · fuel supplies," states the
cornmlaslon 's 1281lage final report, now being prepared for
dlstrirutlon.
'
.
BEIRUT, LEBANON- PREMIER RASHID Karama,
llhocked by the worst outbreak of fighting In ail! montha of
reJiglous warfare, has pleaded with Lebanon's battling
(Continued on page 8)

President Ford pays

NEW MEMBERS-Installed as new members of the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority Sunday at a preferential tea at the home of Mrs. Libby Sayre, were
front row, 1-r, Oreryl Crow, Lynne Crow, Sharon Ru&amp;sell, and Rita Hayes; bsck row, Bette
Jean Krawsczyn, Sherry Abbott, and Sheila Reeves.'
·
wm~:r.&lt;-oo.~mm.~

Otarges denied
by Gov. Rhodes
COLUMBUS (UPI) Qrarges that Gov. James A.
Rhodes' four so&lt;ailed "economic recovery" issues on
the November ballot will not
produce the 500,000 new Ohio
jQbs that he has claimed have
been denied by the governor.
Interviewed by Columbus
radio Illation WBNS for its
"55 Minutes" program
&amp;mday, Rhodes defending
the four constitutional
amendmelilll that be had
placed by petiU011 on the
ballot.
"W~
have housing,"
Rhodel said, "and I think all
the authoriUea say we can
create 35,1100 jQb! In just the
houalng Industry. We have
$1.7$ billion in highways and,
in the maltier plan for
transportation, we get $2.5
billion from the federal
government.
"According to the Labor
Department and Trans·
portatlon ,Departme~t, for
every blllloo dollars we spend
in transportation we get
123,000 jQbs. So you just
multiply that and we are
talking about 522,000 jobs and
we are trying to be conservative here."
Rhodes also noted. extra
taxpayers would result.
"Let me just point out that
In this whole program, if we
have 500,000 people working,
they will pay $85m1Ulon to~
mUJlon mdre In sales tax
revenue," he said.
"They will pay $38 million
' . tax.
more In per1011allncome
There's $&amp;5 million more In

tribute to veterans
WASlUNGTON (UP!) Before this morning's
welcoming ceremonies for
Egypt's President Anwar
Sadat at the White House,
President Ford com·
memorated Veterana Day.
Ford, who 11'811 to place a
wreath at Ute Tomb of the
Unlmowl1 Soldier In :VIington
~' uked "ail Americans to pallle today In trirute
to the priceless contrlbutlm
of all veterins and, In par·
ticular, thole who gave their
Uvea so Uris natloo might
live.''
Ford's comments were
taped In advan.;e.
' With a lingering cough
remaining from hil weeklmg bout with a cold, Ford
planned to greet Sadat on the
South LIWn ol the White
HoUle and then confer with
him today and Tueaday.
There will be a White Houae
state dinner for Sadat

tooigbt.

'

There .
wn
aome
apeculatjon FOrd ml&amp;bt meet
with Sadat again this week
When the Jrmtlllll leader
mit• Jacbonvllle, Fla. But
with Sadlrl retumln&amp; to
Wlitlllngtcln lor a speech to
. eongreu nut week, there
may be '\II need lor the
Florida meetlrti.

Sadat, whose COW\\ry no
longer depends on the Soviet
Uniu lor weaponl, aald
before h1a arrival he will ast
Ford lor military ald.
Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger has said repeatedly
any decision reached between Ford and Sadat will not
be announced iounedlately.
In about a week, Ford will
present hla lull request for
foreign aid, Including help for ,
IU'ael and Egypt, "and I
lhlnk lt will ~lave to be considered by the Coogreu as a
package," Klsalnger aald
Saturday.
Sadat, In a Sunday
broadcallt Interview (ABC'a
luu• and Anlwer• l taped
be!Gre he left Cairo, said he
want• to buy American
weapons, not ta11e tllem as
llftl. "I 1111 not aolng to the
United Stat• u a beggar.''
He a110 uld be trusta Ford
as "an honest and
atralllbtlonrard man" . and
that !Qalnger "has never
fallid hla word with me up
IIIUl IIIII moment."
,
After the Sadat villi, Ford
goee on IIIOther round 14
Rfpubl!can land rllllng ap,paarancel, Including one at
the St. Francia hotel In San.
Francllco where he .,.., snot
at Sept. 22.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Wednesday through
Friday, chance of showers
each day. Highs Wednesday from the mid 60s to
low 70s, and in mld 50s to
mid 60s Thursday and
Friday. Lows mostly In the
40s.

