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Blakeslees

·in National
Sessions
Mi'. and Mrs_ C. E. BlaltesTee

are in Columbus this week

Austerity Ends Camping

Tri-Co Concerts Drive Kickoff Set
The Tri-County Community Rogers and Jan KcArt,
Concert Association will open soprano, with lbeir acits :!lith annual drive for etmpanist, will I*
1t the
members Monday emdng in ·opening I!IIDCert m Od. 16. The
Gallipolis.
Dc*iaD ~let, a woodwind
Drive captains, work..,. 8lld eJS m'b!e:, has been booked to
members of the association~s appear on Marcl! l _ ,
boardofdirectorswillheguests
at the annual kict.&lt;Jif dinner at Other attractions will be
6::11 p.m. Mooclay at !be Grace selected at the close or the
United Methodist Cburdl.
week-long membership driveoo
Two outstanding attractions Sept. 1&amp;.
have already been scheduled Mrs_ J ames A_ Beverly.
for the 1971-72 concert s son. chairman of the :!lith an"Three
on
Broadway," ni~ caml!"iCJI is assisted
·
ban' tone RonaJd by
"--uM. Thaler as cofea t urmg
. Mrs............

C the drift, in
.lli;ip c-ty ..elfr. and lin.
Hauld s-r. ml llnL Ralpb
Qu:ap is . ~ far the
!h.m o-ty ora. Tams
boveabDhemcq;eC lin Rio
0111 HiD. Jar''*' 8lld ,
in Ra-w Ml,
va.
Allllftft waslldd ta:eutly al
"Rioali)· ill ,.......,... fclr
clriwr .np!ains m1 -tas.
pi&amp; •c id wal wed: fclr lasl
se:asoa's DPJ!!l!ers, which
closes Scaiday_A J8r1:e mwnber
&lt;1. last )'!!lr"s nrnl:ws llawe
a•--Ae
--"--' m- lbeir
u...,..., ..........,
c:tWrm.., p

r

Gr..,

membership fees to drive
he~ at II Court St. in
G~lis. f the fi .t time

'\bill year · Of'
II'S
. •
family meQJberships ar~ bemg
offeled at $25 a .family, (Qr
p;ll'ellts· and all childre~ 1;10der
!be age .or 1&amp;, ~ndiVldual
~are pnced at $10
for an.adult and $5 for a student
lfull-:mne through college age).
Drive workers are reminded
ci the imporlan~ ofattending
Monday everung s ~er and
are urged to turn m all !hell'
renewals at that time.

w.
participating in the 56th annual
meeting of !be National
Association
of
County
Agricultural Agents. .
Mrs. Blakeslee is assisting in
the Hospitality Room of the
ladies' program 8lld as tour
guide.
Blakeslee, Meigs County
agent the past two years vice
chairman of the Annual
Meeting Committee, has been
responsible foc coordination of
activity of committees on COLUMBUS (UPI) - The 5inre June 30, was whisked Failure ta ect•nl !l'"""'ing
additional money and will
Advanced Promotion, with Ohio General Assembly. tbrougb the Senate Thursday past nritighllanicbl, wbea tbe
actually allow !be stale to meet
Kenneth Ackennan, chairman, showing signs of tensioo and in fOlD' hours.
cum:nt ltday iolltiim budget bills only through Sept. 17.
and
on publicity, en- weariness over the lengllly lbeproposalwassped tllroqgh apio:es, IIUIIId 11m! left the
Welfare and school foundation
tertainment, 8lld pork cbop budget.taxstalemate, bas Iaten lbe legislative P"'"
to allow state wilbaal.legal aatbarity to payments, whicb come due at
barbecue.
another stopgap step to prolong Gov. Jobn J. Gilligan to sign it pay bills.
uie end of the month, are not
He also has coordinated the negotiatioos.
b!!fore leaWig toclay for the Wllile the "
we es- covered uoder the latest interim
. activities of the National Board, Anew20-&lt;laytemporarybcidg- NaiKina!Gova:ncn Confe:eooe lends tbe 'l*''lii.: blatplint
.&lt;pending plan, and other state
SVAC OFFICERS -Joint Patton, center, head football coacb at Synunes Valley, was
Special Meals and Special et, the fourth to be cleared in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
lhrwgb S!pl. 31, it (GIIIains 110 bills .may be in jeopardy after
elected president of the Southern Valley Athletic Corderence Thursday night. other officers
Guests at !be Center for
next week.
are Roger Kirkhart, left, Eastern football coach, vice-president, and Mel Carter, Southwestern
Tomorrow. For the past three
Uepe For A Break
grid coacb, secretary-treasurer.
years Blakeslee has been the
Legislative leaders, however,
Ohio member on the Eztension
eJ:pl'essed hopes a break in the
one of the men who attended the Programs Committee.
fiscal deadlock may come beparty, "Swann went berserk" The Blakes lees weo·e in
fore then. H not, the lawand threatened to kill his own Columbus last Sunday and
makers will prepare a fifth inwife, Shirley Dalton Swann, Monday in connection with the
terim budget, including school
who had gone to the Williams National Board meetings and
subsidiesandwelfarepayments,
horne to get her husband. The will return next Sullday M . Countians
A"~-..1 anotberfOI'theMtFlower-Uan rb
aa1.
also
ta
tbe
lrfel
of
beginning next Tuesday.
other
men
reportedly following the annual meeting
eigs .
are ~e
Felony indictments were nection with Miss Williams' restrained Swann. At this point, and the National Board ac- to enroll m three adult ~ areas, at the Mt. Flower Grade eduralioll be ,.u..n..~ befcJre Thursday's activities displayIeavmg crhnql
ed the frayed tempers of some
oo Route
for the
returned Thursday afternoon by death and is being held without Shirley Swann returned to her tivities.
.cIasses to be conducted m School
night 8lld
tbe lfl
final
willfirst
be
All
of
the
c
h
ate
tailillll
lawmakers, but bore litUe fruit
a Mason County grand jury bail.
home in Burdette Addition,
Mas:o" County.
against two men being held in William Whitlatch, 19, of according to the sheriff's
W1~ more and more em- meetingattheBeecbHiiiGrade free, .as llleJWVjedis 'I''NUd in the way of progress on a
entirely bJ Slate Vacalilml811d budget-tax package for the rethe local jail as the aftermath of Nelsonville, 0., who is being
report.
P~
~
the necc:sslty of ~ of instruction to be Federal Funds_ AD boob, maining 211&gt; months of the fisa strangulation killing of held in lieu of a $5,000 cash
Reportedly after arriving
havmg a high school d!Pl~ to covered will be General WGikJoAs ami ' tiug sqt- cal biennium.
Sandra Faye Williams ·early on bond, was indicated on a charge home, Mrs. Swann later called
successfully c~te m the ,job
the morning of July 4.
of sale and possession of drugs. the Williams' home to warn that RACINE _Addie R. Barton, market today, With the . on- Mathematics, Englisb and plies an famished to !be Legislative leaders, lobbyists
· at provernent of one•s .educa.tiona! General
Written Science
Communications,
Steven Swann, a 21 year-&lt;Jid The indictment specifically her husband possibly would 73, Racine, died this
· mormng
and Social sludeslts al 110 t:OSl ta the and n:presentatives of !be Gilresident of Point Pleasant, was labeled it Lysergic Acid come to the house. Mr. and Mrs. Veterans Memorial Hospital. level and ~resulting pnde of Studies Instructors will em- enrollee_ Stu*m's may mla' ligan administration continued
at aay lime_
Ill rush from one private meetcharged with murder in con. Diethylamide (LSD).
Cecil Williams were not at home Mrs. Barton was preceded m bemg a high school graduate, pbasize. that all tudents will be lhe d•
(£
inl&amp;""'*'t'.
addilianal
iJ&gt;.
ing
to another in the Statehouse
Felony indictments were also at the time of the incident.
death by her parents, Mr. and the M~
Board of w - at theirsawn individual
funnalioll may he aNaP-IIIn lhoughout the day
returned against Linda C.
Swann allegedly gained entry Mrs. A. J. Decker, and her Education has decided ta open orting
.
th h
b b kin husband Edward Barton Mrs thetbreeadultlearningcla ts. rate and on tbetr OWD ·lhe vuc:alilml tll!llls' in M·- But GOP leaders and repreMullins on a charge of felony ·
mto
e orne y rea g
•
·
· These will
.
. terested achievement 1e11e1 The lengtb Cocmlf. &amp;IWIIB, ml a fclr senlatives of organized labor
concerning a $200 check written through a sliding glass door in !Wton was !be last of 13
.
~t m
of time
for a student
Tonighllhru Tuesday
Cbarles k
Fnun. Pre- said they were in no hurry to
last May and another against the rear, according to the children.
adults m becommg pre~ to
. ~.
September 10-14
7 to agree to proposals to preserve
Robert L. Brotherton on a police. He then attacked Sandra She is survived by two pass the general educallon to rBISe his educational level to enrollmeat is aat ' "
Walt Disney's
mla'
the
c'
Howe•
a. tbe administrations planned
charge
of
armed
robbery
on
while
her
younger
sister
daughters,
Mrs.
George
(Addie
development
test.
where
tM:
can
pass
the
bigh
All Cartoon· Feature
!bclieiUingpt..elabeatlhe
state income tax and would
""PINOCCHIO"
Hazel Grimm.
Deborah 15, struck Swann with Mae) Brown, Mason, and Classes in the area will open school dependdiploma tes:t.e will, ~
l Tecllnicolorl
-. fOI' llavetogivematlerscareful conFour misdemeanors were the butt' of a shotgun. Swann Blanche Biggs, Racine; one on M~~ at 7 p.m. ~ ~t · course,
upon
amoun initial 01pnialional
It's Pure Enchantment!
si.deration.
also among eight of the in· disarmed Deborah and con- son, Dayton Biggs, Racine; two meeting will be foc orgaruzation of study be devotes to the enrollmeal
G
dictments returned by the tinued beating Sandra, ac- step-sons, Victor Barton, only with ~nt dates 8lld !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Ill!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
FLAP
!Color
September term grand jurors cording to Huffman.
Fairmont, W. Va., and the class meeting ~lace to be
Anthony Quinn
after deliberations of nearly two
Deborah then called the Raymond Barton, in California; determined at tha~ time. There
Claude Akins
days.
sheriff's office. Deputy Sheriff a step-daughter, Mrs. Sam must be a ~urn of 12
GP
Larry
Lee
Roach
of
706'f..
Millard
Halstead reports ~e (Violet) Liever, Toledo; two students enrolled ~ order to
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
Viand Street and George said, "He's killing my sister." grandchildren, six step- permanenUy establish a _class.
Clendenen, also of Point
When the police arrived on grandchildren, five step.great- One class will be meeting at
Pleasant, were each charged the scene, Swann allegedly was grandchildren, and several the Hartford Grade Scbool,
·-with
obstructing an officer.
on the front porch of the house nieces and nephews.
MASON
I • I'
George M. Love and &amp;dney and, without resisting arrest, Funeral services will be
Huddleston Ill, both of Point said, "She's dead. Everything's Monday allOa.m. at the Dorcas
SUIT FILED
Tonight, Saturday
Pleasant,
were
each
charged
on
okay
now."
United
Brethren
Olurch
with
A suit for money in the
&amp; Sunday
. the indictments with jail
the 'Rev. Freeland Norris of- amount of $1,516.12 bas been
Sept. I0-11-12
escape .
PLEASANT VALLEY
ficiating. Burial will he in filed in Meigs County Coolmon .
Double Feature
Those in custody were to
ADMISSIONS : Rosemary Gree.nwood Cemetery.
AIRPORT
Pleas Court by George Ingels,
(Color)
appear before Judge James Lee Byus, Point Pleasant; Sandra Friends ~Y cai_J at ~ dba Ingels Furniture, MidBurt Lancaster
Thompson today.
Westmoreland, Cottageville; Planche B1ggs residence m dleport against James E.
Dean Martin
Allegedly six men were in- Frederick Pearson Point Racme after 6 p.m. loday to Ferguson, Pomeroy, Rt. 4. The
Jean Seberg
volved in a "drug party" at the Pleasant; Mr~. Marvin' Bennett, Sunda~ e~ening. Ewing Funeral trial date in the case of Isabel
Jacqueline Bisset
G
mobile home of Eugene Jr., Point Pleasant; Jasper Home ISm charge. .
Simpson versus James Horner
-PlusWilliams, brother of the dead
DREAMS OF GLASS
has been setfoc Sept. 21, and the
Buffalo and Karrie
girl. This was located near the Casto,
(Color)
Marcum, Leon.
case of Herman A. Taylor
GP
home of his parents.
versus Patricia Tayloc bas been
DISCHARGES: Charles (Continue&lt;! frilm Page I )
John Denos
At
the
time
of
the
initial
indismissed.
Caroline Barrett
vestigation, Sheriff Troy Rogers, Mrs. Clayton Duncan, and fundamental matter "
Mr. John Morrow, Mandy Jackson said. "Should such~
Huffman said after talking to
Capehart, Retha Kay, Mrs. election fail to lake place, I
James Sturgeon, Mrs ..Clarence must reserve my position
Emenck, Lyle Austin, Mrs. regarding future u.s. military
HOURS CHANGED
Donald Workman, Mrs. M. and economic aid to the South Sunday School classes will he
Luckeydoo, Shane Shields, Mrs. Vietnamese government."
held at the Wesleyan United
Nellie Zahrendt, Eleanor Jackson bas been a finn and Methodist Church in Racine
Smithson, Reta Roush, Thyron consistent supporter · of U.S. from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. this
Wallace, I, and Mrs. Edward military action in Vietnam, Sunday due to the Cluster
Hudson.
including Nixon's Vietnamirn- Church services and picnic.
tion program. He is regarded
as a potential contender for the
Democratic presidential nomination, although many politicians
believe his stand on the war
has put him far out of step with
!be party's direction.

.

Lawmakers Hedge .another 20 Days

.

Meigs Folks Invited into
No-Cost Learrdng Oasses

Murder Charged
In Mason County

Addie .Barton
DietJ. Friday

Cocmtr

. MEIGS lHEATRf

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IU austerity program.
the part would he a busy
spot with campers, swimm&lt;I'S and fishermen at this time of
the year . .

~I

·:·:····· LANCASTER, Ohio (UPI ) - U. S.
Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kansas, the.National
Republican chairman, said here the
Republican ticket next year would be
President Nixon and Vice President
Agnew and said the people who want to
dump Agnew are the same ones that would
like to dump Nixon.
"You'll note these people have never
been sympathetic to Nixon," Dole said at a

fund raising dinner here Friday night for
U.S. Rep. Clarence Miller, R.{)hio.
Dole said if Nixon doesn't run "we
have a lot of stuff to throw away at the
national committee."
Dole said Ohio would be a key slate in
1972. "You don't have a governor, you
ought to have a president," said Dole in
reference to Democratic Gov. John J.
Gilligan and his battles with the
Republican dominated legislature.

WEATHER REPORT

•

Sat~rday

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON.'S The Southern Local
varsity foolball squad will play
.
CLEANERS
Eastern
Ju'nior
Varsity
211 2nd·
· Pon1eroyl
GAME SET

]UffiOI'

E.

Phone 992-5421

Saturday at Southern foolball
field at 8 p.m.

LADIES LEVI'S
Yau·u find !he answers to all your finan cial needs right here.
All under one roof.
All backed by expert firlancial advice.
And friendly, personal attention.

POMEROY
NATIONAL BANK
.

POMEROY

RU11.AND

In The
Latest
Styles
and
Colors

Seroing Meigs CoUTity
Since 1872
Member Federal Reserve System

30 PAGES

VOL VI

NO. 33

Pomeroy -Middleport

~

r

IGA
FOODLINER

WILL BE CLOSED

All Day Sunday. Sept. 12

M.IDDLEPORT, 0 .

FOR
EMPLOYEES &amp;' FAMILIES
"

I

BAHR CLOTHIERS

M&amp;R
BARGAINLAND

ANNUAL PICNIC

Reaching More
Than 11,()()()
THREE SECTIONS

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1971

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Families
NE~~Tt~~ 15 CENTS

Nixon to Bare
Economi-c Plan
By October 15

NEW DIRECTOR TAKES BREAK - Olarle!l Rowe made his debut as
director of the Gallia Academy High School marching band at South Point Friday
night. Here, he is taking a break following the halftime show presented by his Blue
Devil musicians.

Rowe Makes Debut
SOUTH POINT - Charles Rowe's
Gallia Academy High School marching
band made its 1971 debut before approximately 3,000 fans in halftime
ceremonies of the Gallipolis-South Point
football game here Friday night.
It was also the Gallipolis band's first
appearance under the direction of Mr.
Rowe, who succeeded A. K. Suiter earlier
this year. Suiter retired . in July after
serving the city schools 21 years.
With Drum Major Steve Lee and
Majorettes Connie Coonen, Nancy Adams,
Denise Lanier, Lisa Atkins, Becky

Durham, Peggy Scarberry, Suzette
Robinson and Ginger Dobson out in front,
the Blue Devil musicians presented a
classical theme featuring the following
numbers:
"Fanfare For Band," "Bach With a
Beat," "Rock Ala Bacb" (majorette
feature) and a "Can Can" dance routine.
The program was completed with the
GARS Fight Song.
South Point musicians presented a
well-received show to conclude half-time
activities.

Death Ruled Suicide

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER

COMES IN
ALL SIZES

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporatior
· Alllloccounts Insured Up To $20,000.00

Continuous Service On
Fridays 'i a.m. to .7 p.m.

NOTICE

Your Invited Guest

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley

Jackson

2-HOUR
CLEANING.

GARY HOS'l'£'11 ER, Tuppen Plains, Is the only state paid employe stm
working at Forked Run State Park in Meigs County. Four federally paid employes
remain on duty, however . Hostetter is one of some half dozen state employes who
normally work the year around at the park.

tmts

Nights Until

Wearing Apparel Fer Your Family and
Fumishings For Your Home.

He also said the American people must
be reminded the escalation of the war in
Southeast Asia occurred when Democrats
were in the White House and Nixon is doing
his best to wind that war down .
Attending the dinner for Rep. Miller
from Meigs County were Mr. and Mrs.
Bernard Fultz, Middleport; John T. Wolfe,
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Wolfe, Racine; Mrs.
Joan Harrison, Rutland, and Homer Cole
and George Collins, Tuppers Plains.

+

ParUy cloudy Sunday. High in
the 7~ . Fair Sunday night and
Monday. Low Sunday night in
the 50s. High Monday in the 7il!l.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy Are Open
Friday and

- .DRIVE·iH
•

11US CHAIN BARRICADES the en!ranee to Forked Rill
State Park in Meigs County In conjunctioil with the order of
Gov. John Gilligan to close parks, without lodges, as a part of

BY BOB HOEFLICH
REEDSVILLE - While there is
nqthing like the wrath of a woman scorned,
a camper wilhovt the use of a camping
facility isn't the most amiable person in
·the world.
Growing iri leaps and bounds in the
past few years, camping has become the
"thing" of many people. Camping as it is
known today isn't necessarily a case of
"roughing it. ... Enthusiasts have hundreds
and hundreds or dollars invested in their
comfortable camp ing trailers and ·
equipment. Small wonder that they are
ired by the closing of state parks - and
especially since the weather has been such
to encourage outings.
At Meigs County's Forked Run State
Park, located between Reedsville and
Long Bottom, a chain barricades the
entrance to the park, closed Labor Day in ·
accordance with the austerity program of
Gov. John Gilligan upon the legislature's
inability to agree on a new budget.
The beautiful park which normally
would be swinging with campers, particularly on weekends, at this time of the
year is as quiet as a ghost town.
Most employes of the park - those
paid by the state- have been laid off for a
period estimated from two weeks to two
months. However, four who are paid
through federal funds, remain on duly for
maintenance and office work and one slate
employe of some half dozen hired year
round at the park - Gary Hostetter of
Tuppers Plains - remains on duly.
Campers folded up their trailers and
moved out of the park on Labor Day in
(Continued on Page 2)

GALLJPOLIS - Dr. Donald R.
Warehime, Gallia County Coroner, ruled
Saturday that Charles William McWhorter, 39, Rt. 2, Crown City (Swan
Creek Rd.) died Friday night from a selfinflicted gunshot wound.
·
According 'to the Gallia County
Sheriff's department, the shooting occurred at 11 p.m. Friday shortly after the
victim went to bed. His body was found by
his wife, Mrs. Shirley Clary McWhorter,
who told officers her husband had attempted suicide once before and had been
under a doctor's care.
He had been in failing health the past
two years.

2 Levies on Ballot
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County
Board of Elections Saturday approved the
placing of two tax levies on the November
General Election Ballot:
One was an ·additional two mill
operating levy for the Kyger Creek Local
School ' District, the other a 1.9 mill
renewal levy for !be Hannan Trace School
District. Simmons Printing al~o was
awarded the contract to print ballots for
the election, His bid was $1,391.40. There
were no other bidders. Members of the
election board are Joe Straight, Dale
Allensworth, Charles Bane and Lawrence
Green.

A veteran of the U. S. Air Force, Mr.
McWhorter was the son of the late Henry
McWhorter and Mrs. Marie Fritzgerald of
Staunton, Va. In addition to his wife and
mother, he is survived by the following
children, Charles, Randy, Ross, Joathan,
Tonda and Kimberly, all at home. Funeral
services will be held at I p.m. Monday
from the F. L. Sievers Funeral Home at
Mercerville with Rev. Orville Carrico
officiating. Burial will be in Ridgetawn
Cemetery. Calling hours will be held at the
funeral home after 3 p.m. today.

WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon will announce by mid-&lt;&gt;ctober his
plans for extended ecommic stabilization
to replace the emergency wage-price
freeze expiring Nov, 13, Treasury
Secretary John B. Connally said Saturday.
Connally said there were no plans to
seek coogressional approval for the steps
Nixon will lake when the freeze ends,
although "this could be subject to
cbange."
This appeared to signal a tentative
administration decision against seeking
further tax remedies to stimulate the
economy, stem inflation and create more
jobs, although Connally said "we hold
nothing sacred from the imposition of
effective cootrols."
In any case, he said, the President's
decision against extending the freeze does
not mean he intends to '1urn things loose"
ooce it expires.
Connally spoke to newsmen after Nixon
received a (X'ogress report from the Cost of
Living Council on the 9lklay freeze it is
directing. The council, headed by Connally, had been meeting for an hour at the
Treasury Department on post-freeze
planning when Nixon invited its members
across the street to the White House for a
!JO.minute session.
It was the first time Nixon had met with
the full council.
Recommendations Asked
Connally reported that Nixon asked the
council to submit its recommendations by
Sept. :IJ, after consultations with labor,
business, agriculture and Congress.
Mter about a week of. study, the
President will make his decisions public no

Merchants to
Sponsor Parade

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Retail
Merchants will sponsor two Children's
Day events on Saturday, Sept. 18 according to promotion chairman Mrs.
Charlene Batey.
AtiO a.m. an amateur pet parade and
judging will be held in the center of the
Second Ave. side of the city park. This
event will be open to children through age
16.
$2,807 COLLECTED
Pets eligible for parade will be those
POMEROY - Meigs County Court
collections for the month of August totaled no larger than dogs, with no minimum
$2,807 according to Betty Hobsletter, size. Show animals are not eligible.
Prizes wit) be awarded in the following
clerk. Distribution of money included:
categories:
fines to state $570.60, fees to sheriff
Largest dog, largest cat, prettiest pet,
$150.70; fines and costs lo county; general
fund $1,370.96; law library fund $323.67, most outstanding dog, most outstanding
pet, and most unusual pet.
auto license and gas fund $391.07.
The bicycle parade and contest will be
held at 2:30, also on the Second Ave. side of
the park.
·
BOY KILLED
The bicycle event will be open to those
SHELBY, Ohio tUPI) - Mark E. ages 6 to 16. Age groups will be set up for
Owens, 14, Route I, Shelby, died Saturday purposes of judging. Decorated bicycles
in a Mansfield hospital of injuries suffered will be judged on ingenuity, design, beauty
Friday night in a ooe-car accident north of and overall decor•tion. Prize will be
here. Three other persons were injured in awarded.
the mishap.
All children are invited to participate.

later than a month before the freeze ex.
pil-es at mi~ht Nov. 13, Connally said.
Connally s.tlid there was no similar
presidential timetable for elimination of
the 10 per cent surcharge on imports or
further efforts to stabilize the value on the
dollar over'lfas.
He said the United States will have no
specific (X'Oposals to offer at a meeting in
London next week of the Group of Ten, .the
10 wealthiest Western trading nations.
Connally will attend with Chairman Arthur F. Burns of the Federal Reserve
Board and Paul A. Volcker, assistant
Treasury secretary.
Meanwhile, Democratic economic experts issued a statement applauding the
goals of Nixon's "long overdue action " to
rescue the economy but harshly criticized
key portions of his plan.
The Economic Mfairs Committee of the
high~evel Democratic Policy Council,
(Continued on Page 2)

Fed-Mogul's
1

Short Done

SHERRY KING, head majorette of the flashing Meigs Marauder Band stood
out in her performance Friday night during hlllf.fune activities. She is the
daughter of M!;. and Mrs. William King, Bradbury.

GALLIPOLIS - Gary R. Short,
manager of the Federal-Mogul Corp.,
Haller Division Plant, Eastern Ave.,
Gallipolis, announced his resignation,
effective Friday afternoon .
Short, who was instrumental in getting
POMEROY - The Meigs High School
the plant to locate in Gallipolis, served as Marauder Band made an impressive
plant manager two years and eight appearance Friday night at Marauder
months. Short said his future plans are Stadium in Pomeroy when the football
indefinite.
halftime show of the season was presenPrior to taking over the Federal- ted.
Mogul position, Short was manager of the
Enhancing the effective band were
Chris-Craft plant. Prior to that, he Jierved majllreltes, Julie Hutchison, Karen Price,
as city manager of Gallipolis.
Jill Harris, Milisa Rizer, Brenda Taylor,
Jennie Chapman, Leta Floyd, Sonya
Ohlinger and new head majorette Miss

Band Show Impressive

Football Results

SATURDAY COLLEGE
West Virginia 45 Boston Coli. 14
Kentucky 13 Clemenson 10
Navy 10 VIrginia 6
Georgia S6 Oregon St. 25
VIllanova 28 Maryland 13
Ohio St. 52 Iowa 21
Michigan St. 10 Dllnois 0
Minnesota 28 Indiana 0
Michigan 21 Northwestern 6
Nebraska 3i Oregon 7
Stanford 19 Missouri 0
Utah St. 10 Kansas St. 7
FRIDAY HIGH SCHOOL
Raceland 14 Symmes Valley 12
Athens 28 Marietta 25
Ironton 40 New Boston 14
Jackson 65 Oak Hill 0
Logan 64 Nelsonville-York 20
Meigs 40 Reemelin ll
Wellston 52 Vinton County 6
Gallipolis 28 South Point 20
Eastern 43 Hannan Tract· 0
Fed. Hocking 22 Southern 0
K)'g&lt;·r Creek 6 Wa~ama 6
'

Welsh Shows Film
MIDDLEPORT - Jack Welsh ,
manager of the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co., showed a film on animal
life in the Arctic Friday evening when the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club met for
jts weekly dinner- at Heath Methodist
Church.
John Will presided over the meeting in
the absence of President C. E. Blakeslee.
There was group singing. It was an·
nounced that an open meeting will be held
next Friday. Women of the church serVed
dinner.
THEFTS REPORTED
GALLIPOLIS - Two thefts were
investigated by the Gallia County sheriU's
department Friday. Hubert Smitlo of 'the
Gallia County Highway Department said
someone took a 12-volt battery from a
highway mower and Mrs. Larry Shong, Rt.
'l, Bidwell, reported the lhPft of a mail bo•.

Sherry King, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
William King of Bradbury. Joining !be
corps for the excellent routines were the
twins, Marla and Darla Neutzling, of
Pomeroy.
Following the tradition of opening
shows with river music in tribute to the
mighty Ohio River, the band swung into
"Waitin' for the Robert E. Lee." Spelling
"Chicago" in script, the bandsmen played
"Free" with Miss King being featured
twirler.
Moving into concert formation the
smooth moving bandsmen played "Dor,s
Anybody Really Know What Time It Is."
Timely were the two large smiling
faces which made up the next formations
of the band while the music "Make Me
Smile" was playe&lt;!.
Concluding the presentation was the
block formation, "Meigs," when the Alma
Mater was presented. Banclsmen moved
off the field to the school Fight Song.
Dirdctor of the band is David Bowen
and his assistant Lewis Shields.
'
131 SALES MADE
POMEROY - Meigs County auto
dealers sold 131 new motor vehicle~~ 8lld
160 used vehicle~ during the month of
Augi!St, Mrs . Ne!Ue Brown, deputy clerk of
courts, reports. Of the new vehicles 16
were trucks ; IB were trailers; 12 were
motorcycles and 85 were pauenger cars.
Of the US€d vehicle~. 2G were trucks; four
were motorcyCles; two wer~ trailers and
134 wete passenger cars.

�3 - Tile &amp;lnday Times- Sentinel Sunday Sep.

2- The Slnlay Times-Sentinel,Slnlay,Sepl12, It'll

$306.60.
Several years later the hell cracked
and was replaced with one from the
Calloway School in Minersville which is
still in use today.
In 1939 the basement was put under the
church, in 1942, the church was completely
replastered, and in 1953 classrooms were
added. An electric organ was installed in
1959,1n 1962 a gas furnace was installed in

accidents, none serious, were
reported Saturday evening by
the Gallia-Meigs Post, State
Highway Patrol.
The first was at 10:56 a.m.
Saturday "\~en James Kirby,
20, Detroit, Mich., came up
behind a car 300 feet east of Rio
Grande on Rt. 35 that had
slowed to make a left turn.
Kirby swerved off the roadway
Into the guide wire of a utility
pole, causing moderate damage
to his vehicle. He was cited for
speed in excess of conditions.
At I p.m. on Rt. 160, three
lenlhll of a mile north of Rt. 35,

.!

therapeutic aborticD law.

I

r

rue•t

./

Sept. 12-14
Wall Disney's
All Carloon-Feature

-P!NDCCHIO"
(Techllitolerl
ll's Pure Enchantn;ent!
G

FLAP
!Color
Anthony Quinn

Claude Akins

GP

SHOW STAR.TS7 P.flll

MISS PEGGY RUSS!i:U.,Middlepcl'tltwte I, disp)ayaa colorfully decorated Mexican bllt
and a Mexican doll, souvenirs frun her first year as a missionary in Mexico.

Minersvme Methodist Church
tile church, and last year tile third new
roof was put on the 99-year old building .
An adjacent lot has been purchased,
restrooms have been added, new carpeting
has been laid in the sanctuary, and other
improvements have been made. ·
This week is much more than a centennial celebration. It marks a time for

people of the Minersville community to
stop, look back, and remember their
labors of the past, but most importantly, it
is a time for them to look ahead and plan
for the future.
/
The Rev. Forrest Donley, pastor of the
church, invites the community to join in
the centennial'celebration.

from the water. They are permitted into
ll)e park for that purpose .
Meantime, Rep. Ralph Welker of
Pomeroy has charged thst the governor's
austerity program was made necessary by
less than prudent managing of funds
available to the administration .

equity," they said.
The economists said Nixon's proposed
cuts in federal employment and foreign
aid and delays in welfare reform and
(Continued from Page 1)
including Garmer Ackley and Walter H. revenue sharing were "bad public policy,
Heller, f!rnlel' chief economists in the and Congress should reject them."
Hobart Lewis, president of Reader's
Johnson and Kennedy administrations,
said flatly thst N'IXOn ''has proposed the Digest, announced formation of a "nonpartisan citizens committee" to encourage
wrt~~g fiscal program" to create more jobs
and that his promise ''is largely rhetoric." support for Nixon's economic policies,
including the freeze, witholi necessary enWhat Democrats Say
The Democrats said Nixon's proposed d6rsement of what will follow.
The committee includes the heads of
tax cuts favored business far more than
several
major corporations and three
coosumer-s, where they would do the most
good in stimulating job-producing demand · former Treasury secretaries-Henry H.
for goods and services. Furthermore, they Fowler, C. Douglas Dillon and Robert B.
said, the reductions would remove revenue Anderson. Although Lewis said the
sources that will be needed to finsnce commit~ was open to all unions, only
domestic needs once the economy is four vice presidents of the International
Brotherhood of Teamsters were listed as
healthy again.
committee
members.
They urged delaying scheduled Jan. I
Fowler, who was Treasury secretary in
increases in Social Security payroll taxes,
the
Johnson administration, priased
and junking t4 billion in accelerated tax
deJreciatim allowances already ordered Nixon's economic measures, including the
by Nixon. To grant business this tu cut on import surcharge, which he said was intop of his ~ 10 pa- cent investment tended to warn other countries of the
tax credit "violates every concept of "very great danger of a trade ,war."

Nixon Plan

and another passenger in her
car, Candy Slack, 26, Syracuse,
suffered a laceration of the
forehead. Both were treated
and released at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
The injured were transported
to the hospital by the Racine ER squad. The Persons car was
demolished. There was light
damage to the truck. No
citations were issued.
Friday at 7,15 p.m. on SR 124
north of Portland Park near the
Ralph Henderson residence, a
fawn was killed when it ran into
the path of a car driven west by
Patricia S. Harmon, 34, Ripley.
There was no damage to the
car.
Under investigation is a hitskip which occurred on the
parking lot at Whispering Pines
night club Saturday at 2:45 a.m.
A car owned by Steven Tatterson, Pomeroy, parked on the
Jot, was struck in tile front by a
truck, it was reported. Driver of
the ll'Uck failed to stop.

One Bound Under Bond
POMEROY - One defendant
was bound over to the grand
jury, six were fined and 13
others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Friday.
Bound over under $1000 bond
by Judge Frank W. Porter was
Elza Bartimus, Reedsville, RD,
on a charge of assault.
Fined were Anna M. Wolfe,
Racine,Rt.1,$10andcosls,stop
sign violation; Charles M.
Fitch, Pomeroy, Rt. 3, $5 and
costs no muffler · Fannie
'
'

TWO ACCIDENTS

GALLIPOLIS - Two minor
traffic mishaps were investigated in the downtown
area Friday, the first reported
by Woodrow Mollohan of
Kalamazoo, Mich., who said his
car was struck by an unknown
vehicle when he had it parked
on Cedar St. A second accident
occurred on Cedar St. and Third
Ave., where an auto operated by
Emma M. Forthe, 56, Mason,
sideswiped a stalled car owned
by Morgan Wolford, 5(), Rt. 2,
Oak HilL There was minor
damage to the Forthe auto: No
Carl Spencer, &gt;4, Rt. I, Pt. citation was issued.
Pleasant, ran off the left side of
the road, hitting a concrete
culvert. There was light
SHOT TQ DEATH
dajllage to his auto. No citation
YOUNGSTOWN,
Ohio ( UPI )
' 1.ssued.
was
- S. B. Anderson , 51,
A few minutes later, at 1:20
Youngstown, was shot to death
p.m., also on Rt. 35, and 1.4
at his home here Saturday.
miles west of Rt. 160, James K.
Police said a suspect had been
Thomas, 21, Galtipolis, and Phil
taken into custody.
Calhoun, 'll, Springfield, Ohio.
collided when Calhoun tried to
pass as Thomas was in a left
turn. There was medium
MARRIAGE LICENSE
damage to both vehicles, but no
POMEROY - William Junior
citation to either driver.
Kennedy, 29, Middleport, and
No one was injured in any of Downey Ann Lewis, 24, Midthe tllree accidents.
dleport.

•\

are shown.

Following her graduation
Maynard, Racine, $15 and coots, from high school, Miss Rlwsell
speeding in a school zone; enrolled at Kentucky Otrislian
Barbara Coleman, Cheshire, College at Grnyaon. In additim
Rt. 2, $10 and costs,' expired to .atte~ classes, she paroperators license ; Clarence tiopaled m a work program at
Freeman, Pomeroy, RD, $10 the school. For. three years she
and costs, intoxication ; James served as 8SS1Stant cook and
E. Taylor, Racine, RD, costs four years as head cook at the
only, open flask ; Marion E. college. Durmg her em.Watson, Racine, RD, $10 and pl~yment she became a close
costs, open flask.
frte_nd of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Forfeiting bonds were Wrt.ght. The Wrlgh~ had
Rodney Hatten , McConnels- - d~ci~ed lD work m the
ville $27 5() left of center· Mae IWSSlonary fields ol Mexico and
Mahie ·P~meroy and 'Jack invited Miss Russell to acCorneli, no ad.u.;ss recorded, company them.
$25 each, disturbing the peace; ~ter arranging her suwm:t,
Russell Smith, Parkersburg, Miss Russell l~t the college m
Larry c Kapp Tuscon Ariz August, 1970, With the Wrights.
and Dan~y c. N~tter, Gailipo~: They . open~ th~ir Mexi~o
$27.50 each, speeding; Bobby ChrJstian Clill~ s HilDe m
Meeks, Columbus, $27.50, rentted prope~ty m November rt
passing over yellow line ; Bessie ~ year With two IKmeless
Barnhart, Pomeroy, RD, $25, children. BY February, they
abusing an officer, $25, in- had 11 to care for. There could
toxic a lion · William Reeves be many more but due to the
Pomeroy, 'Paul Kuhn, Long sm~ll. staff and limited
Bottom, Rt. 1, Thomas McKay, facillti~s, the h11ne has had to
Jr., Racine, RD, and Harry tum down numerous requests ~
Greathouse, Racine, RD, $25 take mothers. The orphanage IS
each, intoxication ; Dannie L. loca~ at ~eretaro.
Potts, Gallipolis Ferry, $27.5(), ~h~ldren of. school age
lefl of center.
restdtng at the .orphanage attend an American operated

Flights Of .
Fancy!

Hurry
Hurry

• BANANA SPUTS
• PARFAITS
• PARlOR SPECIALDES

t~akt . i~nppt

Now

There are evening devotillll8ls
daily.Staffmemben lake Iurns
In carrying out this diversim.
Miss Rlwsell finds prices on
some goods in . Melico
"outrageous." A package of 100
tea bags sells for $5; plastic is
''in" and U:ticles made from it
are costly; tcecream -similar

toAme~canloemllk-sellsfor

I •

--

get the best roy poosible.
During her year in Mexico,
Miss Russell his purchased a
number of Mexican items which
she ~Ires m her visits to
e
e
, various churches over four
.
states. Adisplay is set up during
·
her appearances to show some
'
of the colorful items produced in
BY BOB ROEFUCH
Mexico.
In 1960, wben PeggyRussell,dliughter ofMr.andMrs. Guy At
Miss Russell and the Wrights,
Russell, Middleport Rou~ 1, graduated from Pomeroy High in Mexico on visitors' visas,
School, she wanted to study psychology, am perbapll work in a ~cording to law must leave the
mental hospital. Eleven years later Miss Russell is a missionary country each six months. When
in Mexico, helping operate an orphanage for homeless Mexican this period arrives, they go just
children.
over the border. While in the
Presently visitingherparenls1lear Bradbury, Miss Russell is states, they purchase personal
plainly not unhappy about the change. Her happy laughter and supplles which they will need
bright conversatim relating to her p:esent career indicate thst over the next six' month period.
she has found great satisfaction in her work.
While their status In Mexico
Being a inissimary isn •t the
appears tempcnry in some
easiest job to come down the school. Itishl.fulgual, however, respects, the Wrights and Miss
pike . The hours are long, so that the children receive Rlwsell plan for a more perthere is little privacy training in English as well as ·manent arrangement. They
in operating an orphan- ~· Mexico .iS undergoing expect to purchase 120 acres rt
age where children need great industrial development land and have a building
'round the clock looking after, and young people will need to program so thst more adequate
and living expenses are hard to know how to use the English facilities can be developed for
COOle by.
.
Janguage well in the next (ew ihe orphanage operations.
·Miss Russell has encoWltered
Before she could enter the years, Miss Russell said.
a
strange situation when it
field, Miss Russell had to travel
The language harrier has•
to various churches seeking created no real problem for comes to chocolate In Mexico.
pledges ol support. When Miss Russell who had a Spanish She has found thst Americans,
enough money had been teacher for ~ mmths after for some reason, cannot
pledg"!l, she could proceed with arriving in Mexico and also tolerate Mexican chocolate.
her plans to help with the attended a five week course in Somehow, it causes illness.
BY the same token, the staff of
Mexican project. However, the language.
Days at the orphanage are the orphanage found thsl the
support is pledged mO&amp;tly for
one year at a time and Miss long. At 5:30 a.m., it's time to Mexican youngsters are unable
Russell is currently revisiting "rise and shine." The children to eat American chocolate
churches in Ohio, West must be readied for school and without ill effects.
All in all, Miss Russell has
Virginia, Kentucky and transported. The small ones not
Vrrginia to ask help for another yet enrolled in school must be enjoyed her first year in Mexico
year.
cared for. suwlies must be and has found the experience to
During these personal ap- secured and meals prepared for be rewarding in many ways.
Know what she misses most?
pearances, Miss Russell shows the large "family."
slides not only of ~nery and
A lot has been loaned to the Five and ten cent stores!
Miss Russell will return to
points of interest in Mexico but orphanage so that the children
Mexico
on Sept. 28. Sbe has been
also of the children being aided may have a playground.
through the orphanage and Youngsters waleh cartoons - a member of the Bradford
work done there by the staff. An American made with Spanish O!urch of Ouist for 14 years
accompanying tape describes in dialogue dubbed in - and other and has worked with youth
detail the operation of the American shows which are groups there as well as at
children's home as the slides presented in the same manner. Kentucky Ouistian College.

MIS Sionary

Campers Put Out of Park
(Continued from Page I )
accordance with the closing order. Surprisingly, there has been no vandalism.
Apparently everyone is abiding by the
closing ruling.
Owners of boats at the park's lake some 11 in all - have been advised that
they have until Sept. 19 to remove them

Pe
Russell
ggy-

-MASON DRIVt·iM

VILLANOVA TR~HS
COLLEGE PARK, Md. (UPI)
- Quarterback Daryl Woodring
passed for three touchdowns,
two of them to tight end Mike
Siani , as Villanova beat
Maryland 23-13 Saturday.

•&gt;

~

t

'

Tonight, Sept. 12

Ooubie Ftalu"'
AIRPORT
{Color I

Burt Lancaster

Dean Martin

Jean Seberg
Jacqueline Bisset

G

-Plus-

DREAMS OF GLASS

(Color)

GP

Johnllenos

Caroline Barrett

Sun_
Sep 12

Of the Bend

I

land?
A co-worker of Howard Ervin, Racine, has found several
botties which are inscribed "C. W. Bottiing Co., Pomeroy, Ohio".
The botties are a molded and cast type with a top which would
require a cork stopper. The design indicates that the botues were
made before 1910. The botUe collector found several of the botues
around Ripley, W. Va.,on the farm of relatives.
Anyone know the background? Do let us know.

Essex Heralds ReAJched Goal
CO~UMBUS
State
Superintendent of Public Instruchon Marlin W. Essex
Fnday reported that a
longsought goal has been
reached by the Ohio Department of Education With the
announcement of a substantial
reduction m the number o{
teachers ~ployed on ternporary certification this school
year· .
Supermtendent Essex said
available date confirms that as
ol Sept. I, only 'J:74 persons had

. CARTOON

the c;qmvalent c:i $2 for approxunalely one-half pint.
However, fresh fruits and
vegetablesareveryreasonable.
Miss Russell has ~~ fo~
thsl the buyer must bicker With
Mexican shopkeepers then
making purchases in order to

JENO'S

DOUBLE SIZE

PIZZA
95~

"THAf OLD FASHiONED GOODNESS"

•

CHICAGO STOCKYARD SIGN PURCHASED BY BOB
EVANSFARMS-A bit of national history will be preserved
on the Bob Evans Farms, Rio Grande, as a 56-foot sign has
been purchased by Bob Evans from the O!icago Stockyards.

On July 31, stockyard operations ceased in Olicago following
105years of service to fanners throughout the United Slates.
The huge sign. was erected Friday on the Gallia County
ranch. The Chicago yards are being torn down to make room
for a new industrial park.

8 Booked in County Jail
PT. PLEASANT - Eight
persons were booked at the
Mason County jail in the 24
hours before noon Saturday
after arrests by area law enforcement officers.
Two men from New Haven

arrested by Police Chief Tom
Parsons Friday morning were
charged with petit larceny .
They were Warren Teter, 18, 4th
Street, and Tommy Fields, 20,
4th Street.
Five persons arrested on

charges of intoxication were
Kenny Birchfield, 31, Red Mud
Ridge; Ronnie Lee Bonecutter,
18, Red Mud Ridge; Lewis
Michael Oliver, 20, Gallipolis
Ferry, all arrested by the
sheriff's department; Michael
J. Kelly, 67, Manchester, Ky.,
arrested by state police, and
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Lisa Persons, Everett Lee Null of RobertsSyracuse; Sam Hale, Rutland. burg by Putnam authorities.
Clinton E. Gillispie, 40, 1019
DISCHARGED - Barbara
Shore
Street, Point Pleasant,
Casto.
was arrested by the sheriff's
department on a non-support
warrant.
PLEASANT VALLEY
ADMISSIONS:
Weldon
Jorgensen, Pl. Pleasant; Mrs.
Amanda Murray, Middleport;
COME TO
Millard Greenlee, Jr., Leon.
DISCHARGES : Frederick
Pearson, Mrs. Bobby Roush and
son, Jasper Casto, Mrs. Roy
Miller, Delmer Garnes, Charles
Hill, Oren Hanna, Samuel
Scarberry, Mrs. Thomas Darst,
Robert L. Ferrell, Jr.

HOSPITAL
NEWS

Meigs

Property

I'\
,...

·---

~-

Olive.
Lawrence
-~Napper,
Doroll1y L. Napper to James P.
Lambert, Wanda June tam·
bert, 193 Acres, Salisbury.

.!--..

Transfers

Paul Smith Carper, Betty
Smith Carper to Artllur J .
Floyd E. Well , dec. to Doris Slusher. Edna ~lae Slusher,
E. Well, Deryl E. Well, Kenneth Lot, Pomeroy .
R. Well , F. Russell Well ,
Barbara E. Well, Brian K. Well , Margaret S. Baker. William
Cert. for trans., Orange.
K. Baker. Doroth)• S. White,
Murl Douglas, Margaret Jack S. While to Haldain E.
Douglas to William A. Clonch, May, Bernice E. May, Lots I'll,
Martha E. Clonch, Lots, Scipio- 128, Middleport.

~-

always seems to shine on those
who save. Be sure that It shines
• •

'

' "

I

I I 1 I lUI/II I 1 1 J!j l;

•

1 II\

, \

'\ \

'1.

,

'I I I

ON YOU

Harrisonville.

Harold D. Graham, Janet K.
Graham to Ava Gilkey, Lots,
Scipio-Harrisonville .
Henry R. Bailey, Beatrice L.
Bailey to Monongahela Power
Co., Ease .. Olive.
Alvin B. Mays, Alice Mays to
Monongahela Power Co.;Ease ..

'

Forrest Showalter, Mary E.
Showalter to Earl Showalter
Ellen E. Showalter. 31 Acres:
Chester.
Warren Elliott, Martha
Elliott to Eastates Gas
Producing Co., Right of way,
Orange .

ALL SAVINGS GUARANTEED IN FUll

GAUIPOLIS SAVINGS
AND LOAN COMPANY
Opposit• Post Office Phone 444-3831 c;,llipolis

MURPHY'S BIG FALL SALE- GREAT SAVINGS FOR MOM, DAD AND THE KIDS!
'X.HP WARM AND PRI::JT1'

FOR BETTER VAWES
AND LOWER PRICES

tN SOFT IRUSHED TRICOT

WALTZ GOWNS

&amp;4
115.
SIJ!I

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr . and Mrs. Norvel Brown,
Dayton , a son ; Mr. and Mrs.
Loren Parks, Wellston, a
daughter; and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Richard, Clifton, a son.
Discharges
Mrs . Sam Cardi, Mrs. Mary
Crace, Mrs. Karen Dulaney,
Fonda Renee Fisher, Mrs. Paul
Fraley, Mrs. Steve Frazier,
Mrs. Paul Greenlee, Sherry
Harvey, Elias Hatfield, Mrs.
Marie Hively, Mrs. Eva lves,
Susan Kuhn, Mrs. Modjeska
Love, Mrs. Roger McGuire,
Mrs . Allen Patton, James
Roach, Mrs. Gl~nna Roe, Mrs.
Louise Sheline, Mrs. Roy
Sherrill, Mrs. Gary Wallace,
Mrs . Wyborn Waller, Mrs.
Robert Wicker, Mrs. Dale
Wood, Dawn Marie Goad,
Melissa Nance, and Richard
Gragg.

received new temporary certificates for full-time teaching
assignments in the public
schools this year . This marks,
he added the lowest level of
new te~porary certificates
issued in Ohio in more than
three decades. Requests for
new temporary certification
have generally been from
sparsely populated areas and in
Madame Marie Curie is
critical teaching fields such as
the
person to be honindustrial arts or education for ored only
twice with the Nobel
the handicapped
Prize.
·

EX. SIZES
Waodel~r

~ ........

'Ill

udt, cozr gowns of

be.utif-.1 • c • t e t • ~ nylofl
brviMd lticet. Pretty styles with
d.i.ty a.c. triM. Sold it-.,, flor.!
prilt

~ti-.

S,

M. L

RI.G. $l9t l $4.M ORLON

Blomkets

BIG
SAVING
NOW!

WHEN YOU SHOP MUIIPHY'S FALL
HAIIVfST SALE ~ " CHARGE rr•

TEACH 'N PLA Y

499

ANN or ANDY
Doll. (., • .,,;,. "d

~,;, •.

leech toll how to u5e but- ·
tons, buc~l•s, ~111p1 , !.tees,
1ippen, til5.

lUG.

Sl.99

36'

lENGTH

THINK SPRING THIS FALL
Plant Top Quality Holland Bulbs
Tulips Hyacinth Crocus " Daffodils

-

A display of assorted
bulbs suitable for
borders
and
rock

' Since.- ·1159

ls
Guaranteed
To SatisfyOr Ioney Back:

I

ANY "BO'ITLE" AUTHORITIES out there in Times-&amp;ntinel

( .\I! TO()\

Belfast. Cahill went to l)ubtin
earlier this week after having
been barred from the United
States, where be had gone on a
fund-raising mission.
The IR.A is seeking to force
the unification of the Irish
serious between minorily Republic Jlnd Northern Ireland
Catholics and
majority which is a province of Britain.
Protestants in six months.
Recently the battles have been GILLIGAN IN NEW YORK
COLUMBUS t UPll - The
directed at British soldiers
attempting to quell tile disor- Stale Development Department
said Saturday Gov. John J.
der.
In Dublin, a spokesman for Gilligan would address 200 New
lll!' ouUa ..ed ·Irish Republican York executives Thursday at a
Army ( IRA 1 said the leader of Junch&lt;on in the Biltmore Hotel
the IRA 's militant provisional in New York and try to convince
wing , Joe Cahill, had gone into them to locale or expand in
hiding and would soon return to Ohio.

: BELFAST, Northern Ireland
IUPI J - Roman Catholics and
Proleslants fought in the streets
Saturday, exchanging gunfire
in lwo separate incidents, a
British army source said.
The inridents were the most

1:
I

; I
POMEROY - Pomeroy's American Legion organization is
mmed Drew Webster P06t in memory of Drew S. Webster of
Pomeroy who was killed in France on July a, 1918.
· Cmtrary to the belief ol some, Mr. Webster was not killed on
the hattie field by enemy bullets but died as the result of an
~lomobile accident near the hattie front. He was highly regarded
m Pcmeroy and was the first from Meigs County to die in World
. War I. Thus, thepostwasnamedinhishonor.
From Roland Dodderer, of near Tuppers Plains, comes a July
13,1918copyof "The Daily News" which ouUines the death of Mr.
'!ebster and tells of the high esteem in which he was held. In·
odenlally, when the death notice was received it was at finit
thoo~t an error had been made because the rank of Lt. Webster
was mcorrect. However, it was later corrected and the death
verified.
The account from the old newspaper reads :
''The reported death of Lt. DrewS. Webster in an automobile
accident in France, July 8, was practically confirmed by
cablegram which was received by his mother, Mrs. Manning
W~ter, from Lt . Heritage Lewis last night which is as follows :
'Mrs. Manning Webster, Pomeroy, Ohio.
. "'Accept sincere sympathy of·o!ficerS of your son's regiment
m your great sorrow. All feel the loos very keenly. Heritage
Uwis' ,,
Tile newspaper account continued:
"For several days the report of this accident has been current
bere and was based on the press dispaleh which gave his rank as
captain and it was confidenUy hoped that it would prove to be
someo_ne else besides our own Drew.
"The parents wired the war Department two days ago in
fel?~ 1D the matter, and not having received a reply, they were
building hopes thst the report was a mistake. The cablegram
friiD Lt. Lewis, however, wQuld seem to leave no doubt of the
distressing truth of the report.
''From the meager information available, it seems that Lt.
Webster lost his life by a collision of an automobile containing 10
French officers and one in which be was riding, and died very
soon after being taken to a hO&amp;pital.
"Ll. Lewis was an officer in the same regiment with Lt.
Webster and it is very probable that his information was frrst
hand.
''The entire community is deeply grieved to learn of the
'verification of this report, and the parents and other relatives
have the deepest sympathy of the entire community .
"First Lt. Drew S. Webster was an officer in the 33001
Regiment, 83 Division, American Expeditionary Forces Overseas. He was made second lieutenant at officers training camp at
Fort Benjamin Harris last September and inunediately assigned
to the 83rd Division. He was recently promoted to first lieutenant
and sailed with his divisim a short time ago.
" Lt. Webster was a most exceptional young man in many
ways and it was confidently predicted that his military career
would be brilliant in thefactthst he seemed to be especially fitted
for this work. His was an exceptionally bright mind, cool and
collected, and absolutely numb to the sensation of fear. It is the
extreme sacrifice thst this town and community is called upon to
pay in crushing the cruel, grinding autocracy of Europe that one
ol our best and most capable men should he the ftrst of the county
to lay down his life for the cause. He was a graduate of Pomeroy
HighSchool in 1910and a graduate of the engineering class of Ohio
state University in 1915, and was 28 years of age.
''Lt. Webster was the first Meigs County boy to enlist at the
beginning of the war and a fateful coincidence made him the first
to give lis IHe fer his country from the county."
Lt. Webster was a brother of Mrs. Tom Crow, Sr., and an
Wiele of Attorney Manning Webster of Pomeroy.

_CUNT EASIWOOO TEllV SAV.lAS

Gunfire.Sounds In ·Separate Area$

I
·I
·f

I By Bob Hoeflich

. MEI!g·E~

/

Patrol Logs 3 Accidents
GALLIPOLIS - Three traffic

constituHm"IIJ Gf lbe state's

Beat •-•

!

Child, 2 Injured
POMEROY - Two-year-&lt;&gt;ld
Lisa Persons, Syracuse, was
hospitalized at Veterans
Memorial Hoopital following a
car-truck accident Friday at
3:15 p.m. at the intersection of
Bowmans Run Road and SR 124,
the Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. reported.
Lisa was a passenger
in a car driven by
Betty Persons, 33, Syracuse, on Bowmans Run
Road when the brakes on the
car failed. Her car hit a truck
belonging to the Meigs County
Highway Dept., traveling west
on 124 driven by Roy Edward
Frecker, 56, Rt. I, Minersville.
Frecker stated that he tried
unsuccessfully to avoid the
Persons car by pulling.his truck
to the left.
Usa sustained a frontal bone
fracture, severe lacerations to
the scalp and forehead. The
youngster's head hit the windshield.
Mrs. Persons suffered shock

I
I
I·

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) :....
The Calif&lt;niil lqlreme Out
agreed Ftillll1 to del i+ the

Centennial Prograin Set
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
POMEROY ..,. The day of kerosene
limp~~, potbellied stoves and separation of
the sexes for church services. has long
passed, but so lt was 100 years ago this
month when the Minersville Methodist
Olurch was dedicated.
Today marks.the beginning of a week
long celebration of the church centennial
which will be highlighted by cooturning of
the !liDOs, nightly gospel messages, a hymn
sing, and an all.day service.
•
Members have been asked to wear old
fashioned clothes ·for the service at 8
tonight. Area ministers will bring goopel
messages for the next five nights and on
Saiurday evening at 8 p.m. a hymn sing
will be held.
Climax of the centennial observance
will be the aU-day service next Sunday.
Bible school at 9 a.m. will be followed by a
wors,hip service for congregations of all
the churches of the Syracuse Cluster, a
basket dinner at noon, a ·get-acquainted
social hour, and the afternoon service with
Dr. William Messmer, adminisll'ative
assistant to Bishop Ensley of the Ohio West
Area of the United Methodist Church, as
guest speaker.
The ~burch building was built in 1871
on ground which was donated by Daniel
and Elizabeth WoUe. Lumber was hauled
in by horse and wagOn from the Inman Mill
located outside Racine by Adam Roush
and Joseph Hood. The families of both men
have been prominent in the church
throUgh all the years following.
Mr. Roush was the grandfather of
Edna Wiggins and Osmer Roush, and the
great-grandfather of Kenny Wiggins,
present Sunday school superintendent and
Mary Bentz, the church organist. '
Mr. Hood was the father of Ida Hood
Phillips, grandfather of Sadie Phillips
Brown, and the great-grandfather of
Clifford Phillips, all devout members and
workers in the church.
The original enll'ance to the church
was on the side facing the river. There was
a narrow porch acroos the side with two
doors - one for the ladies and one for the
men. Windows have since replaced those
doors. Inside the men were seated on the
left and the Jadies on the right.
A low platform across the front of the
sanctuary was raised in later years to
accommodate the many plays which were
presented under the direction of Garfield
Hilebens.
The piano was in the center of the
sanctuary and two potbellied stoves
provided the heat. The entrance to the
church was changed in 1927 due to a severe
slip of the hill where the church is located.
The church piano, still in use, was
provided from the proceeds of dramatic
plays put on by Gilbert Rummel in the
early 1900's. All local people were used in
the roles and the church history aqates. thst
"they always played to a full house."
A bell for the church was donated by
Lafe McKnight of Rutland in 1937 and thst
year on Oct. 24 at 9 a.m. it was rung for the
first time by the five oldest members of the
church, Mrs. Ida Phillips, Mrs· William
Thomas, Sr., Mrs. Mary Thomas, Mrs.
William Houdashelt, Sr., and Lon Custer.
The bell tower was constructed at a C&lt;J5t of

r-------------~--~-J1~Pl----~

ABOmON lAW

IALI
Family Pack
includes lhese
4 sandwiches

1 BIG
SHEF

Pryacdla
or Fa II Firethorn
loaded with berries.

s

o~~~t~~~~.

Dried FloweB
STRAWFLOWERS
WHEAT, I.AGARUS.

•

Elegant Abaca Flowers.

IIEGULAR 17c YD.

B..utiful pOnh end 1olid
colora. ldul for meking
dreperies end dipc:cvers.

•
•
•;

IMPORTED DRIED UNIOLA,
EUALIA, DAISY STRAM IN E•
I

PACKAGED ASSORTED
DRIED FLOWERS.

Smeltzer Garden Center

:
:

Open Weekdays 9 to 8
Sunday Jto 6
.4 Miles West of G.lllipolis on US 35

:

~ ~------------~~~~
I'

r

CAREFREE WINDOW FLATTERY

IPE&lt;:OA BRIGHTENING COLORTONES

TAD.ORED CASEMEHT FIBEBGLIS"
"DIANE" TIEl AND VALANCE SJ.T
Give 1 color lift to eny room with tt-.i1 b.elli'ifiA tler wf
Solid color white, C)Oicf, green or ""'lon ..:unt.d w~
metdlinq fringe. Ceteft- Fib.,-glu. • ;. h.nJ ,..,1h.bl.
IIIVIt nee d, ironin t Won't shrinl or mild*'- . r.... "' ]l/
loog. M,t1chin9 "' nu •i likltieiCd. , ...... ef e• w .,;ng.
• O..oo,.c.,,.; ... lo" IW

OF ALUmOI COODUE

96

88

Ill.

liU.
lUI

$11.11

A REMINDER

MURPHYS
· ARE
OPEN
UNTIL

We have a large selection of house plants both
large and small- Also dish gardens and
terrariums. We deliver to the hospital.

= ~--------~--~~

t•

53~.

Hardy Mums Suitable tor
Hospital or Shut-ins.

A large selection _ of Permanent Flowers and
Arrangements m fall colors. Scarecrows, witches and
black cats.

•

1639 Fastail Ale.

COnGN IUKCLOTB FUBIC

PACKAGE. ol 10

onlY

!.EverY
SundaY
(ALL DAY)

MUMS

FOR FALl

45" WIDE ' WASHFAST COLORS

ggc

LIWII/LW CLEAN UP lAGS
REii1i UU.R $1.M
H.-, d..t-, pl.utM:: ~o.o,, hold
7 ~ For .,.,.d d. .~ wp
•llcl

.tor.,..

9

DECOR ENHANCING

• FRAMED PICTUIES
ftEa.
$1.11

99c

l1ndlUpt11, d il lifH. Womt•
01' m•ple fi11·
i.MG frem11. 5"•7", 1"• 10"
•nd 6"115" 'iter..

wood, w.lnut

ftEI.

SII.M

9''

MONDAY
NIGHTS AND
FRIDAY NIGHTS

FOR MORE CONVENIENT SHOPPING-YOU CAN "CHARGE IT" AT MURPHY'S
'1.00 NIIDI_III _PAYIBT tD.DS IIOST

�3 - Tile &amp;lnday Times- Sentinel Sunday Sep.

2- The Slnlay Times-Sentinel,Slnlay,Sepl12, It'll

$306.60.
Several years later the hell cracked
and was replaced with one from the
Calloway School in Minersville which is
still in use today.
In 1939 the basement was put under the
church, in 1942, the church was completely
replastered, and in 1953 classrooms were
added. An electric organ was installed in
1959,1n 1962 a gas furnace was installed in

accidents, none serious, were
reported Saturday evening by
the Gallia-Meigs Post, State
Highway Patrol.
The first was at 10:56 a.m.
Saturday "\~en James Kirby,
20, Detroit, Mich., came up
behind a car 300 feet east of Rio
Grande on Rt. 35 that had
slowed to make a left turn.
Kirby swerved off the roadway
Into the guide wire of a utility
pole, causing moderate damage
to his vehicle. He was cited for
speed in excess of conditions.
At I p.m. on Rt. 160, three
lenlhll of a mile north of Rt. 35,

.!

therapeutic aborticD law.

I

r

rue•t

./

Sept. 12-14
Wall Disney's
All Carloon-Feature

-P!NDCCHIO"
(Techllitolerl
ll's Pure Enchantn;ent!
G

FLAP
!Color
Anthony Quinn

Claude Akins

GP

SHOW STAR.TS7 P.flll

MISS PEGGY RUSS!i:U.,Middlepcl'tltwte I, disp)ayaa colorfully decorated Mexican bllt
and a Mexican doll, souvenirs frun her first year as a missionary in Mexico.

Minersvme Methodist Church
tile church, and last year tile third new
roof was put on the 99-year old building .
An adjacent lot has been purchased,
restrooms have been added, new carpeting
has been laid in the sanctuary, and other
improvements have been made. ·
This week is much more than a centennial celebration. It marks a time for

people of the Minersville community to
stop, look back, and remember their
labors of the past, but most importantly, it
is a time for them to look ahead and plan
for the future.
/
The Rev. Forrest Donley, pastor of the
church, invites the community to join in
the centennial'celebration.

from the water. They are permitted into
ll)e park for that purpose .
Meantime, Rep. Ralph Welker of
Pomeroy has charged thst the governor's
austerity program was made necessary by
less than prudent managing of funds
available to the administration .

equity," they said.
The economists said Nixon's proposed
cuts in federal employment and foreign
aid and delays in welfare reform and
(Continued from Page 1)
including Garmer Ackley and Walter H. revenue sharing were "bad public policy,
Heller, f!rnlel' chief economists in the and Congress should reject them."
Hobart Lewis, president of Reader's
Johnson and Kennedy administrations,
said flatly thst N'IXOn ''has proposed the Digest, announced formation of a "nonpartisan citizens committee" to encourage
wrt~~g fiscal program" to create more jobs
and that his promise ''is largely rhetoric." support for Nixon's economic policies,
including the freeze, witholi necessary enWhat Democrats Say
The Democrats said Nixon's proposed d6rsement of what will follow.
The committee includes the heads of
tax cuts favored business far more than
several
major corporations and three
coosumer-s, where they would do the most
good in stimulating job-producing demand · former Treasury secretaries-Henry H.
for goods and services. Furthermore, they Fowler, C. Douglas Dillon and Robert B.
said, the reductions would remove revenue Anderson. Although Lewis said the
sources that will be needed to finsnce commit~ was open to all unions, only
domestic needs once the economy is four vice presidents of the International
Brotherhood of Teamsters were listed as
healthy again.
committee
members.
They urged delaying scheduled Jan. I
Fowler, who was Treasury secretary in
increases in Social Security payroll taxes,
the
Johnson administration, priased
and junking t4 billion in accelerated tax
deJreciatim allowances already ordered Nixon's economic measures, including the
by Nixon. To grant business this tu cut on import surcharge, which he said was intop of his ~ 10 pa- cent investment tended to warn other countries of the
tax credit "violates every concept of "very great danger of a trade ,war."

Nixon Plan

and another passenger in her
car, Candy Slack, 26, Syracuse,
suffered a laceration of the
forehead. Both were treated
and released at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
The injured were transported
to the hospital by the Racine ER squad. The Persons car was
demolished. There was light
damage to the truck. No
citations were issued.
Friday at 7,15 p.m. on SR 124
north of Portland Park near the
Ralph Henderson residence, a
fawn was killed when it ran into
the path of a car driven west by
Patricia S. Harmon, 34, Ripley.
There was no damage to the
car.
Under investigation is a hitskip which occurred on the
parking lot at Whispering Pines
night club Saturday at 2:45 a.m.
A car owned by Steven Tatterson, Pomeroy, parked on the
Jot, was struck in tile front by a
truck, it was reported. Driver of
the ll'Uck failed to stop.

One Bound Under Bond
POMEROY - One defendant
was bound over to the grand
jury, six were fined and 13
others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Friday.
Bound over under $1000 bond
by Judge Frank W. Porter was
Elza Bartimus, Reedsville, RD,
on a charge of assault.
Fined were Anna M. Wolfe,
Racine,Rt.1,$10andcosls,stop
sign violation; Charles M.
Fitch, Pomeroy, Rt. 3, $5 and
costs no muffler · Fannie
'
'

TWO ACCIDENTS

GALLIPOLIS - Two minor
traffic mishaps were investigated in the downtown
area Friday, the first reported
by Woodrow Mollohan of
Kalamazoo, Mich., who said his
car was struck by an unknown
vehicle when he had it parked
on Cedar St. A second accident
occurred on Cedar St. and Third
Ave., where an auto operated by
Emma M. Forthe, 56, Mason,
sideswiped a stalled car owned
by Morgan Wolford, 5(), Rt. 2,
Oak HilL There was minor
damage to the Forthe auto: No
Carl Spencer, &gt;4, Rt. I, Pt. citation was issued.
Pleasant, ran off the left side of
the road, hitting a concrete
culvert. There was light
SHOT TQ DEATH
dajllage to his auto. No citation
YOUNGSTOWN,
Ohio ( UPI )
' 1.ssued.
was
- S. B. Anderson , 51,
A few minutes later, at 1:20
Youngstown, was shot to death
p.m., also on Rt. 35, and 1.4
at his home here Saturday.
miles west of Rt. 160, James K.
Police said a suspect had been
Thomas, 21, Galtipolis, and Phil
taken into custody.
Calhoun, 'll, Springfield, Ohio.
collided when Calhoun tried to
pass as Thomas was in a left
turn. There was medium
MARRIAGE LICENSE
damage to both vehicles, but no
POMEROY - William Junior
citation to either driver.
Kennedy, 29, Middleport, and
No one was injured in any of Downey Ann Lewis, 24, Midthe tllree accidents.
dleport.

•\

are shown.

Following her graduation
Maynard, Racine, $15 and coots, from high school, Miss Rlwsell
speeding in a school zone; enrolled at Kentucky Otrislian
Barbara Coleman, Cheshire, College at Grnyaon. In additim
Rt. 2, $10 and costs,' expired to .atte~ classes, she paroperators license ; Clarence tiopaled m a work program at
Freeman, Pomeroy, RD, $10 the school. For. three years she
and costs, intoxication ; James served as 8SS1Stant cook and
E. Taylor, Racine, RD, costs four years as head cook at the
only, open flask ; Marion E. college. Durmg her em.Watson, Racine, RD, $10 and pl~yment she became a close
costs, open flask.
frte_nd of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Forfeiting bonds were Wrt.ght. The Wrlgh~ had
Rodney Hatten , McConnels- - d~ci~ed lD work m the
ville $27 5() left of center· Mae IWSSlonary fields ol Mexico and
Mahie ·P~meroy and 'Jack invited Miss Russell to acCorneli, no ad.u.;ss recorded, company them.
$25 each, disturbing the peace; ~ter arranging her suwm:t,
Russell Smith, Parkersburg, Miss Russell l~t the college m
Larry c Kapp Tuscon Ariz August, 1970, With the Wrights.
and Dan~y c. N~tter, Gailipo~: They . open~ th~ir Mexi~o
$27.50 each, speeding; Bobby ChrJstian Clill~ s HilDe m
Meeks, Columbus, $27.50, rentted prope~ty m November rt
passing over yellow line ; Bessie ~ year With two IKmeless
Barnhart, Pomeroy, RD, $25, children. BY February, they
abusing an officer, $25, in- had 11 to care for. There could
toxic a lion · William Reeves be many more but due to the
Pomeroy, 'Paul Kuhn, Long sm~ll. staff and limited
Bottom, Rt. 1, Thomas McKay, facillti~s, the h11ne has had to
Jr., Racine, RD, and Harry tum down numerous requests ~
Greathouse, Racine, RD, $25 take mothers. The orphanage IS
each, intoxication ; Dannie L. loca~ at ~eretaro.
Potts, Gallipolis Ferry, $27.5(), ~h~ldren of. school age
lefl of center.
restdtng at the .orphanage attend an American operated

Flights Of .
Fancy!

Hurry
Hurry

• BANANA SPUTS
• PARFAITS
• PARlOR SPECIALDES

t~akt . i~nppt

Now

There are evening devotillll8ls
daily.Staffmemben lake Iurns
In carrying out this diversim.
Miss Rlwsell finds prices on
some goods in . Melico
"outrageous." A package of 100
tea bags sells for $5; plastic is
''in" and U:ticles made from it
are costly; tcecream -similar

toAme~canloemllk-sellsfor

I •

--

get the best roy poosible.
During her year in Mexico,
Miss Russell his purchased a
number of Mexican items which
she ~Ires m her visits to
e
e
, various churches over four
.
states. Adisplay is set up during
·
her appearances to show some
'
of the colorful items produced in
BY BOB ROEFUCH
Mexico.
In 1960, wben PeggyRussell,dliughter ofMr.andMrs. Guy At
Miss Russell and the Wrights,
Russell, Middleport Rou~ 1, graduated from Pomeroy High in Mexico on visitors' visas,
School, she wanted to study psychology, am perbapll work in a ~cording to law must leave the
mental hospital. Eleven years later Miss Russell is a missionary country each six months. When
in Mexico, helping operate an orphanage for homeless Mexican this period arrives, they go just
children.
over the border. While in the
Presently visitingherparenls1lear Bradbury, Miss Russell is states, they purchase personal
plainly not unhappy about the change. Her happy laughter and supplles which they will need
bright conversatim relating to her p:esent career indicate thst over the next six' month period.
she has found great satisfaction in her work.
While their status In Mexico
Being a inissimary isn •t the
appears tempcnry in some
easiest job to come down the school. Itishl.fulgual, however, respects, the Wrights and Miss
pike . The hours are long, so that the children receive Rlwsell plan for a more perthere is little privacy training in English as well as ·manent arrangement. They
in operating an orphan- ~· Mexico .iS undergoing expect to purchase 120 acres rt
age where children need great industrial development land and have a building
'round the clock looking after, and young people will need to program so thst more adequate
and living expenses are hard to know how to use the English facilities can be developed for
COOle by.
.
Janguage well in the next (ew ihe orphanage operations.
·Miss Russell has encoWltered
Before she could enter the years, Miss Russell said.
a
strange situation when it
field, Miss Russell had to travel
The language harrier has•
to various churches seeking created no real problem for comes to chocolate In Mexico.
pledges ol support. When Miss Russell who had a Spanish She has found thst Americans,
enough money had been teacher for ~ mmths after for some reason, cannot
pledg"!l, she could proceed with arriving in Mexico and also tolerate Mexican chocolate.
her plans to help with the attended a five week course in Somehow, it causes illness.
BY the same token, the staff of
Mexican project. However, the language.
Days at the orphanage are the orphanage found thsl the
support is pledged mO&amp;tly for
one year at a time and Miss long. At 5:30 a.m., it's time to Mexican youngsters are unable
Russell is currently revisiting "rise and shine." The children to eat American chocolate
churches in Ohio, West must be readied for school and without ill effects.
All in all, Miss Russell has
Virginia, Kentucky and transported. The small ones not
Vrrginia to ask help for another yet enrolled in school must be enjoyed her first year in Mexico
year.
cared for. suwlies must be and has found the experience to
During these personal ap- secured and meals prepared for be rewarding in many ways.
Know what she misses most?
pearances, Miss Russell shows the large "family."
slides not only of ~nery and
A lot has been loaned to the Five and ten cent stores!
Miss Russell will return to
points of interest in Mexico but orphanage so that the children
Mexico
on Sept. 28. Sbe has been
also of the children being aided may have a playground.
through the orphanage and Youngsters waleh cartoons - a member of the Bradford
work done there by the staff. An American made with Spanish O!urch of Ouist for 14 years
accompanying tape describes in dialogue dubbed in - and other and has worked with youth
detail the operation of the American shows which are groups there as well as at
children's home as the slides presented in the same manner. Kentucky Ouistian College.

MIS Sionary

Campers Put Out of Park
(Continued from Page I )
accordance with the closing order. Surprisingly, there has been no vandalism.
Apparently everyone is abiding by the
closing ruling.
Owners of boats at the park's lake some 11 in all - have been advised that
they have until Sept. 19 to remove them

Pe
Russell
ggy-

-MASON DRIVt·iM

VILLANOVA TR~HS
COLLEGE PARK, Md. (UPI)
- Quarterback Daryl Woodring
passed for three touchdowns,
two of them to tight end Mike
Siani , as Villanova beat
Maryland 23-13 Saturday.

•&gt;

~

t

'

Tonight, Sept. 12

Ooubie Ftalu"'
AIRPORT
{Color I

Burt Lancaster

Dean Martin

Jean Seberg
Jacqueline Bisset

G

-Plus-

DREAMS OF GLASS

(Color)

GP

Johnllenos

Caroline Barrett

Sun_
Sep 12

Of the Bend

I

land?
A co-worker of Howard Ervin, Racine, has found several
botties which are inscribed "C. W. Bottiing Co., Pomeroy, Ohio".
The botties are a molded and cast type with a top which would
require a cork stopper. The design indicates that the botues were
made before 1910. The botUe collector found several of the botues
around Ripley, W. Va.,on the farm of relatives.
Anyone know the background? Do let us know.

Essex Heralds ReAJched Goal
CO~UMBUS
State
Superintendent of Public Instruchon Marlin W. Essex
Fnday reported that a
longsought goal has been
reached by the Ohio Department of Education With the
announcement of a substantial
reduction m the number o{
teachers ~ployed on ternporary certification this school
year· .
Supermtendent Essex said
available date confirms that as
ol Sept. I, only 'J:74 persons had

. CARTOON

the c;qmvalent c:i $2 for approxunalely one-half pint.
However, fresh fruits and
vegetablesareveryreasonable.
Miss Russell has ~~ fo~
thsl the buyer must bicker With
Mexican shopkeepers then
making purchases in order to

JENO'S

DOUBLE SIZE

PIZZA
95~

"THAf OLD FASHiONED GOODNESS"

•

CHICAGO STOCKYARD SIGN PURCHASED BY BOB
EVANSFARMS-A bit of national history will be preserved
on the Bob Evans Farms, Rio Grande, as a 56-foot sign has
been purchased by Bob Evans from the O!icago Stockyards.

On July 31, stockyard operations ceased in Olicago following
105years of service to fanners throughout the United Slates.
The huge sign. was erected Friday on the Gallia County
ranch. The Chicago yards are being torn down to make room
for a new industrial park.

8 Booked in County Jail
PT. PLEASANT - Eight
persons were booked at the
Mason County jail in the 24
hours before noon Saturday
after arrests by area law enforcement officers.
Two men from New Haven

arrested by Police Chief Tom
Parsons Friday morning were
charged with petit larceny .
They were Warren Teter, 18, 4th
Street, and Tommy Fields, 20,
4th Street.
Five persons arrested on

charges of intoxication were
Kenny Birchfield, 31, Red Mud
Ridge; Ronnie Lee Bonecutter,
18, Red Mud Ridge; Lewis
Michael Oliver, 20, Gallipolis
Ferry, all arrested by the
sheriff's department; Michael
J. Kelly, 67, Manchester, Ky.,
arrested by state police, and
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Lisa Persons, Everett Lee Null of RobertsSyracuse; Sam Hale, Rutland. burg by Putnam authorities.
Clinton E. Gillispie, 40, 1019
DISCHARGED - Barbara
Shore
Street, Point Pleasant,
Casto.
was arrested by the sheriff's
department on a non-support
warrant.
PLEASANT VALLEY
ADMISSIONS:
Weldon
Jorgensen, Pl. Pleasant; Mrs.
Amanda Murray, Middleport;
COME TO
Millard Greenlee, Jr., Leon.
DISCHARGES : Frederick
Pearson, Mrs. Bobby Roush and
son, Jasper Casto, Mrs. Roy
Miller, Delmer Garnes, Charles
Hill, Oren Hanna, Samuel
Scarberry, Mrs. Thomas Darst,
Robert L. Ferrell, Jr.

HOSPITAL
NEWS

Meigs

Property

I'\
,...

·---

~-

Olive.
Lawrence
-~Napper,
Doroll1y L. Napper to James P.
Lambert, Wanda June tam·
bert, 193 Acres, Salisbury.

.!--..

Transfers

Paul Smith Carper, Betty
Smith Carper to Artllur J .
Floyd E. Well , dec. to Doris Slusher. Edna ~lae Slusher,
E. Well, Deryl E. Well, Kenneth Lot, Pomeroy .
R. Well , F. Russell Well ,
Barbara E. Well, Brian K. Well , Margaret S. Baker. William
Cert. for trans., Orange.
K. Baker. Doroth)• S. White,
Murl Douglas, Margaret Jack S. While to Haldain E.
Douglas to William A. Clonch, May, Bernice E. May, Lots I'll,
Martha E. Clonch, Lots, Scipio- 128, Middleport.

~-

always seems to shine on those
who save. Be sure that It shines
• •

'

' "

I

I I 1 I lUI/II I 1 1 J!j l;

•

1 II\

, \

'\ \

'1.

,

'I I I

ON YOU

Harrisonville.

Harold D. Graham, Janet K.
Graham to Ava Gilkey, Lots,
Scipio-Harrisonville .
Henry R. Bailey, Beatrice L.
Bailey to Monongahela Power
Co., Ease .. Olive.
Alvin B. Mays, Alice Mays to
Monongahela Power Co.;Ease ..

'

Forrest Showalter, Mary E.
Showalter to Earl Showalter
Ellen E. Showalter. 31 Acres:
Chester.
Warren Elliott, Martha
Elliott to Eastates Gas
Producing Co., Right of way,
Orange .

ALL SAVINGS GUARANTEED IN FUll

GAUIPOLIS SAVINGS
AND LOAN COMPANY
Opposit• Post Office Phone 444-3831 c;,llipolis

MURPHY'S BIG FALL SALE- GREAT SAVINGS FOR MOM, DAD AND THE KIDS!
'X.HP WARM AND PRI::JT1'

FOR BETTER VAWES
AND LOWER PRICES

tN SOFT IRUSHED TRICOT

WALTZ GOWNS

&amp;4
115.
SIJ!I

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr . and Mrs. Norvel Brown,
Dayton , a son ; Mr. and Mrs.
Loren Parks, Wellston, a
daughter; and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Richard, Clifton, a son.
Discharges
Mrs . Sam Cardi, Mrs. Mary
Crace, Mrs. Karen Dulaney,
Fonda Renee Fisher, Mrs. Paul
Fraley, Mrs. Steve Frazier,
Mrs. Paul Greenlee, Sherry
Harvey, Elias Hatfield, Mrs.
Marie Hively, Mrs. Eva lves,
Susan Kuhn, Mrs. Modjeska
Love, Mrs. Roger McGuire,
Mrs . Allen Patton, James
Roach, Mrs. Gl~nna Roe, Mrs.
Louise Sheline, Mrs. Roy
Sherrill, Mrs. Gary Wallace,
Mrs . Wyborn Waller, Mrs.
Robert Wicker, Mrs. Dale
Wood, Dawn Marie Goad,
Melissa Nance, and Richard
Gragg.

received new temporary certificates for full-time teaching
assignments in the public
schools this year . This marks,
he added the lowest level of
new te~porary certificates
issued in Ohio in more than
three decades. Requests for
new temporary certification
have generally been from
sparsely populated areas and in
Madame Marie Curie is
critical teaching fields such as
the
person to be honindustrial arts or education for ored only
twice with the Nobel
the handicapped
Prize.
·

EX. SIZES
Waodel~r

~ ........

'Ill

udt, cozr gowns of

be.utif-.1 • c • t e t • ~ nylofl
brviMd lticet. Pretty styles with
d.i.ty a.c. triM. Sold it-.,, flor.!
prilt

~ti-.

S,

M. L

RI.G. $l9t l $4.M ORLON

Blomkets

BIG
SAVING
NOW!

WHEN YOU SHOP MUIIPHY'S FALL
HAIIVfST SALE ~ " CHARGE rr•

TEACH 'N PLA Y

499

ANN or ANDY
Doll. (., • .,,;,. "d

~,;, •.

leech toll how to u5e but- ·
tons, buc~l•s, ~111p1 , !.tees,
1ippen, til5.

lUG.

Sl.99

36'

lENGTH

THINK SPRING THIS FALL
Plant Top Quality Holland Bulbs
Tulips Hyacinth Crocus " Daffodils

-

A display of assorted
bulbs suitable for
borders
and
rock

' Since.- ·1159

ls
Guaranteed
To SatisfyOr Ioney Back:

I

ANY "BO'ITLE" AUTHORITIES out there in Times-&amp;ntinel

( .\I! TO()\

Belfast. Cahill went to l)ubtin
earlier this week after having
been barred from the United
States, where be had gone on a
fund-raising mission.
The IR.A is seeking to force
the unification of the Irish
serious between minorily Republic Jlnd Northern Ireland
Catholics and
majority which is a province of Britain.
Protestants in six months.
Recently the battles have been GILLIGAN IN NEW YORK
COLUMBUS t UPll - The
directed at British soldiers
attempting to quell tile disor- Stale Development Department
said Saturday Gov. John J.
der.
In Dublin, a spokesman for Gilligan would address 200 New
lll!' ouUa ..ed ·Irish Republican York executives Thursday at a
Army ( IRA 1 said the leader of Junch&lt;on in the Biltmore Hotel
the IRA 's militant provisional in New York and try to convince
wing , Joe Cahill, had gone into them to locale or expand in
hiding and would soon return to Ohio.

: BELFAST, Northern Ireland
IUPI J - Roman Catholics and
Proleslants fought in the streets
Saturday, exchanging gunfire
in lwo separate incidents, a
British army source said.
The inridents were the most

1:
I

; I
POMEROY - Pomeroy's American Legion organization is
mmed Drew Webster P06t in memory of Drew S. Webster of
Pomeroy who was killed in France on July a, 1918.
· Cmtrary to the belief ol some, Mr. Webster was not killed on
the hattie field by enemy bullets but died as the result of an
~lomobile accident near the hattie front. He was highly regarded
m Pcmeroy and was the first from Meigs County to die in World
. War I. Thus, thepostwasnamedinhishonor.
From Roland Dodderer, of near Tuppers Plains, comes a July
13,1918copyof "The Daily News" which ouUines the death of Mr.
'!ebster and tells of the high esteem in which he was held. In·
odenlally, when the death notice was received it was at finit
thoo~t an error had been made because the rank of Lt. Webster
was mcorrect. However, it was later corrected and the death
verified.
The account from the old newspaper reads :
''The reported death of Lt. DrewS. Webster in an automobile
accident in France, July 8, was practically confirmed by
cablegram which was received by his mother, Mrs. Manning
W~ter, from Lt . Heritage Lewis last night which is as follows :
'Mrs. Manning Webster, Pomeroy, Ohio.
. "'Accept sincere sympathy of·o!ficerS of your son's regiment
m your great sorrow. All feel the loos very keenly. Heritage
Uwis' ,,
Tile newspaper account continued:
"For several days the report of this accident has been current
bere and was based on the press dispaleh which gave his rank as
captain and it was confidenUy hoped that it would prove to be
someo_ne else besides our own Drew.
"The parents wired the war Department two days ago in
fel?~ 1D the matter, and not having received a reply, they were
building hopes thst the report was a mistake. The cablegram
friiD Lt. Lewis, however, wQuld seem to leave no doubt of the
distressing truth of the report.
''From the meager information available, it seems that Lt.
Webster lost his life by a collision of an automobile containing 10
French officers and one in which be was riding, and died very
soon after being taken to a hO&amp;pital.
"Ll. Lewis was an officer in the same regiment with Lt.
Webster and it is very probable that his information was frrst
hand.
''The entire community is deeply grieved to learn of the
'verification of this report, and the parents and other relatives
have the deepest sympathy of the entire community .
"First Lt. Drew S. Webster was an officer in the 33001
Regiment, 83 Division, American Expeditionary Forces Overseas. He was made second lieutenant at officers training camp at
Fort Benjamin Harris last September and inunediately assigned
to the 83rd Division. He was recently promoted to first lieutenant
and sailed with his divisim a short time ago.
" Lt. Webster was a most exceptional young man in many
ways and it was confidently predicted that his military career
would be brilliant in thefactthst he seemed to be especially fitted
for this work. His was an exceptionally bright mind, cool and
collected, and absolutely numb to the sensation of fear. It is the
extreme sacrifice thst this town and community is called upon to
pay in crushing the cruel, grinding autocracy of Europe that one
ol our best and most capable men should he the ftrst of the county
to lay down his life for the cause. He was a graduate of Pomeroy
HighSchool in 1910and a graduate of the engineering class of Ohio
state University in 1915, and was 28 years of age.
''Lt. Webster was the first Meigs County boy to enlist at the
beginning of the war and a fateful coincidence made him the first
to give lis IHe fer his country from the county."
Lt. Webster was a brother of Mrs. Tom Crow, Sr., and an
Wiele of Attorney Manning Webster of Pomeroy.