Casualties

emergency by providing $150
million for new drilling and
pipeline construction.
"Jobs
are
serious
business," Rhodes said .
''Talldng the . natural gas
Issue to death won't help.
ThiB program will get us the
gas to preserve and create
jobs. Talldng won't.
"Filling this energy gap Is
what our program is for,"
said Rhodes. "Without new
gas we will have an industrial
wasteland. The industries
which depend on natural gas
are the same ones we depend
on for our economic health."

I

mount m
Lebanon
BEffiUT, Lebanon (UP!)
-U.S. and British embaasies
today advised their naUooals
who had no urgent reason to
stay to get out of Lebanoo
where warring militiamen Ignored yet arother ceaae.fue
In the civil war.
Casua!Ues In the six-weeklong baUle between Moslem
and . Christian gunmen
lnOW\ted to at least 1100 dead
with 2,000 wounded after a
vicious weekend of fighting.
Nearly 7,000 persona have
been killed or Injured since
the conflict flared in AprU.
The
U.S.
Embassy
suggested American
resldenll follow ill lead In
evacuating non-easentlal
staff and dependents "not
essential to their actlviUes in
Lebanon.''
A slmUar statement was ·
made by the British Embassy
and other embaSsies were
meeting to discuss the same
move.

State Issues
explained by

corporate franchise tax
because they will be doing
more business. There's $60
mllllon more In municipal
Income taxes. All the money
we collect, state and locally,
(Editor's note- Tbere will be nine statewide
ts more than this program
(the four bond issues) costs.
issues, many of them complex, on the Ohio ballot
"In 1966, welfare cost· the
Nov. 4.
taxpayers of Ohio $217
MADRID, Spain (UPI) United Press International statehouse
mUJlon. In 1971 it was $4811 Generalissimo Francisco
reporter Lee Leonard has prepared a series of
mUJloo. This year ~e have Franco rallied today from a
articles explaining each Issue.
;:.pproprllted $1 bUJion. The new setback In his fight for
Today's article deals with State Issues One, Six,
recOrd shows that welfare In survival, rut docton said he
Seven and Nine.)
Ohio doubles In Ohio every was still In grave coodition.
five years. It means that by
Amedical bulletin issued at
1811 It will be $2.1 billion dawn said the Spanilh·leader
By LEE. LEONARD
dollan. And In 1986 we are "almost totally" recovered
Statehouse Reporter
talking about $4.2 billion from the latest reverB&amp;! in his
&lt;Fint ill a series)
dollars."
up-and-down fight against
COLUMBUS (UPI)- State Issue 1, known as
twin heart attacks.
the "open spaces'' or "greenbelt" amendment,
, The report came sll hours
Cancer clinic
would
change the state constitution to authorize
after doctors said a stomach
tax relief on land devoted exclusively to outdoor
hemorrhage and heart beat
dates revealed
recreation.
Free cancer screening irregularities had left the SZ.
It is similar to a constitutional amendment
year-old generalissiino in ""AAtl&gt;1iljll&gt;1iljii!'JI'IHI38li88Ell88lll88!•..1il·,·l!ll;",
clinics for all Meigs County critical
condition.
tam
;:n~_M
" ......
adopted by the voters in 1974, granting the tax
women being held monthly at
"He has spent the night
MADRID
I UP I)
relief for agricultural land.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
will he held on the second resting quietly, treatment Generallulmo FraDclsc'o
The Ohio Constitution now law givitig each candidate In
Thursday of each month has almost totally stopped the FraDco is suffering from
gastric hemorrhage and the continuing heart .failure
requires that all land, except an election "reasonably
during November and
disturbances In the heart and his condition remalm
farmland, be assessed for tax equal treatment" on the
December.
rhythm, Improving the card!· gnve, bls docton said
purposes according to Its ballot.
The clinics began ln May ocirculatory condition," today. The ll·man team of
It Is regarded as an ad·
"market value" - the
and since then 360 women
doctors said this morning.
docton treating· blm was
vantage for a political canamount
it
Is
worth
on
the
open
have undergone s~reening .
The medical team treating increased to 14 today.
didate to have his name listed
market.
No positive cases have been
Franco during his week-long
The 112-yeat'old Franco .
Rising land appraisals, first among the contenders
discovered
but
some
fight for survival said he "Is has battled weakly for We
according to the amend- for his office.
suspicios cases are being maintaining a nonnal con- after a series of neat'fatal
The Ohio Constitution
ment's supporters, are forfollowed up by the Meigs sclousness level" but '1he heart attaeks which ~Jegan