_CUNT EASIWOOO TEllV SAV.lAS

Gunfire.Sounds In ·Separate Area$

I
·I
·f

I By Bob Hoeflich

. MEI!g·E~

/

Patrol Logs 3 Accidents
GALLIPOLIS - Three traffic

constituHm"IIJ Gf lbe state's

Beat •-•

!

Child, 2 Injured
POMEROY - Two-year-&lt;&gt;ld
Lisa Persons, Syracuse, was
hospitalized at Veterans
Memorial Hoopital following a
car-truck accident Friday at
3:15 p.m. at the intersection of
Bowmans Run Road and SR 124,
the Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. reported.
Lisa was a passenger
in a car driven by
Betty Persons, 33, Syracuse, on Bowmans Run
Road when the brakes on the
car failed. Her car hit a truck
belonging to the Meigs County
Highway Dept., traveling west
on 124 driven by Roy Edward
Frecker, 56, Rt. I, Minersville.
Frecker stated that he tried
unsuccessfully to avoid the
Persons car by pulling.his truck
to the left.
Usa sustained a frontal bone
fracture, severe lacerations to
the scalp and forehead. The
youngster's head hit the windshield.
Mrs. Persons suffered shock

I
I
I·

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) :....
The Calif&lt;niil lqlreme Out
agreed Ftillll1 to del i+ the

Centennial Prograin Set
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
POMEROY ..,. The day of kerosene
limp~~, potbellied stoves and separation of
the sexes for church services. has long
passed, but so lt was 100 years ago this
month when the Minersville Methodist
Olurch was dedicated.
Today marks.the beginning of a week
long celebration of the church centennial
which will be highlighted by cooturning of
the !liDOs, nightly gospel messages, a hymn
sing, and an all.day service.
•
Members have been asked to wear old
fashioned clothes ·for the service at 8
tonight. Area ministers will bring goopel
messages for the next five nights and on
Saiurday evening at 8 p.m. a hymn sing
will be held.
Climax of the centennial observance
will be the aU-day service next Sunday.
Bible school at 9 a.m. will be followed by a
wors,hip service for congregations of all
the churches of the Syracuse Cluster, a
basket dinner at noon, a ·get-acquainted
social hour, and the afternoon service with
Dr. William Messmer, adminisll'ative
assistant to Bishop Ensley of the Ohio West
Area of the United Methodist Church, as
guest speaker.
The ~burch building was built in 1871
on ground which was donated by Daniel
and Elizabeth WoUe. Lumber was hauled
in by horse and wagOn from the Inman Mill
located outside Racine by Adam Roush
and Joseph Hood. The families of both men
have been prominent in the church
throUgh all the years following.
Mr. Roush was the grandfather of
Edna Wiggins and Osmer Roush, and the
great-grandfather of Kenny Wiggins,
present Sunday school superintendent and
Mary Bentz, the church organist. '
Mr. Hood was the father of Ida Hood
Phillips, grandfather of Sadie Phillips
Brown, and the great-grandfather of
Clifford Phillips, all devout members and
workers in the church.
The original enll'ance to the church
was on the side facing the river. There was
a narrow porch acroos the side with two
doors - one for the ladies and one for the
men. Windows have since replaced those
doors. Inside the men were seated on the
left and the Jadies on the right.
A low platform across the front of the
sanctuary was raised in later years to
accommodate the many plays which were
presented under the direction of Garfield
Hilebens.
The piano was in the center of the
sanctuary and two potbellied stoves
provided the heat. The entrance to the
church was changed in 1927 due to a severe
slip of the hill where the church is located.
The church piano, still in use, was
provided from the proceeds of dramatic
plays put on by Gilbert Rummel in the
early 1900's. All local people were used in
the roles and the church history aqates. thst
"they always played to a full house."
A bell for the church was donated by
Lafe McKnight of Rutland in 1937 and thst
year on Oct. 24 at 9 a.m. it was rung for the
first time by the five oldest members of the
church, Mrs. Ida Phillips, Mrs· William
Thomas, Sr., Mrs. Mary Thomas, Mrs.
William Houdashelt, Sr., and Lon Custer.
The bell tower was constructed at a C&lt;J5t of

r-------------~--~-J1~Pl----~

ABOmON lAW

IALI
Family Pack
includes lhese
4 sandwiches

1 BIG
SHEF

Pryacdla
or Fa II Firethorn
loaded with berries.

s

o~~~t~~~~.

Dried FloweB
STRAWFLOWERS
WHEAT, I.AGARUS.

•

Elegant Abaca Flowers.

IIEGULAR 17c YD.

B..utiful pOnh end 1olid
colora. ldul for meking
dreperies end dipc:cvers.

•
•
•;

IMPORTED DRIED UNIOLA,
EUALIA, DAISY STRAM IN E•
I

PACKAGED ASSORTED
DRIED FLOWERS.

Smeltzer Garden Center

:
:

Open Weekdays 9 to 8
Sunday Jto 6
.4 Miles West of G.lllipolis on US 35

:

~ ~------------~~~~
I'

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IPE&lt;:OA BRIGHTENING COLORTONES

TAD.ORED CASEMEHT FIBEBGLIS"
"DIANE" TIEl AND VALANCE SJ.T
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Solid color white, C)Oicf, green or ""'lon ..:unt.d w~
metdlinq fringe. Ceteft- Fib.,-glu. • ;. h.nJ ,..,1h.bl.
IIIVIt nee d, ironin t Won't shrinl or mild*'- . r.... "' ]l/
loog. M,t1chin9 "' nu •i likltieiCd. , ...... ef e• w .,;ng.
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A REMINDER

MURPHYS
· ARE
OPEN
UNTIL

We have a large selection of house plants both
large and small- Also dish gardens and
terrariums. We deliver to the hospital.

= ~--------~--~~

t•

53~.

Hardy Mums Suitable tor
Hospital or Shut-ins.

A large selection _ of Permanent Flowers and
Arrangements m fall colors. Scarecrows, witches and
black cats.

•

1639 Fastail Ale.

COnGN IUKCLOTB FUBIC

PACKAGE. ol 10

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SundaY
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REii1i UU.R $1.M
H.-, d..t-, pl.utM:: ~o.o,, hold
7 ~ For .,.,.d d. .~ wp
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DECOR ENHANCING

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ftEa.
$1.11

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•nd 6"115" 'iter..

wood, w.lnut

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MONDAY
NIGHTS AND
FRIDAY NIGHTS

FOR MORE CONVENIENT SHOPPING-YOU CAN "CHARGE IT" AT MURPHY'S
'1.00 NIIDI_III _PAYIBT tD.DS IIOST

�a Sort of Journal

You can't get to there
from here no more

BY J. A. McKEAN
(Second of a Series)
make his catch in the street. No one against IJ'lSS~ble attempts to destroy it
GAUJPOIJS - In spring, 19'll, could though Claude 'Stringbeans' by union miners. It is not known Utat
Henry Ford produced the 15,000,000th Miller may have tried.
threats have been made to damage the
Model-T and halted production of Utis
Too, punting from Ute sootheasl bfidge. V· ·
·
historic vehicle which truly had put zone required abnormal luck and skill
· The Gallipolis schools opened
America on wheels. He was re-tooling with only. a five-yard depth to wort during an extended September heat
completely, and the nation would wait from and gigantic elm trees wave (96 degrees average high) and Ute
: in near hysteria his new Model-A to be overhanging Ute south (home) sideline. football candidates began preparing for
. introduced later th;lt year. The first
Also, of course, the west end zone Ute 1927 campaign. ·
underwater vehicular tunnel (Holland) was quainUy unique. It was Ute normal
A Daily Tribune feature anwas completed under the Hudson River rectangle, but some tw..urirds of Ute nounced, "Halliday Touted AB Star At
coonecting New York and New Jersey. end-line marked Ute bank dropping · Wesleyan. Art PhilliPs WiU Leave Big
Perhaps these events were not coin- precipitously to 'chickamauga Creek. Hole in O.W.U. Lineup." Phillips was ·
cidentaL
More than several careless pass out due to an eye problem. The next ·
E;arlier, AT&amp;T had opened the first receivers or plimging backs feU from year he would transfer to Ohio u .;Utus
cominercial phone seniice and on April sight into the briars and horseweeds becoming perhaps the only
7, Secretary of Cornmerre Herbert there - an electrifying experience for player to s~ at two top-grade
Hoover initially and successfully everybody.
universities. John E. Halliday, Jr. had
demonstrated television by speaking to
Field goals and kicked extra points, conditioned himself Utat sununer by
and being seen by AT&amp;T officials, while not expressly forbidden, were swabbing Ute d!!Cks of an oil tanker
Washinglon to New York.
discouraged. They could be expensive. from TeJ:as to Europe and back.
On May H a nag called Whisltey The officers had a chance to retrieve a
Too, the paper (Ruth Richards, city
won Ute Kentucky Derby in the snail's ball kicked toward the fleet-looted lads editor) stated several students ·had
time of 2:06. A monwnental joke. The waiting on Fourth Ave. They had returned to college: Harry Wheeler and ·
rest of the field must've sipped more practically no chance when a kick Paul O'Brien to Ohio State; Columbus
Kentucky corn juice lhan the winner. disappeared over Utat creek bank.
Footana to Notre Dame; Alex and Jack
While temporarily disenchanted
The northwest corner was Wolfe, Shires Jones, Jack Switzer, and
promoters and specUlators traipsed dominated by the huge Tabit Broom Harmon O'Brien to Greenbrier Military
pell-mell north from the vast Florida Factory where ample room existed for Academy; Harris Doepping to Birreal estate bust (a 1926 hWTicane had Ute visitors' bleachers and Coach ' mingham. Rio Grande College
prematurely punctured lhat balloon), it Cooper's favorite practice device, the registered 200 students.
is likely GAHS Coach Cooper wished tackling dummy. ln vogue then was the
A considerably larger group
somebody would bring along an acre or 'flying tackle' for which Cooper had a assembled Sept. 22 in Soldiers Field,
so of Miami frontage to extend his most effective method of teaching Chicago. On that eventful evening
gridiron area. The old Academy Field flying to his players- a five-loot, two- li5,000 boxing fans watched amazed as
was something else.
by.four planted shin high in front of Gene Tunney survived a sevenlh round
All team practice and home games tacklers at the lake-d! point. A knockdown, debatably assisted by the
were performed on the same field miscalculation and man, did that famous "long count," and went on to
which, combined with haphazard smart!
out-point Jack Dempsey in 10 rounds,
drainage, accounted foc its becoming a
Some early September news ac- thus defending his world's heavyweight
bare, frozen surface, or a sodden . counts stated:
championship. It was the greatest
quagmire by November.
National Hairdressers Declare crowd ever to attend a single, one-shot,
This real estate problem made it a Loog Hair Coming Back (Note : for arena type sports event in American
strange field, indeed. It was cut on the women. Males were still influenced by history(andperhapstheworld) and the
bias: that is, Ute northeast corner the beargrease slick of Rudolph gate receipts exceeded Ute incredible
bounded State Sl, and the sooUteasl Valentino.) European Corn Borer sum of $2,600,000, still the record for a
virtually reached the Fourlh Ave. Making Stealthy But Sure Progress. live audience. These were 1927
sidewalk.
Thus the east end zone Situation would have been WO&lt;'Se butfor greenbacks, essentially tax-free. A lot
was a mite tricky. With the goal line as federal action. Control puzzles U. S. of bread.
the base, it fD&lt;'med a scalene triangle. A officials. Believe government ap·
The Gallipolis Blue &amp;White would
pass completion in either extreme propriation was valuable in checking open their season on Saturday at
corner was impossible unless a spread. More needed. Railroad Bridge Athens.
receiver coule leap a six-loot fence and ls Guarded at Kanauga. Precaution
((To be continued)

·Vehicle
reeked

Fairview
News Notes

ADVISING AND RElGJSTRATION opened the academic year at Rio Grande College
August 31. Elrollment, il)cluding late registrations during tbe first week of cia
, is 750 for
the fall semester.

Rio Enrollment Off A Bit
RIO GRANDE -Enrollment p.m. are, however, apat Rio Grande College for the proximately as large as the day
first semester has reached 750 classes: A number of day
students, 461ess than last year, students are enrolled in classes
Dean S. Brown, director of beginning after 6 p.m., and
admissions and records, an- there is a nlixture of boUt day
nounced today. The semester and evening students in aU the
· officially began August 31, but a night classes.
number of students registered
In the future the college may
during the first week of classes. offer a nwnber of courses from
Last year, the college had 796 its new business administration
students enrolled during Ute program as part of the evening
first semester. However, Ute class program. The purpose of
Class of 1971 was the largest in the evening program is to offer
Ute history of Rio Grande an educational opportunity to
College, with more than 200 those members of Ute commembers.
The
largest munity who, through work
graduating class previously
was in 1970, with 143 members.
Of Ute 796 students enrolled
last'tall, «were night students.
This M, a total of 22 students
are enrolled as night students, a
decline of 22. The reason for Ute
decline, according to Roy
Holmes, can be seen by looking
at the type of student enrolled in All residents of Gallia County
night classes in the past.
may obtain answers to
Holmes, director of student questions on operation and
of
the
leaching and
extension interpretation
education, pOinted out that Ute Presidential O&lt;'der of August 1~
majority of students in night on prices, rents, wages and
school in past years were cadet salaries from the Gallia County
certificate holders, teachers Agricultural Stabilization and
who went into the classroom Conservation Service (ASCS)
with roughly 60 hours of college Office, accocding to J. Melvin
·credit.
Gilbert, Chairman of the County
Because they held a cadet ASC Committee.
certificate, Holmes said, Utese County
ASCS
Offices
teachers enrolled in night throughout the United States
school to work toward a have been chosen as in. bachelor's degree and maintain formation centers to answer
their certification. The cadet questions from all citizens on
program, however, was phased President Nixon's Executive
out four years ago.
Order which is designed to stem
Holmes noted thar, of the inflation and strengthen the
11,0110 teachers in Ohio, only 800 national economy. 111e Gallia
hold cadet certificates. As Ute County ASCS office is located at
IIUIIIber of teachers in this 95 Sycamore St., Gallipolis. The
category decreases, the 1elephone number is 446-0035.
enrollment in night school . In charge of the office is
clecreuel.
David W. McKenzie, County
11le classes scheduled after 6 Executive Director. 'Other

or
other
commitments
obligations, cannot attend
college on a full-time basis.
Registration for evening
classes is held each semester on
the same day as advising and
registration foc day classes. A
schedule of courses for both day
and evening classes can be
obtained by contacting the
Admissions and Records Office
at the college.
December 18 marks the official end of Ute first semester,
with final e&gt;:ams set for Dec. 13
Utrough 16. Registration for Ute
second semester is Jan. 11.

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs. Wilma Riggs and father,
Ott Arnott, local, and Mrs. Luda
Arnott of Belpre spent Labor
Day.weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Jesse 1\r'nott at Roches1er, Pa .
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Arnall are
residing at Charleston, W. Va.,
where he is employed.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of
Clifton, W. Va., spent Monday
with Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Roush. Mr. Lewis assisted Mr.
Roush with house painting.
Other callers on Ute Roushes
were Mrs. Edna Roush, Mrs.
Gladys Shields, Mrs. Everette
Parsons and daughters of
Negley, Ohio, Mrs. Ruth Parsons on Tuesday evening. On
Sunday evening Mr. and Mrs.
Wiley Ours of Racine visited.
Miss Wilda Lawson spent
Labor Day weekend with her
brother, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Lawson and son at Letart, W.
Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lawson
and children visited over Labor
Day weekend wilh Ute latter's
aunt at Charleston, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs . Edward
Laudermill and children of
Columbus spent Labor Day
weekend with the latter's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Donohue.
Mrs. Linda Cleland and
children, Mrs. Anna Wines,
Karen and Jackie, Mr. and Mrs.
Don Hupp, Scotty and Brian,
Mrs. Joyce White and son,
Kevin, Mrs. Gerald Wells,
Mandy and Amy of Syracuse
called on Mrs. Kale Rowe and

5-The Sunday Times- Sentinel, &amp;mday, Sept. 12, 1971

Saturday
PT. PLEASANT - Two high·

way mishaps were investigated
by Mason County Sheriff's
Department Friday and
Saturday but no personal injuries were reported.
A late model car was a total
loss at 4 a.m. Saturday on Slate
Route 62 when a deer ran onto
the highway causing the driver
to lose control.
Millard L. Greenlee of the
Leon-Baden Road told deputy
sheriff Bob Huffman he was
traveling south when the deer
came from Ute right and ran in
front of his ·car. He said he cut to
Ute left to miss it, got in a ditch
and lost control.
Two vehicles were involved in
a reaHnd collision Friday at
~:50p.m., on the Shadle Bridge.
Deputy Huffman also investigated this and identified
Ute drivers as James H. Staats,
52, 2320 Washington Avenue,
Point .Pleasant and Gerald
McCarley, 41, Route I,
Gallipolis, 0.
According to Ute driver's
statements, McCarley struck
the Staats vehicle in the back
end.

Ada over the holiday weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
spent Saturday and Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Styer at
Waterford and attended the
River Rat celebration. M•. and
Mrs. Pete Shields, David Sayre
and Mrs. Dorothy Glenn visited
the Styers on Sunday and also
attended the celebration.
Mrs. Bertha Robinson
returned home Tuesday accompanied by her sister, Mrs.
Bill Mitchell of Columbus who
spent the night with her. Mrs.
Robinson had spent a week with
her sister and attended the Ohio
State Fair on Monday. Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Robinson · of
Flatwoods, W. Va., Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Sargent of Racine,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Robinson and
family spent Sunday with Mrs.
Bertha Robinson.
Paul Sayre of Columbus spent
Thursday with Mr, and Mrs.
Herbert Sayre.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Manuel,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Roush,
Paul and Babby, were visiting
relatives in Charleston, W. Va .,
Sunday.
Mrs. Lou Van way and Billy
Graybeal of Huntington visited
Mrs. Iva Orr Tuesday.

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wants the county office to obtain
an answer the question will go
by phone or mail to the nearest
IRS district office," Gilbert
said . Normal 'function of the
ASCS county offices is to administer farm action programs
of the U. S. Department of
Agriculture on the local level.
County committee Chairman
Gilbert said ASCS service to
farmers will continue without
interruption.
"Our county office people
welcome Ute opportunity to
serve their country and are
.happy to make the extra effort
in this crucial period," he said.
Modern Olympiad
The first modern Olympiad
took place in Athens, Greece.
in 11196 and only nine nations
were involved. T h e 1964
Olympic Games in Tokyo
hnrl &lt;om• 94 participaling
nations.

GALLIPOLIS
The
A.A.U. W. are selling stationery
designed (or them by Mrs.
Herman Koby !Saundra).
Mrs. •Koby completed tindergraduate work at Bowling
Green, receiving a B.S. in Art
Education.! ,
She ex~ndect her studies at
Ohio State University resulting
in a bacheloi" of arts from Utis
university. She also taught art
appreciation at Rio Grande
cOllege.
.
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She is an instructor for Ute
Frenc~ Art Colony in silk
screemng and water color.
Her first l)'Or~ for tpe community was when she designed
four scenes of the Rio Grande
Campus which were used for
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GALLIPOLIS - Comi ng from Earl Segraves, Mrs . Ervin and Mrs. Walter Skaggs and Charlie Hatfield, MI. Vernon;
uul uf town tu attend the funeral Wan!, Mr. and Mrs. Matt sun, Mr . and Mrs. Curtis Mrs. Monnie Brown, Mr. lnd

the covers of .stationery sponsored by the Faculty Women's
Club.
·
She. later assisted GSI in
developing patients' drawings
of the grounds there, into
stationery.
Mrs. Koby is receiving no pay
for this effort. Her words when
asked whelher she would be
willing to undertake this project
were, "This will be my contribulion to Gallipolis."
We are indeed fortunate to
have a person of her skill and
spirit in our community.
Proceeds of ·the stationery
will go toward AAUW's
program of educational advancemenl in various fields.

, nf the Rev. Brack Skaggs were
Mr. and Mrs. Van SkaggS and
.. uns, Mr. and Mrs. Jonah
Skaggs, Thurman Skaggs, Mrs.

GALLIPOLIS - The First
Church pf God Youth group had
a retreat on Labor Day . The day
started at 6 a.m. when everyone
arrived at the church for breakfast, prepared by Carol Kessel,
Freda Clark, Penny Haner. and
Shirley Dailey . After breakfast
we had devotions by Reverend

POMEROY POIJCE ClUEF Jed Webster presents Pomeroy Village Oerk Jane Walton a
check for $1 821 from the SoUtheastern Ohio Council of Governments, Marietta. The check
represents a~prollimately 60 percent of the cost of a recenUy purchased new police cruiser.
The council is designed to upgrade local law enforcement agencies.
ENROLLED AT GBC
GALIJPOIJS - Sherri Anne
Turner, daughter of Mrs. Anna
E. Turner, Rutland, has been
accepted at Gallipolis BWiiness
College for Ute Fall Quar1er
beginning September 16. Miss
death from farm tractor, power Turner, a 1971 graduate of
lawn mower and travel to and Meigs High School, will be
from and while attending a enrolled in the Secretarial
Farm Bureau meeting. ,
Course. She formerly attended
Rio Grande College.

Benefits Sweetened for

Farm Bureau Members
Starting with 1972 memberships, the benefils on the
Farm Bureau Tractor and
Travel accidental death policy
will be increased sharply,
Henry Frank, Meigs County
Farm Bureau president, said
today. The policy is included
with each Farm Bureau
membership without extra
charge.
The new maximum benefit
foc member and-or spouse will
be $2,000 instead of the former
$1,500. The benefit for covered
dependent children under age 19
will be $500 instead of Ute former $250. The "climbing
benefit" feature will still be
included. Under it, non~apsing
membership
adds
$100
coverage per year unlil a $2,000
maximum is reached. The
starting point is $1,000 for new
members or members wbo let
their membership lapse by not
renewing by Jan. 1. The
dependent child coverage
remains constant at $500.
Another new feature gives
immediate coverage to new
Farm Bureau members who
join after Sept. 30 for the
coming
~a lendar
year.
Previously the policy did not go
into effect unlil Jan. 1, for those
joining in Ute last quarter prior
to the membership year.
This policy covers accidental

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EVERYDAY LOW PRICES
KlAn'S
MIRACLE
WHIP

qt

FOR BIG DOCOUNT SAVTNC.S.

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Stree1
GalliPOlis. Ohio
137 Pkle

THIS BEAUTIFUL MEDITERRANIAN (4 PIECE)
BEDROOM SUITE WITH
SEALY BOX SPRINGS &amp;MATTRESS INCLUDED

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By Helen Bottel

1

WHEN SOMEBODY BUGS YOU:
FIGHT OR IGNORE?
Dear Helen:
Several times, when kids have written in about gross teachers
they don't get along with, you've implied it's better to quietly earn
"' your grade than fight what you can't change and risk getting
" failed.
''
Well, what do you say about a teacher who never misses a
chance to poke fun at minority races? When a pregnant white girl
quit school to marry her Puerto Rican boy friend, he called it
"heir pollution" and some of the class even laughed!
Being Jewish, I get my share of his dirty cuts and I'm not
about to sit and take it! I figure an "A" from this creep would be a
disgrace, though I could make one if I'd act hwnble. He'll
probably Dunk me.
Maybe you don't agree with me, Helen, but I'll bel your
daughter Sue does. - FIGHTER
P.S. He never does anything "open" enough to complain to
U!e principal about, so I take revenge by driving' him bananas.
With his stupidity, it's easy.
Dear Fighter:
And you win -an F, plus a year of make-up work. And this
WASPish teacher will end up more firmly locked into his
prejudices, because you've ''proved what he always said about
those people." So all fighting gels you is Ute doubtful satisfaction
of skewering a slupidUtUe man who isn't worth your effort.
Maybe I'm just too practical: if you can CHANGE things, I
say fight; If not, ignore. -HELEN
Okay, Sue, your turn:
SUE'S VIEWS :
Dear Fighter:
Mcm has a neat trick : To someone like your teacher, she'd
men laDy say, "Zap, you don't exist," and then get on with the
course. His cuts couldn't hurl because she'd smile and look right
through him.
It works for her, but I'm more of a head-on fighter, because
there's alw.ays the oulside chance you can change things. like for
instance I drew two "F's" in citizenship (and stern words from
home) befcre this teacher and I finally got to understanding each
o er. ~;V,ear;-iqlljlrJll'lle-we'regoodfrlenda.
~ WhY. Couldn:t you do your work, draw a decent grade, and
STU.L smack down stupid prejudices, Fighter? Olherwise, as
Mom says, you're only hurUng hourself. -SUE
Dear Sue:
Back in the eighth 'grade I went wilh a certain boy and I've
always liked him a lot.
We'r~ still friends three years later, but just friends, nothing
:: else. I've learned to accept this.
~
The problem Ia I recenUy heard that someone is spreading the
• rumor around that he Ia a fag.! can't believe it and won't! Or can

Miss Sprow To Wed
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
John H. Sprow announce the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter,
Sharon L. Sprow, to Mr. Max L.
Knopp, son of Mr. and Mrs. Otis
Knopp, Racine, Ohio.
Miss Sprow is a 1966 graduate
of Gallia Academy High School.
She is a graduate Of Huntington
School of Beauty Culture, and is
employed at Evelyn's Salon of
Beauty.
Mr. Knopp graduated from
Racine High School Class of

1964. He is presently employed
by Carter &amp; Evans Conlr.

Wedding plans are
complete at this time.

in·

Weekend Meeting

GALLIPOLIS - There will be
a weekend meeting at the
Bulaville Christian Church
beginning Sept. 16th lhru 19th at
7:30 nightly. Rev. Arnold B.
Johnson , evangelist from
Pikeville, Kentucky, will be the
speaker. Special singing
nightly: Thursday - White Oak
Youth Choir, Fridday - Shafer
Family ; Saturday - Ewing ton
Girls, Sunday, 19th
Homecoming All Day Service The Revelators from Columbus,
Ohio featured singers. The
pastor, Rev. William L. Burke,
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. invites the public to attend.
Levi Adkins of Route 4, Basket dinner will be served at
Pomeroy, are happy to an. noon.
nounce the engagement and
forthcoming marriage of their
REUNION
daughter, Roberta, of Route l
GALLIPOLIS
- The annual
Northup, to Mr. Harland J .
Carper
and
Lawson
Stanley
Slover of 1638 Chatham Ave.,
Gallipolis.
reunionatwill
be Park
held 12in noon.,
Lan·
caster
Rising
The wedding will be an event Sept. 19, relatives invited, bring
of Sept. 18 al6 p.m. at the home picnic lunch.
of Rev. Ray Rouse of Rl. 4,
The president is Ralph
Albany, Ohio. An open wedding Stausbaugh and secretary .
is planned.
treasurer is Mrs. Donald Corn.

Miss Adkins
To Wed Soon

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Mrs. Chester Hatfield, Mr. Joe
Skaggs , E'!llis · Sklggs, .
Columbus;
Mrs .
Delmar Skarks, Mr. and
WelterMrs .
Conley,
ville;
Mr .
and _ Mrs.
Richard Clemons, Hilliards;
Mrs. Escom Skaggs, Amblin.
Also; Rev. Bruce Daniela,
Sitka, Ky. ; Rev. Ellis Hamilton,
Paintsville, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs.
G. H. Hatfield, Henneryetta,
Okla. ; Mr. and Mrs. Lesley
Ramey, Wheelersburg; Blutcher Skaggs, Ironton ; Bill
Robinson , Ralph Miller, Rev.
Kelly McGraw, Rev. Zecill
Lyons, Bufford Lyons, Ashland,
Ky . ; Mrs . Faye Bales,
Wellston ; Mr. and M••. Gene
Skaggs, Mr . and Mrs. Floyd
Skaggs, Hilliards; Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Borders, WesterviUe;
Mr. ·and Mrs. Marvin Skaggs,
AshviUe.

SPECIAL
SALE

Miss Sharon Sprow

•

:: · How can !stop thia?I go to the boy and ask him straight out? : STUMPED
: Dear Slumped:
:
If you asked a guy about a rwnor like this, you wouldn't gain
~ anything and you might lose his friendship.
:.
Just stand by and keep on being his friend, no matter what ·: someone he can really talk to.
:
And don't gel so shook. It's kind of a fad to whisper about
: ''who's queer" U!ese days. People don'llake it aU Utat seriously .
: -SUE
: HELEN'S CORNER:
:' Dear Slumped:
'
... ru.J at 16, no boy is locked into homosexuality, even though
: he may have had an experience or two that brought on the
: whispers. - H.
•
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"Bloody Mary"
The
term,
"Bloody Mary ,"
•
was applied to Queen Mary I
of England because of the
bitter persecution she
•
caused
the Protestants in
•~ GALIJPOLIS - The first Girl her attempt to bring Eng·
• Scout Service Unit Meeting for
land back to the Roman
: all troop leaders, assistant Catholic
faith .
: feaders and Service Team
: members of the Gallia Unit will
: be held on Wednesday, Sep: iember 15, at 9 a.m. in the
: basement of Ute Presbyterian
: Church. Tentative plans for Ute
1
• coming school year will be
: discussed as well as troop
: registration which is due this

Allison of Shawnee Church or went back to the church for a
Goo in F'latwoods, Kentucky. talk given by Rev. Allison.
The ones who attended were :
When devotions were over, the
group left the church and went Sherry and Mike Evans, Timmy
to Jim Saunders' farm for a day Anderson, Jeff Rhodes, Cathy
in the woods. There was a Will , Denise and Edith Long,
recreation lime, followed by a Diana Haner, Dinia Eads,
time of singing and testimon ies. Roger Dailey, Debbie Burnette,
At 12, the youth had a picnic Mike Bush, Julie, Tonya North,
lunch. After lunch they were Pam Haffelt, Jerry, Bobb)', and
give11 questions to answer in Steve Wallis, Lu Ann Whitley,
groups. When the groups joined Sue Adkins, F'rank Rutherford,
back together, there was a Terry IJoyd, Debbie Houck,
GALLIPOLIS - Students in discussion or what young people Rev. and Mrs. Jones, Rev . and
the Diversified Health Oc- could do for the church and for Mrs. Allison, Angel Allison, and
cupations class at Gallia the community. The youth then Bill Scott.
Academy High School loured
the Gallipolis Slate Institute on
Friday, Sept. 3. The purpose of
the field trip was to familiarize
the class with the many health
occupa lions in the field of
mental health.
Students participating in the
tour were Lori Barron , Louise
Baird, Gay Briggs, Nina Criner,
Chuck E. Hill, William
Jamison, Sam Mitchell, Betsy
Saunders, Terri Woodward, and
Lynn MitchelL Those already
employed and·unable to lake the
tour were Pat Canaday, Martha
Childers, Priscilla Dayton,
Michael Doyle, Lu Ann Foster,
Karen Houston, and Debra
While.
Mrs. Janet Wetherholt is the
instructor-&lt;:oordinator of this
new vocational program offered
at Gallia Academy High School.
Students work in health
oriented occupations for three
hours each day and attend
classes the remainder of the
day .

Class Tours GSI

!Helen Help Us!
I

Lemasters and children, all of Segraves, Plain City; Mr. and
l.~wmansville , Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. Grover Castel and
Mrs. Willard Blair, Dayton : Mr. daughters, Ashvi lle; Mrs.
and Mrs. Johnie Skaggs, Mr .

Youth Group lizbor Daj Retreat

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THE REG. 130

SCOTTISH
CAPER
The Scottish Caper with a
free-flowing back, belted
in front, with a row of
brassy buttons on the side.
FvJiy nylon taffeta lined.
Ze Pel treated. Multi-color
orange plaid in 80 per cent
wool, 20 per cent nylon.
Sizes S. M. L.

2 Day Vacation
GALLIPOLIS- Mrs. Stanley
Earwood visited her aunt, Mrs.
Day Richardson in Cincinnati
on Wednesday and Thursday
where she also attended the
Lawrence Welk Show.
She was accompanied by Mrs.
Elise Kimball as far as
Georgetown where she visited
with her aunt, Mrs. Will PohL
HONORARY DINNER
GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis Chapter OES will
honor the Past Matrons with a
dinner Monday evening at 6:30
p.m. Everyone is asked to bring

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WILL HOLD

YOUR CHOICE
IN OU
R
LAYAWAY

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lt~h:ei~r~o:w:n~ta~b~le:,:;se~r:vi~ce~·--.!::=~===========~::;:;;;::;~~~~==::::~:1

,,-··.

: Scout Leaders
~ Plan To Meet

Information Center On Economic
Actions Available At ASCS,Office
members of the staff are Rita
Buckley, Robert Haskins,
Avalon Roush and Lillian
Pauley. "Ours and all ASCS
offices throughout Ute nation,
wiU function as information
centers in aU locations outside
of highly urbanized areas,"
Gilbert said.
.
County ASCS offices are not to
handle complaints or appeals,
he said. They will serve only to
provide official information.
Persons with c&lt;mplaints will
register them wilh Ute most
convenient district or subdistrict office of the Internal
Revnue Service.
"Neither will interpretations
or guesses be made for ASCS
county office people. They will
answer only those questions for
which they have been supplied
answeni. If they don't know the
answer to a specific question,
they will say so.
If a member of the public

Many Come for Recent Rev. Skaggs Funeral

.AAVW To Sell Stationery

8

lA ring of beapty

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:month.

62" Tripl~ Dresser. 37;, Chest on Chest. 5/0 or 4/6 Panel Headboard. 28" x 50" Framed Mirror.
Beautiful Pecan Finish. All Case Pieces have Solid Tops.

ALL SIX .
·PIECES
NOW ONLY

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COMPLETE Wlnt SEALY BEDDING.

·YOUR FURNITURE DOLLAR BUYS MORE HERE/

(Reese Furniture Outlet
SECOND &amp; SYCAMORE

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Also the new field director
from the Seal of Ohio Council,
Mrs. Charles Leach, will be in
attendance
to
become
acquainted wilh the Gallipolis
Girl Scout Adults. ·
All leaders and assistants are
wgently requested to attend so
lhat their trobps will be able to
gel off to ri good star~.
Leaders sl\ould bring · with
Utem all individual girl forms,
~. old and new, and a list of needed
~ supplies fo~ the year.

isa~y

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foreter.

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. wb..i(t.., AriConod.
: Arte.rwd crtf..... havt btln
• doiDr booodlol th~ with
: ftno ..... -1811j). AD&lt;I .thio
:

a study in
quiet elegance
polyester
double knit

_.,_..........._
lmi\IIPI!I'quolityilqoito
ovldtntllltboAIICarnd

Pick a coat for anywhere,
any-weather ... richly tex·
tured polyester double knit
with flattering raglan
sleeves and roomy patch
pockets. Of course, it's
washable, packable, wrln·
kleproof. More than that,
it's Zepel• treated for rain

haverfrbtaow. ~your
...... ill ....... ,_line
daaip.. bold ..... _

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ba-. :
............... "tor
or -'hldrln

)'OU.

At! Carved
!fWaOOINQ

llt1N81

:

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and stain resistance, win·

FM.LIIIWTMt liT

terized with a light · inner
layer of polyester. Wine,
Gold,
lor
misses 8-18.

E

:i'f·.,.Ragfands Wekome

..I:' first Child

'55.00

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w.t·' Mr.
- and Mrs.I Donald. Ragland

: announce the birth of their first
: child,aboy,Sundayal~:36a.m.
.I: weWJiing 6 lbs., 9¥• ounces, at
01 HOlier Medical Center.
:
~ '1'\ie maternal grandparents . l
.. -;~· Mr. and r.trs. Stanley i

·.~vne:

y~d

·are Jilck!iorl.
mr. and
Mts.
'E-··ilfandllaren~
BidweU,i
paterhal
'l!illisun Raglahd,

Betty Rose.

Building a pantshoe wardrobe?
Then be SIJre to include this
dynamic duo of styles.
They'll add smashing dash to
all your newest pant·ingsi· A.
Speed-laced Sllede uppers on
an ovaled heel in
Golden Tan, Dark Brown or
Rust. B. Belted flap on a
stashed, rounded heel in
Medium
Blue, Tan or Brown naked
leather. Both 515.95

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Mon .• Tue$., Wed., Sit. 9-5

Thur. 9-12, Fri.'" P .~

atl'
.,,....,_
- ..IIIIIIJ ..........
IIUec•U,..
loll[filil. 0.

412-414 Setond ____________
Ave.
Galllpoll~. (), ..,_ ~...:~;:~;.~::,__...,.~..-•~~====:::::::::;:;::=~-..ii
j. ••liiii.tiilliiiiiiiii.

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�a Sort of Journal

You can't get to there
from here no more

BY J. A. McKEAN
(Second of a Series)
make his catch in the street. No one against IJ'lSS~ble attempts to destroy it
GAUJPOIJS - In spring, 19'll, could though Claude 'Stringbeans' by union miners. It is not known Utat
Henry Ford produced the 15,000,000th Miller may have tried.
threats have been made to damage the
Model-T and halted production of Utis
Too, punting from Ute sootheasl bfidge. V· ·
·
historic vehicle which truly had put zone required abnormal luck and skill
· The Gallipolis schools opened
America on wheels. He was re-tooling with only. a five-yard depth to wort during an extended September heat
completely, and the nation would wait from and gigantic elm trees wave (96 degrees average high) and Ute
: in near hysteria his new Model-A to be overhanging Ute south (home) sideline. football candidates began preparing for
. introduced later th;lt year. The first
Also, of course, the west end zone Ute 1927 campaign. ·
underwater vehicular tunnel (Holland) was quainUy unique. It was Ute normal
A Daily Tribune feature anwas completed under the Hudson River rectangle, but some tw..urirds of Ute nounced, "Halliday Touted AB Star At
coonecting New York and New Jersey. end-line marked Ute bank dropping · Wesleyan. Art PhilliPs WiU Leave Big
Perhaps these events were not coin- precipitously to 'chickamauga Creek. Hole in O.W.U. Lineup." Phillips was ·
cidentaL
More than several careless pass out due to an eye problem. The next ·
E;arlier, AT&amp;T had opened the first receivers or plimging backs feU from year he would transfer to Ohio u .;Utus
cominercial phone seniice and on April sight into the briars and horseweeds becoming perhaps the only
7, Secretary of Cornmerre Herbert there - an electrifying experience for player to s~ at two top-grade
Hoover initially and successfully everybody.
universities. John E. Halliday, Jr. had
demonstrated television by speaking to
Field goals and kicked extra points, conditioned himself Utat sununer by
and being seen by AT&amp;T officials, while not expressly forbidden, were swabbing Ute d!!Cks of an oil tanker
Washinglon to New York.
discouraged. They could be expensive. from TeJ:as to Europe and back.
On May H a nag called Whisltey The officers had a chance to retrieve a
Too, the paper (Ruth Richards, city
won Ute Kentucky Derby in the snail's ball kicked toward the fleet-looted lads editor) stated several students ·had
time of 2:06. A monwnental joke. The waiting on Fourth Ave. They had returned to college: Harry Wheeler and ·
rest of the field must've sipped more practically no chance when a kick Paul O'Brien to Ohio State; Columbus
Kentucky corn juice lhan the winner. disappeared over Utat creek bank.
Footana to Notre Dame; Alex and Jack
While temporarily disenchanted
The northwest corner was Wolfe, Shires Jones, Jack Switzer, and
promoters and specUlators traipsed dominated by the huge Tabit Broom Harmon O'Brien to Greenbrier Military
pell-mell north from the vast Florida Factory where ample room existed for Academy; Harris Doepping to Birreal estate bust (a 1926 hWTicane had Ute visitors' bleachers and Coach ' mingham. Rio Grande College
prematurely punctured lhat balloon), it Cooper's favorite practice device, the registered 200 students.
is likely GAHS Coach Cooper wished tackling dummy. ln vogue then was the
A considerably larger group
somebody would bring along an acre or 'flying tackle' for which Cooper had a assembled Sept. 22 in Soldiers Field,
so of Miami frontage to extend his most effective method of teaching Chicago. On that eventful evening
gridiron area. The old Academy Field flying to his players- a five-loot, two- li5,000 boxing fans watched amazed as
was something else.
by.four planted shin high in front of Gene Tunney survived a sevenlh round
All team practice and home games tacklers at the lake-d! point. A knockdown, debatably assisted by the
were performed on the same field miscalculation and man, did that famous "long count," and went on to
which, combined with haphazard smart!
out-point Jack Dempsey in 10 rounds,
drainage, accounted foc its becoming a
Some early September news ac- thus defending his world's heavyweight
bare, frozen surface, or a sodden . counts stated:
championship. It was the greatest
quagmire by November.
National Hairdressers Declare crowd ever to attend a single, one-shot,
This real estate problem made it a Loog Hair Coming Back (Note : for arena type sports event in American
strange field, indeed. It was cut on the women. Males were still influenced by history(andperhapstheworld) and the
bias: that is, Ute northeast corner the beargrease slick of Rudolph gate receipts exceeded Ute incredible
bounded State Sl, and the sooUteasl Valentino.) European Corn Borer sum of $2,600,000, still the record for a
virtually reached the Fourlh Ave. Making Stealthy But Sure Progress. live audience. These were 1927
sidewalk.
Thus the east end zone Situation would have been WO&lt;'Se butfor greenbacks, essentially tax-free. A lot
was a mite tricky. With the goal line as federal action. Control puzzles U. S. of bread.
the base, it fD&lt;'med a scalene triangle. A officials. Believe government ap·
The Gallipolis Blue &amp;White would
pass completion in either extreme propriation was valuable in checking open their season on Saturday at
corner was impossible unless a spread. More needed. Railroad Bridge Athens.
receiver coule leap a six-loot fence and ls Guarded at Kanauga. Precaution
((To be continued)

·Vehicle
reeked

Fairview
News Notes

ADVISING AND RElGJSTRATION opened the academic year at Rio Grande College
August 31. Elrollment, il)cluding late registrations during tbe first week of cia
, is 750 for
the fall semester.

Rio Enrollment Off A Bit
RIO GRANDE -Enrollment p.m. are, however, apat Rio Grande College for the proximately as large as the day
first semester has reached 750 classes: A number of day
students, 461ess than last year, students are enrolled in classes
Dean S. Brown, director of beginning after 6 p.m., and
admissions and records, an- there is a nlixture of boUt day
nounced today. The semester and evening students in aU the
· officially began August 31, but a night classes.
number of students registered
In the future the college may
during the first week of classes. offer a nwnber of courses from
Last year, the college had 796 its new business administration
students enrolled during Ute program as part of the evening
first semester. However, Ute class program. The purpose of
Class of 1971 was the largest in the evening program is to offer
Ute history of Rio Grande an educational opportunity to
College, with more than 200 those members of Ute commembers.
The
largest munity who, through work
graduating class previously
was in 1970, with 143 members.
Of Ute 796 students enrolled
last'tall, «were night students.
This M, a total of 22 students
are enrolled as night students, a
decline of 22. The reason for Ute
decline, according to Roy
Holmes, can be seen by looking
at the type of student enrolled in All residents of Gallia County
night classes in the past.
may obtain answers to
Holmes, director of student questions on operation and
of
the
leaching and
extension interpretation
education, pOinted out that Ute Presidential O&lt;'der of August 1~
majority of students in night on prices, rents, wages and
school in past years were cadet salaries from the Gallia County
certificate holders, teachers Agricultural Stabilization and
who went into the classroom Conservation Service (ASCS)
with roughly 60 hours of college Office, accocding to J. Melvin
·credit.
Gilbert, Chairman of the County
Because they held a cadet ASC Committee.
certificate, Holmes said, Utese County
ASCS
Offices
teachers enrolled in night throughout the United States
school to work toward a have been chosen as in. bachelor's degree and maintain formation centers to answer
their certification. The cadet questions from all citizens on
program, however, was phased President Nixon's Executive
out four years ago.
Order which is designed to stem
Holmes noted thar, of the inflation and strengthen the
11,0110 teachers in Ohio, only 800 national economy. 111e Gallia
hold cadet certificates. As Ute County ASCS office is located at
IIUIIIber of teachers in this 95 Sycamore St., Gallipolis. The
category decreases, the 1elephone number is 446-0035.
enrollment in night school . In charge of the office is
clecreuel.
David W. McKenzie, County
11le classes scheduled after 6 Executive Director. 'Other

or
other
commitments
obligations, cannot attend
college on a full-time basis.
Registration for evening
classes is held each semester on
the same day as advising and
registration foc day classes. A
schedule of courses for both day
and evening classes can be
obtained by contacting the
Admissions and Records Office
at the college.
December 18 marks the official end of Ute first semester,
with final e&gt;:ams set for Dec. 13
Utrough 16. Registration for Ute
second semester is Jan. 11.

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs. Wilma Riggs and father,
Ott Arnott, local, and Mrs. Luda
Arnott of Belpre spent Labor
Day.weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Jesse 1\r'nott at Roches1er, Pa .
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Arnall are
residing at Charleston, W. Va.,
where he is employed.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of
Clifton, W. Va., spent Monday
with Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Roush. Mr. Lewis assisted Mr.
Roush with house painting.
Other callers on Ute Roushes
were Mrs. Edna Roush, Mrs.
Gladys Shields, Mrs. Everette
Parsons and daughters of
Negley, Ohio, Mrs. Ruth Parsons on Tuesday evening. On
Sunday evening Mr. and Mrs.
Wiley Ours of Racine visited.
Miss Wilda Lawson spent
Labor Day weekend with her
brother, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Lawson and son at Letart, W.
Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lawson
and children visited over Labor
Day weekend wilh Ute latter's
aunt at Charleston, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs . Edward
Laudermill and children of
Columbus spent Labor Day
weekend with the latter's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Donohue.
Mrs. Linda Cleland and
children, Mrs. Anna Wines,
Karen and Jackie, Mr. and Mrs.
Don Hupp, Scotty and Brian,
Mrs. Joyce White and son,
Kevin, Mrs. Gerald Wells,
Mandy and Amy of Syracuse
called on Mrs. Kale Rowe and

5-The Sunday Times- Sentinel, &amp;mday, Sept. 12, 1971

Saturday
PT. PLEASANT - Two high·

way mishaps were investigated
by Mason County Sheriff's
Department Friday and
Saturday but no personal injuries were reported.
A late model car was a total
loss at 4 a.m. Saturday on Slate
Route 62 when a deer ran onto
the highway causing the driver
to lose control.
Millard L. Greenlee of the
Leon-Baden Road told deputy
sheriff Bob Huffman he was
traveling south when the deer
came from Ute right and ran in
front of his ·car. He said he cut to
Ute left to miss it, got in a ditch
and lost control.
Two vehicles were involved in
a reaHnd collision Friday at
~:50p.m., on the Shadle Bridge.
Deputy Huffman also investigated this and identified
Ute drivers as James H. Staats,
52, 2320 Washington Avenue,
Point .Pleasant and Gerald
McCarley, 41, Route I,
Gallipolis, 0.
According to Ute driver's
statements, McCarley struck
the Staats vehicle in the back
end.

Ada over the holiday weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
spent Saturday and Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Styer at
Waterford and attended the
River Rat celebration. M•. and
Mrs. Pete Shields, David Sayre
and Mrs. Dorothy Glenn visited
the Styers on Sunday and also
attended the celebration.
Mrs. Bertha Robinson
returned home Tuesday accompanied by her sister, Mrs.
Bill Mitchell of Columbus who
spent the night with her. Mrs.
Robinson had spent a week with
her sister and attended the Ohio
State Fair on Monday. Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Robinson · of
Flatwoods, W. Va., Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Sargent of Racine,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Robinson and
family spent Sunday with Mrs.
Bertha Robinson.
Paul Sayre of Columbus spent
Thursday with Mr, and Mrs.
Herbert Sayre.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Manuel,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Roush,
Paul and Babby, were visiting
relatives in Charleston, W. Va .,
Sunday.
Mrs. Lou Van way and Billy
Graybeal of Huntington visited
Mrs. Iva Orr Tuesday.

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wants the county office to obtain
an answer the question will go
by phone or mail to the nearest
IRS district office," Gilbert
said . Normal 'function of the
ASCS county offices is to administer farm action programs
of the U. S. Department of
Agriculture on the local level.
County committee Chairman
Gilbert said ASCS service to
farmers will continue without
interruption.
"Our county office people
welcome Ute opportunity to
serve their country and are
.happy to make the extra effort
in this crucial period," he said.
Modern Olympiad
The first modern Olympiad
took place in Athens, Greece.
in 11196 and only nine nations
were involved. T h e 1964
Olympic Games in Tokyo
hnrl &lt;om• 94 participaling
nations.

GALLIPOLIS
The
A.A.U. W. are selling stationery
designed (or them by Mrs.
Herman Koby !Saundra).
Mrs. •Koby completed tindergraduate work at Bowling
Green, receiving a B.S. in Art
Education.! ,
She ex~ndect her studies at
Ohio State University resulting
in a bacheloi" of arts from Utis
university. She also taught art
appreciation at Rio Grande
cOllege.
.
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She is an instructor for Ute
Frenc~ Art Colony in silk
screemng and water color.
Her first l)'Or~ for tpe community was when she designed
four scenes of the Rio Grande
Campus which were used for
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GALLIPOLIS - Comi ng from Earl Segraves, Mrs . Ervin and Mrs. Walter Skaggs and Charlie Hatfield, MI. Vernon;
uul uf town tu attend the funeral Wan!, Mr. and Mrs. Matt sun, Mr . and Mrs. Curtis Mrs. Monnie Brown, Mr. lnd

the covers of .stationery sponsored by the Faculty Women's
Club.
·
She. later assisted GSI in
developing patients' drawings
of the grounds there, into
stationery.
Mrs. Koby is receiving no pay
for this effort. Her words when
asked whelher she would be
willing to undertake this project
were, "This will be my contribulion to Gallipolis."
We are indeed fortunate to
have a person of her skill and
spirit in our community.
Proceeds of ·the stationery
will go toward AAUW's
program of educational advancemenl in various fields.

, nf the Rev. Brack Skaggs were
Mr. and Mrs. Van SkaggS and
.. uns, Mr. and Mrs. Jonah
Skaggs, Thurman Skaggs, Mrs.

GALLIPOLIS - The First
Church pf God Youth group had
a retreat on Labor Day . The day
started at 6 a.m. when everyone
arrived at the church for breakfast, prepared by Carol Kessel,
Freda Clark, Penny Haner. and
Shirley Dailey . After breakfast
we had devotions by Reverend

POMEROY POIJCE ClUEF Jed Webster presents Pomeroy Village Oerk Jane Walton a
check for $1 821 from the SoUtheastern Ohio Council of Governments, Marietta. The check
represents a~prollimately 60 percent of the cost of a recenUy purchased new police cruiser.
The council is designed to upgrade local law enforcement agencies.
ENROLLED AT GBC
GALIJPOIJS - Sherri Anne
Turner, daughter of Mrs. Anna
E. Turner, Rutland, has been
accepted at Gallipolis BWiiness
College for Ute Fall Quar1er
beginning September 16. Miss
death from farm tractor, power Turner, a 1971 graduate of
lawn mower and travel to and Meigs High School, will be
from and while attending a enrolled in the Secretarial
Farm Bureau meeting. ,
Course. She formerly attended
Rio Grande College.

Benefits Sweetened for

Farm Bureau Members
Starting with 1972 memberships, the benefils on the
Farm Bureau Tractor and
Travel accidental death policy
will be increased sharply,
Henry Frank, Meigs County
Farm Bureau president, said
today. The policy is included
with each Farm Bureau
membership without extra
charge.
The new maximum benefit
foc member and-or spouse will
be $2,000 instead of the former
$1,500. The benefit for covered
dependent children under age 19
will be $500 instead of Ute former $250. The "climbing
benefit" feature will still be
included. Under it, non~apsing
membership
adds
$100
coverage per year unlil a $2,000
maximum is reached. The
starting point is $1,000 for new
members or members wbo let
their membership lapse by not
renewing by Jan. 1. The
dependent child coverage
remains constant at $500.
Another new feature gives
immediate coverage to new
Farm Bureau members who
join after Sept. 30 for the
coming
~a lendar
year.
Previously the policy did not go
into effect unlil Jan. 1, for those
joining in Ute last quarter prior
to the membership year.
This policy covers accidental

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EVERYDAY LOW PRICES
KlAn'S
MIRACLE
WHIP

qt

FOR BIG DOCOUNT SAVTNC.S.

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Stree1
GalliPOlis. Ohio
137 Pkle

THIS BEAUTIFUL MEDITERRANIAN (4 PIECE)
BEDROOM SUITE WITH
SEALY BOX SPRINGS &amp;MATTRESS INCLUDED

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By Helen Bottel

1

WHEN SOMEBODY BUGS YOU:
FIGHT OR IGNORE?
Dear Helen:
Several times, when kids have written in about gross teachers
they don't get along with, you've implied it's better to quietly earn
"' your grade than fight what you can't change and risk getting
" failed.
''
Well, what do you say about a teacher who never misses a
chance to poke fun at minority races? When a pregnant white girl
quit school to marry her Puerto Rican boy friend, he called it
"heir pollution" and some of the class even laughed!
Being Jewish, I get my share of his dirty cuts and I'm not
about to sit and take it! I figure an "A" from this creep would be a
disgrace, though I could make one if I'd act hwnble. He'll
probably Dunk me.
Maybe you don't agree with me, Helen, but I'll bel your
daughter Sue does. - FIGHTER
P.S. He never does anything "open" enough to complain to
U!e principal about, so I take revenge by driving' him bananas.
With his stupidity, it's easy.
Dear Fighter:
And you win -an F, plus a year of make-up work. And this
WASPish teacher will end up more firmly locked into his
prejudices, because you've ''proved what he always said about
those people." So all fighting gels you is Ute doubtful satisfaction
of skewering a slupidUtUe man who isn't worth your effort.
Maybe I'm just too practical: if you can CHANGE things, I
say fight; If not, ignore. -HELEN
Okay, Sue, your turn:
SUE'S VIEWS :
Dear Fighter:
Mcm has a neat trick : To someone like your teacher, she'd
men laDy say, "Zap, you don't exist," and then get on with the
course. His cuts couldn't hurl because she'd smile and look right
through him.
It works for her, but I'm more of a head-on fighter, because
there's alw.ays the oulside chance you can change things. like for
instance I drew two "F's" in citizenship (and stern words from
home) befcre this teacher and I finally got to understanding each
o er. ~;V,ear;-iqlljlrJll'lle-we'regoodfrlenda.
~ WhY. Couldn:t you do your work, draw a decent grade, and
STU.L smack down stupid prejudices, Fighter? Olherwise, as
Mom says, you're only hurUng hourself. -SUE
Dear Sue:
Back in the eighth 'grade I went wilh a certain boy and I've
always liked him a lot.
We'r~ still friends three years later, but just friends, nothing
:: else. I've learned to accept this.
~
The problem Ia I recenUy heard that someone is spreading the
• rumor around that he Ia a fag.! can't believe it and won't! Or can

Miss Sprow To Wed
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
John H. Sprow announce the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter,
Sharon L. Sprow, to Mr. Max L.
Knopp, son of Mr. and Mrs. Otis
Knopp, Racine, Ohio.
Miss Sprow is a 1966 graduate
of Gallia Academy High School.
She is a graduate Of Huntington
School of Beauty Culture, and is
employed at Evelyn's Salon of
Beauty.
Mr. Knopp graduated from
Racine High School Class of

1964. He is presently employed
by Carter &amp; Evans Conlr.

Wedding plans are
complete at this time.

in·

Weekend Meeting

GALLIPOLIS - There will be
a weekend meeting at the
Bulaville Christian Church
beginning Sept. 16th lhru 19th at
7:30 nightly. Rev. Arnold B.
Johnson , evangelist from
Pikeville, Kentucky, will be the
speaker. Special singing
nightly: Thursday - White Oak
Youth Choir, Fridday - Shafer
Family ; Saturday - Ewing ton
Girls, Sunday, 19th
Homecoming All Day Service The Revelators from Columbus,
Ohio featured singers. The
pastor, Rev. William L. Burke,
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. invites the public to attend.
Levi Adkins of Route 4, Basket dinner will be served at
Pomeroy, are happy to an. noon.
nounce the engagement and
forthcoming marriage of their
REUNION
daughter, Roberta, of Route l
GALLIPOLIS
- The annual
Northup, to Mr. Harland J .
Carper
and
Lawson
Stanley
Slover of 1638 Chatham Ave.,
Gallipolis.
reunionatwill
be Park
held 12in noon.,
Lan·
caster
Rising
The wedding will be an event Sept. 19, relatives invited, bring
of Sept. 18 al6 p.m. at the home picnic lunch.
of Rev. Ray Rouse of Rl. 4,
The president is Ralph
Albany, Ohio. An open wedding Stausbaugh and secretary .
is planned.
treasurer is Mrs. Donald Corn.

Miss Adkins
To Wed Soon

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Mrs. Chester Hatfield, Mr. Joe
Skaggs , E'!llis · Sklggs, .
Columbus;
Mrs .
Delmar Skarks, Mr. and
WelterMrs .
Conley,
ville;
Mr .
and _ Mrs.
Richard Clemons, Hilliards;
Mrs. Escom Skaggs, Amblin.
Also; Rev. Bruce Daniela,
Sitka, Ky. ; Rev. Ellis Hamilton,
Paintsville, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs.
G. H. Hatfield, Henneryetta,
Okla. ; Mr. and Mrs. Lesley
Ramey, Wheelersburg; Blutcher Skaggs, Ironton ; Bill
Robinson , Ralph Miller, Rev.
Kelly McGraw, Rev. Zecill
Lyons, Bufford Lyons, Ashland,
Ky . ; Mrs . Faye Bales,
Wellston ; Mr. and M••. Gene
Skaggs, Mr . and Mrs. Floyd
Skaggs, Hilliards; Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Borders, WesterviUe;
Mr. ·and Mrs. Marvin Skaggs,
AshviUe.

SPECIAL
SALE

Miss Sharon Sprow

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:: · How can !stop thia?I go to the boy and ask him straight out? : STUMPED
: Dear Slumped:
:
If you asked a guy about a rwnor like this, you wouldn't gain
~ anything and you might lose his friendship.
:.
Just stand by and keep on being his friend, no matter what ·: someone he can really talk to.
:
And don't gel so shook. It's kind of a fad to whisper about
: ''who's queer" U!ese days. People don'llake it aU Utat seriously .
: -SUE
: HELEN'S CORNER:
:' Dear Slumped:
'
... ru.J at 16, no boy is locked into homosexuality, even though
: he may have had an experience or two that brought on the
: whispers. - H.
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"Bloody Mary"
The
term,
"Bloody Mary ,"
•
was applied to Queen Mary I
of England because of the
bitter persecution she
•
caused
the Protestants in
•~ GALIJPOLIS - The first Girl her attempt to bring Eng·
• Scout Service Unit Meeting for
land back to the Roman
: all troop leaders, assistant Catholic
faith .
: feaders and Service Team
: members of the Gallia Unit will
: be held on Wednesday, Sep: iember 15, at 9 a.m. in the
: basement of Ute Presbyterian
: Church. Tentative plans for Ute
1
• coming school year will be
: discussed as well as troop
: registration which is due this

Allison of Shawnee Church or went back to the church for a
Goo in F'latwoods, Kentucky. talk given by Rev. Allison.
The ones who attended were :
When devotions were over, the
group left the church and went Sherry and Mike Evans, Timmy
to Jim Saunders' farm for a day Anderson, Jeff Rhodes, Cathy
in the woods. There was a Will , Denise and Edith Long,
recreation lime, followed by a Diana Haner, Dinia Eads,
time of singing and testimon ies. Roger Dailey, Debbie Burnette,
At 12, the youth had a picnic Mike Bush, Julie, Tonya North,
lunch. After lunch they were Pam Haffelt, Jerry, Bobb)', and
give11 questions to answer in Steve Wallis, Lu Ann Whitley,
groups. When the groups joined Sue Adkins, F'rank Rutherford,
back together, there was a Terry IJoyd, Debbie Houck,
GALLIPOLIS - Students in discussion or what young people Rev. and Mrs. Jones, Rev . and
the Diversified Health Oc- could do for the church and for Mrs. Allison, Angel Allison, and
cupations class at Gallia the community. The youth then Bill Scott.
Academy High School loured
the Gallipolis Slate Institute on
Friday, Sept. 3. The purpose of
the field trip was to familiarize
the class with the many health
occupa lions in the field of
mental health.
Students participating in the
tour were Lori Barron , Louise
Baird, Gay Briggs, Nina Criner,
Chuck E. Hill, William
Jamison, Sam Mitchell, Betsy
Saunders, Terri Woodward, and
Lynn MitchelL Those already
employed and·unable to lake the
tour were Pat Canaday, Martha
Childers, Priscilla Dayton,
Michael Doyle, Lu Ann Foster,
Karen Houston, and Debra
While.
Mrs. Janet Wetherholt is the
instructor-&lt;:oordinator of this
new vocational program offered
at Gallia Academy High School.
Students work in health
oriented occupations for three
hours each day and attend
classes the remainder of the
day .

Class Tours GSI

!Helen Help Us!
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Lemasters and children, all of Segraves, Plain City; Mr. and
l.~wmansville , Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. Grover Castel and
Mrs. Willard Blair, Dayton : Mr. daughters, Ashvi lle; Mrs.
and Mrs. Johnie Skaggs, Mr .

Youth Group lizbor Daj Retreat

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THE REG. 130

SCOTTISH
CAPER
The Scottish Caper with a
free-flowing back, belted
in front, with a row of
brassy buttons on the side.
FvJiy nylon taffeta lined.
Ze Pel treated. Multi-color
orange plaid in 80 per cent
wool, 20 per cent nylon.
Sizes S. M. L.

2 Day Vacation
GALLIPOLIS- Mrs. Stanley
Earwood visited her aunt, Mrs.
Day Richardson in Cincinnati
on Wednesday and Thursday
where she also attended the
Lawrence Welk Show.
She was accompanied by Mrs.
Elise Kimball as far as
Georgetown where she visited
with her aunt, Mrs. Will PohL
HONORARY DINNER
GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis Chapter OES will
honor the Past Matrons with a
dinner Monday evening at 6:30
p.m. Everyone is asked to bring

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WILL HOLD

YOUR CHOICE
IN OU
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LAYAWAY

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lt~h:ei~r~o:w:n~ta~b~le:,:;se~r:vi~ce~·--.!::=~===========~::;:;;;::;~~~~==::::~:1

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: Scout Leaders
~ Plan To Meet

Information Center On Economic
Actions Available At ASCS,Office
members of the staff are Rita
Buckley, Robert Haskins,
Avalon Roush and Lillian
Pauley. "Ours and all ASCS
offices throughout Ute nation,
wiU function as information
centers in aU locations outside
of highly urbanized areas,"
Gilbert said.
.
County ASCS offices are not to
handle complaints or appeals,
he said. They will serve only to
provide official information.
Persons with c&lt;mplaints will
register them wilh Ute most
convenient district or subdistrict office of the Internal
Revnue Service.
"Neither will interpretations
or guesses be made for ASCS
county office people. They will
answer only those questions for
which they have been supplied
answeni. If they don't know the
answer to a specific question,
they will say so.
If a member of the public

Many Come for Recent Rev. Skaggs Funeral

.AAVW To Sell Stationery

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lA ring of beapty

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62" Tripl~ Dresser. 37;, Chest on Chest. 5/0 or 4/6 Panel Headboard. 28" x 50" Framed Mirror.
Beautiful Pecan Finish. All Case Pieces have Solid Tops.

ALL SIX .
·PIECES
NOW ONLY

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COMPLETE Wlnt SEALY BEDDING.

·YOUR FURNITURE DOLLAR BUYS MORE HERE/

(Reese Furniture Outlet
SECOND &amp; SYCAMORE

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Also the new field director
from the Seal of Ohio Council,
Mrs. Charles Leach, will be in
attendance
to
become
acquainted wilh the Gallipolis
Girl Scout Adults. ·
All leaders and assistants are
wgently requested to attend so
lhat their trobps will be able to
gel off to ri good star~.
Leaders sl\ould bring · with
Utem all individual girl forms,
~. old and new, and a list of needed
~ supplies fo~ the year.

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foreter.

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..I:' first Child

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: child,aboy,Sundayal~:36a.m.
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Betty Rose.

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Church Presents Gift and Holds Cookout
GALLI POI.I S - On Sep- in bel"ll( of lite group which she
tember I, at reJ&lt;Uiar choir Aratcfii!ly acknowledged.
rehearsal, Mrs. Elbert McGhee. In other church news, the
•uinister of music at Paint spacious lawn of the "Forrest
Creek Reguiar Baptist Church, Bnrt.len 's" al33 Uncoln Sl., was
was pleasanUy surprised by the 1/Je scene of a happy gathering
choir who sang "Happy Birth- September 6, when members of
day" and Mrs. Frank the Paint Creek Baptist senior
Wash i n~tun

r

presented her a girt

dl&lt;lir anti their guests enjoyed a
cookout wilh Mr. Borden as chef
assisted by Mrs. Borden.
The group enjoyed grilled hot
dogs and hamburgers with aU
1/le trimmings, potato salad,
green beans, sliced toma loes,
cake, soft drinks and coffee.
Attending were Rev . and Mrs.
Elbert McGhee, Mr. and Mrs.

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Miss Craft Wins
At State Fair

Pathfinders Sing
GALLII'OIJS - The Path- Ric!lard Salyer is the pasblr.
finders , with Tom Kessell, The Rev. Henry Robinson of
Regina Heugel, Nina Bnun- Portsmouth, will be the speaker
field ; Kenny Deckard and · for the afternoon service. He
Bertie Smith at the piano, will will also begin a revival at the
be singing for the hOIIII!Ciming church on Tuesday; Sept. 14.
service at the &lt;llureh of God, The public is invited to attend
Jackson Pike oo RL 35 Ibis these services.
Sunday, Sept. 12 at 2 p.m. Rev.

Buffet Supper Given
For Miss Cathy Suiter

GALIJPOIJS - Holding the Gallia Couoty All Ohio Electric Bake-A-Rama winners'
ribbons is Jane Stowers, Miss Gallia Couoty 1971. First place pie winner is Mrs. William H. ·
Saunders li GallipoUs. Mrs. Jerry Bass of Bidwell is fli'St place cake winner.

Bake-A -Rama Contest Winners
GALlJI'OlJS - Mrs. Jerry
Bass of Bidwell and Mrs .
William H. Saunders of
Gallipolis are the first place
winners in the Gallia County
section of the AU Ohio Electric
·Bake-A-Rama, sponsored by
Colwnbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co.
Mrs. Bass won $50 for her
Orange Glazed Cake and Mrs.
Saunders received $50 for her
first
place apple
pie
They went on to bake
in the semi - finals held
August . 26 through Sep-

\

GALLII'O!JS - Mrs. o.scai
Clarke and Miss Susan Clarke
entertained with a buffet diruler
biidal shower and pool party in
honor' of Miss Cathy Ann Suiter,
bride-elect of Mr. Karl Heinke.
The table was canetered with

a bouquet of daisies and roses
and hurricane candlelight.
Guests dined at small tables
around the pool.
Guests included Miss Cindy
Boster,GingerEllcessor, Paula
Young, Beth Bastiani, Cathy
Davis, Cristy Davis, Joan Ford,
Sue Ann McKenzje, Jenny
Clarke, Mrs. Susan Russell,
Mrs. carol Julian, Mrs.
Elizabeth Sayre, Mrs. Mahle
Slioo:, Mrs. Noble Loe and Mrs.
Kimball Suiter.
GALLII'OIJS -The first fall Sending a gift was Miss Jean
meeting of the Gallia County Reese.
JJomemak~r's Council was beld
·
at the Grace United Methodist
Church Wednesday, September
10.
v
Mrs.
Ethel Robinson,
president, opened the meeting GALLIPOLIS
The
by the singing of songs, ''Tell it Chevalier reunion was beld at
to Jesus" and "Help Somebody tile home of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob
Today" with Mary Mar!laret Chevalier.
Willis at the piano. Bea Evans, Those attending were : Mr.
Citizenship chairman, led the and Mrs. AI Myers and children
Pledge to the Flag. Mrs. Rusty and Mary Beth, of UrRobinson welcomed the 33 bana, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
members pn!Sellt with a bit of Chevalier, Misses Terrie and
inspiratiQII' to start the year Debbie Lynch, Colwnbus; Mr.
with QliCIIations fr&lt;m Abraham and Mrs. Robert Chevalier and
Lincoln, wbicll were gi-ven by son Jamie, Mr. and Mrs. John
Naurine McCormick, assistant Galbreath and Jolmda Ann, Mr.
clirectorofHcmeEcimomics, at and Mrs. Maurice Bane, Mr.
Ohio State University at and -Mrs. Frank McCalla and
Campus Days for WmM!II and SOilS, Dick, Lee, and Mike;' Mr.
were good ideas for us tofoUow. and Mrs. Cleo Chevalier; Mr.
Devotions were given by the and Mrs. 0 . W. Richardson and
Patriot, Northup, Gage group. children, Jeff and Sherri,
Mrs. Dorothy Steger read the Columlr!B; Mr. and Mrs. Gary
acripture from Matt., 6:34, Bane and sons, Mike and
"GivenofJloughtoftomorrow", Gregg; Mr. and Mrs. Max
followed by prayer by Alice McCalla, Perry and Anita; Mr.
Salisbury, "U I Can-Show Me and Mrs. Charles Mayes, Clark
How".
A. Chevalier.
The secretary's report was Also attending were Mr. and
read by Mrs. Evelyn Evans. Mrs. Kerr Myers, Debbie and
The treasurer's report, in the David; Blanche McCalla, Rethe
ablence of Maude Persinger, Davis, John McCalla, Mr. and
was read by Mary Mar!laret Mrs. Joe Chevalier, Debbie,
Willis. 1be yearly hooks were Pam, Kim and Tammy,
not quite ready and will be Colmnbos; Mrs. Bonnie Hutton,
mailed to each member by the Mr. and Mrs. Rodger Sluiver
next moothly meeting. Some and Jennifer, Columbus; Mr.
I.F.YE. letters will be read Charles N. Chevalier, Myra
tater by Mrs. Nyle Borden. The Gibnore, Hazel, Gilbert and
October meeting will be a toor Paul Fisher, Akron; Mr. and
of the Ohio Historical Center in Mrs. Mike Johnson and Shane,
Colwnbus. All those who ezpect Mr. and Mrs . Charles A.
to attend should notify the Chevalier, Scott and Jeff,
president 50011.
Francis Jenkins and Mr. and
One minute " Chairman Mrs. J. C. Chevalier, Brenda,
Chatter" talks were given by Tinuny and Andy.
the Citizenship Olainnan, Bea
Evans, on Our Flag; safety Nelsons End 3
chairman, Louise Dennis, on
, _!:i!e ~
~~,~'_1! Week Vacation
"'""'"""'•
11. .,., me
Margaret Blazer, said she GALLII'OIJS - Attorneyand
would give a prize in November Mrs. William R. Nelson and
for the one who brings the moot f .
d .h
t
1
1
new members or old members am• Y re urne
ome 0
whohaven'tbeencoming to that Woodland Hills, California, a
meeting. Mrs. Dorothy Toler, suburb of Los Angeles.
health chainnan, said Ulat Ohio They spent three weeks'
won the National Health Award vacation here visiting with their
this year.
mothers, Mrs. L. H. Nelson and
Bernice Woods and Ethel Mrs. C. L. Masters.
Robinson gave brief reports of . They_stopped in Colwnbus to
the State Executive meeting VISit friends and were guests of
that they attended for two days the Lodge Gates Me~ Co.,
in ColiDllbus. Adisplay on hand •for whom Mr. Nelson 15 d1rector
this month was from a local of offices on the West Coast.
merchant showing sewing They also attend_ed the
materialS and "Let's Make a football game at Ohio State
Belt" ideas on how to use dif- Saturday·
ferent materials and trimmings
for a belt.
cataloges from Ohio, West
Route 35 members were the Virgi nia and J{entucky ,
hostesses for the day and telephone directory geneology
beautifully decorated the history, 60,000 volwnes of books
tables. Vice President Mrs. on all floors and the basement,
Bernice Woods introduced the bookmobile, books at the
local district librarian, Mr. hoopital and G.S.l. They have a
JonafJlan Louden as speaker for copy' machine for outsiders'
the morning program. He ex- use.
plained thoroughly "How to He showed a Ohn tiUed "The
Know Your Library" and what Hottest Spt in Town" which is
aU is available tbere for us. the Library of Freedom. To
Many more services are offered destroy civilizatioll would be to
there today than just books and destroy books. After lunch Mr.
volwnes of them.
J.ouden took the members on a
Some of the services he t!IUI' of the library then mem·
menlioned were : phonograph bersall walked Ofer to Riverby
recttds,pampblets, ma,guines, and were received by Mrs.
16 mm. films, renue boots by Gordon Rolh and taken on tour
telephone, references by phone, of beautiful Riverby home and
story · hours, all local saw a displa~ of art pictures by
newsp11pers since 1!105. college Gertrude War1.
·

Local librarian
To be Speaker

73 Present At
R ·
ramt1ry eUnzon

:e::

?Dr

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Mr. and Mrs. William Griffin

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McCaO Reunion
GALLIPOLIS
The
descendants of James McCall,
Jr. and Martha Blake Phelps
McCall, held their 52nd reunion
at Centenary, Sept. 5.
There were 54 relatives and
friends present.
Whendinnerwasonthet:able,
the president, Victor McCall
asked James Blain to express
thanks.
During the afternoon a short
business meeting was held. The
officers now serv.ing were
retained for another year.
The closing prayer was given
by Okey E. Saunders.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Victor McCall, Mr. and Mrs.
Maurice McCall, Mr. and Mrs.
Merrill White, Mr. and Mrs.
Bob E. Carter, allfrom Florida ;
Mrs. Alice McCall Pauley, Mr.
and Mrs. William R. McCall and
Neil; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Shoemaker and Mrs. Pearl
McCall WhippaU from Dayton,
Ohio; David Shoemaker, Nashville, Tennessee; Mrs. Hattie
Buckle and Mr. and Mrs. James
L. Buckle, all from California;
Mr. and Mrs. Dale McCall,
South Point; Maj . and Mrs . Jim
Worline, Albuquerque, New
Mexico; Kathryn McCall
Hannon, Grove City ; Mr. and
Mrs. Art Mershon, Mansfield;
Margie Hannan and Nancy
Carter, both from Huntington,
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. James E.
Blain, Galtipolis Ferry, W. Va.
Attending from Gallia County
were Mr. and Mrs. Paul Norlhup, Edith McCall, Mrs. Violet
Blain, Gloria Jean, and
Gregory, Mr . and Mrs. Okey E.
Saunders, Mr. and Mrs. Grover
Shoemaker, Homer Baker, Mr.
and Mrs. Vicblr Niday, Cynthia
and Victor Richard, and Mr.
and Mrs. George NorfJlup, and
Frances Buckle.
Also attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Mark Lowe and children,
Bill and Bonnie, from South
Charleston.

GALIJI'OLIS - Miss Cynthia centerpiece of pink snapE;Uen Francis became the bride dragons and white chrysanof Mr. William ·R. Griffin in a themwns and the four tiered
double ring ceremony on wedding cake which was iced in
Saturday, August 14, in the white wiUl pink roses.
First United Presbyterian Guests were registered by
Chureh in Gallipolis.
Miss Deborah HeiiSon.
The bride is the daughter of
Presiding at the bride's table
Mr. and Mrs. H. 0. Francis, 658 were Mrs. George C. Francis,
Upper River Road, Gallipolis, Aberdeen, Maryland, aunt of
and the bridegroom is the son of the bride, and Mrs. Arthur
Mr. and Mrs. John T. Griffm, Henson, Addison, Ohio.
Jr. of Gallipolis.
Assisting were Maria and
The Rev. Glen R. Hueholt Angela Griffin.
performed the double-ring
For traveling the bride chose
ceremony at 2:30p.m. before an a gray polyester knit ensemble
altar decorated with white trimmed with silver buckle and
gladioli, white carnations, buttons and navy accessories.
Spider chrysanthemwns and Out of town guests registering
palms.
in the bride'sbook were Mr. and
A prelude of nuptial music . Mrs . George C. Francis,
was presented by Miss Aberdeen , Md.; Mr. William A.
Catherine Hayward.
Francis, Washington, D. C.;
The bride was escorted to the Mrs. James Hoff, Colwnbus;
altar by her father . Her formal Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
length gown of chantilly lace Hineman, Crown City ; Dr. and
was fashioned with a princess Mrs. Dennis Duling and Teddy
sill!ouette featuring a sabrina AnnDuling, Colwnbus; Dr. and
neckline, elbow length sleeves Mrs. Tom McCoy, Huntington,
and fitted bodice wilh flowing W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Carl
skirt. The detachable, chapel Denbow, Huntington, W. Va .;
length lace train and the gown Mr. and Mrs. Larry Luzader,
were accented wilh seed pearls Colwnbus Mr. and Mrs. David
and cryslals.
A. Watts, Colwnbus; Mr. and
The bride's veil was also Mrs. Roger O'Neil, Mr. Jerry
fashioned with cryslals and Sander, and Miss BethJohnsoo,
pearls which outlined lace all of Huntington, W. Va.
petals. Her only jewelry con- Attending lhe wedding from
sisted of a single strand of Point Pleasan~ W. Va. were
pearls, a gift of the bridegroom. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Burdette,
She carried a nosegay of Mr . and Mrs. Joe Neeley, Mr.
white roses tied wilh white satin and Mrs. Earl Painter, Mrs.
streamers.
James McComb, Mrs. Carroll
Attending Miss Francis as Casto, Mrs. Jack Rogers, Mr.
matron of honor was Mrs. and Mrs. Emory Monroe, Mrs.
David Watts, Columbus, sister John Hilbert and Lynn Hilbert.
of the bride. Bridesmaids were Registering from Cheshire
Miss Kristy Blazer and Mrs. were Mrs. Alice Swisher, Mrs. Accepted At GBC
Drema Webb of Gallipolis. Richard Sisson and Annette
Meghan Griffin, sister of the Sisson, Mrs. Huber Fulton, Mrs. F GALLIPOLIS
Mrs.
groom, was the flower girl.
Russell Eblin, and Miss Jean ranees McBride Hayes
The bride's attendants wore Shaver, and from Rio Grande, Bidwell, w_ife of Sgt. Harold B:
floor length pants dresses of Miss Ruth Thomas.
H~yes, Umted States Air Force,
blue floral print chiffon styled The bride attended Rio VIetnam, has been accepted at
with sabrina necklines and Grande College and is now a Gallipolis Business College for
purled sleeves. They wore white student at Marshall University. the Fall Quarter he ginning
picture hats, the matron of The groom is employed as a September 16.
honor's trinuned with a pink newsman at WSAZ-TV in Mrs. Hayes, a 1954 graduate
ribbon, the bridesmaids Huntington and also attends of_Bidwell-Porter High School,
trimmed with blue ribbons, and classes on the Marshall Cam- will be enrolled in the General
Uley carried baskets of pink
Office Course.
chrysanthemums with white pus.
satin streamers. The nower
girl's dress was fashibned of
pink crepe with a white satin
sash.
A family gathering at the M. L. Bahr and they canned
Mr. Robert Ford served as home of Mr. and Mrs. Ben peaches. The Conroys returned
best man. Ushers were Mat- Perry was held August 29 with to Colwnbus SWiday.
thew Louis Griffin and Patrick all children present. They in- Clara Milhoan helped Mrs.
Michael Griffin, brothers ol the eluded Mr. and Mrs. Jim Perry Hilda White can kraut Monday
and children, Mr. and Mrs. Jack morning.
groom.
For her daughter's wedding Perry and children of Milton, Mr. and Mrs. Haswell Betz
Mrs. Francis chose a blue crepe W. Va ., Mr. and Mrs. Harry retumedtotheirhomeMonday,
dress with blue chiffon sleeves Perry and children of s.ipt. 6.
and white lace trim and a Cleveland, Mr. and Mrs. David Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Milhoan
matching blue chiffon hat. Her Acree and children of Long attended a birthday celebration
accessories were of navy Bottom, Mr. and Mrs. Paul for Floyd Weber at the Weber
patent, and she wore a corsage Nottingham and children of home Saturday evening.
of pink rosebuds.
Pomeroy.
Mrs. KennefJl Dune and Mrs.
Mrs. Griffin, mother of the It was a week of canning on Don Bosson of Pennsyvlania
groom, wore a pale yellow the Ridge. Mr. and Mrs. -£rrol visited with Mrs. Edith Osborne
ensemble with matching ac- Conroy of Akron and Mr.' and over the weekend and called on
cessories and a corsage of Mrs, Haswell Betz of St. Joseph, Emmett Stethem of Long
Mich., were canning peaches Bottom who is quite ill.
yellow rosebuds.
The reception was held for all and corn at the home of Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. BiU Bahr of
guests in the chutch dining Dt&gt;dsun . Mr. and Mrs. Jack· Gallipolis were Sunday guesls
rwm. The bride's table was Conroy were spending a week uf his parents, Mr. ami Mrs.
adorned wuh pink candles. a with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. MD\·:J:u·•l Bahr.

Keno Ridge News ~otcs

tetnber 4 in the Electric Miller was fourth with ApBuilding at Ule Ohio State Fair · plesauce cake. All three ladies
in Columbus.
are Gallipolis residents.
Grand prize in the finals on Mrs. G. T. Marr of Northup
September 5 was $1,000 in each was second in Ule pie division
division of the cake and pie and won a portable appliance
baking contest. Two second for her Cherry Pie. Third was
prize winners received $500 Mrs. William Kemper of Kerr
each, and $250 went to each of with Peach Pie. Mrs. B. H.
two third prize winners.
Lasseter of Gallipolis was '
Miss Jean Blakeman won a fourth with Apple Pie Rolls.
portable appliance for her Ice The state-wide contest was
Water Cake, judged second in sponsored by Ohio's eight inthe Gallia County contest. Miss vestor-owned electric comRhonda Miller was third with panies.
Banana Cake and Mrs. Don

INSURANCE PAYS OFF - Mrs. Rooald Springer, of
Yonng's Trailer Coort, Gallipolis, is presented a free layette
by C. J . Brown, assistant manager of the Upper Murphy
Store. When Mrs. Springer purchased a layette in early
August, she also received a twin insurance policy which is
part of the Murphy layettes. In the event a prn9peCtive
mother does have twins, she is presented a doplicate layette,
free of charge. According to Mr. Brown, Mrs. Springer is the
second mother to be presented this award at Murphy's Ibis
year. Mrs. Springer had twin !&gt;oys (foor pounds, six ounces)
on Sept. 5.

GALLII'OlJS - Miss Linda
Craft,' daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James H. Craft, 275 Lower
River Road, represented her
Wide-A-Wake 4-H Club at Ule
Ohio State Fair, Sept. 2. She
won outstanding honors of the
day at the style show in which
she modeled jn Ule clothes for
school class.
Her advisors are Mrs.
Raymond Willis and Mrs.
Frank McCalla.
This is the first time that she
has attended the State Fair and
lhe second contest which she
has won. Miss Craft will be a
senior at Galtia Academy next
year.
MI. Waialeale on Kauai,
Hawaii, is the rainiest place
in the world, with an average -annual rainfall of 471.68
inches.

r---------1
OPEN SUNDAY, SEPT. 12, 1 • 5 P.M.
See on Display

First Grandchild
GALLII'OLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Dovel Myers announce the birth
of their first grandchild, a boy
named John Dovel Sept. 4 to Mr.
and Mrs. Lewis Campbell
(Patsy Myers), Petersburg, Va.
Paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Campbell,
Colonial Heights, Va.
Great-grandparents are Mr.
Orner Myers and Mrs. Blanche
Steele, both of Gallipolis.

500 ANTIQUES
40 ANCIENT CARS
At The

T. K. OWENS MUSEUM
Jackson, o.

116Dickason Street

T~ Route 93 - turn at South St., go 5 blocks
turn olton Dickason St. See our Apple Festival
Booth, Sept. 22-25.

is a Co-&lt;lperative effort of Ule
Jackson Apple F!!Btival Committee, The Town and Country
Club, and the Co-&lt;J perative
Extension Homemakers Club.
Quilts may be placed for show
or for sale.
First Sweepstakes
The Irish Sweepstakes, a
lottery on behalf of several
Irish hospitals, was inaugurated in 1930 and soon became popular in America.
Within fi ve years, it was the
most successful lottery in
the world.
Early. Patent
The first patent granted in
the United States was to
Samuel Winslow of Massachusetts in 1641 for a novel
method of making salt, accord i ng to the Encyclopaedia Britannica .

Dad

(AND WE AGRE~).

~1hecar

loan
for
gUs/
YES, THE NEW CAR DEALERS
ARE NOW GIVING•••

eBIG BARGAINS
ON
'71 ·MODELS
.
SO SHOP AROUND AND GET
YOURSELF A BIG BARGAIN ON
A NEW 1971 MODEL ••• THEN
COME TO US FOR A BIG. BARGAIN
ON ·THE FINANCING!
.

Save Time!. Save Money!
See Us First!
''THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

l

I

. Quilts to Be Shown
JACKSON - Quilting, a craft
stretching back in history to the
early settling of the United
States, is still practiced widely
by women of southeastern Ohio .
As an addition to the Apple
F!!Stival, on Friday, September
24 from 1 to 5 p.m. Jackson
County and neighboring women
will put their works of art on
display.
Awards will be given to the
best
patchwork ,
best
piecework, best applique quilt,
best novelty quilt or spread
(including crocheted, knitted,
woven, or embroidery) and to
the quilt with the most history
related to it. A trophy will be
awarded to tile best of the show.
Live demonstrations of
quilting techniques will be
sponsored throughout the afternoon.
Sponsorship of the quilt show

Coming Events

SUNDAY
WOMAN'S DAY Program,
Paint Creek Baptist Church 3
p.m. Public is welcome.
HOMECOMING at Asbury
Church, Sepl 12, Basket d1nner
at Noon. Special music in the
afternoon. Bring own table
service, Everyone welcome.
THE OlliO Women's . Bow lint
Association District4 will hold &lt;
workshop at Skyline Lanes,
Sunday 2-4 p.m.
REV. BILIJE Payne will be
preaching 7:30 Sunday at the
Walnut Ridge Church.
A homecoming wiU be held at
Old Emory Free Will Baptist
Church. Marvin Bates, Pastor,
invites the public.
CREMEENS reunion will be
beld Sunday, at the Parish
Grove in Oak Hill, Basket
dinner at noon.

Mrs. john Neiman

Davis-Neiman
Solemnize Vows

IJTI'LE Kyger Church, Sunday
School, and Ladies Aid, are
SpOnsoring a community picnic.
&amp;nday, 12:30.
.
.Bring
tr picnic
Is
Iunc h, mus1ca 1 ms umen ,
and ~ames.
MONDAY
WRITERS WORKSHOP
meeting Monday, September 13,
in Gallia County Library
basement , 7:30 P.M. Bring
manuscrip t. Inquiries phone
446-0530 evening, or 446-4646.
CHESHIRE-KYGER PTA will
meet 7:30 school auditoriwn.
School personnel will be intraduced. Everyone is invited.
Ge t Acquainted night.
OEA 283 Past Matrons Night,
dinner at 6:30. Meeting at 7,30
p.m.
TUESDAY
VFW FAMILY cookout Fortification Hill, 6: 30 p.m.: meat
and dr ink furnished . Bring
covered dish and own table
service. (In case of rain, VFW
Hall ).

Ge&lt;.o-ge Gilmore, Mr. and llrs.
Frank Washington, Mr. and
Mrs. 'BOOby Gonlul and SID,
il&lt;lbby Dean, Mrs. Pearl Smilh,
Miss Wyoma Header:son,
Deacon Charles Bc!rden, Mrs.
Lenore Howard.
Garnes and ·reminiscing
furnished. entertainment for the
evening.

.i

1

11JESDAY
GALI..IPOIJS - The French
City Garden Club will meet with
~~- :lvm Smeltzer Tuesday,
GALIJPOLIS
..
- Morrung Star
Chapter No. 444 OES grand
VISitation by Robert K. South,
worthy grand patron, 7' 30 p.m.
FRENCH Colony Chapter DAR
will meet Monday, Sept. 13, at I
p.m. for a luncheon at Oscar 's.
Reservations must be m by
Friday, Sept. 10, to Mrs .
Howard I. Neal.
EXECUTIVE Board Meeting,
Band Room, 7' 30 p.m.
.
VOLUNTEER GRAY Ladies
luncheon, 12:30 m Holzer
Medical Center Cafeteria, all
members urged to attend.
THE CENTENARY Grange,
7:30 regular meeting, election
of officers. Ladies bring
cookies.
RIVERSfDE Club will meet
with Mrs. Ben Eachus, 611 First
Ave., I p.m. Rou caU , My
Summer.
MI NISTER Leonard Repass
will hold preaching services
Tuesday at the Big Four Church
near Swan Creek at 7:30 p.m.
ill 1..0 Canasta Oub will meet
with Mrs. Ronna Wood, 7 p.m.
THE KYGER Creek Band
Boosters will meet, Tuesday,
7:30 at High School Caf~teria.
GRACE &lt;llurcb Circles 5 and 6
at the clllrch at I pJD.
WEDNESDAY
lJITLE KYGER Ladies Aid
will meet with Mrs. Mary
Moore, 10:30 a.m. potluck.
GALIJA County Citizens Band
Radio Club will meet 7:30p.m.
at the K of P Hall. Guest
speaker w1ll be Bob Cox.
GRACE Church Women's
Society of &lt;llristian Service in
the chapel, 7:30 pJD.

W~ GOT CAUGHT

WITH OUR PRICES DOWN!
The price-freeze came during our
August Coat Sale. The fact is we are
unable to raise our sale pr ice for the
duration of the freeze. We now have
32 luxurious hand detailed cashmere
and Harris-tweed coats at the unbelievable low price of $-48. It is in
your interest to take advantage of
the price freeze- we guarantee you
a ~&lt;wing of 20 per cent, and for your
convenience use our no-cost layaway. ·

GALlJI'OlJS - On Saturday, graduate of Ohio University.
June 19, in the First United Mr. Neiman is a graduate of
Presbyterian Church, Miss Ohio University School of
Sallie Davis, daughter of Dr. Engineering and is employed at
and Mrs. George W. Davis, Wright-Patterson Field in
Gallipolis, became the bride of Dayton.
John Ebler Neiman, son of Mr. Out of town guests for the
and Mrs. Paul E. Neiman, of wedding included: Mrs. George
Hanley , Baltimore, Md.,
Summit, New Jersey.
Reverent Glen Hueholt and grandmother ol lhe groom, Mr.
Reverend Linson Stebbins and Mrs. James Murphy,
solemnized the double ring Scottsdale, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs.
ceremony at four p.m . in a Roger Welsh and Mark ,
"'THE STORE WITH MORE"
background setting of baskets Wooster ; Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
Gallipolis
of
white
snapdragons, Nelson and Rondi, Summit, N.
chrysanthemwns and baby's
J., and Mr. and Mrs. Dwight . . . . . .~~~·····4~&lt;111--~liJ.~·····~~~
breath and circular brass Welsh, Columbus; Mr. William
Davis, Saint Louis 1 Mo.;· Mrs.
candelabra.
A half-hour of nuptial music Norvil Martin, Kathy
was provided by Miss Catherine Karen, Santa Barbara, Ulllll.;
Eva · Stephens,
Hayward, organist, and Bill Mrs.
Bloomington, !U.; Mr. and Mrs.
Griffin, soloist.
Robert
Sechrist, Bristol, Tenn.;
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a Vic- Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Spires and
torian styled gown of ivory Matthew, Cleveland; Mr. and
COVER GOWI' BR IDES MAGAZINE
Dan
Somerville,
imported silk organza, with Mrs .
cathedral train and camelot Cleveland; Miss Susie Archer,
Total look. Ribbed satin faille,
sleeves. The bib bodice, high Wapakoneta, and Ralph
neck, and elbow lengfJl cuffs Rogers, AtheiiS.
braiding willl pearl motif,
were of chantilly lace. Her
fingertip veil fell from a '}'''''''''"''''''N''''''"''' ' ' '' ' ' ' ,,,,, ,,,,,, ,.
detachable train
headpiece made of lace petals :·:,:
and seed pearls, accented with ?
complete with cap &amp; mantilla.
a crystal teardrop. She carried {
white orchids with stephanotis. ....
and baby's breath.
The maid of honor was Miss ]
Marilyn Saunders. Bridesmaids -"''
were
Miss
Jacqueline
De Pompei and Miss Ann Tolnai, Through September
Cleveland, and Miss Cathy Gertrude Ward Exhibit.
Davis and Miss Cristy Davis,
Tuesday, Sept. 7 - Classes
begin .
!win sisters of the bride:
The attendants were attired Saturday, SepL 25 - 10 a.m.in .Empire styled. gowns with 12 noon, Poaster Workshop.
scoop necklines and cap sleeves October - Eastman Kodak
of sherbet crepe. The honor Photographic Award Winner's
attendant was in apricot and the Exhibit.
bridesmaids in lemon yellow,
~Iober I Early)- FAC Arts
and mint green. They wore &amp; Crafts Fair and Auction
matching picture hats with Riverby is open as
on
sheer braided streamers and
Saturdays and Sundays from l.,'i
carried nosegays of sweetheart
p.m.
roses and baby's breath.
There is no admission charge.
A cousin of the bride, Miss
Tandy Sue Woodward, nower
girl, ' was attired in a yellow , . - - - - - - - -. .
dotted swiss ,print floor lengfJl
gown. She carried a white
basket filled with sweetheart
roses and baby's breath.
Dave Hoffsis of Summit, New
Jersey ,servt!d as best mari.
Ushers were Eugene Triplett,
Middleport, Dan Sommerville,
,
Cleveland, Charles Carter, and
Mark Davis, brother of the
bride. Master Mark Welsh,
Wooster, nephew of the groom,
served as ringbearer.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Davis chose a turquoise
crepe dress with matching lace
coat and accessories, and a
corsage of gardenias.
The bridegroom 's mother
chose a turquoise chiffon &lt;jress
with long sleeves and satin belt.
She wore matching accessories
You're starting to plan your wedding. tt's the happiest lime
and a corsage of yellow
of your tile- and, of coune.&gt;you want the most beautiful wedding ever. That beautiful wedlting can
rosebuds.
begin at Bernadine's- In our lovely Bridal Room. We have everything. A beglming-tiHIId bridlll
A reception was held at the
service that handles every detail, giving you ltlat sense of serenity that all is .complete. Wedding
church immediately following
gowns? A magnificent collection of romantic creations! Alfendants' dresses-. a myriad of cokn
and
styles to delight your entire bridal party. /VI array of bridal acxessol"ies for thefinallouch.
the ceremony.
.
Come meet our Bridal Consultants, Lureva Mullins and Kathleen Mayes who can help piAn
The bride's parents served a
every detail you' ve lfiought ot - and _probably a good many you haven't! They' ll keep in touch
buffet supper lor relatives and
out of town guests at their
with you each step of the way as your wedding plans lake shape enabling you to relaK and enjoy..,. r
home, following the reception.
moment.
When the couple left for their
wedding trip (o Jamaica , the
bride was wearing a turquoise
1&lt;!-.:: ~ress and matching coal
ensemble .with toast ac422 Second 'Ave.
•
cessories, and the orchid corGallipt ;is
sage !rom the bridal bouquet.
The new Mrs. Neiman is a

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Church Presents Gift and Holds Cookout
GALLI POI.I S - On Sep- in bel"ll( of lite group which she
tember I, at reJ&lt;Uiar choir Aratcfii!ly acknowledged.
rehearsal, Mrs. Elbert McGhee. In other church news, the
•uinister of music at Paint spacious lawn of the "Forrest
Creek Reguiar Baptist Church, Bnrt.len 's" al33 Uncoln Sl., was
was pleasanUy surprised by the 1/Je scene of a happy gathering
choir who sang "Happy Birth- September 6, when members of
day" and Mrs. Frank the Paint Creek Baptist senior
Wash i n~tun

r

presented her a girt

dl&lt;lir anti their guests enjoyed a
cookout wilh Mr. Borden as chef
assisted by Mrs. Borden.
The group enjoyed grilled hot
dogs and hamburgers with aU
1/le trimmings, potato salad,
green beans, sliced toma loes,
cake, soft drinks and coffee.
Attending were Rev . and Mrs.
Elbert McGhee, Mr. and Mrs.

;:;::;:§::C:;:;:;*:';:;:::;:;::;:;:;:::;:~~\.'.~~; Q' ' . 'Q'' "' ''' '' ' '''PC''1

Miss Craft Wins
At State Fair

Pathfinders Sing
GALLII'OIJS - The Path- Ric!lard Salyer is the pasblr.
finders , with Tom Kessell, The Rev. Henry Robinson of
Regina Heugel, Nina Bnun- Portsmouth, will be the speaker
field ; Kenny Deckard and · for the afternoon service. He
Bertie Smith at the piano, will will also begin a revival at the
be singing for the hOIIII!Ciming church on Tuesday; Sept. 14.
service at the &lt;llureh of God, The public is invited to attend
Jackson Pike oo RL 35 Ibis these services.
Sunday, Sept. 12 at 2 p.m. Rev.

Buffet Supper Given
For Miss Cathy Suiter

GALIJPOIJS - Holding the Gallia Couoty All Ohio Electric Bake-A-Rama winners'
ribbons is Jane Stowers, Miss Gallia Couoty 1971. First place pie winner is Mrs. William H. ·
Saunders li GallipoUs. Mrs. Jerry Bass of Bidwell is fli'St place cake winner.

Bake-A -Rama Contest Winners
GALlJI'OlJS - Mrs. Jerry
Bass of Bidwell and Mrs .
William H. Saunders of
Gallipolis are the first place
winners in the Gallia County
section of the AU Ohio Electric
·Bake-A-Rama, sponsored by
Colwnbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co.
Mrs. Bass won $50 for her
Orange Glazed Cake and Mrs.
Saunders received $50 for her
first
place apple
pie
They went on to bake
in the semi - finals held
August . 26 through Sep-

\

GALLII'O!JS - Mrs. o.scai
Clarke and Miss Susan Clarke
entertained with a buffet diruler
biidal shower and pool party in
honor' of Miss Cathy Ann Suiter,
bride-elect of Mr. Karl Heinke.
The table was canetered with

a bouquet of daisies and roses
and hurricane candlelight.
Guests dined at small tables
around the pool.
Guests included Miss Cindy
Boster,GingerEllcessor, Paula
Young, Beth Bastiani, Cathy
Davis, Cristy Davis, Joan Ford,
Sue Ann McKenzje, Jenny
Clarke, Mrs. Susan Russell,
Mrs. carol Julian, Mrs.
Elizabeth Sayre, Mrs. Mahle
Slioo:, Mrs. Noble Loe and Mrs.
Kimball Suiter.
GALLII'OIJS -The first fall Sending a gift was Miss Jean
meeting of the Gallia County Reese.
JJomemak~r's Council was beld
·
at the Grace United Methodist
Church Wednesday, September
10.
v
Mrs.
Ethel Robinson,
president, opened the meeting GALLIPOLIS
The
by the singing of songs, ''Tell it Chevalier reunion was beld at
to Jesus" and "Help Somebody tile home of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob
Today" with Mary Mar!laret Chevalier.
Willis at the piano. Bea Evans, Those attending were : Mr.
Citizenship chairman, led the and Mrs. AI Myers and children
Pledge to the Flag. Mrs. Rusty and Mary Beth, of UrRobinson welcomed the 33 bana, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
members pn!Sellt with a bit of Chevalier, Misses Terrie and
inspiratiQII' to start the year Debbie Lynch, Colwnbus; Mr.
with QliCIIations fr&lt;m Abraham and Mrs. Robert Chevalier and
Lincoln, wbicll were gi-ven by son Jamie, Mr. and Mrs. John
Naurine McCormick, assistant Galbreath and Jolmda Ann, Mr.
clirectorofHcmeEcimomics, at and Mrs. Maurice Bane, Mr.
Ohio State University at and -Mrs. Frank McCalla and
Campus Days for WmM!II and SOilS, Dick, Lee, and Mike;' Mr.
were good ideas for us tofoUow. and Mrs. Cleo Chevalier; Mr.
Devotions were given by the and Mrs. 0 . W. Richardson and
Patriot, Northup, Gage group. children, Jeff and Sherri,
Mrs. Dorothy Steger read the Columlr!B; Mr. and Mrs. Gary
acripture from Matt., 6:34, Bane and sons, Mike and
"GivenofJloughtoftomorrow", Gregg; Mr. and Mrs. Max
followed by prayer by Alice McCalla, Perry and Anita; Mr.
Salisbury, "U I Can-Show Me and Mrs. Charles Mayes, Clark
How".
A. Chevalier.
The secretary's report was Also attending were Mr. and
read by Mrs. Evelyn Evans. Mrs. Kerr Myers, Debbie and
The treasurer's report, in the David; Blanche McCalla, Rethe
ablence of Maude Persinger, Davis, John McCalla, Mr. and
was read by Mary Mar!laret Mrs. Joe Chevalier, Debbie,
Willis. 1be yearly hooks were Pam, Kim and Tammy,
not quite ready and will be Colmnbos; Mrs. Bonnie Hutton,
mailed to each member by the Mr. and Mrs. Rodger Sluiver
next moothly meeting. Some and Jennifer, Columbus; Mr.
I.F.YE. letters will be read Charles N. Chevalier, Myra
tater by Mrs. Nyle Borden. The Gibnore, Hazel, Gilbert and
October meeting will be a toor Paul Fisher, Akron; Mr. and
of the Ohio Historical Center in Mrs. Mike Johnson and Shane,
Colwnbus. All those who ezpect Mr. and Mrs . Charles A.
to attend should notify the Chevalier, Scott and Jeff,
president 50011.
Francis Jenkins and Mr. and
One minute " Chairman Mrs. J. C. Chevalier, Brenda,
Chatter" talks were given by Tinuny and Andy.
the Citizenship Olainnan, Bea
Evans, on Our Flag; safety Nelsons End 3
chairman, Louise Dennis, on
, _!:i!e ~
~~,~'_1! Week Vacation
"'""'"""'•
11. .,., me
Margaret Blazer, said she GALLII'OIJS - Attorneyand
would give a prize in November Mrs. William R. Nelson and
for the one who brings the moot f .
d .h
t
1
1
new members or old members am• Y re urne
ome 0
whohaven'tbeencoming to that Woodland Hills, California, a
meeting. Mrs. Dorothy Toler, suburb of Los Angeles.
health chainnan, said Ulat Ohio They spent three weeks'
won the National Health Award vacation here visiting with their
this year.
mothers, Mrs. L. H. Nelson and
Bernice Woods and Ethel Mrs. C. L. Masters.
Robinson gave brief reports of . They_stopped in Colwnbus to
the State Executive meeting VISit friends and were guests of
that they attended for two days the Lodge Gates Me~ Co.,
in ColiDllbus. Adisplay on hand •for whom Mr. Nelson 15 d1rector
this month was from a local of offices on the West Coast.
merchant showing sewing They also attend_ed the
materialS and "Let's Make a football game at Ohio State
Belt" ideas on how to use dif- Saturday·
ferent materials and trimmings
for a belt.
cataloges from Ohio, West
Route 35 members were the Virgi nia and J{entucky ,
hostesses for the day and telephone directory geneology
beautifully decorated the history, 60,000 volwnes of books
tables. Vice President Mrs. on all floors and the basement,
Bernice Woods introduced the bookmobile, books at the
local district librarian, Mr. hoopital and G.S.l. They have a
JonafJlan Louden as speaker for copy' machine for outsiders'
the morning program. He ex- use.
plained thoroughly "How to He showed a Ohn tiUed "The
Know Your Library" and what Hottest Spt in Town" which is
aU is available tbere for us. the Library of Freedom. To
Many more services are offered destroy civilizatioll would be to
there today than just books and destroy books. After lunch Mr.
volwnes of them.
J.ouden took the members on a
Some of the services he t!IUI' of the library then mem·
menlioned were : phonograph bersall walked Ofer to Riverby
recttds,pampblets, ma,guines, and were received by Mrs.
16 mm. films, renue boots by Gordon Rolh and taken on tour
telephone, references by phone, of beautiful Riverby home and
story · hours, all local saw a displa~ of art pictures by
newsp11pers since 1!105. college Gertrude War1.
·

Local librarian
To be Speaker

73 Present At
R ·
ramt1ry eUnzon

:e::

?Dr

•

I

\

.

•
Mr. and Mrs. William Griffin

"C'.

•

f ' ~iffi

n

rrf'nCtS-uTt
Uo

ExChanue
6 ,

TT

v OWS

McCaO Reunion
GALLIPOLIS
The
descendants of James McCall,
Jr. and Martha Blake Phelps
McCall, held their 52nd reunion
at Centenary, Sept. 5.
There were 54 relatives and
friends present.
Whendinnerwasonthet:able,
the president, Victor McCall
asked James Blain to express
thanks.
During the afternoon a short
business meeting was held. The
officers now serv.ing were
retained for another year.
The closing prayer was given
by Okey E. Saunders.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Victor McCall, Mr. and Mrs.
Maurice McCall, Mr. and Mrs.
Merrill White, Mr. and Mrs.
Bob E. Carter, allfrom Florida ;
Mrs. Alice McCall Pauley, Mr.
and Mrs. William R. McCall and
Neil; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Shoemaker and Mrs. Pearl
McCall WhippaU from Dayton,
Ohio; David Shoemaker, Nashville, Tennessee; Mrs. Hattie
Buckle and Mr. and Mrs. James
L. Buckle, all from California;
Mr. and Mrs. Dale McCall,
South Point; Maj . and Mrs . Jim
Worline, Albuquerque, New
Mexico; Kathryn McCall
Hannon, Grove City ; Mr. and
Mrs. Art Mershon, Mansfield;
Margie Hannan and Nancy
Carter, both from Huntington,
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. James E.
Blain, Galtipolis Ferry, W. Va.
Attending from Gallia County
were Mr. and Mrs. Paul Norlhup, Edith McCall, Mrs. Violet
Blain, Gloria Jean, and
Gregory, Mr . and Mrs. Okey E.
Saunders, Mr. and Mrs. Grover
Shoemaker, Homer Baker, Mr.
and Mrs. Vicblr Niday, Cynthia
and Victor Richard, and Mr.
and Mrs. George NorfJlup, and
Frances Buckle.
Also attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Mark Lowe and children,
Bill and Bonnie, from South
Charleston.

GALIJI'OLIS - Miss Cynthia centerpiece of pink snapE;Uen Francis became the bride dragons and white chrysanof Mr. William ·R. Griffin in a themwns and the four tiered
double ring ceremony on wedding cake which was iced in
Saturday, August 14, in the white wiUl pink roses.
First United Presbyterian Guests were registered by
Chureh in Gallipolis.
Miss Deborah HeiiSon.
The bride is the daughter of
Presiding at the bride's table
Mr. and Mrs. H. 0. Francis, 658 were Mrs. George C. Francis,
Upper River Road, Gallipolis, Aberdeen, Maryland, aunt of
and the bridegroom is the son of the bride, and Mrs. Arthur
Mr. and Mrs. John T. Griffm, Henson, Addison, Ohio.
Jr. of Gallipolis.
Assisting were Maria and
The Rev. Glen R. Hueholt Angela Griffin.
performed the double-ring
For traveling the bride chose
ceremony at 2:30p.m. before an a gray polyester knit ensemble
altar decorated with white trimmed with silver buckle and
gladioli, white carnations, buttons and navy accessories.
Spider chrysanthemwns and Out of town guests registering
palms.
in the bride'sbook were Mr. and
A prelude of nuptial music . Mrs . George C. Francis,
was presented by Miss Aberdeen , Md.; Mr. William A.
Catherine Hayward.
Francis, Washington, D. C.;
The bride was escorted to the Mrs. James Hoff, Colwnbus;
altar by her father . Her formal Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
length gown of chantilly lace Hineman, Crown City ; Dr. and
was fashioned with a princess Mrs. Dennis Duling and Teddy
sill!ouette featuring a sabrina AnnDuling, Colwnbus; Dr. and
neckline, elbow length sleeves Mrs. Tom McCoy, Huntington,
and fitted bodice wilh flowing W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Carl
skirt. The detachable, chapel Denbow, Huntington, W. Va .;
length lace train and the gown Mr. and Mrs. Larry Luzader,
were accented wilh seed pearls Colwnbus Mr. and Mrs. David
and cryslals.
A. Watts, Colwnbus; Mr. and
The bride's veil was also Mrs. Roger O'Neil, Mr. Jerry
fashioned with cryslals and Sander, and Miss BethJohnsoo,
pearls which outlined lace all of Huntington, W. Va.
petals. Her only jewelry con- Attending lhe wedding from
sisted of a single strand of Point Pleasan~ W. Va. were
pearls, a gift of the bridegroom. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Burdette,
She carried a nosegay of Mr . and Mrs. Joe Neeley, Mr.
white roses tied wilh white satin and Mrs. Earl Painter, Mrs.
streamers.
James McComb, Mrs. Carroll
Attending Miss Francis as Casto, Mrs. Jack Rogers, Mr.
matron of honor was Mrs. and Mrs. Emory Monroe, Mrs.
David Watts, Columbus, sister John Hilbert and Lynn Hilbert.
of the bride. Bridesmaids were Registering from Cheshire
Miss Kristy Blazer and Mrs. were Mrs. Alice Swisher, Mrs. Accepted At GBC
Drema Webb of Gallipolis. Richard Sisson and Annette
Meghan Griffin, sister of the Sisson, Mrs. Huber Fulton, Mrs. F GALLIPOLIS
Mrs.
groom, was the flower girl.
Russell Eblin, and Miss Jean ranees McBride Hayes
The bride's attendants wore Shaver, and from Rio Grande, Bidwell, w_ife of Sgt. Harold B:
floor length pants dresses of Miss Ruth Thomas.
H~yes, Umted States Air Force,
blue floral print chiffon styled The bride attended Rio VIetnam, has been accepted at
with sabrina necklines and Grande College and is now a Gallipolis Business College for
purled sleeves. They wore white student at Marshall University. the Fall Quarter he ginning
picture hats, the matron of The groom is employed as a September 16.
honor's trinuned with a pink newsman at WSAZ-TV in Mrs. Hayes, a 1954 graduate
ribbon, the bridesmaids Huntington and also attends of_Bidwell-Porter High School,
trimmed with blue ribbons, and classes on the Marshall Cam- will be enrolled in the General
Uley carried baskets of pink
Office Course.
chrysanthemums with white pus.
satin streamers. The nower
girl's dress was fashibned of
pink crepe with a white satin
sash.
A family gathering at the M. L. Bahr and they canned
Mr. Robert Ford served as home of Mr. and Mrs. Ben peaches. The Conroys returned
best man. Ushers were Mat- Perry was held August 29 with to Colwnbus SWiday.
thew Louis Griffin and Patrick all children present. They in- Clara Milhoan helped Mrs.
Michael Griffin, brothers ol the eluded Mr. and Mrs. Jim Perry Hilda White can kraut Monday
and children, Mr. and Mrs. Jack morning.
groom.
For her daughter's wedding Perry and children of Milton, Mr. and Mrs. Haswell Betz
Mrs. Francis chose a blue crepe W. Va ., Mr. and Mrs. Harry retumedtotheirhomeMonday,
dress with blue chiffon sleeves Perry and children of s.ipt. 6.
and white lace trim and a Cleveland, Mr. and Mrs. David Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Milhoan
matching blue chiffon hat. Her Acree and children of Long attended a birthday celebration
accessories were of navy Bottom, Mr. and Mrs. Paul for Floyd Weber at the Weber
patent, and she wore a corsage Nottingham and children of home Saturday evening.
of pink rosebuds.
Pomeroy.
Mrs. KennefJl Dune and Mrs.
Mrs. Griffin, mother of the It was a week of canning on Don Bosson of Pennsyvlania
groom, wore a pale yellow the Ridge. Mr. and Mrs. -£rrol visited with Mrs. Edith Osborne
ensemble with matching ac- Conroy of Akron and Mr.' and over the weekend and called on
cessories and a corsage of Mrs, Haswell Betz of St. Joseph, Emmett Stethem of Long
Mich., were canning peaches Bottom who is quite ill.
yellow rosebuds.
The reception was held for all and corn at the home of Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. BiU Bahr of
guests in the chutch dining Dt&gt;dsun . Mr. and Mrs. Jack· Gallipolis were Sunday guesls
rwm. The bride's table was Conroy were spending a week uf his parents, Mr. ami Mrs.
adorned wuh pink candles. a with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. MD\·:J:u·•l Bahr.

Keno Ridge News ~otcs

tetnber 4 in the Electric Miller was fourth with ApBuilding at Ule Ohio State Fair · plesauce cake. All three ladies
in Columbus.
are Gallipolis residents.
Grand prize in the finals on Mrs. G. T. Marr of Northup
September 5 was $1,000 in each was second in Ule pie division
division of the cake and pie and won a portable appliance
baking contest. Two second for her Cherry Pie. Third was
prize winners received $500 Mrs. William Kemper of Kerr
each, and $250 went to each of with Peach Pie. Mrs. B. H.
two third prize winners.
Lasseter of Gallipolis was '
Miss Jean Blakeman won a fourth with Apple Pie Rolls.
portable appliance for her Ice The state-wide contest was
Water Cake, judged second in sponsored by Ohio's eight inthe Gallia County contest. Miss vestor-owned electric comRhonda Miller was third with panies.
Banana Cake and Mrs. Don

INSURANCE PAYS OFF - Mrs. Rooald Springer, of
Yonng's Trailer Coort, Gallipolis, is presented a free layette
by C. J . Brown, assistant manager of the Upper Murphy
Store. When Mrs. Springer purchased a layette in early
August, she also received a twin insurance policy which is
part of the Murphy layettes. In the event a prn9peCtive
mother does have twins, she is presented a doplicate layette,
free of charge. According to Mr. Brown, Mrs. Springer is the
second mother to be presented this award at Murphy's Ibis
year. Mrs. Springer had twin !&gt;oys (foor pounds, six ounces)
on Sept. 5.

GALLII'OlJS - Miss Linda
Craft,' daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James H. Craft, 275 Lower
River Road, represented her
Wide-A-Wake 4-H Club at Ule
Ohio State Fair, Sept. 2. She
won outstanding honors of the
day at the style show in which
she modeled jn Ule clothes for
school class.
Her advisors are Mrs.
Raymond Willis and Mrs.
Frank McCalla.
This is the first time that she
has attended the State Fair and
lhe second contest which she
has won. Miss Craft will be a
senior at Galtia Academy next
year.
MI. Waialeale on Kauai,
Hawaii, is the rainiest place
in the world, with an average -annual rainfall of 471.68
inches.

r---------1
OPEN SUNDAY, SEPT. 12, 1 • 5 P.M.
See on Display

First Grandchild
GALLII'OLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Dovel Myers announce the birth
of their first grandchild, a boy
named John Dovel Sept. 4 to Mr.
and Mrs. Lewis Campbell
(Patsy Myers), Petersburg, Va.
Paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Campbell,
Colonial Heights, Va.
Great-grandparents are Mr.
Orner Myers and Mrs. Blanche
Steele, both of Gallipolis.

500 ANTIQUES
40 ANCIENT CARS
At The

T. K. OWENS MUSEUM
Jackson, o.

116Dickason Street

T~ Route 93 - turn at South St., go 5 blocks
turn olton Dickason St. See our Apple Festival
Booth, Sept. 22-25.

is a Co-&lt;lperative effort of Ule
Jackson Apple F!!Btival Committee, The Town and Country
Club, and the Co-&lt;J perative
Extension Homemakers Club.
Quilts may be placed for show
or for sale.
First Sweepstakes
The Irish Sweepstakes, a
lottery on behalf of several
Irish hospitals, was inaugurated in 1930 and soon became popular in America.
Within fi ve years, it was the
most successful lottery in
the world.
Early. Patent
The first patent granted in
the United States was to
Samuel Winslow of Massachusetts in 1641 for a novel
method of making salt, accord i ng to the Encyclopaedia Britannica .

Dad

(AND WE AGRE~).

~1hecar

loan
for
gUs/
YES, THE NEW CAR DEALERS
ARE NOW GIVING•••

eBIG BARGAINS
ON
'71 ·MODELS
.
SO SHOP AROUND AND GET
YOURSELF A BIG BARGAIN ON
A NEW 1971 MODEL ••• THEN
COME TO US FOR A BIG. BARGAIN
ON ·THE FINANCING!
.

Save Time!. Save Money!
See Us First!
''THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEAS"

l

I

. Quilts to Be Shown
JACKSON - Quilting, a craft
stretching back in history to the
early settling of the United
States, is still practiced widely
by women of southeastern Ohio .
As an addition to the Apple
F!!Stival, on Friday, September
24 from 1 to 5 p.m. Jackson
County and neighboring women
will put their works of art on
display.
Awards will be given to the
best
patchwork ,
best
piecework, best applique quilt,
best novelty quilt or spread
(including crocheted, knitted,
woven, or embroidery) and to
the quilt with the most history
related to it. A trophy will be
awarded to tile best of the show.
Live demonstrations of
quilting techniques will be
sponsored throughout the afternoon.
Sponsorship of the quilt show

Coming Events

SUNDAY
WOMAN'S DAY Program,
Paint Creek Baptist Church 3
p.m. Public is welcome.
HOMECOMING at Asbury
Church, Sepl 12, Basket d1nner
at Noon. Special music in the
afternoon. Bring own table
service, Everyone welcome.
THE OlliO Women's . Bow lint
Association District4 will hold &lt;
workshop at Skyline Lanes,
Sunday 2-4 p.m.
REV. BILIJE Payne will be
preaching 7:30 Sunday at the
Walnut Ridge Church.
A homecoming wiU be held at
Old Emory Free Will Baptist
Church. Marvin Bates, Pastor,
invites the public.
CREMEENS reunion will be
beld Sunday, at the Parish
Grove in Oak Hill, Basket
dinner at noon.

Mrs. john Neiman

Davis-Neiman
Solemnize Vows

IJTI'LE Kyger Church, Sunday
School, and Ladies Aid, are
SpOnsoring a community picnic.
&amp;nday, 12:30.
.
.Bring
tr picnic
Is
Iunc h, mus1ca 1 ms umen ,
and ~ames.
MONDAY
WRITERS WORKSHOP
meeting Monday, September 13,
in Gallia County Library
basement , 7:30 P.M. Bring
manuscrip t. Inquiries phone
446-0530 evening, or 446-4646.
CHESHIRE-KYGER PTA will
meet 7:30 school auditoriwn.
School personnel will be intraduced. Everyone is invited.
Ge t Acquainted night.
OEA 283 Past Matrons Night,
dinner at 6:30. Meeting at 7,30
p.m.
TUESDAY
VFW FAMILY cookout Fortification Hill, 6: 30 p.m.: meat
and dr ink furnished . Bring
covered dish and own table
service. (In case of rain, VFW
Hall ).

Ge&lt;.o-ge Gilmore, Mr. and llrs.
Frank Washington, Mr. and
Mrs. 'BOOby Gonlul and SID,
il&lt;lbby Dean, Mrs. Pearl Smilh,
Miss Wyoma Header:son,
Deacon Charles Bc!rden, Mrs.
Lenore Howard.
Garnes and ·reminiscing
furnished. entertainment for the
evening.

.i

1

11JESDAY
GALI..IPOIJS - The French
City Garden Club will meet with
~~- :lvm Smeltzer Tuesday,
GALIJPOLIS
..
- Morrung Star
Chapter No. 444 OES grand
VISitation by Robert K. South,
worthy grand patron, 7' 30 p.m.
FRENCH Colony Chapter DAR
will meet Monday, Sept. 13, at I
p.m. for a luncheon at Oscar 's.
Reservations must be m by
Friday, Sept. 10, to Mrs .
Howard I. Neal.
EXECUTIVE Board Meeting,
Band Room, 7' 30 p.m.
.
VOLUNTEER GRAY Ladies
luncheon, 12:30 m Holzer
Medical Center Cafeteria, all
members urged to attend.
THE CENTENARY Grange,
7:30 regular meeting, election
of officers. Ladies bring
cookies.
RIVERSfDE Club will meet
with Mrs. Ben Eachus, 611 First
Ave., I p.m. Rou caU , My
Summer.
MI NISTER Leonard Repass
will hold preaching services
Tuesday at the Big Four Church
near Swan Creek at 7:30 p.m.
ill 1..0 Canasta Oub will meet
with Mrs. Ronna Wood, 7 p.m.
THE KYGER Creek Band
Boosters will meet, Tuesday,
7:30 at High School Caf~teria.
GRACE &lt;llurcb Circles 5 and 6
at the clllrch at I pJD.
WEDNESDAY
lJITLE KYGER Ladies Aid
will meet with Mrs. Mary
Moore, 10:30 a.m. potluck.
GALIJA County Citizens Band
Radio Club will meet 7:30p.m.
at the K of P Hall. Guest
speaker w1ll be Bob Cox.
GRACE Church Women's
Society of &lt;llristian Service in
the chapel, 7:30 pJD.

W~ GOT CAUGHT

WITH OUR PRICES DOWN!
The price-freeze came during our
August Coat Sale. The fact is we are
unable to raise our sale pr ice for the
duration of the freeze. We now have
32 luxurious hand detailed cashmere
and Harris-tweed coats at the unbelievable low price of $-48. It is in
your interest to take advantage of
the price freeze- we guarantee you
a ~&lt;wing of 20 per cent, and for your
convenience use our no-cost layaway. ·

GALlJI'OlJS - On Saturday, graduate of Ohio University.
June 19, in the First United Mr. Neiman is a graduate of
Presbyterian Church, Miss Ohio University School of
Sallie Davis, daughter of Dr. Engineering and is employed at
and Mrs. George W. Davis, Wright-Patterson Field in
Gallipolis, became the bride of Dayton.
John Ebler Neiman, son of Mr. Out of town guests for the
and Mrs. Paul E. Neiman, of wedding included: Mrs. George
Hanley , Baltimore, Md.,
Summit, New Jersey.
Reverent Glen Hueholt and grandmother ol lhe groom, Mr.
Reverend Linson Stebbins and Mrs. James Murphy,
solemnized the double ring Scottsdale, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs.
ceremony at four p.m . in a Roger Welsh and Mark ,
"'THE STORE WITH MORE"
background setting of baskets Wooster ; Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
Gallipolis
of
white
snapdragons, Nelson and Rondi, Summit, N.
chrysanthemwns and baby's
J., and Mr. and Mrs. Dwight . . . . . .~~~·····4~&lt;111--~liJ.~·····~~~
breath and circular brass Welsh, Columbus; Mr. William
Davis, Saint Louis 1 Mo.;· Mrs.
candelabra.
A half-hour of nuptial music Norvil Martin, Kathy
was provided by Miss Catherine Karen, Santa Barbara, Ulllll.;
Eva · Stephens,
Hayward, organist, and Bill Mrs.
Bloomington, !U.; Mr. and Mrs.
Griffin, soloist.
Robert
Sechrist, Bristol, Tenn.;
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a Vic- Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Spires and
torian styled gown of ivory Matthew, Cleveland; Mr. and
COVER GOWI' BR IDES MAGAZINE
Dan
Somerville,
imported silk organza, with Mrs .
cathedral train and camelot Cleveland; Miss Susie Archer,
Total look. Ribbed satin faille,
sleeves. The bib bodice, high Wapakoneta, and Ralph
neck, and elbow lengfJl cuffs Rogers, AtheiiS.
braiding willl pearl motif,
were of chantilly lace. Her
fingertip veil fell from a '}'''''''''"''''''N''''''"''' ' ' '' ' ' ' ,,,,, ,,,,,, ,.
detachable train
headpiece made of lace petals :·:,:
and seed pearls, accented with ?
complete with cap &amp; mantilla.
a crystal teardrop. She carried {
white orchids with stephanotis. ....
and baby's breath.
The maid of honor was Miss ]
Marilyn Saunders. Bridesmaids -"''
were
Miss
Jacqueline
De Pompei and Miss Ann Tolnai, Through September
Cleveland, and Miss Cathy Gertrude Ward Exhibit.
Davis and Miss Cristy Davis,
Tuesday, Sept. 7 - Classes
begin .
!win sisters of the bride:
The attendants were attired Saturday, SepL 25 - 10 a.m.in .Empire styled. gowns with 12 noon, Poaster Workshop.
scoop necklines and cap sleeves October - Eastman Kodak
of sherbet crepe. The honor Photographic Award Winner's
attendant was in apricot and the Exhibit.
bridesmaids in lemon yellow,
~Iober I Early)- FAC Arts
and mint green. They wore &amp; Crafts Fair and Auction
matching picture hats with Riverby is open as
on
sheer braided streamers and
Saturdays and Sundays from l.,'i
carried nosegays of sweetheart
p.m.
roses and baby's breath.
There is no admission charge.
A cousin of the bride, Miss
Tandy Sue Woodward, nower
girl, ' was attired in a yellow , . - - - - - - - -. .
dotted swiss ,print floor lengfJl
gown. She carried a white
basket filled with sweetheart
roses and baby's breath.
Dave Hoffsis of Summit, New
Jersey ,servt!d as best mari.
Ushers were Eugene Triplett,
Middleport, Dan Sommerville,
,
Cleveland, Charles Carter, and
Mark Davis, brother of the
bride. Master Mark Welsh,
Wooster, nephew of the groom,
served as ringbearer.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Davis chose a turquoise
crepe dress with matching lace
coat and accessories, and a
corsage of gardenias.
The bridegroom 's mother
chose a turquoise chiffon &lt;jress
with long sleeves and satin belt.
She wore matching accessories
You're starting to plan your wedding. tt's the happiest lime
and a corsage of yellow
of your tile- and, of coune.&gt;you want the most beautiful wedding ever. That beautiful wedlting can
rosebuds.
begin at Bernadine's- In our lovely Bridal Room. We have everything. A beglming-tiHIId bridlll
A reception was held at the
service that handles every detail, giving you ltlat sense of serenity that all is .complete. Wedding
church immediately following
gowns? A magnificent collection of romantic creations! Alfendants' dresses-. a myriad of cokn
and
styles to delight your entire bridal party. /VI array of bridal acxessol"ies for thefinallouch.
the ceremony.
.
Come meet our Bridal Consultants, Lureva Mullins and Kathleen Mayes who can help piAn
The bride's parents served a
every detail you' ve lfiought ot - and _probably a good many you haven't! They' ll keep in touch
buffet supper lor relatives and
out of town guests at their
with you each step of the way as your wedding plans lake shape enabling you to relaK and enjoy..,. r
home, following the reception.
moment.
When the couple left for their
wedding trip (o Jamaica , the
bride was wearing a turquoise
1&lt;!-.:: ~ress and matching coal
ensemble .with toast ac422 Second 'Ave.
•
cessories, and the orchid corGallipt ;is
sage !rom the bridal bouquet.
The new Mrs. Neiman is a

....

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• Built-in blindstilch, plain aAd multi-zig-zag stitches!
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Plus 14 more great Singer features.
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Select from , cabinets, from $60. Or choose a handy

carrying case, only S20.

FALL FABRIC SPECIALS
REG. 13.98

BONDED ACRYUCS ·---~- •3.49

REG. 11.49

PINWALE OORDUROY--J!_.•1. 19
PERMANENT PRESS FALl PRINTS

NOW 10% OFF
Open MOiLI Fri. 'Til 8 P.M.

FRENCH CITY
FABRIC SHOPPE
Simplicity, Me Calls, Butterick, Vogue Patterns
2 Complete Floors of Fabrics &amp; Notions
We Do Custom Dress Making
Singer Sales &amp; Service
446-9255

58 Court

Gallipolis
•A Trademark ol THE SINGER COMPANY

..-1111011 DI'N.£ll

News

usuai

Shop!

Compare!
NO LOWER
PRICES

..

ANYWHERE

LADIES
DIAMONDS

.

THE BEGINNING •

$7950

r.

TAWNEY
JEWELERS

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

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QfAOdtR.e&amp;-

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\,

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•

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Both Sid~s Tui"D. Screws

i.

By LEE UJONARD
UPI Stale~ Reperler
OOLUMBUS ( UPI) ~ Owing
a news· conference last week,
Gov. Jobn J . Gilligan pointed
out Republicans bave a worldng
cootrol of boll! !be House and
Senate, yet tbey bave produced

1•....:..
I'
&lt;! ·

;

Ohio Politics

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r
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•
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••

,,
s;muJamr at me lime. Students' reactiODS are measured by
use of a 16 mm film whicll cover roost actual driving cooditi&lt;IIS.

JNS1DE the III!W lliYtiS education simuJatnr installed
beiUd 1be GABS gym Thursday afternoon in Dave Angles,

t

••
••

ooeofthede

oominslructors. Sixteen students can use !be

..•."'.

£
.
~
J
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•

~
•

••

:•
•••
:

IEC'l'llR1NG cbivasedlallion students in !be Gallipolis gym is Jim Enyart, bead of tbe
GABS coune. Students must e&lt;mplete a minimum of 36 boors of classroom work to succeafully pass the CGUtse.

••

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Simulators Sharpening

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GALIJPOLIS Gallia
Higb Scbool received
IIIII! ci 2liii!W dllvers edueatilll
!Jinmlafars distributed by !be
state· depu1ment of edueatilll
lllllt 'llnnday, atrmdiog to
James N. M. Davis, pincipal.
Slate Scbool Superintendent
Martin Ell!lex said lbere DOw
.-eG+m!•tanin qM!rlltion in

Olio.

:
Elch I!Uoot loQg mol:ile unit
Cllllliaa 16 !!jmnJaton, per-

:
•
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:nlttlng more students to
receive drivers education
lrliaing in the &lt;iliiise of !be
acboa1 year, as weD as reWce
the cost ci training eacll J11Pi1
by IIIII! (ourlb.
E111!1: said 15f Obio scbool

.,

._""'"'"""" u 81111

~

• .......... ··-' .. · ula'-'-...

:•

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mobile unit behind the GAHS
varsity gym. GaUla Acad1my
bas 40t slldents enrolled in !be
..-ogram Ibis year compared to
70 1his lime last year.
James Enyart is in cbarge of
tbe GAHS drivers educatim
program. He is assisted by
Dave Angles Ron Logan, and
Ken Turner. Twoolber teachers
serve as monitors
Eoyart and ~ went to
Columbus in August where tbey
were eniolled in a spedal
simulator work81lop program
conducted by the sta~
department of education in
cooperatim witb Aetna Ufe and
Casualty Co., Visual Ed U Com,
builders of tbe simulators .

~m:~~m:·form:
..-oject, and shares
cost in
tbe

= g instructors for the

Gallipolis Supt. Paul F. Kuhn
said it is !be scllool's aim to
sbow the new piece of equipment to local service and civic
arganizations during tbe course
of !be scllool year. Officials feel
year. Districts must (!bare tbe student must have a minimum Ibis equipment is one of the
biggest assets to tbe local school
use of !be equipment. Total cost of 36 c1assroon hours.
ci tbe project !bus far in Ohio is
A special concrete patio ..-ogram in many years.
$732,000. The Natiooal Higbwey
Safety Administration will
reimburse !be state on tbe cost
accmling to Essex.
Inside tbe mobile unit, a 16 I
mm film 81lows stop signs,
pedestrians, other vehicles ,
James H. Scott
sharp curves and a mnnberllf Andrew (Jack) Hoy
POMEROY _ James H.
emergency situations whicll a
MIDDLEPORT - Andrew (Dock
) Scott, 62, Pomeroy RD
student must react to. The Jackson (Jack) Hoy, 79,
equipment in tbe mobile unit is . Broadway st., Middleport, died 2, died Saturday morning at
simular to !bat of an actual Saturday morning at veterans Holzer Medical Center.
He is survived by his parents
automobile.
Memorial Hospital.
ClydeandMaryScott
Porn~
Student lectures are required
Mr. Hoy was born March 22,
Rt.
2;
two
bro~,
Wayne,
bef..-e a pupil advances to !be 1892 in Charlottesville, Va. A
simulator. 'lbe state requires member of tbe Methodist Pomeroy RD 2, and Cecil,
Albany, and several nieces and
that before the course can be
Church at Decota, W. Va., be nephews. He was preceded in
successfully C(]lllpleted, eacb was a retired coal miner.
Surviving are his wife, death by a sister, Hazel

Drivers' ·Ed Training

: N:......,
:

ne~~

don't tbey do something?" be asked.
To answer tbe governor's
cpestim is to explain !bat ReWblicans are right m tbe
course they bave cllarted for
enactment of a tax and budget

measuring 62 by 25 feet was Certain details may not yet
installed last week fer !be bave been worked out, but GOP

~•

~

DO budget-tax package after six
mmtbs' study.
Tbe governor wmdered wby.
' "lbey can do a:nylbing !bey
want to," Gilligan said, repeating bis Jiropa;ition of a day
earHer ·that "aoylhing !bat gets
17 votes in tbe Senate is a win-

plan.

!•

!

3&amp;H . OL®ut.U

-~ ..,.,

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! Area Deaths l

f-...---------------~---------~ Virginia Scott Hoy; three

Dateline

daughters, Miss Maggie Hoy, at
•
home; Mrs. Ruben ('lbehna)
~
Collins and Mrs. Elizabeth
" I.
· 1 Oiler, both of Middleport; a
1 sister, Mrs . Ned (Mary)
: 1
I Thompson, Rhonda, W. Va.,and
: I
I two grandsons, Stephen and
: I
• I
I Richard Oiler, Jr. His parents,
;
BY HOBART WiUION, JR.
. a son, a daughter, three
••
· brothers and three sisters
••
preceded him in death.
••
Funeral services will be beld
GALUA Comly's Grandma Emma Gatewood who j~
al
11 a.m. Tuesday at !be
•~ recently ret.ned bline from Canada wbere 8lle spent several
o dafl Bobhw, received a mentim in !be September issue of Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home.
: Relders lligest. Taken frun the Natimal Geographic News Burial will be in Riverview
Cemetery. Friends may call at
: bulletin, lbe article read: "Trail Gazer- The scenic Appalachian
the funeral home anytime after
: Trail- 2,025 miles tbrougb forest lands over mountains from
10 a.m. Monday.
: . Maine to Ge«gia, is uot an easy trell. When a 69-year-old grand~ : molber wbo bad walked lbe entire trail for tbe second lime was
: ' asked wby, abe replied, "'bere were things I didn't see the first VaUie McCumber
CHESTER - Vallie Otis
: · time.' "PS -Grandma is now Myears old, and still going strong.
M&lt;'O,mber,
73,of22'1N. Yellow
•:• 9te resides at 'lburmao. +++++
Springs St., Springfield, Ohio,
died
at 2 p.m. Thursday in
2 MEMBERS of the GABS Key Uub hope to improve the
: footlian and basketball programs for Blue Devil fans and visitors Mercy Medical Center after six
• in lbe near future. In the past 15 or 16 years, the club bas been in years of illness following a
•• dllqe of miJM.grajlbed pragrams whicll contained mly the massive stroke.
Mr. McCumber retired in 1963
•• rosters of lbe Blue Devils and opposil)g teams. It may be too late
as
a fireman at Robbins and
•
. : to ee! tbe projecllftlerway for tile 1971 grid campaign, but !be
Myers, Inc., where be bad
• sludents are malti,. plans for !be future . Tbe programs would not
: mly cmtain rosters, but pictures, ads and bits of information on wcrked !I years. He was a
member li Sbade River Lodge
: the Blue Devils and tbeir oppments. Several SEOAL schools are 453, F and A.M., Chester, and
• doiiW thlll, and selling tbe programs as game souvenirs.
was born in Meigs County Feb.
•! .
22, 1898, the son of Gecrge and
+++++
;,
WHILE helping erect 1be new football bleachers on Memorial Enuoa Sl &lt;lair McCumber.
: Field recently, Jolm McKean, retired U. S. Air Force officer,
He is survived by bis wife,
: Wcnned us tbat lbe 1937 Blue Devil tailback once punted tbe ball Dcris; two SllllS, George, of
: • yards. (Two weeks ago, we printed several school football Springfield, and Jack of Ur! records mmpiled by Blue Devils down through !be years, and bana; a sister, Mrs. Lelia
: listed a 511-fard punt by Tommy ~MIS !be longest punt ever Heilman , Pomeroy; five
• by a GABS player). We cllecked tbe Tribune files, and found that grandchildren, three great•
• 1m Oct. 29, 1937, m tbe Old Academy Field, a halfback by the grandchildren and several
•• name of Jolm McKean booted one 60 yards against visit.L1g nieces and nephews.
Services were cooducled in
• l'llmti'oy, 'Ibatsurely must be the school's longest punt from the
•• lineJl. ik!fimmage. By !be way,GAHSentered that contest with a tbe LiiUeton Flmeral Home at 3
p.m. Saturday in charge of !be
ae~ record, but after !be final whistle sounded, the
•• powerful Pantbers had SCII'ed a 13-0 triumph over the Blue and Rev. Marvin Rettig of the
Wlite. Mare than 2,500 persons, a r~ord home crowd, were on Lawrenceville United (]lurch of
Cllrist. Burial was in Glen
" hillel for tbe game.
Haven Memorial Gardens.
:
+++++
Pallbearers were Keith
:
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune McCumber , Gary Fenton,
• IIIII we *If a.Dia Times .... Oyde Hemswortb, 20, strip mine Jackie McCumber, Ronald
• ...-, aoddtiilllly electrocuted on Rt. 21&amp; •... MaiU'ice Grover Sapp, Lemard Palmer, and
~ aectld n.anr of Gallil Olilnty, succeeds Otis Drummond .... Paul Hawk.
: 11. Banld Brown, GABS principal, niuned president of
• llul' nlmJ Ohio Alhlellc IA!ague .... John Frazier appointed
F.dwin Rooth wac ttw fir.'
• . . dty~ mtariaa .... Marietta edges GAllS 1~14 .in
at· J~r to have his name en.
Joolllll iCi ht+ IIV-IIIIIIIe .... Coach Dick Shrider aMOunoes ~ shrined
I~ the Hall of Faint&gt;
..,.. ~ I elblllscbedulf! far Blue Devil cagers. ·
for Great Am~ricans. in J92!i.
1
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1

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GallUJ"

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!

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Roseberry.

Funeral services will be
conducted Monday al 2 p.m.
from tbe Ewing Chapel, witb
burial
in
Burlingham
Cemetery. Friends !!lay call at
the funeral home anytime.
l8l8li8118!i0311"'&amp;
·~:'&amp;W~
·
&amp;'l~8!l~tlliil8!iii8!EIII&gt;:lLII8tiilr;Tl881i$
i. l &gt; l

COLUMBUS ~UPI)
Three of Ohio's top
Cooperative Ellleasloa
Service Ageols were to be
presented dlstlngulsbed
service awards Saturday
night at !be unuaf meetlq
here of tbe National
Assoc iatioo of County
Agricallurel Ageals.
Scheduled to receive tbe
awards were Erie County
Extension Agent Floren
James; Fayette County
Apicallurel Exteoslon Agent
PIIDip L Grover aad Farm
Management Specialist
Herbert Crown of tbe Mt.
Gilead Area Extension
Center.
J.

Maybe Some Help
WASHlNGTON (UPI) - The
U. S. Labor Department said
some " speci~l employment
funds " from the federal
government may be granted to
Ohio to aid in tbe biring of
public service employees in
areas of high unemployment.
Gov. John Gilligan and
several members of the state's
congressional delegation have
complained lhal Ohio was
getting short changed in 1he
distribution of job-making funds
from the federal government.

l~ders_l~ve DO do~t they are
still writing ~ scnp~.
Item: Desptte earner waruingstheywere goingtorollouta
sales. tax increase !ill if tbe
Democrats didn't come VII witb
the votes for an income tax
within 411_b~, tb~ GOP Senate
leadership ts Stelling further to
acc?mmodate new adminislratilll proposals to woo organized labor toward an inccme
lax.

May ~e GillipD
Republican leaders are allowing 1he Gilligan administratim
!0 play out the full string on tbe
UJCcme tax proposal. H it

succeeds, itis labied ''Gilligan's
lsx.'' If it fails, tbe (l()P says
lbe ptlblic doesn't want it cuts
!be budget and raises tbe 'sales .
lax a cOIJII)e of cents.
The longer a ~~~~ is delayed, lbe more intense outside
JftSS11reS become until a permanent agreoment IUilOI1g an
parties can be forged inside tbe
crucible !bat is the Statehouse.

based on their domestic wbeat

allotment
times
their
established farm yield.
. In order to prove yield lor use
tn the 1972 wbeat program, a
farmer must bave harvested
wheat tn 1968, 1969, and 1970 and
provide reliable evidence of the
amount of production from tbe
harvested acreage.
"Acceptable evidence is
limited lo bin measurements,
sales or warehouse recetpls and
summarization of receipts or
scale llckels and summarization of scale tickets from
warehouses or scales used by
!be general public,'' Gilbert

~

&amp;Jv

While the~
ne 1s relativeItem: 'lbe Republican leader- ly mild, last week's actions ciship in botb tbe House and Sen- fered lbe ·first ltint the lawate refused to knuckle under tO makers are l&lt;egilming to get
aoy attempts to force reopening nervous. Tbe lee 1e£obip !mows
great.er ~ SS!ft will fdlow
li state

parks1
·'

Training Days Set
ATHENS - 'lbe Women's
Society of Christian Service of
Athens District of tbe United
Methodist Church will conduct
Leadership Training days
during September.
The first session will be beld
Sept. 16 at Trinity United
Metbodist Church at 105 West
Hunter Street, Logan, Ohio. The
second wiii!Je Sept. 21 at Camp
Francis Asbury near Rio
Grande. Registration and coffee
hour for tbese two meetings will
be at 9 a.m. witb a workshop
starling at 9:30. Those attending are to bring a seck
IWJCh; coffee and dessert may
be purchased.
The final session will be held
Sept. 23 at First United
Methodist Church, College
Street, Athens. Registration
will be at 7 p.m. with a
wtwk81lop at 7:30. A social hour
will foUow. Special speakers

Farmers May Set
Own Wheat y 1e
• ld
GALLIPOLIS - ~armers
everywhere may, tf they
choose, prove tbeir wbeat yield
per acre rather !ban accept tbe
yield established by tbe County
Agricultur_al Stabilization .and
Conservallon (ASC) Corrurntt.ee
on a judgment basis WJder tbe
Agricultural Act of 1970, according to J. Melvin Gilbert,
Chairman of "the Gallia County
ASC Committee.
Tbe yield figure is important
to a farmer, he said, since
growers participating in tbe
wheal program receive
marketing certificate payments

As inviting as it might bave
been, GOP !elders did mhnint
to remove llis ODe bit of 1ft:$Sire which mq eJeatnaii;J' Clll·
tribule to a decisim.
I.egislatnrs in dislriClli emtei!Ug stale pads bave been
beaeged wilb ~ from
their cmslilueata objectilc to
dtmJ~g oflbe parb_

will include African natives wbo
are now students studying in lbe
United States also Mrs. L L
Krantz who ~th 1w husband
Uved ~ worked. in Africa.
Mrs. Krantz will be attired in
!be national dress and wiD bave
an art display depicting lbe
culture of tbe land.-

BOND SET
GALLIPOLIS - Robert
Bowers, 53, Parkersburg, indicted by the Septemlw term ci
!be Gallia. County Grand Jury
for assault with intent to llill.
entered a not guilty plea Friday
afternoon when arraigned
before Cornman Pleas Judge
Ronald R. Calhoun. Bond was
set al $10,000. No !rial date was
set.

1'

Dear Sir:
41 a ~ to tbe Daily Senlimll I feel entilled to write

~--nu;c 1he editorial Ill. page2 of 'lbursday's Sept. bf
tdilial!. Cerlain plinta ci interest to me need cJearin8 VIII. UtUe. I
- wlllltJCIIlnfer to in yotr edilorial, a "career criminal." You
mall! ~ staltmi!Dt that, ''Rarely is !be career criminal able to
&amp;dmit to bil Olm guilt."
.
lllndlllatollea ralberpalbetic and DD!air judgement by YCIU.
lint of us ''clld limon'' bne long ago acmitted our guilt, to the
""!*IIi ml to Olnelfts. Few, if any of us blame society for oor
~ ~ JWuhlitation comes from witbin lbe individual, IKid
IS DDt~ @iflfrom Society. Society is not blamed, as you say, for
_. bei!lfl bl!re, by I!CICiolfll!isl or psyc:bologisls. Not mce in over
~ ~ I bad a professimai penologist lay the blame m
-tr.Iam re!IJI"Nible for my own life, in ar out of society, so
bDw am I put !be blame el:sewbae?
Yoa dBim 111111 it is a rare lbiog fw 0111! of us to feel any
I I •p'hlity for the welfare ci our victims ar tbeir familieS and
lbat tlis obmld lie a part of rebabilitation. ·How cloeS a person
~ ane""' ~certain crimes? -murder, rape, shooting with
intent to lliii.IJIIIDDI"I, cutting wilb intent to till, and so m? How
would Ylll SIQesl we mate amends for 1his type of aime to the
victim cr Ja laiiJily?
1\G" ·w pellple lbi! world over bave tried to find an anner to lbis~JleS~iGD for many years and still bave no answer for
it. Wbat would JQlllllve Ill do?
I, per•.,.IIJ, baveiii!Ver committed a aime ohiolence but
l'ft liwd wi1b u.e wbD bave Clllllllitted soaie of .!be aillws in lbe utlm. I live wilb them now and I can see and feel
wlat ~feel for our ''Society.''
llnl oll!S wisb we were not bae, but we still take tbe
IE5(P'P'hlity for OW actions and CJUr deeds. Jo 1be past 16 year&amp;,
~ 32,0111 mm bave been sent to the Cilia Pemtentiary alllle Ia
tis state. Oar aime rate is 111e of !be nstion's blgbest I clo nat
IUme Society fer 1his! One leams to separate certain parts ofSociety lo put 1be blame oo. I would like to point out to you, .;r,
1hat 1be priall popil•t:IGD is made .., from all walks of life, wbD
mly )~~dot may bave been your neighbor, your dentist, or
yolll' IIM!t"lt:r. Most crimes are not CfiDII!itled by ''polr whites"
cr ''poor Nwb." '!bey are ccmmitted by members of !be oociety
fllliRiivi!wio.Icanmukenoexcuses for my life ofaime, bat I
Jiace lbe blaml! Gil my Olm shoulders and DOt lbe ''free WIJI'ld"
......... I ba'VI! lived witb a few "polilicel" criminals in my time,
bat IIIey- are rare in state priall S)'Biems. ''Big time" gamblers
IIIII ....., paoben are so-called ''state polilicel" Jrisooen..
Nifiriansdobavealargeinfluence on tbis type of criminal; not
Ill palinoliri~
·- · -IDS,' but some.
We as cmvkls do not cmdme tbe acti&lt;IIS of some of our
reno. prisiDers, bat we reserve our judgement of tbem. As a
wllole, the Jqllllallon of the Obio l'ellitentiary would be m..-e than
glad to retuJn to SI!Ciety as useful dlizens oace mare. Your ac·
eepllmce ci 111m as part of society, is 1he biggest step towards his
self.,....hllitatilll. If you accept him back into the ''free world"
as a maml not as an "oddity," be will soon beeline useful and
~odaoctive in lbe community.
I pera•JIIIJ seek Ibis for myself. As you put it in yoor
editorW: ''Pmishmmt
, is a degrading and embittering and

•• ,......,.. ,.,.._._

Ite!D : LegislaUn reapportionml!ilt cards come ont GD
lbe bible nell Friday, and Ibis
may lie as Jmg as lbe GOP

.

Fewcau say wbetber lbe gov:
ernor setlbe_date fer Clllvering
the Democratic • controlled
...,.. ~rwment jJoard in line
wilb lbe time the RepmlicanCC!!Itrolled legjslature migbt be
ripe for smne lrading.
Bat reappcrliCIIIJII!Ilt can be
regarded as another item m 1be
. list li factors leading to
~
a fiscal seftiement.
In smunary, !be ultimate solulioo could go in any me ci
suaal directiCIIS. Bat the Hepublican leadaobipis willq to
~t I* "es build up in tbe belief !bey will puoh fartb a .setdemenl that favors lbe GOP.

»

.-.ilving 01.Funci Raising
Event? Gilrilge S..le?
.Fieil Milrket? ·
We have •..

•Glilssware
• Novelties

· • Toys
·Jokes

Gu.arilnteed Sale on Cansignment.

GIFTLAND
Bidwell, Ohio

s miles from G.-llipolis an

u.s. n.

PHARMACIST

said.
Special provision bas been
made to include wheat
produced on a farm and used for
seed, even though weight
tickets or otber evidence of
production are not available. To
prove wheal yield for use in !be
19rl program, a producer must
file a request at tbe County
ASCS Office between Se_p!ember 1 end Septeplber '!'It,
••
1971. Any producer riling during
this period will be given
"Point Pleasanfs I P~ing Drug Stnre"
reasonable time to obtain proof
of acreage and production, . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __
Gilbert satd.

9:00 A.M. DLL 10:00 P.M.

....

_._._~

~~~;wee.

SEVEN DAYS AWEEK

O'ime is nat aa sjmplr as some people; including criminals,
would line JQl beliew. I bqle you see fit to print lliis letter so
olbln might bow buw ame of "liOCiety's rejects" really feel. 1
will be glad to IIII!WEr any questions you would like to ask of me.
'l1lant fUlL
R 1 lfiJIIJ, Gecqe L Rager 119-tOe, Boa 69, London Prison
~ Fum. Imdan, Obio 43141.
-

FRUTH

PHARMACY

Strip Mining Defended

C'JJotce
, BuiJdt"nta s.ites A lfln.i/ab'-

.---IIJII!l------------~------181'!--~

~

vu..-

'It

Middleport, Obio

Sept. 5, 19'11
Dear Sir:
JiJSt read in lbe Sentinel&amp;bout tbat lady that made !bat trip
by IIIII to Bam~ eo.! Co. slrippng ares.
Did J011 !IOtice abe fwnd fault witb tbe stripping area? Sbe
found fault witb the llllnhr in Cadiz; sbe wanted to koow buw
mneluiher be got fer lis soul. Found fault too witb Mr. Hatcll.
I MM
if abe .-Ill talk lang """'gh !he would bave follld
fault with lbe biB driver. Did abe leln to find fault tbat way
m+inc all crllbat joarlley lbiwgb MDOtena?
I wiD tell ber-thing. when the Hanna Coal Co. gels done
with lbe ~Bit will be in betW obape than before tbey got the coal
wt. ...... Wille, 11ae 1ru!:b I don't tbint baul120 toasor 15 or
9DIIm.IIhi*abemade lbeftigbta liWe stroog. Aslo, abe didn't
telllbere'l*lbaae tndsopen~teon Bwma Coal Co. land. Ibaw
heeD da!Uid tbal&lt;DIIIlry. Just go over !be bill to BeDaire, over
lllnMCh Ill. M 'I. IIIII- some ci tbat reclaiming lla!VIa bas
done.
lllllve heeD 1111 lbat way to Dillonvale, Piney Fart, Germano.
1.._ auelliiC aboallhllt COW!try.I Wlllder if abe bas seea !be
piclltre:l of IIIIIDe oflbe red•iml!w lbe Hanna Coal Co. bas done.
Fur. . more, lbe laws the state ci ado are putting in effect
lbe
will bave to reclaim
they are putting VII em~Ch
cub boadif ~don't lbe state cau do it.
.
Allll!ia "'and that is ldl in bad shape": It is not lbe coal
'"l.,.lij"s fault. It is the state of Ollio's fault. Tbe state bas inspeclllls going uUi!lld wbo are ~ to make a C(]lllpa!ly Uve
1111 to lbe taw.
SD dm't blame lbe alai CQ!Dpany for the shape tbe land in
KJxerdilbiLtlsin obape!W it is. It is !be state's fault. But you
aee, lbe 11.- ci Rq!raentatMs and Senators are bulding
for a sb: ida law w strip mini,..
lfitlllldll!llbem fer strip mining, I don't koow wbat I would
bave daDe. ADd ltbanl!: U.. ...,pany I worked
Bill I hope Ibis lady does nat find SO much fault with com·
paniro lilae tbe Hamw o.l Co. '!bey bave been in strip min!,., I
tadwe toii,J, 3iJECL IIBJbe abe went juat to find fault. Maybe
itftllld la-ve paldber to staybome and do ber bouework.

W

na•••ny

Rodney Vzllage
The above aerial photograph
development and was formerly
farm, located on Rt. 35, just four
Holzer Medical Center and the
Fairgrounds.
TREV A BOCKMAN b11
rec:eived a tutlou award lo
pursue cosmetology lralDIDg
at the Ohio State Scbool of
Cosmetology in Columbus.
Miss Hockman was one of the
winners from over 3G8 Oblo- ·
area appUcanls, selected ou
the llllsls of recemmeadatl~
of ber bigb school officialB,
aad rauk at the top Ia
evaluations
by
tbe
Scbolanblp Board of tbe Oblo
State School. Miss Hockmau
is the daughter of Mr. aad
~- Homer Hockman and
resides with ber pareols at
Route I, Cbesblre.

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

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

Yoaralnily,
A Friend oflbe sb:ip-mloiag operators,

Bell Batey.

Ef1M in Big, Bad Ciliea• •••
'

-4Mi.~
~GJMi

_

t.llw

lh,.,TA&amp;.

6oii LU~s

fZJ

Rodney.Village

•

tAll THOMAS

AND SON

.

Dear Sir:

rm_,,..tBolltMIIII!Ibq,udafrieadsuuested lhllti
write a 'leaS- to !be tdiklr. Tbe t1*Jg I'm so upeet about is tile
llllb:J,1•
litaatne m puiDc dllplay in our loella~Gres.
Webne beeDftiJ four,_-s, IIIII ba"VE just recently mmoavveded
llldt 11ame, IIIII I Clllln tis 11,J, I bave De9Er been so shoc:lred
Ia IDJ lie. Wbea yuu go ID cbect oat your IP'IJ(erlea, r!Pt in front
olJIIQaadyolll'fillleclildrell too, II outud out JMDOgl'afllly lbat
tiua ,.....,_ llllllinfl to tbe imlgillltilll. In one store it's
rfclltlide by llidt wilb dlildren's boob!
Petple 1n our 1111a11 fDw!ll are always md"• tbe Jig bad
dlldl, bDt In lbe dtr they bave !beE tiild ol boob in Ullt boot
s111res wl&amp;e Jllll llllve to be IIID ba7 lien. My sou found !be
1 1 . ed ... lo bQ bere iUJ! QJald you £11-e WC1i111 me as to
wlatl,. m . . . . olfoar, cudotobelp eet lbil mth off lbe rac:b,
_ , fnm lbe iqa 1 ....,.. lllindJ ci 01r ycr...en?
'l'balllt You,
Mrs.CHnton hilt
p .s. !7 ;'be lb!!re'l other cwcaned IIIIJthe a wbD feel aa I do
lilaiatllil.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
'.

for

for.

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

I

Jc ' ... lie llpoe'l

'I

rw. Names may

lli'wl.,...~: 1M ·-.Mwent', a ft!JIIftt. Leiters
Ill Jlllela&amp;... ._.., u
1&amp;--.,aolpenoaalilies.

Sept:s,im

~--1

needs lo stan.

_. ..tile

lmdmOlrredlmal Insli!Wm

Senate Plfl!idtilt Pro Ttmpore TbecJdq'e N. Gray, RPlq118, ccmullold .tilt ladersltip
em.
ltcild_ out. .R"as lang asII
_.,_
•

....:;

Opi~ion

ReapolUibilily Accepted

fnm scbool 11101111" ud othen. ·

Hru.~

BEGINS OAPSE DUTIES
LANCASTER
Fred
Haynes, Lancaster, is one of
five newly appointed field
representatives for the Ohio
Association of Public Scbool
Employees (OAPSE). Haynes
bas been assigned an 11-eounty
area comprised of Athens,
Fairfield , Hocking, Licking,
Meigs, Monroe, Morgan,
Muskingum, Noble, Perry and
Washington counties.

Letters:

lBIIn I( J' In 1 tit a t d. 'l'loey IIIHid lie less
. . . . . . . . . (•lle•Jed .. !tl tleabytbtediler)

(UPIJ-Sia!c
Uquor Di=lor Richard E .
GUJ:J:enheim says !be t..,..
mon!b experiment in selling
liquor by the use at a
disceunt ""a.ppears to have

---------------------------·

TAHEAIDOK.IE Ioo:Hl'OODPDI~

been ertremely .s~Kcesslul''
- as to inueasing sales ~

Plea for Den Mothers .
· q,m LeiB

&lt;:::ute::WH~

'JIH....

(;ULU~IBUS

but a resumption depends on
conclusion of an in-deptb
analysis.
During tbe lwo-monlh
period Ohio's total liquor
sales climbed to $5!.27
miUioo, compim,d to $49.5%
Dllllion for Jbe same period in
1970. Total gallonage sold in
lbe two-months was 2.26
million compared to 2.12
miHion in !be same period of
1970•. Tbere was no breakdown on bow mucb or tbe gain
10'as from case lot sales.

ID ICwJdlepcwt Pareuts:

lnSoptrmlri (dalewDIMnyet), Pack 2e will bavea day to
f"«&lt;•li!l" any boyeptymrsaldand up wishing to join Scouts.
Hi is in neal ol illlft deD motlleni- AU it takes is one I
bola- a week ml your I* u:e at our IIIII! pac~ meeting each 1
monlb.
' ) lbougbtiCIIlldn'tllea den mother eitber, but it really isn't
bard wtft,jllsta HlllepalieDce.From my own experience, I bave
!wad that SWutiJc can lie a lot of fun and that sometimes
scouliligean belp lbeadaltsoouter. l know tbey did in my case. I
1re J1111 that wben a- Hille boys are looking up to you for
gulc!!MIC'e tbat they respect you not only far your being a den
mother but also bee """ they are a group of boys working
t,.etber. Tbeyleml toiDve,bonorandrespect lbelr God, flag and
COIIIIIrj • •tps lppljwC a hefping band to Jess fcrtunate people, 8io§1!!11811-81!811Hfllll8 8!8!1lil!il'fllll''.ll!a81&amp;!'8&amp;l::ll8is:M~
·
dogooddeedsand&lt;Dfts!lvarious kinds, besides setting a goal in
AWARDED BADGE
life mll1!8dliQg it. Tbat is wbere a scout learns !bat manpower
POMEROY
Army
begins wilb boy power.
Specialis! Four Danny J . Smith,
Parenlls, please, I urge you, get behind your boys and do aU 21, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray H.
you can for PadE 215 in Kd!!qMrt. Novr that scllool bas started Smith, Union Terrace Route 4
and S0 M"" is over, there really isn't too mucl) a boy can do recenUy received
combai
ueept for his scbool activities and scouting. Let your boys join infantry badge wbile serving
our scout pacta let lbem knoor you are behind them 100 per with the JOist Airborne Division
(Airmobile) in Vielnam. Spec.
cent an oflbe ~Tbe dale ci SCQlt registration far scouts will be announced Smith is a radio telephone
operator in Company C, 2D
later.
Eulab F'ri!OOs. Battalion, 506tb Infantry.

Pam

u..;

252

THII~D

AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

OPEN 9 A.M. T09 P.M. MONDAYtHRU SATURDAY

PRICES EFFECTIVE AT THIS STORE OILY!

ARMOUR*STAR. U.S.D.A•.GRADED CHOICE
, S. Govl.
Inspect..

USDA

CHOICE

OUND

TEAK lb.
POMEROY11GERS - Frunt,l tor, Kelly Hawk, Danny Morris, Randy Marshall, Rick
Jolmon,LutberBievins,MartSlali!l"; back row, Randy Lyons, Jobn Partlow Dale Browning
1bn Sdles, David Blake, BOOby McClure, Mr. Sonny McClure, manager. A.;..,nt were B~
. Carmen, Donnie Icemower, aol managP.r, Mr. R. J. Browning.

Champs, Families at Picnic
POMEROY- Tbe l'waoy
Tigers, little league champs in
Pomeroy, were presented
trophies at a piatic Thursday al
tbe new roadside )ii'B Ill Rt. 33.
Approximately 541 team
members and relatives at.
tended. Mrs. Nancy Morris was
chairman of tbe picnic.
Devotions were giYeD by tbe

Racine

.

Rev. Fred Hill .
Sonny McClure, team
manager, !banked the team and
parents for tbe fine cooperation
extended him during the
season. McClure also !banked
R. J. Browning, assistant
manager, ftw his work with the
pitching staff.
1bn Sdtes and Jobn Parllow
'

~ial

Events

llyMn.FraarlsMonts
Mrs. Fern Gilmore of
Columbus and Mr. ml Mrs.
Price Wolfe crl Iaington spent
several days wilb their sister,
Mrs. HaiEI Camaban.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Gould ol
Marietta and Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Lake, Lori and Sean, of
Columbus spent Sunday witb
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Morris.
Mr. and Mrs. a,deCnmand

CARPET·
SPECIAL
.95

Padding
and Labor

INCLUDED

Danny Bush at Larain. Mr.
Roush Visited his new granddaughter' Larelli Roush, ben

WE ALSO HAVE •.•

e ARMSTRONGVINYL QUUERTONE
UltOI.EUM. 9 &amp; 12 WIDTHS
e ARMSIIONG VINYL CUSHION

STOKELY

CATSUP
14-oz. Bottles
•

STOKELY

TO JUICE
1-Qt. 14-oz. Ca n

MUSSELMANrS

APPLE SAUCE
16%-oz. Cans

Sunshine

STOKELY FEATURES

Hydroa Cookies

Cit Green Beals , , . . . . . •.. . . 1-lb. can 27'
Whale Kenel Cern . . . . . . . 1-lb. 1-oz. can 25'

14~·0Z. 49~
Pkg.

Sunshine

Fruit Cocktail . . ...••..•. Hb. 1-o•. can 31'
Y.C. Sliced Peaches . . . . . • . , . a oz. can 19'
Tomato Sauce ......... , . . . a-oz. con 12'

Hi Ita Crackers
t ·lb.

Pkg.

I IR&amp;IRIIE

AX ION

1-lb.
Otn.

PRE-SOAK
1-lb. 9-oz.
Pkg.

79c

Rre Saltines
1-lb. 49~
Pkg.

AJAX

,.,,

1-Pt. 6-oz.
A....

............. ..,5
. G.llipelis

3 1~

KEEBLER

FOLGER'S

Dishwashing Lic:qid
142

49~

'lLOE BONNET

ROOt UNOLEUM•

Sept. 3. Parents ue Mr. and
Mrs. Dsvid Rousb, Oohnnlw!o.
Cbarlotte C u s b m " " was
the &amp;rst member of the
theatrical profession -whose
name was placed in the Hall
of Fame i:or Great Ameri~ans, in 19l5.

head

Mr. and Mrs. Bud Simpson of
Pomeroy spent Labor Day with
Weekend guests of Mr. and his mother, Mrs. Grette SimpMrs. Otis Bailey were Mr. and son.
Mrs. AlbertWigal,sOil'!George, Mr. and Mrs. Chester SimpBany and Bryan, of Prospect, son, !$abel Simpson, Mr. and
Mr. andMrs. Charles,smith and Mrs. Pete Shields, Mr. and Mrs.
Deah of Greenwich, Mr. and Herbert Sayre, Dave Sayre and
Mrs. Ted Bailey and three Dorotby GleM spent Sunday
cbildren of GaUipolis. Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Styer at
dinner guests included Mr. and Waterford. ~t.er a bountiful
Mrs. Lawrence Theiss of dinner !bey enjoyed boating,
Vmton.
'
skiing and swimming.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;;_ _

son, Roy, of Co)mnlm spent a
couple of days wilb Mrs. ·
Boward Neigler and other
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Otis McOintock
spent tbe weekend in Cnhgnhus
witb Mr. and Mrs. Bob Rousb
and daugllter and attended !be
state fair.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve CleJI'Dd,
Vince and Ryan, of C)llnmbas
were weekend guests of tbeir
p!irents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Cleland and Mrs. Anna W'IIII!S.
Melvin RifiJe of Cohnobus
spent a w I eu.t wilb Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Riffle.
Mr. and Mrs. C2larles Rausch
of Westfield, N. J ., speut
several'days witb his sista- and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Rusb
Philson.
Mrs. lillian .Trriden retmbtd
sq. yd.
home from a visit in Albeas
and up
with ber SOD, 1):. and Mrs.
Charles Jividen.
Minimum 20 Sq. Yds.
Mrs. Ann Coe spent a week in
NyiOI). Polyester. Acrilan, Herculon. Over 500
Gabanna wllb llr. and Mrs.
colors and patterns to select from. Come in
Dave 'lbamas..
today and make your selection.
T-Sgt. and Mrs. Steven
INDOOR-oUTDOOR CARPET
Jacobs and ebiJdreD ci Lockbourne Air Rue spent ~
NOT
Day witb his gn.1•\• euls, Mr.
INCLUDED IN TH IS SPECIAL!
ml Mrs. llem'y Rousb ml

Mildred.
Dale Roush and Adria SQre
visited over Labor Day
we elaol wilb Mr. ml Mrs.

ICEBERG
LETTUCE

who played with tbe Tigers in
1970 were honored with a roWJd
of applause .
On behalf of team, Jack Scites
presented gifts to McClure and
Mrs. BrowninJ: wbo accepted
lhe gift in lbe absence of ber
husband. FoUowing the picnic,
the men played the boys a game
of footbaU .

COFFEE

63'-

2~b..

c .~

\

, 75 '

�r•

Both Sid~s Tui"D. Screws

i.

By LEE UJONARD
UPI Stale~ Reperler
OOLUMBUS ( UPI) ~ Owing
a news· conference last week,
Gov. Jobn J . Gilligan pointed
out Republicans bave a worldng
cootrol of boll! !be House and
Senate, yet tbey bave produced

1•....:..
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Ohio Politics

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,,
s;muJamr at me lime. Students' reactiODS are measured by
use of a 16 mm film whicll cover roost actual driving cooditi&lt;IIS.

JNS1DE the III!W lliYtiS education simuJatnr installed
beiUd 1be GABS gym Thursday afternoon in Dave Angles,

t

••
••

ooeofthede

oominslructors. Sixteen students can use !be

..•."'.

£
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•••
:

IEC'l'llR1NG cbivasedlallion students in !be Gallipolis gym is Jim Enyart, bead of tbe
GABS coune. Students must e&lt;mplete a minimum of 36 boors of classroom work to succeafully pass the CGUtse.

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Simulators Sharpening

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GALIJPOLIS Gallia
Higb Scbool received
IIIII! ci 2liii!W dllvers edueatilll
!Jinmlafars distributed by !be
state· depu1ment of edueatilll
lllllt 'llnnday, atrmdiog to
James N. M. Davis, pincipal.
Slate Scbool Superintendent
Martin Ell!lex said lbere DOw
.-eG+m!•tanin qM!rlltion in

Olio.

:
Elch I!Uoot loQg mol:ile unit
Cllllliaa 16 !!jmnJaton, per-

:
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:nlttlng more students to
receive drivers education
lrliaing in the &lt;iliiise of !be
acboa1 year, as weD as reWce
the cost ci training eacll J11Pi1
by IIIII! (ourlb.
E111!1: said 15f Obio scbool

.,

._""'"'"""" u 81111

~

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mobile unit behind the GAHS
varsity gym. GaUla Acad1my
bas 40t slldents enrolled in !be
..-ogram Ibis year compared to
70 1his lime last year.
James Enyart is in cbarge of
tbe GAHS drivers educatim
program. He is assisted by
Dave Angles Ron Logan, and
Ken Turner. Twoolber teachers
serve as monitors
Eoyart and ~ went to
Columbus in August where tbey
were eniolled in a spedal
simulator work81lop program
conducted by the sta~
department of education in
cooperatim witb Aetna Ufe and
Casualty Co., Visual Ed U Com,
builders of tbe simulators .

~m:~~m:·form:
..-oject, and shares
cost in
tbe

= g instructors for the

Gallipolis Supt. Paul F. Kuhn
said it is !be scllool's aim to
sbow the new piece of equipment to local service and civic
arganizations during tbe course
of !be scllool year. Officials feel
year. Districts must (!bare tbe student must have a minimum Ibis equipment is one of the
biggest assets to tbe local school
use of !be equipment. Total cost of 36 c1assroon hours.
ci tbe project !bus far in Ohio is
A special concrete patio ..-ogram in many years.
$732,000. The Natiooal Higbwey
Safety Administration will
reimburse !be state on tbe cost
accmling to Essex.
Inside tbe mobile unit, a 16 I
mm film 81lows stop signs,
pedestrians, other vehicles ,
James H. Scott
sharp curves and a mnnberllf Andrew (Jack) Hoy
POMEROY _ James H.
emergency situations whicll a
MIDDLEPORT - Andrew (Dock
) Scott, 62, Pomeroy RD
student must react to. The Jackson (Jack) Hoy, 79,
equipment in tbe mobile unit is . Broadway st., Middleport, died 2, died Saturday morning at
simular to !bat of an actual Saturday morning at veterans Holzer Medical Center.
He is survived by his parents
automobile.
Memorial Hospital.
ClydeandMaryScott
Porn~
Student lectures are required
Mr. Hoy was born March 22,
Rt.
2;
two
bro~,
Wayne,
bef..-e a pupil advances to !be 1892 in Charlottesville, Va. A
simulator. 'lbe state requires member of tbe Methodist Pomeroy RD 2, and Cecil,
Albany, and several nieces and
that before the course can be
Church at Decota, W. Va., be nephews. He was preceded in
successfully C(]lllpleted, eacb was a retired coal miner.
Surviving are his wife, death by a sister, Hazel

Drivers' ·Ed Training

: N:......,
:

ne~~

don't tbey do something?" be asked.
To answer tbe governor's
cpestim is to explain !bat ReWblicans are right m tbe
course they bave cllarted for
enactment of a tax and budget

measuring 62 by 25 feet was Certain details may not yet
installed last week fer !be bave been worked out, but GOP

~•

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DO budget-tax package after six
mmtbs' study.
Tbe governor wmdered wby.
' "lbey can do a:nylbing !bey
want to," Gilligan said, repeating bis Jiropa;ition of a day
earHer ·that "aoylhing !bat gets
17 votes in tbe Senate is a win-

plan.

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3&amp;H . OL®ut.U

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! Area Deaths l

f-...---------------~---------~ Virginia Scott Hoy; three

Dateline

daughters, Miss Maggie Hoy, at
•
home; Mrs. Ruben ('lbehna)
~
Collins and Mrs. Elizabeth
" I.
· 1 Oiler, both of Middleport; a
1 sister, Mrs . Ned (Mary)
: 1
I Thompson, Rhonda, W. Va.,and
: I
I two grandsons, Stephen and
: I
• I
I Richard Oiler, Jr. His parents,
;
BY HOBART WiUION, JR.
. a son, a daughter, three
••
· brothers and three sisters
••
preceded him in death.
••
Funeral services will be beld
GALUA Comly's Grandma Emma Gatewood who j~
al
11 a.m. Tuesday at !be
•~ recently ret.ned bline from Canada wbere 8lle spent several
o dafl Bobhw, received a mentim in !be September issue of Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home.
: Relders lligest. Taken frun the Natimal Geographic News Burial will be in Riverview
Cemetery. Friends may call at
: bulletin, lbe article read: "Trail Gazer- The scenic Appalachian
the funeral home anytime after
: Trail- 2,025 miles tbrougb forest lands over mountains from
10 a.m. Monday.
: . Maine to Ge«gia, is uot an easy trell. When a 69-year-old grand~ : molber wbo bad walked lbe entire trail for tbe second lime was
: ' asked wby, abe replied, "'bere were things I didn't see the first VaUie McCumber
CHESTER - Vallie Otis
: · time.' "PS -Grandma is now Myears old, and still going strong.
M&lt;'O,mber,
73,of22'1N. Yellow
•:• 9te resides at 'lburmao. +++++
Springs St., Springfield, Ohio,
died
at 2 p.m. Thursday in
2 MEMBERS of the GABS Key Uub hope to improve the
: footlian and basketball programs for Blue Devil fans and visitors Mercy Medical Center after six
• in lbe near future. In the past 15 or 16 years, the club bas been in years of illness following a
•• dllqe of miJM.grajlbed pragrams whicll contained mly the massive stroke.
Mr. McCumber retired in 1963
•• rosters of lbe Blue Devils and opposil)g teams. It may be too late
as
a fireman at Robbins and
•
. : to ee! tbe projecllftlerway for tile 1971 grid campaign, but !be
Myers, Inc., where be bad
• sludents are malti,. plans for !be future . Tbe programs would not
: mly cmtain rosters, but pictures, ads and bits of information on wcrked !I years. He was a
member li Sbade River Lodge
: the Blue Devils and tbeir oppments. Several SEOAL schools are 453, F and A.M., Chester, and
• doiiW thlll, and selling tbe programs as game souvenirs.
was born in Meigs County Feb.
•! .
22, 1898, the son of Gecrge and
+++++
;,
WHILE helping erect 1be new football bleachers on Memorial Enuoa Sl &lt;lair McCumber.
: Field recently, Jolm McKean, retired U. S. Air Force officer,
He is survived by bis wife,
: Wcnned us tbat lbe 1937 Blue Devil tailback once punted tbe ball Dcris; two SllllS, George, of
: • yards. (Two weeks ago, we printed several school football Springfield, and Jack of Ur! records mmpiled by Blue Devils down through !be years, and bana; a sister, Mrs. Lelia
: listed a 511-fard punt by Tommy ~MIS !be longest punt ever Heilman , Pomeroy; five
• by a GABS player). We cllecked tbe Tribune files, and found that grandchildren, three great•
• 1m Oct. 29, 1937, m tbe Old Academy Field, a halfback by the grandchildren and several
•• name of Jolm McKean booted one 60 yards against visit.L1g nieces and nephews.
Services were cooducled in
• l'llmti'oy, 'Ibatsurely must be the school's longest punt from the
•• lineJl. ik!fimmage. By !be way,GAHSentered that contest with a tbe LiiUeton Flmeral Home at 3
p.m. Saturday in charge of !be
ae~ record, but after !be final whistle sounded, the
•• powerful Pantbers had SCII'ed a 13-0 triumph over the Blue and Rev. Marvin Rettig of the
Wlite. Mare than 2,500 persons, a r~ord home crowd, were on Lawrenceville United (]lurch of
Cllrist. Burial was in Glen
" hillel for tbe game.
Haven Memorial Gardens.
:
+++++
Pallbearers were Keith
:
TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily Tribune McCumber , Gary Fenton,
• IIIII we *If a.Dia Times .... Oyde Hemswortb, 20, strip mine Jackie McCumber, Ronald
• ...-, aoddtiilllly electrocuted on Rt. 21&amp; •... MaiU'ice Grover Sapp, Lemard Palmer, and
~ aectld n.anr of Gallil Olilnty, succeeds Otis Drummond .... Paul Hawk.
: 11. Banld Brown, GABS principal, niuned president of
• llul' nlmJ Ohio Alhlellc IA!ague .... John Frazier appointed
F.dwin Rooth wac ttw fir.'
• . . dty~ mtariaa .... Marietta edges GAllS 1~14 .in
at· J~r to have his name en.
Joolllll iCi ht+ IIV-IIIIIIIe .... Coach Dick Shrider aMOunoes ~ shrined
I~ the Hall of Faint&gt;
..,.. ~ I elblllscbedulf! far Blue Devil cagers. ·
for Great Am~ricans. in J92!i.
1
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GallUJ"

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Roseberry.

Funeral services will be
conducted Monday al 2 p.m.
from tbe Ewing Chapel, witb
burial
in
Burlingham
Cemetery. Friends !!lay call at
the funeral home anytime.
l8l8li8118!i0311"'&amp;
·~:'&amp;W~
·
&amp;'l~8!l~tlliil8!iii8!EIII&gt;:lLII8tiilr;Tl881i$
i. l &gt; l

COLUMBUS ~UPI)
Three of Ohio's top
Cooperative Ellleasloa
Service Ageols were to be
presented dlstlngulsbed
service awards Saturday
night at !be unuaf meetlq
here of tbe National
Assoc iatioo of County
Agricallurel Ageals.
Scheduled to receive tbe
awards were Erie County
Extension Agent Floren
James; Fayette County
Apicallurel Exteoslon Agent
PIIDip L Grover aad Farm
Management Specialist
Herbert Crown of tbe Mt.
Gilead Area Extension
Center.
J.

Maybe Some Help
WASHlNGTON (UPI) - The
U. S. Labor Department said
some " speci~l employment
funds " from the federal
government may be granted to
Ohio to aid in tbe biring of
public service employees in
areas of high unemployment.
Gov. John Gilligan and
several members of the state's
congressional delegation have
complained lhal Ohio was
getting short changed in 1he
distribution of job-making funds
from the federal government.

l~ders_l~ve DO do~t they are
still writing ~ scnp~.
Item: Desptte earner waruingstheywere goingtorollouta
sales. tax increase !ill if tbe
Democrats didn't come VII witb
the votes for an income tax
within 411_b~, tb~ GOP Senate
leadership ts Stelling further to
acc?mmodate new adminislratilll proposals to woo organized labor toward an inccme
lax.

May ~e GillipD
Republican leaders are allowing 1he Gilligan administratim
!0 play out the full string on tbe
UJCcme tax proposal. H it

succeeds, itis labied ''Gilligan's
lsx.'' If it fails, tbe (l()P says
lbe ptlblic doesn't want it cuts
!be budget and raises tbe 'sales .
lax a cOIJII)e of cents.
The longer a ~~~~ is delayed, lbe more intense outside
JftSS11reS become until a permanent agreoment IUilOI1g an
parties can be forged inside tbe
crucible !bat is the Statehouse.

based on their domestic wbeat

allotment
times
their
established farm yield.
. In order to prove yield lor use
tn the 1972 wbeat program, a
farmer must bave harvested
wheat tn 1968, 1969, and 1970 and
provide reliable evidence of the
amount of production from tbe
harvested acreage.
"Acceptable evidence is
limited lo bin measurements,
sales or warehouse recetpls and
summarization of receipts or
scale llckels and summarization of scale tickets from
warehouses or scales used by
!be general public,'' Gilbert

~

&amp;Jv

While the~
ne 1s relativeItem: 'lbe Republican leader- ly mild, last week's actions ciship in botb tbe House and Sen- fered lbe ·first ltint the lawate refused to knuckle under tO makers are l&lt;egilming to get
aoy attempts to force reopening nervous. Tbe lee 1e£obip !mows
great.er ~ SS!ft will fdlow
li state

parks1
·'

Training Days Set
ATHENS - 'lbe Women's
Society of Christian Service of
Athens District of tbe United
Methodist Church will conduct
Leadership Training days
during September.
The first session will be beld
Sept. 16 at Trinity United
Metbodist Church at 105 West
Hunter Street, Logan, Ohio. The
second wiii!Je Sept. 21 at Camp
Francis Asbury near Rio
Grande. Registration and coffee
hour for tbese two meetings will
be at 9 a.m. witb a workshop
starling at 9:30. Those attending are to bring a seck
IWJCh; coffee and dessert may
be purchased.
The final session will be held
Sept. 23 at First United
Methodist Church, College
Street, Athens. Registration
will be at 7 p.m. with a
wtwk81lop at 7:30. A social hour
will foUow. Special speakers

Farmers May Set
Own Wheat y 1e
• ld
GALLIPOLIS - ~armers
everywhere may, tf they
choose, prove tbeir wbeat yield
per acre rather !ban accept tbe
yield established by tbe County
Agricultur_al Stabilization .and
Conservallon (ASC) Corrurntt.ee
on a judgment basis WJder tbe
Agricultural Act of 1970, according to J. Melvin Gilbert,
Chairman of "the Gallia County
ASC Committee.
Tbe yield figure is important
to a farmer, he said, since
growers participating in tbe
wheal program receive
marketing certificate payments

As inviting as it might bave
been, GOP !elders did mhnint
to remove llis ODe bit of 1ft:$Sire which mq eJeatnaii;J' Clll·
tribule to a decisim.
I.egislatnrs in dislriClli emtei!Ug stale pads bave been
beaeged wilb ~ from
their cmslilueata objectilc to
dtmJ~g oflbe parb_

will include African natives wbo
are now students studying in lbe
United States also Mrs. L L
Krantz who ~th 1w husband
Uved ~ worked. in Africa.
Mrs. Krantz will be attired in
!be national dress and wiD bave
an art display depicting lbe
culture of tbe land.-

BOND SET
GALLIPOLIS - Robert
Bowers, 53, Parkersburg, indicted by the Septemlw term ci
!be Gallia. County Grand Jury
for assault with intent to llill.
entered a not guilty plea Friday
afternoon when arraigned
before Cornman Pleas Judge
Ronald R. Calhoun. Bond was
set al $10,000. No !rial date was
set.

1'

Dear Sir:
41 a ~ to tbe Daily Senlimll I feel entilled to write

~--nu;c 1he editorial Ill. page2 of 'lbursday's Sept. bf
tdilial!. Cerlain plinta ci interest to me need cJearin8 VIII. UtUe. I
- wlllltJCIIlnfer to in yotr edilorial, a "career criminal." You
mall! ~ staltmi!Dt that, ''Rarely is !be career criminal able to
&amp;dmit to bil Olm guilt."
.
lllndlllatollea ralberpalbetic and DD!air judgement by YCIU.
lint of us ''clld limon'' bne long ago acmitted our guilt, to the
""!*IIi ml to Olnelfts. Few, if any of us blame society for oor
~ ~ JWuhlitation comes from witbin lbe individual, IKid
IS DDt~ @iflfrom Society. Society is not blamed, as you say, for
_. bei!lfl bl!re, by I!CICiolfll!isl or psyc:bologisls. Not mce in over
~ ~ I bad a professimai penologist lay the blame m
-tr.Iam re!IJI"Nible for my own life, in ar out of society, so
bDw am I put !be blame el:sewbae?
Yoa dBim 111111 it is a rare lbiog fw 0111! of us to feel any
I I •p'hlity for the welfare ci our victims ar tbeir familieS and
lbat tlis obmld lie a part of rebabilitation. ·How cloeS a person
~ ane""' ~certain crimes? -murder, rape, shooting with
intent to lliii.IJIIIDDI"I, cutting wilb intent to till, and so m? How
would Ylll SIQesl we mate amends for 1his type of aime to the
victim cr Ja laiiJily?
1\G" ·w pellple lbi! world over bave tried to find an anner to lbis~JleS~iGD for many years and still bave no answer for
it. Wbat would JQlllllve Ill do?
I, per•.,.IIJ, baveiii!Ver committed a aime ohiolence but
l'ft liwd wi1b u.e wbD bave Clllllllitted soaie of .!be aillws in lbe utlm. I live wilb them now and I can see and feel
wlat ~feel for our ''Society.''
llnl oll!S wisb we were not bae, but we still take tbe
IE5(P'P'hlity for OW actions and CJUr deeds. Jo 1be past 16 year&amp;,
~ 32,0111 mm bave been sent to the Cilia Pemtentiary alllle Ia
tis state. Oar aime rate is 111e of !be nstion's blgbest I clo nat
IUme Society fer 1his! One leams to separate certain parts ofSociety lo put 1be blame oo. I would like to point out to you, .;r,
1hat 1be priall popil•t:IGD is made .., from all walks of life, wbD
mly )~~dot may bave been your neighbor, your dentist, or
yolll' IIM!t"lt:r. Most crimes are not CfiDII!itled by ''polr whites"
cr ''poor Nwb." '!bey are ccmmitted by members of !be oociety
fllliRiivi!wio.Icanmukenoexcuses for my life ofaime, bat I
Jiace lbe blaml! Gil my Olm shoulders and DOt lbe ''free WIJI'ld"
......... I ba'VI! lived witb a few "polilicel" criminals in my time,
bat IIIey- are rare in state priall S)'Biems. ''Big time" gamblers
IIIII ....., paoben are so-called ''state polilicel" Jrisooen..
Nifiriansdobavealargeinfluence on tbis type of criminal; not
Ill palinoliri~
·- · -IDS,' but some.
We as cmvkls do not cmdme tbe acti&lt;IIS of some of our
reno. prisiDers, bat we reserve our judgement of tbem. As a
wllole, the Jqllllallon of the Obio l'ellitentiary would be m..-e than
glad to retuJn to SI!Ciety as useful dlizens oace mare. Your ac·
eepllmce ci 111m as part of society, is 1he biggest step towards his
self.,....hllitatilll. If you accept him back into the ''free world"
as a maml not as an "oddity," be will soon beeline useful and
~odaoctive in lbe community.
I pera•JIIIJ seek Ibis for myself. As you put it in yoor
editorW: ''Pmishmmt
, is a degrading and embittering and

•• ,......,.. ,.,.._._

Ite!D : LegislaUn reapportionml!ilt cards come ont GD
lbe bible nell Friday, and Ibis
may lie as Jmg as lbe GOP

.

Fewcau say wbetber lbe gov:
ernor setlbe_date fer Clllvering
the Democratic • controlled
...,.. ~rwment jJoard in line
wilb lbe time the RepmlicanCC!!Itrolled legjslature migbt be
ripe for smne lrading.
Bat reappcrliCIIIJII!Ilt can be
regarded as another item m 1be
. list li factors leading to
~
a fiscal seftiement.
In smunary, !be ultimate solulioo could go in any me ci
suaal directiCIIS. Bat the Hepublican leadaobipis willq to
~t I* "es build up in tbe belief !bey will puoh fartb a .setdemenl that favors lbe GOP.

»

.-.ilving 01.Funci Raising
Event? Gilrilge S..le?
.Fieil Milrket? ·
We have •..

•Glilssware
• Novelties

· • Toys
·Jokes

Gu.arilnteed Sale on Cansignment.

GIFTLAND
Bidwell, Ohio

s miles from G.-llipolis an

u.s. n.

PHARMACIST

said.
Special provision bas been
made to include wheat
produced on a farm and used for
seed, even though weight
tickets or otber evidence of
production are not available. To
prove wheal yield for use in !be
19rl program, a producer must
file a request at tbe County
ASCS Office between Se_p!ember 1 end Septeplber '!'It,
••
1971. Any producer riling during
this period will be given
"Point Pleasanfs I P~ing Drug Stnre"
reasonable time to obtain proof
of acreage and production, . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __
Gilbert satd.

9:00 A.M. DLL 10:00 P.M.

....

_._._~