requires that candidates'
cing
the
owners
of
ski
areas,
County lieal th Depariment.
gravity continues."
last Tuesday and a gold courses and other names be rotated so each will
Women wishing to be.given
dangerous stomach
recreational areas to think be In the top position an equal
benefits of the free clinic
MEEt RESCHEDULED
hemorrhage
s"unday
about selling their land to number of times at every
.during
November
or
A meeting of Middleport night
commercial developers for p(JIUng place.
December should call 992- Village Council scheduled for
A medical bulleUn timed
This means each polling
housing projects and shop7531 between 9 a.m. and 4 this evening will be held at at 8 a. m. EST and signed
place with voting machines
ping
centers.
p.m.
7:30 p.m. Tuesday.
by the 14 docton- the fifth
State Issue 1 would en- must have an even number of
.bulletin of the day - said
courage them to remain in machines and voters must be
tire Caudillo spent a quiet
business by allowing the sent to alternate booths.
morning and remains
legislature to pass
law Otherwise, paper ballots with
eonsc:ious.
providing that land "devoted equal rotation must be used,
~.m:~·s;u·· exclusively
to outdoor causing delays and expense.
State Issue 6 would do away
recreation" be valued for tax
Fireman says
purposes according to its with ballot-by-ballot rotation
and require the General
ucurrent use."
Taxation based on income Assembly to provide for
runs are costly
from
the
recreation rotation on a precinct-byRACINE - According to presumably would be lower precinct basis. · ·
Randall Roberts, a member than taxation based on the
of the Racine Fire Depart- land value as a commercial
State Issue 7 would permit
ment, the department investment.
the Ohio General Assembly to
members are getting weary
If the land were sold for determine how delegates to
of answering fire calls to the another purpose, the reduced national political party
trash containers owned by taxes could be recovered by conventions are chosen.
the county.
The state Constitution now
the local government inThey were called Sunday at volved .
requires that the name of
9:25p.m. to County Road 28
There is nothing in the every candidates for delegate
where two had been set on proposed amendment which to a political party convention
fire. They used 300 gallons of bars tax breaks on property appear on the ballot. If eight
water to put out the fires. closed to the public, but those
(Continued on page 8)
This type of fire call is very property owners violating
costiy to the department, civil rights or practicing
Roberts said. Eight men racial discrimination are not
answered the call.
eligible for the relief.
LOCAL TEMPS
Saturday at 10:35 a.m., the
Opponents complain the
The
temperature in
Racine ER squad was called amendment would apply to
downtown Pomeroy at 11
to Rt. 2, Racine, for Henry private golf courses, race
a.m. Monday was 59 degrees
Phelps, a medical patient tracks and amusement
under cloudy skies.
·
who was .taken to Veterans . parks. They also note local
Memorial Hospital.
governments would lose
TRI&lt;::K OR TREAT
revenues, and that the
Trick or treat night in
EVENT WEDNESDAY
amendment would encourage
Trick ot: treat night in other classes of property Pomeroy will be observed for
SO'UTI!ERN'S SENIOR BAND MEMBERS were honored during haiftime activities at Middleport for children 12 owners to seek similar youngsters 12 and under from
6 to 7 Wednesday evening.
Southern High stadium Saturday night. Front row, Becky Harris, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. and under will be observed breaks.
The fire siren will be sounded
from
6
to
7
p.rll.
Wednesday,
Bill Harrla, Corella RhodiB, daughter of Mrs. Irene Rhodes, and Molly Fisher, daughter of
Marlene Fisher and John Fisher; bact row, I to r, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Harris, Mrs, Rhodes, according to recent action by
State Issue 6 requires the to mark the opening and
Middleport Village Council. General Assembly .to write a closing of the activity,
Marlene Fisher and John Fisher.
•

Franco
rallies

Lee Leonard

a

.

."The
Ohio
Energy
Emergency Comml~lon,
created by the Ohio General
Asaembly, reported 1ast wee1t
that no new supllles are going ·
to be available In Ohio under
existing progranui IDIUl 19110
or beyond," Rhodes said,
"We cannot 1fait unUI 19110
for more gas, or our Industry
~move out," Rhodea said.
"With the $150 million
provided In IIIBue $, we can
get moving now with new
drUilng and pipeline construction to get Ohio natural
gas flowing."

. ~

.'r

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