~~~;wee.

SEVEN DAYS AWEEK

O'ime is nat aa sjmplr as some people; including criminals,
would line JQl beliew. I bqle you see fit to print lliis letter so
olbln might bow buw ame of "liOCiety's rejects" really feel. 1
will be glad to IIII!WEr any questions you would like to ask of me.
'l1lant fUlL
R 1 lfiJIIJ, Gecqe L Rager 119-tOe, Boa 69, London Prison
~ Fum. Imdan, Obio 43141.
-

FRUTH

PHARMACY

Strip Mining Defended

C'JJotce
, BuiJdt"nta s.ites A lfln.i/ab'-

.---IIJII!l------------~------181'!--~

~

vu..-

'It

Middleport, Obio

Sept. 5, 19'11
Dear Sir:
JiJSt read in lbe Sentinel&amp;bout tbat lady that made !bat trip
by IIIII to Bam~ eo.! Co. slrippng ares.
Did J011 !IOtice abe fwnd fault witb tbe stripping area? Sbe
found fault witb the llllnhr in Cadiz; sbe wanted to koow buw
mneluiher be got fer lis soul. Found fault too witb Mr. Hatcll.
I MM
if abe .-Ill talk lang """'gh !he would bave follld
fault with lbe biB driver. Did abe leln to find fault tbat way
m+inc all crllbat joarlley lbiwgb MDOtena?
I wiD tell ber-thing. when the Hanna Coal Co. gels done
with lbe ~Bit will be in betW obape than before tbey got the coal
wt. ...... Wille, 11ae 1ru!:b I don't tbint baul120 toasor 15 or
9DIIm.IIhi*abemade lbeftigbta liWe stroog. Aslo, abe didn't
telllbere'l*lbaae tndsopen~teon Bwma Coal Co. land. Ibaw
heeD da!Uid tbal&lt;DIIIlry. Just go over !be bill to BeDaire, over
lllnMCh Ill. M 'I. IIIII- some ci tbat reclaiming lla!VIa bas
done.
lllllve heeD 1111 lbat way to Dillonvale, Piney Fart, Germano.
1.._ auelliiC aboallhllt COW!try.I Wlllder if abe bas seea !be
piclltre:l of IIIIIDe oflbe red•iml!w lbe Hanna Coal Co. bas done.
Fur. . more, lbe laws the state ci ado are putting in effect
lbe
will bave to reclaim
they are putting VII em~Ch
cub boadif ~don't lbe state cau do it.
.
Allll!ia "'and that is ldl in bad shape": It is not lbe coal
'"l.,.lij"s fault. It is the state of Ollio's fault. Tbe state bas inspeclllls going uUi!lld wbo are ~ to make a C(]lllpa!ly Uve
1111 to lbe taw.
SD dm't blame lbe alai CQ!Dpany for the shape tbe land in
KJxerdilbiLtlsin obape!W it is. It is !be state's fault. But you
aee, lbe 11.- ci Rq!raentatMs and Senators are bulding
for a sb: ida law w strip mini,..
lfitlllldll!llbem fer strip mining, I don't koow wbat I would
bave daDe. ADd ltbanl!: U.. ...,pany I worked
Bill I hope Ibis lady does nat find SO much fault with com·
paniro lilae tbe Hamw o.l Co. '!bey bave been in strip min!,., I
tadwe toii,J, 3iJECL IIBJbe abe went juat to find fault. Maybe
itftllld la-ve paldber to staybome and do ber bouework.

W

na•••ny

Rodney Vzllage
The above aerial photograph
development and was formerly
farm, located on Rt. 35, just four
Holzer Medical Center and the
Fairgrounds.
TREV A BOCKMAN b11
rec:eived a tutlou award lo
pursue cosmetology lralDIDg
at the Ohio State Scbool of
Cosmetology in Columbus.
Miss Hockman was one of the
winners from over 3G8 Oblo- ·
area appUcanls, selected ou
the llllsls of recemmeadatl~
of ber bigb school officialB,
aad rauk at the top Ia
evaluations
by
tbe
Scbolanblp Board of tbe Oblo
State School. Miss Hockmau
is the daughter of Mr. aad
~- Homer Hockman and
resides with ber pareols at
Route I, Cbesblre.

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

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

Yoaralnily,
A Friend oflbe sb:ip-mloiag operators,

Bell Batey.

Ef1M in Big, Bad Ciliea• •••
'

-4Mi.~
~GJMi

_

t.llw

lh,.,TA&amp;.

6oii LU~s

fZJ

Rodney.Village

•

tAll THOMAS

AND SON

.

Dear Sir:

rm_,,..tBolltMIIII!Ibq,udafrieadsuuested lhllti
write a 'leaS- to !be tdiklr. Tbe t1*Jg I'm so upeet about is tile
llllb:J,1•
litaatne m puiDc dllplay in our loella~Gres.
Webne beeDftiJ four,_-s, IIIII ba"VE just recently mmoavveded
llldt 11ame, IIIII I Clllln tis 11,J, I bave De9Er been so shoc:lred
Ia IDJ lie. Wbea yuu go ID cbect oat your IP'IJ(erlea, r!Pt in front
olJIIQaadyolll'fillleclildrell too, II outud out JMDOgl'afllly lbat
tiua ,.....,_ llllllinfl to tbe imlgillltilll. In one store it's
rfclltlide by llidt wilb dlildren's boob!
Petple 1n our 1111a11 fDw!ll are always md"• tbe Jig bad
dlldl, bDt In lbe dtr they bave !beE tiild ol boob in Ullt boot
s111res wl&amp;e Jllll llllve to be IIID ba7 lien. My sou found !be
1 1 . ed ... lo bQ bere iUJ! QJald you £11-e WC1i111 me as to
wlatl,. m . . . . olfoar, cudotobelp eet lbil mth off lbe rac:b,
_ , fnm lbe iqa 1 ....,.. lllindJ ci 01r ycr...en?
'l'balllt You,
Mrs.CHnton hilt
p .s. !7 ;'be lb!!re'l other cwcaned IIIIJthe a wbD feel aa I do
lilaiatllil.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
'.

for

for.

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

I

Jc ' ... lie llpoe'l

'I

rw. Names may

lli'wl.,...~: 1M ·-.Mwent', a ft!JIIftt. Leiters
Ill Jlllela&amp;... ._.., u
1&amp;--.,aolpenoaalilies.

Sept:s,im

~--1

needs lo stan.

_. ..tile

lmdmOlrredlmal Insli!Wm

Senate Plfl!idtilt Pro Ttmpore TbecJdq'e N. Gray, RPlq118, ccmullold .tilt ladersltip
em.
ltcild_ out. .R"as lang asII
_.,_
•

....:;

Opi~ion

ReapolUibilily Accepted

fnm scbool 11101111" ud othen. ·

Hru.~

BEGINS OAPSE DUTIES
LANCASTER
Fred
Haynes, Lancaster, is one of
five newly appointed field
representatives for the Ohio
Association of Public Scbool
Employees (OAPSE). Haynes
bas been assigned an 11-eounty
area comprised of Athens,
Fairfield , Hocking, Licking,
Meigs, Monroe, Morgan,
Muskingum, Noble, Perry and
Washington counties.

Letters:

lBIIn I( J' In 1 tit a t d. 'l'loey IIIHid lie less
. . . . . . . . . (•lle•Jed .. !tl tleabytbtediler)

(UPIJ-Sia!c
Uquor Di=lor Richard E .
GUJ:J:enheim says !be t..,..
mon!b experiment in selling
liquor by the use at a
disceunt ""a.ppears to have

---------------------------·

TAHEAIDOK.IE Ioo:Hl'OODPDI~

been ertremely .s~Kcesslul''
- as to inueasing sales ~

Plea for Den Mothers .
· q,m LeiB

&lt;:::ute::WH~

'JIH....

(;ULU~IBUS

but a resumption depends on
conclusion of an in-deptb
analysis.
During tbe lwo-monlh
period Ohio's total liquor
sales climbed to $5!.27
miUioo, compim,d to $49.5%
Dllllion for Jbe same period in
1970. Total gallonage sold in
lbe two-months was 2.26
million compared to 2.12
miHion in !be same period of
1970•. Tbere was no breakdown on bow mucb or tbe gain
10'as from case lot sales.

ID ICwJdlepcwt Pareuts:

lnSoptrmlri (dalewDIMnyet), Pack 2e will bavea day to
f"«&lt;•li!l" any boyeptymrsaldand up wishing to join Scouts.
Hi is in neal ol illlft deD motlleni- AU it takes is one I
bola- a week ml your I* u:e at our IIIII! pac~ meeting each 1
monlb.
' ) lbougbtiCIIlldn'tllea den mother eitber, but it really isn't
bard wtft,jllsta HlllepalieDce.From my own experience, I bave
!wad that SWutiJc can lie a lot of fun and that sometimes
scouliligean belp lbeadaltsoouter. l know tbey did in my case. I
1re J1111 that wben a- Hille boys are looking up to you for
gulc!!MIC'e tbat they respect you not only far your being a den
mother but also bee """ they are a group of boys working
t,.etber. Tbeyleml toiDve,bonorandrespect lbelr God, flag and
COIIIIIrj • •tps lppljwC a hefping band to Jess fcrtunate people, 8io§1!!11811-81!811Hfllll8 8!8!1lil!il'fllll''.ll!a81&amp;!'8&amp;l::ll8is:M~
·
dogooddeedsand&lt;Dfts!lvarious kinds, besides setting a goal in
AWARDED BADGE
life mll1!8dliQg it. Tbat is wbere a scout learns !bat manpower
POMEROY
Army
begins wilb boy power.
Specialis! Four Danny J . Smith,
Parenlls, please, I urge you, get behind your boys and do aU 21, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray H.
you can for PadE 215 in Kd!!qMrt. Novr that scllool bas started Smith, Union Terrace Route 4
and S0 M"" is over, there really isn't too mucl) a boy can do recenUy received
combai
ueept for his scbool activities and scouting. Let your boys join infantry badge wbile serving
our scout pacta let lbem knoor you are behind them 100 per with the JOist Airborne Division
(Airmobile) in Vielnam. Spec.
cent an oflbe ~Tbe dale ci SCQlt registration far scouts will be announced Smith is a radio telephone
operator in Company C, 2D
later.
Eulab F'ri!OOs. Battalion, 506tb Infantry.

Pam

u..;

252

THII~D

AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

OPEN 9 A.M. T09 P.M. MONDAYtHRU SATURDAY

PRICES EFFECTIVE AT THIS STORE OILY!

ARMOUR*STAR. U.S.D.A•.GRADED CHOICE
, S. Govl.
Inspect..

USDA

CHOICE

OUND

TEAK lb.
POMEROY11GERS - Frunt,l tor, Kelly Hawk, Danny Morris, Randy Marshall, Rick
Jolmon,LutberBievins,MartSlali!l"; back row, Randy Lyons, Jobn Partlow Dale Browning
1bn Sdles, David Blake, BOOby McClure, Mr. Sonny McClure, manager. A.;..,nt were B~
. Carmen, Donnie Icemower, aol managP.r, Mr. R. J. Browning.

Champs, Families at Picnic
POMEROY- Tbe l'waoy
Tigers, little league champs in
Pomeroy, were presented
trophies at a piatic Thursday al
tbe new roadside )ii'B Ill Rt. 33.
Approximately 541 team
members and relatives at.
tended. Mrs. Nancy Morris was
chairman of tbe picnic.
Devotions were giYeD by tbe

Racine

.

Rev. Fred Hill .
Sonny McClure, team
manager, !banked the team and
parents for tbe fine cooperation
extended him during the
season. McClure also !banked
R. J. Browning, assistant
manager, ftw his work with the
pitching staff.
1bn Sdtes and Jobn Parllow
'

~ial

Events

llyMn.FraarlsMonts
Mrs. Fern Gilmore of
Columbus and Mr. ml Mrs.
Price Wolfe crl Iaington spent
several days wilb their sister,
Mrs. HaiEI Camaban.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Gould ol
Marietta and Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Lake, Lori and Sean, of
Columbus spent Sunday witb
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Morris.
Mr. and Mrs. a,deCnmand

CARPET·
SPECIAL
.95

Padding
and Labor

INCLUDED

Danny Bush at Larain. Mr.
Roush Visited his new granddaughter' Larelli Roush, ben

WE ALSO HAVE •.•

e ARMSTRONGVINYL QUUERTONE
UltOI.EUM. 9 &amp; 12 WIDTHS
e ARMSIIONG VINYL CUSHION

STOKELY

CATSUP
14-oz. Bottles
•

STOKELY

TO JUICE
1-Qt. 14-oz. Ca n

MUSSELMANrS

APPLE SAUCE
16%-oz. Cans

Sunshine

STOKELY FEATURES

Hydroa Cookies

Cit Green Beals , , . . . . . •.. . . 1-lb. can 27'
Whale Kenel Cern . . . . . . . 1-lb. 1-oz. can 25'

14~·0Z. 49~
Pkg.

Sunshine

Fruit Cocktail . . ...••..•. Hb. 1-o•. can 31'
Y.C. Sliced Peaches . . . . . • . , . a oz. can 19'
Tomato Sauce ......... , . . . a-oz. con 12'

Hi Ita Crackers
t ·lb.

Pkg.

I IR&amp;IRIIE

AX ION

1-lb.
Otn.

PRE-SOAK
1-lb. 9-oz.
Pkg.

79c

Rre Saltines
1-lb. 49~
Pkg.

AJAX

,.,,

1-Pt. 6-oz.
A....

............. ..,5
. G.llipelis

3 1~

KEEBLER

FOLGER'S

Dishwashing Lic:qid
142

49~

'lLOE BONNET

ROOt UNOLEUM•

Sept. 3. Parents ue Mr. and
Mrs. Dsvid Rousb, Oohnnlw!o.
Cbarlotte C u s b m " " was
the &amp;rst member of the
theatrical profession -whose
name was placed in the Hall
of Fame i:or Great Ameri~ans, in 19l5.

head

Mr. and Mrs. Bud Simpson of
Pomeroy spent Labor Day with
Weekend guests of Mr. and his mother, Mrs. Grette SimpMrs. Otis Bailey were Mr. and son.
Mrs. AlbertWigal,sOil'!George, Mr. and Mrs. Chester SimpBany and Bryan, of Prospect, son, !$abel Simpson, Mr. and
Mr. andMrs. Charles,smith and Mrs. Pete Shields, Mr. and Mrs.
Deah of Greenwich, Mr. and Herbert Sayre, Dave Sayre and
Mrs. Ted Bailey and three Dorotby GleM spent Sunday
cbildren of GaUipolis. Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Styer at
dinner guests included Mr. and Waterford. ~t.er a bountiful
Mrs. Lawrence Theiss of dinner !bey enjoyed boating,
Vmton.
'
skiing and swimming.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;;_ _

son, Roy, of Co)mnlm spent a
couple of days wilb Mrs. ·
Boward Neigler and other
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Otis McOintock
spent tbe weekend in Cnhgnhus
witb Mr. and Mrs. Bob Rousb
and daugllter and attended !be
state fair.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve CleJI'Dd,
Vince and Ryan, of C)llnmbas
were weekend guests of tbeir
p!irents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Cleland and Mrs. Anna W'IIII!S.
Melvin RifiJe of Cohnobus
spent a w I eu.t wilb Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Riffle.
Mr. and Mrs. C2larles Rausch
of Westfield, N. J ., speut
several'days witb his sista- and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Rusb
Philson.
Mrs. lillian .Trriden retmbtd
sq. yd.
home from a visit in Albeas
and up
with ber SOD, 1):. and Mrs.
Charles Jividen.
Minimum 20 Sq. Yds.
Mrs. Ann Coe spent a week in
NyiOI). Polyester. Acrilan, Herculon. Over 500
Gabanna wllb llr. and Mrs.
colors and patterns to select from. Come in
Dave 'lbamas..
today and make your selection.
T-Sgt. and Mrs. Steven
INDOOR-oUTDOOR CARPET
Jacobs and ebiJdreD ci Lockbourne Air Rue spent ~
NOT
Day witb his gn.1•\• euls, Mr.
INCLUDED IN TH IS SPECIAL!
ml Mrs. llem'y Rousb ml

Mildred.
Dale Roush and Adria SQre
visited over Labor Day
we elaol wilb Mr. ml Mrs.

ICEBERG
LETTUCE

who played with tbe Tigers in
1970 were honored with a roWJd
of applause .
On behalf of team, Jack Scites
presented gifts to McClure and
Mrs. BrowninJ: wbo accepted
lhe gift in lbe absence of ber
husband. FoUowing the picnic,
the men played the boys a game
of footbaU .

COFFEE

63'-

2~b..

c .~

\

, 75 '

�'

.Installation of
Officers is Held
MIDDLEPORT - A can·
dlelight installation ceremony
for the new oflicers and a
workshop on making velvet
roses by a guest demonstrator
highlighted the September
mee ting of the · Middleport
Amateur Gardeners.
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
WaLte r Crooks, Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds installed ihe officers
Mrs. Harry Moore ,
president ; Mrs. Roger Morgan,
vice president; Mrs. L. .E.
Reynolds, secretary ; and Mrs.
Eddie Burkett, treasurer. Each
of the officers was presented
with a corsage.
Mrs. Roy Holter, Chester
Garden Club member, condueled the workshop with all of
the members participating. She
was presented with a gift of
appreciation.
Welcomed
into
club
membership was Mrs. S. T.
Smith. The resignations from
membership of .Mrs . Glen
Lambert and Mrs . Larry
Spencer were accepted with
regret. Mrs. Spencer will be
moving later this month to
Louisville, Ky.
A letter was read from Mrs.
Fred Blaetinar, county contact
chairman, announcing a Meigs
County Garden Club meeting
for 8 p.m. on Sept. 27 at the
Pomeroy United Methodist

Mrs. Thomas Daniel Crow

Church. Also announced was
lhe Rutland Friendly G.a rdeners flow er show held
yesterday.
The Civic committee reported
on village plantings and noted
that a work session will be held
in the near future. Mrs. Grace
Pratt, by-laws chairman, gave
the second and third reading of
the revised by-laws which were
accepted by the club.
A report was given on the
Meigs County Fair flower show
and it was noted that Mrs. L. E.
Reynolds, Mrs. Pearl Reynolds,
Mrs. Harry Moore, Mrs.
Spencer, Mrs. Harold Lohse,
and Mrs. Nina Bland had
participated.
Mrs. Crooks opened the
meeting with verses from a
booklet entitled "Friendship
Thoughts." Mrs. Moore condueled the business meeting.
Refreshments of cake,
homemade sherbet and spiced
nuts were served by Mrs.
Crooks and her special committee composed of Mrs.
Charlotte Taunton, Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds, Mrs . Pratt, Mrs.
Wesley Fry, and Mrs. L. E.
Reynolds. Arrangements of
mwns· and dahlias were used
throughout the Crooks home.
Mrs. Moore presided at the
silver coffee service .

11- The &amp;mday Times -Sentinel, Smday, Sept. 12, 1971

Personality Profile
POMEROY - Twenty-one year old Debbie. "It's their organization, their
Debbie King Fiqlaw is probably· Ohio's program," she expla!Jied, "and i ~ is my
youngest guardian of a Bethel in the In- function to give guidance."
ternatjonal Order of Job's Daughters.
Thomas Edwards is the associate
Enthused with the challenge it presents, garden of the Bethel.
Debbie assumes the advisory position of
Debbie, her husband, Stephen, who is
guardian of Pomeroy's Bethel 62 and the associated with his father, Richard
responsibility of developing a program Finlaw, in Gravely Tractor Sales, and
geared to teenage interest tomorrow night. their six-month-&lt;Jid daughter, Heather,
The organization and its program reside in Pomeroy.
aimed as teaching love and loyalty to God ·
A graduate of Middleport High School,
and country, a sense of responsibility, Debbie attended Rio Grande ~ollege a
leadership qualities, and citizenship, is not year belore taking employment in the
new to Debbie.
office of Imperial Electric. She quit work
For six years she was an active before her daughter was born and says she
member of the Pomeroy Bethel, is a past is perfectly satisfied doing things around
honored queen, and iS currently a mjaority the house and with her family.
member participating regularly in inDebbie loves to cook, bake and sew,
stallation and initiation ceremonies.
and this summer tried her hand at canning
Despite the closeness of her age to the and preserving. She makes aU of her own
· "Jobies" who range from 12 to 18, Debbie clothes, and sews some things for her
expects no discipline problems. She says husband and daughter.
She is a member of the Ohio Eta Phi
approximately 30 of the 60 members of
. Meigs County, with one 'or two of Mason Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi, Evangeline
. County, are active.
Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star, and
"I know and like the girls and just the Bradbury Church of Christ.
don ' t anticipate any problem," said

Family Reunion At State Park
RACINE - The descendants
of the late Walter Roush and
Mrs. Edna Roush of Racine held
a family rewlion at State Park
oil Rt. 33 Sunday.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Walter McDade, Kim and Gene
Early of Troy ; Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Roush and son Roger,
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Roush,

Vows Taken August 7R · . t
. . ·
. atzen s Remembered - - POMEROY - MISS Carol Ann Stout and Mr. Thomas Daniel
Crow exchanged wedding vows in a double ring ceremony at the
United MethodistChurchinSparta,N. C. on Aug. 7.
The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Jean Stout, Syracuse, and
the late Robert Stout, Jr. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. ThtmasD. Crow, Pomeroy. The Rev. RayS. Cody officiated
at.the wedding.
For ber wedding the bride wore a white crepe dress fashioned
withlongpuffysleeves,anemjirewaist lrirnmed with blue satin.
The new Mrs. Crow will graduate !run Marshall University
In June, 1972. Mr. Crow recently lransferred from Marshall
University to Ohio University. He served two years in the U. S.
Navy.
Following thelr wedding, the couple traveled to Fort
·Lauderdale, Fla., for a hooeymoon. They will reside at 3510\2,
Roote 00 East, Huntington, W. Va.

Goeglein-Pickens
Vfedding Day Set
POMEROY - Plans for the
open church wedding of Miss
Patty Ann Goeglein, daughter
of Mr: and Mrs. Albert E.
Goeglem, ~eroy, to Mr. Ray
~ Pickens, son of Mrs.
Elizabeth Pickens, Colwnbus,
and Dr. R. R. Pickens, Mid·
dleport; have been completed.
The wedding will be an event
of Saturday, Sept. 25, at 6:30
p.m. preceded by a half-hour of
nuptial music in the First
Baptist Church, Middlepo~t.
The Rev. Charles Simon will
officia~. The reception will
follow m the social room of the
church.
Miss Goeglein has chosen

Brown-Mayes
• ne
U Jd
Reunton

MIDDLEPORT - Gifts for
the patients at the Southeastern
Ohio Mental Health Center were
presented by members of the
Philathea Women of the Mid·
dleport Church of Christ at a
meeting Thursday night.
It was reported during the
meeting conducted by Mrs.
Grace Pratt that $100 had been
turned into the building fund,
the amount representing
proceeds from a bake sale and
the remainder of the curtain
fund . A rummage sale was
planned for Nov. 4, 5and 6 in the
Fry building.
Mrs. Norman Yeauger and
Mrs. Denver Rice were ap·
pointed chairmen for a
reception on Oct. 3 at the church
to honor Mrs. Mary Martin,
departemental chapeau of the
Eight and Forty. An invitation
to the reception was extended at

the meeting.
Mrs . Marvin Kelly was
welcomed as a oew member.
Mrs. Pratt thanked Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds for a reception at the
recent Elardo wedding. A
contribution from the family
was acknowledged. Miss
Mildred Hawley was appointed
to purchase hostess trays for
use at the church.
Tentative plans were made
for the women to serve the
Homebuilders annual banquet
on the third Tuesday of
November. The motherdaughter banquel was set for
Oct. 14 and will be a potluck
affair.
Reported ill were Homer
Rice, Mrs. David Farmer, Miss
Fran.ces Roush, Mrs. Minerva
Childers, Mrs. Leo Searles,
Mrs. Bessie Ashley, Miss Mabel
Hysell, and Dallas Lightfoot.

u~.

EddY'S Sched-·'
rue
POMEROY - Mr . Eddy
Educator's schedule for the
week of September 13th, in
Meigs County:
MONDAY
9-10:25,
Salisbury; 4:3Q.li, School Lot;
5: 15-6, Carpenter; 6:30-7,
Harrisvonville ; 7:30-8, Wolf
Pen.
TUESDAY -12:3o-3, Racine ;
3:15-3:30, Wagner's; 4-4:30,
Harden's; 4:45-5:30, Rizer's ;
5:45-6:45, Forest Run ; 7-7:30,
Minersville; 7:45-8:15, Naomi.
THURSDAY 9-10:30,
Syracuse; 11-11 :15, Antiquity;
12-2, Letart; 2:15-4, East
Letart; 5-5:30, Apple Grove; S.
7, Great Bend; 7:30-8:30,
Syracuse P.O.
FRIDAY _ 9-2:30, Pomero~,
Ele.; 3-3:30, Pomeroy Library.
- - - - -----Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush and
Kelly, Mrs. Jack Hesson and
sons and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Roush.

I

Our Scheduled Price Increase will not be made
due to the recent '"Price Freeze."

.

Meigs County Branch of The
Athens County Savings &amp;
loan Co.
296 Second Sf.
Pnmeroy, Ohi o
Member Federal Home Loa n

Bank

Member F4:der al Sav ings &amp;

Loan Insurance Corpor a tion .
All accounts insur ed up ro
S20,000.00.

'

PAUL HAPTONSTAILHAS ISSUED a last call for orders of
the record of the late Rev. Howard Ruppe]t's songs. Sept. 17ls the
deadline for placing orders for the $6 10-m. record whieb will be
made from Paul's personal tapes at the First United Presbyterian Chtirch while the Rev. Mr. Ruppel! pastored there.
Orders maybe placed with the Haptonstalls, Mrs. Micbael Zirlde,
mcMiss Pl!yllisJoachim. The record willbecutootbe 18th.

Mrs. Barnhart is Honored
Harvey Van Vranken, Mrs.
Paul Taylor, Mrs. Ellen Couch,
Mrs. Robert Kuhn, Mrs. Joe
Cook, Mrs. L. P. Sterrett, Mrs.
Harry Bailey, Mrs. Carver
Williams and daughter, Dawn,
Mis.&lt; Bonnie Walker, Mrs. Ivan
Walker, Mrs. William Barnhart, Miss Elaine ~­
Others presenting gifts to
Mrs. Barnhart were Mrs.
Tommr Hysell, Mrs. George
Skinner, Mrs. T. T. Shelton,
Mrs. Robe~t Arnold, .~rs .
William Shendan, Mrs: William
Bennett, Mrs. Orval Wiles, Mrs.
Dwight Parker, Mrs. E. T.
Greenlee, Mrs. Mildred Tubbs,
Mrs. E. E. Follrod, Mrs.
. MIDDLEPORT - Fall ac- William Watson, Mrs. Leslie
tiv1ties were cliscussed durmg a Price and Mrs. Dale Smith.
meeting of Pack 245 of Mid'
dleport at the municipal park

-

Tu;~a~e~i~:~:~s

of Mrs.
Milford Hysell, Mrs . Jean
Thomas and Mrs . Larry
Spencer as den mothers were
noted. Mrs. Linda Lane and
Mrs. Jean Kelly will serve _as
den mothers for Den 4, With
Mrs. Frances Whittington .an4
M~s. Sharon Doss to continue
With Den 2 and Mrs. Eulah
Francis with Den 3. Refreshments were served.

EARN

.

.,

HERE FOR THE PAS!' TWO YEARS, the Larry Spencer
family will move to Louisville, Ky. the latter part of this mooth.
Currently they are getting loose ends together, no easy cllore
when you've been as active and involved as this family
. Larry is leaving his employment with the Investor's Diversified Service and will begin work soon with Kremers Urban, a
pharmaceutical company in Louisville. Since coming to Mid·
dleport, Larry has been scoubnaster of Bny Seoul Troop 245 and is
currently oo the veslry at Grace EPiscopal Churcb wbere the
family has been active.
'
President of the Middleport P .T .A., Judy plans to resign soon
but not until after things are pretty well lined up fw the scbool
year. She is also in the process of completing book selection and
assignments for the MiddJePoct literary Club of which sbe is vice
president. She has already given up her Brownie and CUb scout
work, and resigned from the Middleport Amateur Gardeners.
The four children, Dale, an eighth grader, Dean, a fifth
grader, Laurel in the fourth, and Clristina in the second, have all
been active in scout work. The family is sure to be missed here.

POMEROY
A
miscellaneous shower was held
recently honoring Mrs. Wayne
Barnhart at the home of her
husband's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. William Barnhart.
Mrs. Oliver Michael and Mrs.
Waid Gorby hosted the shower.
.Games were pl4yetl with pl'lies
going to Mrs. J . Edward Foster,
Mrs. Charles Werry, and Mrs.
William Stivers. Punch, cake,
and mints were served. At.
tending besides those named
were Mrs. Harold Norton, Mrs.

NOW! Is the time to buy.

Build while you live, The chances ore nearly three to one that your wife will survive you, If she does she will
have over a hundred heart-rending duties to perform ... all within twenty-four hours. There is no finer way
to prove your devotion than to suggest that you perform two of those duties now, together, rather than
leave them for her to do alone •.

Happy Birthday

Serving: O.llipalis,
Pomeroy, Middllpart

Debbie Finlaw

granite. i
. companion type
scroll and open books. The scroll
design depicts beautiful trees, water and the setting sun overlooking Rolling Hills. The gleaming polished front enhances the

Say

Ducley's Fbist

POMEROY - Steamboats - at least the Sternwbeela'
&amp;lwaMe - were built in MiddiepcJrt around 1110, but several
lidtimers we've asked, have absolutely no recollection ~ boat
building facilities in Middlep&lt;rt. Perhaps you do.
Imagine the surprise when .fun and Gloria Arnold and their
two daughters cliscovered a plaque in · the Greenfield Village
Musemn at Dearborn, Mich. which reads:
"Steamboat &amp;lwanne, the lriginal sternwheel steamboat
Qlwanne was built in 1880 at Middlepor-t, Obio.lJsed by 'l1Kmu
Edison on the Swt'anne and other Florida rivers, this vessel wu
rebuilt in 1929 for operation at Greenfield Vlllage."
.run, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Arnold, MitiDepocl, sent hla
parents a picture of bis daughter, Laura, standing beside the
plaque. He also i"'nt a postcard which says !bat the steampowend
sternwheeler was named for a boat used by ThOOiaS A. Edi8oD
when he worked at Fort Myers, Fla., and after that boat sank, ita ·
engines were raised and inatalled in the present vessel cons1ructed at Middleport.
Incidentally, the &amp;lwaMe is in operatioo at Greenfield
VIllage and visitors are able to take short trips oo it.
Several Middleport residents recall docking and barge
building facilities at the river end of Dock St. in the late lim!!, but
nobody we've talked to recalls any steamboat building.

CLUB MEETS
NEW HAVEN- Mrs. Uoyd
Roush entertained members of
the Julia T. Bryant Sewing Club
Tuesday afternoon at her home.
Attending were Mrs. F. A.
Batey, Mrs. John C. Fry, Mrs.
J. W. McMurray, Mrs. James
MacKnight, Mrs. Emil Knight,
Mrs. Donald A. Smith, Mrs.
Howard Wagenhals, Mrs.
Herman Layne, Mrs. Ollie
Roush and the hostess. The next
meeting wiD be held on Sept. 14
at the home of Mrs. Donald A.
Smith in Hartford.

4%%

With A
Vase Arrangement
Dnignod By

Charlene Hoeflich

memorials natural beauty.

·

00

ROTARY MET
NEW HAVEN - The regular
dinner meeting of the New
Haven Rotary Club was held
Thursday evening , followed
with a short business session.
Members attending were Dick
Ord, John Thorne, Harry
Miller, James N. Roush, Don
Foglesong, Russell Capehart,
Rome Williamson, Donald F.
Roush, Herman Layne, Rev.
William DeMoss, Uoyd Roush,
Karl Wiles and George Ingels.

·

ssooo Down
s20°0 Monthly

'
most.

IQ!W C»uERS ol ReC1n " - " - . . . = zl , 0 J+ss Ill tile Amel:iull
Jlmiulim presiding at Friday's meetjq:were,WtlorigN..IIr.s.. IMaaii!G&lt;n, biotorian; Mrs.
J. Edward Foster, regeot; Mrs. Nancy Reed, lreliswe'; llliss I ••De :omtb. m regent, and

Mrs. J. E. Harley, secntary.

Part11
Given for
:1'
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Werry entertained
recently with a party honoring
their daughter, Debbie, on ber
birthday anniversary.
The party was held at the
Second Ward Fire House which
was decorated in pink and white
with multi-colored balloons
making up the centerpeice.
Games were played with
prizes going · to Melinda
Thomas, Jamie Sisson, Ray
Werry, and Danny WiD. Cake,
ice cream, and wangeade were
served. Favors were balloons
and horns.
Other guests were Lori
Hudson, Mrs. Larry Hudsm,
Angela Grueser and Mrs. Jolm
Grueser, Kathy Pickens and
Mrs. Harry Pickens, Mike
Thomas, Ray and Eddie Werry
and Mrs. Phillip Werry, J~
Sisson and Mrs. J"un Silmon,
Danny Will, Lori Ann Wood, and
Mrs., Heary Werry. Mr. and
Mrs. Pat Wood joined the group
later. Sending a gift was Mistee
Dawn Grueser.
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
·Mrs. Herman Wince and
children, Gerald and Brenda of
Sabina were recent visitors of
Mrs. Mae Van Inwagen and
other area relatives.

1

HEATING
AND CENTRAL
AIR CONDITIONING
GAS - OIL - ELECTRIC
eFREE ESTIMATES
eFREE DELIVERY
•EASY TERMS
··SALES AND SERVICE

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT
MIDDLEPORT 0.

1
1
I
I
I
I

l

!\ume ... ;..............................................................

I
:

=~nited

I
I

~
1

1

l

:

:Street ur Houle .......;............................................

:

:

City or 'l'o~ n ................................... Phone..........

I

d.,.

inllnchtntinc.
.
• Woo.Mr end
lid! do 1 fomiiJ·siu loAd ot lhl 11m1 time ~ tndependenliJ.
• 2-SpeiCI Wuher. Rot!:'r plus
Dtliclte ..Uinp for tlil
tomily.wo- must have.

'bility 1

• Perm•nent Prell C1re in both

w-and Dryer.

POMEROY, OHIO
Meigs County Display Yard Near
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
LEO L VAUGHN, MGR.
Phone 992-2588

VINTON, OHIO

•389'

5

Gallia County Display Yard
JAMES 0. BUSH,
MANAGER
Phone 388-8603

FURNITURE

BAKER
__.......___

OPEN EVENINGS I. SUNDA Y5 BY APPOINTMENT

Mrs. Nan MIIIR is dllinaa ollbe IDI:al GIRnance ftr
Return JonalbaD lkics a 4+s. ~ sbe balds a
Jrncl•matim sigpd llf .,... c. 0. ?i • • and a booklet
entitled ''Your LaDd :md lliae'" beiltg distributed by the
Western and SI&gt;Jdhan bwaace 01.

·

'}"'J
IIIIIlDl.EI'OKf - A party
was held recently honoring
Timulllt MiiiH 111 his fifth
IMihda.r at the 111me of bis

POMER~~ER

eighth distcict cOIIIIIWider,
scheduied to be present.
Refreshments. All members
urged to attend.
REVIVAL SERVICES,

• . board member. will betbe pl5l

speaker. Jlaton ... ·.s ""''
will also be featured.

•

JHS

i•

ies~

YISir HEBE
IIIIDillEPOKI' _ Mrs. Leo

lidwads-uute lo bes-bomein
h, Florida. and ber
'
ll!tt 11r5. Bilall Urban of
~. Rft: m&gt;!llt visitors
of llr. ...: Ills. tames Arnold,
V'..lq a t., and olbeuelatives.
'IIIey aJsD 'filited MrS. Laura
llntlw) , H,. will. remaim&lt; a
palimt al Ve!ttans Memorial
11o "tal
•
IMiani B

Boots are right on today. And the toughest boots of all are
these new Hugh Puppies (r) . Look them over. Squared
toe. Step into a pair of Hush Puppies boots today, you
may never wear shoes again.
Red, .White and Blue. Brown leather &amp; suede combination. From about $18.00.

6j

PAIUINIS WISifED

~tiomtripfii Niaprl!Falls, a

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

\c

sigN

and mls

trip into Canada
in .....,.,..,.

Will' 1BE DYES
iNEW HAYEN - Mr. and

Mrs. Genld Ged acb and f.unlly
of O.,a~Ji«;i Falls, Obio are
mlillc Ur. and Mrs. William
~

Sti .

p

Open All Day Thursdays
Open Fri. Night til9
Middle of Upper Block

Pameroy

. 0."'-"1......,..,

.,.Miiltl ..,_.

L..!&amp;~.=~ca:.··~·~-v:•:·.-J 1---------~--~---------::---•..ii.
•

••

'remore
slloes.
They're .

~-

begiMing Monday, ~ . - - - - - - - - ,
Christian Church_, Charles
Norris, evangelist. Services,
7:30 each evening., Pllhlir
The Gentle Touch
wel&amp;me. 1
That Means Sa Mud1
nJESDAY
446-lm
OHIO ETA PHI Sourity
C.I U..For
Tuesday 1:15 p.m.. at O ~wnlw
tn-1561
and Southern Obio Eledrir Co.
y_.,_lletds
SYRACUSE P.T.A. 'l'l!esday
7:30p.m., David Nnse , sdltd
-t_

BAHR CLOTHIERS

Celebrated

Jlriiln.

~

Butternut Ave. Nral ~.

• tnotoll II when the •••" io-

LOGAN MONUMENT 00., INC.

Amer\CaD Ren~Riian 1111
OntiiDtian weet. This
year's oo •we baJs ._•Uribe .at af Sepll7-1J.

!MIDDI.EI'OBT - Mr. and
llrs. James Arnold and
daagbters, Cincinnati, were
- t g.sls of lis parents.
'!lleyftftaawt.e llonipafter a

kilcliln bolll, nunery . • • OtlywMN.
you co~ pt ll'illl- wirir&amp; plumll-

·-------------------------~

l.r tile Doqjdfts. of

IDI'iStliUIU WW- '

RIJTLAND P.T.A. '/:JO -p.m.

(Only 2feet wide)_

Simply mail ihe convenient coupon ••• write ••• or come in.
Transportation gladly furnished to and from any of our
showrooms without obligotion.

Betty Rose.

Monday, Rutland EJen-n'-Y
gymnasiwn. New teacllen will
be introduced. Parents m'glli lo
attend.
SALEM CENTER P .T.A.
Monday7:3Dp.m.atsdlool.f.ll
and Fairexbibitswillbe*-..
MEIGS CHAP'I'ER 53, DAV.
7:30 p.m. Monday at borne ..,

Fits
anywhere.

You can make this family maHer~ family decision, so all con
have the satisfaction of knowin11 additional strain will noi be
placed upon theshaulders of loved ones at the •ery time they
are least able to cope with it. Select your memorial now!

'97.50

JllftDis. Ur. and
Russell
E. MiiiH.
Games nrr played with
prill:s gGing to Carol Bailey,
Rhonda Clxll, Wilma Cook,
RidwdCixll, Craig Darst. and
Dlrin ~ Ice cream and
cab Rft: sen ed to those
'A""I 11111 'llmotby's grand11 _.ha , Jir$. Gallt* Millel',
Ns -t.. Mrs. Carl Roach,
Tnd.r s-11, Karm Bailey,
Cmrir !laile7, Carol Simons,
and Tila lllillel'.

~·

Why wait unlil next week, next month or perhaps next year? Redudions are now!

AT BAHR
CLOtHIERS

Failh
of
Non..IJenominational Cburch, Commerce Monday at IIOllll,
Middleport-Pomeroy By-Pass; Bnwers Restaurant
:1'
2 p.m. Sunday. BisseD Bcothers
WSCS, BEAm United
POMEROY _ Mr. and Mrs. will sing. Other singers and the Methodist Orurch, 7:311 M&lt;DIIJ
Bill Davis entertained recently public welcome.
night at the chnrch. lllrs.
with a party in observance of NATIVITY
OF
Mary Beulah Hayes to have
the second birthday an- Deanery, Catholic Women's devotions; Mrs. James 0\s ell
niversary of their daughter, Club, 2 p.m. Sunday, St. An- to give study on Cuba.. Mrs.
Angela Kaye A green and drew's Church, Nelsonville.
Jack Bechlle, Mrs. Nan lloare,
yellow colo~ scheme was TRA.CTOR PULL Sunday Mrs. C. F. Hibbs, Mrs. Q'isftll,
carried out with streamers and beginning at I p..m. on.~ hostesses.
balloons
of new commwuty t.nlrbng m
POMEROY GARDillN CidJ
CUpcakes ice cream and Tuppers Plains with Doug Carr , Monday7:30p. m. bome of!Urs.
Kool-Aid w~re served to Mrs. in charg~. Lunch~ at 12 Walter Grueser orilll lllrs.
Luella Moore, Syracuse and Mr. noon wtth Sl;'ndw1ches and Tracy Whaley co-00s1ess. .
and Mrs. William Davis, beHOveraMEOOgesaMINvatlaGble. SUND
BETIIEL 62, lnlematicml
Middleport, grandparents; Mr.
.
, . .
AY, Order of Jobs Daogbtas,.
and Mrs. Clarence fhle, Mason, Langsville ~!ian Clwrch, 12 Monday night at 7:31 p. m.. lit
great-grandparents; ~rs. noon,. basket~- Aflemooo ~ -~ M•...,ic ,..,.,...
Shirley Smith, Mark and Cindy, .sei'V)ce at 2 ~eaturing Lemley lnitiatioo will be beld. Pa~
B. K. and Randy Annes and Quartet. Public welctme.
and~~ wi':" ~....,. ~
Charles and Dan Davis.
MONDAY :
.
re~~~ IDVIted. l'radice
Others presenting gifts toandthe R~I'T_EMBEI'RTmeeAtingM ~!be fSaorturdalnltialiontobebeldatt a.m.
youngster were Bob Moore
tvervtew . . ., on ay'
y.
Miss Bobbie Moore Syracuse, Sept. 13, at 7:30p.m.; pr1)8J'alll
EIGHT AND FORTY, IJe&amp;s
John Randolph, N;,... Haven, by Jean Whitehead, wbo will · County Salon 7lt , !Moatby
and Timmy and Jon Smith.
show slides of ber ~ •evening, 7:30 p. m., bome fll
Trip.
..rs. "
· - DaVIS.
.
•-•&gt;
HYMN

·----------COUPON·----------,
logan Monument Compan~ •. Po~e~y, Ohio
( ) Please "'!nd me •.REE hookleiS showinl!l
memorials printed in full color with sizes and
priee•list•d.
( ) Kindly have an authorized Logan Monumcnt (••· representative call ai my houoe.
( ) Pl•a"" send me de1ails about )lau5oleums
hilhuut obligation.

atOOSE

sOCI·al Calendar

Second Birthday
Noted at Part11

THE MANY

WHiat TO

lbe

Vll!IT RElATiVES

ONE

SlYLES FROM

II

Debbie Weny

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

:

POMEROY -ObservanCe of national magazines. "WhY I Ain of the . Rlll!Sians: and ol !be
Constitution Week, Sepl 17·23, a DAR Member" was the roll necessity of having an adequate
defense. She . introch!ced bet'
was planned during a meeting call response.
daughter, Mrs. Larry Finegold,
An
invitatiori
to
a
luncheon
to
of Return J onathan Meigs
Chapter ol the Daughters of !be be held on Sept. 24 in Logan was who is vacationing heft.
Mrs. Nancy Reed gave !be
American Revolution Friday read.
afternoon at the Episcopal Mrs. Emerson Jones, national treasurer's repcrt. Dues were
defense chairman, presented an received at the moeting and !be
Parish House.
Mrs. Nan Moore, cha.pter article by a retired Air Force expense of printing program
chainnan for !be observance, general per tai ning to the books was noted.
advised that a proclamation has danger ol losing status as a Apple pie and ice cream were
been signed by Middleport world power . He spoke of the served by the hostesses, Mrs.
Mayor C. 0 . Fisher designating apathy of Americans,' of the Foster, Miss Lucille Smith, and
the week as a time to give suJlll05edly friendly appearance Mrs. Reed.
special attention to the Consti tution, this year marking its
'!&amp;4th anniversary of adoplion.
She urged that members
display their flags cfuring !be
week. After giving a history on
the Constitution Mrs. Moore
distributed copies ol a patriotic
booklet entitled "Your Land
and Mine" cmtaining a copy of
the
Constitution,
the
.
Dectaration ol Independence,
the American Creed, and a
history of the !tag, provided by
the Western and Southern Life
Insurance Co. Mrs. Moore also
(f
conducted a quiz on the Constitution.
It was reported that Mrs.
Robert W. Hagan ol Huntington,
W. Va., the Southeast District
Director, will be guest speaker
at the October meeting ol !be
Chapter to be held at the home
of Mrs. Patrick Lochary.
Mrs. J . Edward Foster,
regent, welcomed Mrs. Lee
Bnyd, Cassopolis, Mich., the
former Anna Laura Huddleston,
and a former member of the
Chapter. Mrs. Boyd spoke on
her work with the D.A.R. in
Michigan. She was here to visit
the grave of a Revolutionary
War ancestor, Ben LeMaster, at
The most fashion, most
Summersville, W. Va., and to
beauty. Newest Crushed Vemark the grave of bet' moihe!',
lour (yummy-soft!) looks so
Mrs. W. G. Huddleston at Lone
costlier, is opulent
much
Oak Cemetery in Point
enough
for the biggest bash
Pleasant.
as well as daytime doings.
Following the meeting Mrs.
Saucy
tie belt; outline stitchFoster, Mrs. Guy Neigler, and
ing on collar, pockets, front.
. accomparu'ed
Mrs. 0 . P. Klem
100% rayon face J 100%
Mr. and Mrs. Boyd to Point
cotton back. Quilted lining.
Pleasant for the marking
BROWN OR GREEN
ceremony. Mrs. Klein gave
a personal tribute to
Mrs. Huddleston and Dowers
from the Chapter were placed
on her grave. Mrs. Huddleston
SIZES 10-12·14
was a former member of
Return Jonathan
Meigs
Chapter.
Mrs . Neigler was acting
chaplain for the meeting and
conducted the ritualistic
opening. Mrs. Klein was at the
piano for the national anthem.
The president general's
message was read by Mrs.
Foster who noted !bat Mrs.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
George Skinner is taking
subscriptions for the state and

it's the

Plans are Made

MORE NOW

Happy AnniversalJ

The oldest person present was
Mrs. Edna Roush, the youngest,
Andrea Hill; the ones with the
most children, Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush, and the one
traveling the farthest, Mr. and
Mrs. Walter McDade of Troy.

'

Mrs.,.Pat Martin, Alexandria,
Va., as her matron of honor.
Bridesmaids will be Miss Pat
Bahr, Long Bnttom, Mrs. Twila
Buckley, Pomeroy, and Miss
Connie Carhart, Gallipolis.
Flower girl will be Miss Jlhelta
BrowJ, Little Hocking. Miss
Ann Holter of Colwnbus wiD
register the guests.
Mr. Pickens' best man will be
Mr. John Shutt Toledo. Ushers
will be Mr.' Jim Conde,
Colwnbus, Mr. Michael Boring,
Reedsville and Mr . Jack
Sigman, Athens. Ring bearer
will be Master Brian Spencer of
Pomeroy.

MIDDLEPORT
The
Brown-Mayes re.union was held
Sept. 5 at the farm home of Mr.
and Mrs. William Hayes and
family, Middleport, Route 1.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
B. B. Amick, Mrs. Jean Wilson
and sons, Jeff and Jimmy of
Charleston, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Wade Belcher and
grandson, Wade Belcher of
Elyria; Mr. and Mrs. Josh
Mayes and daughter, Cathy of
Waterloo; Franklin Farrell and
children, Frankie, Becky and
Greg, and Elizabeth Mayes of
Oak Hill, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Bernard Meadows of Comfort,
W. Va.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Meadows
and children, Stanley, Gwen
Your regular payday
and Katherine of Bloomingrose,
savings plus our high
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. John
rate . of return will
Dyke and children, Gary, Unda
make your savings
and Lori of Fairborn; Mr. and
grow quickly ...
Mrs. Pat Eads and children,
Jeff, Melanie, Mark and Scott,
of The Plains, Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Hayes and children ,
Christy, Steve, Teressa and
PASSBOOK RATE
Amy, Chillicothe; Sherry Hayes
of Springfield, and Mr. and Mrs.
MEIGS CO. BRANCH
Bill Hayes and daughter, Joy.

or

The 22 members presented
exchanged plant slips and bulb~
in response to roll call.
Mrs . Lula Mae Lynch
presented devotions using
"Prince of Peace" as her topic
with scripture from Isaiah.
Thank you card was read from
Mrs. Ida Childs and her family.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. · Clyde Allensworth, Mrs.
Gertrude Miller, Mrs. Regina
Swift, Mrs. Lynch with Mrs.
Ashley as a contributing
hostess.

Joann, Vicki, Gary, Mike and
Johnnie; Dick Smith, Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Roush and Sharon,
Cindy, David and Edward; Mr.
and Mrs. Ronnie Russell, Mrs.
Brenda Haggey of Middleport;
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis,
Clifton ; Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Roush, Mansfield; Mr, and Mrs.
Bud Lampen, Loraine; Mrs.
Gladys Shields, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Hill and son Jay, Miss
Judy Roberts, Mr . and Mrs.
Randall Roberts, children
Todd, Leslie and Chad; Mr. and
Mrs. Philip HiU and daughter
Andrea of Gallipolis, and Mrs.
Edna Roush, Racine.

ATTEND REUNION
NEWHAVEN -Among those
from the Bend Area who at.
tended the recent National
Roush Reunion at West Union,
Ohio were Mr. and Mrs. Walden
Roush,Mr.andMrs. Ray Roush
and Mr. and Mrs. Arnett Roush,
all of Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Dallas Yeager of Mason, Mrs.
Henrietta Bailey of Pomeroy,
Mrs. Edna Burris, Mr. and Mrs.
PirlBurrisandfamily, Mr. and
Mrs. Eber Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Roush, Mary and Kevin,
all of Mason; Mr. and Mrs.,
Gary Roush and sons·Ty and
Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Roush, and children, Tammy,
Tanya and Travis, Eldon Ray
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. G. 0 .
Roush; Mr. and Mrs. Donald F.
RoushandSheryl,Mr. andMrs.
John C. Fry, Mr. and Mrs. Alton
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Donald 0.
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Nelson
Roush and Randy, Mr. and Mrs.
Hank Cleland, Allred and Keith
Roush, "Skip" Miller, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Roush and Greg,

ConstitUtion Week to be Observed Here

Community
·Corner By

•

'if

,.•
•

�'

.Installation of
Officers is Held
MIDDLEPORT - A can·
dlelight installation ceremony
for the new oflicers and a
workshop on making velvet
roses by a guest demonstrator
highlighted the September
mee ting of the · Middleport
Amateur Gardeners.
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
WaLte r Crooks, Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds installed ihe officers
Mrs. Harry Moore ,
president ; Mrs. Roger Morgan,
vice president; Mrs. L. .E.
Reynolds, secretary ; and Mrs.
Eddie Burkett, treasurer. Each
of the officers was presented
with a corsage.
Mrs. Roy Holter, Chester
Garden Club member, condueled the workshop with all of
the members participating. She
was presented with a gift of
appreciation.
Welcomed
into
club
membership was Mrs. S. T.
Smith. The resignations from
membership of .Mrs . Glen
Lambert and Mrs . Larry
Spencer were accepted with
regret. Mrs. Spencer will be
moving later this month to
Louisville, Ky.
A letter was read from Mrs.
Fred Blaetinar, county contact
chairman, announcing a Meigs
County Garden Club meeting
for 8 p.m. on Sept. 27 at the
Pomeroy United Methodist

Mrs. Thomas Daniel Crow

Church. Also announced was
lhe Rutland Friendly G.a rdeners flow er show held
yesterday.
The Civic committee reported
on village plantings and noted
that a work session will be held
in the near future. Mrs. Grace
Pratt, by-laws chairman, gave
the second and third reading of
the revised by-laws which were
accepted by the club.
A report was given on the
Meigs County Fair flower show
and it was noted that Mrs. L. E.
Reynolds, Mrs. Pearl Reynolds,
Mrs. Harry Moore, Mrs.
Spencer, Mrs. Harold Lohse,
and Mrs. Nina Bland had
participated.
Mrs. Crooks opened the
meeting with verses from a
booklet entitled "Friendship
Thoughts." Mrs. Moore condueled the business meeting.
Refreshments of cake,
homemade sherbet and spiced
nuts were served by Mrs.
Crooks and her special committee composed of Mrs.
Charlotte Taunton, Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds, Mrs . Pratt, Mrs.
Wesley Fry, and Mrs. L. E.
Reynolds. Arrangements of
mwns· and dahlias were used
throughout the Crooks home.
Mrs. Moore presided at the
silver coffee service .

11- The &amp;mday Times -Sentinel, Smday, Sept. 12, 1971

Personality Profile
POMEROY - Twenty-one year old Debbie. "It's their organization, their
Debbie King Fiqlaw is probably· Ohio's program," she expla!Jied, "and i ~ is my
youngest guardian of a Bethel in the In- function to give guidance."
ternatjonal Order of Job's Daughters.
Thomas Edwards is the associate
Enthused with the challenge it presents, garden of the Bethel.
Debbie assumes the advisory position of
Debbie, her husband, Stephen, who is
guardian of Pomeroy's Bethel 62 and the associated with his father, Richard
responsibility of developing a program Finlaw, in Gravely Tractor Sales, and
geared to teenage interest tomorrow night. their six-month-&lt;Jid daughter, Heather,
The organization and its program reside in Pomeroy.
aimed as teaching love and loyalty to God ·
A graduate of Middleport High School,
and country, a sense of responsibility, Debbie attended Rio Grande ~ollege a
leadership qualities, and citizenship, is not year belore taking employment in the
new to Debbie.
office of Imperial Electric. She quit work
For six years she was an active before her daughter was born and says she
member of the Pomeroy Bethel, is a past is perfectly satisfied doing things around
honored queen, and iS currently a mjaority the house and with her family.
member participating regularly in inDebbie loves to cook, bake and sew,
stallation and initiation ceremonies.
and this summer tried her hand at canning
Despite the closeness of her age to the and preserving. She makes aU of her own
· "Jobies" who range from 12 to 18, Debbie clothes, and sews some things for her
expects no discipline problems. She says husband and daughter.
She is a member of the Ohio Eta Phi
approximately 30 of the 60 members of
. Meigs County, with one 'or two of Mason Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi, Evangeline
. County, are active.
Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star, and
"I know and like the girls and just the Bradbury Church of Christ.
don ' t anticipate any problem," said

Family Reunion At State Park
RACINE - The descendants
of the late Walter Roush and
Mrs. Edna Roush of Racine held
a family rewlion at State Park
oil Rt. 33 Sunday.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Walter McDade, Kim and Gene
Early of Troy ; Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Roush and son Roger,
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Roush,

Vows Taken August 7R · . t
. . ·
. atzen s Remembered - - POMEROY - MISS Carol Ann Stout and Mr. Thomas Daniel
Crow exchanged wedding vows in a double ring ceremony at the
United MethodistChurchinSparta,N. C. on Aug. 7.
The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Jean Stout, Syracuse, and
the late Robert Stout, Jr. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. ThtmasD. Crow, Pomeroy. The Rev. RayS. Cody officiated
at.the wedding.
For ber wedding the bride wore a white crepe dress fashioned
withlongpuffysleeves,anemjirewaist lrirnmed with blue satin.
The new Mrs. Crow will graduate !run Marshall University
In June, 1972. Mr. Crow recently lransferred from Marshall
University to Ohio University. He served two years in the U. S.
Navy.
Following thelr wedding, the couple traveled to Fort
·Lauderdale, Fla., for a hooeymoon. They will reside at 3510\2,
Roote 00 East, Huntington, W. Va.

Goeglein-Pickens
Vfedding Day Set
POMEROY - Plans for the
open church wedding of Miss
Patty Ann Goeglein, daughter
of Mr: and Mrs. Albert E.
Goeglem, ~eroy, to Mr. Ray
~ Pickens, son of Mrs.
Elizabeth Pickens, Colwnbus,
and Dr. R. R. Pickens, Mid·
dleport; have been completed.
The wedding will be an event
of Saturday, Sept. 25, at 6:30
p.m. preceded by a half-hour of
nuptial music in the First
Baptist Church, Middlepo~t.
The Rev. Charles Simon will
officia~. The reception will
follow m the social room of the
church.
Miss Goeglein has chosen

Brown-Mayes
• ne
U Jd
Reunton

MIDDLEPORT - Gifts for
the patients at the Southeastern
Ohio Mental Health Center were
presented by members of the
Philathea Women of the Mid·
dleport Church of Christ at a
meeting Thursday night.
It was reported during the
meeting conducted by Mrs.
Grace Pratt that $100 had been
turned into the building fund,
the amount representing
proceeds from a bake sale and
the remainder of the curtain
fund . A rummage sale was
planned for Nov. 4, 5and 6 in the
Fry building.
Mrs. Norman Yeauger and
Mrs. Denver Rice were ap·
pointed chairmen for a
reception on Oct. 3 at the church
to honor Mrs. Mary Martin,
departemental chapeau of the
Eight and Forty. An invitation
to the reception was extended at

the meeting.
Mrs . Marvin Kelly was
welcomed as a oew member.
Mrs. Pratt thanked Mrs. Pearl
Reynolds for a reception at the
recent Elardo wedding. A
contribution from the family
was acknowledged. Miss
Mildred Hawley was appointed
to purchase hostess trays for
use at the church.
Tentative plans were made
for the women to serve the
Homebuilders annual banquet
on the third Tuesday of
November. The motherdaughter banquel was set for
Oct. 14 and will be a potluck
affair.
Reported ill were Homer
Rice, Mrs. David Farmer, Miss
Fran.ces Roush, Mrs. Minerva
Childers, Mrs. Leo Searles,
Mrs. Bessie Ashley, Miss Mabel
Hysell, and Dallas Lightfoot.

u~.

EddY'S Sched-·'
rue
POMEROY - Mr . Eddy
Educator's schedule for the
week of September 13th, in
Meigs County:
MONDAY
9-10:25,
Salisbury; 4:3Q.li, School Lot;
5: 15-6, Carpenter; 6:30-7,
Harrisvonville ; 7:30-8, Wolf
Pen.
TUESDAY -12:3o-3, Racine ;
3:15-3:30, Wagner's; 4-4:30,
Harden's; 4:45-5:30, Rizer's ;
5:45-6:45, Forest Run ; 7-7:30,
Minersville; 7:45-8:15, Naomi.
THURSDAY 9-10:30,
Syracuse; 11-11 :15, Antiquity;
12-2, Letart; 2:15-4, East
Letart; 5-5:30, Apple Grove; S.
7, Great Bend; 7:30-8:30,
Syracuse P.O.
FRIDAY _ 9-2:30, Pomero~,
Ele.; 3-3:30, Pomeroy Library.
- - - - -----Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush and
Kelly, Mrs. Jack Hesson and
sons and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Roush.

I

Our Scheduled Price Increase will not be made
due to the recent '"Price Freeze."

.

Meigs County Branch of The
Athens County Savings &amp;
loan Co.
296 Second Sf.
Pnmeroy, Ohi o
Member Federal Home Loa n

Bank

Member F4:der al Sav ings &amp;

Loan Insurance Corpor a tion .
All accounts insur ed up ro
S20,000.00.

'

PAUL HAPTONSTAILHAS ISSUED a last call for orders of
the record of the late Rev. Howard Ruppe]t's songs. Sept. 17ls the
deadline for placing orders for the $6 10-m. record whieb will be
made from Paul's personal tapes at the First United Presbyterian Chtirch while the Rev. Mr. Ruppel! pastored there.
Orders maybe placed with the Haptonstalls, Mrs. Micbael Zirlde,
mcMiss Pl!yllisJoachim. The record willbecutootbe 18th.

Mrs. Barnhart is Honored
Harvey Van Vranken, Mrs.
Paul Taylor, Mrs. Ellen Couch,
Mrs. Robert Kuhn, Mrs. Joe
Cook, Mrs. L. P. Sterrett, Mrs.
Harry Bailey, Mrs. Carver
Williams and daughter, Dawn,
Mis.&lt; Bonnie Walker, Mrs. Ivan
Walker, Mrs. William Barnhart, Miss Elaine ~­
Others presenting gifts to
Mrs. Barnhart were Mrs.
Tommr Hysell, Mrs. George
Skinner, Mrs. T. T. Shelton,
Mrs. Robe~t Arnold, .~rs .
William Shendan, Mrs: William
Bennett, Mrs. Orval Wiles, Mrs.
Dwight Parker, Mrs. E. T.
Greenlee, Mrs. Mildred Tubbs,
Mrs. E. E. Follrod, Mrs.
. MIDDLEPORT - Fall ac- William Watson, Mrs. Leslie
tiv1ties were cliscussed durmg a Price and Mrs. Dale Smith.
meeting of Pack 245 of Mid'
dleport at the municipal park

-

Tu;~a~e~i~:~:~s

of Mrs.
Milford Hysell, Mrs . Jean
Thomas and Mrs . Larry
Spencer as den mothers were
noted. Mrs. Linda Lane and
Mrs. Jean Kelly will serve _as
den mothers for Den 4, With
Mrs. Frances Whittington .an4
M~s. Sharon Doss to continue
With Den 2 and Mrs. Eulah
Francis with Den 3. Refreshments were served.

EARN

.

.,

HERE FOR THE PAS!' TWO YEARS, the Larry Spencer
family will move to Louisville, Ky. the latter part of this mooth.
Currently they are getting loose ends together, no easy cllore
when you've been as active and involved as this family
. Larry is leaving his employment with the Investor's Diversified Service and will begin work soon with Kremers Urban, a
pharmaceutical company in Louisville. Since coming to Mid·
dleport, Larry has been scoubnaster of Bny Seoul Troop 245 and is
currently oo the veslry at Grace EPiscopal Churcb wbere the
family has been active.
'
President of the Middleport P .T .A., Judy plans to resign soon
but not until after things are pretty well lined up fw the scbool
year. She is also in the process of completing book selection and
assignments for the MiddJePoct literary Club of which sbe is vice
president. She has already given up her Brownie and CUb scout
work, and resigned from the Middleport Amateur Gardeners.
The four children, Dale, an eighth grader, Dean, a fifth
grader, Laurel in the fourth, and Clristina in the second, have all
been active in scout work. The family is sure to be missed here.

POMEROY
A
miscellaneous shower was held
recently honoring Mrs. Wayne
Barnhart at the home of her
husband's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. William Barnhart.
Mrs. Oliver Michael and Mrs.
Waid Gorby hosted the shower.
.Games were pl4yetl with pl'lies
going to Mrs. J . Edward Foster,
Mrs. Charles Werry, and Mrs.
William Stivers. Punch, cake,
and mints were served. At.
tending besides those named
were Mrs. Harold Norton, Mrs.

NOW! Is the time to buy.

Build while you live, The chances ore nearly three to one that your wife will survive you, If she does she will
have over a hundred heart-rending duties to perform ... all within twenty-four hours. There is no finer way
to prove your devotion than to suggest that you perform two of those duties now, together, rather than
leave them for her to do alone •.

Happy Birthday

Serving: O.llipalis,
Pomeroy, Middllpart

Debbie Finlaw

granite. i
. companion type
scroll and open books. The scroll
design depicts beautiful trees, water and the setting sun overlooking Rolling Hills. The gleaming polished front enhances the

Say

Ducley's Fbist

POMEROY - Steamboats - at least the Sternwbeela'
&amp;lwaMe - were built in MiddiepcJrt around 1110, but several
lidtimers we've asked, have absolutely no recollection ~ boat
building facilities in Middlep&lt;rt. Perhaps you do.
Imagine the surprise when .fun and Gloria Arnold and their
two daughters cliscovered a plaque in · the Greenfield Village
Musemn at Dearborn, Mich. which reads:
"Steamboat &amp;lwanne, the lriginal sternwheel steamboat
Qlwanne was built in 1880 at Middlepor-t, Obio.lJsed by 'l1Kmu
Edison on the Swt'anne and other Florida rivers, this vessel wu
rebuilt in 1929 for operation at Greenfield Vlllage."
.run, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Arnold, MitiDepocl, sent hla
parents a picture of bis daughter, Laura, standing beside the
plaque. He also i"'nt a postcard which says !bat the steampowend
sternwheeler was named for a boat used by ThOOiaS A. Edi8oD
when he worked at Fort Myers, Fla., and after that boat sank, ita ·
engines were raised and inatalled in the present vessel cons1ructed at Middleport.
Incidentally, the &amp;lwaMe is in operatioo at Greenfield
VIllage and visitors are able to take short trips oo it.
Several Middleport residents recall docking and barge
building facilities at the river end of Dock St. in the late lim!!, but
nobody we've talked to recalls any steamboat building.

CLUB MEETS
NEW HAVEN- Mrs. Uoyd
Roush entertained members of
the Julia T. Bryant Sewing Club
Tuesday afternoon at her home.
Attending were Mrs. F. A.
Batey, Mrs. John C. Fry, Mrs.
J. W. McMurray, Mrs. James
MacKnight, Mrs. Emil Knight,
Mrs. Donald A. Smith, Mrs.
Howard Wagenhals, Mrs.
Herman Layne, Mrs. Ollie
Roush and the hostess. The next
meeting wiD be held on Sept. 14
at the home of Mrs. Donald A.
Smith in Hartford.

4%%

With A
Vase Arrangement
Dnignod By

Charlene Hoeflich

memorials natural beauty.

·

00

ROTARY MET
NEW HAVEN - The regular
dinner meeting of the New
Haven Rotary Club was held
Thursday evening , followed
with a short business session.
Members attending were Dick
Ord, John Thorne, Harry
Miller, James N. Roush, Don
Foglesong, Russell Capehart,
Rome Williamson, Donald F.
Roush, Herman Layne, Rev.
William DeMoss, Uoyd Roush,
Karl Wiles and George Ingels.

·

ssooo Down
s20°0 Monthly

'
most.

IQ!W C»uERS ol ReC1n " - " - . . . = zl , 0 J+ss Ill tile Amel:iull
Jlmiulim presiding at Friday's meetjq:were,WtlorigN..IIr.s.. IMaaii!G&lt;n, biotorian; Mrs.
J. Edward Foster, regeot; Mrs. Nancy Reed, lreliswe'; llliss I ••De :omtb. m regent, and

Mrs. J. E. Harley, secntary.

Part11
Given for
:1'
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Werry entertained
recently with a party honoring
their daughter, Debbie, on ber
birthday anniversary.
The party was held at the
Second Ward Fire House which
was decorated in pink and white
with multi-colored balloons
making up the centerpeice.
Games were played with
prizes going · to Melinda
Thomas, Jamie Sisson, Ray
Werry, and Danny WiD. Cake,
ice cream, and wangeade were
served. Favors were balloons
and horns.
Other guests were Lori
Hudson, Mrs. Larry Hudsm,
Angela Grueser and Mrs. Jolm
Grueser, Kathy Pickens and
Mrs. Harry Pickens, Mike
Thomas, Ray and Eddie Werry
and Mrs. Phillip Werry, J~
Sisson and Mrs. J"un Silmon,
Danny Will, Lori Ann Wood, and
Mrs., Heary Werry. Mr. and
Mrs. Pat Wood joined the group
later. Sending a gift was Mistee
Dawn Grueser.
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
·Mrs. Herman Wince and
children, Gerald and Brenda of
Sabina were recent visitors of
Mrs. Mae Van Inwagen and
other area relatives.

1

HEATING
AND CENTRAL
AIR CONDITIONING
GAS - OIL - ELECTRIC
eFREE ESTIMATES
eFREE DELIVERY
•EASY TERMS
··SALES AND SERVICE

FOREMAN &amp;ABBOTT
MIDDLEPORT 0.

1
1
I
I
I
I

l

!\ume ... ;..............................................................

I
:

=~nited

I
I

~
1

1

l

:

:Street ur Houle .......;............................................

:

:

City or 'l'o~ n ................................... Phone..........

I

d.,.

inllnchtntinc.
.
• Woo.Mr end
lid! do 1 fomiiJ·siu loAd ot lhl 11m1 time ~ tndependenliJ.
• 2-SpeiCI Wuher. Rot!:'r plus
Dtliclte ..Uinp for tlil
tomily.wo- must have.

'bility 1

• Perm•nent Prell C1re in both

w-and Dryer.

POMEROY, OHIO
Meigs County Display Yard Near
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
LEO L VAUGHN, MGR.
Phone 992-2588

VINTON, OHIO

•389'

5

Gallia County Display Yard
JAMES 0. BUSH,
MANAGER
Phone 388-8603

FURNITURE

BAKER
__.......___

OPEN EVENINGS I. SUNDA Y5 BY APPOINTMENT

Mrs. Nan MIIIR is dllinaa ollbe IDI:al GIRnance ftr
Return JonalbaD lkics a 4+s. ~ sbe balds a
Jrncl•matim sigpd llf .,... c. 0. ?i • • and a booklet
entitled ''Your LaDd :md lliae'" beiltg distributed by the
Western and SI&gt;Jdhan bwaace 01.

·

'}"'J
IIIIIlDl.EI'OKf - A party
was held recently honoring
Timulllt MiiiH 111 his fifth
IMihda.r at the 111me of bis

POMER~~ER

eighth distcict cOIIIIIWider,
scheduied to be present.
Refreshments. All members
urged to attend.
REVIVAL SERVICES,

• . board member. will betbe pl5l

speaker. Jlaton ... ·.s ""''
will also be featured.

•

JHS

i•

ies~

YISir HEBE
IIIIDillEPOKI' _ Mrs. Leo

lidwads-uute lo bes-bomein
h, Florida. and ber
'
ll!tt 11r5. Bilall Urban of
~. Rft: m&gt;!llt visitors
of llr. ...: Ills. tames Arnold,
V'..lq a t., and olbeuelatives.
'IIIey aJsD 'filited MrS. Laura
llntlw) , H,. will. remaim&lt; a
palimt al Ve!ttans Memorial
11o "tal
•
IMiani B

Boots are right on today. And the toughest boots of all are
these new Hugh Puppies (r) . Look them over. Squared
toe. Step into a pair of Hush Puppies boots today, you
may never wear shoes again.
Red, .White and Blue. Brown leather &amp; suede combination. From about $18.00.

6j

PAIUINIS WISifED

~tiomtripfii Niaprl!Falls, a

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

\c

sigN

and mls

trip into Canada
in .....,.,..,.

Will' 1BE DYES
iNEW HAYEN - Mr. and

Mrs. Genld Ged acb and f.unlly
of O.,a~Ji«;i Falls, Obio are
mlillc Ur. and Mrs. William
~

Sti .

p

Open All Day Thursdays
Open Fri. Night til9
Middle of Upper Block

Pameroy

. 0."'-"1......,..,

.,.Miiltl ..,_.

L..!&amp;~.=~ca:.··~·~-v:•:·.-J 1---------~--~---------::---•..ii.
•

••

'remore
slloes.
They're .

~-

begiMing Monday, ~ . - - - - - - - - ,
Christian Church_, Charles
Norris, evangelist. Services,
7:30 each evening., Pllhlir
The Gentle Touch
wel&amp;me. 1
That Means Sa Mud1
nJESDAY
446-lm
OHIO ETA PHI Sourity
C.I U..For
Tuesday 1:15 p.m.. at O ~wnlw
tn-1561
and Southern Obio Eledrir Co.
y_.,_lletds
SYRACUSE P.T.A. 'l'l!esday
7:30p.m., David Nnse , sdltd
-t_

BAHR CLOTHIERS

Celebrated

Jlriiln.

~

Butternut Ave. Nral ~.

• tnotoll II when the •••" io-

LOGAN MONUMENT 00., INC.

Amer\CaD Ren~Riian 1111
OntiiDtian weet. This
year's oo •we baJs ._•Uribe .at af Sepll7-1J.

!MIDDI.EI'OBT - Mr. and
llrs. James Arnold and
daagbters, Cincinnati, were
- t g.sls of lis parents.
'!lleyftftaawt.e llonipafter a

kilcliln bolll, nunery . • • OtlywMN.
you co~ pt ll'illl- wirir&amp; plumll-

·-------------------------~

l.r tile Doqjdfts. of

IDI'iStliUIU WW- '

RIJTLAND P.T.A. '/:JO -p.m.

(Only 2feet wide)_

Simply mail ihe convenient coupon ••• write ••• or come in.
Transportation gladly furnished to and from any of our
showrooms without obligotion.

Betty Rose.

Monday, Rutland EJen-n'-Y
gymnasiwn. New teacllen will
be introduced. Parents m'glli lo
attend.
SALEM CENTER P .T.A.
Monday7:3Dp.m.atsdlool.f.ll
and Fairexbibitswillbe*-..
MEIGS CHAP'I'ER 53, DAV.
7:30 p.m. Monday at borne ..,

Fits
anywhere.

You can make this family maHer~ family decision, so all con
have the satisfaction of knowin11 additional strain will noi be
placed upon theshaulders of loved ones at the •ery time they
are least able to cope with it. Select your memorial now!

'97.50

JllftDis. Ur. and
Russell
E. MiiiH.
Games nrr played with
prill:s gGing to Carol Bailey,
Rhonda Clxll, Wilma Cook,
RidwdCixll, Craig Darst. and
Dlrin ~ Ice cream and
cab Rft: sen ed to those
'A""I 11111 'llmotby's grand11 _.ha , Jir$. Gallt* Millel',
Ns -t.. Mrs. Carl Roach,
Tnd.r s-11, Karm Bailey,
Cmrir !laile7, Carol Simons,
and Tila lllillel'.

~·

Why wait unlil next week, next month or perhaps next year? Redudions are now!

AT BAHR
CLOtHIERS

Failh
of
Non..IJenominational Cburch, Commerce Monday at IIOllll,
Middleport-Pomeroy By-Pass; Bnwers Restaurant
:1'
2 p.m. Sunday. BisseD Bcothers
WSCS, BEAm United
POMEROY _ Mr. and Mrs. will sing. Other singers and the Methodist Orurch, 7:311 M&lt;DIIJ
Bill Davis entertained recently public welcome.
night at the chnrch. lllrs.
with a party in observance of NATIVITY
OF
Mary Beulah Hayes to have
the second birthday an- Deanery, Catholic Women's devotions; Mrs. James 0\s ell
niversary of their daughter, Club, 2 p.m. Sunday, St. An- to give study on Cuba.. Mrs.
Angela Kaye A green and drew's Church, Nelsonville.
Jack Bechlle, Mrs. Nan lloare,
yellow colo~ scheme was TRA.CTOR PULL Sunday Mrs. C. F. Hibbs, Mrs. Q'isftll,
carried out with streamers and beginning at I p..m. on.~ hostesses.
balloons
of new commwuty t.nlrbng m
POMEROY GARDillN CidJ
CUpcakes ice cream and Tuppers Plains with Doug Carr , Monday7:30p. m. bome of!Urs.
Kool-Aid w~re served to Mrs. in charg~. Lunch~ at 12 Walter Grueser orilll lllrs.
Luella Moore, Syracuse and Mr. noon wtth Sl;'ndw1ches and Tracy Whaley co-00s1ess. .
and Mrs. William Davis, beHOveraMEOOgesaMINvatlaGble. SUND
BETIIEL 62, lnlematicml
Middleport, grandparents; Mr.
.
, . .
AY, Order of Jobs Daogbtas,.
and Mrs. Clarence fhle, Mason, Langsville ~!ian Clwrch, 12 Monday night at 7:31 p. m.. lit
great-grandparents; ~rs. noon,. basket~- Aflemooo ~ -~ M•...,ic ,..,.,...
Shirley Smith, Mark and Cindy, .sei'V)ce at 2 ~eaturing Lemley lnitiatioo will be beld. Pa~
B. K. and Randy Annes and Quartet. Public welctme.
and~~ wi':" ~....,. ~
Charles and Dan Davis.
MONDAY :
.
re~~~ IDVIted. l'radice
Others presenting gifts toandthe R~I'T_EMBEI'RTmeeAtingM ~!be fSaorturdalnltialiontobebeldatt a.m.
youngster were Bob Moore
tvervtew . . ., on ay'
y.
Miss Bobbie Moore Syracuse, Sept. 13, at 7:30p.m.; pr1)8J'alll
EIGHT AND FORTY, IJe&amp;s
John Randolph, N;,... Haven, by Jean Whitehead, wbo will · County Salon 7lt , !Moatby
and Timmy and Jon Smith.
show slides of ber ~ •evening, 7:30 p. m., bome fll
Trip.
..rs. "
· - DaVIS.
.
•-•&gt;
HYMN

·----------COUPON·----------,
logan Monument Compan~ •. Po~e~y, Ohio
( ) Please "'!nd me •.REE hookleiS showinl!l
memorials printed in full color with sizes and
priee•list•d.
( ) Kindly have an authorized Logan Monumcnt (••· representative call ai my houoe.
( ) Pl•a"" send me de1ails about )lau5oleums
hilhuut obligation.

atOOSE

sOCI·al Calendar

Second Birthday
Noted at Part11

THE MANY

WHiat TO

lbe

Vll!IT RElATiVES

ONE

SlYLES FROM

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Debbie Weny

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POMEROY -ObservanCe of national magazines. "WhY I Ain of the . Rlll!Sians: and ol !be
Constitution Week, Sepl 17·23, a DAR Member" was the roll necessity of having an adequate
defense. She . introch!ced bet'
was planned during a meeting call response.
daughter, Mrs. Larry Finegold,
An
invitatiori
to
a
luncheon
to
of Return J onathan Meigs
Chapter ol the Daughters of !be be held on Sept. 24 in Logan was who is vacationing heft.
Mrs. Nancy Reed gave !be
American Revolution Friday read.
afternoon at the Episcopal Mrs. Emerson Jones, national treasurer's repcrt. Dues were
defense chairman, presented an received at the moeting and !be
Parish House.
Mrs. Nan Moore, cha.pter article by a retired Air Force expense of printing program
chainnan for !be observance, general per tai ning to the books was noted.
advised that a proclamation has danger ol losing status as a Apple pie and ice cream were
been signed by Middleport world power . He spoke of the served by the hostesses, Mrs.
Mayor C. 0 . Fisher designating apathy of Americans,' of the Foster, Miss Lucille Smith, and
the week as a time to give suJlll05edly friendly appearance Mrs. Reed.
special attention to the Consti tution, this year marking its
'!&amp;4th anniversary of adoplion.
She urged that members
display their flags cfuring !be
week. After giving a history on
the Constitution Mrs. Moore
distributed copies ol a patriotic
booklet entitled "Your Land
and Mine" cmtaining a copy of
the
Constitution,
the
.
Dectaration ol Independence,
the American Creed, and a
history of the !tag, provided by
the Western and Southern Life
Insurance Co. Mrs. Moore also
(f
conducted a quiz on the Constitution.
It was reported that Mrs.
Robert W. Hagan ol Huntington,
W. Va., the Southeast District
Director, will be guest speaker
at the October meeting ol !be
Chapter to be held at the home
of Mrs. Patrick Lochary.
Mrs. J . Edward Foster,
regent, welcomed Mrs. Lee
Bnyd, Cassopolis, Mich., the
former Anna Laura Huddleston,
and a former member of the
Chapter. Mrs. Boyd spoke on
her work with the D.A.R. in
Michigan. She was here to visit
the grave of a Revolutionary
War ancestor, Ben LeMaster, at
The most fashion, most
Summersville, W. Va., and to
beauty. Newest Crushed Vemark the grave of bet' moihe!',
lour (yummy-soft!) looks so
Mrs. W. G. Huddleston at Lone
costlier, is opulent
much
Oak Cemetery in Point
enough
for the biggest bash
Pleasant.
as well as daytime doings.
Following the meeting Mrs.
Saucy
tie belt; outline stitchFoster, Mrs. Guy Neigler, and
ing on collar, pockets, front.
. accomparu'ed
Mrs. 0 . P. Klem
100% rayon face J 100%
Mr. and Mrs. Boyd to Point
cotton back. Quilted lining.
Pleasant for the marking
BROWN OR GREEN
ceremony. Mrs. Klein gave
a personal tribute to
Mrs. Huddleston and Dowers
from the Chapter were placed
on her grave. Mrs. Huddleston
SIZES 10-12·14
was a former member of
Return Jonathan
Meigs
Chapter.
Mrs . Neigler was acting
chaplain for the meeting and
conducted the ritualistic
opening. Mrs. Klein was at the
piano for the national anthem.
The president general's
message was read by Mrs.
Foster who noted !bat Mrs.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
George Skinner is taking
subscriptions for the state and

it's the

Plans are Made

MORE NOW

Happy AnniversalJ

The oldest person present was
Mrs. Edna Roush, the youngest,
Andrea Hill; the ones with the
most children, Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush, and the one
traveling the farthest, Mr. and
Mrs. Walter McDade of Troy.

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Mrs.,.Pat Martin, Alexandria,
Va., as her matron of honor.
Bridesmaids will be Miss Pat
Bahr, Long Bnttom, Mrs. Twila
Buckley, Pomeroy, and Miss
Connie Carhart, Gallipolis.
Flower girl will be Miss Jlhelta
BrowJ, Little Hocking. Miss
Ann Holter of Colwnbus wiD
register the guests.
Mr. Pickens' best man will be
Mr. John Shutt Toledo. Ushers
will be Mr.' Jim Conde,
Colwnbus, Mr. Michael Boring,
Reedsville and Mr . Jack
Sigman, Athens. Ring bearer
will be Master Brian Spencer of
Pomeroy.

MIDDLEPORT
The
Brown-Mayes re.union was held
Sept. 5 at the farm home of Mr.
and Mrs. William Hayes and
family, Middleport, Route 1.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
B. B. Amick, Mrs. Jean Wilson
and sons, Jeff and Jimmy of
Charleston, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Wade Belcher and
grandson, Wade Belcher of
Elyria; Mr. and Mrs. Josh
Mayes and daughter, Cathy of
Waterloo; Franklin Farrell and
children, Frankie, Becky and
Greg, and Elizabeth Mayes of
Oak Hill, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Bernard Meadows of Comfort,
W. Va.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Meadows
and children, Stanley, Gwen
Your regular payday
and Katherine of Bloomingrose,
savings plus our high
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. John
rate . of return will
Dyke and children, Gary, Unda
make your savings
and Lori of Fairborn; Mr. and
grow quickly ...
Mrs. Pat Eads and children,
Jeff, Melanie, Mark and Scott,
of The Plains, Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Hayes and children ,
Christy, Steve, Teressa and
PASSBOOK RATE
Amy, Chillicothe; Sherry Hayes
of Springfield, and Mr. and Mrs.
MEIGS CO. BRANCH
Bill Hayes and daughter, Joy.

or

The 22 members presented
exchanged plant slips and bulb~
in response to roll call.
Mrs . Lula Mae Lynch
presented devotions using
"Prince of Peace" as her topic
with scripture from Isaiah.
Thank you card was read from
Mrs. Ida Childs and her family.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. · Clyde Allensworth, Mrs.
Gertrude Miller, Mrs. Regina
Swift, Mrs. Lynch with Mrs.
Ashley as a contributing
hostess.

Joann, Vicki, Gary, Mike and
Johnnie; Dick Smith, Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Roush and Sharon,
Cindy, David and Edward; Mr.
and Mrs. Ronnie Russell, Mrs.
Brenda Haggey of Middleport;
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis,
Clifton ; Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Roush, Mansfield; Mr, and Mrs.
Bud Lampen, Loraine; Mrs.
Gladys Shields, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Hill and son Jay, Miss
Judy Roberts, Mr . and Mrs.
Randall Roberts, children
Todd, Leslie and Chad; Mr. and
Mrs. Philip HiU and daughter
Andrea of Gallipolis, and Mrs.
Edna Roush, Racine.

ATTEND REUNION
NEWHAVEN -Among those
from the Bend Area who at.
tended the recent National
Roush Reunion at West Union,
Ohio were Mr. and Mrs. Walden
Roush,Mr.andMrs. Ray Roush
and Mr. and Mrs. Arnett Roush,
all of Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Dallas Yeager of Mason, Mrs.
Henrietta Bailey of Pomeroy,
Mrs. Edna Burris, Mr. and Mrs.
PirlBurrisandfamily, Mr. and
Mrs. Eber Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Roush, Mary and Kevin,
all of Mason; Mr. and Mrs.,
Gary Roush and sons·Ty and
Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Roush, and children, Tammy,
Tanya and Travis, Eldon Ray
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. G. 0 .
Roush; Mr. and Mrs. Donald F.
RoushandSheryl,Mr. andMrs.
John C. Fry, Mr. and Mrs. Alton
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Donald 0.
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Nelson
Roush and Randy, Mr. and Mrs.
Hank Cleland, Allred and Keith
Roush, "Skip" Miller, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Roush and Greg,

ConstitUtion Week to be Observed Here

Community
·Corner By

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�12- 'Mie SUnday Times- Sentinei,Seday,llepl.l2, 1171

Katie'S Korner By

Katie crow·

POMEROY :_ Congratulstioos to the Meigs Mara!*rs on
lltelr victory Friday night. C&lt;lllgratulsilons also to the Meigs
llllnd and majtrette line. .
·
·
·
The Manuder Stadinm ln Pomeroy Friday mght was filled.to
c:a..city. The crowd cheered, y~ters sc,..med, and the band
played on. The Meigs team and band were well SUJJ)lOI'ted,
The Reemelin (BIS) team perhaps bad a few supporters. But
lie young men from Lancaster played as if they had the support
II. hundreds.
When the Reemelin team was leaving the field one of tbe

yoWJg men was running toward the dressing room when he
slopped suddenly. He turned around and his eyes opened wide as
did his arms, fcr·there~tood hia parents. Aheartwarming reunion
followed.
Our young men have so much to look forward to and a goal to
wCI'k for while the boys from Reeme1in are thankful for the
smallest bit of affection.
.
A halflinte the score was 40 to 0. Head Coach Cllarles Chan·
cey who doesn't take advantage of weak foes gave the younger
tea~ members a chance to get experience by playing them the
second half. They did a fine job.
However, the competitioo will get strooger. But knowing
Coach Chancey, so will his squad.
MRS. ROSE GENHEIMER, Minersville, left Wednesday
from Columbus Airport for Paris, France and Londm, Englsnd.
Mrs , Genheimer plans an extended visit with her daughter
IM!d husband, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Vanica, Loodon. Mr. Vanica is
with the London Branch of the First Oty National Bank of New
York.
Accompanying Mrs, Genbeimer were Mr. and Mrs. Walden
Roush of Pt. Pleasant who will visit their 8011 Walden, Jr., in
Paris, France.

BY TilE WAY, it is David 0. Jenkins of Middleport, who is
running for a post on. the M~
Local Board ri Education, not his
&lt;.;
son, David E. Je nk:ms.

Fairborn Couple Music, Readings
Came Last Sunday .
.
Given
Grange
REEDSVILLE - Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Wiener of Fairborn
were dinner guests of the Edgar
Pullins, Reedsville, last Sun·
day. Mrs. Wiener, the former
Marilyn Pooler and Mrs.
Pullins, Lepa Pooler, are
sisters. Later, Mrs. Wiener's
mother, Inez Pooler, an employee of the Meigs County
Infirmary, was met by Mr. and
Mrs. Wiener at the infirmary.
After visiting with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. William
Pooler Sr. and son Gary of
Chester, they returned to the
Pullins' residence and were
entertained by nieces Diana and
Kathy. Diana a member of the
Eastern High School marching
band, modeled the new band
uniform.
·On Monday Mr. and Mrs.
Wiener spent the day visiting
with their daughter and son-inlaw, Carol, Eugene and granddaugl)ters, Usa and Tanuny
Roush, Henderson, W. Va. After
an enjoyable dinner prepared
by Carol, and a short shopping
visit to Gallipolis, they returned
to Fairborn.

POMEROY - A program of
music and readings was
presented by Racine Grange
members who were guests
Thursday night at a meeting of
the Rock Springs Grange.
Mrs. Emma Adams, lecturer
of Racine Grange, hacl charge
of the program wbicb opened
with the song, "Work for the
Night is Coming". Earl Cross
read "The Song of the Lazy
Fanner", Mrs. Cross, "What
Every Farmer's Wife Should
Know", Mrs. Adams and Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Ashley, "In
Step with Time", and Mrs.
Charles Alkire, Cross, Mrs.
Adams and Mrs. Ashley, "How
to Uve on 24 Houra a Day".
There was a piano solo by
KeithAshleyandastyleshowof
hats by Racipe grange members. Three applications for
membership were received at
the meeting. The ned meeting
was set for Sept. 23 with an
election of officers. Cake, ice
cream and coffee were served
by the home economics
chairman.

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Two Girc/es Meet
· NEW HAVEN- A combined
lllef!ling of the Rebecca and
ESther Circles of the United
Lulheran Church WOOiell of St.
l'liul Lulheran Church here was
. held Wednesday in the ~
room of lhe church with Mrs.
Seibel Vance presiding. Mrs.
Vance opened the meeting with
a scripture and prayer.
Mrs. William Powell announced that the Lutheran
World Relief Clothing drive
would·be held in October.
Mh. J. V. · McGrew,
president, announced that the
United Church Women · would
hold a meeting at Cedar ~.
Ripley, September 22 to 24 and
urged aU women to attend.
Members were abo informed
that tl)e public address system
had been installed in the
church, with the exception of a
microphone, which would be
taken care of as soon as
possible. The purchasing of this
system is a project ol the
women's organization.

The program at the meeting

POMEROY_ Baton students
was a chapter taken from the tl Mrs Judy Riggs have won
s~y book Paul's Letters, 11nd 150 tr~bies in two recent
ent.itled "Eve~body. Does' It." !!.B.T.A. sanctioned baton
The topiC !fa&amp; discussed by Mrs. ·. --~
· ·_· --~--,-Donald ' Bumg11_rdner, and
PART¥ GIVEN · •
several members participated NEW · HAVEN - Mr. and
by reading scripture passages. . Mrs. Harold Rose entertained
At t,lle conclUsion refresh. With a dinner party Saturday
menta were served by Mrs. evening. Guest chef of the
Edna Burris to Mfs. Jolm F. evening was Mr. Tommie
Roush, Mrs. Alfred Sprouse, Allbritton
of Hurricane,
Mrs. William Russell, Mrs. representative of the Salad
Melvin Knapp, Mrs. -David Master Co. Guests at the dinner
Roush, Mrs. John'C. Fry, Mrs. were Mr. and Mrs. John
Lloyd Roush, Mrs. Bethel Thorne, Mr. and Mrs. John F.
Vance, Mrs. Hennan Layne, Roush, Mr. and Mrs. James
Mrs. Otto Grimm, Mrs. William Adams, Mr. and Mrs. Max
Powell, Mrs. Carol Adams, Jr., Eichinger, Mr. and Mrs. John
Mrs. Donald Bumgardner and C. Fry, and the host and
Mrs. J . V. McGrew.
hostess.

Twirling Contests, the fLrSI the
"Second Annual Belpre
Homecoming Contest" · at
Howes Grove Park iD Belpre
Sponsorecl by the Belpre Area
Chamber of Commerce.
Miss Diana Guthrie of
Coolville was the high point
grand champion winner ol the
day, and won lhe Miss Belpre
Homecoming Majorette Queen
lor the 11-14 yr.-age division.
She also won 11 other lrq&gt;hies in
the contest, whicb pushed her
total trophy wins over 200.
Other winners of the Belpre
Contest are as follows with the
numberoftropbieswonbyeacb
girl :
Cindy Patterson 9, Connie
ReciDr 8, Karen Strausbaugb 1,

Captolia Cole 5, Rochele
Logston 5, Becky Turner 5,
Marcia Carr 4, Deborah
Burkhammer 4, Vicki Matlack
4, Louann Newell 3, Joann Fick
3, Carla Matlack 3, Terri
Vannoy 3, Rita Welsh 2, Janet
Ambrose 2, Debbie Scott 2,
Ubby Ann Watkins 2, Kaleen
Milhone I, Brenda Linton 1,
Gloria Barber 1, Connie Hensley 1, Teresa Carr 1, Grella
Miller 1, Dalelene Scott 1,
Debbie England I, Karen Smith
1, Betsy Amsbary I, Jane
Marcellus I, Cathy Newell 1,
Suzy Goebel I, Rhonda Soval 1,
Vicki England 1, Julia Carpenter 1.
"The Riggs Royal Kad-ettes"

Team I, The PinkPanthersJuv.
Dance-Twirl Team I, The
Amesville Jr, Dance-Twirl
Team 1, The Federal Hocking
Majorettes 1st in Sr. Twirling
Teams.
.
The second con.test the
twirlers took part in was the
Annual "Sweetcorn Festival
Contest'" las! weekend at
Millersport on Buckeye Lake.
Over 400 twirlers took part in
the event whicb is sponsored by
the Lions Club.
Winning trophies were Cindy
Patterson 8, Diana Guthrie 7,
Karen Strausbaugh 5, Connie
Rector 4, Debbie Ford 3,
Dalelene Scott I, Louann Newell
1 and Debbie Scott 1.

Baptist
Women Met
Thursday

Enter our Dress-A-Doll Contest. The doll you dress

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BY JACK O'BRIAN
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••..ORCHIDS AND SCALIJONS'
NEW YORK - Book reviewer in the N. Y.
Times simply chortled over the lmocks in Bob
Thcmas' back biography of Walter Wmchell and
especially enjoyed citing WW's alleged
columnar inaccuracies - wbile fielding some
ineiCUS8ble goofs of hia own: he staled Wmchell
"remained silent&lt;' when Josephine Baker, the
black entertainer, was barred from the stork
Club." .... She wasn't barred: she and her party
were sealed, served three rounds of drinks and
ernpted when she had to walt 35 minutes f«
steak sandwiches .... Wmchell wasn't even there
when La Baker grabbed at the limelight at
Wlnchell's expense after he'd helped ber often in
hia colwnn.
Walter was with my wife and me; our table
was invaded by another colunnist in his sloppy
cups and the three of us left to get away from him
.... We went to an all-night movie, the first
performances of "Desert FOI," in which Nazi
general Rommel was being glorified (after
which Walter belted in print the apologia), went
elsewhere for a bite and dido'! know Baker's
story until the next day .... Two official in· ·
vestigations (by the city and the liquor board)
cleared the Stork Club completely.
Tbe book reviewer (R. R. Lingeman) said
Winchell "fell out with Harry Truman"; he
never was ''in," so how could be fall out? Walter
did not write "a vote for Stevenson is a vote for
Christine Jorgensen"; be said it on the Mutual
Network Election Eve and got what-for from my
wife for the lapse (and Walter agreed); WUicbell
did not turn to Joe McCarthy after his civil
litertarian colwnn-llistory because "McCarthy
forces " said they'd tum their guns on him- that
was nonsense .... His ''last columns" were aot
written for Variety, the showbiz bible, as the
reviewer states to flatly; they were written f«
the new version of the N. Y. Daily Mirror.
After his son's suicide and his wife's death,
Walter did not give up his column as the
reviewer notes, but returned to itfor a while and
quit because of ill health .... He lost his radio
show oot when it ·~ell rif" but when he fought
personally with ABC's Pres. Robert Klnlner and
demanded ABC give him back the "lifetime
coo tract" that guaranteed Walter $52,000 a year
f« life as a "coosultant" after he quit broad·
casting. His later radio work was anti-climactic.
1be error.filled review attempts to use
Winchell's own words as smug tenninal Clllll·
ment: "Orchids and onioos," it says, when the
real phrase was ''Orchids and scallions." .... And

-

wily do book critics fail to review the book- and
only review Wmchell?
A few passing swats: Bob Thomas called us

when he was in New York presumably researching the WIIICbell biograpby .... His nailing
collection ri old attacks and reconstructed press
agenls' self.aerving switcbes oo the actual
Broadway hisl«y of their WIIICbell relatiOIIBblpa
Is just one more silly credibility gap .... Thomas
telephoned us, asked I« anecdotes about Winchell and we said we'd meet lim; be said, no, he
only bad a few minutes beftre he was flying back
to Hollywood .... We told him several and mtered
in a few crusty moments ri Wmcbell's character
to keep it fr(lll making him seem 118IDbyi)8111by,
which he never was -but all that was printed in
Tbcmas' book were the crusty anecdotes,
pbrased as !mocks.
He called columnist Bob Sylvester of the N.
Y. Daily News and asked to meet him to collect
some anecdotes .... Sylvester told Thomas he
dido'! know anything bad about Walter ....
Tb&lt;mas never called Sylvester back.
Walter was indeed a controversial celebrity,
loved by many, feared by many, hated by some
and liked by a few .... Such as myself ..... We don1
think anyone was closer to Walter these last 24
years cr more than my wife and me .... We'd
have been glsd to meet the author and tell him
what we knew just to have IIIIIUJ"ance that the
book might cootain a few true incidents explained and explored a,mid the laughable selfaggrandizements of the Broadway hate1)8ck
who groveled for fav&lt;irs, and got them; who
pleaded f« help Jest their sick cblldren starve,
wives leave them,mcrtgages be fcreclosed -we
heard them then, scme of them quoting themselves ever-61Hndependently in Thomas' thirdrate backmansbip.
They all remind me ol SUnerset Mangham's
gentle worulerment when told a certain person
was telling terrible things about him: "I can't
understand it," said the Old Party. "I never did
anything f« him."
The whole retroactive flctioo is mucb like
the cynical anecdotes Winchell wrote over the
years .... Might we say right here that he never
was a ''newspaperman," although that was his
dearest boast .... Walter was a "showman,"
instilled in him from vaudeville days, and he
!rough! showmanship to a sucCession of flam.
boyantjob5 including his column, his radio show,
lis movies; he was very good in the couple he
made but couldo 'I stand the H'wood inaeUvity of
just standing around waiting for the nell scene ·
to be shot; Walter alwaYl' demanded "action"
and when none was around, he searched, f..- it.

·The Farmers ·Bank &amp; Savings Co.

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POMEROY. OHIO

Member Federal Reserve System

Nina Petrovna, his wife of 48
years, was at hia side when be
died. They bad three children.
Khrushchev, a coarse but
cunning peasant and former
coal miner, was earthy and
direct even at the apex of
power. He loved jokes and
savored the limelight. Friends
said the imposition upon him of
utter political silence after 1964
hurt him most.
The latest assessment of his
leadership by Soviet bisiDrians
refers to his "shortcomings,
errors, miscalculations, harebrained schemes, hasty conclusions, decisions remote from
reality and bureaucracy."
Khrushchev installed Soviet
missiles in Cuba, then withdrew
them. He went to the United
Nations and thumped his shoe
on a desk in the General
Assembly, . He sanctioned the
Berlin wall a ~ecade ago and
sent tanks into Hungary in 1956.
Was Underestimated
Khrushchev hardly seemed
the man to succeed Josef V..
Stalin. Combalants in the
vicious power struggle among
Stalin's beir apparents in 1953
made him Communist party
chief, or first secretary.
Within five years, however,
Khrushchev added the office of

hidustrialist
Was Impressed

along Broadway !

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MOSCOW (UP! ] - Former
Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev,
who rose from a peasant
background to loosen the chains
of Stalinism in the Soviet Union
and play cold war brinkmanship irJ the w«ld, died Saturday
of a heart attack. He was T/ .
In death as in the last seven
years of his life, Khrushchev.
was relegated to the status of
an unperson by the Soviet
Union's current rulers who
ousted him in 1964 from the
leadership he had shared with
others and then held alone for
11 years after Stalin's death in
l\153.
· There was no immediate
announcement from the Kremlin of his death, which · was
confirmed by friends. The
friends said Khrushchev woold
be buried at noon (5 a.m. EDT)
Monday in Moscow's Novodevichy cemetery, an apolitical
graveyard that ranks second in
prestige to the Kremlin Wall,
the pantheon of Soviet_heroes.
Khrushchev suffered a massive heart attack, his third ,
Saturday morning at his simple
country house 2S miles west of
Moscow. He died in the
Kremlin Hospital before noon,
the family friends said.

in our Dress-A-Doll Contest may be the doll she's dreaming of,
the one she may not find beneath her tree if you don't help.
Make her dream happen. Stop by and pick up a doll now.
Design and sew an outfit for it and return the doll in November.
We'll have your doll judged, award prizes, display it in our lobby
and turn it over to a charitable organization
for distribution to a n~edy child. And a dream will come true,

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Khrushchev Dead

come true.

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!I Voice

IUn~rs:; Still, at Death I

Lisa Kuhn 7, Debbie Ford 6, 1 (Corp), Ka~tle Jr. Twirl

Help make a
little girl's dream

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POMEROY - The Rio
Grande Baptist Association
meeting to be held at the Rio
Grande Church on Saturday
was announced at Tirursday
night's meeting of the
Missionary Society of· the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church.
Miss Tanya Griffith was to be
the featured speaker at the
Association meeting convening
at 2 p.m.
Present to report on the
swnmer women's conference ·
held at Otterbein College, ·
Weste..Ville, were Mrs. Charles
Searles and Mrs. John Werner
of the Middleport Church.
Among
the
conference
materials they presented was a
reporton'theworkofMissJune
M. "Sutton, Australian Baptist
missionary.
Mrs. Joseph Cook conducted
the meeting, which opened with
the theme song, "They'll Know
We Are Christians by Our
Love" and prayer. The list Of
materials needed to fill the
white cross quota was
presented and arrangements
made to fill it. The love gift
offering of $15.50 was dedicated
by ·Mrs. Ellen Couch. Mrs.
Oliver Michael, Mrs. Orval
Wiles, and Mrs. Wl)llam Barnhart served refreshmenls.

1'50 Trophies Won in Two Contests

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Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

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CLEVELAND (UP! ) - Cleveland Industrialist Cyrus Eaton
described former Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, who
died Saturday, as a vigorous,
pract.ical man with a "quick
native Intelligence."
"When I mel Khrushchev in
the Kremlin in 1958 I was immediately struck with his vigor and quick native intelli
gence," Eaton said Saturday. "I told him that if he had
been born in the United States
he would have risen to be head
of .one of our great corporations.
"I found he was not a !anal·
ic on political and ideological
matters, but tbok a practical
approaC!i," Eal6n added. "He
was trying for an understand·
ing with the U.S. and was content that we should pursue our
own economic and political sys·
tem while his country followed
its 0 \\'11 ideas.''
Eaton said when world scientists gathered at his Pugwash
Conference in Canada in 1957,
to discuss copyi ng with the
atomic threat, there was some
concern that the Russians

lism uncorked unrest in op-

pressed Soviet bloc .countries.
Orthodox Communists applied
political pressure, and then
Khrushchev applied pressure of
his own.
He crushed the Hungarian
revolt with tanks in 1956 and
smashed opposition at home
one year later.
Opponents in the party
leadership who misjudged
Khrushchev's political acumen
DALE RUSSELL, who WM 1espoosible f« the errection of thia war memorial
lost a dramatic central commit- in the public square in 1968,plans to bring it up to date in the near future.
tee showdown in 1957. Half a
dozen top Kremlin leaders were
disgraced and sacked. On
March 27, 1958, he was named
premierimchen Debate
He traveled extenstvely and
met many foreign leaders,
including Richard M. Nixon,
who at the time · in 1959 was
U.S. vice president. The two
engaged in ·the now famous
Kitchen Debate at a u.s.
exhibition in Moscow,
He met and liked U.S.
President John F. Kennedy. But
it was different with Chinese
Communist Chainnan Mao Tsetung. Khrushchev presided over
the breakdown in relations
between Moscow and Peking.

VOL VI NO. 33

War Memorial Symbol
o+J Deen' r Ap1nreciation
J:"
BY BECKY VANCO
GALLIPOLIS - Beauty lies in the
eyes of the beholder! This is so when one
looks at the war memorial in the park
facing Second Ave. The memorial was
unveiled July 4, 1968 after two years of
planning . The monument was dedicated to
the memory of all who served in wars from
Gallia County .
Dale Russell conceived the idea in 1966
when he wanted to do something for those
who had given their time - some their

lives - to figh t for him and his coun try. He
was too youn g for World War I and 1oo old
for World War fl .
Determined "to do something" for
those who had protected him and his
country in a time of need , with the
financial help of organizations and individuals. he collected $0,300. It was given
with the hea rt of a whole community as a
pledge of its appreciation.
The Fre nch City Lumber Co. dona ted
the brick and the Stanley Saunders

PAGE 13

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1971

woold not attend.
"Mr. Khrushchev told me !ater that he had encouraged
them to do so," Eaton said,
"because be ·felt it was vital
that the scientists who had
made the nuClear weapons develop their own ideas for controlling them.
·'Later he asked me to confer with his agricultural specialists.' I advised them to
abandon the dual-purpose cattle
system in which the same type
of cattle are used for milk and
meat and to adopt the single
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!] - The Ohio Valley Health Services
purpose beef animal," he said. Foundation, whicb covers seven southeastern Ohio counties is
"For my help," Eaton said, · !IJltimis"Ucally awa1"ting a federa 1government decision this month
'
"they gave me a Gold Medal in hq&gt;es of getting $300,000 to draw physicians to the rural
and later the Lenin Peace coun¥,~
'--'de .
Prize."
J. E. F&amp;rrington, executive director of the foumlation, said he
Eaton said be intended to expected approval by the Appalachian Regional Commission on
send his condolences to Khrush- the requested grant sometime this month.
chev's widow, Nina Petrovna.
If the federal money is approved, the seve~ounty region of
He called Khrushchev's sue- Gallia, Hocking, Meigs, Vinton, Lawrence, Athens and Jackson,
cessors "extremely able men.''
He said he expects to meet would be assured of gaining more doctors.
with Soviet Premier Aleksei N.
Farrington explained the money would be used to hire phyKosygin later this month when sicians, who would be assured of earning at least three.fourtha of
the premier makes an official the national annual median income during their first years.
visit to Canada.
Statistics show a self.employed general practitioner earned $33,·
Kosygin came to Canada in :1110 in 19&amp;9.
19&amp;9 as Eaton's guest.
If the doctcr's mcome fell short of the median, federal money
would make up the difference, Farrington said.
The pbysician, however, would have to agree to practice in the
area designated by the frundationfor at least two years.
Farrington said the grant could be a prime motivation for encouraging young doctcrs to practice in rural areas, where the
need for PhYsicians is well known. Vinton County, for' instance,

e

ros ects

Farm Decisions
In Bitter Test
By BERNARD BRENNER
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UP! )-Farm
and food industry groups are
preparing to open what is expee~ to be a bitter contest
later this month over proposals
to give farmers more power in
bargaining for the sale of their
crops.
The forum will be a House
Agriculture subcommittee
which is scheduled to
hold
hearings on
the
issue from Sept. 20 through
Oct. 1. The lawmakers will consider a series of bills including
one backed by the American
Farm Bureau Federa1ion, a sec·
ond and stiffer measure backed
by the National FarmerS Union,
and a third proposal which
would affect only milk and is
backed by the National Milk
Producers Federation.
Most attention is expected to
center·on the so-&lt;:alled "National Agricultural Marketing and
Bargaining Act," sponsored by
Rep. B. F. Sisk, !).Calif_, and
some 82 other House members,
and strongly backed by the
Farm Bureau and some major
Western cooperatives.
This measure woold create a
federal board to determine
which farmer associations are
"qualified" to act as bargain·
ing representatives, Then, it
would require processors and
handlers to negotiate in good
faith with the approved associ·
a lions.
Under the measure, a handler
engaged in negotiations with a
fanner group would not be required to reach agreement. But
he would he forbidden, during
the course of bargaining, to
open negotiations with producers who are not members of the
association.
An administration farm

premier of the Soviet Union to
his position as leader of .the
party. He held both offices
from 1958 until be was forced to
resign Oct. 15, 1964, by the
current troika of Premier
Alexei N. Kosygin, party First
Secr,Ftary Leonid I. Brezbnev,
and President Nikolai Podgorny.
.
During hia five-year climb to
alisolute supremacy, Khrush·
chev altered the Soviet Union's
attitude toward the world and
toward itself. At a 1955 summit
conference he first uttered the
phrase "peaceful coexistence"
and made it a keystone of
Soviet foreign policy.
At home he began to ease the
rigid political controls maintained by Stalin. There was no
total liberalization but midoight
raps on ~oors by police ceased
and fear of oppression melted.
Denounces Slalln
In 1956 Khrushchev stunned
the 'world and his countrymen
by directly assailing Stalin's
memory. His speech at the 20th
Communis! party congress that
year denounced Stalin as a
tyrant, a murderer, a liar and
military bungler.
Khrushchev'sapparentlibera-

spokesman said the Agriculture
Department will give the House

hearings a favorable verdict on
farm bargaining legislation, but
will suggest some changes in
the Sisk bill.
"We're going in to support the
idea that farmers, through
joint action, should be
allowed to help themselves.
But we
have
a few problems with some of
the specificis of the (Sisk) bill
... we will have suggestions· for
changes,'' the source said. The
official said one area where
changes may be proposed invalves the ban on processor
dealingswithnon-membergrowers.
The administration earlier had
gone on record against other
bargaining bills backed by the
National Farmers Union.
Much of the opposition to all
of the new proposals is.coming
frnm processor groups including
the National Canners Association
and
poultry
industry
trade
groups.
The National Broiler Coun·
cil, for example, is distributing a leaflet charging that in
practical effect, the measure
would "dictate compulsory collective bargaining in agricultur·
a1 ,products, including broiler
contracting and ... represents a
blueprint f« monopoly control
by bargaining associations."
DIED IN WRECK
WATERFORD, ohio (UP!)A one-car accident Saturday on
State Route 60 in Morgan
County claimed the life of
Albert J . Offenberger, Route 2,
Waterford.
GIRL IDlED
ASHLAND, Ohio (UP!)
Karen Simon, 12, Ashland, was
killed Friday night when str.uck
by a car here,

00

bas been without a local pbysician for several months, although
one from Pennsylvania is expected to start a practice there soon.
"There hasn't been a real concentrated effort for years to
recruit PhY~cians here;' Farril]gton said. 1
H_e said Vinton county·needed seven more aoctors_. ·, .Athens 23,
HOCking 3, Jacl!SOn 11, Meigs 8, Lawrence 27. Gallia is sufficiently
stal'fed, he said.
The frundation said there were 165 physicians in the
southeastern region in 1966, but only 133 are practicing there

Monument Co. the granite. With that help,
the monument was built at much less cost
than had been anticipated.
Because of the good management, and
generosity, a balance of $1,812.33 remains
in the Commercial and Savings Bank after
the replacement of the plate glass window
(costing $438) in the front of the
monument, and all outstanding bills are·
paid.
Mrs. Dale Russell bought the flower
pots on the ends of the monument and has
kept fldlvers in them ever since.
Names on the monument are being
kepi up to date as closely as possible since
there is no room for more names.
In the future, Mr. Russell plans to
make new name plates for those who have
given their lives. These names will grace
one side of the memorial while the othe•
will contain a verse suitable for honoring
those who have given their time.

President
Optimistic
WASHINGTON (UPI )-White
House sources are painting a
rosy picture of the prospects
for passage of President
Nixon's new tax cut proposals
as well as the welfare reform
bill he asked Congress to
postpone for a year.
Reporters were told Saturday
there had been a "salutary"
response from Congress to
Nixon's plan to consult with
legislative leaders, businessmen
and union officials on "phase
two" of the effort to stem
inflation and increase employmen! which began with his
wage-price freeze.
The source, who spoke to
newsmen on the condition that
he not be identified, said
Congressmen generally took

9 Die m·
Team Bu-8

Nixon to be sincere in his
promise to be "consultative,
conciliatoryand cooperative."
"And we expect response in
kind," the source said.
The official declined to say
how far the White House would
go toward compromise of its
proposals to provide tax relief
for businessmen in an effort to
stimulate the economy. But he
did say the administraUon
would argue against heavy tax
cuts for individuals on the
ground that this kind of relief,
especially for the poor, was
enacted in 1969.
The surprise of the back
ground briefing was the official•
optimism about Senate passage
this year of a welfare reform
measure, which Nixon now
wants to put into effect in mid-

presently.
In addition to filling out a rural pbysician's salary, the federal
funds could be used to:
-Assist senior year medical and dental students in defraying
part of their final training costs if they agree to practice in the
area.
- Pay all "reasonable" expenses of a physician and his family
in connection with visiting the community under consideration.
-Pay moving c!$ts for the doctor, including transportation and
GARFIELD, Colo. (UPI)- A
temp«ary lodging.
school bus carrying a Gunnison,
-Provide interest free five-year loans to physicians beginning Colo., high school football team,
careened down 11,312-foot Monpractice, not to exceed $5,000 to defray the costs of purcbasing a arch Pass in the south-central
home, office or office equipnent. Loans would be contingent on Colorado Rockies Saturday,
two year's practice in the region.
killing eight of the J"unior
varsity players and their coach.
The bus apparently lost its

1973.
The source conceded that the
climate in the Senate Finance
Committee, where a Housepassed w~lfare ref~ b~ has
been awa1ting action, mdicaled
substantial changes might be
made. But he said the
administration was confident
the bill would be resiDred to a
~hape satisfactory to the
Pres"d t
the Se te fl
I en . on "
na
oor.
He said
a , tremend~us
amount of effort was bemg
made to get action on welfare
f
1 • Jati
re arm egiS on.

down safely but at the bottom
he swerved to avoid other
vehides and overturned in a
parkmg lot.
There we_re 47 pe~ns on the
bus, mcludmg the dnver. None
was tdenlified.
Several of the players and
coaehes were take~ to nearby
Salida, Col?·• Hos~ttal or flown
to St. Lukes Hospttal ~ Denver
for treatment of InJuries.
Four of those killed we(e
dead at the ~ne of the crash,
about . SIX nules east of the
summit of the ,pass. Two others
died at Sahda, two were
pronounced dead on arrival at
St. Luke's and another died in
an emergency room at the
Denver hospital.
. The bus, which Gunnison
Superintenctent James R. Raine
said was new, was carrying the
junior varsity players and
coaches to a football game
against the SaUda junior
varsity. It was to have been the
first football game ~ seaaon
for the learn.
"I don't know what could
have happened," said Raine,
who rushed to the hospital after
learning of the accident. "All
we know is that it was some
kind of mechanical failure." •.
All members of the team
were in the 9th or lOth grade,
the superintendent said,
Cliff Watson, a state patrol
officer who witnessed the
crash, said it appeared the
brakes failed ·on the bus near
the summit ol the pass, aboot
115 miles southwest ri Denver.
The driver, Watsoo said,
steered the careening bus down
the curvinK biglnray. U.S. 50,
and was nearly to the bottom
when he swerved to avoid
hitting a small car and a
sem!trailer truck.

T111:"11 p omt
SAIGON (UP!) - South

School Lunch Plan E n da ngered ~~~k~.a~~r :,:/::a~ Assault in
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Rep.
Carl D. ~rkins, J).Ky ., chairman of the House Education
Clmmittee, said Saturday that
proposed government rules for
funding schoolluncb programs
could seriously hinder efforts to
feed needy ciBldren.
In a letter to President Nixon,
Perkins asked that Nixon
personally review and then
rescind the new regulations that
~rkins called a "damaging
policy" that has spawned
confusion over financing the
school lunch program.
Under the proposed regulations announced recently by the
Agriculture Department, every
stste would get at least 35 cents

per meal. Critics said this would
mean thst many states, some of
them getting as mucb as 60
cents a meal, would be severely
cut back. The deparlment said,
bowever, that it was setting a
floor, not a ceiling, and most
states would get more funds,
and only a few would get less.
Sen. Herman E. Talmaclge, J).
Ga., chairman of the Senate
Agriculture Crmmittee, said he
would open hearings Thursday
oo the proposed cbanges. He
said he would hear complaints
and then call Agriculture
Secretary' Clifford M. Hardin
"to respmd to these com·
plainls."
"School lunch administrators

around the nation have indicated lh8t they feel the rug has
been jerked frnm under them in
their attempts to cCillply with
the law in providing tree or
reduced-price meals to all
needy school children," Talmadge said.
Critics charged before a
Senate crmmittee earlier in the
week that the rules are so
restrictive that up to 2 million
needy children will not get
school lunches this year .
Agriculture depa1 tment officials denied the allegatioo and
claimed the revisions in the
complex formula allocating
mooey to the states would
enable even more needy

'

'

Nader Takes .on Beetle
By ROBERT F. BUCKHORN
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Consumer advocate Ralph Nader
urged Saturday that Volkswa·
gen recall all of its three
million cars to correct safety
defects and said the VW
Microbus "is so unsafe" it
should be permanently !Jarred
from the road.
In a 200-page report, Nader
said: ''The Volkswagen Beetle
is the most hazardous car
currently in use in significant
numbers in the United States."
Volkswagen promptly denied
the charge, claiming its products "meet or exceed all
safety standards." Nader said
such a recall woold cost.
Volkswagen $184 million.
Nader said his conclusion
about the Volkswagep was
based on these faclo(s:
"The danger of injury from

the windshield, the weakness of
the seat backs, the likelihood of
the doors opening in a crash,
the consequent likelihood of
passenger ejection, the dangerous location of the gasoline
tank, the propensity of the gas
cap and the gas tines to come
off during a crash, steering
column penetration in a frontal
crash, the vulnerability of the
doors to side impacls, exlraordinary sidewind sensit.ivity, and
handling qualities which make
the car unP,redictable."
All of these factors, Nader
said, "not only make the
Volkswagen Beetle more likely
to becOIIle involved in single
vehicle accidents, but also
make the BeeUe 11\0re likely to
cause serious or fatal injury in
any colllsion, "
Volkswagen said, however,
that its car$ are "providing

millions Of owners with safe,
dependable, and economical
transportation ." Nader, the
spokesman said, has been
making "similar allegations
about our products since
1966.11

Volkswagen's sales have been
increasing every year in the
United Slates and it now has
about 12 to 15 per cent of the
U.S. market
Nader claimed nothing could
eliminate the danger in the
iiOO,OOO Volkswagen microbuses
on the highway because of what
he said was a basic unsafe
design,
Said Nader: "The fundamental reason to avoid purchasing
or riding in any Volkswagen
Microbus Is the gross lack of
front collapse distance"-the
space between the front end of
the ,.,,.. and the driver.

children to be fed.
Congress this year has
au thorized spending $667.3
million on school food
programs, $78.8 million more
year .
The
than
last
bulk of the money is
to provide free or reduced-east
meals to cblldren who cannot
afford to pay.
~rkins told the President
·that the federal average
reimbursement rate of 30 cents
f« free and reduced lunches
provided in the new regulations
was insufficient for the
majority of the states.

1. •.-.·.: ··: ·.;..
.............

.;.,

. .... .

.

.
'

A1TICA, N.Y. (UP!t- A
" touchy" calm hung over the
Attica State Correctional
Facility
Saturday
as
rebellious convicts boldlllg 30
hostages awaited tbe arrival
of Black Paather leaders
Bobby Seale aod Huey
Newlon to act as mediators In
the three-&lt;lay insurrection.
Cblcago Seven Attorney
William A. Kuostler, a
member of a hastily compesed citizens' committee
that met with the prisoners
for almost five houn durtog
the night, said only a few
Items remained at issue, He
expressed "very bigh hopes
this situation will be over
today." The talks, described
as pre-negotiations for later
discussions bet«.-een prison
officials and representatives
of the 1,000 rebellious
prlsooers, were recessed
• ·bea the inmates demaaded
that Stale aud Newlon aP"
pear.
:::: · j~

:08'~::;~~':-~-:$~~

o

Vietnamese troops battled
Communlstuniisnear Khe Sanh
Saturday while elite South
Vietnamese Black Panther
airborne troops moved into
action on the sixth day of a
major government drive below
the Demilitarized Zone
military spokesmen said.
'
The 220 Black Panther troopa
were dropped from scores of u.
s. helicopters on a r!&amp;gellne sill
miles north of Kbe Sanh. UP!
correspondent Stewart
Kellerman watched them fan
out through the area, believed
to contain North Vietnamese
37mm antiaircraft gun emplacements.

GingerAdds
Heftiness
By Uolted Press bttenalleul
Tropical storm Ginger
became a full..fledged hurricane
late Saturday while Edith, once

a fierce hurricane, crnse d the
Yucatan Peninsula toward a
likely rebirth in the Gulf of
Mexico.
Ginger at 6 p.m. EDT wu 300
miles southeast of Bermuda",
moving slowly to the eastnortheast at 10 mille an hour.
Weakening tropical atorm
r'em meanwbile pestered the
South-! Texas Cout with
gales and street.lloodiiw rains.
The storm bit Corpua a.rtatl
with winds up to 111 milll 1111
hour, then begaa ploMID&amp;
southweshrard toward tile Rio
Grande Valley, leavlnllllliktd
up to ei&amp;ht indies ol raiD.
•

~~--------------~-----------------~-------------'~-------

•

�12- 'Mie SUnday Times- Sentinei,Seday,llepl.l2, 1171

Katie'S Korner By

Katie crow·

POMEROY :_ Congratulstioos to the Meigs Mara!*rs on
lltelr victory Friday night. C&lt;lllgratulsilons also to the Meigs
llllnd and majtrette line. .
·
·
·
The Manuder Stadinm ln Pomeroy Friday mght was filled.to
c:a..city. The crowd cheered, y~ters sc,..med, and the band
played on. The Meigs team and band were well SUJJ)lOI'ted,
The Reemelin (BIS) team perhaps bad a few supporters. But
lie young men from Lancaster played as if they had the support
II. hundreds.
When the Reemelin team was leaving the field one of tbe

yoWJg men was running toward the dressing room when he
slopped suddenly. He turned around and his eyes opened wide as
did his arms, fcr·there~tood hia parents. Aheartwarming reunion
followed.
Our young men have so much to look forward to and a goal to
wCI'k for while the boys from Reeme1in are thankful for the
smallest bit of affection.
.
A halflinte the score was 40 to 0. Head Coach Cllarles Chan·
cey who doesn't take advantage of weak foes gave the younger
tea~ members a chance to get experience by playing them the
second half. They did a fine job.
However, the competitioo will get strooger. But knowing
Coach Chancey, so will his squad.
MRS. ROSE GENHEIMER, Minersville, left Wednesday
from Columbus Airport for Paris, France and Londm, Englsnd.
Mrs , Genheimer plans an extended visit with her daughter
IM!d husband, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Vanica, Loodon. Mr. Vanica is
with the London Branch of the First Oty National Bank of New
York.
Accompanying Mrs, Genbeimer were Mr. and Mrs. Walden
Roush of Pt. Pleasant who will visit their 8011 Walden, Jr., in
Paris, France.

BY TilE WAY, it is David 0. Jenkins of Middleport, who is
running for a post on. the M~
Local Board ri Education, not his
&lt;.;
son, David E. Je nk:ms.

Fairborn Couple Music, Readings
Came Last Sunday .
.
Given
Grange
REEDSVILLE - Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Wiener of Fairborn
were dinner guests of the Edgar
Pullins, Reedsville, last Sun·
day. Mrs. Wiener, the former
Marilyn Pooler and Mrs.
Pullins, Lepa Pooler, are
sisters. Later, Mrs. Wiener's
mother, Inez Pooler, an employee of the Meigs County
Infirmary, was met by Mr. and
Mrs. Wiener at the infirmary.
After visiting with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. William
Pooler Sr. and son Gary of
Chester, they returned to the
Pullins' residence and were
entertained by nieces Diana and
Kathy. Diana a member of the
Eastern High School marching
band, modeled the new band
uniform.
·On Monday Mr. and Mrs.
Wiener spent the day visiting
with their daughter and son-inlaw, Carol, Eugene and granddaugl)ters, Usa and Tanuny
Roush, Henderson, W. Va. After
an enjoyable dinner prepared
by Carol, and a short shopping
visit to Gallipolis, they returned
to Fairborn.

POMEROY - A program of
music and readings was
presented by Racine Grange
members who were guests
Thursday night at a meeting of
the Rock Springs Grange.
Mrs. Emma Adams, lecturer
of Racine Grange, hacl charge
of the program wbicb opened
with the song, "Work for the
Night is Coming". Earl Cross
read "The Song of the Lazy
Fanner", Mrs. Cross, "What
Every Farmer's Wife Should
Know", Mrs. Adams and Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Ashley, "In
Step with Time", and Mrs.
Charles Alkire, Cross, Mrs.
Adams and Mrs. Ashley, "How
to Uve on 24 Houra a Day".
There was a piano solo by
KeithAshleyandastyleshowof
hats by Racipe grange members. Three applications for
membership were received at
the meeting. The ned meeting
was set for Sept. 23 with an
election of officers. Cake, ice
cream and coffee were served
by the home economics
chairman.

•

Two Girc/es Meet
· NEW HAVEN- A combined
lllef!ling of the Rebecca and
ESther Circles of the United
Lulheran Church WOOiell of St.
l'liul Lulheran Church here was
. held Wednesday in the ~
room of lhe church with Mrs.
Seibel Vance presiding. Mrs.
Vance opened the meeting with
a scripture and prayer.
Mrs. William Powell announced that the Lutheran
World Relief Clothing drive
would·be held in October.
Mh. J. V. · McGrew,
president, announced that the
United Church Women · would
hold a meeting at Cedar ~.
Ripley, September 22 to 24 and
urged aU women to attend.
Members were abo informed
that tl)e public address system
had been installed in the
church, with the exception of a
microphone, which would be
taken care of as soon as
possible. The purchasing of this
system is a project ol the
women's organization.

The program at the meeting

POMEROY_ Baton students
was a chapter taken from the tl Mrs Judy Riggs have won
s~y book Paul's Letters, 11nd 150 tr~bies in two recent
ent.itled "Eve~body. Does' It." !!.B.T.A. sanctioned baton
The topiC !fa&amp; discussed by Mrs. ·. --~
· ·_· --~--,-Donald ' Bumg11_rdner, and
PART¥ GIVEN · •
several members participated NEW · HAVEN - Mr. and
by reading scripture passages. . Mrs. Harold Rose entertained
At t,lle conclUsion refresh. With a dinner party Saturday
menta were served by Mrs. evening. Guest chef of the
Edna Burris to Mfs. Jolm F. evening was Mr. Tommie
Roush, Mrs. Alfred Sprouse, Allbritton
of Hurricane,
Mrs. William Russell, Mrs. representative of the Salad
Melvin Knapp, Mrs. -David Master Co. Guests at the dinner
Roush, Mrs. John'C. Fry, Mrs. were Mr. and Mrs. John
Lloyd Roush, Mrs. Bethel Thorne, Mr. and Mrs. John F.
Vance, Mrs. Hennan Layne, Roush, Mr. and Mrs. James
Mrs. Otto Grimm, Mrs. William Adams, Mr. and Mrs. Max
Powell, Mrs. Carol Adams, Jr., Eichinger, Mr. and Mrs. John
Mrs. Donald Bumgardner and C. Fry, and the host and
Mrs. J . V. McGrew.
hostess.

Twirling Contests, the fLrSI the
"Second Annual Belpre
Homecoming Contest" · at
Howes Grove Park iD Belpre
Sponsorecl by the Belpre Area
Chamber of Commerce.
Miss Diana Guthrie of
Coolville was the high point
grand champion winner ol the
day, and won lhe Miss Belpre
Homecoming Majorette Queen
lor the 11-14 yr.-age division.
She also won 11 other lrq&gt;hies in
the contest, whicb pushed her
total trophy wins over 200.
Other winners of the Belpre
Contest are as follows with the
numberoftropbieswonbyeacb
girl :
Cindy Patterson 9, Connie
ReciDr 8, Karen Strausbaugb 1,

Captolia Cole 5, Rochele
Logston 5, Becky Turner 5,
Marcia Carr 4, Deborah
Burkhammer 4, Vicki Matlack
4, Louann Newell 3, Joann Fick
3, Carla Matlack 3, Terri
Vannoy 3, Rita Welsh 2, Janet
Ambrose 2, Debbie Scott 2,
Ubby Ann Watkins 2, Kaleen
Milhone I, Brenda Linton 1,
Gloria Barber 1, Connie Hensley 1, Teresa Carr 1, Grella
Miller 1, Dalelene Scott 1,
Debbie England I, Karen Smith
1, Betsy Amsbary I, Jane
Marcellus I, Cathy Newell 1,
Suzy Goebel I, Rhonda Soval 1,
Vicki England 1, Julia Carpenter 1.
"The Riggs Royal Kad-ettes"

Team I, The PinkPanthersJuv.
Dance-Twirl Team I, The
Amesville Jr, Dance-Twirl
Team 1, The Federal Hocking
Majorettes 1st in Sr. Twirling
Teams.
.
The second con.test the
twirlers took part in was the
Annual "Sweetcorn Festival
Contest'" las! weekend at
Millersport on Buckeye Lake.
Over 400 twirlers took part in
the event whicb is sponsored by
the Lions Club.
Winning trophies were Cindy
Patterson 8, Diana Guthrie 7,
Karen Strausbaugh 5, Connie
Rector 4, Debbie Ford 3,
Dalelene Scott I, Louann Newell
1 and Debbie Scott 1.

Baptist
Women Met
Thursday

Enter our Dress-A-Doll Contest. The doll you dress

I

I

I
I

I
'

BY JACK O'BRIAN
I

••..ORCHIDS AND SCALIJONS'
NEW YORK - Book reviewer in the N. Y.
Times simply chortled over the lmocks in Bob
Thcmas' back biography of Walter Wmchell and
especially enjoyed citing WW's alleged
columnar inaccuracies - wbile fielding some
ineiCUS8ble goofs of hia own: he staled Wmchell
"remained silent&lt;' when Josephine Baker, the
black entertainer, was barred from the stork
Club." .... She wasn't barred: she and her party
were sealed, served three rounds of drinks and
ernpted when she had to walt 35 minutes f«
steak sandwiches .... Wmchell wasn't even there
when La Baker grabbed at the limelight at
Wlnchell's expense after he'd helped ber often in
hia colwnn.
Walter was with my wife and me; our table
was invaded by another colunnist in his sloppy
cups and the three of us left to get away from him
.... We went to an all-night movie, the first
performances of "Desert FOI," in which Nazi
general Rommel was being glorified (after
which Walter belted in print the apologia), went
elsewhere for a bite and dido'! know Baker's
story until the next day .... Two official in· ·
vestigations (by the city and the liquor board)
cleared the Stork Club completely.
Tbe book reviewer (R. R. Lingeman) said
Winchell "fell out with Harry Truman"; he
never was ''in," so how could be fall out? Walter
did not write "a vote for Stevenson is a vote for
Christine Jorgensen"; be said it on the Mutual
Network Election Eve and got what-for from my
wife for the lapse (and Walter agreed); WUicbell
did not turn to Joe McCarthy after his civil
litertarian colwnn-llistory because "McCarthy
forces " said they'd tum their guns on him- that
was nonsense .... His ''last columns" were aot
written for Variety, the showbiz bible, as the
reviewer states to flatly; they were written f«
the new version of the N. Y. Daily Mirror.
After his son's suicide and his wife's death,
Walter did not give up his column as the
reviewer notes, but returned to itfor a while and
quit because of ill health .... He lost his radio
show oot when it ·~ell rif" but when he fought
personally with ABC's Pres. Robert Klnlner and
demanded ABC give him back the "lifetime
coo tract" that guaranteed Walter $52,000 a year
f« life as a "coosultant" after he quit broad·
casting. His later radio work was anti-climactic.
1be error.filled review attempts to use
Winchell's own words as smug tenninal Clllll·
ment: "Orchids and onioos," it says, when the
real phrase was ''Orchids and scallions." .... And

-

wily do book critics fail to review the book- and
only review Wmchell?
A few passing swats: Bob Thomas called us

when he was in New York presumably researching the WIIICbell biograpby .... His nailing
collection ri old attacks and reconstructed press
agenls' self.aerving switcbes oo the actual
Broadway hisl«y of their WIIICbell relatiOIIBblpa
Is just one more silly credibility gap .... Thomas
telephoned us, asked I« anecdotes about Winchell and we said we'd meet lim; be said, no, he
only bad a few minutes beftre he was flying back
to Hollywood .... We told him several and mtered
in a few crusty moments ri Wmcbell's character
to keep it fr(lll making him seem 118IDbyi)8111by,
which he never was -but all that was printed in
Tbcmas' book were the crusty anecdotes,
pbrased as !mocks.
He called columnist Bob Sylvester of the N.
Y. Daily News and asked to meet him to collect
some anecdotes .... Sylvester told Thomas he
dido'! know anything bad about Walter ....
Tb&lt;mas never called Sylvester back.
Walter was indeed a controversial celebrity,
loved by many, feared by many, hated by some
and liked by a few .... Such as myself ..... We don1
think anyone was closer to Walter these last 24
years cr more than my wife and me .... We'd
have been glsd to meet the author and tell him
what we knew just to have IIIIIUJ"ance that the
book might cootain a few true incidents explained and explored a,mid the laughable selfaggrandizements of the Broadway hate1)8ck
who groveled for fav&lt;irs, and got them; who
pleaded f« help Jest their sick cblldren starve,
wives leave them,mcrtgages be fcreclosed -we
heard them then, scme of them quoting themselves ever-61Hndependently in Thomas' thirdrate backmansbip.
They all remind me ol SUnerset Mangham's
gentle worulerment when told a certain person
was telling terrible things about him: "I can't
understand it," said the Old Party. "I never did
anything f« him."
The whole retroactive flctioo is mucb like
the cynical anecdotes Winchell wrote over the
years .... Might we say right here that he never
was a ''newspaperman," although that was his
dearest boast .... Walter was a "showman,"
instilled in him from vaudeville days, and he
!rough! showmanship to a sucCession of flam.
boyantjob5 including his column, his radio show,
lis movies; he was very good in the couple he
made but couldo 'I stand the H'wood inaeUvity of
just standing around waiting for the nell scene ·
to be shot; Walter alwaYl' demanded "action"
and when none was around, he searched, f..- it.

·The Farmers ·Bank &amp; Savings Co.

L:

POMEROY. OHIO

Member Federal Reserve System

Nina Petrovna, his wife of 48
years, was at hia side when be
died. They bad three children.
Khrushchev, a coarse but
cunning peasant and former
coal miner, was earthy and
direct even at the apex of
power. He loved jokes and
savored the limelight. Friends
said the imposition upon him of
utter political silence after 1964
hurt him most.
The latest assessment of his
leadership by Soviet bisiDrians
refers to his "shortcomings,
errors, miscalculations, harebrained schemes, hasty conclusions, decisions remote from
reality and bureaucracy."
Khrushchev installed Soviet
missiles in Cuba, then withdrew
them. He went to the United
Nations and thumped his shoe
on a desk in the General
Assembly, . He sanctioned the
Berlin wall a ~ecade ago and
sent tanks into Hungary in 1956.
Was Underestimated
Khrushchev hardly seemed
the man to succeed Josef V..
Stalin. Combalants in the
vicious power struggle among
Stalin's beir apparents in 1953
made him Communist party
chief, or first secretary.
Within five years, however,
Khrushchev added the office of

hidustrialist
Was Impressed

along Broadway !

I

MOSCOW (UP! ] - Former
Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev,
who rose from a peasant
background to loosen the chains
of Stalinism in the Soviet Union
and play cold war brinkmanship irJ the w«ld, died Saturday
of a heart attack. He was T/ .
In death as in the last seven
years of his life, Khrushchev.
was relegated to the status of
an unperson by the Soviet
Union's current rulers who
ousted him in 1964 from the
leadership he had shared with
others and then held alone for
11 years after Stalin's death in
l\153.
· There was no immediate
announcement from the Kremlin of his death, which · was
confirmed by friends. The
friends said Khrushchev woold
be buried at noon (5 a.m. EDT)
Monday in Moscow's Novodevichy cemetery, an apolitical
graveyard that ranks second in
prestige to the Kremlin Wall,
the pantheon of Soviet_heroes.
Khrushchev suffered a massive heart attack, his third ,
Saturday morning at his simple
country house 2S miles west of
Moscow. He died in the
Kremlin Hospital before noon,
the family friends said.

in our Dress-A-Doll Contest may be the doll she's dreaming of,
the one she may not find beneath her tree if you don't help.
Make her dream happen. Stop by and pick up a doll now.
Design and sew an outfit for it and return the doll in November.
We'll have your doll judged, award prizes, display it in our lobby
and turn it over to a charitable organization
for distribution to a n~edy child. And a dream will come true,

\ il

.I

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Khrushchev Dead

come true.

r-----------------------------------------1

!I Voice

IUn~rs:; Still, at Death I

Lisa Kuhn 7, Debbie Ford 6, 1 (Corp), Ka~tle Jr. Twirl

Help make a
little girl's dream

,,

POMEROY - The Rio
Grande Baptist Association
meeting to be held at the Rio
Grande Church on Saturday
was announced at Tirursday
night's meeting of the
Missionary Society of· the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church.
Miss Tanya Griffith was to be
the featured speaker at the
Association meeting convening
at 2 p.m.
Present to report on the
swnmer women's conference ·
held at Otterbein College, ·
Weste..Ville, were Mrs. Charles
Searles and Mrs. John Werner
of the Middleport Church.
Among
the
conference
materials they presented was a
reporton'theworkofMissJune
M. "Sutton, Australian Baptist
missionary.
Mrs. Joseph Cook conducted
the meeting, which opened with
the theme song, "They'll Know
We Are Christians by Our
Love" and prayer. The list Of
materials needed to fill the
white cross quota was
presented and arrangements
made to fill it. The love gift
offering of $15.50 was dedicated
by ·Mrs. Ellen Couch. Mrs.
Oliver Michael, Mrs. Orval
Wiles, and Mrs. Wl)llam Barnhart served refreshmenls.

1'50 Trophies Won in Two Contests

II

\ll~\1(1

U\\I\

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

-·- --------...;._--------,------.....!

CLEVELAND (UP! ) - Cleveland Industrialist Cyrus Eaton
described former Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, who
died Saturday, as a vigorous,
pract.ical man with a "quick
native Intelligence."
"When I mel Khrushchev in
the Kremlin in 1958 I was immediately struck with his vigor and quick native intelli
gence," Eaton said Saturday. "I told him that if he had
been born in the United States
he would have risen to be head
of .one of our great corporations.
"I found he was not a !anal·
ic on political and ideological
matters, but tbok a practical
approaC!i," Eal6n added. "He
was trying for an understand·
ing with the U.S. and was content that we should pursue our
own economic and political sys·
tem while his country followed
its 0 \\'11 ideas.''
Eaton said when world scientists gathered at his Pugwash
Conference in Canada in 1957,
to discuss copyi ng with the
atomic threat, there was some
concern that the Russians

lism uncorked unrest in op-

pressed Soviet bloc .countries.
Orthodox Communists applied
political pressure, and then
Khrushchev applied pressure of
his own.
He crushed the Hungarian
revolt with tanks in 1956 and
smashed opposition at home
one year later.
Opponents in the party
leadership who misjudged
Khrushchev's political acumen
DALE RUSSELL, who WM 1espoosible f« the errection of thia war memorial
lost a dramatic central commit- in the public square in 1968,plans to bring it up to date in the near future.
tee showdown in 1957. Half a
dozen top Kremlin leaders were
disgraced and sacked. On
March 27, 1958, he was named
premierimchen Debate
He traveled extenstvely and
met many foreign leaders,
including Richard M. Nixon,
who at the time · in 1959 was
U.S. vice president. The two
engaged in ·the now famous
Kitchen Debate at a u.s.
exhibition in Moscow,
He met and liked U.S.
President John F. Kennedy. But
it was different with Chinese
Communist Chainnan Mao Tsetung. Khrushchev presided over
the breakdown in relations
between Moscow and Peking.

VOL VI NO. 33

War Memorial Symbol
o+J Deen' r Ap1nreciation
J:"
BY BECKY VANCO
GALLIPOLIS - Beauty lies in the
eyes of the beholder! This is so when one
looks at the war memorial in the park
facing Second Ave. The memorial was
unveiled July 4, 1968 after two years of
planning . The monument was dedicated to
the memory of all who served in wars from
Gallia County .
Dale Russell conceived the idea in 1966
when he wanted to do something for those
who had given their time - some their

lives - to figh t for him and his coun try. He
was too youn g for World War I and 1oo old
for World War fl .
Determined "to do something" for
those who had protected him and his
country in a time of need , with the
financial help of organizations and individuals. he collected $0,300. It was given
with the hea rt of a whole community as a
pledge of its appreciation.
The Fre nch City Lumber Co. dona ted
the brick and the Stanley Saunders

PAGE 13

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1971

woold not attend.
"Mr. Khrushchev told me !ater that he had encouraged
them to do so," Eaton said,
"because be ·felt it was vital
that the scientists who had
made the nuClear weapons develop their own ideas for controlling them.
·'Later he asked me to confer with his agricultural specialists.' I advised them to
abandon the dual-purpose cattle
system in which the same type
of cattle are used for milk and
meat and to adopt the single
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!] - The Ohio Valley Health Services
purpose beef animal," he said. Foundation, whicb covers seven southeastern Ohio counties is
"For my help," Eaton said, · !IJltimis"Ucally awa1"ting a federa 1government decision this month
'
"they gave me a Gold Medal in hq&gt;es of getting $300,000 to draw physicians to the rural
and later the Lenin Peace coun¥,~
'--'de .
Prize."
J. E. F&amp;rrington, executive director of the foumlation, said he
Eaton said be intended to expected approval by the Appalachian Regional Commission on
send his condolences to Khrush- the requested grant sometime this month.
chev's widow, Nina Petrovna.
If the federal money is approved, the seve~ounty region of
He called Khrushchev's sue- Gallia, Hocking, Meigs, Vinton, Lawrence, Athens and Jackson,
cessors "extremely able men.''
He said he expects to meet would be assured of gaining more doctors.
with Soviet Premier Aleksei N.
Farrington explained the money would be used to hire phyKosygin later this month when sicians, who would be assured of earning at least three.fourtha of
the premier makes an official the national annual median income during their first years.
visit to Canada.
Statistics show a self.employed general practitioner earned $33,·
Kosygin came to Canada in :1110 in 19&amp;9.
19&amp;9 as Eaton's guest.
If the doctcr's mcome fell short of the median, federal money
would make up the difference, Farrington said.
The pbysician, however, would have to agree to practice in the
area designated by the frundationfor at least two years.
Farrington said the grant could be a prime motivation for encouraging young doctcrs to practice in rural areas, where the
need for PhYsicians is well known. Vinton County, for' instance,

e

ros ects

Farm Decisions
In Bitter Test
By BERNARD BRENNER
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UP! )-Farm
and food industry groups are
preparing to open what is expee~ to be a bitter contest
later this month over proposals
to give farmers more power in
bargaining for the sale of their
crops.
The forum will be a House
Agriculture subcommittee
which is scheduled to
hold
hearings on
the
issue from Sept. 20 through
Oct. 1. The lawmakers will consider a series of bills including
one backed by the American
Farm Bureau Federa1ion, a sec·
ond and stiffer measure backed
by the National FarmerS Union,
and a third proposal which
would affect only milk and is
backed by the National Milk
Producers Federation.
Most attention is expected to
center·on the so-&lt;:alled "National Agricultural Marketing and
Bargaining Act," sponsored by
Rep. B. F. Sisk, !).Calif_, and
some 82 other House members,
and strongly backed by the
Farm Bureau and some major
Western cooperatives.
This measure woold create a
federal board to determine
which farmer associations are
"qualified" to act as bargain·
ing representatives, Then, it
would require processors and
handlers to negotiate in good
faith with the approved associ·
a lions.
Under the measure, a handler
engaged in negotiations with a
fanner group would not be required to reach agreement. But
he would he forbidden, during
the course of bargaining, to
open negotiations with producers who are not members of the
association.
An administration farm

premier of the Soviet Union to
his position as leader of .the
party. He held both offices
from 1958 until be was forced to
resign Oct. 15, 1964, by the
current troika of Premier
Alexei N. Kosygin, party First
Secr,Ftary Leonid I. Brezbnev,
and President Nikolai Podgorny.
.
During hia five-year climb to
alisolute supremacy, Khrush·
chev altered the Soviet Union's
attitude toward the world and
toward itself. At a 1955 summit
conference he first uttered the
phrase "peaceful coexistence"
and made it a keystone of
Soviet foreign policy.
At home he began to ease the
rigid political controls maintained by Stalin. There was no
total liberalization but midoight
raps on ~oors by police ceased
and fear of oppression melted.
Denounces Slalln
In 1956 Khrushchev stunned
the 'world and his countrymen
by directly assailing Stalin's
memory. His speech at the 20th
Communis! party congress that
year denounced Stalin as a
tyrant, a murderer, a liar and
military bungler.
Khrushchev'sapparentlibera-

spokesman said the Agriculture
Department will give the House

hearings a favorable verdict on
farm bargaining legislation, but
will suggest some changes in
the Sisk bill.
"We're going in to support the
idea that farmers, through
joint action, should be
allowed to help themselves.
But we
have
a few problems with some of
the specificis of the (Sisk) bill
... we will have suggestions· for
changes,'' the source said. The
official said one area where
changes may be proposed invalves the ban on processor
dealingswithnon-membergrowers.
The administration earlier had
gone on record against other
bargaining bills backed by the
National Farmers Union.
Much of the opposition to all
of the new proposals is.coming
frnm processor groups including
the National Canners Association
and
poultry
industry
trade
groups.
The National Broiler Coun·
cil, for example, is distributing a leaflet charging that in
practical effect, the measure
would "dictate compulsory collective bargaining in agricultur·
a1 ,products, including broiler
contracting and ... represents a
blueprint f« monopoly control
by bargaining associations."
DIED IN WRECK
WATERFORD, ohio (UP!)A one-car accident Saturday on
State Route 60 in Morgan
County claimed the life of
Albert J . Offenberger, Route 2,
Waterford.
GIRL IDlED
ASHLAND, Ohio (UP!)
Karen Simon, 12, Ashland, was
killed Friday night when str.uck
by a car here,

00

bas been without a local pbysician for several months, although
one from Pennsylvania is expected to start a practice there soon.
"There hasn't been a real concentrated effort for years to
recruit PhY~cians here;' Farril]gton said. 1
H_e said Vinton county·needed seven more aoctors_. ·, .Athens 23,
HOCking 3, Jacl!SOn 11, Meigs 8, Lawrence 27. Gallia is sufficiently
stal'fed, he said.
The frundation said there were 165 physicians in the
southeastern region in 1966, but only 133 are practicing there

Monument Co. the granite. With that help,
the monument was built at much less cost
than had been anticipated.
Because of the good management, and
generosity, a balance of $1,812.33 remains
in the Commercial and Savings Bank after
the replacement of the plate glass window
(costing $438) in the front of the
monument, and all outstanding bills are·
paid.
Mrs. Dale Russell bought the flower
pots on the ends of the monument and has
kept fldlvers in them ever since.
Names on the monument are being
kepi up to date as closely as possible since
there is no room for more names.
In the future, Mr. Russell plans to
make new name plates for those who have
given their lives. These names will grace
one side of the memorial while the othe•
will contain a verse suitable for honoring
those who have given their time.

President
Optimistic
WASHINGTON (UPI )-White
House sources are painting a
rosy picture of the prospects
for passage of President
Nixon's new tax cut proposals
as well as the welfare reform
bill he asked Congress to
postpone for a year.
Reporters were told Saturday
there had been a "salutary"
response from Congress to
Nixon's plan to consult with
legislative leaders, businessmen
and union officials on "phase
two" of the effort to stem
inflation and increase employmen! which began with his
wage-price freeze.
The source, who spoke to
newsmen on the condition that
he not be identified, said
Congressmen generally took

9 Die m·
Team Bu-8

Nixon to be sincere in his
promise to be "consultative,
conciliatoryand cooperative."
"And we expect response in
kind," the source said.
The official declined to say
how far the White House would
go toward compromise of its
proposals to provide tax relief
for businessmen in an effort to
stimulate the economy. But he
did say the administraUon
would argue against heavy tax
cuts for individuals on the
ground that this kind of relief,
especially for the poor, was
enacted in 1969.
The surprise of the back
ground briefing was the official•
optimism about Senate passage
this year of a welfare reform
measure, which Nixon now
wants to put into effect in mid-

presently.
In addition to filling out a rural pbysician's salary, the federal
funds could be used to:
-Assist senior year medical and dental students in defraying
part of their final training costs if they agree to practice in the
area.
- Pay all "reasonable" expenses of a physician and his family
in connection with visiting the community under consideration.
-Pay moving c!$ts for the doctor, including transportation and
GARFIELD, Colo. (UPI)- A
temp«ary lodging.
school bus carrying a Gunnison,
-Provide interest free five-year loans to physicians beginning Colo., high school football team,
careened down 11,312-foot Monpractice, not to exceed $5,000 to defray the costs of purcbasing a arch Pass in the south-central
home, office or office equipnent. Loans would be contingent on Colorado Rockies Saturday,
two year's practice in the region.
killing eight of the J"unior
varsity players and their coach.
The bus apparently lost its

1973.
The source conceded that the
climate in the Senate Finance
Committee, where a Housepassed w~lfare ref~ b~ has
been awa1ting action, mdicaled
substantial changes might be
made. But he said the
administration was confident
the bill would be resiDred to a
~hape satisfactory to the
Pres"d t
the Se te fl
I en . on "
na
oor.
He said
a , tremend~us
amount of effort was bemg
made to get action on welfare
f
1 • Jati
re arm egiS on.

down safely but at the bottom
he swerved to avoid other
vehides and overturned in a
parkmg lot.
There we_re 47 pe~ns on the
bus, mcludmg the dnver. None
was tdenlified.
Several of the players and
coaehes were take~ to nearby
Salida, Col?·• Hos~ttal or flown
to St. Lukes Hospttal ~ Denver
for treatment of InJuries.
Four of those killed we(e
dead at the ~ne of the crash,
about . SIX nules east of the
summit of the ,pass. Two others
died at Sahda, two were
pronounced dead on arrival at
St. Luke's and another died in
an emergency room at the
Denver hospital.
. The bus, which Gunnison
Superintenctent James R. Raine
said was new, was carrying the
junior varsity players and
coaches to a football game
against the SaUda junior
varsity. It was to have been the
first football game ~ seaaon
for the learn.
"I don't know what could
have happened," said Raine,
who rushed to the hospital after
learning of the accident. "All
we know is that it was some
kind of mechanical failure." •.
All members of the team
were in the 9th or lOth grade,
the superintendent said,
Cliff Watson, a state patrol
officer who witnessed the
crash, said it appeared the
brakes failed ·on the bus near
the summit ol the pass, aboot
115 miles southwest ri Denver.
The driver, Watsoo said,
steered the careening bus down
the curvinK biglnray. U.S. 50,
and was nearly to the bottom
when he swerved to avoid
hitting a small car and a
sem!trailer truck.

T111:"11 p omt
SAIGON (UP!) - South

School Lunch Plan E n da ngered ~~~k~.a~~r :,:/::a~ Assault in
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Rep.
Carl D. ~rkins, J).Ky ., chairman of the House Education
Clmmittee, said Saturday that
proposed government rules for
funding schoolluncb programs
could seriously hinder efforts to
feed needy ciBldren.
In a letter to President Nixon,
Perkins asked that Nixon
personally review and then
rescind the new regulations that
~rkins called a "damaging
policy" that has spawned
confusion over financing the
school lunch program.
Under the proposed regulations announced recently by the
Agriculture Department, every
stste would get at least 35 cents

per meal. Critics said this would
mean thst many states, some of
them getting as mucb as 60
cents a meal, would be severely
cut back. The deparlment said,
bowever, that it was setting a
floor, not a ceiling, and most
states would get more funds,
and only a few would get less.
Sen. Herman E. Talmaclge, J).
Ga., chairman of the Senate
Agriculture Crmmittee, said he
would open hearings Thursday
oo the proposed cbanges. He
said he would hear complaints
and then call Agriculture
Secretary' Clifford M. Hardin
"to respmd to these com·
plainls."
"School lunch administrators

around the nation have indicated lh8t they feel the rug has
been jerked frnm under them in
their attempts to cCillply with
the law in providing tree or
reduced-price meals to all
needy school children," Talmadge said.
Critics charged before a
Senate crmmittee earlier in the
week that the rules are so
restrictive that up to 2 million
needy children will not get
school lunches this year .
Agriculture depa1 tment officials denied the allegatioo and
claimed the revisions in the
complex formula allocating
mooey to the states would
enable even more needy

'

'

Nader Takes .on Beetle
By ROBERT F. BUCKHORN
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Consumer advocate Ralph Nader
urged Saturday that Volkswa·
gen recall all of its three
million cars to correct safety
defects and said the VW
Microbus "is so unsafe" it
should be permanently !Jarred
from the road.
In a 200-page report, Nader
said: ''The Volkswagen Beetle
is the most hazardous car
currently in use in significant
numbers in the United States."
Volkswagen promptly denied
the charge, claiming its products "meet or exceed all
safety standards." Nader said
such a recall woold cost.
Volkswagen $184 million.
Nader said his conclusion
about the Volkswagep was
based on these faclo(s:
"The danger of injury from

the windshield, the weakness of
the seat backs, the likelihood of
the doors opening in a crash,
the consequent likelihood of
passenger ejection, the dangerous location of the gasoline
tank, the propensity of the gas
cap and the gas tines to come
off during a crash, steering
column penetration in a frontal
crash, the vulnerability of the
doors to side impacls, exlraordinary sidewind sensit.ivity, and
handling qualities which make
the car unP,redictable."
All of these factors, Nader
said, "not only make the
Volkswagen Beetle more likely
to becOIIle involved in single
vehicle accidents, but also
make the BeeUe 11\0re likely to
cause serious or fatal injury in
any colllsion, "
Volkswagen said, however,
that its car$ are "providing

millions Of owners with safe,
dependable, and economical
transportation ." Nader, the
spokesman said, has been
making "similar allegations
about our products since
1966.11

Volkswagen's sales have been
increasing every year in the
United Slates and it now has
about 12 to 15 per cent of the
U.S. market
Nader claimed nothing could
eliminate the danger in the
iiOO,OOO Volkswagen microbuses
on the highway because of what
he said was a basic unsafe
design,
Said Nader: "The fundamental reason to avoid purchasing
or riding in any Volkswagen
Microbus Is the gross lack of
front collapse distance"-the
space between the front end of
the ,.,,.. and the driver.

children to be fed.
Congress this year has
au thorized spending $667.3
million on school food
programs, $78.8 million more
year .
The
than
last
bulk of the money is
to provide free or reduced-east
meals to cblldren who cannot
afford to pay.
~rkins told the President
·that the federal average
reimbursement rate of 30 cents
f« free and reduced lunches
provided in the new regulations
was insufficient for the
majority of the states.

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A1TICA, N.Y. (UP!t- A
" touchy" calm hung over the
Attica State Correctional
Facility
Saturday
as
rebellious convicts boldlllg 30
hostages awaited tbe arrival
of Black Paather leaders
Bobby Seale aod Huey
Newlon to act as mediators In
the three-&lt;lay insurrection.
Cblcago Seven Attorney
William A. Kuostler, a
member of a hastily compesed citizens' committee
that met with the prisoners
for almost five houn durtog
the night, said only a few
Items remained at issue, He
expressed "very bigh hopes
this situation will be over
today." The talks, described
as pre-negotiations for later
discussions bet«.-een prison
officials and representatives
of the 1,000 rebellious
prlsooers, were recessed
• ·bea the inmates demaaded
that Stale aud Newlon aP"
pear.
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:08'~::;~~':-~-:$~~

o

Vietnamese troops battled
Communlstuniisnear Khe Sanh
Saturday while elite South
Vietnamese Black Panther
airborne troops moved into
action on the sixth day of a
major government drive below
the Demilitarized Zone
military spokesmen said.
'
The 220 Black Panther troopa
were dropped from scores of u.
s. helicopters on a r!&amp;gellne sill
miles north of Kbe Sanh. UP!
correspondent Stewart
Kellerman watched them fan
out through the area, believed
to contain North Vietnamese
37mm antiaircraft gun emplacements.

GingerAdds
Heftiness
By Uolted Press bttenalleul
Tropical storm Ginger
became a full..fledged hurricane
late Saturday while Edith, once

a fierce hurricane, crnse d the
Yucatan Peninsula toward a
likely rebirth in the Gulf of
Mexico.
Ginger at 6 p.m. EDT wu 300
miles southeast of Bermuda",
moving slowly to the eastnortheast at 10 mille an hour.
Weakening tropical atorm
r'em meanwbile pestered the
South-! Texas Cout with
gales and street.lloodiiw rains.
The storm bit Corpua a.rtatl
with winds up to 111 milll 1111
hour, then begaa ploMID&amp;
southweshrard toward tile Rio
Grande Valley, leavlnllllliktd
up to ei&amp;ht indies ol raiD.
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�~- Tbe Sunday Timea -Sentinel, Sooday. Sept. 12, 1971

It -The Slladay Times - 91 '~ jneJ, s..t1J ,SI!pl 12,1171

FoOtball Action Returns In Tri-Co:u nty Area

e
COLuMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
Quarterback Don .Lamka and
Fullback ·John Bledsoe combined for 251 yards rushing and
six touchdowns to lead rebuilt
Obio Sate to surprisingly easy
52-21 win o~~:er Iowa here
Saturday in tile Big Ten and
season opener for both teams.
Lamka, who spent the last
two years as a defensive back
after being recruited as a quarterback, scored on runs cf 21, 19,
6 and I yards and gained 100
yards, many on broken tackles,
in 15 carries.
Bledsoe, who bad only three

a

am owa
.

minutes playing time behind
All-American John Brockington
last year, scored on runs of 11
and 3 yards and picked up IS!
yards in 1:1 carries.
The . other Ohio Stale
scoring came on a 10 yard run
by sophmore Elmer Uppert and
a 39 yard field goal by Fred
Schramm, who also kicked
seven conse~utive poinls.
Iowa, making _its debut under
first year head Coach Frank
Laut.erbur who carne to the
Hawkeyes from the University
of Toledo where hls tealns ran
up a string of 23 consecutive

wins, fell behind 17..0 in the first
period and was never in the
game.
The lh!wkeyes picked up
touchdowns on a 1-yard plunge
by Frank Holmes, a W-yard
pass from Frank Sunderman to
Tom Cabalka and a 7 yard run
by Levi Mitchell.
Both teams got off to a shaky
stat"!, largely due to inexperience and both teams
fumbled four tunes apieCe in the
first half.
An Iowa fumble by Sun·
derman on the first play of the
game on the Hawkeye 17 set up

the field goal by Schranun.
Ohio s.tate got its second
touchdown
when
Jerry
Reardon fumbled a kickoff.
following Bledsoe's first score,
giving the Buckeyes the ball on
the Iowa 23. Lamka went 21
yards on the second play of the
series.
Iow~'s first touchdown came
early m the second per1od when
the Hawkeyes recovered a fumble by Bledsoe on the Ohio 22,
five plays later Holmes scored.
Upper! fumbled the second
half kickoff and Iowa recovered
on the Ohio 11, three plays later

UP, UP, OVER- Kyger Creek's Rick Smith (27) was bit in mid-air here by Wahama's
Curtis Rwsb (42), but the sq&gt;bomor-e balfback still managed to get over the goal line on the
!Uywilb the Bobcats'lone m Friday nigbl Tbe game endedtna Utie.

. ~~ STADIUM atln11:ted 111an 2,-. foo!beD fans for
Fridays~ game of lbe .,• ..., between lbe Marauders o1 Meig.s High

School and Reemelin Boys IJJduslrial Scbool, •••

1'«.111111-. •lt.

the third period when Dana
Coin's 51-yard field goal shot
fell inches short of the cross
bar and Northwestern's Jack
Dustin goal-tended the ball,
knocking it back from the goal
post into the end zone. Jtather

punlatt.emplgave them the ball
at the BC B-yard line.
Wood, a senior, ran 27 yards
up the middle for West
Virginia's first touchdown,
scored another on a one-yard
plunge and also sped a way on a
65-yard run to set up a touchdown. He also had gains of 33
and 17 yards. His 214 yards
broke a 2-year-old WVU individual rushing mark.
~arterback Bernie Galiffa

In 27-13 Loss Friday
ST. LOUIS iUPI ) - The
Cleveland Browns dressing
room looked like General
Hospital late Friday night.
The Browns had jusllosl27-13
to the St. Louis Cardinals and
Coach Nick Skorich counted
five regulars among bia walking

IT WAS A BOT NIGHT- Blue Devil tackles S1eoe R4se
and Dave Kerns take a rest m beocb Wring Friday's GABS-

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South Point grid game played in hot and bmnid weather at
South Plint.

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American League

JO ELLEN DIEHL, senior
varsity cheerleader. leading
the crowd in cheers to "Go
Marauders Go" Friday night
at Meigs Stadium in
Pomeroy.

APPROXIMATELY 1,000 GABS grid faro aecompanied the Blue Devils to South Point
Friday to watch tbeGalliansscorea 28-21Jopeninggamewin.

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MEIGS HIGH BAND members were nol about to .let !be

MaraUder Squad down z

IIIey cheered and , ' : . eeL

.

SUCCESSFUL RETURN ~like Welle_ 1115-pound junior
&amp;-.1 fer GABS, returned to
IIC'Iioilo11 the 8Jidiron .for the
rust liow since lasr O&lt;tober
afln Niitrial: a broken leg in
. the l!ll tkir:s game.

MILISA RIZER, varSi ty
rna joretle, during one of the
routines presented Friday
night at llleigs Stadium. The
Majorette line gave an excellent performance befor-e
the large cr o• d in attt: lltl~llll"C.

G, AB R. H. Pet.
118 463 72 161 .348
135 490 85 158 .322
124 422 73 132 .313
132 517 82 160 .309
133 505 75 156 .309
138 577 86 174 .302
11 5 414 56 124 .300
142 559 79 164 .293
123 444 47 130 .293
123 440 53 128 .291
11 5 436 62 127 .291

Home Runs

BLACKS LOSE 31..0
ST. ALBANS - St. Albans
·blanked visiting Pt. Pleasant 310 here Friday afternoon. It was
Pt. Pleasant's second setback in
two games.

PILED UP - Wahama's Chester ROWJb (22) is really
piled up here by a Host cf KC taclders tn the flfst haH of
Friday night's game which ended in aU lie. Bobcala shown
in.-!ude Rick Smith (27) and Marlt Dal'8t (82).

Oliva, Min
Murcer, NY
Rllmnd, Bal
Carew, Min
Otis, KC
Tovar . Min
Rojas. KC
Smilh, Bos
Rchrdl. Chi
May. Chi
Horln, Del

wounded.
Defensive ends Jack Gregory
and Joe Jones each banged up a
knee, defensive tackle Walter
Johnson and tight end Chip
Glass had rib injuries and of·
fensive tackle Bob McKay had a
shoulder injury. .
" The men worked hard
t.•.olght and did everything but
SC'" fr," said Skorich. " The
defense played good ball, but
the five giveaways by the offense beat us."
The Browns gave up the ball
on three pass interceptions and
two fwnbles .
One of those interceptions
was made by cornerback Miller

..! Fair who raced 94 yards for a

'I

Major League Leaders
By United Press International
Leading Batters
National League
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Torre, SI.L 144 566 86 207 .366
Clmnle, Pit 119 480 78 167 .348
Bckrl. Ch i t31 530 80 181 .342
Garr, AII
138570 93190 .333
Snglln, Pil 126 487 57 159 .326
Jones. NY 123 464 60 151 .325
H.Arn. AII t25443 85 144 .325
Brock , Si.L 139 562 114 181 .322
Alou, SI.L 134 548 75 174 .318
Davis. LA t4t 570 74 178 .312

WHO'S GOT 111E BALL? - From the expressions seen onlbe faces of Gallipolis and South
Point players in !his photo, one wonders who bas the ball. That's Ken Wamsley (SS) senior Blue
Devil guard in middle, lralled by Mike Wolfe (63). On right at rear Is Dave White (16). On
grOUDd atleft Is JOhn Davis (:I»). South Point jUyers, leftlo right (standing) are Jack Stevens
and Howard Cornette. Number 30on ground is John Seott.

fourth-quarter touchdown that
iced the game lor the Cards.
Farr was sprung loose on his
long jaunt by a block by Jim
Hargrove which took out three
Cleveland players.

GoInh
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scored on a three-yard keeper
and threw a four-yard touchdown pass to Harry Blake.
linebacker Wib Newton ran 11
yards with a fumble recovery
and second unit quarterback
Kim West scored from the three
for the other West Virginia
touchdowns. Frank Nester
added a 23-yard field goal.
For Boston College, which
trailed 17-0 before scoring,
quarterback Ray Rippman
scored on a two-yard run and hit
Don Schneider with a !!)-yard
scoring pass.
The Eagles, who won their
final five games a year ago,
fumbled away the ball the first
two times they had it-the
second time at their own 36.
Wood ran lor six yards, then
three, then went 'l:/ for the
touchdown on third down.
Early in the second period,
Boston College lined up to punt
from ils own 49-yard line but the
center snap sailed high over the

Michigan 'oach Bo Schembechler · called the play to the
attention of the officials.
An official observer explained
that once the Northwestern
defender touched the ball, it
became .a fre e ball and the

POINT PLEASANT STORE ONLYI

receiving team was responsible
for maintaining possession,
which it failed to do.
·
Rather earlier lifted the
Wolverines out of their firstquarter doldrums. Norlhwes·
tern obtained good field position
and Michigan was bottled up in
its own end of the field for 21
minutes before it made a first

_
kicker's head and West Virginia
got the ball at the eight. Two
plays later, Galiffa scored.
The Mountaineers got their
third "gift" touchdown midway
in the third period after Steve
Seroka punted Boston College
back to ils own one-yard line.
Bermett fwnbled as he was
tackled, the ball popped into the
air, and Newlon grabbed it at
the 11 and ran in for the touchdown.
In the fourth quarter, Walt
Bragg recovered a fumble by
Bennett at the Eagles' one-yard
line and Wood scored on the
next play.
Wood's performance-&lt;Jn 24
carries-broke the West Virginia school rushing record of 208
yards set by Eddie Williams in
the 1969 Peach Bowl against
South Carolina, but ironically
on the play on which he broke
the record, he fumbled the ball
and Baston College recovered
it.

Huskers Start Out On
Right Foot, Win 34-7
LINCOLN, Neb. (UPI)- Nebraska's No. I canked Corn huskers under the expert guidance
of quarterbacks Jerry Tagge
and Van Brownson, lived up to
their pre-seaso.n reputation
Saturday with a comparatively

easy 34-7 victory over Oregon's
Ducks.
Gary Dixon scored three
times for the Huskers on runs
of 2, 1 and 6 yards.
Tagge, a senior, was at the
throttle for Nebraska's first

8
0
Blan k nooszers 2 -

MINNEAPOLIS( UPI )-Quarterback Craig Curry passed for
three touch.4owns, all set up by
turnovers, to lead the Universi·
ty of Minnesota to a 28-0
victory over Indiana University
Saturday in a Big Ten
Conference football game.
The Gophers jwnped to a 7-1
first-quarter lead when Indiana
halfback Rick Hoffman fwnbled

.National League ' St?rgell ,
Poll 44 ; H. Aaron, All 40. May,
Cin 37; Williams. All 31 ;
Johnson. Phil 30.
American league , Cash. Del
30; Mellon, Chi 29 ; Smilh, Bos
27; Jackson. Oak 26; Scoll, Bos
24.
Runs Batted In
Nation•! Leagu"' Torre. SI.L
125; Stargell. Pill 119; H.
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va .
Aaron. All 104; May , Cin 88 ;
Monlanez, Phil 86 .
(UPI)-Junior Andy Pease
American League : Killebrew,
Minn 109 ; Sando, Oak 87 ; raced through the Virginia line
Smith, Bos 86; Cash, Del and on a 15,-yard touchdown run late
Murcer. NY 84.
in the third period Saturday to
Pitching
Nationol league ' Jenkins. give Navy a I~ win over the
Chi 21-12; Ellis. Pill 18-7; Cavaliers.
Downing , LA and Carllon, Sl. L · Pease's run climaxed a 7&amp;18-8; Seaver. NY 17-8; Pappas. yard drive by the Middies who
Chi 17·12.
American league ' Blue, Oak came back from a lethargic
23-8; lolich. Del 23·11 ; Wood, ftrst half to spoil Virginia •s
Chi and Hunter, Oak 19-11 ; home opener.
McNally, Bai t 18-4; Palmer,
Sophomore quarterback AI
Ball 18·7; Cuellar . Ball 18-8.
Glenny came off the bench to
direct the drive , throwing
passes of 11 and 14-yards lo
CASANOVA WILL RETIRE
EUGENE, Ore. (UPI)-Leo- tight end Steve Ogden.
nard J. !'[.en) Casanova ,
The drive had seemingly
former head football coach and stalled at Virginia's 15 when
athletic dirktor J~t the Univer- Glenny tightened up his line for
sity of Oregon, will retire from the apparent one-yard plunge
hls post as Associate Director needed for a first down.
of University Relations next
Instead, . GleMY handed to
Pease who simply pushed
Feb. I.
Alter retiring as Athletic through the line and then
Director in 1970, Casanova had scampered through a Cavalier
been assigned to the athletic secondary drawn up close to the
department where he worked line of scrimmage.
The touchdown followed a 35as a fund raiser and the
school's liaison man in public yard field goal early in the third
affairs and community rela- period-by Middie kicker Roger
Laminll. Navy drove 44 yards
tions.

Then Rather rambled 20
yards on a end-around play to
move into Wildcat territory for
the first time.
He carried the ball three
times on the same end-around
play, running 18 yards for the
first Michigan touchdown with
75 seconds to play in the first
half.
Altogether, Rather carried
three times lor 49 yards,
caught three passes for 26
yards, and scored 12 points.
But Bill Tay lor was the bread
and butler carrier for the
Wolverines, gaining 105 yards
on 28 carries, including a five·
ya rd touchdown run.
Another Michigan star was
Rover back Frank Gusich, who
intercepted two of the three
passes picked off by Michigan
off Northwestern quarterback
Maurie Daigneau and recovered
one fumble. The recovery came
on the Michigan 30, stopping a
Northw estern drive which had
carried 40 yards.
Daigneau completed 17 of 33
passes for 199 yards and hit
Johnny Cooks lor two yards for
Northwestern'sonly touchdown.

U

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the first play from scrimmage
at his own 30.
On lour down and lour yards
to go, CUrry passed to junior
Doug Kingsriler, who carried
the balll7 yards to the Indiana
seven-yard line. Fullback Ernie
Cook rushed to the six, then
pulled over on the next play.
Mel Anderson kicked the extra
point.

Opening Tilt Saturday
with the second-half kickoff
before calling on Lanning.
Virginia came back to life
briefly early in the fourth
period, marching to Navy's 28yard line. Bullhe drive stalled,
and the Cavaliers had to settle
lor sophomore placekicker Billy
Maxwell's second field goal of
the day-a 35-yarder.
Virginia looked sharp on the
game's opening set of downs,
driving59yardson13plays . But
the drive bogged down at
Navy's 13 and Maxwell kicked a
00-yard field goal.
Highlights of the Virginia
drive were a 23-yard sprint by
sophomore Kent Merritt and
passes of 12 and 13 yards by
sophomore quarterback Harrl'
son Davis.
Two early VIrginia drives
were halted by an offensive
interference penalty and an
interception in the end zone by
Navy's Charlie Robinson.
.The Middles' atta~k sputtered
most of the first half. They
didn't get their first first down
till midway in the second
period.

The Gophers added three
more scores after another
Indiana fumble, a blocked punt
and a pass interception off
Hoosier quarterback Greg
Brown.
Minnesota punter Mike Per·
fetti chased Indiana's Danny
Lintner back 10 yards with his
kick, opening the second
quarter. and Linlner fumbled at
the Hoosier 12.
Two plays later, Curry
passed 12 yards to Kingsriter
for a touchdown.
The Gophers added a third
toucMown when defensive end
Tom Chandler partially blocked
a punt by Alan Dick and
sophomore Scott Irwin recovered the ball five yards from
scrimmage at the Indiana 20.
On third down, Curry passed
to senior Kevin Hamm on a
slant in pattern lor a touchdown. Anderson converted to
give Minnesota a 21..0 halftime
lead.
Indiana's Chris Gartner
missed a field goal attempt
from the Gopher 29 with 5:41
left in the hall.
The Gophers scored their
final touchdown when defensive
back 'J;im Alderson intercepted
Brown's pass at the Minnesota
21, and returned it 53 yards
• down the sideline to the Indiana
26. On the next play, Curry
passed 15 nrds to Hanim at
the 11, then Curry h\t Cook lor
the score.
·
Curry. the Big Ten total
offensive leader as a junior last
year, completed 10 of 24 passes
for 103 yards.
Both teams were picked in
'some polls to finish last in the
B i ~ Ten this ye.lf and the
allrndance was .only 28,459;
luwest since 1944.

three scoring drives which
covered 67, 53 and 59 yards.
. After that he turned over the
signal calhng dutlos to Brown·
son, another semor with whom
he has shared the quarterback
spot the last two years.
Early in the game, Tagge
moved into the all-time Nebraska passing yardage leadership
when he connected on. 34-yd.
toss to end Jerry Lost, a key
play in the opening touchdown
drive.
Tagge came into the game
with 2,891 passing yards and
added 98 to that before retiring
to the sidelines late in the third
period.
Brownson's.4irected touch·
down marches covered 33 and
50 yards.
Oregon brought its own highly
acclaimed quarterback, Dan
Fouts, who came into the game
off a brilliant sophomore season
last year during. which he
passed for 2,39f\ yards 16
touchdowns.
But the Nebraska defense
wouldn 't let Fouls get untracked with any degree of
consistency. Twice he started
moving the Ducks authoritative·
ly only · to have a pass
intercepted.
Two of Nebraska's first three
scoring marches came after a
Cornhusker defender had
picked off a Fouts pass. Bruce
Mason hauled in one and Jim
Anderson intercepted on the
Nebraska one to set the stage
for Tagge's longest drive of the
day.
The victory stretched Nebras·
ka's undefeated string to 20,
with the only winless game in
that span a tie with Southern
California at the start or the
1970 season.
Oregon never carne close to
scoring until Nebraska fumbled
a punt on the Cornhusker 11
late in the fourth period which
set up a seven-yard scoring run
by Bobby Moore.
Jeff Kinney racked up 124
yards from scrimmage for
Nebraska and scored the first
louchdown on a one-yard run .
Randy Butts got the final
Curnhusker touchdown on a
ow 1 ' " rl plunge.

•
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&gt;:

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SCOTT

..... NA!OkOMi
.. ·-· . ...

k

-IIIJ
.........

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Navy 10-6 Winner In

NEAL GAlLOPS -Pete Neal, 181-pound senior GAllS
tailback, raced for .186 yards in 211 carries and ICOftd two
touchdowna and a set of extra polnla to pace the Blue Devils
lo a 28-':1» openln4! game victory over South Point Friday
mghl

znner

W. Va. In 45-14 Win

Five Browns Injured
Meigs Marauder tacklers m this play in Friday's grid opener
at Marauder Stadium.

7PM ·

down .

MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
(UPI)-Pete Wood ran for a
record 214 yards, scoring two
touchdowns and setting up
another, to power West Virginia
to a 45-14season opening victory
over mistake-prone Boston
College Saturday.
The Mountaineers struck for
three
touchdowns
after
recovering fumbles by Boston
College's Bill Bennett and got
another scor-e when a bungled

SURROUNDED BY ~UDER TACKLERS Reemelin ball carrier W"lllie Eskridge is S1IITIIUIIded by six

running downlield to defend
against a possible runback, fell
on the ball for his second
touchdown of the game.
It needed three minutes
discussion before the score was
signaled and the touchdown was
allowed-and then only after

SUNDAY ONLY

•

ichigan 21-6
EVANSTON, Ill. (UPl)- A
futile field goal try turned into
a freak touchdown for Michigan
Saturday as the lifth-ranked
Wolverines swept over Northwestern, 21-6.
Bo Rather, a junior split end,
got the strange touchdown in

Sunderman passed to Ca balka
for the score.
Ohio State, ranked lOth in the
UPI pre-.;eason poll and depleted by the graduation of 15 seniors who had been regulars for
three years and a rash of injuries, started 10 new faces on
offense and seven on defense.
Ohio State's devi'Sting ground
attack rolled up 402 years while
a tough sophomore dominated
defense beld the Hawkeyes to
only 31 yards on the gournd.
Sundermann completed 25 out
of 34 passes for 216 yards and
the one touchdown.

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�~- Tbe Sunday Timea -Sentinel, Sooday. Sept. 12, 1971

It -The Slladay Times - 91 '~ jneJ, s..t1J ,SI!pl 12,1171

FoOtball Action Returns In Tri-Co:u nty Area

e
COLuMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
Quarterback Don .Lamka and
Fullback ·John Bledsoe combined for 251 yards rushing and
six touchdowns to lead rebuilt
Obio Sate to surprisingly easy
52-21 win o~~:er Iowa here
Saturday in tile Big Ten and
season opener for both teams.
Lamka, who spent the last
two years as a defensive back
after being recruited as a quarterback, scored on runs cf 21, 19,
6 and I yards and gained 100
yards, many on broken tackles,
in 15 carries.
Bledsoe, who bad only three

a

am owa
.

minutes playing time behind
All-American John Brockington
last year, scored on runs of 11
and 3 yards and picked up IS!
yards in 1:1 carries.
The . other Ohio Stale
scoring came on a 10 yard run
by sophmore Elmer Uppert and
a 39 yard field goal by Fred
Schramm, who also kicked
seven conse~utive poinls.
Iowa, making _its debut under
first year head Coach Frank
Laut.erbur who carne to the
Hawkeyes from the University
of Toledo where hls tealns ran
up a string of 23 consecutive

wins, fell behind 17..0 in the first
period and was never in the
game.
The lh!wkeyes picked up
touchdowns on a 1-yard plunge
by Frank Holmes, a W-yard
pass from Frank Sunderman to
Tom Cabalka and a 7 yard run
by Levi Mitchell.
Both teams got off to a shaky
stat"!, largely due to inexperience and both teams
fumbled four tunes apieCe in the
first half.
An Iowa fumble by Sun·
derman on the first play of the
game on the Hawkeye 17 set up

the field goal by Schranun.
Ohio s.tate got its second
touchdown
when
Jerry
Reardon fumbled a kickoff.
following Bledsoe's first score,
giving the Buckeyes the ball on
the Iowa 23. Lamka went 21
yards on the second play of the
series.
Iow~'s first touchdown came
early m the second per1od when
the Hawkeyes recovered a fumble by Bledsoe on the Ohio 22,
five plays later Holmes scored.
Upper! fumbled the second
half kickoff and Iowa recovered
on the Ohio 11, three plays later

UP, UP, OVER- Kyger Creek's Rick Smith (27) was bit in mid-air here by Wahama's
Curtis Rwsb (42), but the sq&gt;bomor-e balfback still managed to get over the goal line on the
!Uywilb the Bobcats'lone m Friday nigbl Tbe game endedtna Utie.

. ~~ STADIUM atln11:ted 111an 2,-. foo!beD fans for
Fridays~ game of lbe .,• ..., between lbe Marauders o1 Meig.s High

School and Reemelin Boys IJJduslrial Scbool, •••

1'«.111111-. •lt.

the third period when Dana
Coin's 51-yard field goal shot
fell inches short of the cross
bar and Northwestern's Jack
Dustin goal-tended the ball,
knocking it back from the goal
post into the end zone. Jtather

punlatt.emplgave them the ball
at the BC B-yard line.
Wood, a senior, ran 27 yards
up the middle for West
Virginia's first touchdown,
scored another on a one-yard
plunge and also sped a way on a
65-yard run to set up a touchdown. He also had gains of 33
and 17 yards. His 214 yards
broke a 2-year-old WVU individual rushing mark.
~arterback Bernie Galiffa

In 27-13 Loss Friday
ST. LOUIS iUPI ) - The
Cleveland Browns dressing
room looked like General
Hospital late Friday night.
The Browns had jusllosl27-13
to the St. Louis Cardinals and
Coach Nick Skorich counted
five regulars among bia walking

IT WAS A BOT NIGHT- Blue Devil tackles S1eoe R4se
and Dave Kerns take a rest m beocb Wring Friday's GABS-

'.

I
;ziiiac=:::::J-.....

South Point grid game played in hot and bmnid weather at
South Plint.

ii0 f''

I

'I

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American League

JO ELLEN DIEHL, senior
varsity cheerleader. leading
the crowd in cheers to "Go
Marauders Go" Friday night
at Meigs Stadium in
Pomeroy.

APPROXIMATELY 1,000 GABS grid faro aecompanied the Blue Devils to South Point
Friday to watch tbeGalliansscorea 28-21Jopeninggamewin.

"

~

(

MEIGS HIGH BAND members were nol about to .let !be

MaraUder Squad down z

IIIey cheered and , ' : . eeL

.

SUCCESSFUL RETURN ~like Welle_ 1115-pound junior
&amp;-.1 fer GABS, returned to
IIC'Iioilo11 the 8Jidiron .for the
rust liow since lasr O&lt;tober
afln Niitrial: a broken leg in
. the l!ll tkir:s game.

MILISA RIZER, varSi ty
rna joretle, during one of the
routines presented Friday
night at llleigs Stadium. The
Majorette line gave an excellent performance befor-e
the large cr o• d in attt: lltl~llll"C.

G, AB R. H. Pet.
118 463 72 161 .348
135 490 85 158 .322
124 422 73 132 .313
132 517 82 160 .309
133 505 75 156 .309
138 577 86 174 .302
11 5 414 56 124 .300
142 559 79 164 .293
123 444 47 130 .293
123 440 53 128 .291
11 5 436 62 127 .291

Home Runs

BLACKS LOSE 31..0
ST. ALBANS - St. Albans
·blanked visiting Pt. Pleasant 310 here Friday afternoon. It was
Pt. Pleasant's second setback in
two games.

PILED UP - Wahama's Chester ROWJb (22) is really
piled up here by a Host cf KC taclders tn the flfst haH of
Friday night's game which ended in aU lie. Bobcala shown
in.-!ude Rick Smith (27) and Marlt Dal'8t (82).

Oliva, Min
Murcer, NY
Rllmnd, Bal
Carew, Min
Otis, KC
Tovar . Min
Rojas. KC
Smilh, Bos
Rchrdl. Chi
May. Chi
Horln, Del

wounded.
Defensive ends Jack Gregory
and Joe Jones each banged up a
knee, defensive tackle Walter
Johnson and tight end Chip
Glass had rib injuries and of·
fensive tackle Bob McKay had a
shoulder injury. .
" The men worked hard
t.•.olght and did everything but
SC'" fr," said Skorich. " The
defense played good ball, but
the five giveaways by the offense beat us."
The Browns gave up the ball
on three pass interceptions and
two fwnbles .
One of those interceptions
was made by cornerback Miller

..! Fair who raced 94 yards for a

'I

Major League Leaders
By United Press International
Leading Batters
National League
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Torre, SI.L 144 566 86 207 .366
Clmnle, Pit 119 480 78 167 .348
Bckrl. Ch i t31 530 80 181 .342
Garr, AII
138570 93190 .333
Snglln, Pil 126 487 57 159 .326
Jones. NY 123 464 60 151 .325
H.Arn. AII t25443 85 144 .325
Brock , Si.L 139 562 114 181 .322
Alou, SI.L 134 548 75 174 .318
Davis. LA t4t 570 74 178 .312

WHO'S GOT 111E BALL? - From the expressions seen onlbe faces of Gallipolis and South
Point players in !his photo, one wonders who bas the ball. That's Ken Wamsley (SS) senior Blue
Devil guard in middle, lralled by Mike Wolfe (63). On right at rear Is Dave White (16). On
grOUDd atleft Is JOhn Davis (:I»). South Point jUyers, leftlo right (standing) are Jack Stevens
and Howard Cornette. Number 30on ground is John Seott.

fourth-quarter touchdown that
iced the game lor the Cards.
Farr was sprung loose on his
long jaunt by a block by Jim
Hargrove which took out three
Cleveland players.

GoInh
I;'

er.·~
~

scored on a three-yard keeper
and threw a four-yard touchdown pass to Harry Blake.
linebacker Wib Newton ran 11
yards with a fumble recovery
and second unit quarterback
Kim West scored from the three
for the other West Virginia
touchdowns. Frank Nester
added a 23-yard field goal.
For Boston College, which
trailed 17-0 before scoring,
quarterback Ray Rippman
scored on a two-yard run and hit
Don Schneider with a !!)-yard
scoring pass.
The Eagles, who won their
final five games a year ago,
fumbled away the ball the first
two times they had it-the
second time at their own 36.
Wood ran lor six yards, then
three, then went 'l:/ for the
touchdown on third down.
Early in the second period,
Boston College lined up to punt
from ils own 49-yard line but the
center snap sailed high over the

Michigan 'oach Bo Schembechler · called the play to the
attention of the officials.
An official observer explained
that once the Northwestern
defender touched the ball, it
became .a fre e ball and the

POINT PLEASANT STORE ONLYI

receiving team was responsible
for maintaining possession,
which it failed to do.
·
Rather earlier lifted the
Wolverines out of their firstquarter doldrums. Norlhwes·
tern obtained good field position
and Michigan was bottled up in
its own end of the field for 21
minutes before it made a first

_
kicker's head and West Virginia
got the ball at the eight. Two
plays later, Galiffa scored.
The Mountaineers got their
third "gift" touchdown midway
in the third period after Steve
Seroka punted Boston College
back to ils own one-yard line.
Bermett fwnbled as he was
tackled, the ball popped into the
air, and Newlon grabbed it at
the 11 and ran in for the touchdown.
In the fourth quarter, Walt
Bragg recovered a fumble by
Bennett at the Eagles' one-yard
line and Wood scored on the
next play.
Wood's performance-&lt;Jn 24
carries-broke the West Virginia school rushing record of 208
yards set by Eddie Williams in
the 1969 Peach Bowl against
South Carolina, but ironically
on the play on which he broke
the record, he fumbled the ball
and Baston College recovered
it.

Huskers Start Out On
Right Foot, Win 34-7
LINCOLN, Neb. (UPI)- Nebraska's No. I canked Corn huskers under the expert guidance
of quarterbacks Jerry Tagge
and Van Brownson, lived up to
their pre-seaso.n reputation
Saturday with a comparatively

easy 34-7 victory over Oregon's
Ducks.
Gary Dixon scored three
times for the Huskers on runs
of 2, 1 and 6 yards.
Tagge, a senior, was at the
throttle for Nebraska's first

8
0
Blan k nooszers 2 -

MINNEAPOLIS( UPI )-Quarterback Craig Curry passed for
three touch.4owns, all set up by
turnovers, to lead the Universi·
ty of Minnesota to a 28-0
victory over Indiana University
Saturday in a Big Ten
Conference football game.
The Gophers jwnped to a 7-1
first-quarter lead when Indiana
halfback Rick Hoffman fwnbled

.National League ' St?rgell ,
Poll 44 ; H. Aaron, All 40. May,
Cin 37; Williams. All 31 ;
Johnson. Phil 30.
American league , Cash. Del
30; Mellon, Chi 29 ; Smilh, Bos
27; Jackson. Oak 26; Scoll, Bos
24.
Runs Batted In
Nation•! Leagu"' Torre. SI.L
125; Stargell. Pill 119; H.
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va .
Aaron. All 104; May , Cin 88 ;
Monlanez, Phil 86 .
(UPI)-Junior Andy Pease
American League : Killebrew,
Minn 109 ; Sando, Oak 87 ; raced through the Virginia line
Smith, Bos 86; Cash, Del and on a 15,-yard touchdown run late
Murcer. NY 84.
in the third period Saturday to
Pitching
Nationol league ' Jenkins. give Navy a I~ win over the
Chi 21-12; Ellis. Pill 18-7; Cavaliers.
Downing , LA and Carllon, Sl. L · Pease's run climaxed a 7&amp;18-8; Seaver. NY 17-8; Pappas. yard drive by the Middies who
Chi 17·12.
American league ' Blue, Oak came back from a lethargic
23-8; lolich. Del 23·11 ; Wood, ftrst half to spoil Virginia •s
Chi and Hunter, Oak 19-11 ; home opener.
McNally, Bai t 18-4; Palmer,
Sophomore quarterback AI
Ball 18·7; Cuellar . Ball 18-8.
Glenny came off the bench to
direct the drive , throwing
passes of 11 and 14-yards lo
CASANOVA WILL RETIRE
EUGENE, Ore. (UPI)-Leo- tight end Steve Ogden.
nard J. !'[.en) Casanova ,
The drive had seemingly
former head football coach and stalled at Virginia's 15 when
athletic dirktor J~t the Univer- Glenny tightened up his line for
sity of Oregon, will retire from the apparent one-yard plunge
hls post as Associate Director needed for a first down.
of University Relations next
Instead, . GleMY handed to
Pease who simply pushed
Feb. I.
Alter retiring as Athletic through the line and then
Director in 1970, Casanova had scampered through a Cavalier
been assigned to the athletic secondary drawn up close to the
department where he worked line of scrimmage.
The touchdown followed a 35as a fund raiser and the
school's liaison man in public yard field goal early in the third
affairs and community rela- period-by Middie kicker Roger
Laminll. Navy drove 44 yards
tions.

Then Rather rambled 20
yards on a end-around play to
move into Wildcat territory for
the first time.
He carried the ball three
times on the same end-around
play, running 18 yards for the
first Michigan touchdown with
75 seconds to play in the first
half.
Altogether, Rather carried
three times lor 49 yards,
caught three passes for 26
yards, and scored 12 points.
But Bill Tay lor was the bread
and butler carrier for the
Wolverines, gaining 105 yards
on 28 carries, including a five·
ya rd touchdown run.
Another Michigan star was
Rover back Frank Gusich, who
intercepted two of the three
passes picked off by Michigan
off Northwestern quarterback
Maurie Daigneau and recovered
one fumble. The recovery came
on the Michigan 30, stopping a
Northw estern drive which had
carried 40 yards.
Daigneau completed 17 of 33
passes for 199 yards and hit
Johnny Cooks lor two yards for
Northwestern'sonly touchdown.

U

o

'

the first play from scrimmage
at his own 30.
On lour down and lour yards
to go, CUrry passed to junior
Doug Kingsriler, who carried
the balll7 yards to the Indiana
seven-yard line. Fullback Ernie
Cook rushed to the six, then
pulled over on the next play.
Mel Anderson kicked the extra
point.

Opening Tilt Saturday
with the second-half kickoff
before calling on Lanning.
Virginia came back to life
briefly early in the fourth
period, marching to Navy's 28yard line. Bullhe drive stalled,
and the Cavaliers had to settle
lor sophomore placekicker Billy
Maxwell's second field goal of
the day-a 35-yarder.
Virginia looked sharp on the
game's opening set of downs,
driving59yardson13plays . But
the drive bogged down at
Navy's 13 and Maxwell kicked a
00-yard field goal.
Highlights of the Virginia
drive were a 23-yard sprint by
sophomore Kent Merritt and
passes of 12 and 13 yards by
sophomore quarterback Harrl'
son Davis.
Two early VIrginia drives
were halted by an offensive
interference penalty and an
interception in the end zone by
Navy's Charlie Robinson.
.The Middles' atta~k sputtered
most of the first half. They
didn't get their first first down
till midway in the second
period.

The Gophers added three
more scores after another
Indiana fumble, a blocked punt
and a pass interception off
Hoosier quarterback Greg
Brown.
Minnesota punter Mike Per·
fetti chased Indiana's Danny
Lintner back 10 yards with his
kick, opening the second
quarter. and Linlner fumbled at
the Hoosier 12.
Two plays later, Curry
passed 12 yards to Kingsriter
for a touchdown.
The Gophers added a third
toucMown when defensive end
Tom Chandler partially blocked
a punt by Alan Dick and
sophomore Scott Irwin recovered the ball five yards from
scrimmage at the Indiana 20.
On third down, Curry passed
to senior Kevin Hamm on a
slant in pattern lor a touchdown. Anderson converted to
give Minnesota a 21..0 halftime
lead.
Indiana's Chris Gartner
missed a field goal attempt
from the Gopher 29 with 5:41
left in the hall.
The Gophers scored their
final touchdown when defensive
back 'J;im Alderson intercepted
Brown's pass at the Minnesota
21, and returned it 53 yards
• down the sideline to the Indiana
26. On the next play, Curry
passed 15 nrds to Hanim at
the 11, then Curry h\t Cook lor
the score.
·
Curry. the Big Ten total
offensive leader as a junior last
year, completed 10 of 24 passes
for 103 yards.
Both teams were picked in
'some polls to finish last in the
B i ~ Ten this ye.lf and the
allrndance was .only 28,459;
luwest since 1944.

three scoring drives which
covered 67, 53 and 59 yards.
. After that he turned over the
signal calhng dutlos to Brown·
son, another semor with whom
he has shared the quarterback
spot the last two years.
Early in the game, Tagge
moved into the all-time Nebraska passing yardage leadership
when he connected on. 34-yd.
toss to end Jerry Lost, a key
play in the opening touchdown
drive.
Tagge came into the game
with 2,891 passing yards and
added 98 to that before retiring
to the sidelines late in the third
period.
Brownson's.4irected touch·
down marches covered 33 and
50 yards.
Oregon brought its own highly
acclaimed quarterback, Dan
Fouts, who came into the game
off a brilliant sophomore season
last year during. which he
passed for 2,39f\ yards 16
touchdowns.
But the Nebraska defense
wouldn 't let Fouls get untracked with any degree of
consistency. Twice he started
moving the Ducks authoritative·
ly only · to have a pass
intercepted.
Two of Nebraska's first three
scoring marches came after a
Cornhusker defender had
picked off a Fouts pass. Bruce
Mason hauled in one and Jim
Anderson intercepted on the
Nebraska one to set the stage
for Tagge's longest drive of the
day.
The victory stretched Nebras·
ka's undefeated string to 20,
with the only winless game in
that span a tie with Southern
California at the start or the
1970 season.
Oregon never carne close to
scoring until Nebraska fumbled
a punt on the Cornhusker 11
late in the fourth period which
set up a seven-yard scoring run
by Bobby Moore.
Jeff Kinney racked up 124
yards from scrimmage for
Nebraska and scored the first
louchdown on a one-yard run .
Randy Butts got the final
Curnhusker touchdown on a
ow 1 ' " rl plunge.

•
I

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'

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Navy 10-6 Winner In

NEAL GAlLOPS -Pete Neal, 181-pound senior GAllS
tailback, raced for .186 yards in 211 carries and ICOftd two
touchdowna and a set of extra polnla to pace the Blue Devils
lo a 28-':1» openln4! game victory over South Point Friday
mghl

znner

W. Va. In 45-14 Win

Five Browns Injured
Meigs Marauder tacklers m this play in Friday's grid opener
at Marauder Stadium.

7PM ·

down .

MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
(UPI)-Pete Wood ran for a
record 214 yards, scoring two
touchdowns and setting up
another, to power West Virginia
to a 45-14season opening victory
over mistake-prone Boston
College Saturday.
The Mountaineers struck for
three
touchdowns
after
recovering fumbles by Boston
College's Bill Bennett and got
another scor-e when a bungled

SURROUNDED BY ~UDER TACKLERS Reemelin ball carrier W"lllie Eskridge is S1IITIIUIIded by six

running downlield to defend
against a possible runback, fell
on the ball for his second
touchdown of the game.
It needed three minutes
discussion before the score was
signaled and the touchdown was
allowed-and then only after

SUNDAY ONLY

•

ichigan 21-6
EVANSTON, Ill. (UPl)- A
futile field goal try turned into
a freak touchdown for Michigan
Saturday as the lifth-ranked
Wolverines swept over Northwestern, 21-6.
Bo Rather, a junior split end,
got the strange touchdown in

Sunderman passed to Ca balka
for the score.
Ohio State, ranked lOth in the
UPI pre-.;eason poll and depleted by the graduation of 15 seniors who had been regulars for
three years and a rash of injuries, started 10 new faces on
offense and seven on defense.
Ohio State's devi'Sting ground
attack rolled up 402 years while
a tough sophomore dominated
defense beld the Hawkeyes to
only 31 yards on the gournd.
Sundermann completed 25 out
of 34 passes for 216 yards and
the one touchdown.

'
•j

..

AUTOMOTIVE

FOLDING

25 LB. ~UTLAND

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I

IC-TheSundayTimes -Sentinei,Sunday,Sept. 12,1971

'

.

'

17-TbeSmdayTimes-Senllnei,Sunday,Sept.12, 1971

,

·

28-20 Reemelin No Match Fo:.: Marauders
Meigs Subs Get
· Friday~ Scores,
Spears
Big
Plenty Of Action
v

Two ·Blue Devil

...

Linemen Score; ·
Up Skein To 13

Riverview 1~ Tri:Valley 6
"
West HOimesl:JRidaewood 22
Wayne 11. Oa
Col. Whlll! 6
Jetfe""" 30 ylan Dunbar 2
New Philadelphia 13 Fairview 6
Trotwood
Madison
20
ea"""'rrolf'~a!:.!creel&lt; 6
H'lls
X ·
Fairborn Park 1 1~ erua
6
Wilson 6
Shenandoah 18 Union Local o Miamisburg 6 West Carrollton o
St. Mary's IW. Va.l 70 Frontler Centerville 22 Ooltwood 0
o
Narlhmont 16 Oaylan SIMlblns
Winlersvilte 19 Weirton (W. 14
va.l 6
. XCovenia 32 w nmTllng~lyo
Hamilton Baden 12 Cindnnah
inglon 1 ~ pp ,_, 12
Withrow 18
Twin Valley North 32 New
Lawrenceburg (Ind.) 22 Taylor Miami 12
16
Twin Valley South 20 Eaton 6
Greenhills 26 Indian Hill 1
Graham Local 15 Urbana 0
Cincinnati· Hughes 14 Oakhills 6 Hamilton Tall 22 Lemon
Madiera .48 Dayton Slivers 6 · Monroe 12
Cin. Purcell 22 Cio. Courter Hamilton fairfield 30
Tech 6
Oxf..-d Tallawanda 26
Wyoming 38 Deer Park 0
Marian Local 20 Ridgemont 0
Loveland 42 Forest Park 0
Minster 12 Coldwater 6
Harrison ~7 North .Dearborn Versailles 12 Miami East 0
(lnd-1 0
Southeastern 7 Indian lAke 0
Anderson 15 Gincinnati Me· Cedarville 16 NorlhwtSiern
Nicholas o
(Oarkl 16 (tiel
MI. Healthy 60 Nodh College Cols. Wehrle ~ Teays Valley 6
Hill 7
Newark ~1 MI. Vernon 20
Norwood 0 Mariemont 0 (lie) Millersporl28 Granville 15
Finneylown 1 Western Hills 0 Circleville 8 Grove City 6
Cin. LaSalle 16 Dayton Gahanna 20 Columbus Hartley 6
Roosevelt 5
Cots, Walnut Ridge 23 Whilehall
Coshocton 20 Claymont 0
6
Newcastle (Pa.l 19 Cleveland
Shaw o
Cadiz 3-4 Adena 12
Mingo 8 Jefferson Union 8 (tiel
Carrollton 30 East Palestine 14
T..-onto 26 Springfield Local 12
St. Clairsville 44 Wheeling t W.
Va.l 14
.
Marlins·Ferry8 Linsly (W. Va.)

SOUTH POINT- Visiting Gallipolis came from
behind twice in the first half, built up a comfortable
lead, then stayed off a furious last-minute rally by
host South Point to score a thrilling 28-20 grid victory
here Friday night.
It was a typical season opener for both squads.
After the final whistle sounded, officials had called
nine penalties against the two defending league
champions (Southeastern Ohio Athletic League and
Ohio Valley Conference) totaling 75 yards. GAHS.
had two six-pointers nullified by infractions.

•

Both teams were hurt by
fumbles. All told, there were 12 touchdown to give GAHS a 14-12
bobbles. Five were lost, three lead with 8:49lef_l in the half. A
resulting in quick touchdowns. pass for th~ PATs failed.
On tbe brighter side, there
After the ball exchanged
were sparkling offensive · hands, GAHS moved to its 49.
plays by botb ·teams, fine QB Snowden found tight end
defeasive play altimes, and a Eric Saunders all alone up the
record 3,0011 fans wbo jam· middle, hit the husky GAllS
med tbe Pointers' out-dated tight end with a perfect strike.
stadium to see whose winning Saunders turned,, raced to his
streak would come to an end. right and zoomed 51 yards into
After suffering an 8-6 loss to the endzone. The sparkling play
GAHS in the 1970 opener last was nullified by a Iii-yard
Sept. ll, ?ointer fans felt they clipping· penalty.
could have beaten Coach C. L. South Point then intercepted
(Johnny) Ecker's lads last aGAHSpass,andinfourplays,
November. South Point entered drove 44 yards to the GAHS 19
Friday's game with a nine- with 30 seconds left in the half.
game winning streak.
QB Pleasant dropped the ball at
GAllS, following a jittery the line of scrimmage. GAllS
start for the second straight tackle Chuck Wood grabbed the
year, came through when the pigskin and streaked 81 yards to
chips were down and increased put the Gallians on top 2G-12
its three-year winning streak to with 15 seconds left in the half.
13 in a row.
Snowden made it 22-12 with a
Ga!Upolls dominated tbe pass to Dave White on the
eontest in nearly every conversion play following an
department despite a flat off-side infraction against
start In Friday;s bot and GAHS on the first try.
bumld weatber.
THIRD PERJ()D
The Gallians were paced by Following an exchange of
senior tailback Pete Neal who punts and fumbles, GAHS guard
scored two touchdowns and two Ken Wamsley recovered a
extra points. Neal galloped 186 Brown fwnble on the South
yards in 26 trips. Kev Sheets, Point 41. This mistake led to the
fullback, added 65 in 15 at- Pointer's downfall. In four
tempts. Guard Pat Boster and plays, the Gallians upped their
Tackle Chuck Wood scored six- lead to 28-12 with 2:55left in the
pointers for the Blue and Whi~ period. Neal capped the drive
and Dave White bad a two-point with a 21-yard dash into
conversion from QB Larry promise land. A run for the two
Snowden.
points failed.
Mike Brown, sensational 181· The Pointers marched to the
pound sophomore tallback, GAHS 43 just before the third
\f.ced the Pointers offensively perjQdJ~~istle .
lf':th 156 yards in Jil triJ)s. . :
' flFOURTH PERIOD
' Defensively, Ken Wamsley, Neal snagged Pleasant for a
John Davis, Chuck Wood, Dave 7-yard loss on the first play of
White, John Walter, Jim Miller the final period. Glen Kouns
and Pete Neal stood out for the punted to Dave White who
Gallians. Dave Simmerman, signaled for a fair catch on the
Howard Cornette and Mike GAHS 18.
Pleasant were outstanding for Neal got one, then John Davis
the Pointers.
picked up 14 on a beautiful run,
GAHS bad 15 first downs, but lost the ball on the GAHS 33,
Soutb Point 11. Total yardage with SP's Jack Stevens
iavored tbe Gallians, 283-215. recovering. The Pointers took to
GAHS ran 53 plays from the air, but managed to comscrimmage compared to 43 plete only one of five passes (23
for the Pointers.
yards) as GAHS held on its own
Here's what happened:
five. Eight minutes and ll
FIRST PERIOD
seconds remained.
Dave
White
returned GAHS killed the next four
Vernon Jackson 's open- minutes, marching 50 yards to
ing
kickoff
from
his the Pointer 47 in eight plays.
own 15 to the GAHS 22. Kev However, the Pointers held on
Sheets picked up three, then fourth down, and regained
Pete Neal added six, but possession at the GAHS 44 with
fumbled on the play. The ball 4:31 left.
bounced backward. Mike Seven plays later Brown
Pleasant scooped it up on the zoomed 'l/ yards into the end·
GAHS 25 and was long gone. zone and it was 28-18 with I :50
Ten fifty-seven remained in the left. Pleasant reduced the count
quarter . A pass for the PATs to 28-20 with a two-point confailed.
version pass to Paul Kearns.
Eric Saunders returhed GAHS was penali2ed on five
Jackson's kickoff from his own yards on the following "on20 to the GAHS 35. In 12 plays, sides" kickoff . .On the next KO
aided by two South Point attempt, big Jim Miller scooped
penalties, GAHS marched 65 up the ball on the Pointer 44 for
yards with Pete Neal blasting GAHS. One minute and fortyover from the two at the 5:10 eight sec· cds remained. Neal,
mark. Neal then lunged for the Sheets and Snowden took turns
extra points to give GAHS an 8-6 running out the clock, but
lead. Big gainers in the drive before it was over, the Pointers
were rUhs of 12 and 19 yards by regained possession on the
Neal.
GAHS 46 with three seconds
Fred Walker returned Larry left.
Snowden's kickoff from the On the final play of the game,
Pointer 20 to the 25. In nine Pleasant passed out-(lf-bounds
plays, South Point regained the to a teammate 30 yards
lead. Keith Brown plowed over downfield. It would not have
from the four with 48 seconds counted anyway, because the
left. ·A run for the points after Pointers were penalized on the
failed. ll was 1U. Big gainer in play. GAHS refused the penalty,
the drive was a 34-yard gallop ending the game.
by Brown, who was hauled
down from behind by John
Walter .
SECOND QUARTER
After Dave White returned
HOLLOWAY ACTIVATED
Jackson 's kickoff from the · CHICAGO (UP!) - The
GAHS nine to the 16, Neal Chicago Bears Saturday acripped off three yards. On the tivated guard Glen Holloway
first play of the sef ond period, from the waived-injured list.
Neal hit a huge hole, cut to the
Holloway was injured in the
right, and ·scampered 62 yards Aug. 14 game with the
down the GAHS sidelines before Baltimore Colts. With Holloway
he was hauled down. Kev Sheets returned, Randy Jackson could
smashed up the middle for 13. leave the offensive left guard
John Walter took it to the three. position and return to left
GAHS scored from the three, tackle, a spokesman said.
but a backfield motion penalty
To stay within the 44-man
nullfied a Neal touchdown at the limit, running back Craig
9:42 mark. Neal got four back to Baynham, who suffered a
the four, then rammed it to the shoulder injury Thursday, was
one and fumbled . Alert Pat put on the waived-injured list,
Boster, right guard, picked up the spokesman said.
the loose ball and stepped into The Bears play the Denver
the endzone for his first varsity Bruncos Sunday in Chicago.

Pleasant(24, inmickir) defensive safety, hauled him down.
Sheets picked up 65 yards in 15 trips fer the vict&lt;rious mue
Devils. (Steve Wilson photo).

SIIEETS RAMBLF.'l- Kev Sbeets, (35) 1811)0Wld juni~r
fullback f~r GaDia Academy High School's Blue Devils,
picked up a sizable gain here bef«e South Point's Mike

p l ...otes
e

•

U

RUSSELL, Ky. North
Gallia's Pirates opened thei.r
1971 grid season on a sad note
hereFridaynightdroppinga146 decision to Fairview.
The host team scores its first
touchdown with 5:4lleft in the
first period, moving 52 yards in
10 plays.' Bob Tackett scortid on
a one-yard plunge. A kick for
the extra point was good.
North Gallia, after taking the
kickoff, drove to the Fairview
five-yard stripe but a series of
penalties moved the ball back to
the 21 where the Pirates were
stopped on downs.
Fairview was then pushed
back to its tO-yard line by the
." fired-up" Pirate defense .
Following a short punt, Coach
John Blake's Pirates moved
into scoring range on a big 14yard pass play froni senior
quarterback Jackie Smith to
speedy halfback Harvey Brown.
Kim Hall, 171 pound
sophomore halfback, rambled
up the middle for 10 yards and a

Drop 14-6 Battle

first down at the two. Phil
Hollanbaugh, 190 pound junior
fullback, ran the ball over from
the two for the Pirate touchdown. Arun for the extra points
was stopped. Fairview led at
halftime, 7-fi.
North Gallia kicked off
opening the third period, held
and forced Fairview to punt.
Harvey Brown took the ball at
the 19, broke clear and rolled
into the end zone with what
appeared to be a go-ahead
touchdown. The play, however,
was nullified on off setting
penalties. North Gallia was
calledforclippingandFairview
was charged with illegal
procedure.
On the ensuing kickoff,
Fairview punted the ball out ot
bounds away from Brown.
The Kentuckians scored their
second touchdown on a fourth
and one situation from the six
yard line. The Fairvie~ ball
carrier fumbled in the end zone
but fell on the loose ball for the

GAHS Grid Statistics
INDIVIDUAL NET
2:55, third (run tail) .
YARDS RUSHING
SOUTH POINT- Pleasant,
(Gallipolis)
25-yards wilh tumble recovery,
Player-Pos.
TCB YG AVG. 10:57, first, (pass tail); Brown,
John Walter, LH
2 17 8.S 4-yard run, 0:48, fir~l. (run
John Davis, RH
2 16 8.0 fa ill: Brown, 27-yard run, l:SO,
Pele Neal, LH
26 186 7.1 fourth , (Pleasant to Kearns,
Kev Sheets, FB
15 65 4.3 pass) .
.
.
L. Snowden, QB
3 ·2 ·.6
PUNTS: Gallipolis - Davts,
Dave While, SE
1 -3 ·3 Hl (41.0).
TOTALS
49 279 5.7 SOUTH POINT- Kouns, 4tSoulh Point)
130 (32.5) .
p
TCB
y
TEAM
STATISTICS
Player- qs.
G AVG. SCORE
BY QUARTERS
Keith Brown, LH
18 156 8.6 Gallipolis
8 14 6 1)-28
Randy Smilh, FB
4 15 3.7 5o th Point 12 o o 8 - 20
Mike Pleasant,QB 12 15 .1.2 FIRST DOWNS
Glen Kouns, RH
0 0 0.0 G II' r
4 3 4 4- 15
TOTALS
14 186 5.4 . a 1P0 1 ~
4 2 l 3- lO
INDIVIDUAL PASSING
South Poml
(Gallipolis)
YARDS . RUSHING
PLAYER
C A i YG TO Galltpolts
74 98 65 65-302
·
South Point
75 48 41 43-207
,L. Snowden
2·4 1 4 0 LOST RUSHING
TOTALS
l-4 1 4 0
. .
23
!South Point)
Gallipolis
0 6 6 11 PLAVER c A 1 YG TO South Poml
0 14 0 7- 21
.
NET RUSHING
M. Pleasanl
2·10 0 2'1 0 Gallipolis
74 92 59 54-279
TOTALS
l-10 0 29 0
·
186
INDIVIDUAL RECEPTIONS South Poml
75 34 41 36-(Gallipolisl
PAS_SES ATTEMPTED
PLAYER
C-A YG TO Gallipolts
0 2 1 1- 4
South
Poinl
0 0 1 9-10
1·1 2 0 PASSES COMPLETED
E. Saunders
WhJDtte .
~- : ~ ~ Gallipolis
0 1 0 1- 2
· avts
· 4
South Point
0 0 0 2-2
1·3
0 PASSES INTERCEPTED
TOTALS
X - One Intercepted.
G II' r15
0 0 0 1)-0
(South Poonll
a tpo
PLAYER
C-A YG TO South Pomt
0 1 0 D-1
YARDS PASSING
Brown
1-4 23 0 Gallipolis
0 2 0 2- 4
1·4 6 0 South Point
Kouns
0 0 0 29-2'1
Monlgomery
0-2 0 0. TOTAL YARDS (Rush-Pass)
TOTALS
l-10 29 0
. . "'
PASS INTERCEPTION
Gallipolis
14 94 59 56-283
RUN BACKS
Soulh Point
75 34 41 65-215
!Gallipolis)
RETI.'RN YARDAGE
PLAYER
PI YG TO Gallipoli~
2'1 81 0 1)-110
None
0 0 0 South Pomt
30 18 20 II- 68
TOTALS
o o o PLAYS FROM SCRIMNIAGE
(South Point)
Gallipoli~
IS 14 9 15-S3
PLAYER
PI YG TO South Potnf
9 712 15-43
Brown
1 o 0 FUMBL.ES
TOTALS
2 1 2 2- 7
1 o o Galhpoh~
KICKOFF . RETURNS
fJ~.itEn~ LOST O 2 3 1)-S
(Galhpohsl
. .
t- 3
PLAYER
KO YG TD Galhpoh~
1 0
D-2
0 I
S o South Po1nl
1
I
Saunders ~
PENAL TIES
Whtte
2 14 o
. .
Miller
(6) 15 30 0 5-50
1 0 0 Galltpolos
TOTALS
4 29 o South Point 13) 20 0 5 D-25
(LINEUPS)
·
(South Po1nt1
(GALLIPOLIS
PLAYER
KO YG TD
.
T'bbett
ENDS- Em Saunders, Dave
2 29 0
J~ckso~
1 9 0 While, Chuck Perroud.
W lk
1 5 o TACKLES - Chuck Wood,
Pl:as':.'nt
1 0 0 Jim Miller, John Bagshaw,
TOTALS
s 43 o Dave Kerns. Steve Rose.
.
PUNT RETURNS
GUARDS- Mike Wolle, Pat
(Gallipolis)
Boster, Ken Wamsley.
PLAYER
PR YG TO
CENTE_RS- ·Bud Sanders,
N ne
0 0 0 Brett Epling .
T~TALS
0 o 0
BACK~ - Larry S~owden,
!South Point)
Pete Neal. John Davts, Kev
PLAYER
PR VG TO Sheets, Mike Berridge, John
N ne
o o o Walters, Rick Grymes.
TOTALS
0 0 0
SOUTH POINT
RE(OVERED ENEMY
ENDS- Ron Montgomery,
FUMBLES _ GAHS: Wood (81 - Paul Kearns, Dave Blake ..
ard touchdown runbackl ;
TACKLES - Dave Sl.m ·
YW msley SP _ Pleasant (25- m~r~an, Bernard South, M1ke
a
·
b k). Wtlhams , Howard Cornette.
yard touchdown ru•' ac ,
GUARDS - Ben R'ckard,
1 •
Hanshaw and Slevens.
INDIVIDUAL SCORING - Tom Thorpe, Joe 5colt ..
G ll ipolis · Neal 2-yard run
CENTERS - Steve Ktnney,
a · · IN 1'
. Bo 1 ' Randy Hanshaw.
1
S: 10, ftrst! ea • run • s er.
BACKS - Mike Pleasant,
1-yard wtth fumble .re~overy.
8: 49, s~con~~ (pass fa•IL Wood ,

Keit h Br own, Glen Kouns,
Randy S·n ith, Je \:k S!evens,

8t .yards wtth fumble recoverx.

Dave Tibbe'ls VernOn Jackson

0: 15,

seco"~a ,

l~nowden

'"

While, pass) ; Neal . _21 -yard run. Fred Walker.

•

c

score. Another kick was good
for the extra point.
The entire fourth quarter was
played in the Eagles territory
but both teams were unable to
sustain a major threat. North
Gallia drove to the 15 but was
forced to turn the ball over at
that spot.
Statistic-wise, North Gallia
collected 178 yards and ll first

downs. Fairview had 117 yards
and eight first downs. Although
the Pirates lost, Coach Blake
was pleased with their performance.
North Gallia travels to
Eastern Friday in an SVAC
contest.
By quarters :
0 6 0 0
North Gallia
7
0 7 0
Fairview

It'• lito perfect IMgga1•
for ~w..,

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It con bounce from 01'11 •nd

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - safety standards for "patenCiting a study indicating that tially haurdous new products
synthetic turf causes additional such as synthetic turf."
football injuries, Rep. John E. Moss released copies of letMoss,
D-Cali!.,
asked ters to Monsanta (Astroturf),
manufacturers Saturday to 3M Co. (Tartan Turf ) and
provide safety data on their American Biltrite Rubber Co.
project.
( Polyture ) requesting " A
Moss said he was "gravely description of all tests made by
concerned o\ler a recent study your company of performance
by Dr. James' Garrick of the and safety of synthetic turf."
University of Washington in- Moss said about 113 snythetic
dicating that synthetic turf may foothall fields have been in·
cause almost 50 per cent more · stalled by high school, college
injuries than grass fields ."
and professional teams ai an
Moss said a product safety average cost of $250,000. He said
bill before his House Conunerce synthetic turf is used for the
subcommittee on commerce home fields of at least 12
and finance would empower the National Football League
federal government to set teams.

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PHONE 444tas

POMEROY - The Meigs Marauders,
displaying two-deep power, ran over an· overmatched Reemelin eleven 40-14 at Marauder
Stadium Friday night in the opening game of the
1971 scholastic grid campaign.
The Marauders, who threw only four passes,
showed a devastating running attack in piling up a
· 40-U halftime lead. Marauder reserves - everybody
on the fiG-plus roster got in - played from the middle
of the second quarter on. The first stringers left with
.the score 34-o in the second period.
Meigs had 282 yards rushing
and only six passing, g~ for 18
first downs. Mark Williams, 150
lb. senior tailback, led the
Marauders on the ground with
77 yards in 12 carries. Andy
Vaughan, 174 lb. junior quarterback, had 55 yards in five
attempts. WiUiams, whose
:Cousin, Tiny, (all-league
1ullbackandlinebacker)didnot
,dress, scored 20 points, three
'touchdowns by runs and caught
".one pass for extra points.
: Vaughan, the muciHleralded
:175 lb. junior getting his first
:Starting call at quarterback,
:was impressive. He led the
•famous Marauder power sweep
'
•repeatedly
with good blocks.
: One of the strongest points of
:the Marauders was their
:defensive line. They allowed the
'.Rams a spectacular minus 13
·yards rushing and only three
·first downs. All three first
·downs came over the reserves
;in the second balf.
Starters for tile first team
defeuslvo line were 1!10 lb.
·. senior Jeff Morris, 187 lb.
; senior Larry Harmon, 199 lb.
senior Jobn Grueser, 16Z lb.
· senior Jobn Thomas, and 2G5
: lb. senior Fred Lee. All were

: great.
: Tbe linebackers were
: Dallas Weber, 175 lb. junior,
' and Ted Ltbew, 11i111b. sealor.
•
~ They helped out tremen·
• doasly wbeu llle ball carriers
; lnfrequeatly esc:aped tbe llDe
:. of Scrimmage.
: The offensive line was made
:up of Eddie Young, 156 lb.
;senior center ; Roger Dixon, 151
:n&gt;. senior guard ; Mark Werry,
~m lb. junior tackle; Morris,
'Lee, Harmon, and Lehew. They
.opened some holes a semi-rig
ocould coast through.
:
HOW IT WENT
' The Rams, coached by for·
:'mer Gallipolis head mentor
:Karl Justus, received the
:opening kickoff and lost three
:Yards in three plays. Bill Un)lerwood,
who
played
tremendously on defense,
i»unted 36 yards, and Chuck
:Fau!k,!60lb. junior,returnedit
::tJ to the Meigs 48.
; The Marauders, coached by
;charles Chancey, drove those 48
:Yards in ll straight running
:plays with M. Williams taking it
over from the one. A pass from
:vaughan to Morris failed for the
:extras and with 5:42 left in the
"first quarter, Meigs led 6-0.
: After the ensuing kickoff, the
:Rams lost 13 yards in two plays
quick-lticked 24 yards to the
:~melin 43.
.
• A holding penalty cost the
: Marauders 22 yards and they
: didn't make it up. Keith Van
: tnwagen,146lb. senior, filling in
: for injured Tiny Williams,
: punted 33 yards to the Reemelin
"17.
; , This time the Rams gained
: two yards in three plays and
• again Underwood punted, this
to the Reemelin 47. That
: was the final play in the first
: quarter.
• After fuDbad&lt; VaniDwqen
: weat lor 1, Williams galloped
:: zs 1o 111e It. Tbne plays later,
: : van Inwogen balled hls way
:; seve11 yanli up tile middle for
••

~'

tbe score. Williams was
stopped sbort In trying tbe
extras and witb 10:35 left In
tbe baH, It was JU.
Three straight incomplete
passes forced the Rams to punt
once again, this time Tl yards
with Faulk returning it 23 to the
Meigs 42.
A !:&gt;-yard penalty against the
Rams, a six yard reception by
Harmon, and a 13-yard run by
Vaughan put the ball on the
seven where Williams scored
his second touchdown. Vaughan
passed to Morris for the extras
and with 7:45 left in the half,
Meigs waa on top ~NEXT ONE EASY
Don Burrell, the Rams
fullback, fumbled the Meigs
kickoff with Thomas recovering
for the Marauders on the
Reemelin 15. Vaughan sprinted
into the end zone on the first
play to put Meigs on the board
again. Vaughan passed to
Hannon incomplete attempting
the extras and with 6:35 left,
Meigs upped their margin to 260.
Mike Del Grosso, Reemelin 's
wingback, fumbled the next
Meigs kickoff and Jon Dillard,
138 lb. junior, recovered on the
Reemelin 24.
A half the distance penalty
against the Rams combined
with Williams seven yard run
put the ball on the eight.
Williams rammed six to the
two. On the following play, Van
lnwagen went into the end zone
but a penalty against the
Marauders put the ball back to
the 17. Vaughan gained 10 to the
seven. Then Williams scored his
third six-pointer from seven
yards out. Vaughan passed to
Williams for the extras and with
4:53 left in the half, Meigs led

MEIGS TAILBACK Mark Williams, (33) !55-pound
senior, followed his blockers through a gigantic hole for a
good gain during Friday night's Meigs-Reemelin grid game
at Marauder Stadium, Pomeroy. Meigs romped 40-14 for its

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/

sTATISTICS
:;
;;
Meigs Reemelin
3
•firsl Downs
18
""'
R sh '
282
20
••'
ards Passing
u 1ng
·1
•'l'ards
6
"Total Yards
288
-13
:Pass Alt.
4
8
•PassComp.
t
1
:Fumbles(folall
s
5
•fumbles (lost)
•
3
"J:::Iercept by
1
0
• nls · . 3.56, 18.7 7-222, 31.7
•-nallies
67
3-4
"' • ~ IND. RUSHING
::
MEIGS
•·Player
Vds. TC Avg.
::Williams
77 12 6.~
14 6 5.7
I
: van nwagen
4 2 2.0
:~auitghhan
S9 5 11.8
· ·•
29 8 3.6
:J:ooke
7 33
23
• "·Laughlin
·
3
ST
""17
•M. ,Ash
·
.......
40 s 8.0
11en
••Z:..ch
.
6 2 3.0
"-n Ash
./ 7 -1.0
K
'
5I
·:roTALS
211 4
'
:.
REEMELIN
Burrell
12 8 0.7
Quincy
·5 6 -0.8

fourth straight triumph covering a two-year period. Leading
the play is Meigs• Ted Lehew, 160-pound senior guard ( 68)
and Andy Vaughan, 175-pound junior quarterback. Pushing
away Reemelin defenders in middle is poweJiu! Jeff Morris,
190-pound senior end.

Logan Rips N-Y, 64-20
BUCHTEL - Tailback Rick
Krebs scored three touchdowns
and Quarterback Greg Smith
tossed a pair of touchdown
passes in leading the Logan
&lt;thieftains to a 64-20 pounding of
Nelsonville-York Friday night.
Although badly outgunned at
every position, the underdog
Buckeyes made it interesting as
Sophomore quarterback Bill
Woodson connected on 10 of 24
passes for 257 yards and two
touchdowns and scored the
other himself to test the
powerful Logan defenfe.
The Chieftains went to work
early as Krebs scored on a five
yard run and Fullback Ken
Culbertson went over from the

two.
pass, a 63-yard beauty to Greg
Smith passed to Brian · Bookman but a conversion kick
Davidson for a two point con- failed.
version as Logan took a 14-0 Krebs broke out on a 42-yard
lead at the end of the first touchdown jaunt to up the
period.
Chieflain lead to 34-13.
Early in the second quarter Woodson came right back for
Smith hit George Shaw with a Nelsonville-York with a 57-yard
45-yard TO strike to make it 20- TO pa.ss to Chuck Adkins and
0.
then kicked the EP to make it
Woodson then cranked up for 34-20.
the Buckeyes and scored on a The sladium trembled in the
one yard keeper. He also kicked third quarter as Logan put 24
the extra point to narrow the points on !he board triggered by
count to 20-7.
a 13 yard run with a recovered
Smith put Logan on the board fumble by Craig Davidson.
again with a four yard scoring Greg Smith then hit Brian
run and Chuck Helber ran the Davidson with a 65 yard pass
good for six points, Krebs bolted
conversion.
Woodson fired his first TO ll yards for another TO, and

Craig Davidson scored on a five
yard run to make the score 58-20
after three quarters of play.
The final Chieftain score
came in the fourth quarter when
Roger Monk rambled 35 yards
to paydirt with a recovered
fumble.
Statistics show Logan with 21
first downs, 310 yards rushing,
and 212 passing for a 522 total.
Nelsonville-York had 14 first
downs, only 60 yards rushing,
but added 307 yards passing for
a nice 367 total yards.
Krebs led the Logan rushers
with 122 yards in 14 carries.
The score by quarters:
Logan
14 20 24 &amp;-M
Nels-York
0 20 0 0-20

Jackson .Mauls
Oak
Hill,
65-0
..
OAK HILL ..:. Coach Ben
Buckles ' Jackson lronmen
looked like a big German
Shepherd shaking an old sock
around Friday night as nine
different players contributed to
the scoring in a 65-0 pasting of
the host Oak Hill Oaks.
Fleliug their power in
every department the
Iroomen scored nearly every
time they bad possession in

3W.

AI this point in the game,
Coach Chancey started to pull
his starters and the reserves
finished the second half.
Reemelin lost one yard in
three plays and punted 32 yards
with Rick Ash, 146 lb. senior,
returning it 8 to the Rams' 42.
Tommy Cooke, 138 lb.
senior tailback, gained 9,
Alleu McLaughllll, 134 lb.
sophomore, weal 11, R. Ash
pl&lt;ktduptwo,Cooketrave1ed
18 to tbe two, and tbeu Cooke,
wbo played ucillllg football
In his reserve role, scored tbe
final Meigs to11&lt;hdo11111 from
tbe Z. Robbie Eason, 183 lb.
sophomore fullback, was
stopped short for tbe e~
and Meigs took a 4G-41 lead
Into tbe 1ockerTOOm.
.
With the Meigs second, thll'd,
and fourth stringers playing in
the final half, Reemelin, which
·ran its offense from the oldfashioned single-wing, scored
two touchdowns. The first came
on a 411-yard blockedpuntrelurn
by Jack Watson with 7:54left in
the thind quarter. The final
scoring came on a 17-yard run
by Underwood with 1:39 left in
the game. The extras were
scored by Del Grosso on a run.
The Marauders, now l-0, play
another non-reague game next
Friday with the Belpre Golden
Eagles at Belpre. In last year's
game, Meigs won 4U.

1

1

B U lldOD'S

:Ueiu.'S
Grid Statistics
~'~~ ~·

.,.•

INSULATION

BY KEITH WISECUP

:time

STOP AT THE

Gun, Tigers
·R oll, 40-14

40-14 Victory

:and

1'-9' Height
60 lb.

iron railing needs.

X46

Bowl and Chrome Faucet.

25 Yl:" Jl54u

See us lor oil your wrought

Toughest Finish
Outwears All Others

]n

Cumingham
o 4 o.o
DelGrosso
2 2 -1.0
Sparks
-18 4 ·4·5
Feaster
·3 1 -3.0
TOTALS
-20 19 .o•1
INDIVIDUAL PUNTING,
Meigs, Van lnwagen 1-33. 33 O;
Eason 1-23, 11 .5. Reemelln,
Underwood 5- 1~7. 29.4; Del
Grosso 2-75. 37.5.
INDIVIDUAL PASSING,
Meigs, Vaughan 1-4, 6 yards.
Reemelin, Qulncy0-3; Burrelll 4, 1 yards; and Del Grosso 0-1.
INDIVIDUAL RECEIVING.
Meigs, Harmon, I for 6 yards.
Reemelin, Underwood, 1 1..- 7
yards
PUin RETURNS, Meias.
Fauik, 1.36 , 16.5; R. Ash 1-8, 8.0;
!jtack 1-11, 11-0; Dillard 1-1, 1.0.
R
II wa~- 40
eeme
n, RETURNS,
·~·
· Meios,·
"ICKOFF
• 1•·
• 0. Reem eli'n •
R. " Ash, 11
· .,
Quincy2-30, 15.0; Del Grosso. 3.
36 12 o· Eskridge. 1-8, 8-0;
au' rre1.1 ' .2.J3' 16.5'
•
lnt.I'C8PIIon Returns, Meigs, '
Cooke 1-16 16 0 Reemelln
none.
'
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'

e'

.
piling'lap a 51-0 halftime lead.
Quarterback Eddie Hughes
hit Tom Stevenson with a five
yard TD pass and Mike Buckley
kicked the extra point to open
the scoring in the first period.
Steve Meadows ran two yards
for the next TO with Hughes
passing to Stevenson for the
points after.
.
.
Kenny Valentine showed hiS
blazing speed with a 46 yard
touchdown run with Buckley

kicking the extra point.
Chris Ondera gathered in a
33-yard scoring pass from
Hughes to close out the first
period scoring with a 28-0
lead.
The parade of touchdowns
continued in the second quarter
as Steve Thompson ran 14 yards
to paydirt with Steve Rice
running the extra points .
Valentine scored from one

Nudge Tigers 28-25

ATHENS - Gerald Inbody,
who replaced the veteran Don
Eskey as coach of the Athens
Bulldogs this year, made his
debut a success Friday night as
Athens turned back the
Marietta Tigers 28-25 at Rutter
Stadium.
The Bulldogs scores first
when speedy Stu Smith rammed
over from the one yard stripe
and Gary Snow kicked the extra
point to put Athens on top 7-0
with 6:59left in the first period.
Marietta's Mark Burke
blasted over from the two and
then kicked the point after to

knot the score at 7-7 with 49
seconds remaining in the first
period.
Quarterback Mike Green
tallied on a one yard sneak with
7:57 showing on the clock and
Stu Smith added his second TO
on a three yard burst four
minutes later.
Snow who successfully
conver~ after all four Bulldog
scores, kicked both extra points
for a 21-7 lead at the intermission.
In the third quarter Mark
Boston ranuned over from the
one with four ·seconds left to

Yanks Trim Indians
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Reserve outfielder Jim Lyttle
drove in three runs and Thurman Munson belted a two-nm
homer Saturday to power the
New York Yankees to a 1~
victory over the Cleveland

In=~.

who entered the game
in the second Inning after
Danny Cater soffered a hairline
fracture of the middle finger of
his right hand when hit by a
pitched ball , doubled hmne two
runs in the third and hit a
sacrifice Oy to cap a fOW'-&lt;'Uil
imlng ll Th 25sixth·
ra Y· e yearold outfielder had been to bat
ooly eight times since June 29
ad kn '-ed .
f
and h
OC• 111 on1Y our
runs.
After spotting the Indians a:!,.
SCORING, Meigs, Williams,
runs all, 1 and 1. Van lnwagen,
run of 7. Vaughan, run of 15.
Cooke, run of 2. PAT'S,
W'll'
Mo rr Is, pass.
I tams, run ;
Reemelin, Matson, 40 yard
U
1
return of blocked pu~AT's"'
derwood, 17 yard run.
·
Del Grosso. run.
SCORE BY QUARTEDS
.
.,.
Reemehn
0 0 6 8- 14
Meigs
6 34 0 0- ·40

0 lead in the first inning , the
Yanks tied the score in the
second on starter Mike Kekich 's
bases-loaded single and added
three more in the third on
LytUe's hit and Gene Michael's
run-scoring single.
Roy White hit his 16th homer
in the fifth and Munson drilled
his ninth of the year over left
field fence iii the sixth. Rookie
Ron Blomberg banged out three
hits and tripled borne another
Yankee run in the sixth.
Kekick, who picked up his
ninth victory in 12 decisions
since July 7, hurled four-hit ball
wttil the seventh when the In·
dians sc«ed twice on folD' hits.
Rookie Alan Closter took over
f~r Kekich but was tagged for
Ray Fosse's tw~un homer in
the ninth.
KW't Bevacqua added a tworun homer with Chris Olambliss on base to end the Indians'
scoring in the ninth.
Keklch struck out three and
walked four in posling his loth
victory against seven losses·.
Closter and Roger Hambright
finished up for Now York to
preserve the victory.

narrow the count to 21-13.
Fullback Don Wood smashed
seven yards for a Bulldog score
with Snow's kick making it 28-13
with 6:30 left in the contest.
In the final four minutes of
·play Mark Burke and Tom
Cernuf scored on two and 11
yard runs to narrow the !mal
margin to 28-25 as the Tigers
were stopped on their two-point
conversion runs by the stout
Bulldog defense.
Score by quarters :
Marietta
7 0 6 12-20
Athens
7 14 0 7- 28

Georgia
Rambles

56 To 25
ATHENS, Ga. (UPI) - Buzy
Rosenberg shredded tackles
and jerseys while returning
punts 66 and 79 yards for touchdowns Saturday and the
Ge~rgia Bulldogs put on a
dazzling offensive show to bury
Oregon State, 56-25.
Rosenberg, a flv!Hoot, nineinch defensive wraith, broke up
a scoreless deadlock halfway
through the first period by
returning Bob McKenzie's punt
freon his own 21, leaving part of
his jersey behind as he wove
and leaped over fallen Beavers
enroute to a score.
He started the scoring parRde
·again in the second ball by
scooting 66 yards for another
touchdown, picking up a wall of
blockers on the way.
Andy Johnson l]irected the
Georgia attack 78 yards for one
touchdown - that on his eight
yard keeper - and .tater darted
12 for another score after faking
a P""..

yard out with Buckley kicking
the extra point.
Dave Beckley got into the act
by picking up an Oak Hill
fumble and racing 37 yards to
score with Hughes running the
conversion points and a 51-0
lead.
In the third quarter Hughes
threw his third touchdown pass
of the contest, a 38 yard strike to
Buckley, and the final TD of the
game came on a 23 yard
scamper by Thompson with
Artie DeStephen running the
conversion to make it 65-0.
The lronmen rolled up 24
first downs, had 403 yards
rushing and 99 passing for a
Iota! of 502.
Hughes had a perfect night
with his passing as he attempted three and completed
all three for touchdowns.
Oak Hill managed only four
first downs, had 76 yards
rushing, and zero passing for
their evening's work.
The score by quarters :
Jackson
28 23 6 8-65
OakHill
0 000-0

IRONTO N - Quarterback
Hal Spears threw two touchdown passes and Jeff Howard
ki cked four extra points Friday
night as the lronllln Tigers
crushed visiting New Boston 4014 · in the lid-lifter for both

converted for a 21-0 lead.
With 4:42 left in the second
period Spears rifled a .l-yard
touchdown pass to Terry
Mowrey and Howard's kick
made i1 28-1! ~~ the haHtime

teams.

Jim Payne picked up his
second TO of the contest with
7:031efl in the thind qu.arter on a
dazzling 60 yard run, but
Howard's kick was blocked, and
the score was aw.
New Boston finally got on
tbe board wltb %:311eft Ill tbe
third period whea Quarterback Ed Thompso11 KOred
on a silt: yard nm.
With substitutes ul the contest
the final Tiger Ially came on a
three yard run by Bruce Carlo!r
with 7: 56 left to play for a 4D-'
lead.
With less than two minutes
remaining Thompson found
Mike Dunham with a 66-yard
touchdown pass for a New
Boston score. Thompson passed
to Al Fayers for the conversion.
'lbe Tigers ames""'i m
yards I'IISblDg and 8dded 221
pusillc for 453 loCal yards
while tile vlslton showed 122
yards rushlnc aad 15&amp; via tbe
air for • m lolal.
Score by quarters:
New Boston
0 0 6 8-14
Ironton
14 14 6 6--40

Spears, a deadly passer,
coDOected on seven of 10
passes for 220 yards in
leading the highly-touted
Tigers to tbeir victory.
Halfback Bob Smith opened
the scoring with a three yard
run with Howard's kick making
it 7-0 at the 7:45 mark of the first
period.
Five minutes later Spears
unloaded an 82-yard pass to Jim
Payne for the second Ironton
TD with Howard's kick making
it 14-0.
Fullback Rick
Boykin
rambled 63 yards on the third
play of the second period for a
Tiger score and again Howard

PENGUINS SIGN TWO
PITISBURGH (UPI ) -Left
wing Dean Prentice and right
wing Ken Schinkel, a pair of :ISyear -(lid veterans, have 'ii!!ned
their 1971-72 contracts with the
Pittsburgh Penguins of the
National Hockey League .

in termission.

SPECIALS
We tiM Only 2·1971 Modlls
We're Moving Theae To Make
Room For 1912 Mode&amp;

FOREST PARK

12160 Early Am•ican • Flllll lilirl ...

14x60 California Sierra Dim',

Front Kiii:hen

e TREMENDOUS ·
SAVINGS

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MOBILE
HOME
5'1 ES
5H Jim st..tsor .... Gilu
Upper R1. 7 Next Door to AulD Au!;tion
Phone 446-t34G
Gilllipolis. Ohio

The Full-Gallon
Gallon
Devoe guarantees it in every
C?Oior you buy.
Interiors or exteriors ... pas·
tels or accents ... you can
count on a full gallon in every
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Wo1derlo1es l1l. Pai11
Over teet tolors

· $6.75~~~.

--· .-. :.':·. ~~~-~---'"------------.....-------------~1 \-"-------"---"--

'r

�'

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.,
I

IC-TheSundayTimes -Sentinei,Sunday,Sept. 12,1971

'

.

'

17-TbeSmdayTimes-Senllnei,Sunday,Sept.12, 1971

,

·

28-20 Reemelin No Match Fo:.: Marauders
Meigs Subs Get
· Friday~ Scores,
Spears
Big
Plenty Of Action
v

Two ·Blue Devil

...

Linemen Score; ·
Up Skein To 13

Riverview 1~ Tri:Valley 6
"
West HOimesl:JRidaewood 22
Wayne 11. Oa
Col. Whlll! 6
Jetfe""" 30 ylan Dunbar 2
New Philadelphia 13 Fairview 6
Trotwood
Madison
20
ea"""'rrolf'~a!:.!creel&lt; 6
H'lls
X ·
Fairborn Park 1 1~ erua
6
Wilson 6
Shenandoah 18 Union Local o Miamisburg 6 West Carrollton o
St. Mary's IW. Va.l 70 Frontler Centerville 22 Ooltwood 0
o
Narlhmont 16 Oaylan SIMlblns
Winlersvilte 19 Weirton (W. 14
va.l 6
. XCovenia 32 w nmTllng~lyo
Hamilton Baden 12 Cindnnah
inglon 1 ~ pp ,_, 12
Withrow 18
Twin Valley North 32 New
Lawrenceburg (Ind.) 22 Taylor Miami 12
16
Twin Valley South 20 Eaton 6
Greenhills 26 Indian Hill 1
Graham Local 15 Urbana 0
Cincinnati· Hughes 14 Oakhills 6 Hamilton Tall 22 Lemon
Madiera .48 Dayton Slivers 6 · Monroe 12
Cin. Purcell 22 Cio. Courter Hamilton fairfield 30
Tech 6
Oxf..-d Tallawanda 26
Wyoming 38 Deer Park 0
Marian Local 20 Ridgemont 0
Loveland 42 Forest Park 0
Minster 12 Coldwater 6
Harrison ~7 North .Dearborn Versailles 12 Miami East 0
(lnd-1 0
Southeastern 7 Indian lAke 0
Anderson 15 Gincinnati Me· Cedarville 16 NorlhwtSiern
Nicholas o
(Oarkl 16 (tiel
MI. Healthy 60 Nodh College Cols. Wehrle ~ Teays Valley 6
Hill 7
Newark ~1 MI. Vernon 20
Norwood 0 Mariemont 0 (lie) Millersporl28 Granville 15
Finneylown 1 Western Hills 0 Circleville 8 Grove City 6
Cin. LaSalle 16 Dayton Gahanna 20 Columbus Hartley 6
Roosevelt 5
Cots, Walnut Ridge 23 Whilehall
Coshocton 20 Claymont 0
6
Newcastle (Pa.l 19 Cleveland
Shaw o
Cadiz 3-4 Adena 12
Mingo 8 Jefferson Union 8 (tiel
Carrollton 30 East Palestine 14
T..-onto 26 Springfield Local 12
St. Clairsville 44 Wheeling t W.
Va.l 14
.
Marlins·Ferry8 Linsly (W. Va.)

SOUTH POINT- Visiting Gallipolis came from
behind twice in the first half, built up a comfortable
lead, then stayed off a furious last-minute rally by
host South Point to score a thrilling 28-20 grid victory
here Friday night.
It was a typical season opener for both squads.
After the final whistle sounded, officials had called
nine penalties against the two defending league
champions (Southeastern Ohio Athletic League and
Ohio Valley Conference) totaling 75 yards. GAHS.
had two six-pointers nullified by infractions.

•

Both teams were hurt by
fumbles. All told, there were 12 touchdown to give GAHS a 14-12
bobbles. Five were lost, three lead with 8:49lef_l in the half. A
resulting in quick touchdowns. pass for th~ PATs failed.
On tbe brighter side, there
After the ball exchanged
were sparkling offensive · hands, GAHS moved to its 49.
plays by botb ·teams, fine QB Snowden found tight end
defeasive play altimes, and a Eric Saunders all alone up the
record 3,0011 fans wbo jam· middle, hit the husky GAllS
med tbe Pointers' out-dated tight end with a perfect strike.
stadium to see whose winning Saunders turned,, raced to his
streak would come to an end. right and zoomed 51 yards into
After suffering an 8-6 loss to the endzone. The sparkling play
GAHS in the 1970 opener last was nullified by a Iii-yard
Sept. ll, ?ointer fans felt they clipping· penalty.
could have beaten Coach C. L. South Point then intercepted
(Johnny) Ecker's lads last aGAHSpass,andinfourplays,
November. South Point entered drove 44 yards to the GAHS 19
Friday's game with a nine- with 30 seconds left in the half.
game winning streak.
QB Pleasant dropped the ball at
GAllS, following a jittery the line of scrimmage. GAllS
start for the second straight tackle Chuck Wood grabbed the
year, came through when the pigskin and streaked 81 yards to
chips were down and increased put the Gallians on top 2G-12
its three-year winning streak to with 15 seconds left in the half.
13 in a row.
Snowden made it 22-12 with a
Ga!Upolls dominated tbe pass to Dave White on the
eontest in nearly every conversion play following an
department despite a flat off-side infraction against
start In Friday;s bot and GAHS on the first try.
bumld weatber.
THIRD PERJ()D
The Gallians were paced by Following an exchange of
senior tailback Pete Neal who punts and fumbles, GAHS guard
scored two touchdowns and two Ken Wamsley recovered a
extra points. Neal galloped 186 Brown fwnble on the South
yards in 26 trips. Kev Sheets, Point 41. This mistake led to the
fullback, added 65 in 15 at- Pointer's downfall. In four
tempts. Guard Pat Boster and plays, the Gallians upped their
Tackle Chuck Wood scored six- lead to 28-12 with 2:55left in the
pointers for the Blue and Whi~ period. Neal capped the drive
and Dave White bad a two-point with a 21-yard dash into
conversion from QB Larry promise land. A run for the two
Snowden.
points failed.
Mike Brown, sensational 181· The Pointers marched to the
pound sophomore tallback, GAHS 43 just before the third
\f.ced the Pointers offensively perjQdJ~~istle .
lf':th 156 yards in Jil triJ)s. . :
' flFOURTH PERIOD
' Defensively, Ken Wamsley, Neal snagged Pleasant for a
John Davis, Chuck Wood, Dave 7-yard loss on the first play of
White, John Walter, Jim Miller the final period. Glen Kouns
and Pete Neal stood out for the punted to Dave White who
Gallians. Dave Simmerman, signaled for a fair catch on the
Howard Cornette and Mike GAHS 18.
Pleasant were outstanding for Neal got one, then John Davis
the Pointers.
picked up 14 on a beautiful run,
GAHS bad 15 first downs, but lost the ball on the GAHS 33,
Soutb Point 11. Total yardage with SP's Jack Stevens
iavored tbe Gallians, 283-215. recovering. The Pointers took to
GAHS ran 53 plays from the air, but managed to comscrimmage compared to 43 plete only one of five passes (23
for the Pointers.
yards) as GAHS held on its own
Here's what happened:
five. Eight minutes and ll
FIRST PERIOD
seconds remained.
Dave
White
returned GAHS killed the next four
Vernon Jackson 's open- minutes, marching 50 yards to
ing
kickoff
from
his the Pointer 47 in eight plays.
own 15 to the GAHS 22. Kev However, the Pointers held on
Sheets picked up three, then fourth down, and regained
Pete Neal added six, but possession at the GAHS 44 with
fumbled on the play. The ball 4:31 left.
bounced backward. Mike Seven plays later Brown
Pleasant scooped it up on the zoomed 'l/ yards into the end·
GAHS 25 and was long gone. zone and it was 28-18 with I :50
Ten fifty-seven remained in the left. Pleasant reduced the count
quarter . A pass for the PATs to 28-20 with a two-point confailed.
version pass to Paul Kearns.
Eric Saunders returhed GAHS was penali2ed on five
Jackson's kickoff from his own yards on the following "on20 to the GAHS 35. In 12 plays, sides" kickoff . .On the next KO
aided by two South Point attempt, big Jim Miller scooped
penalties, GAHS marched 65 up the ball on the Pointer 44 for
yards with Pete Neal blasting GAHS. One minute and fortyover from the two at the 5:10 eight sec· cds remained. Neal,
mark. Neal then lunged for the Sheets and Snowden took turns
extra points to give GAHS an 8-6 running out the clock, but
lead. Big gainers in the drive before it was over, the Pointers
were rUhs of 12 and 19 yards by regained possession on the
Neal.
GAHS 46 with three seconds
Fred Walker returned Larry left.
Snowden's kickoff from the On the final play of the game,
Pointer 20 to the 25. In nine Pleasant passed out-(lf-bounds
plays, South Point regained the to a teammate 30 yards
lead. Keith Brown plowed over downfield. It would not have
from the four with 48 seconds counted anyway, because the
left. ·A run for the points after Pointers were penalized on the
failed. ll was 1U. Big gainer in play. GAHS refused the penalty,
the drive was a 34-yard gallop ending the game.
by Brown, who was hauled
down from behind by John
Walter .
SECOND QUARTER
After Dave White returned
HOLLOWAY ACTIVATED
Jackson 's kickoff from the · CHICAGO (UP!) - The
GAHS nine to the 16, Neal Chicago Bears Saturday acripped off three yards. On the tivated guard Glen Holloway
first play of the sef ond period, from the waived-injured list.
Neal hit a huge hole, cut to the
Holloway was injured in the
right, and ·scampered 62 yards Aug. 14 game with the
down the GAHS sidelines before Baltimore Colts. With Holloway
he was hauled down. Kev Sheets returned, Randy Jackson could
smashed up the middle for 13. leave the offensive left guard
John Walter took it to the three. position and return to left
GAHS scored from the three, tackle, a spokesman said.
but a backfield motion penalty
To stay within the 44-man
nullfied a Neal touchdown at the limit, running back Craig
9:42 mark. Neal got four back to Baynham, who suffered a
the four, then rammed it to the shoulder injury Thursday, was
one and fumbled . Alert Pat put on the waived-injured list,
Boster, right guard, picked up the spokesman said.
the loose ball and stepped into The Bears play the Denver
the endzone for his first varsity Bruncos Sunday in Chicago.

Pleasant(24, inmickir) defensive safety, hauled him down.
Sheets picked up 65 yards in 15 trips fer the vict&lt;rious mue
Devils. (Steve Wilson photo).

SIIEETS RAMBLF.'l- Kev Sbeets, (35) 1811)0Wld juni~r
fullback f~r GaDia Academy High School's Blue Devils,
picked up a sizable gain here bef«e South Point's Mike

p l ...otes
e

•

U

RUSSELL, Ky. North
Gallia's Pirates opened thei.r
1971 grid season on a sad note
hereFridaynightdroppinga146 decision to Fairview.
The host team scores its first
touchdown with 5:4lleft in the
first period, moving 52 yards in
10 plays.' Bob Tackett scortid on
a one-yard plunge. A kick for
the extra point was good.
North Gallia, after taking the
kickoff, drove to the Fairview
five-yard stripe but a series of
penalties moved the ball back to
the 21 where the Pirates were
stopped on downs.
Fairview was then pushed
back to its tO-yard line by the
." fired-up" Pirate defense .
Following a short punt, Coach
John Blake's Pirates moved
into scoring range on a big 14yard pass play froni senior
quarterback Jackie Smith to
speedy halfback Harvey Brown.
Kim Hall, 171 pound
sophomore halfback, rambled
up the middle for 10 yards and a

Drop 14-6 Battle

first down at the two. Phil
Hollanbaugh, 190 pound junior
fullback, ran the ball over from
the two for the Pirate touchdown. Arun for the extra points
was stopped. Fairview led at
halftime, 7-fi.
North Gallia kicked off
opening the third period, held
and forced Fairview to punt.
Harvey Brown took the ball at
the 19, broke clear and rolled
into the end zone with what
appeared to be a go-ahead
touchdown. The play, however,
was nullified on off setting
penalties. North Gallia was
calledforclippingandFairview
was charged with illegal
procedure.
On the ensuing kickoff,
Fairview punted the ball out ot
bounds away from Brown.
The Kentuckians scored their
second touchdown on a fourth
and one situation from the six
yard line. The Fairvie~ ball
carrier fumbled in the end zone
but fell on the loose ball for the

GAHS Grid Statistics
INDIVIDUAL NET
2:55, third (run tail) .
YARDS RUSHING
SOUTH POINT- Pleasant,
(Gallipolis)
25-yards wilh tumble recovery,
Player-Pos.
TCB YG AVG. 10:57, first, (pass tail); Brown,
John Walter, LH
2 17 8.S 4-yard run, 0:48, fir~l. (run
John Davis, RH
2 16 8.0 fa ill: Brown, 27-yard run, l:SO,
Pele Neal, LH
26 186 7.1 fourth , (Pleasant to Kearns,
Kev Sheets, FB
15 65 4.3 pass) .
.
.
L. Snowden, QB
3 ·2 ·.6
PUNTS: Gallipolis - Davts,
Dave While, SE
1 -3 ·3 Hl (41.0).
TOTALS
49 279 5.7 SOUTH POINT- Kouns, 4tSoulh Point)
130 (32.5) .
p
TCB
y
TEAM
STATISTICS
Player- qs.
G AVG. SCORE
BY QUARTERS
Keith Brown, LH
18 156 8.6 Gallipolis
8 14 6 1)-28
Randy Smilh, FB
4 15 3.7 5o th Point 12 o o 8 - 20
Mike Pleasant,QB 12 15 .1.2 FIRST DOWNS
Glen Kouns, RH
0 0 0.0 G II' r
4 3 4 4- 15
TOTALS
14 186 5.4 . a 1P0 1 ~
4 2 l 3- lO
INDIVIDUAL PASSING
South Poml
(Gallipolis)
YARDS . RUSHING
PLAYER
C A i YG TO Galltpolts
74 98 65 65-302
·
South Point
75 48 41 43-207
,L. Snowden
2·4 1 4 0 LOST RUSHING
TOTALS
l-4 1 4 0
. .
23
!South Point)
Gallipolis
0 6 6 11 PLAVER c A 1 YG TO South Poml
0 14 0 7- 21
.
NET RUSHING
M. Pleasanl
2·10 0 2'1 0 Gallipolis
74 92 59 54-279
TOTALS
l-10 0 29 0
·
186
INDIVIDUAL RECEPTIONS South Poml
75 34 41 36-(Gallipolisl
PAS_SES ATTEMPTED
PLAYER
C-A YG TO Gallipolts
0 2 1 1- 4
South
Poinl
0 0 1 9-10
1·1 2 0 PASSES COMPLETED
E. Saunders
WhJDtte .
~- : ~ ~ Gallipolis
0 1 0 1- 2
· avts
· 4
South Point
0 0 0 2-2
1·3
0 PASSES INTERCEPTED
TOTALS
X - One Intercepted.
G II' r15
0 0 0 1)-0
(South Poonll
a tpo
PLAYER
C-A YG TO South Pomt
0 1 0 D-1
YARDS PASSING
Brown
1-4 23 0 Gallipolis
0 2 0 2- 4
1·4 6 0 South Point
Kouns
0 0 0 29-2'1
Monlgomery
0-2 0 0. TOTAL YARDS (Rush-Pass)
TOTALS
l-10 29 0
. . "'
PASS INTERCEPTION
Gallipolis
14 94 59 56-283
RUN BACKS
Soulh Point
75 34 41 65-215
!Gallipolis)
RETI.'RN YARDAGE
PLAYER
PI YG TO Gallipoli~
2'1 81 0 1)-110
None
0 0 0 South Pomt
30 18 20 II- 68
TOTALS
o o o PLAYS FROM SCRIMNIAGE
(South Point)
Gallipoli~
IS 14 9 15-S3
PLAYER
PI YG TO South Potnf
9 712 15-43
Brown
1 o 0 FUMBL.ES
TOTALS
2 1 2 2- 7
1 o o Galhpoh~
KICKOFF . RETURNS
fJ~.itEn~ LOST O 2 3 1)-S
(Galhpohsl
. .
t- 3
PLAYER
KO YG TD Galhpoh~
1 0
D-2
0 I
S o South Po1nl
1
I
Saunders ~
PENAL TIES
Whtte
2 14 o
. .
Miller
(6) 15 30 0 5-50
1 0 0 Galltpolos
TOTALS
4 29 o South Point 13) 20 0 5 D-25
(LINEUPS)
·
(South Po1nt1
(GALLIPOLIS
PLAYER
KO YG TD
.
T'bbett
ENDS- Em Saunders, Dave
2 29 0
J~ckso~
1 9 0 While, Chuck Perroud.
W lk
1 5 o TACKLES - Chuck Wood,
Pl:as':.'nt
1 0 0 Jim Miller, John Bagshaw,
TOTALS
s 43 o Dave Kerns. Steve Rose.
.
PUNT RETURNS
GUARDS- Mike Wolle, Pat
(Gallipolis)
Boster, Ken Wamsley.
PLAYER
PR YG TO
CENTE_RS- ·Bud Sanders,
N ne
0 0 0 Brett Epling .
T~TALS
0 o 0
BACK~ - Larry S~owden,
!South Point)
Pete Neal. John Davts, Kev
PLAYER
PR VG TO Sheets, Mike Berridge, John
N ne
o o o Walters, Rick Grymes.
TOTALS
0 0 0
SOUTH POINT
RE(OVERED ENEMY
ENDS- Ron Montgomery,
FUMBLES _ GAHS: Wood (81 - Paul Kearns, Dave Blake ..
ard touchdown runbackl ;
TACKLES - Dave Sl.m ·
YW msley SP _ Pleasant (25- m~r~an, Bernard South, M1ke
a
·
b k). Wtlhams , Howard Cornette.
yard touchdown ru•' ac ,
GUARDS - Ben R'ckard,
1 •
Hanshaw and Slevens.
INDIVIDUAL SCORING - Tom Thorpe, Joe 5colt ..
G ll ipolis · Neal 2-yard run
CENTERS - Steve Ktnney,
a · · IN 1'
. Bo 1 ' Randy Hanshaw.
1
S: 10, ftrst! ea • run • s er.
BACKS - Mike Pleasant,
1-yard wtth fumble .re~overy.
8: 49, s~con~~ (pass fa•IL Wood ,

Keit h Br own, Glen Kouns,
Randy S·n ith, Je \:k S!evens,

8t .yards wtth fumble recoverx.

Dave Tibbe'ls VernOn Jackson

0: 15,

seco"~a ,

l~nowden

'"

While, pass) ; Neal . _21 -yard run. Fred Walker.

•

c

score. Another kick was good
for the extra point.
The entire fourth quarter was
played in the Eagles territory
but both teams were unable to
sustain a major threat. North
Gallia drove to the 15 but was
forced to turn the ball over at
that spot.
Statistic-wise, North Gallia
collected 178 yards and ll first

downs. Fairview had 117 yards
and eight first downs. Although
the Pirates lost, Coach Blake
was pleased with their performance.
North Gallia travels to
Eastern Friday in an SVAC
contest.
By quarters :
0 6 0 0
North Gallia
7
0 7 0
Fairview

It'• lito perfect IMgga1•
for ~w..,

........

(a71d

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JnJ" urieS On Aslro Turf

It con bounce from 01'11 •nd

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - safety standards for "patenCiting a study indicating that tially haurdous new products
synthetic turf causes additional such as synthetic turf."
football injuries, Rep. John E. Moss released copies of letMoss,
D-Cali!.,
asked ters to Monsanta (Astroturf),
manufacturers Saturday to 3M Co. (Tartan Turf ) and
provide safety data on their American Biltrite Rubber Co.
project.
( Polyture ) requesting " A
Moss said he was "gravely description of all tests made by
concerned o\ler a recent study your company of performance
by Dr. James' Garrick of the and safety of synthetic turf."
University of Washington in- Moss said about 113 snythetic
dicating that synthetic turf may foothall fields have been in·
cause almost 50 per cent more · stalled by high school, college
injuries than grass fields ."
and professional teams ai an
Moss said a product safety average cost of $250,000. He said
bill before his House Conunerce synthetic turf is used for the
subcommittee on commerce home fields of at least 12
and finance would empower the National Football League
federal government to set teams.

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SPECIAL

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SALE

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PRICE

Flat and corner columns
also an stotk.

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Regular $99.09.

REGULAR 54.46

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CASH .
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CARRY
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"BUILDING SUPPLIES"
Monday Thru Friday -7 A.M. to 5 P.M.
Salurday -7 A.M. Ia 4 P.M.
PHONE 444tas

POMEROY - The Meigs Marauders,
displaying two-deep power, ran over an· overmatched Reemelin eleven 40-14 at Marauder
Stadium Friday night in the opening game of the
1971 scholastic grid campaign.
The Marauders, who threw only four passes,
showed a devastating running attack in piling up a
· 40-U halftime lead. Marauder reserves - everybody
on the fiG-plus roster got in - played from the middle
of the second quarter on. The first stringers left with
.the score 34-o in the second period.
Meigs had 282 yards rushing
and only six passing, g~ for 18
first downs. Mark Williams, 150
lb. senior tailback, led the
Marauders on the ground with
77 yards in 12 carries. Andy
Vaughan, 174 lb. junior quarterback, had 55 yards in five
attempts. WiUiams, whose
:Cousin, Tiny, (all-league
1ullbackandlinebacker)didnot
,dress, scored 20 points, three
'touchdowns by runs and caught
".one pass for extra points.
: Vaughan, the muciHleralded
:175 lb. junior getting his first
:Starting call at quarterback,
:was impressive. He led the
•famous Marauder power sweep
'
•repeatedly
with good blocks.
: One of the strongest points of
:the Marauders was their
:defensive line. They allowed the
'.Rams a spectacular minus 13
·yards rushing and only three
·first downs. All three first
·downs came over the reserves
;in the second balf.
Starters for tile first team
defeuslvo line were 1!10 lb.
·. senior Jeff Morris, 187 lb.
; senior Larry Harmon, 199 lb.
senior Jobn Grueser, 16Z lb.
· senior Jobn Thomas, and 2G5
: lb. senior Fred Lee. All were

: great.
: Tbe linebackers were
: Dallas Weber, 175 lb. junior,
' and Ted Ltbew, 11i111b. sealor.
•
~ They helped out tremen·
• doasly wbeu llle ball carriers
; lnfrequeatly esc:aped tbe llDe
:. of Scrimmage.
: The offensive line was made
:up of Eddie Young, 156 lb.
;senior center ; Roger Dixon, 151
:n&gt;. senior guard ; Mark Werry,
~m lb. junior tackle; Morris,
'Lee, Harmon, and Lehew. They
.opened some holes a semi-rig
ocould coast through.
:
HOW IT WENT
' The Rams, coached by for·
:'mer Gallipolis head mentor
:Karl Justus, received the
:opening kickoff and lost three
:Yards in three plays. Bill Un)lerwood,
who
played
tremendously on defense,
i»unted 36 yards, and Chuck
:Fau!k,!60lb. junior,returnedit
::tJ to the Meigs 48.
; The Marauders, coached by
;charles Chancey, drove those 48
:Yards in ll straight running
:plays with M. Williams taking it
over from the one. A pass from
:vaughan to Morris failed for the
:extras and with 5:42 left in the
"first quarter, Meigs led 6-0.
: After the ensuing kickoff, the
:Rams lost 13 yards in two plays
quick-lticked 24 yards to the
:~melin 43.
.
• A holding penalty cost the
: Marauders 22 yards and they
: didn't make it up. Keith Van
: tnwagen,146lb. senior, filling in
: for injured Tiny Williams,
: punted 33 yards to the Reemelin
"17.
; , This time the Rams gained
: two yards in three plays and
• again Underwood punted, this
to the Reemelin 47. That
: was the final play in the first
: quarter.
• After fuDbad&lt; VaniDwqen
: weat lor 1, Williams galloped
:: zs 1o 111e It. Tbne plays later,
: : van Inwogen balled hls way
:; seve11 yanli up tile middle for
••

~'

tbe score. Williams was
stopped sbort In trying tbe
extras and witb 10:35 left In
tbe baH, It was JU.
Three straight incomplete
passes forced the Rams to punt
once again, this time Tl yards
with Faulk returning it 23 to the
Meigs 42.
A !:&gt;-yard penalty against the
Rams, a six yard reception by
Harmon, and a 13-yard run by
Vaughan put the ball on the
seven where Williams scored
his second touchdown. Vaughan
passed to Morris for the extras
and with 7:45 left in the half,
Meigs waa on top ~NEXT ONE EASY
Don Burrell, the Rams
fullback, fumbled the Meigs
kickoff with Thomas recovering
for the Marauders on the
Reemelin 15. Vaughan sprinted
into the end zone on the first
play to put Meigs on the board
again. Vaughan passed to
Hannon incomplete attempting
the extras and with 6:35 left,
Meigs upped their margin to 260.
Mike Del Grosso, Reemelin 's
wingback, fumbled the next
Meigs kickoff and Jon Dillard,
138 lb. junior, recovered on the
Reemelin 24.
A half the distance penalty
against the Rams combined
with Williams seven yard run
put the ball on the eight.
Williams rammed six to the
two. On the following play, Van
lnwagen went into the end zone
but a penalty against the
Marauders put the ball back to
the 17. Vaughan gained 10 to the
seven. Then Williams scored his
third six-pointer from seven
yards out. Vaughan passed to
Williams for the extras and with
4:53 left in the half, Meigs led

MEIGS TAILBACK Mark Williams, (33) !55-pound
senior, followed his blockers through a gigantic hole for a
good gain during Friday night's Meigs-Reemelin grid game
at Marauder Stadium, Pomeroy. Meigs romped 40-14 for its

aAIIIlEIImn
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stainless steel
won't chip, stain
,.. rust.
SPECIAl

'24.95
CASH

l

CARRY
GAUIPOUS, OHIO
. . '

/

sTATISTICS
:;
;;
Meigs Reemelin
3
•firsl Downs
18
""'
R sh '
282
20
••'
ards Passing
u 1ng
·1
•'l'ards
6
"Total Yards
288
-13
:Pass Alt.
4
8
•PassComp.
t
1
:Fumbles(folall
s
5
•fumbles (lost)
•
3
"J:::Iercept by
1
0
• nls · . 3.56, 18.7 7-222, 31.7
•-nallies
67
3-4
"' • ~ IND. RUSHING
::
MEIGS
•·Player
Vds. TC Avg.
::Williams
77 12 6.~
14 6 5.7
I
: van nwagen
4 2 2.0
:~auitghhan
S9 5 11.8
· ·•
29 8 3.6
:J:ooke
7 33
23
• "·Laughlin
·
3
ST
""17
•M. ,Ash
·
.......
40 s 8.0
11en
••Z:..ch
.
6 2 3.0
"-n Ash
./ 7 -1.0
K
'
5I
·:roTALS
211 4
'
:.
REEMELIN
Burrell
12 8 0.7
Quincy
·5 6 -0.8

fourth straight triumph covering a two-year period. Leading
the play is Meigs• Ted Lehew, 160-pound senior guard ( 68)
and Andy Vaughan, 175-pound junior quarterback. Pushing
away Reemelin defenders in middle is poweJiu! Jeff Morris,
190-pound senior end.

Logan Rips N-Y, 64-20
BUCHTEL - Tailback Rick
Krebs scored three touchdowns
and Quarterback Greg Smith
tossed a pair of touchdown
passes in leading the Logan
&lt;thieftains to a 64-20 pounding of
Nelsonville-York Friday night.
Although badly outgunned at
every position, the underdog
Buckeyes made it interesting as
Sophomore quarterback Bill
Woodson connected on 10 of 24
passes for 257 yards and two
touchdowns and scored the
other himself to test the
powerful Logan defenfe.
The Chieftains went to work
early as Krebs scored on a five
yard run and Fullback Ken
Culbertson went over from the

two.
pass, a 63-yard beauty to Greg
Smith passed to Brian · Bookman but a conversion kick
Davidson for a two point con- failed.
version as Logan took a 14-0 Krebs broke out on a 42-yard
lead at the end of the first touchdown jaunt to up the
period.
Chieflain lead to 34-13.
Early in the second quarter Woodson came right back for
Smith hit George Shaw with a Nelsonville-York with a 57-yard
45-yard TO strike to make it 20- TO pa.ss to Chuck Adkins and
0.
then kicked the EP to make it
Woodson then cranked up for 34-20.
the Buckeyes and scored on a The sladium trembled in the
one yard keeper. He also kicked third quarter as Logan put 24
the extra point to narrow the points on !he board triggered by
count to 20-7.
a 13 yard run with a recovered
Smith put Logan on the board fumble by Craig Davidson.
again with a four yard scoring Greg Smith then hit Brian
run and Chuck Helber ran the Davidson with a 65 yard pass
good for six points, Krebs bolted
conversion.
Woodson fired his first TO ll yards for another TO, and

Craig Davidson scored on a five
yard run to make the score 58-20
after three quarters of play.
The final Chieftain score
came in the fourth quarter when
Roger Monk rambled 35 yards
to paydirt with a recovered
fumble.
Statistics show Logan with 21
first downs, 310 yards rushing,
and 212 passing for a 522 total.
Nelsonville-York had 14 first
downs, only 60 yards rushing,
but added 307 yards passing for
a nice 367 total yards.
Krebs led the Logan rushers
with 122 yards in 14 carries.
The score by quarters:
Logan
14 20 24 &amp;-M
Nels-York
0 20 0 0-20

Jackson .Mauls
Oak
Hill,
65-0
..
OAK HILL ..:. Coach Ben
Buckles ' Jackson lronmen
looked like a big German
Shepherd shaking an old sock
around Friday night as nine
different players contributed to
the scoring in a 65-0 pasting of
the host Oak Hill Oaks.
Fleliug their power in
every department the
Iroomen scored nearly every
time they bad possession in

3W.

AI this point in the game,
Coach Chancey started to pull
his starters and the reserves
finished the second half.
Reemelin lost one yard in
three plays and punted 32 yards
with Rick Ash, 146 lb. senior,
returning it 8 to the Rams' 42.
Tommy Cooke, 138 lb.
senior tailback, gained 9,
Alleu McLaughllll, 134 lb.
sophomore, weal 11, R. Ash
pl&lt;ktduptwo,Cooketrave1ed
18 to tbe two, and tbeu Cooke,
wbo played ucillllg football
In his reserve role, scored tbe
final Meigs to11&lt;hdo11111 from
tbe Z. Robbie Eason, 183 lb.
sophomore fullback, was
stopped short for tbe e~
and Meigs took a 4G-41 lead
Into tbe 1ockerTOOm.
.
With the Meigs second, thll'd,
and fourth stringers playing in
the final half, Reemelin, which
·ran its offense from the oldfashioned single-wing, scored
two touchdowns. The first came
on a 411-yard blockedpuntrelurn
by Jack Watson with 7:54left in
the thind quarter. The final
scoring came on a 17-yard run
by Underwood with 1:39 left in
the game. The extras were
scored by Del Grosso on a run.
The Marauders, now l-0, play
another non-reague game next
Friday with the Belpre Golden
Eagles at Belpre. In last year's
game, Meigs won 4U.

1

1

B U lldOD'S

:Ueiu.'S
Grid Statistics
~'~~ ~·

.,.•

INSULATION

BY KEITH WISECUP

:time

STOP AT THE

Gun, Tigers
·R oll, 40-14

40-14 Victory

:and

1'-9' Height
60 lb.

iron railing needs.

X46

Bowl and Chrome Faucet.

25 Yl:" Jl54u

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Toughest Finish
Outwears All Others

]n

Cumingham
o 4 o.o
DelGrosso
2 2 -1.0
Sparks
-18 4 ·4·5
Feaster
·3 1 -3.0
TOTALS
-20 19 .o•1
INDIVIDUAL PUNTING,
Meigs, Van lnwagen 1-33. 33 O;
Eason 1-23, 11 .5. Reemelln,
Underwood 5- 1~7. 29.4; Del
Grosso 2-75. 37.5.
INDIVIDUAL PASSING,
Meigs, Vaughan 1-4, 6 yards.
Reemelin, Qulncy0-3; Burrelll 4, 1 yards; and Del Grosso 0-1.
INDIVIDUAL RECEIVING.
Meigs, Harmon, I for 6 yards.
Reemelin, Underwood, 1 1..- 7
yards
PUin RETURNS, Meias.
Fauik, 1.36 , 16.5; R. Ash 1-8, 8.0;
!jtack 1-11, 11-0; Dillard 1-1, 1.0.
R
II wa~- 40
eeme
n, RETURNS,
·~·
· Meios,·
"ICKOFF
• 1•·
• 0. Reem eli'n •
R. " Ash, 11
· .,
Quincy2-30, 15.0; Del Grosso. 3.
36 12 o· Eskridge. 1-8, 8-0;
au' rre1.1 ' .2.J3' 16.5'
•
lnt.I'C8PIIon Returns, Meigs, '
Cooke 1-16 16 0 Reemelln
none.
'
· ·
'

e'

.
piling'lap a 51-0 halftime lead.
Quarterback Eddie Hughes
hit Tom Stevenson with a five
yard TD pass and Mike Buckley
kicked the extra point to open
the scoring in the first period.
Steve Meadows ran two yards
for the next TO with Hughes
passing to Stevenson for the
points after.
.
.
Kenny Valentine showed hiS
blazing speed with a 46 yard
touchdown run with Buckley

kicking the extra point.
Chris Ondera gathered in a
33-yard scoring pass from
Hughes to close out the first
period scoring with a 28-0
lead.
The parade of touchdowns
continued in the second quarter
as Steve Thompson ran 14 yards
to paydirt with Steve Rice
running the extra points .
Valentine scored from one

Nudge Tigers 28-25

ATHENS - Gerald Inbody,
who replaced the veteran Don
Eskey as coach of the Athens
Bulldogs this year, made his
debut a success Friday night as
Athens turned back the
Marietta Tigers 28-25 at Rutter
Stadium.
The Bulldogs scores first
when speedy Stu Smith rammed
over from the one yard stripe
and Gary Snow kicked the extra
point to put Athens on top 7-0
with 6:59left in the first period.
Marietta's Mark Burke
blasted over from the two and
then kicked the point after to

knot the score at 7-7 with 49
seconds remaining in the first
period.
Quarterback Mike Green
tallied on a one yard sneak with
7:57 showing on the clock and
Stu Smith added his second TO
on a three yard burst four
minutes later.
Snow who successfully
conver~ after all four Bulldog
scores, kicked both extra points
for a 21-7 lead at the intermission.
In the third quarter Mark
Boston ranuned over from the
one with four ·seconds left to

Yanks Trim Indians
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Reserve outfielder Jim Lyttle
drove in three runs and Thurman Munson belted a two-nm
homer Saturday to power the
New York Yankees to a 1~
victory over the Cleveland

In=~.

who entered the game
in the second Inning after
Danny Cater soffered a hairline
fracture of the middle finger of
his right hand when hit by a
pitched ball , doubled hmne two
runs in the third and hit a
sacrifice Oy to cap a fOW'-&lt;'Uil
imlng ll Th 25sixth·
ra Y· e yearold outfielder had been to bat
ooly eight times since June 29
ad kn '-ed .
f
and h
OC• 111 on1Y our
runs.
After spotting the Indians a:!,.
SCORING, Meigs, Williams,
runs all, 1 and 1. Van lnwagen,
run of 7. Vaughan, run of 15.
Cooke, run of 2. PAT'S,
W'll'
Mo rr Is, pass.
I tams, run ;
Reemelin, Matson, 40 yard
U
1
return of blocked pu~AT's"'
derwood, 17 yard run.
·
Del Grosso. run.
SCORE BY QUARTEDS
.
.,.
Reemehn
0 0 6 8- 14
Meigs
6 34 0 0- ·40

0 lead in the first inning , the
Yanks tied the score in the
second on starter Mike Kekich 's
bases-loaded single and added
three more in the third on
LytUe's hit and Gene Michael's
run-scoring single.
Roy White hit his 16th homer
in the fifth and Munson drilled
his ninth of the year over left
field fence iii the sixth. Rookie
Ron Blomberg banged out three
hits and tripled borne another
Yankee run in the sixth.
Kekick, who picked up his
ninth victory in 12 decisions
since July 7, hurled four-hit ball
wttil the seventh when the In·
dians sc«ed twice on folD' hits.
Rookie Alan Closter took over
f~r Kekich but was tagged for
Ray Fosse's tw~un homer in
the ninth.
KW't Bevacqua added a tworun homer with Chris Olambliss on base to end the Indians'
scoring in the ninth.
Keklch struck out three and
walked four in posling his loth
victory against seven losses·.
Closter and Roger Hambright
finished up for Now York to
preserve the victory.

narrow the count to 21-13.
Fullback Don Wood smashed
seven yards for a Bulldog score
with Snow's kick making it 28-13
with 6:30 left in the contest.
In the final four minutes of
·play Mark Burke and Tom
Cernuf scored on two and 11
yard runs to narrow the !mal
margin to 28-25 as the Tigers
were stopped on their two-point
conversion runs by the stout
Bulldog defense.
Score by quarters :
Marietta
7 0 6 12-20
Athens
7 14 0 7- 28

Georgia
Rambles

56 To 25
ATHENS, Ga. (UPI) - Buzy
Rosenberg shredded tackles
and jerseys while returning
punts 66 and 79 yards for touchdowns Saturday and the
Ge~rgia Bulldogs put on a
dazzling offensive show to bury
Oregon State, 56-25.
Rosenberg, a flv!Hoot, nineinch defensive wraith, broke up
a scoreless deadlock halfway
through the first period by
returning Bob McKenzie's punt
freon his own 21, leaving part of
his jersey behind as he wove
and leaped over fallen Beavers
enroute to a score.
He started the scoring parRde
·again in the second ball by
scooting 66 yards for another
touchdown, picking up a wall of
blockers on the way.
Andy Johnson l]irected the
Georgia attack 78 yards for one
touchdown - that on his eight
yard keeper - and .tater darted
12 for another score after faking
a P""..

yard out with Buckley kicking
the extra point.
Dave Beckley got into the act
by picking up an Oak Hill
fumble and racing 37 yards to
score with Hughes running the
conversion points and a 51-0
lead.
In the third quarter Hughes
threw his third touchdown pass
of the contest, a 38 yard strike to
Buckley, and the final TD of the
game came on a 23 yard
scamper by Thompson with
Artie DeStephen running the
conversion to make it 65-0.
The lronmen rolled up 24
first downs, had 403 yards
rushing and 99 passing for a
Iota! of 502.
Hughes had a perfect night
with his passing as he attempted three and completed
all three for touchdowns.
Oak Hill managed only four
first downs, had 76 yards
rushing, and zero passing for
their evening's work.
The score by quarters :
Jackson
28 23 6 8-65
OakHill
0 000-0

IRONTO N - Quarterback
Hal Spears threw two touchdown passes and Jeff Howard
ki cked four extra points Friday
night as the lronllln Tigers
crushed visiting New Boston 4014 · in the lid-lifter for both

converted for a 21-0 lead.
With 4:42 left in the second
period Spears rifled a .l-yard
touchdown pass to Terry
Mowrey and Howard's kick
made i1 28-1! ~~ the haHtime

teams.

Jim Payne picked up his
second TO of the contest with
7:031efl in the thind qu.arter on a
dazzling 60 yard run, but
Howard's kick was blocked, and
the score was aw.
New Boston finally got on
tbe board wltb %:311eft Ill tbe
third period whea Quarterback Ed Thompso11 KOred
on a silt: yard nm.
With substitutes ul the contest
the final Tiger Ially came on a
three yard run by Bruce Carlo!r
with 7: 56 left to play for a 4D-'
lead.
With less than two minutes
remaining Thompson found
Mike Dunham with a 66-yard
touchdown pass for a New
Boston score. Thompson passed
to Al Fayers for the conversion.
'lbe Tigers ames""'i m
yards I'IISblDg and 8dded 221
pusillc for 453 loCal yards
while tile vlslton showed 122
yards rushlnc aad 15&amp; via tbe
air for • m lolal.
Score by quarters:
New Boston
0 0 6 8-14
Ironton
14 14 6 6--40

Spears, a deadly passer,
coDOected on seven of 10
passes for 220 yards in
leading the highly-touted
Tigers to tbeir victory.
Halfback Bob Smith opened
the scoring with a three yard
run with Howard's kick making
it 7-0 at the 7:45 mark of the first
period.
Five minutes later Spears
unloaded an 82-yard pass to Jim
Payne for the second Ironton
TD with Howard's kick making
it 14-0.
Fullback Rick
Boykin
rambled 63 yards on the third
play of the second period for a
Tiger score and again Howard

PENGUINS SIGN TWO
PITISBURGH (UPI ) -Left
wing Dean Prentice and right
wing Ken Schinkel, a pair of :ISyear -(lid veterans, have 'ii!!ned
their 1971-72 contracts with the
Pittsburgh Penguins of the
National Hockey League .

in termission.

SPECIALS
We tiM Only 2·1971 Modlls
We're Moving Theae To Make
Room For 1912 Mode&amp;

FOREST PARK

12160 Early Am•ican • Flllll lilirl ...

14x60 California Sierra Dim',

Front Kiii:hen

e TREMENDOUS ·
SAVINGS

&amp;'~W~
MOBILE
HOME
5'1 ES
5H Jim st..tsor .... Gilu
Upper R1. 7 Next Door to AulD Au!;tion
Phone 446-t34G
Gilllipolis. Ohio

The Full-Gallon
Gallon
Devoe guarantees it in every
C?Oior you buy.
Interiors or exteriors ... pas·
tels or accents ... you can
count on a full gallon in every
Devoe mix.

Wo1derlo1es l1l. Pai11
Over teet tolors

· $6.75~~~.

--· .-. :.':·. ~~~-~---'"------------.....-------------~1 \-"-------"---"--

'r

�.,

•

•

• I•

•

""

.

19-Tbe Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday. Sept. 12, 19'n
- -.

Week's Weather

(

Fartn News: Developments
-

Falcons Hold Cats
On One Foot Line
In Fourth Stanza

Southern Is
22-0 Victim
0 Lancers

'

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BY DALE ROTIIGEB, JR.

BACHTEL FIELD - After 15 years of
frustration, tbe Kyger Creelt Bobcats fmally slllpped
the Wabama White F_'alcons' long mastery here
Friday night although the game ended in a 6-6 tie.
Going into tbe contest, Wabama bad beaten
Kyger Cteek five straight times 6ince tbe two
schools renewed their rivalry in 1966. Prior to that,
the Scarlet and Grey Warriors of Gallia County bad
never beaten or tied Wahama on the gridiron. It was
Coach Dick Adams' debut at tbe helm of the Bobcats.

What's the old saying, "a lie
is like kissing your sister."
Well, from Kyger Creek's then plagued the visiting
standpoint, il was a lot more · BOOcats. A five-yard delay of
sali.sfying.
the game . penalty plaeed the
Coach Dick Adams' BOOcats oval at the 29. Another ftve-yl!rd
came lo play from the moment penalty moved it to the 24 and a
they took the fJeld.
big 15 yarder on a personal foul
Wahama, a 13-6 winner over placed the ball at tbe 10.
Wtrt County last week, was not Wahama scored three plays
quitethesamebllnch thatroUed later on a one yl!rd sneak by
over the Bocats a year ago.
Mike While. Roush's kick for
Coach Don Van Meter's While the extra point was wide lo the
Falcoos C1llllpleted only one left.
pallS all night. Altbough the
Neither club moved the ball
Mason Counlians gained more coosistently in the third period.
yardage on the ground, it was A !»-yard punt by KC's Orland
the hard-socking ~\~&gt;beat Cremeans put Wabama in a
defense which spelled the dif. hole on its 15 yard line. On a
third down situation at the 29,
ference in-the end.

rigbL Wabama players in the background are Robbie
lambert (34), Olrlis Roll$ (42) and Doo Machir (70). KC
players are Terry Sbeets (63), Terry Moles (64) and Ken

FALCONTOuaiDOWN -$mewbere under this piJeql
is Mike While, W•bama quarterback, who bas just scored the
Wlite Falcons lone m II. the" tie will! Kyger Creek Friday

Blankenship (30).

2=tn£a
=
:::!: ~::~~~=Ea~ules
e · Get Good Start
.::g:v~

::!~le~ous~a;:tur':~tcb~~

1

-

'

but were stopped solidly by the recovered the loose ball for

~~1:5 53iE~:

lhinl period. Wahama took the
opening 'kickoff from its 211 In
the Bobcat 311 yanktripe before
relinquishing the ball. A f~
down balfback option pass from
Curtis to Chester Roush was too
l011g.
Kyger Creek took the ball .tn
the White Falcon 11 yard line
before punting. Wabama took
over on its 21 yl!rd line, gained
two yards before tumbling the
baU over toKC's Gecrge CUrry,
a t75 pound junicr linebacker_
1be BOOcals drove from the
18to the 10 yard line but were
held on a fourth down situation.
Audie McFarland made the
defensive play. 1be first period
ended in a (1.1) lie.
The While Falcons gained a
quick first down to put the ball
011 the 24 yard tine but fuliibled
ll8118y once again. Mark Darst,
146poundlinebacker,recovered
for the BOOcats.
Kyger Creek struck paydirt
seven plays later when
sopbomonl halfback Rick Smith
ran over from the four-yard
line. During the drive, Gary
Collins, 150 pound senior
fullback and John Roush, 145
pound junior halfback, combined to lead the Bobcat ground
attack. A pass from senicr
quarterback Glenn Smith 1o
Curry fell shGrt.
Wahama sccred ils touchdown with 1:23 left in the first
half. After receiving tbe kickoff,
quarterback Mike White mixing
bis plays weD, moved bis team
lo the KC 34 yard line. Bad luck

-

first down. Randy Crawford
was spilled fer a six-yard loss.
Early in the fourth period
Kyger Creek's alert defense
regained the ball on an interception by Louden, wbo
returned it lo the 20 yard line.
Smith quickly moved bis club to
the 10 yard line behind sotid
blocks provided by the offensive
line.
·
On a fourlh down situatiOn at
the seven, Glenn Smith's pass to
Collins was good but the speedy
halfback wasdrllppedalthe one
foot line.
Wahama failed to move and
was forced to punt but regained
the ball when the BOOcals were
caught for having too many
men on the .field.
Two IS yard penalties moved
the White Falcons back lo their
eight yl!rd line where they were
forced to punt again. With :i6
seconds remaining, KC drove to
the 3S yard tine but a last second
pass feU short.
According to the charts,
Wahama bad 107 yards rushing
and only six yards passing. 1be
White Falcons bad 9 first
downs, three on penalties.
Kyger Creek gained 67 yards on
the ground and 22 yards in the
air.
The Bobcats had seven first
downs.
Wahama travels to Federalllocking next week. Kyger
Creek will host Hannan Trace.
By Quarters:
0 6 0 0
Kyger Creek
0 6 0 0
Wahama

Linesoores

Major LNgue ResuHs
By United Press lnlern.lional
Americ;~ll L.Ngue
Boston
030 Ot2 1100- 6 10 o
Detroit · 000 000 001- 1 3 1
Peters ( U-10) and Josephson;
Lotich, Timmerman (6). Whil lock 17) , Perranoski (9) and
Freehan. LP- Lolich (23-lll .
HRs-Petrocelli (2Jrdl. Conigliaro (11th), Josephson !lOth). L
Brown (8th).
Washngtn 010 000 1100- 1 3 1
Baltimre 301 010 02x- 7 12 2
Bosman. Cox (8). Riddleberger (8) and Casanova ; Cuellar
118-8) and Hendricks. LPBosman (11 -14L HR- F. Robin son (2Jrd) .
Chic~o

000 100 1100- I 4 1
Kan C1 ty 003 003 OOx- 6 9 1
Bradley, Forster (6), Eddy
(7), Kealey (81 and Egan ;
Spiillol'fl (8-7) and Kirkpatrick .
LP-8radley (13-13). HRsValdespino (lsi) , Mellon (29th) .

Minnes ta .00 000 1100- 4 8 2
Oakland 000 102 002- 5 7 o
Blyleven. Haydel (6) and
Roof ; Odom. Knowles (I) .
Grant (4), Fingers (6), Locker
(8) and Duncan, Tenace (6) .
WP-Locker (S-1). LP- Haydel
(3-2). HRs- Killebrew (23rd},
Epstein (17th) .
Milwakee 011 ooo OlD- 3 4 1
Calif
100 210 21x- 7 13 0
Lockwood, Staton (1) , Lopez
Cl} , Hannan (8) and Porter,
Rodriguez (4) ; Messersmith
(16-13) and Torborg. LPLockwood (9-13) . HR- Cardenal
(Jrd) .

High Scorer
l'lllbtdel.... E 1 J: It- '"""
..., I!Kit Olelt lllrl ONKr
KWMI 33 p.iau Ia elM! gamr
11 1 ..lfh .na.l pllyer.

'

R ·o mn
Wildcats
43-0
r

BY MIKE WISE
MERCERVILLE The
Hannan Trace Wildcats opened
their 1971 grid season with 43-0
setback lo defending SVAC
champion Eastern Friday
night.
Hannan Trace received the
opening kickoff deep in its own
territory. Efforts lo move the
ball by liT bads Joe Jolmson,
Delbert Cisco, and Steve Walter
were st'W!Id -by tbe Eqles'
Iough front defense and the
Wildcats went min punt formation with 9:48 remaining in
lhe first quarter.
Alan Holter, l!JO lb. senior
tackle, who broke through the
Wildcats' tine, retiNa ed the
blocked punt, and ran tbe ball in
for the Eagles' first seore. The
extra points were made by
halfback Rick Sanders on a run,
making the score 8 lo 0.
The Eagles kicked off again
with liT laking over at ils 22
yard tine.
Hannan Trace got a fJrSt
down when a run by Delbert
Cisco, 145 lb: halfback, put the
hall at about the 46 yard line. In
four plays, HT had the ball at

' SECOND QUAKTt;K
Again, the Wildcats just
couldn't get their offense
moving. Rick Williams senior
end, inlercepted a Wtldcat pass
returning it 40 yards for a TO.
The extra point was kicked by
Rick Hauber.
Randy Boring, 145 lb. junior
haltback, scored another TO for
Eastern with the clock reading
2:03 on a one-yard plunge
through the Wi~ defense.
The extra point attempt failed.

POMEROY - Statistics of the 45lh Annual Ohio American
legion Baseball Tournament in early August at Ashland have
been released.
·
Meigs, wbi.cb woo the district tournament in Athens to gain a
berth in the slate finals, wasU in the toumament, good for a tie
of fifth place in a field II. 141eams.
The Meigs team, coacbed by Geu'ge N~
Mike
Werry, bad a team pitcbing ERA of 2.TI. This mark was topped
mly by two others, Wcrlbington and Euclid. The team batting
average was .194, rartkiq: 13th. The team fielding average was
.923, good for lOth place.
The individual baiting and pilcbing averages were as foJJows:

and

OR MORE AT BATSJ
AB R H 28 JB HR RBI Avg.
16
1~

10
16
13
14
15

1
2
3

6

5
2

1
0
0

0
1
0

0
0
0

2

3

0

0

0

1 .188

3
4
3

2

1
0
1

0

0

3 .154

0

0

2 .143

0

0

0

2
1

OR LESS AT
4 2 1
4 1 1
7 1 1
9 1 1
1 o o
6 0 0
129 2l 25
STANDINGS

BATSJ
o o
0 0
0 0
o o
o o
0 0
J 1

w
s

4
4
3
2
2
2

1
1
I
I
0

0
0

l

J .37S
1 .357

3 .200

.061

0
0
0
0

2 .250
0 .250
0 .143
0 . Ill
0 0 .000
0 0 .ODD
0 IS .1,4
R Opp.

0
2
2
2

30
36

2

23

19

29

l2

2 19
2 • 13
2 12
2 17
2
26
14
2
2
J
2
6

27
18
12
19

2

SECOND HALF
The second balf saw the
W'tldcats come alive oo defense
1o hold the Eagles scoreless in
the third stanza.
liT's offense got off lo a good
start twice and came very close
to hitting pay~ . The ball was
resting on the 12yardlinelate in
the third period, however a
reverse by Hannan Trace backfired, giving the ball to Eastern.
The Eagles ran it up to their
own 4l).yard line before Wildcats' Dean Barry, 190 lb.
tackle, recovered an
Eastern fumble.
The whistle blew ending the
lhinl quarter with HT getting
very close lo TD territory. A
passing and running offense by
the Wildcats brought the ball to
the 15 yard line. Once again liT
failed to make a score due lo
damaging penalties.
Hannan Trace was plagued

....oomore

48

22

33

21
18
l2

35

20
13
21

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Jack
Billingham has discovered a
way lo put an end to those 2-1
losses which haunted him at
the beginning of the season.
The llouston Astro righthander's 1.0 vicl«y over the Cincinnati !leW; Friday night in the
opener of a three-game series
was bis second in a row. His
victims the last lime were the
San Francisco Giants.
As a team, the Aslros have
had real good success against
the ReW; this season. Not Billingham, though.
The Astro's vicl«y Friday
night was the ninth in 13 outings with the !leW; Ibis season_
For Billingham, it was bis
first after seven losses in a
row to the !leW;. Three of those
seven have come this season.
And two oflhose three losses
1o the Reds earlier this season
were by 2-1 se&lt;ns.
"Those, though, were just
two of five 2-1 losses Jack suffered early in the season," offered a Houstoo writer.
" Yes, losing close ones like
that can get to you mentally,"
admitted Billingham Friday
night after the two-hitter he
fired against the Reds gave
him an 3-4 won-lost record
"After a while when you give
up two runs, you ftgUre you 're
already beaten," said Billingham. "The next thing you know
you're trying lo be too fine
with your pitches. You get behind the hillers. You might not
wind up walking them, but you
wind up giving them something

I 1
4 (x)

9
JS 2-3

4
J6

4
"

4
1
11 2J

BB SO ERA
11

7.04 ( 9th)

3.00 (l3th l .
10 4.00 (li!hl
23 1.77 ( Jrdl
7

they are.''
Although no statistics were
available from either Southern
or Federal Hocting, Wallace
thought tbe Tqrnadoes bad
more !Dial yardage. " PI!nalties
killed us," said the T«nado
head mentor. ·
The Tornadoes wiD return
home next Friday when they
meet the Gloiustfir Tomcats at
Racine.
Glouster also lost its opener,
4U) to O"ook.sville.
Score by quarters:
Southern.
0 0 0 B- 0
Fed. Hocking
7 9 0 6-22

SEO Standings
ALLGAMES
W L T POP
1 o o 65 0
1 o o 64 20
1 0 0 52 14
1 0 0 40 14
1 0 0 40 14
1 0 0 28 20
1 0 0 28 25
Yf:~iJ!~s R~Hs~ 0 0 0 0
Jackson 65 Oak Hill o
Logan 64 Nelsonville- Ycrl 20
Wellston 52 Vinton County 6
Meigs 40 Reemelin 14
Ironton 411 New Boston 1~
Gallipol is 28 South Point 20
Athens 21 Mariellit 25
Ceredo-Kenova 28 Coal Grove 0
Sept. 17 Gomes:
Athens at Warren Local
Coal Grove at GalliPOlis
Portsmouth at lronfon
Greenfield at Jackson
'Logan al Hilliards
Meigs at Belpre
Portsmouth Wesl al Waverly
Portsmouth Nolie Dame at
Wellston
TEAM
Jackson
Logan
Wellston
Meigs
Ironton
Gallipolis
Athens

.

'

BY C. E. BLAltESLEE
En qeat., Agrinllare
POMEROY - Those interested in good lawns can do
their most effective work this
fall. U it is a question of seeding
a new lawn, the sooner this is
done the better. Call or write the
Extension Office for Bulletin

271, "Your Lawn."
Lawns need regular fertilization . A reliable soil test.can

New in Farming
be helpful in planning your turf
fertilization program, particularly where low levels of
phosphorus and-or potassium
occur. The fertilizer program
described in this section will
normally provide enough
phosphorus and potassium.
Choosing a fertilizer program
will depend on yoW' soil, the
type of grass present, and the
amount of effort you are willing
to spend . Several different
plans, as weD as kinds .of ferlililers, will produce the desired
results. Buy fertilizer by
analysis. For most lawns, the
proper use of nitrogen is the
most important phase of the
fertilization program.
Unless a soil test indicates
otherwise, apply a complete
fertilizer (containing nitrogen,
phosphate, and potash) annually in September. For the
""''"P. and summer ap -

plications, one of the straight
nitrogen material&amp; may be
used.
Nonnally at this season in the
year we are short on rain so
growth has been at a slandslill.
This year in this area we have
rather satisfactory grass
grow lb.
At any rate, manY of us are
getting anllious to apply fall
weed killers, and lhe lime is
near at hand.
Dandelions, plantains
(common and buckhorn) and
many other broadleaf weeds
can be eliminated with 2, 4-D.
Fall is the best lime for general
lreabnent with 2, 4-D, since
desirable plants such as
Dowers, vegetables, shrubs and
trees are less likely to be injured in the fall than in spring or
summer. Too, we'll probably
have more moisture this fall
than we had during the summer. You get a better kill during
periods of ample moisture when
the weeds are growing weD.
Use the amine (not ester)
fonnulation . and spray only
when the wind is quiet Avoid
direct contact wilh Dowers,
vegetables, shrubs or trees. A
standard lawn solution is one
tablespoon of 2, 4-D (4 lbs. per
gallon amine fonnulation 1 in
one gallon of water. Apply this
to wet the weeds to a point of
runoff.
Probably the best lime to

More SportS
on Page 24

First downs
Rushing yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Penalties

11 7
160 47

50 0
210 47
95 40

lhey can hit."
"The big difference in Billingham lately," said Astra manager Harry Walker, ."is that he
is getting his breaking baD
over_ He's challenging the hitler and not nibbling wilh the
pitches."
A single by Pete Rose in the
third and another by Johnny
Bench in the fourth were the
only hils off Billingham Friday
night.

start is about the middle of
September . Regardless of when
you start, be careful that you do
not spray plants you do not want
killed and don' t let the spray
drift onto the neighbor's
property.
Apply Grub Killer - September is a good lime to apply
chlordane or other soil treatment for grub control. Grubs larvae of lhe Japanese beetlehave about completed lheir
dlimage to lawns this year .
They'll be moving downward 6
In 8 inches in lhe soil for the
winter about the latter part of
Seplelllber. But since it takes
considerable lime for insecticides such as chlordane lo

work lheir way down inlo the
lop .layer of soil where they will
he effective, treabnent applied
now should catch the grubs
moving back up in lhe grass
root zone next spring.
A common treatment is
chlordane (72 pet. concentrate)
apptied at the rate of 4
tablespoons per 1,000 square
feet.
CALL ANSWERED
MIDDLEPORT The
Middleport Emergency Squad
answered a caD to the residence
of Mrs. Amanda Murray, Coal
St., at 4:20pm. Fnday. Mrs.
Murray was taken In Pleasant
Valley Hospital.

Aussie Baler Checked
By JOHN COOPER
SoH Cooservalion Service

PT. PLEASANT -

We attended a recent demonstration
lo show a new round baler at the
Southeastern Ohio Agricultural
Research Center at Carpenter
in Meigs County, Ohio, one of
several research
farms
belonging to Ohio State
University.
The new baler we observed

Lay of Land
rools up hay out of a windrow
makes round bales weighing
somel!JOto4001bs. threelofour
feet high and about four feet
long. It rolled up these bales
into a fairly light bale, which,
however, was not lied.
The baler was made by a
manufacturer in Australia .
Robert Lich, manager of the
farm, said that the cost of it in
Australia was $1800 and that it
cost $1000 to get it shipped to
this country_
The reason Ohio State
University got this baler was
because of the increasing interes! in winter feeding of
livestock by use of what is
caUed "extended grazing. "
As we went to the farm by
Route 143 we noted many fanns
which had used a round baler
made by Allis-Chalmer and
lilese small round bales were

lying in many fields in
preparation for winter feeding.
Several Mason Counly farmers have adopted this winter
feeding
program
or
modifications of it
The people attending the
demonstration from Mason
Counly were D. L. Hatfield,
Earl Foglesong, J . S. Baird,
William Bateman, Wesley
Holley, Larry HoOey, Fred
Green, and Mr . and Mrs.
Denver Yoho.
Wesley Meadows, who had
inspired our interest in this
lour, and is one of lhe pioneer
fanners in Mason County lo
adopt an extended grazing
program had an accident on bis
farm the morning of lhe tour,
breaking bis leg and his ann
and was unable 1o go. At Ibis
writing it is reported that Mr.
Meadows is recuperating
satisfactorily in a Huntington
hospital.
CLYDE AND Rex Adams on
Kanawha Sixteen Mile Creek
near lhe old Bird School have
completed a waterway. The
waterway was 800 feet long and
wasconstructedtoadeplhof1.9
feet wilh a width of 10 feet wilh
lhe grade being 1.6 percent The
purpose of this waterway is to
carry water across a bottom
land field which is coUected on a
hillside and runs down over the

bottom .
The waterway was built by
lhe bulldozer belonging In lhe
Western Soil Conservation
District and operated by Rupert
Sayre. Designs were made by
Denver Yoho of Soil Conservalion Service.
ROBERT LANZ has com·
pleted a farm pond on his famt
at the head of Horse Lick Fork
of Crab Creek. When it is full of
water, it wiD contain about onethird acre of water surface. The
construction of Mr. Lanz' pond
was done by the district
bulldmer and design made by

WA.SHJNGTO N (UP! ) OhiQ's
com production
prospects brigblened dtDig the
past month, winter wheal was
IDicbanged and soybeans were
down. according to the
Agriculture Department.
The September outlook for
Ohio c&lt;rn is for a crup of
299,710,000 bushe·.., equal to B5
bushels an acre. The yield had
been forecast in Augmt at
292,658,000 bushels, while last
year's
banesI
totaled
Z31,078,000 bushels.
Good gro~ wealhes- and
the lesser than expected impact
by the cun Jjjght apparently
improved Ohio's prospects this

IaU while nationaUy the corn
fllnlcast dropped one per cent
allhough sliD being at a record
level of 5,265,641,000 bushels.
'That's a national yield of 82
bushels an acre, down one
wshel from a. year ago.
The monlhly crop report also
forecast the national soybean

'

SEVERAL TO TALK
ATHENS, Ohio &lt;U P! )
Several members of the administration at Ohio University
were scheduled to testify
Monday when a special state
grand jW')' convenes its investigation into business transactions conducted by OU.
Scheduled to testify Monday are
vice presidents Martin Hecht,
Charles Culp and John Milar;
OU director of Resident Services Philip Tice, former
trustee Paul O'Brien and Dave
Jacoby, head of the Upward
Bound program.
DEPIITY NM1ED
COLUMBUS (UPI J - Andris
Pride has been named deputy
directnr of the Ohio Deparbnenl
of Development's Planning
Division, H was announced
Saturday. Department Director
David G. SWeet said Priede
would be responsible for formulating
the
Planning
Division's policies, programs

Come in- we have ample loan funds.
CLYDE B. WALKER, Mgr.
19 Locust St .
446-0203
Gallipolis

Seltins.Ameria's f.uiilb'S:Providers of ftiiJI-..~w

technician;s~o~f:scs:.·----·and=-~~-----•••••••••••••••1!11•••••

Look What We Got!

MOD
•

FOR ALL!.
•• -·I

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Report Verified.

Yoor

EHT

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Coach Tom Belville of Hannan , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -..
Trace and Roger Kirkhart of
Eastern.
BY QUARTERS
E
22 13 0 S--43
HT
0 0 0 0-0
STATS

Billingham Blanks

INDIVIDUAL PITCHING AVERAGES
WLGCGLPH R ER
0 1 7 2 (x) 17 2-J 12 9 4 15 h)
1011
9
1063 1
1 0 1
2 2 4

wilh illegal procedure penalties
all evening. Eastern took over
and drove it deep inlo Wildcat
country. A 35-yard pass from
Eichinger to Boring was the
clincher, making lhe score 41 lo
0. The extra points were run by
Eichinger, making the score 43
to 0. The game ended wilh
Hannan Trace making a final
effort from about lhe 23 yard
line.
II was lhe coaching debuts of

Cincinnati, 1-0

Legion Tied for Fifth
In Field of 14 Teams

National League
( 12 innings)
SI.L 300 000 120 002- 8 15 1
Chcgo 010 021 020 001- 7 11 1
Carlton, Linzy (7), Shaw (8),
Williams (11) and Simmons;
Jenkins, Gura (8), Regan (8),
Colborn (10) and Fernandez.
BATTING- (lG
WP- Williams (2.0) . LP- Col·
born (O. l) . HRs- Fernandez PLAYER
(1st), Santo (20th).
Dave BumeH &lt;•l
( 11 innings)
Bob Werry I xx)
Pill
000 000 101 oo- 2 8 1 Gene Powell
Mont
000 000 020 OF- 3 IS 1
Johnson,. Miller (8), Veale Roger Di•on
(9) , Giusti (9) and Sanguillen ; Stan Perry
Stoneman, Marshall (8), Stroh- Lonnie Bush
mayer (11) and Bateman. WP- Dave Boys
(x) · 14th
Stroh mayer (7-5) . LP--Giusli
15·61. HR- Oiiver (12th) .
(xxl 19lhl
BATIING- (9
Houston 100 000 1100- I 10 2 Kevin Sheets
Cinci
000 000 llOO- 0 2 0
Billingham (8-14) and Ed- BreH Hart
wards: McGlothlin, Merrill (5). Rick Van Maire
Granger (9) and Bench.· LP- GaryHarl
Howie Taylor
McGiothlin (7-121.
Rick Ash
( 11 innings)
TOTALS
S.F.
021 000 000 11- 5 6 3
FINAL
Alln ta 000 001 020 13-- 7 IJ 2 TEAM
Perry, Hamilton (8) , Johnson
( 101 and Dietz , Gibson (d) ; Archbold
Niekro. Jarvis (81, Nash (10) Hillsboro
and Williams. WP- Nash (9-7) . Euclid
LP- Johnson ( 12·61 . HRs- Piqua
Arnold (1st). Williams· (Jist), Meigs
Aaron (40th 1.
Lima
Cambridge
Phita
00o 001 on- 3 9 J Worlhinlitan
New York 030 010 oox- 4 8 1
Richmond
Wise, Lersch (7) and McCar- Ashtabula
ver ; Koosman, Frisella 191 and
Grote. WP- Koosman (6-9). LP Ashley
- Wise 04-13). HR- Johnson Wadsworth
Cincinnati
(J ist).
Ken t
LosAng
200 000 004~ 6 13 1
San Diego 000 010 OlD- 2 9 2
Sutton, Brewer 18) and PLAYER
Hailer; Roberts, Acosta (81, Rick Van Maire
Kelley 19), Severinsen (9). Dave Burnett
Caldwell (9) and Barton, Stan Perry
Kendall (81. WP- Bre\Yer 16-5). TOTALS
LP- Acosla 0 -2).
I• J ~ed tournament
•

the Eagles' 41 yard line, but the
Wtldcats could not make the
necessary yardage so Eastern
took over.
With $:19 oo the first quarter
clock, the Eagles scored again
oo a W-~ run by Rick Sanders. Dennis Eichinger, Eagle
fullback, ran in the extra points.
The score stood at Eastern 16,
Hannan Trace 0.
The Eagles scored once more
after the HT offense sputtered
lo a halt. With 34 seconds left
BOO Caldwell SCII'ed on a 21&gt;yard pass from senior quarlerback Jim Amsbary. The
conversion failed.

STEWART - The Southern
Local Tornadoes, much improved this year over previous
campaigns, gave the Federal
Hocking Lancers everything
they wanted before suc·
cumbing, 22-0, at lhe winners
home field Friday night.
The non-league loss made
coach Bruce Wallace's Tornadoes 11'1 on the year while
Coach Danny Hall's Lancers
are 1-0. This was Coach
Wallace's first game as a head
mentor.
The Lancers were dealt a
serious blow to their season's
succe~s when junior quarterback Danny HaD, two year
lettennan and son of.the coach,
was ruled out for lhe season
after suffering a broken collar
bone. Another Lancer, Mitch
Daugherty had his shoulder
separated by the hard hilling
Tornadoes and will miss a few
games.
Federal Hocking hit paydirt
once in the first quarter when
Hall passed to Rob Smith from
26 yards. Hall kicked the extras
to make it 7.0.
In the second quarter, Jerry
Mahoney Ia ckled the Southem
punter in the end zone for a
safety. Also in the second
period Delbert Guess ran four
'
yards and Hall added the extra
on a kick to make it 16-0 in favor
of lhe Lancers
.
·
After a scoreless third
quarter, James Taylor added
lhe icing on lhe cake for the
Lancers on a lhirty-yard run.
The kick for the extra point
failed.
Coach Wallace was not happy
about lhe final score but his
team, he said, "Didn't gel any
breaks, I did.lhen and still think
we are a better ball club than

Now Best Time to. Reseed Lawn

GALLIPOLIS
Ternperature, precipitation, and
weather conditioos for each Z4
hoW' period as recorded by Pete
McCormick, Fairfield Weather
ObserVer :
Day
High Low Prec.
$znday
90
65
Monday
91
64
Tuesday
85
67
JJ5
Wednesday 86
63
Thursday
93
62
Friday
93
63
Saturday
68
63
Average high temperature for
week this year - 116.5. Last year
- 87.
Average low temperatiU'e for
week this year - 63.8. Last year
_ 63.8.
Total precipitation for week
Ibis year _ .05 inch. Last year
_ .94 inch.
Total precipitation to dale
this year _ 23.~ inches. Last
year _ 29.68 inches.
Normal average precipilatioo
annuaUy - 40.99 inches.

Ohio Com Crop Good

production at a recenl
I,Jil6,310,01J0bu*ll, ,.._ltt a
record 1,625,~4$,0111 l!v¢els,
and grain !IQI'gllum at • · - •
180,113,000 bashels.
The estimate f91' aD li't rt Jr
feed grams combined- af c:GI'JI,
oats, barley and sorgluan .:.. Ill
198,000,000 lOlls was dOim per cent from a I!HIIlth e.rlier
wl24per cent above las1 yar'a
yield.

ONE
STOP

or snow thrower aHachment*when you
buy a new Cub Cadet~ tractor ••• or
free lawn sweeper aHachment with
purchase of Cadet 60 riding mower!

FOR

MOBILE HOMES!
ALL YOU NEED IS AT K&amp;K•••
• Financing

• Window Awnings

• Insurance

• Under Pinning

• Air Conditioning

• Delivery &amp; Set-Up

-

Your choice of free attachment for mowing, snow
throwing or leal raking can save you up to $213.
Come in today. See the lawn and garden tractors
with " built-for-keeps" features!
•
•
•
•
•

Steel frame, full-length.
Heavy-duty axles and housing.
Choice of'S, 7, 10. 12, 14 horsepower.
Choice oltransmission.
Over 60 work-saving implements.

• 35-ineh wi&lt;M

•
IH.

Stop in and see how you can save today!

Meigs Equipment Co.
"2 LOCATIONS"
Eastern Ave .• Gallipolis Rt. 62 . Pt. Plea~ant , W. Va.

See Paul or Gary Northup

'

_;,P.;,H;;,·,;.992;.;,;·2~17;,;6;,.._ _ _ _ _ _PO_M;,;;E;,;R,;,;O;,Y;;••O;;._,

WASHINGTON (UP!) Eight cmt belt farmers Friday
got an mmsual opportunity lo
watch
the
Agriculture
Department prepare its
monthly farm crop report under
light security cooditions.
The eight invited farmers
entered the agency's '1ockup"
area which was behind sealed
doors guarded by armed
guards, with teleph011es cut off
and even window blinds locked
shut. There the fanners watcbed specialists prepare the
government's monthly estimate
of producti011 of crops including
CGm and soybeans.
No ooe inside the lockup area
was allowed to communicate
with the outside until after the
repol't was released Saturday.
The light security cooditioos
are maintained to prevent leaks
of the crop estimates which
could affect volatile farm
commodity markets.
Saturday's report

awaited with great interest
because it was to show how
much estimated production of
corn and soybeans bas changed
from the record levels
estimated in August.
Dr. Don Paarlberg, the
Agriculture
Department's
direclnr of ecooomics, said the
eight fa'lllers were selected on
the basis of the type of crops
IIIey produce, their leadership
record and their ability lo tell
others about their experience.
The deparbnent has ~ong been
trying to convince some
skeptical producers of the
soundness of its es!inuliing
methods and lhe thoroughness
of its precautions against
premature disclosure of
estimates.
The invited grain and
livestock fanners were: Robert
Albnan, Bondurant, Iowa; Jack
Elliott, Mount Ayr, Iowa;

Robert
Phi IIi p so o,
was Bloomington, Neb.; Leland
George, SoulhSioux City, Neb. ;
Durbin Budd, Leban011, Ind.;
Waller Harris, Jasper, Ind.;
Kenneth W. Gordon, Blue
Mound, Dl., and Harold Strand,
Cordova, Dl.

575,000

STRIKE ENDED
FINDLAY, Ohio (UP!)
Striking school teachers here
and the City board of educalioo.
have reached agreement on a
new contract and classes are
scheduled lo begin on Monday
for 9,100 students. The school
system's 400 teachers struck
Wednesday which was lo have
been lhe first day of school after
the board of education announced a cutback in salaries lo
lhe January, 1970 level.

Capital Shares of Beneficia/Interest

NORTHERN INVESTMENT PROPERTIES
A REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT TRUST

Price $10.00 per share
• Tax sheltered current return .
• Over 90% of earnings distributed to shareholders.
• Equity ownership in properties with long term
capital growth objectives.

DEPUl'Y PROMOI'ED
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - W. J.
Whealon, deputy warden at
Cblllicothe Correctional Institution, will be named Monday
as warden of the new Ohio
Penitentiary at Lucasville, it
waa reported today.

This is neither an ofler to sell nor a solicitation Qf an offer to buy share~.
An offer may be made only by prospectus to residents of Ohio.

WE HAVE THE LOWEST rossmLE
PRICES!.SEE US FffiST BEFORE

For information write or phone

LANDSIJDES KIU. 21

YOU BUY!
Jack Wilson
Northern Securities Company
395 East Broad Street
Columbus,· Ohio . 43215
Toll Free Number 1-800-282-1587

OWASE, Japan (UPI)
rwertty persons were known
dead and 22 others m!S!ring
today following landslides
caUBed by rains of as much as 40
inches in 24 hour~. The slides
buried 30 homes in this c01151al
town 300 miles southwest of
1'okyo.

CENTRAL
SOYA
Food Pow• People"
"The

OHIO

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b

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Big Yank Brand
SIZES FOR AUI
STYLES FOR ALLI
GIRLS- BOYS
MEN
YOUNG MEN
GIRLS - TEENS
WOMEN
They're All Here!
Everybody is talking about
this new slacks department
at Landmark ... and our big
selection. In fact. the largest
selection in the area . And
another big shipment just
arrived. Si!es for all! Styles
for all! Colors for all ...
plains.
stripes ,
com binations. patch pockets, etc .
COME! SEE!

AT LOW lANDMARK PRICES

4.10

TO

7.00

PAIR

eBEll BOTTOMS
· eFLARES
•BUTTOfl FROm
eMMY STYl£S

All Fabrics In This Selection! All Guaranteed At Landmark/

Pomeroy Landmark
®

Serving Meigs, Gallia and Mason Counties
JACK W. CARSEY, Mgr.
PHONE 992-2181
Stcn Dpeft Mon. Thru Sol. Until.:OO
YOU can buy at ~NDMARK-EVERYONE CAN I

! £.

�.,

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19-Tbe Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday. Sept. 12, 19'n
- -.

Week's Weather

(

Fartn News: Developments
-

Falcons Hold Cats
On One Foot Line
In Fourth Stanza

Southern Is
22-0 Victim
0 Lancers

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BY DALE ROTIIGEB, JR.

BACHTEL FIELD - After 15 years of
frustration, tbe Kyger Creelt Bobcats fmally slllpped
the Wabama White F_'alcons' long mastery here
Friday night although the game ended in a 6-6 tie.
Going into tbe contest, Wabama bad beaten
Kyger Cteek five straight times 6ince tbe two
schools renewed their rivalry in 1966. Prior to that,
the Scarlet and Grey Warriors of Gallia County bad
never beaten or tied Wahama on the gridiron. It was
Coach Dick Adams' debut at tbe helm of the Bobcats.

What's the old saying, "a lie
is like kissing your sister."
Well, from Kyger Creek's then plagued the visiting
standpoint, il was a lot more · BOOcats. A five-yard delay of
sali.sfying.
the game . penalty plaeed the
Coach Dick Adams' BOOcats oval at the 29. Another ftve-yl!rd
came lo play from the moment penalty moved it to the 24 and a
they took the fJeld.
big 15 yarder on a personal foul
Wahama, a 13-6 winner over placed the ball at tbe 10.
Wtrt County last week, was not Wahama scored three plays
quitethesamebllnch thatroUed later on a one yl!rd sneak by
over the Bocats a year ago.
Mike While. Roush's kick for
Coach Don Van Meter's While the extra point was wide lo the
Falcoos C1llllpleted only one left.
pallS all night. Altbough the
Neither club moved the ball
Mason Counlians gained more coosistently in the third period.
yardage on the ground, it was A !»-yard punt by KC's Orland
the hard-socking ~\~&gt;beat Cremeans put Wabama in a
defense which spelled the dif. hole on its 15 yard line. On a
third down situation at the 29,
ference in-the end.

rigbL Wabama players in the background are Robbie
lambert (34), Olrlis Roll$ (42) and Doo Machir (70). KC
players are Terry Sbeets (63), Terry Moles (64) and Ken

FALCONTOuaiDOWN -$mewbere under this piJeql
is Mike While, W•bama quarterback, who bas just scored the
Wlite Falcons lone m II. the" tie will! Kyger Creek Friday

Blankenship (30).

2=tn£a
=
:::!: ~::~~~=Ea~ules
e · Get Good Start
.::g:v~

::!~le~ous~a;:tur':~tcb~~

1

-

'

but were stopped solidly by the recovered the loose ball for

~~1:5 53iE~:

lhinl period. Wahama took the
opening 'kickoff from its 211 In
the Bobcat 311 yanktripe before
relinquishing the ball. A f~
down balfback option pass from
Curtis to Chester Roush was too
l011g.
Kyger Creek took the ball .tn
the White Falcon 11 yard line
before punting. Wabama took
over on its 21 yl!rd line, gained
two yards before tumbling the
baU over toKC's Gecrge CUrry,
a t75 pound junicr linebacker_
1be BOOcals drove from the
18to the 10 yard line but were
held on a fourth down situation.
Audie McFarland made the
defensive play. 1be first period
ended in a (1.1) lie.
The While Falcons gained a
quick first down to put the ball
011 the 24 yard tine but fuliibled
ll8118y once again. Mark Darst,
146poundlinebacker,recovered
for the BOOcats.
Kyger Creek struck paydirt
seven plays later when
sopbomonl halfback Rick Smith
ran over from the four-yard
line. During the drive, Gary
Collins, 150 pound senior
fullback and John Roush, 145
pound junior halfback, combined to lead the Bobcat ground
attack. A pass from senicr
quarterback Glenn Smith 1o
Curry fell shGrt.
Wahama sccred ils touchdown with 1:23 left in the first
half. After receiving tbe kickoff,
quarterback Mike White mixing
bis plays weD, moved bis team
lo the KC 34 yard line. Bad luck

-

first down. Randy Crawford
was spilled fer a six-yard loss.
Early in the fourth period
Kyger Creek's alert defense
regained the ball on an interception by Louden, wbo
returned it lo the 20 yard line.
Smith quickly moved bis club to
the 10 yard line behind sotid
blocks provided by the offensive
line.
·
On a fourlh down situatiOn at
the seven, Glenn Smith's pass to
Collins was good but the speedy
halfback wasdrllppedalthe one
foot line.
Wahama failed to move and
was forced to punt but regained
the ball when the BOOcals were
caught for having too many
men on the .field.
Two IS yard penalties moved
the White Falcons back lo their
eight yl!rd line where they were
forced to punt again. With :i6
seconds remaining, KC drove to
the 3S yard tine but a last second
pass feU short.
According to the charts,
Wahama bad 107 yards rushing
and only six yards passing. 1be
White Falcons bad 9 first
downs, three on penalties.
Kyger Creek gained 67 yards on
the ground and 22 yards in the
air.
The Bobcats had seven first
downs.
Wahama travels to Federalllocking next week. Kyger
Creek will host Hannan Trace.
By Quarters:
0 6 0 0
Kyger Creek
0 6 0 0
Wahama

Linesoores

Major LNgue ResuHs
By United Press lnlern.lional
Americ;~ll L.Ngue
Boston
030 Ot2 1100- 6 10 o
Detroit · 000 000 001- 1 3 1
Peters ( U-10) and Josephson;
Lotich, Timmerman (6). Whil lock 17) , Perranoski (9) and
Freehan. LP- Lolich (23-lll .
HRs-Petrocelli (2Jrdl. Conigliaro (11th), Josephson !lOth). L
Brown (8th).
Washngtn 010 000 1100- 1 3 1
Baltimre 301 010 02x- 7 12 2
Bosman. Cox (8). Riddleberger (8) and Casanova ; Cuellar
118-8) and Hendricks. LPBosman (11 -14L HR- F. Robin son (2Jrd) .
Chic~o

000 100 1100- I 4 1
Kan C1 ty 003 003 OOx- 6 9 1
Bradley, Forster (6), Eddy
(7), Kealey (81 and Egan ;
Spiillol'fl (8-7) and Kirkpatrick .
LP-8radley (13-13). HRsValdespino (lsi) , Mellon (29th) .

Minnes ta .00 000 1100- 4 8 2
Oakland 000 102 002- 5 7 o
Blyleven. Haydel (6) and
Roof ; Odom. Knowles (I) .
Grant (4), Fingers (6), Locker
(8) and Duncan, Tenace (6) .
WP-Locker (S-1). LP- Haydel
(3-2). HRs- Killebrew (23rd},
Epstein (17th) .
Milwakee 011 ooo OlD- 3 4 1
Calif
100 210 21x- 7 13 0
Lockwood, Staton (1) , Lopez
Cl} , Hannan (8) and Porter,
Rodriguez (4) ; Messersmith
(16-13) and Torborg. LPLockwood (9-13) . HR- Cardenal
(Jrd) .

High Scorer
l'lllbtdel.... E 1 J: It- '"""
..., I!Kit Olelt lllrl ONKr
KWMI 33 p.iau Ia elM! gamr
11 1 ..lfh .na.l pllyer.

'

R ·o mn
Wildcats
43-0
r

BY MIKE WISE
MERCERVILLE The
Hannan Trace Wildcats opened
their 1971 grid season with 43-0
setback lo defending SVAC
champion Eastern Friday
night.
Hannan Trace received the
opening kickoff deep in its own
territory. Efforts lo move the
ball by liT bads Joe Jolmson,
Delbert Cisco, and Steve Walter
were st'W!Id -by tbe Eqles'
Iough front defense and the
Wildcats went min punt formation with 9:48 remaining in
lhe first quarter.
Alan Holter, l!JO lb. senior
tackle, who broke through the
Wildcats' tine, retiNa ed the
blocked punt, and ran tbe ball in
for the Eagles' first seore. The
extra points were made by
halfback Rick Sanders on a run,
making the score 8 lo 0.
The Eagles kicked off again
with liT laking over at ils 22
yard tine.
Hannan Trace got a fJrSt
down when a run by Delbert
Cisco, 145 lb: halfback, put the
hall at about the 46 yard line. In
four plays, HT had the ball at

' SECOND QUAKTt;K
Again, the Wildcats just
couldn't get their offense
moving. Rick Williams senior
end, inlercepted a Wtldcat pass
returning it 40 yards for a TO.
The extra point was kicked by
Rick Hauber.
Randy Boring, 145 lb. junior
haltback, scored another TO for
Eastern with the clock reading
2:03 on a one-yard plunge
through the Wi~ defense.
The extra point attempt failed.

POMEROY - Statistics of the 45lh Annual Ohio American
legion Baseball Tournament in early August at Ashland have
been released.
·
Meigs, wbi.cb woo the district tournament in Athens to gain a
berth in the slate finals, wasU in the toumament, good for a tie
of fifth place in a field II. 141eams.
The Meigs team, coacbed by Geu'ge N~
Mike
Werry, bad a team pitcbing ERA of 2.TI. This mark was topped
mly by two others, Wcrlbington and Euclid. The team batting
average was .194, rartkiq: 13th. The team fielding average was
.923, good for lOth place.
The individual baiting and pilcbing averages were as foJJows:

and

OR MORE AT BATSJ
AB R H 28 JB HR RBI Avg.
16
1~

10
16
13
14
15

1
2
3

6

5
2

1
0
0

0
1
0

0
0
0

2

3

0

0

0

1 .188

3
4
3

2

1
0
1

0

0

3 .154

0

0

2 .143

0

0

0

2
1

OR LESS AT
4 2 1
4 1 1
7 1 1
9 1 1
1 o o
6 0 0
129 2l 25
STANDINGS

BATSJ
o o
0 0
0 0
o o
o o
0 0
J 1

w
s

4
4
3
2
2
2

1
1
I
I
0

0
0

l

J .37S
1 .357

3 .200

.061

0
0
0
0

2 .250
0 .250
0 .143
0 . Ill
0 0 .000
0 0 .ODD
0 IS .1,4
R Opp.

0
2
2
2

30
36

2

23

19

29

l2

2 19
2 • 13
2 12
2 17
2
26
14
2
2
J
2
6

27
18
12
19

2

SECOND HALF
The second balf saw the
W'tldcats come alive oo defense
1o hold the Eagles scoreless in
the third stanza.
liT's offense got off lo a good
start twice and came very close
to hitting pay~ . The ball was
resting on the 12yardlinelate in
the third period, however a
reverse by Hannan Trace backfired, giving the ball to Eastern.
The Eagles ran it up to their
own 4l).yard line before Wildcats' Dean Barry, 190 lb.
tackle, recovered an
Eastern fumble.
The whistle blew ending the
lhinl quarter with HT getting
very close lo TD territory. A
passing and running offense by
the Wildcats brought the ball to
the 15 yard line. Once again liT
failed to make a score due lo
damaging penalties.
Hannan Trace was plagued

....oomore

48

22

33

21
18
l2

35

20
13
21

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Jack
Billingham has discovered a
way lo put an end to those 2-1
losses which haunted him at
the beginning of the season.
The llouston Astro righthander's 1.0 vicl«y over the Cincinnati !leW; Friday night in the
opener of a three-game series
was bis second in a row. His
victims the last lime were the
San Francisco Giants.
As a team, the Aslros have
had real good success against
the ReW; this season. Not Billingham, though.
The Astro's vicl«y Friday
night was the ninth in 13 outings with the !leW; Ibis season_
For Billingham, it was bis
first after seven losses in a
row to the !leW;. Three of those
seven have come this season.
And two oflhose three losses
1o the Reds earlier this season
were by 2-1 se&lt;ns.
"Those, though, were just
two of five 2-1 losses Jack suffered early in the season," offered a Houstoo writer.
" Yes, losing close ones like
that can get to you mentally,"
admitted Billingham Friday
night after the two-hitter he
fired against the Reds gave
him an 3-4 won-lost record
"After a while when you give
up two runs, you ftgUre you 're
already beaten," said Billingham. "The next thing you know
you're trying lo be too fine
with your pitches. You get behind the hillers. You might not
wind up walking them, but you
wind up giving them something

I 1
4 (x)

9
JS 2-3

4
J6

4
"

4
1
11 2J

BB SO ERA
11

7.04 ( 9th)

3.00 (l3th l .
10 4.00 (li!hl
23 1.77 ( Jrdl
7

they are.''
Although no statistics were
available from either Southern
or Federal Hocting, Wallace
thought tbe Tqrnadoes bad
more !Dial yardage. " PI!nalties
killed us," said the T«nado
head mentor. ·
The Tornadoes wiD return
home next Friday when they
meet the Gloiustfir Tomcats at
Racine.
Glouster also lost its opener,
4U) to O"ook.sville.
Score by quarters:
Southern.
0 0 0 B- 0
Fed. Hocking
7 9 0 6-22

SEO Standings
ALLGAMES
W L T POP
1 o o 65 0
1 o o 64 20
1 0 0 52 14
1 0 0 40 14
1 0 0 40 14
1 0 0 28 20
1 0 0 28 25
Yf:~iJ!~s R~Hs~ 0 0 0 0
Jackson 65 Oak Hill o
Logan 64 Nelsonville- Ycrl 20
Wellston 52 Vinton County 6
Meigs 40 Reemelin 14
Ironton 411 New Boston 1~
Gallipol is 28 South Point 20
Athens 21 Mariellit 25
Ceredo-Kenova 28 Coal Grove 0
Sept. 17 Gomes:
Athens at Warren Local
Coal Grove at GalliPOlis
Portsmouth at lronfon
Greenfield at Jackson
'Logan al Hilliards
Meigs at Belpre
Portsmouth Wesl al Waverly
Portsmouth Nolie Dame at
Wellston
TEAM
Jackson
Logan
Wellston
Meigs
Ironton
Gallipolis
Athens

.

'

BY C. E. BLAltESLEE
En qeat., Agrinllare
POMEROY - Those interested in good lawns can do
their most effective work this
fall. U it is a question of seeding
a new lawn, the sooner this is
done the better. Call or write the
Extension Office for Bulletin

271, "Your Lawn."
Lawns need regular fertilization . A reliable soil test.can

New in Farming
be helpful in planning your turf
fertilization program, particularly where low levels of
phosphorus and-or potassium
occur. The fertilizer program
described in this section will
normally provide enough
phosphorus and potassium.
Choosing a fertilizer program
will depend on yoW' soil, the
type of grass present, and the
amount of effort you are willing
to spend . Several different
plans, as weD as kinds .of ferlililers, will produce the desired
results. Buy fertilizer by
analysis. For most lawns, the
proper use of nitrogen is the
most important phase of the
fertilization program.
Unless a soil test indicates
otherwise, apply a complete
fertilizer (containing nitrogen,
phosphate, and potash) annually in September. For the
""''"P. and summer ap -

plications, one of the straight
nitrogen material&amp; may be
used.
Nonnally at this season in the
year we are short on rain so
growth has been at a slandslill.
This year in this area we have
rather satisfactory grass
grow lb.
At any rate, manY of us are
getting anllious to apply fall
weed killers, and lhe lime is
near at hand.
Dandelions, plantains
(common and buckhorn) and
many other broadleaf weeds
can be eliminated with 2, 4-D.
Fall is the best lime for general
lreabnent with 2, 4-D, since
desirable plants such as
Dowers, vegetables, shrubs and
trees are less likely to be injured in the fall than in spring or
summer. Too, we'll probably
have more moisture this fall
than we had during the summer. You get a better kill during
periods of ample moisture when
the weeds are growing weD.
Use the amine (not ester)
fonnulation . and spray only
when the wind is quiet Avoid
direct contact wilh Dowers,
vegetables, shrubs or trees. A
standard lawn solution is one
tablespoon of 2, 4-D (4 lbs. per
gallon amine fonnulation 1 in
one gallon of water. Apply this
to wet the weeds to a point of
runoff.
Probably the best lime to

More SportS
on Page 24

First downs
Rushing yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Penalties

11 7
160 47

50 0
210 47
95 40

lhey can hit."
"The big difference in Billingham lately," said Astra manager Harry Walker, ."is that he
is getting his breaking baD
over_ He's challenging the hitler and not nibbling wilh the
pitches."
A single by Pete Rose in the
third and another by Johnny
Bench in the fourth were the
only hils off Billingham Friday
night.

start is about the middle of
September . Regardless of when
you start, be careful that you do
not spray plants you do not want
killed and don' t let the spray
drift onto the neighbor's
property.
Apply Grub Killer - September is a good lime to apply
chlordane or other soil treatment for grub control. Grubs larvae of lhe Japanese beetlehave about completed lheir
dlimage to lawns this year .
They'll be moving downward 6
In 8 inches in lhe soil for the
winter about the latter part of
Seplelllber. But since it takes
considerable lime for insecticides such as chlordane lo

work lheir way down inlo the
lop .layer of soil where they will
he effective, treabnent applied
now should catch the grubs
moving back up in lhe grass
root zone next spring.
A common treatment is
chlordane (72 pet. concentrate)
apptied at the rate of 4
tablespoons per 1,000 square
feet.
CALL ANSWERED
MIDDLEPORT The
Middleport Emergency Squad
answered a caD to the residence
of Mrs. Amanda Murray, Coal
St., at 4:20pm. Fnday. Mrs.
Murray was taken In Pleasant
Valley Hospital.

Aussie Baler Checked
By JOHN COOPER
SoH Cooservalion Service

PT. PLEASANT -

We attended a recent demonstration
lo show a new round baler at the
Southeastern Ohio Agricultural
Research Center at Carpenter
in Meigs County, Ohio, one of
several research
farms
belonging to Ohio State
University.
The new baler we observed

Lay of Land
rools up hay out of a windrow
makes round bales weighing
somel!JOto4001bs. threelofour
feet high and about four feet
long. It rolled up these bales
into a fairly light bale, which,
however, was not lied.
The baler was made by a
manufacturer in Australia .
Robert Lich, manager of the
farm, said that the cost of it in
Australia was $1800 and that it
cost $1000 to get it shipped to
this country_
The reason Ohio State
University got this baler was
because of the increasing interes! in winter feeding of
livestock by use of what is
caUed "extended grazing. "
As we went to the farm by
Route 143 we noted many fanns
which had used a round baler
made by Allis-Chalmer and
lilese small round bales were

lying in many fields in
preparation for winter feeding.
Several Mason Counly farmers have adopted this winter
feeding
program
or
modifications of it
The people attending the
demonstration from Mason
Counly were D. L. Hatfield,
Earl Foglesong, J . S. Baird,
William Bateman, Wesley
Holley, Larry HoOey, Fred
Green, and Mr . and Mrs.
Denver Yoho.
Wesley Meadows, who had
inspired our interest in this
lour, and is one of lhe pioneer
fanners in Mason County lo
adopt an extended grazing
program had an accident on bis
farm the morning of lhe tour,
breaking bis leg and his ann
and was unable 1o go. At Ibis
writing it is reported that Mr.
Meadows is recuperating
satisfactorily in a Huntington
hospital.
CLYDE AND Rex Adams on
Kanawha Sixteen Mile Creek
near lhe old Bird School have
completed a waterway. The
waterway was 800 feet long and
wasconstructedtoadeplhof1.9
feet wilh a width of 10 feet wilh
lhe grade being 1.6 percent The
purpose of this waterway is to
carry water across a bottom
land field which is coUected on a
hillside and runs down over the

bottom .
The waterway was built by
lhe bulldozer belonging In lhe
Western Soil Conservation
District and operated by Rupert
Sayre. Designs were made by
Denver Yoho of Soil Conservalion Service.
ROBERT LANZ has com·
pleted a farm pond on his famt
at the head of Horse Lick Fork
of Crab Creek. When it is full of
water, it wiD contain about onethird acre of water surface. The
construction of Mr. Lanz' pond
was done by the district
bulldmer and design made by

WA.SHJNGTO N (UP! ) OhiQ's
com production
prospects brigblened dtDig the
past month, winter wheal was
IDicbanged and soybeans were
down. according to the
Agriculture Department.
The September outlook for
Ohio c&lt;rn is for a crup of
299,710,000 bushe·.., equal to B5
bushels an acre. The yield had
been forecast in Augmt at
292,658,000 bushels, while last
year's
banesI
totaled
Z31,078,000 bushels.
Good gro~ wealhes- and
the lesser than expected impact
by the cun Jjjght apparently
improved Ohio's prospects this

IaU while nationaUy the corn
fllnlcast dropped one per cent
allhough sliD being at a record
level of 5,265,641,000 bushels.
'That's a national yield of 82
bushels an acre, down one
wshel from a. year ago.
The monlhly crop report also
forecast the national soybean

'

SEVERAL TO TALK
ATHENS, Ohio &lt;U P! )
Several members of the administration at Ohio University
were scheduled to testify
Monday when a special state
grand jW')' convenes its investigation into business transactions conducted by OU.
Scheduled to testify Monday are
vice presidents Martin Hecht,
Charles Culp and John Milar;
OU director of Resident Services Philip Tice, former
trustee Paul O'Brien and Dave
Jacoby, head of the Upward
Bound program.
DEPIITY NM1ED
COLUMBUS (UPI J - Andris
Pride has been named deputy
directnr of the Ohio Deparbnenl
of Development's Planning
Division, H was announced
Saturday. Department Director
David G. SWeet said Priede
would be responsible for formulating
the
Planning
Division's policies, programs

Come in- we have ample loan funds.
CLYDE B. WALKER, Mgr.
19 Locust St .
446-0203
Gallipolis

Seltins.Ameria's f.uiilb'S:Providers of ftiiJI-..~w

technician;s~o~f:scs:.·----·and=-~~-----•••••••••••••••1!11•••••

Look What We Got!

MOD
•

FOR ALL!.
•• -·I

I

I

...

'·

Report Verified.

Yoor

EHT

.

'

Coach Tom Belville of Hannan , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -..
Trace and Roger Kirkhart of
Eastern.
BY QUARTERS
E
22 13 0 S--43
HT
0 0 0 0-0
STATS

Billingham Blanks

INDIVIDUAL PITCHING AVERAGES
WLGCGLPH R ER
0 1 7 2 (x) 17 2-J 12 9 4 15 h)
1011
9
1063 1
1 0 1
2 2 4

wilh illegal procedure penalties
all evening. Eastern took over
and drove it deep inlo Wildcat
country. A 35-yard pass from
Eichinger to Boring was the
clincher, making lhe score 41 lo
0. The extra points were run by
Eichinger, making the score 43
to 0. The game ended wilh
Hannan Trace making a final
effort from about lhe 23 yard
line.
II was lhe coaching debuts of

Cincinnati, 1-0

Legion Tied for Fifth
In Field of 14 Teams

National League
( 12 innings)
SI.L 300 000 120 002- 8 15 1
Chcgo 010 021 020 001- 7 11 1
Carlton, Linzy (7), Shaw (8),
Williams (11) and Simmons;
Jenkins, Gura (8), Regan (8),
Colborn (10) and Fernandez.
BATTING- (lG
WP- Williams (2.0) . LP- Col·
born (O. l) . HRs- Fernandez PLAYER
(1st), Santo (20th).
Dave BumeH &lt;•l
( 11 innings)
Bob Werry I xx)
Pill
000 000 101 oo- 2 8 1 Gene Powell
Mont
000 000 020 OF- 3 IS 1
Johnson,. Miller (8), Veale Roger Di•on
(9) , Giusti (9) and Sanguillen ; Stan Perry
Stoneman, Marshall (8), Stroh- Lonnie Bush
mayer (11) and Bateman. WP- Dave Boys
(x) · 14th
Stroh mayer (7-5) . LP--Giusli
15·61. HR- Oiiver (12th) .
(xxl 19lhl
BATIING- (9
Houston 100 000 1100- I 10 2 Kevin Sheets
Cinci
000 000 llOO- 0 2 0
Billingham (8-14) and Ed- BreH Hart
wards: McGlothlin, Merrill (5). Rick Van Maire
Granger (9) and Bench.· LP- GaryHarl
Howie Taylor
McGiothlin (7-121.
Rick Ash
( 11 innings)
TOTALS
S.F.
021 000 000 11- 5 6 3
FINAL
Alln ta 000 001 020 13-- 7 IJ 2 TEAM
Perry, Hamilton (8) , Johnson
( 101 and Dietz , Gibson (d) ; Archbold
Niekro. Jarvis (81, Nash (10) Hillsboro
and Williams. WP- Nash (9-7) . Euclid
LP- Johnson ( 12·61 . HRs- Piqua
Arnold (1st). Williams· (Jist), Meigs
Aaron (40th 1.
Lima
Cambridge
Phita
00o 001 on- 3 9 J Worlhinlitan
New York 030 010 oox- 4 8 1
Richmond
Wise, Lersch (7) and McCar- Ashtabula
ver ; Koosman, Frisella 191 and
Grote. WP- Koosman (6-9). LP Ashley
- Wise 04-13). HR- Johnson Wadsworth
Cincinnati
(J ist).
Ken t
LosAng
200 000 004~ 6 13 1
San Diego 000 010 OlD- 2 9 2
Sutton, Brewer 18) and PLAYER
Hailer; Roberts, Acosta (81, Rick Van Maire
Kelley 19), Severinsen (9). Dave Burnett
Caldwell (9) and Barton, Stan Perry
Kendall (81. WP- Bre\Yer 16-5). TOTALS
LP- Acosla 0 -2).
I• J ~ed tournament
•

the Eagles' 41 yard line, but the
Wtldcats could not make the
necessary yardage so Eastern
took over.
With $:19 oo the first quarter
clock, the Eagles scored again
oo a W-~ run by Rick Sanders. Dennis Eichinger, Eagle
fullback, ran in the extra points.
The score stood at Eastern 16,
Hannan Trace 0.
The Eagles scored once more
after the HT offense sputtered
lo a halt. With 34 seconds left
BOO Caldwell SCII'ed on a 21&gt;yard pass from senior quarlerback Jim Amsbary. The
conversion failed.

STEWART - The Southern
Local Tornadoes, much improved this year over previous
campaigns, gave the Federal
Hocking Lancers everything
they wanted before suc·
cumbing, 22-0, at lhe winners
home field Friday night.
The non-league loss made
coach Bruce Wallace's Tornadoes 11'1 on the year while
Coach Danny Hall's Lancers
are 1-0. This was Coach
Wallace's first game as a head
mentor.
The Lancers were dealt a
serious blow to their season's
succe~s when junior quarterback Danny HaD, two year
lettennan and son of.the coach,
was ruled out for lhe season
after suffering a broken collar
bone. Another Lancer, Mitch
Daugherty had his shoulder
separated by the hard hilling
Tornadoes and will miss a few
games.
Federal Hocking hit paydirt
once in the first quarter when
Hall passed to Rob Smith from
26 yards. Hall kicked the extras
to make it 7.0.
In the second quarter, Jerry
Mahoney Ia ckled the Southem
punter in the end zone for a
safety. Also in the second
period Delbert Guess ran four
'
yards and Hall added the extra
on a kick to make it 16-0 in favor
of lhe Lancers
.
·
After a scoreless third
quarter, James Taylor added
lhe icing on lhe cake for the
Lancers on a lhirty-yard run.
The kick for the extra point
failed.
Coach Wallace was not happy
about lhe final score but his
team, he said, "Didn't gel any
breaks, I did.lhen and still think
we are a better ball club than

Now Best Time to. Reseed Lawn

GALLIPOLIS
Ternperature, precipitation, and
weather conditioos for each Z4
hoW' period as recorded by Pete
McCormick, Fairfield Weather
ObserVer :
Day
High Low Prec.
$znday
90
65
Monday
91
64
Tuesday
85
67
JJ5
Wednesday 86
63
Thursday
93
62
Friday
93
63
Saturday
68
63
Average high temperature for
week this year - 116.5. Last year
- 87.
Average low temperatiU'e for
week this year - 63.8. Last year
_ 63.8.
Total precipitation for week
Ibis year _ .05 inch. Last year
_ .94 inch.
Total precipitation to dale
this year _ 23.~ inches. Last
year _ 29.68 inches.
Normal average precipilatioo
annuaUy - 40.99 inches.

Ohio Com Crop Good

production at a recenl
I,Jil6,310,01J0bu*ll, ,.._ltt a
record 1,625,~4$,0111 l!v¢els,
and grain !IQI'gllum at • · - •
180,113,000 bashels.
The estimate f91' aD li't rt Jr
feed grams combined- af c:GI'JI,
oats, barley and sorgluan .:.. Ill
198,000,000 lOlls was dOim per cent from a I!HIIlth e.rlier
wl24per cent above las1 yar'a
yield.

ONE
STOP

or snow thrower aHachment*when you
buy a new Cub Cadet~ tractor ••• or
free lawn sweeper aHachment with
purchase of Cadet 60 riding mower!

FOR

MOBILE HOMES!
ALL YOU NEED IS AT K&amp;K•••
• Financing

• Window Awnings

• Insurance

• Under Pinning

• Air Conditioning

• Delivery &amp; Set-Up

-

Your choice of free attachment for mowing, snow
throwing or leal raking can save you up to $213.
Come in today. See the lawn and garden tractors
with " built-for-keeps" features!
•
•
•
•
•

Steel frame, full-length.
Heavy-duty axles and housing.
Choice of'S, 7, 10. 12, 14 horsepower.
Choice oltransmission.
Over 60 work-saving implements.

• 35-ineh wi&lt;M

•
IH.

Stop in and see how you can save today!

Meigs Equipment Co.
"2 LOCATIONS"
Eastern Ave .• Gallipolis Rt. 62 . Pt. Plea~ant , W. Va.

See Paul or Gary Northup

'

_;,P.;,H;;,·,;.992;.;,;·2~17;,;6;,.._ _ _ _ _ _PO_M;,;;E;,;R,;,;O;,Y;;••O;;._,

WASHINGTON (UP!) Eight cmt belt farmers Friday
got an mmsual opportunity lo
watch
the
Agriculture
Department prepare its
monthly farm crop report under
light security cooditions.
The eight invited farmers
entered the agency's '1ockup"
area which was behind sealed
doors guarded by armed
guards, with teleph011es cut off
and even window blinds locked
shut. There the fanners watcbed specialists prepare the
government's monthly estimate
of producti011 of crops including
CGm and soybeans.
No ooe inside the lockup area
was allowed to communicate
with the outside until after the
repol't was released Saturday.
The light security cooditioos
are maintained to prevent leaks
of the crop estimates which
could affect volatile farm
commodity markets.
Saturday's report

awaited with great interest
because it was to show how
much estimated production of
corn and soybeans bas changed
from the record levels
estimated in August.
Dr. Don Paarlberg, the
Agriculture
Department's
direclnr of ecooomics, said the
eight fa'lllers were selected on
the basis of the type of crops
IIIey produce, their leadership
record and their ability lo tell
others about their experience.
The deparbnent has ~ong been
trying to convince some
skeptical producers of the
soundness of its es!inuliing
methods and lhe thoroughness
of its precautions against
premature disclosure of
estimates.
The invited grain and
livestock fanners were: Robert
Albnan, Bondurant, Iowa; Jack
Elliott, Mount Ayr, Iowa;

Robert
Phi IIi p so o,
was Bloomington, Neb.; Leland
George, SoulhSioux City, Neb. ;
Durbin Budd, Leban011, Ind.;
Waller Harris, Jasper, Ind.;
Kenneth W. Gordon, Blue
Mound, Dl., and Harold Strand,
Cordova, Dl.

575,000

STRIKE ENDED
FINDLAY, Ohio (UP!)
Striking school teachers here
and the City board of educalioo.
have reached agreement on a
new contract and classes are
scheduled lo begin on Monday
for 9,100 students. The school
system's 400 teachers struck
Wednesday which was lo have
been lhe first day of school after
the board of education announced a cutback in salaries lo
lhe January, 1970 level.

Capital Shares of Beneficia/Interest

NORTHERN INVESTMENT PROPERTIES
A REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT TRUST

Price $10.00 per share
• Tax sheltered current return .
• Over 90% of earnings distributed to shareholders.
• Equity ownership in properties with long term
capital growth objectives.

DEPUl'Y PROMOI'ED
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - W. J.
Whealon, deputy warden at
Cblllicothe Correctional Institution, will be named Monday
as warden of the new Ohio
Penitentiary at Lucasville, it
waa reported today.

This is neither an ofler to sell nor a solicitation Qf an offer to buy share~.
An offer may be made only by prospectus to residents of Ohio.

WE HAVE THE LOWEST rossmLE
PRICES!.SEE US FffiST BEFORE

For information write or phone

LANDSIJDES KIU. 21

YOU BUY!
Jack Wilson
Northern Securities Company
395 East Broad Street
Columbus,· Ohio . 43215
Toll Free Number 1-800-282-1587

OWASE, Japan (UPI)
rwertty persons were known
dead and 22 others m!S!ring
today following landslides
caUBed by rains of as much as 40
inches in 24 hour~. The slides
buried 30 homes in this c01151al
town 300 miles southwest of
1'okyo.

CENTRAL
SOYA
Food Pow• People"
"The

OHIO

.

•

'

b

.

.'

Big Yank Brand
SIZES FOR AUI
STYLES FOR ALLI
GIRLS- BOYS
MEN
YOUNG MEN
GIRLS - TEENS
WOMEN
They're All Here!
Everybody is talking about
this new slacks department
at Landmark ... and our big
selection. In fact. the largest
selection in the area . And
another big shipment just
arrived. Si!es for all! Styles
for all! Colors for all ...
plains.
stripes ,
com binations. patch pockets, etc .
COME! SEE!

AT LOW lANDMARK PRICES

4.10

TO

7.00

PAIR

eBEll BOTTOMS
· eFLARES
•BUTTOfl FROm
eMMY STYl£S

All Fabrics In This Selection! All Guaranteed At Landmark/

Pomeroy Landmark
®

Serving Meigs, Gallia and Mason Counties
JACK W. CARSEY, Mgr.
PHONE 992-2181
Stcn Dpeft Mon. Thru Sol. Until.:OO
YOU can buy at ~NDMARK-EVERYONE CAN I

! £.

�..

"''•

_.,._..,. ,

. . . ....
'

~

.

.

.... . ..

..

•

21 ~ TheSundaYTimes·Senllnei,Sunday;Sepi.IZ,l l
97

'

• -Tbe Sandlly Times ·Sentinel, Slllday, Sept. 12, 1971

For Fas~ Results Use The ·Sunday Times~Sentinel Classifieds(

••
~

Obituary

••

For Sale

Wanted

: MERIDITH Claire Well ington BABYSITTER in my home fo; 1
•
was born to John and Myra
small child 5 days a week . Ph .
"
Kent Wellln!!lon on July 17,
446-3687 after 5: 30p.m .
:
1• departed this life
213.-3
•
September
1971.
'
Most of his liie was spent in WOMAN to live in , Jighl
• ·
Gallla Coun ly exceplfor a few
:
housework , cooking, ~ay off,
•
years when he lived in Green
535 wk . Call Middleport, 9'12:
County.
3507 .
•
He was thrice married. on
213-3
"June 20. 1911 to Em ma
0 D- H
--::0 -cM:-:E:-:-fo_r_y_e-:-:11-ow
- mal e
•
Huffman who departed this -G-0--::kitten . Ph . 446-1809.
•
life January 20. 1912.
212 -3
:
On December 19, 1914 he
•
was united in marriage to
: . Elsie Harman who passed
•
away October 18, 1942.
:
To this union wa$ born FARM, 100-200 acres, rolling
.seven children , four of whom
farm land . Write Box 192 c-o
_..
survive, Wendell of Wheeling .
Gallipolis Tribune.
~
W. Va .i Leo of Vinton ;
209-6
Eugene of Bidwell, and Mary
:
Lou of Louisiana.
Two sons, Earl and Har ·
•
:
man, and a daugh1er , Peart, BOOKKEEPING, accounting,
,.
died in infancy.
tax reports of all kind . Ph .
In November o119.15 he was
446-3309.
210-6
,
united in marriage to Sue
•
Large who departed this life
•
June 19, 1969. He leaves a
•
step-son, Jack Hendrix of
:• Groveport, Oh io. of this OWN YOUR own Business with
a California base manufac·
marriage and 6 step·
lu r ing company wh ic h is
grandchildren .
expanding its business in this
Claire was a member of the
area . Has opening tor
Porter United Methodist
distributorship
.
Above
Church and of Huntington
average earnings potential,
Grange of Vinton .
investment secured . Write
He was a kind, considerate
•
resume including business
neighbor, well liked and
background, name. address,
respected by his fellowman.
•
and phone number to Area
Besides rearing his grandCoordinator, Box No. 122,
son, Ricky Geiger, he look
Belpre, Ohio.
a
into his home his mother.
• Myra Kent Wellington, and
211 -6
his three aged aunts, Emily
• . Ken t, Carr ie Kent, and HIGH volume Ashland service
station for lease . Paid
Frank i e Allen. tenderly
tra in ing . Call 9'12-5221 or 446:
caring for them through their
0185 or Marietta 373-8412.
declining years.
211 -lf
Lefl to mourn his passing
•
besides his · before named - - - - - ...
children are twenty -two
W
grandchildren and four great·
grandchildren and a host of WANT L.P.N. or retired R.
friends and relatives.
. nurse to work in nursing
home. Can live in if desired.
Write : Box 313, Ironton, Ohio,
"They who think that you are
Rl. L
gone.
214-3
• Because no more your face they

------

s.

•

Wanted To Buy

Wanted To Do

Business Opportunities

Help

td
an e

- - -- - -

see ;

HELP YOUR HUSBAND!
YOU can earn up to Sl2.50 in an
hour taking orders from your
: And alwa-vs will in memory ."
friends,
neighbors
and
•
2U-l
relatives for Studio Girl's
• .
beautiful Good Housekeeping
approved WIGS, WIGLETS,
FALLS,
cosmetics
and
• rHE FAMILY of
Claire
Christmas
gifts
.
•• Wellington wishes fo thank
the wonderful people at
TOP profi ts. No terrilory
Houston's Nursing Home, the
restrictions . Also sell where
McCoy Funeral Home, the
you work. Full time or spare
• doctors and nurses at Holzer,
• Rev. Curfman ~ Rev. Graham, hours. Side line OK. Phone
toll free (BOO) 621 -4005 or write
• the singers. the many friends,
STUDIO
GIRL
• and family that sent flowers HOLL ¥WOOD, Depl.
M-405,
• · and helped in every way
11461 Hart Sl., No . Hollywood.
through the illness and death
• of our beloved father and Calif . 91605 , for full in formation and free samples
• grandfather.
by mail. No one will call on
The Wellington Family
you. All replies confidential.
•
21~1
Phone today .
.
214-1
•
: Are wrong -

For in our hearts

you live ;

.: Card

of Thanks

..

- - - -- , Lost
.

.
•

MAN'S black wallet, vicinity of
Rio Grande or Porter. If
found, return to Adrian
$tMnCer or i:all 2.15-5600 or 3677689. Reward.

.:·Notice
--:-------

210

•

•
REWARD
: A ONE-HUNDRED (5100.00)
•
Dollar reward will be paid by

:
•

the undersigned for information leading to ap -

:
•
"

~

prehension and conviction of
the person or persons taking a
Cadet Tractor International
Harvester Yellow and While

:

serial no. 31.tl09, stdlen on the

•
:

night of 1 September 1971,
from the home of Mr. leslie

..

Treadway, Fraziers Bottom,

:
•
•

W. Va . Signed :
Leslie
Treadway, Phone 937-3226.
211 -6

•

in color, with 48" mower,

~.,--:-:-:-::-=-,------~

a

: I WILL NOT be responsible for
:
any debts other than my own
w
as of this dale, Sept. 11 . 1971.
Signed Alfred Lee Warren .

:·

210

•
!

RALPH'S Carpel- Upholstery
Cleaning
Service.
Free
•

"'
::

'~

~
.,
"

estimates. Ph. 4A&amp;-0294.
197-11

------------------SUN VALLEY Nursery School,

577 Sun Valley Drive, licensed

.,.

by the State of Ohio,
Department
of
Public
Welfare. now providing full
day
care
and
child

•
:

development program for
pre-school children, infants

~

•
..,
•
•

=
~

..

..

lnstr~tiolt

':" BETTER jobs are available for
GBC graduates. Enroll now
for fall term . Gall ipolis
Business College R. N. 71 -020032B. Ph. 446-4367.
162-11
•ARMY TECHNICAL SCHOOLS
: PAY
YOU .
Regular
paycheck , top benefits, while

you

learn . 300

training

.. courses. Electronics. Heavy
construction
mach inery .
Aircraft , Automotive .
Laboratory skills . Three-year
enlistment guarantees choice
of training . New higher pay
scales . Ph . 446-3343.

214-4

'

.
•

- - - - -- - -

1970 442W30 .Oldsmobile , 455 cu.
in., 370 HP, 4 spd., P.S., P.B.,
AM-FM stereo radio, buill-in
tape pla yer, all tinted glass .
Ph . 245-5464 .
214-6

STE REO - Radio Console, 4
speed intermixed changer,
dual volume control, 4
speaker sound system, lovely
walnut finish . Balance $62.97.
Use our budget terms. Call
446-1028.
214-3

- - -- - - - -

STEREO - Radio combination
unit. with AM-FM radio, 4
speakers, ·dual Volume con .
trol. modern maple console.
Balance $79.76. Use our
budget terms . Call 446-1028.
214-3

- - -- - -

ZIG ZAGOMATIC, well known
make sewing machine. makes
buttonholes. sews on bullons.
etc. Balance $49.31. Call 4461028.
214-3

Mon. thru Sat. 9-4 :30
Sun. 1-1
Other Times by Appt .

notlu•og hke • N•IKI...S home lor livin9

~- .

QUlin~ . An
lliiC!!d to IYIOM!t ~&lt;Kioc1lly ~nyl:lud!lft.
t r,t&gt;&lt;:tt&amp;~n,dt~~v·ogren 1 .

WESTBROOK

, Westbrook is the prettiest
P,art of. town. Space. Com forts. Large , pretty lot .
They're all yours in West brook ... a very special place
to live.
Rt. 160 to
Butaville Rd .
N. on Buta,ille Rd. ~: ..(; -

lfo~ mi. to

~

-·

Model Home

t.&gt;e.Y,.,. .

The
WISelllan

Agency

.. .._ .. ,_ ._

MDRE fliii1UE S UVE IN A NATIONAl HOM( TH4.H ANY OTHER HDMf JN THE WORlD

------

'53 FORD pickup with '60
engine, bucket seats, good
shape, $115. Ph . 245-5022.
214-3

- - -- - -

PORCH sale between Un ion 76
Service Station and Unem ployment Office, 447 Second
Ave . rear . School dresses and
m isc. Wednesday, begi~s 10
a.m .
214-2

THE . WISEMAN
AGENCY
Office 446-3643
Evenings Call
E •.M. "Ike" Wiseman 446..S796
E. N. Wiseman 446-45ro

--

'67 MERCURY Colony Park
wagon , V-B, P.S ., P.B .• auto.
and many extras, 10 pass. Ph.
367-7554.
214-2

---------

SOUP'S on, the rug that is, so
clean the spot with Blue
Lu st re .
.Ren t
electric
sham pooer 51. Central Supply
Co .
214-6

- - - -- - - -

USED FURNITURE

Real Estate For Sale

STROUT REALlY
Ph. 446-0008

FARMS
104 A.- Gallipolis School Dist.
60 A.· Grade B Dairy
31 A. '12 A . lob. good home, $8800
VACANT LAND &amp; CAMP
SITES- 5 A., 6 A ., 10 A., 30 A.,
40 A .. lots of pines, cheap .
LOTS for homes or tra ilers, all
utilities, EZ terms .
41h A . modern home. Rl. 160.
15 A. Extra nice 8 room home on
sta le rd .
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
FEED MILL- long established
busi ness on state rd ., ex cellent terms lor the right
indi v idual.
NI TE CLUB for those who like
money. over 580,000 reported
annual income.
GROCERY
STORE
well
established business, lovely
living quarters.
FARM
EQUIPMENT
BUSINESS- Top line ol
machinery.
C.WP
GROUND
&amp;
R~CREATION
PARK national adverti si ng , owner
may lake home on trade.
Gas Station. mobile home, &amp; 2
ren tal units.
GIFT SHOP on US 35, lovety
home &amp; garage attached.
HOMES
BIDWELL - 2 homes for the
price ol 1, $13.000.
K.C. SC HOOL DIST.-2 homes
live in one &amp; rent the other ~
$12,900.
CITY - 13 rooms, large enough
for 3 or 4 apts .
S65D0-7 rooms, 11 mi. from
tow n.
MOBILE HOMES- 3 , with or
without lots.
Ranny Blackburn
Branch Manager

Six miles from Galli • 'lis Cily limils in Green Township on
Raccoon Creek , 70 ~
- of clean level land well fenced.
with 14 acres co.
'ld 1/~ acre tobacco base and
plenty of pasture an~
~ ' nice pond, and large barn
and _one out building, t...
t.A"t:tr in road at the house.
Two bedrooms with halt
.rge living room with
fireplace and nice kitchen a.
dining room combined .
Shown by appoinlmenl.
FARM SALE
S3 acres with 1,1, acre tabacco base in Harrison township.
$12,600.
SS acres with 1/z acre tobacco base in Harrison township.
$5,500.
104 acres with 112 acre tobacco base in Green Township.
S12,500.
·
96 acres wilh .89 tobacco base in Ohio Township, 515,800 .
260 acres with 1h acre tobacco base in Addison Township,
540,000.
31ofs89.4 wide, 222ft. deep. $2,200 each
6 lots in Addison Township, l 1/ 2 acres on S. R. 7. $2 ,500
each.

FRENCH

REALLY NOW , AFTER
SEE ING THESE TWO
HOME S, YOU'LL AGREE
THEY CAN'T BE BEAT
DON 'T TAKE MY WORD
FOR IT , HAVE A LOOK
FOR YOURSELF . WE ' LL
SHOW EITHER HOME AT
' YOUR
CONVENIENCE ..

ADAM , TAKE YOUR EVE
BY THE HAND A~D
LEAD HER TO HIS
SECLUDED HIDE ·AWAY .
LARGE SHADED LAWN ,
WONDERFUL GARDEN
AND POND . VERY NICE
HOME
WITH
HUGE
LIVING ROOM , NICE
K ITCHEN 11. DINING AND
2 BEDROOMS . HUGE
NEARLY NEW , VERY
GOOD
UTILITY
BUILDING PRESENTLY
USED AS LARGE SHOP , 2
CAR
GARAGE
AND
BARN .

(11 YOU CAN'T
TELL
THI S 4 YR . OLD 3
BEDROOM HOME FROM
NEW . ONE OF THE
PRETTIEST KITCHENS
IN TOWN , VERY NICE
BATH , CENTRAL AIR ;
WALL TO WALL CAR ·
PET , LARGE 2 CAR
GARAGE , ONE OF THE
BEST LOCATIONS IN
TOWN . OWNERS MOVED
TO I L LINO IS . PRICED
S23,900 . IT 'S A REAL
BARGAIN
FOR
SOMEO NE .

Lots For Sale
(1) 2.38 ACRE WOODED
ALL
WATER
AVAILABLE .

2.33 ACRE WOODED ,
VE.RY , VERY
N ICE.
WATER TAP PAID .
(2)

(21
NOW
DON 'T
PREJUDGE TH IS VERY
A TTRACTIVE
3
BEDROOM BRICK . READ
THE SE FEATURES AND
CA LL IKE WISEMAN
FOR AN APPOINTMENT .
3 BEDROOM BRICK , l'h
BATH S, ALL ELECTRIC,
ALL CARPETED . FULL
DRY
BASEMENT ,
LARGE 2 CAR G" RAGE ,
BEAUT I FULLY
EQUIPPED.
K ITCHEN ,
BACK PORCH , COR NER
LOT AND IN AN EX CELLENT
NEIGH BOR HOOD WITH CITY
WA T ER . SE WAGE . NAT .
GAS AND CITY SC HOOL
SYS TEM . LOCATED IN
R 10 GRANDE WITH THE
OWNER VERY ANXIOUS
TO SELL . PRICE SJOOO .
UNDER TRUE MARKET
VALUE .

(3 ) 2 ACRES AT EDGE OF
TOWN, $2,500. WATER 11.
GAS AVAIL. GOOD FOR 2
OR
MORE
MOBILE
HOMES .
5 1!~

(.41

ACRES ,

LARGE

TREES A BEAUTIFUL
· LOCATION , $3 ,900 .

Just Married?
Just Retired?

Price Reduced
Riverside location
THI S LIKE
NEW
3
BEDROOM HOME WITH
2'1'
BATH S.
f=ULL
BA SEME NT AND 2 CAR
GARAGE CAN MEAN A
LI FE TIME
OF
HAP .
PINESS
FO R
SOME
L UC KY
FAMILY
LOCATED ON • ACRE
PLOT RUNNING TO THE
RIVER WITH A SMALL
ORCHARD AND DANDY
PLA CE
FOR
BOAT .
VERY
ATTRACTIVE
VERY WELL BUILT , AND
VERY WELL KEPT.

THE OWNER OF THIS
VERY NI CE J BEDROOM
HOME HA S MOVED TO
CINCINNATI
AND
DESIRES THE QUICK
SA LE .
3
SPACIOU S
BEDROOMS,
LARGE
LIVING ROOM, FAMILY
ROOM,
EQUIPPED
KITCHEN AND LARGE
UTILITY ROOM . LARGE
LOT WITH
GARDEN
SPO T. FULL PRICE IS
$19,900. BE THE FIRST TO
SEE THIS VERY NICE
HOME .

We Need Your
Property To Sell

4 Bedroom Home
With 4 Acres

WE ARE SEL LING AT
SUCH A PACE, IT 'S IM POSSIBLE TO KEEP
ENOUGH
PRO PERTY
LI STE D TO EVEN COME
CLOSE TO SAT ISFYING
THE BUYERS WE HAVE
ON A WAITING LIST . IF
YOU ARE THINKING OF
A CHANGE , CALL US
RIGHT NOW . IF YOU
WANT TO BUILD NEW ,
SEE US TO SEL L YOUR
PRESENT
PROPERTY .

AND RIGHT AT THE
EDGE OF TOWN . IT'S AN
OLDER
HOME WITH
BARN AND CHICKEN
HOUSE AND REAL GOOD
· GAR DE N. THERE IS 600
FE ET OR FRONTAGE '
ALONG RT . 141 . IT'S A
MONEY MAKER FOR
ANY ONE WANTING TO
WORK ON IT .

' - - - - - - - - -- -

for $17,000.00
for 517,900.00
for $16.000.00
for 521,500.00
Office 446-1066
Evenings: call
Ron Canaday 446-3636
John I. Richards 446-0280
Russell b. Wood 446-4618

Hobart Dillon, Realtor
Office 446-2674

Supply. 750 lsi Ave,, 446· 14YY.
Paint , panellng. f'har~ware,
plumbing ..and electrical
supplies . Hours. 7 to 5,
Thursday 7 to 1,2.

HORSE .SHOEING
COMPLETE farrier service.
Bob

The Di ll~n ,;gency has been' a
member of the Local, Stale
and National Association of
REALTORS since Jan. 1942,
we have listed existing homes
apd farms all these years on a
FIVE (5) percent commission
basis . Why pay more list with
the OILLON AGENCY. II
pays.

MASSIE
Realtor, 32 State St
Tel 446-1998

REFRIGERATION
&amp; AIR CONDITIONING
RESIDENTIAL, commercial,
industrial. Ph. 367f 200.
1
117-lf

ALB~RT EHMAN

Water Dellvery-S~rvice
Patriot Star Rt .• Gallipolis
Ph . 379-2133
243-lf
t.entrai Air Condilioning
-Healing
Free Estimates
Stewart's Hardware
Vinton, Ohio
144-lf

Neal Realty

Investment

IFfo~?Cb~~ION

FARM . 80 acres, 880 lb. tobacco
base , 6 room house bath
carpeted built -in c~blnels
copper pl'umbing, good drilled
well , new ce llar house, good
sl and of pine. House is 2 years
old, also barn , anolher house.

~~fc"~e5~ 1 :~ppi~_g~~~~7 :tP

2] 3_6
::-:-:---:--------------BY OWNER - 2 story 6 room
house, 1'' bath, full siz~
basement and garage. 24
Portsmouth Rd. or call 4461407.
213-3

--

~·--...---

cohunls see this
room ome located
rgoss from the high school al
wal~l~te Slheet. Children can
can w~l~c 1001 and parents
busi ness d ' 1 ,grocery and
IS ric ·

°.

ss.ooo.

87 ACRES vacant land Offoce Pho~e 446-1694
Evenongs
Charles M. Neal, 446·1546
J. Michael Neal, 446-JSOJ
LARGE brick house In Kyger
Creek School Dislricl. Ph . 256. 6526 or 256-6747.

209-6
-

STARCRAFT
SEE the 19721ravellrallers and
campers in stock. 15 per cent
plus discount. 1 71 trailer,
dealer's cost. We stock all
accessories, service what we
sell and guarantee. Camp
Conley Slarcrafl Sales, Rl. 62,
North of Point Pleasant, W.
Va .
205-lf
HUNTE'R 1S SPECIAL
NEW truck camper $1,587 for
51.195 dealer' s cost, 1966 1511 .
Banner S850 . All fisHing boats
tell at dealer's cost. Camp
Conley Starer aft Sales, Rl. 62,
North ol Point Pl easant, W.
Va .
211 -lf

- ----Plumbing &amp;Heating

STANDARD
Plumbing &amp; Healing
215 Third Ave., 446-3782
187-lf
. CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
830 Fourth Avenue
Phone 446-3888 or 446-4477
155-lf

AUCTION
SERVIa
"SELL THE AUCTION
WAY" ·

JAMES (JIMME)
SAYRE
PH. 446-3444

- - - c- - - = : = - -

J D's R·adio a; --TV Service.
Serving Gallipolis &amp; Pl.
Pleasant, reasonable rates,
prompt service. Also evening
calls. Ph . 675-5220.
203-tf

GILLENWATER'S seplic lank
cleaning and repair, also
house wrecking . Ph . 446 949'1. -Eslablished In 1940.
169-lf

D . P. MARTIN &amp; Son Water
DeliverY.
Service .
Your
patronage will be
ap preciated. Ph . 446-0463.
] .If

BANKS TREE SERVICE
FREE estimates, liability in surance. Pruning, trimming
and cavity work, tree and
slump removal. Ph . 446-4953.
.73-ti

DEAD STOCK
"v

S5.00 Service Charge
Will remove your dead
horse and cows
Call JaJ:ks_on286-.1531. ,,

SWISHER'S
Plumbing
&amp;
Electric contractor . We
specialize in hooking up rural
water I ine system to your
home. Completely build your
bathroom. Call us for com plete free estimate. Delbert
Swisher, 1809 Chestnut, Ph .
446-0468.
135-lf
SWISHER'S
DITCH TRENCHING
SERVICE Ph. 446·0468
174-tf

Insurance
NATIONWIDE INSURANCE
AUTO, Fire, life, 45 Stale St.,
Waldo F . Brown, W. R.
Brown, 446-1960.
FOR ALL your Insurance needs
check with your Grange
agents at the Neal Ins.
Agency, 64 Stale St. Agents
for auto, fire, homeowners,
hospital and general liability.
84-lf

AUOION
Sale Every
Saturday
Evenings, 7;00
Corner 3rd &amp; Olive Ave.
We sell anything
for
anybody . We also buy some
estates. For Pick-up Service

Call
Knotts
Com.
munity Auction, 446·
2917

ANTIQUE ·AUCTION
THURS., SEPT. 16th

AT lO:OO .AM

VOLKSWAGEN ~

I· SALE!

VOLKSWAGEN RIDES AGAIN

,

We have a very' nice sale In part as follows :
2 -:- 6 Leg Gateleg tables (In Walnut), walnut chest,
Edoson phonograph with 10 cylinder records, cherry
note stand, 2 - drawer walnut nile stand, marble
top wall !able . Fine very old Japanese Clock
'
.
.
t
Mickey Mouse wrist watch In .o riginal box, walnul beds,
stands, walnut wardrobe, 2-4 leg drop-leaf tables, brass
candle stand, many old Iron and tin toys, old store advertising items, containers etc., 10 nice plales, chocolate
set, mush and milk sei. 4 bird plales, 2 biscuit jars. fine 3'
pc. jardonier, wash bowl and pitcher, cut glass rose bowl.
·cut glass compote,, Satin glass •rose bowl. pair fine vases,
Phoenix vase, Carnival water set (n), while Carnival
punch bowl (n), 3 sllll banks, 6 Blue Bird milk glass salts,
pa ir Cranberry manlelluslers, oil lamps, electric trains,
olher carnival, China etc. A very nice 9xl2 Oriental rug.
Don't miss this one.

HAROLD GODDARD, INC.

SALE! SALE! I

I
I
I
I

I
I
I
I

I
1·
I

I·

I

I MF 135 .•• THE WORLD'S LARGEST SELLING
I TRACTOR! Dollar for dollar more value than any
I other J.plow t_racto_r l)'lade! Famous Perkins gas
I . or record·settmg dtesel en~ine. Options include
I !"ressure Control, differenttal lock, power steer·
1 mg. Advanced Ferguson hydraulics are standard!

I1
1
1

·1

1
1
1
I
I

69 Sq. Back, .white, black interior, 4 speed, loca 1car.
Sharp.
69 Bug, white, red interior, automatic stick shift. Nice
car.

Factory fresh!
Prtces may never be this low again! We will
g!ve you our special discount price and still
gtve you top dollar trade·in allowance on your
tractor!

No

I1

69 Bug, red, black interior, 4 speed, radio, white tires.
68 Fast Back, white, 4 speed. A local car. One owner.

$1495

68 Fast Back, light blue, 4 speed. This car is in nic~
condition.

1495

68 Bug, light blue, radio, leatherette, white trim.

67 Sq. Back, red with black interior, radio, white trim. $1488
67 Fast Back, red with black interior, radio, white tires. $1488

1
1

66 Bug, blue with white interior, radio, good transportation
.
._

1

I
I
II

1
Phone 446·1044
1 Bill Wooldridge. Owner

$995

63 V.W. Bug. We have redone this car completely. Perfect
shape.
$98B

I

I
I GALLIPOLIS
II TRACTOR

$1695
$1295

1
1

1
Investment credit?
1
LOW, LOW discount prices on all I
tractors!
I
AT YOUR
MASSEY-FERGUSON DEALER

$1995
$1788
$1788

I
I
I - 68 Sq. Back, beige in color, radio. In nice condition.
1·

La~ge selection now in stock!

I interesl
ALSO, consider these factors:
until March 1, 1972.

71 Sq .. Back, red with black interior, 4 speed, air condition,
low !l'•leage.
$3195

I
I
I
II
I
II

I

awms
•u,.rllhw ... ,......

"DOC"
SMITH
SAYS:

SEPT. 23rd WAS TO HAVE BEEN BUICK-OPEL SHOW DATE.
1972 BUICKS-OPELS ON
DISPLAY AND READY FOR
DELIVERY NOW I I I
1969 BUICK ELECTRA 2 DR. HDTP.

1969 BUICK LeSABRE CUST. 4 DR. HDTP•
Air Cond., lime green, dark green vinyl top . New
Electra trade.

1970 PONTIAC G.T.O. CONV.
Auto ., P.S., P. B., bucket seats, Was $2895 .

: ~;5 _~g.'p ., P.S., P. B., auto., factory air cond . Sharp . Wa s

2

VOLKSWAGEN ~

COMPLETE LINE of pipes and
accessories.
GBD
and
Charatan. Tawney Jewelers,
424 Second Ave .
173-lf

1967 DATSUN P.U.
1966 '12 T. GMC P.U .
1969 Plymouth Roadrunner
1969 Chev . '-" T. P.U.
1963 C7SO Ford truck
1965 112 T . GMC P.U.
1969 Chev . dump truck
1952 112 T. Chev. P.U.
1965 1 T. GMC
1969 GMC 4 T . 10!! truck
1962 'I• T. GMC pock up
1957 1h T. GMC P.U.
1965 o;, T. Ford P.U.
1963 '12 T. Chev. P.U.
1969 1 T. GMC
1967 1/ 2 T. GMC P.U .
1968 Chev . Suburban
1966 :If, T . Chev. P.U.
1967 ~· T., Che.v rolel pickup
1963 F600 Ford Truck
1961 2 T. GM'( , ..... ,
1964 3 T. GMC
1967 F700 Ford dump truck

NOW YOU CAN GET ACAR WITH ARADIATOR

FROM VOLKSWAGEN

~LLIS

CHALMERS Harvester
with grass and corn at tachments.
Also
All is
Chalmers blower used about
12 seasons on my farm.
Pr iced very reasonable. A. J.
Payne. Ironton . 0 . Ph. 532 0533.
212-3

69 Olds Delta 88,2 dr. H.T., air, P.S., P.B., vinyl top.

69 Camaro SS, 4 speed, 307 engine, red &amp; black.
69 Impala Custom, 4 speed, air, vinyl top, AM-FM.

241 -lf
1971
SL
350- Kl
Honda
Motosport. Ph . 446-1108 after
5: 30.
212-6

Wholesale Close Out, These Cars
Have To Be Sold!! WAS
1965 Buick Skylark Sed.
1965 Ford St. Wagon 9 Pass.
1965 Ford Sedan
196501ds Cutlass Cpe
1965 Corvair Cpe.

67 Ply. Fury II I, 4 dr. H. T., yellow, P.S., P. B., white
tires.

67 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
Silver, with Black Vinyl Top, P.S., P.B., Air

67 Pontiac Lemans, auto., P.$., P.B., air, mint cond.

$1695

SEWING MACHINE service in
your home. Special pre -school
offer . Clean, oil and adjust,
$4 .99. Call 675- 1589.
191 -tf

67 Fiaf-1100 4 dr., 4 speed. Good transportation

$688

Real Sharp Car. $1788
'

66 Dart G. T., V-8, automatic, P.S., air cond.
66 Catalina ~fa. Wgn., P.S., P.B., air, rack &amp; radio.
(Sharp.)
65 Elec. 225,4 dr., P.S., P.B., air, radio, white tires.
65 Mustang Conv., 6 cyl., radio, auto.
65Mercury4dr. H.T., P.S., P.B.,auto.
65 Chev. Imp., 2 dr. H. T., auto. V.a, P.S., P. B., radio
64 Olds F-85, 4 dr., auto., P.S., P. B., radio.
63 Olds 88,2 dr. P.S., P.B., radio.

Corbin &amp;
Snyder Furniture

DON ~ WI!SWAGDI, INC.
•u,.r.,_ ... ,...... Cleft\

For Sale

For Sale

2

------

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

$1188
$1395
$1188
$895
$595
$1088
$588
$395

For Sale

For Sale
SIGNS .
No
hun t ing
or
trespa ss ing or others . Protect
your rights . Simmons Ptg . &amp;
Office Equip .
203-lf

(12)

- - -- --

WHITE cement , all sizes tile in
stock. 12" &amp; 15" field tile,
suitable for highway ditch ing,
conc r ete
blocks .
GALLI POLIS BLOCK CO .•
ph . 446-2763.
97-11

1971
DODGES

PUBLIC seati ng, l olding tables
and Cllalrs - restaurants,
churc hes.. org anizations .
Comp lete line of office chairs
and desks . Simmons Pig . &amp;
Office Equip. Ph. 446-:397 .
141 -lf

IN STOCK!

CLOSE-OUT

1964 VALIANT, sld. trans .•
excel. cond . See at 541 Fourth
Ave .
212-3

WE ARE SELLING THESE LAST 12
NEW DODGES IN STOCK FOR

USED TRAILERS
1960 Nati onal 10x50, 2 br .
1967 Hori zon 12x50, 2 br .
1957 Glider 45x8, 3 br.
1966 Namco, 52xl0, 3 br .
1960 Van Dyke, 10x50 2 br .
1960 Van Dyke 10x50, 2 br .
1965 Kentuckian, 56x10, 3 br .
1962 Colonial 50x10, 2 br .
1960 Van Dyke 10x40, 2 br .
All trailers dean and recon ditioned. Ready for DC ·
cu pancy. Free Delivery and
set -up . Tri -Countv Mobile
Homes, 446-0175.
93-11

•100

6-ptunp
lo-Golf cry

14-Lassa
1!1-Yellowlsh
21-Towerd shafter
22~Way out
23-Wrote
24-0ratlfltd
26-Made Into law
28-Ailowtd

30-0t)t '

32-BitrTdah
33--Shakespetrlen

kine
3~vourtd

35-Stlnts
37-G,..et Ltke

39-Potsassed
40-Wender

IUCCUIIOn

84- Roams ·
&amp;~Related on
ftthilr's aide

95-Fold

98-The bl rds
99--lnflata
101-Cry of.horP

103-Gaellc
104-Communlst
105-Hendle
106-Nott of scale
107-Teutonle deity
111-llquid

41-Piaythlnl

50-Derk·pur,Jta
...... d

52-Hotpa
53-0ttek letter
. 55-Whip

146-Ctolhed

33-Grent use of

91-Rivtrln Fnnce
92-Ftmalt theep

36--Superclllous

93-Ptrt of neck

148-Coats with
IUIIr

150-Bew•ll

152-Sowtd
153-Sharpen

92-Babylonlan
horo

42-Lalrt

47-Row

28-Whtel tooth
31-Mttal plate

154-Evelultt

44-Racard
46-Frvlt

141-WIItrway
IU-Affectlon
145-Anlmal'a foot

17-Su,.
19-PotaHsts

108-HI&amp;h Clrdl
liD-Trtnllrtll

41-Rtllld

27-South Afriun

maasurt
(abbr.)

ll2-$mlll birds
113- PriSSII for
peyment

LIBERAL TRADEIN AUOWAfiCES
Will BE GIVEN!

~:;;;::::;;;;::;;;:~;;;;;;;;;;;:;::;;::;;;;;::;;:;:;

NORRIS DODGE

47-Gntultln

49--Dtpolltd

114-Btleh of ttlt

160--Cublc mater
OOWN
1-Tremulous
2-Trutad with
malt
3-Crled like temb
4-Guldo't hllh
note
·
5-Girl 't name
&amp;-Note of SCI II
7-Bevere..
~Pattofey•

119- Htar

12-Frte of

mamm1ls
121-Pierct

59--Snekee

60-Great Brittin

.12•-Roattr
126--Artemoon

13-L.ttln
conjunction
14-Hind ~rt

(abbr.)
62-Peld notlcn

127- Aatlonal

H--Prtpotftlon
&amp;a-conjunction

130-Smalllumps
132-Hiah
133-Fit

7o-tontend

15-Hostelry
16-Star In

Scorpio
17-Seesaw
I I -Totaled

intent ~..

51-Crystal·llned

stone
52-Toward ,..ar
of vessel
53-Cronlee

(c:olloq.)
.
54--Sac:,.d lmap
56-B,..vlty
59-Hauteur
60-Rhttr In
Arizona
61-Warnlnl' device
63- Piayed leadinl

... role
65-Qolf mounds
67-Brood of
phtnents
6~~mbol for COld
70-Thln layers of

wood

72-Quarrels
74-lndtflnltt
artie It
76--Pronoun

77-Ntmt'
79--Nahoor sheep
83-Sklp stone • ·

llf)-PHI

2D-£xl&amp;ttd
23- En&amp;llth baby
ctrrl111

tcrost water
as-Monsters
86--Giri's name

137-T.. rs

25-Extrtmtl~

87-Cavll
811-Newt (VIr.)

134-Soft food
139-.Q,..k letter

terrible

69 BUICK LeSABRE ·

100-Sun eod

158-City In Hussla
159-Rtteh across

120-FI~inl

· ?1-Pilarc:elt of land
73- nlnterestlnl

91-Ttmporary
shtlter

l 02-Pti-lod of time

time (abbr.f
51-Look for

subitctl

seltlement
-4G-Throw off fumes

105--Rivtr lsltnds
109--Pack away
J 12- Afrlltaant
113-Dtpretslon

57-Ptriod of

19-Aeademlc

96-A «:ontlnent

45-Mistakas
46-Looktd ••

11-&amp;aasts of
burdtn

64-food PI"'inm , 128-R•ply In kind

94-Threa-totd sloth

31-Grttnltnd
.(1-Proposltloni

Phone 446·060S or 446-0842
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

harmony

157- lctlandlc
wrltlnl•

115-Bont

p1rtlu

person

Upper Rl. 7

90-Brinllnto

43-Winter vthlclt

156--Aumored

9-Tanned hide
10--Nolsome

llf-Dines

fOXII

.

WE NEED USED CARS

89-Elcl•mttlo~

140-lmltated

OVER

OUR COSTI

DONT MISS THIS SALE!

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1971

78-Sirikts
80-FHIIRI
11- Duteh town
12-lndlcatlnc

'895 •600
•895 '600
•695
'895
'595

$1295

USED FURNITURE
1971 MODEL zig zag sewing 16
cu.
11 . frost clear
machine. buttonholes, fashion
refrigerator, like new, utillly
deslans, etc. Balance due
cabinet. bolh avocado ; break$26.10. Ph. 675-1589 .
fast set, 12x12 rug &amp; pad,
197-tf
rollaway bed, bedroom suite,
-::-:-:--=c':'=-::------::--wringer
washer, coli springs
BY OWNER - 1968 Cutlass S,
full size .
and
maftress,
J50cu . in . engine, auto., eKcel.
NEW
FURNITURE
cond. Ph . 446-2228 .
212-6 INNERSPRING mattresses
starting at $28.95 . Gel the rest
you deserve, select your
BUSINESS for sale, The
mattress
and box springs
Grande Cafe. Ph. 446-9520 or
now. Free parking. Open
446-3228.
Fridays 11118. 9SS Second Ave .
212-6
7),
'lt,·'*Ph . 446-1171 .
206-lf
.... ,IHII.
SINGER Sewing Machine Sales
0,.:
.....
-..f'lt.l .. l; lllti.N
&amp; Service. All models In
.
.
,lt,,PIIti,~M&amp;.f'rt.U.IIItl.•u
stock. Free delivery. Service
guaranteed. Models priced 24 ACRES on Brick Road 2
miles from Addison . Several
from $69 .95 . French Ci ty
excellent
Fabric Shoppe, Singer ap- 367-7598 . building lots. Ph .
proved dealer, 58 Court St.
204 -ff
Ph. 446-9255.
8 ROLLS of new barbed wire, IF YOU are building a new LOW, low prices on Bemco and
308-11
two 825 : 14 mounted snow
Serta mattresses and box
home or remodeling, see us .
SUNRAY, dou)lle oven gas
tires, round oak table, fuel oil
springs . Corbin &amp; Snyder
We
are
builders
.
Distributor
10 X 50 HOUSETRAILER
range, white, almost new,
stove, misc. Items. Ph. 256Furn ., 955 Second Ave . Ph.
for Holpoinl Appliances,
· bedroom, call 379-2506 after 4
$300. Call 367-7158.
6588.
446-1171.
Electric.
Allison
p.m .
195-11 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___:_
212-3
3-lf
154-lf
211 ·6

1-Folllf rnln

IS

$1988

WE specialize In portrait and
commercial photography,
church weddings, reunions,
etc. Tawney Studio.
88-11

15-Pttlta
77-Narratt

$239
$1995

$2288
69 Ford Country Sed., sta. wgn., automatic, radio, rack. $1995

GOOD CLEAN LUMP and
stoker coal. Carl Winters •. Rio ·
Grande. Phone 245-5115.
8-lf

SOMMER'S G.M.C.
TRUCKS, INC.
133 Pine St.
Ph, 446-25J2

$2788

Sharp,

$3495

Air cond., one owner, marlin blue. black vinyl top.
Sharp.

I
I

New GMC
·Truck HeadquarteJS

WE JUMPED
THE GUN!

1968 CHEV. CAPRICE

INC.

7),"4\ tlllt,'*t
,._(IH)I.IIII
~: ..... - ..f'lt.l .. I; IIII.U
.. olee,PIItl601b-•.f'rLU.IIII••U

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

29-Greek letter

IN
BARTI.ElT, OHIO

For Sale

r-----------------------,
1 GALUPO~IS TRACTOR 1

ACROSS

Farms,
Vacant Land
48 A . most tractor, cheap.
150 A. Farmer's farm . $16.000.
50 A. 25 Is bottom . S7 .500.
11 A. edge of lawn . $10.000.
25 A. St. Rt . 325. $7,500.

Wt: ~Ul LU, remoaet , repair,
c~stom buill kitchens , Install
bathrooms. 446-4764.
140-78

Camping Equipment

RUSSELL'S
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
7 MI. from new Gavin Plant ; 6
nice rms .• bath and base., 3 SEPTIC lank cleaning , electric
rms. and bath paneled, H. W.
sewer cleaning, d i tching .
Gal!ipolis, Ohio. Ph . 446-4782 .
lloors , copper plumbi ng,
plenty good soft water from _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
193-lf
dr. well. Located on 1.21 A .
lol. This house is 12yr. old and Brammer Plumbing &amp; Heating
in 9ood repair . See today.
300 Fourth Ave .•
Price 518,500.
Phone 446-1637 '
Gene Plants, Owner
Thurman
298-lf
GOOD 5 rm. home located on o;,
A. lot . House has had 1rea1DEWITT' S PLUMBING
ment for termites . It has a
ANO HEATING
garage and can be bought tor
Route 160 at Evergreen
$8,000 .
Phone 446-2735
281-lf
Dairy Farm
IDEAL set-up. 122 A .. lerlile
land. all llallo gentle roll, all
tillable except 5 A. in saw
timber. This land has been
improved over a generation of
good farming pract ices. II has
good fences, plenty water,
1,623 lb. lob. base ., 7 rm .
modern home. 5 barns ; block
and metal dairy barn 36' x 96',
31 metal stanchions, water
cups, milkers and 320 gal.
bulk lank. All bldgs. In good
repair and have metal roofs
tess than 10 years old. Owner
gr0ws roughage for 80 head
livestock and sells hay. This Is
an amazing opportunity for
anyone interested in farming .
Pnce S40.000.

Scha~:::g~.~-15l0j 88_ 11

WANT TO TRADE UP? Two WATER well drilling, Myers
luxury homes owners will
pumps Sales and Service.
trade for cheaper properties
Complete water line service
or farms . Both located wllin
and trenching . C. J. Lemley,
VInton , Ohio. Ph . 388-8543.
one mile of city limits. City
water, schools, good streets.
114-11

SIX room . two story home, 11/z LIST WITH US - If you want
bath , large storage room,
action on your properly, list
deep lot with detached
with Oscar and Doug.
garage. Now vacant.
Oscar Baird, 446-4632
Doub
Wetherholt, 446-4244
Opportunity Knocks

FOR SALE by owner, 2 story
br ick at 452 First Ave. 7
_ .
18 A. WITH 3 houses ; 1 brick, 1
rooms, 2 baths. gas hot air
BUSINESS
block , and 1 tile block. Only
furnace ,
p res en 1
OPPORTUNITY
$22,500.
arrangement 2 apartments. EVERYTHING you need 10 go
ANY HR. 446-1998
Ea sily co nverted to one
onto the feed business. In I;VE.: J. Fuller 446-3246
eludes building~. equipment ,
fa mily dwelling . Asking
S35,000
shown
by
ap a5
h
pointmenl. Ph . 446-0208.
room ouse and Inventory
199-11
Call today for details.
.
PRIME LOCATION

_________:::=

BAIRD REALTY CO.
Oscar Baird, Realtor

Down Town

10 ACRES at Cheshire, good
frontage. Ideal for any kind of
business.

212-lf

TV Antenna Sales lnslallatlon
- Service. Estimates. Ph .
446-1673. or 446-9679.
63-tf

35 ACRE FARM - Four miles
from Rio Grande, good house,
lots of outbuildings, priced
PEACE. Separate enlrances, 6
well below $20,000.
rooms &amp; balh--4 rooms &amp;
bath . Large lot with plenty 4 ACRES, GOOD HOUSE parking space, located on lsi
Less than 10 miles out. county
Ave., overlooking the Ohio
water , three BR. full bath,
River . Price 514,900.
buill -in kitchen, garage, level
land.

St. Rt. 554
(Enol

HERE 'S A HOME THAT
WILL SUIT YOU IF YOU
WANT ELBOW ROOM ,
COUNTRY
QUIETNESS
AND HANDY TO TOWN . 2
BEDROOMS,
SMALL
KITCHEN AND DINING
AREA .' 3,1.1 OF ACRE, 3
MILE s OUT .

New Listing,
Clean As A Pen
Ready for Occupancy

home
home
home
home

Dillon
Agency

•

CITY ,,. Builders

""T"'-t:""'R"'
M""
-1T"'E::-:::
PE
"'S""T""c"'
o;:-::NT"'R""OL
FREE inspection . Call446·3245,
Merrill O'Dell, DP.erator for
Exterminal Term1te Serv ice,
19 Belmont 'Dr.
267-lf

Two Family
Harmony

15 Acres Garden
Of Eden

Here Are2
Fantastic Buys

HOUSES
1- 2 bedroom
1-2 bedroom
1-3 bedroom
1- 4 bedroom

For Sale

Services Offered

q

1971 KIRKWOOD mobile home
complete, same as new . Ph.
576-2210 Glenwood, W. Va .
214-3

----=------

WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTOR WANTED
To sell to company, established. all cash accounts in th is
area. This is no! a coin operated vending route . Our
producl is sold in locations such as ollices, employee
lounges in retail stores, financial institutions. small
manufacturing plants, warehouses. schools and hospita_ls.
The dislributor we select will be responsible for maon telnlng lhese locations and reslockong inventory . All
locations are established by our com~nx. a 10 year old
company. We need a dependable dtslrobuJor, male or
female. in this area with $1.595 m inimum to invest in
equipment and inventory. which will turn over about two
times monthly. Earnings can grow to 525.000annually and
up. We will consider part-lime appl icants. Write lor
complete Information, including phone number and Area
Code. All Inquiries striclly confidential .
CONSOLIDATED CHEMICAL CORPORATION
. F.-.eze Dried Products Division
3115 Montrose Blvd., Suite 2t5
Houston, Texas 77006

Old people can stand more comfort than young people
can.

Month r;;_n .

- - -- - -

DUPLEX apartment, upstairs 1968 VW wit h sunr oof, R&amp;H,
good cond . Ph . 446-1615or 446furn . , d ow nstairs unfurn .,
1243.
water included. Must have
213·11
references . Henderson, W.
Va . Ph . 675-3886.
' 68 PLYMOUTH, 2 dr . hardtop,
_::214-3
sport coupe, 4 new ti res,
exce llent condition, 446-4018.
VINDALE mobile home . 2
211 -6
bedroom. auto. washer, air
conditioned, across from
Holzer Hospital by Shell
Station, Sl50 mo. Ph . 446-0175 .
213-3 NEW 3 bedroom home in Plantz
Subdiv., good location, in city
school district . Will be
TRAILER, 2 bedroom, utilities
finished soon. Ph. Delbert
furnished , everything tur Clark, 446-0390.
nished but linen in Henderson.
208-lf
Ph. 446-1330.
212-3
FARM lor sale . Price reduced.
50 acres 7 miles N. on Rl. 2,
TRAILER Spaces with walks
Pt . Pleasant , city water . Ph .
and patios , water furn .
675-2045
after 5 p. m .
Henderson Trailer Court, end
210-5
of Si lver Memorial Bridge.
Ph . 675-3886.
212-3

SLEEPING ROOMS, weekly
rates. Park Central Hotel.
306-11

$117

--------

For Rent

SLEEPING ROOMS week l y
rates, free garage parking,
Libby Hotel.
74-11

Is our mind geHing broader, or is our conscience stret.
ching?

IIW II NO MONEY .DOWN

FROM wa ll to wall, no soil at
all , on carpets cleaned with
Blue Lus tre . Rent electric
shampooer $1. Lower G. C.
Murphy Store.
214-6

213-3

1~6 - 11

......... 1.. 11

- - - -- - - -

210-5 1964 CHEV . Im pal a. 327 stan- - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - dard . Ph . 446-1461.

LOOKING fora real nice room?
Lowe M otor Hote l , Pl.
Pleasant, Ma in and 4th in vites your inspection. Singles,
$4.50. S5. 56. $7, $8, $9, $2 lor
extra person . Special weekly
rates . F pkg ., TV. Ind. air
cond ., self serv. elev. Ph . 6752260.

.REAl.TOR.
_
0.
446 1 66

SMALL Davis ditching machine
$400. 1971 Datsun coupe, 1
owner Sl ,400. Ph. 446-4335.
214-3

------

- - - -- Business Opportunities

'•

--------

- - - - - -- - -

____

.
wo
·
·
o
"
D
'
'
.
.
USSE.LL
-

1970 VW stalion wagon, good
cond ., $1.700. Ph. 446 -42~7.
214'3

- ---,-------

&lt;1028.

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

ANTIQUE marble lop dresser
in excellent condition was
$299.95 now $19'1.95, living
room suite less than 1 yr . old,
TV. 2 dinette sels, 2 rockers,
dresser, roll -away bed wilh
LAD! ES Santa needs helpers
mattress, twin mattress and
S3.73 an hour. 7 to 10 p.m ., no
spring, 2 beds, hassinet. 2
experience necessary. For
lawn mowers, auto. gas dryer
Holiday money call Mrs .
$29.95. Rice's New &amp; Used
Claus, Jachon 988-2705.
Furn ., 854 Second (across
175-11
from Tex aco Stat ion ). 4469523.
YOU' RE IN demand! Even if
213-11
you've never sold anything - -- - -- - before, you can become a PONY with saddle and bridle, 2
successful representative of
calves, Monogram fuel oil
the world's largest cosmeti c
stove complete with equipcompany. Call now and let
ment. Ph. 388 -8631.
Avon tell you how easily you
213 -3
can turn hours into extra fun
·and exira prolils . Call or '66 CHEV . Belair 4 dr ., auto .,
wrlle Mrs. Helen Yeager , Box
mo. Ph . 446-0782 .
1n. Jackson. Ohio. Ph. 286213-3

excluded. Open 6: 30a .m . to 6
p .m . Monday through Friday.
Fees: 520 for full five-day
week. S5 per day if less than
five days. S3 per day for
morn1ng sessions. Ph. 446. FURNISHED apartment, 3
3657 . Madge
Hauldren
r ooms and bath, upstairs,
Owner-Director ; John and
adulls on l y 446-0322 after 5
Loredilh
Hauldren ,
p .m .
operators.
211 -tf
JS~ tf

.: -----------------::

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

OC:81n

116-Ctl&amp;l
J 18-Henenly body
120-Ttrdy
121-RemuneraUd

Custom 400 · 4 dr. hardtop. radio &amp; heater
auto._ transmission, p. steering, p. brakes:
~erd! green metallic finish with matching
tnten or . Black vinyl roof, W· S·w tires in ex·
cellent cond.

122-Mend•
123-Ptrtalnlnl to

•2395

an era ·
125-Ptrtllnlnl' to
animal fat
126-~ade

Ieee

12 7-Pttltioned
129-W•Iktd on

131-Sitndere,
132-PI•tut
133-HurHed
· 134-Jury list
136-Smooth

J
}

138-Europttn
UO-Wu IOd
141-Wslkln&amp; stick
1-42-Jump

1&lt;44-Eplc poem
147- Mountaln on
Crttt
148-Tht heart
149-Muslc: 11
.. writltn
151-lllumlntted

153-Ekelllmatlon
J iS-Printer's

musun

·I

WOOD MOTOR SALES
EASTERN AVE.

For Sale

GALLI POLIS, 0.

For Sale

USED
Mobile
Home 17 FT. Fiberglas.s boat, 75 HP
motor, lr-iler and ski
Headquarters. All size mobile
equipment, SUI. Also 16 p .
homes in stock .. B 11. S Mobile
a.ulo. shotgun, $75. Ph. .._
Home .Sales, Second &amp; Viand,
2885.
Pt. Pleasant, next to Heck's.

Solution On Page 24 """"'~111.-.L-J...:.....I..-.L....J _ _ _ _ _ _ _6_7-11

21U

�..

"''•

_.,._..,. ,

. . . ....
'

~

.

.

.... . ..

..

•

21 ~ TheSundaYTimes·Senllnei,Sunday;Sepi.IZ,l l
97

'

• -Tbe Sandlly Times ·Sentinel, Slllday, Sept. 12, 1971

For Fas~ Results Use The ·Sunday Times~Sentinel Classifieds(

••
~

Obituary

••

For Sale

Wanted

: MERIDITH Claire Well ington BABYSITTER in my home fo; 1
•
was born to John and Myra
small child 5 days a week . Ph .
"
Kent Wellln!!lon on July 17,
446-3687 after 5: 30p.m .
:
1• departed this life
213.-3
•
September
1971.
'
Most of his liie was spent in WOMAN to live in , Jighl
• ·
Gallla Coun ly exceplfor a few
:
housework , cooking, ~ay off,
•
years when he lived in Green
535 wk . Call Middleport, 9'12:
County.
3507 .
•
He was thrice married. on
213-3
"June 20. 1911 to Em ma
0 D- H
--::0 -cM:-:E:-:-fo_r_y_e-:-:11-ow
- mal e
•
Huffman who departed this -G-0--::kitten . Ph . 446-1809.
•
life January 20. 1912.
212 -3
:
On December 19, 1914 he
•
was united in marriage to
: . Elsie Harman who passed
•
away October 18, 1942.
:
To this union wa$ born FARM, 100-200 acres, rolling
.seven children , four of whom
farm land . Write Box 192 c-o
_..
survive, Wendell of Wheeling .
Gallipolis Tribune.
~
W. Va .i Leo of Vinton ;
209-6
Eugene of Bidwell, and Mary
:
Lou of Louisiana.
Two sons, Earl and Har ·
•
:
man, and a daugh1er , Peart, BOOKKEEPING, accounting,
,.
died in infancy.
tax reports of all kind . Ph .
In November o119.15 he was
446-3309.
210-6
,
united in marriage to Sue
•
Large who departed this life
•
June 19, 1969. He leaves a
•
step-son, Jack Hendrix of
:• Groveport, Oh io. of this OWN YOUR own Business with
a California base manufac·
marriage and 6 step·
lu r ing company wh ic h is
grandchildren .
expanding its business in this
Claire was a member of the
area . Has opening tor
Porter United Methodist
distributorship
.
Above
Church and of Huntington
average earnings potential,
Grange of Vinton .
investment secured . Write
He was a kind, considerate
•
resume including business
neighbor, well liked and
background, name. address,
respected by his fellowman.
•
and phone number to Area
Besides rearing his grandCoordinator, Box No. 122,
son, Ricky Geiger, he look
Belpre, Ohio.
a
into his home his mother.
• Myra Kent Wellington, and
211 -6
his three aged aunts, Emily
• . Ken t, Carr ie Kent, and HIGH volume Ashland service
station for lease . Paid
Frank i e Allen. tenderly
tra in ing . Call 9'12-5221 or 446:
caring for them through their
0185 or Marietta 373-8412.
declining years.
211 -lf
Lefl to mourn his passing
•
besides his · before named - - - - - ...
children are twenty -two
W
grandchildren and four great·
grandchildren and a host of WANT L.P.N. or retired R.
friends and relatives.
. nurse to work in nursing
home. Can live in if desired.
Write : Box 313, Ironton, Ohio,
"They who think that you are
Rl. L
gone.
214-3
• Because no more your face they

------

s.

•

Wanted To Buy

Wanted To Do

Business Opportunities

Help

td
an e

- - -- - -

see ;

HELP YOUR HUSBAND!
YOU can earn up to Sl2.50 in an
hour taking orders from your
: And alwa-vs will in memory ."
friends,
neighbors
and
•
2U-l
relatives for Studio Girl's
• .
beautiful Good Housekeeping
approved WIGS, WIGLETS,
FALLS,
cosmetics
and
• rHE FAMILY of
Claire
Christmas
gifts
.
•• Wellington wishes fo thank
the wonderful people at
TOP profi ts. No terrilory
Houston's Nursing Home, the
restrictions . Also sell where
McCoy Funeral Home, the
you work. Full time or spare
• doctors and nurses at Holzer,
• Rev. Curfman ~ Rev. Graham, hours. Side line OK. Phone
toll free (BOO) 621 -4005 or write
• the singers. the many friends,
STUDIO
GIRL
• and family that sent flowers HOLL ¥WOOD, Depl.
M-405,
• · and helped in every way
11461 Hart Sl., No . Hollywood.
through the illness and death
• of our beloved father and Calif . 91605 , for full in formation and free samples
• grandfather.
by mail. No one will call on
The Wellington Family
you. All replies confidential.
•
21~1
Phone today .
.
214-1
•
: Are wrong -

For in our hearts

you live ;

.: Card

of Thanks

..

- - - -- , Lost
.

.
•

MAN'S black wallet, vicinity of
Rio Grande or Porter. If
found, return to Adrian
$tMnCer or i:all 2.15-5600 or 3677689. Reward.

.:·Notice
--:-------

210

•

•
REWARD
: A ONE-HUNDRED (5100.00)
•
Dollar reward will be paid by

:
•

the undersigned for information leading to ap -

:
•
"

~

prehension and conviction of
the person or persons taking a
Cadet Tractor International
Harvester Yellow and While

:

serial no. 31.tl09, stdlen on the

•
:

night of 1 September 1971,
from the home of Mr. leslie

..

Treadway, Fraziers Bottom,

:
•
•

W. Va . Signed :
Leslie
Treadway, Phone 937-3226.
211 -6

•

in color, with 48" mower,

~.,--:-:-:-::-=-,------~

a

: I WILL NOT be responsible for
:
any debts other than my own
w
as of this dale, Sept. 11 . 1971.
Signed Alfred Lee Warren .

:·

210

•
!

RALPH'S Carpel- Upholstery
Cleaning
Service.
Free
•

"'
::

'~

~
.,
"

estimates. Ph. 4A&amp;-0294.
197-11

------------------SUN VALLEY Nursery School,

577 Sun Valley Drive, licensed

.,.

by the State of Ohio,
Department
of
Public
Welfare. now providing full
day
care
and
child

•
:

development program for
pre-school children, infants

~

•
..,
•
•

=
~

..

..

lnstr~tiolt

':" BETTER jobs are available for
GBC graduates. Enroll now
for fall term . Gall ipolis
Business College R. N. 71 -020032B. Ph. 446-4367.
162-11
•ARMY TECHNICAL SCHOOLS
: PAY
YOU .
Regular
paycheck , top benefits, while

you

learn . 300

training

.. courses. Electronics. Heavy
construction
mach inery .
Aircraft , Automotive .
Laboratory skills . Three-year
enlistment guarantees choice
of training . New higher pay
scales . Ph . 446-3343.

214-4

'

.
•

- - - - -- - -

1970 442W30 .Oldsmobile , 455 cu.
in., 370 HP, 4 spd., P.S., P.B.,
AM-FM stereo radio, buill-in
tape pla yer, all tinted glass .
Ph . 245-5464 .
214-6

STE REO - Radio Console, 4
speed intermixed changer,
dual volume control, 4
speaker sound system, lovely
walnut finish . Balance $62.97.
Use our budget terms. Call
446-1028.
214-3

- - -- - - - -

STEREO - Radio combination
unit. with AM-FM radio, 4
speakers, ·dual Volume con .
trol. modern maple console.
Balance $79.76. Use our
budget terms . Call 446-1028.
214-3

- - -- - -

ZIG ZAGOMATIC, well known
make sewing machine. makes
buttonholes. sews on bullons.
etc. Balance $49.31. Call 4461028.
214-3

Mon. thru Sat. 9-4 :30
Sun. 1-1
Other Times by Appt .

notlu•og hke • N•IKI...S home lor livin9

~- .

QUlin~ . An
lliiC!!d to IYIOM!t ~&lt;Kioc1lly ~nyl:lud!lft.
t r,t&gt;&lt;:tt&amp;~n,dt~~v·ogren 1 .

WESTBROOK

, Westbrook is the prettiest
P,art of. town. Space. Com forts. Large , pretty lot .
They're all yours in West brook ... a very special place
to live.
Rt. 160 to
Butaville Rd .
N. on Buta,ille Rd. ~: ..(; -

lfo~ mi. to

~

-·

Model Home

t.&gt;e.Y,.,. .

The
WISelllan

Agency

.. .._ .. ,_ ._

MDRE fliii1UE S UVE IN A NATIONAl HOM( TH4.H ANY OTHER HDMf JN THE WORlD

------

'53 FORD pickup with '60
engine, bucket seats, good
shape, $115. Ph . 245-5022.
214-3

- - -- - -

PORCH sale between Un ion 76
Service Station and Unem ployment Office, 447 Second
Ave . rear . School dresses and
m isc. Wednesday, begi~s 10
a.m .
214-2

THE . WISEMAN
AGENCY
Office 446-3643
Evenings Call
E •.M. "Ike" Wiseman 446..S796
E. N. Wiseman 446-45ro

--

'67 MERCURY Colony Park
wagon , V-B, P.S ., P.B .• auto.
and many extras, 10 pass. Ph.
367-7554.
214-2

---------

SOUP'S on, the rug that is, so
clean the spot with Blue
Lu st re .
.Ren t
electric
sham pooer 51. Central Supply
Co .
214-6

- - - -- - - -

USED FURNITURE

Real Estate For Sale

STROUT REALlY
Ph. 446-0008

FARMS
104 A.- Gallipolis School Dist.
60 A.· Grade B Dairy
31 A. '12 A . lob. good home, $8800
VACANT LAND &amp; CAMP
SITES- 5 A., 6 A ., 10 A., 30 A.,
40 A .. lots of pines, cheap .
LOTS for homes or tra ilers, all
utilities, EZ terms .
41h A . modern home. Rl. 160.
15 A. Extra nice 8 room home on
sta le rd .
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
FEED MILL- long established
busi ness on state rd ., ex cellent terms lor the right
indi v idual.
NI TE CLUB for those who like
money. over 580,000 reported
annual income.
GROCERY
STORE
well
established business, lovely
living quarters.
FARM
EQUIPMENT
BUSINESS- Top line ol
machinery.
C.WP
GROUND
&amp;
R~CREATION
PARK national adverti si ng , owner
may lake home on trade.
Gas Station. mobile home, &amp; 2
ren tal units.
GIFT SHOP on US 35, lovety
home &amp; garage attached.
HOMES
BIDWELL - 2 homes for the
price ol 1, $13.000.
K.C. SC HOOL DIST.-2 homes
live in one &amp; rent the other ~
$12,900.
CITY - 13 rooms, large enough
for 3 or 4 apts .
S65D0-7 rooms, 11 mi. from
tow n.
MOBILE HOMES- 3 , with or
without lots.
Ranny Blackburn
Branch Manager

Six miles from Galli • 'lis Cily limils in Green Township on
Raccoon Creek , 70 ~
- of clean level land well fenced.
with 14 acres co.
'ld 1/~ acre tobacco base and
plenty of pasture an~
~ ' nice pond, and large barn
and _one out building, t...
t.A"t:tr in road at the house.
Two bedrooms with halt
.rge living room with
fireplace and nice kitchen a.
dining room combined .
Shown by appoinlmenl.
FARM SALE
S3 acres with 1,1, acre tabacco base in Harrison township.
$12,600.
SS acres with 1/z acre tobacco base in Harrison township.
$5,500.
104 acres with 112 acre tobacco base in Green Township.
S12,500.
·
96 acres wilh .89 tobacco base in Ohio Township, 515,800 .
260 acres with 1h acre tobacco base in Addison Township,
540,000.
31ofs89.4 wide, 222ft. deep. $2,200 each
6 lots in Addison Township, l 1/ 2 acres on S. R. 7. $2 ,500
each.

FRENCH

REALLY NOW , AFTER
SEE ING THESE TWO
HOME S, YOU'LL AGREE
THEY CAN'T BE BEAT
DON 'T TAKE MY WORD
FOR IT , HAVE A LOOK
FOR YOURSELF . WE ' LL
SHOW EITHER HOME AT
' YOUR
CONVENIENCE ..

ADAM , TAKE YOUR EVE
BY THE HAND A~D
LEAD HER TO HIS
SECLUDED HIDE ·AWAY .
LARGE SHADED LAWN ,
WONDERFUL GARDEN
AND POND . VERY NICE
HOME
WITH
HUGE
LIVING ROOM , NICE
K ITCHEN 11. DINING AND
2 BEDROOMS . HUGE
NEARLY NEW , VERY
GOOD
UTILITY
BUILDING PRESENTLY
USED AS LARGE SHOP , 2
CAR
GARAGE
AND
BARN .

(11 YOU CAN'T
TELL
THI S 4 YR . OLD 3
BEDROOM HOME FROM
NEW . ONE OF THE
PRETTIEST KITCHENS
IN TOWN , VERY NICE
BATH , CENTRAL AIR ;
WALL TO WALL CAR ·
PET , LARGE 2 CAR
GARAGE , ONE OF THE
BEST LOCATIONS IN
TOWN . OWNERS MOVED
TO I L LINO IS . PRICED
S23,900 . IT 'S A REAL
BARGAIN
FOR
SOMEO NE .

Lots For Sale
(1) 2.38 ACRE WOODED
ALL
WATER
AVAILABLE .

2.33 ACRE WOODED ,
VE.RY , VERY
N ICE.
WATER TAP PAID .
(2)

(21
NOW
DON 'T
PREJUDGE TH IS VERY
A TTRACTIVE
3
BEDROOM BRICK . READ
THE SE FEATURES AND
CA LL IKE WISEMAN
FOR AN APPOINTMENT .
3 BEDROOM BRICK , l'h
BATH S, ALL ELECTRIC,
ALL CARPETED . FULL
DRY
BASEMENT ,
LARGE 2 CAR G" RAGE ,
BEAUT I FULLY
EQUIPPED.
K ITCHEN ,
BACK PORCH , COR NER
LOT AND IN AN EX CELLENT
NEIGH BOR HOOD WITH CITY
WA T ER . SE WAGE . NAT .
GAS AND CITY SC HOOL
SYS TEM . LOCATED IN
R 10 GRANDE WITH THE
OWNER VERY ANXIOUS
TO SELL . PRICE SJOOO .
UNDER TRUE MARKET
VALUE .

(3 ) 2 ACRES AT EDGE OF
TOWN, $2,500. WATER 11.
GAS AVAIL. GOOD FOR 2
OR
MORE
MOBILE
HOMES .
5 1!~

(.41

ACRES ,

LARGE

TREES A BEAUTIFUL
· LOCATION , $3 ,900 .

Just Married?
Just Retired?

Price Reduced
Riverside location
THI S LIKE
NEW
3
BEDROOM HOME WITH
2'1'
BATH S.
f=ULL
BA SEME NT AND 2 CAR
GARAGE CAN MEAN A
LI FE TIME
OF
HAP .
PINESS
FO R
SOME
L UC KY
FAMILY
LOCATED ON • ACRE
PLOT RUNNING TO THE
RIVER WITH A SMALL
ORCHARD AND DANDY
PLA CE
FOR
BOAT .
VERY
ATTRACTIVE
VERY WELL BUILT , AND
VERY WELL KEPT.

THE OWNER OF THIS
VERY NI CE J BEDROOM
HOME HA S MOVED TO
CINCINNATI
AND
DESIRES THE QUICK
SA LE .
3
SPACIOU S
BEDROOMS,
LARGE
LIVING ROOM, FAMILY
ROOM,
EQUIPPED
KITCHEN AND LARGE
UTILITY ROOM . LARGE
LOT WITH
GARDEN
SPO T. FULL PRICE IS
$19,900. BE THE FIRST TO
SEE THIS VERY NICE
HOME .

We Need Your
Property To Sell

4 Bedroom Home
With 4 Acres

WE ARE SEL LING AT
SUCH A PACE, IT 'S IM POSSIBLE TO KEEP
ENOUGH
PRO PERTY
LI STE D TO EVEN COME
CLOSE TO SAT ISFYING
THE BUYERS WE HAVE
ON A WAITING LIST . IF
YOU ARE THINKING OF
A CHANGE , CALL US
RIGHT NOW . IF YOU
WANT TO BUILD NEW ,
SEE US TO SEL L YOUR
PRESENT
PROPERTY .

AND RIGHT AT THE
EDGE OF TOWN . IT'S AN
OLDER
HOME WITH
BARN AND CHICKEN
HOUSE AND REAL GOOD
· GAR DE N. THERE IS 600
FE ET OR FRONTAGE '
ALONG RT . 141 . IT'S A
MONEY MAKER FOR
ANY ONE WANTING TO
WORK ON IT .

' - - - - - - - - -- -

for $17,000.00
for 517,900.00
for $16.000.00
for 521,500.00
Office 446-1066
Evenings: call
Ron Canaday 446-3636
John I. Richards 446-0280
Russell b. Wood 446-4618

Hobart Dillon, Realtor
Office 446-2674

Supply. 750 lsi Ave,, 446· 14YY.
Paint , panellng. f'har~ware,
plumbing ..and electrical
supplies . Hours. 7 to 5,
Thursday 7 to 1,2.

HORSE .SHOEING
COMPLETE farrier service.
Bob

The Di ll~n ,;gency has been' a
member of the Local, Stale
and National Association of
REALTORS since Jan. 1942,
we have listed existing homes
apd farms all these years on a
FIVE (5) percent commission
basis . Why pay more list with
the OILLON AGENCY. II
pays.

MASSIE
Realtor, 32 State St
Tel 446-1998

REFRIGERATION
&amp; AIR CONDITIONING
RESIDENTIAL, commercial,
industrial. Ph. 367f 200.
1
117-lf

ALB~RT EHMAN

Water Dellvery-S~rvice
Patriot Star Rt .• Gallipolis
Ph . 379-2133
243-lf
t.entrai Air Condilioning
-Healing
Free Estimates
Stewart's Hardware
Vinton, Ohio
144-lf

Neal Realty

Investment

IFfo~?Cb~~ION

FARM . 80 acres, 880 lb. tobacco
base , 6 room house bath
carpeted built -in c~blnels
copper pl'umbing, good drilled
well , new ce llar house, good
sl and of pine. House is 2 years
old, also barn , anolher house.

~~fc"~e5~ 1 :~ppi~_g~~~~7 :tP

2] 3_6
::-:-:---:--------------BY OWNER - 2 story 6 room
house, 1'' bath, full siz~
basement and garage. 24
Portsmouth Rd. or call 4461407.
213-3

--

~·--...---

cohunls see this
room ome located
rgoss from the high school al
wal~l~te Slheet. Children can
can w~l~c 1001 and parents
busi ness d ' 1 ,grocery and
IS ric ·

°.

ss.ooo.

87 ACRES vacant land Offoce Pho~e 446-1694
Evenongs
Charles M. Neal, 446·1546
J. Michael Neal, 446-JSOJ
LARGE brick house In Kyger
Creek School Dislricl. Ph . 256. 6526 or 256-6747.

209-6
-

STARCRAFT
SEE the 19721ravellrallers and
campers in stock. 15 per cent
plus discount. 1 71 trailer,
dealer's cost. We stock all
accessories, service what we
sell and guarantee. Camp
Conley Slarcrafl Sales, Rl. 62,
North of Point Pleasant, W.
Va .
205-lf
HUNTE'R 1S SPECIAL
NEW truck camper $1,587 for
51.195 dealer' s cost, 1966 1511 .
Banner S850 . All fisHing boats
tell at dealer's cost. Camp
Conley Starer aft Sales, Rl. 62,
North ol Point Pl easant, W.
Va .
211 -lf

- ----Plumbing &amp;Heating

STANDARD
Plumbing &amp; Healing
215 Third Ave., 446-3782
187-lf
. CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
830 Fourth Avenue
Phone 446-3888 or 446-4477
155-lf

AUCTION
SERVIa
"SELL THE AUCTION
WAY" ·

JAMES (JIMME)
SAYRE
PH. 446-3444

- - - c- - - = : = - -

J D's R·adio a; --TV Service.
Serving Gallipolis &amp; Pl.
Pleasant, reasonable rates,
prompt service. Also evening
calls. Ph . 675-5220.
203-tf

GILLENWATER'S seplic lank
cleaning and repair, also
house wrecking . Ph . 446 949'1. -Eslablished In 1940.
169-lf

D . P. MARTIN &amp; Son Water
DeliverY.
Service .
Your
patronage will be
ap preciated. Ph . 446-0463.
] .If

BANKS TREE SERVICE
FREE estimates, liability in surance. Pruning, trimming
and cavity work, tree and
slump removal. Ph . 446-4953.
.73-ti

DEAD STOCK
"v

S5.00 Service Charge
Will remove your dead
horse and cows
Call JaJ:ks_on286-.1531. ,,

SWISHER'S
Plumbing
&amp;
Electric contractor . We
specialize in hooking up rural
water I ine system to your
home. Completely build your
bathroom. Call us for com plete free estimate. Delbert
Swisher, 1809 Chestnut, Ph .
446-0468.
135-lf
SWISHER'S
DITCH TRENCHING
SERVICE Ph. 446·0468
174-tf

Insurance
NATIONWIDE INSURANCE
AUTO, Fire, life, 45 Stale St.,
Waldo F . Brown, W. R.
Brown, 446-1960.
FOR ALL your Insurance needs
check with your Grange
agents at the Neal Ins.
Agency, 64 Stale St. Agents
for auto, fire, homeowners,
hospital and general liability.
84-lf

AUOION
Sale Every
Saturday
Evenings, 7;00
Corner 3rd &amp; Olive Ave.
We sell anything
for
anybody . We also buy some
estates. For Pick-up Service

Call
Knotts
Com.
munity Auction, 446·
2917

ANTIQUE ·AUCTION
THURS., SEPT. 16th

AT lO:OO .AM

VOLKSWAGEN ~

I· SALE!

VOLKSWAGEN RIDES AGAIN

,

We have a very' nice sale In part as follows :
2 -:- 6 Leg Gateleg tables (In Walnut), walnut chest,
Edoson phonograph with 10 cylinder records, cherry
note stand, 2 - drawer walnut nile stand, marble
top wall !able . Fine very old Japanese Clock
'
.
.
t
Mickey Mouse wrist watch In .o riginal box, walnul beds,
stands, walnut wardrobe, 2-4 leg drop-leaf tables, brass
candle stand, many old Iron and tin toys, old store advertising items, containers etc., 10 nice plales, chocolate
set, mush and milk sei. 4 bird plales, 2 biscuit jars. fine 3'
pc. jardonier, wash bowl and pitcher, cut glass rose bowl.
·cut glass compote,, Satin glass •rose bowl. pair fine vases,
Phoenix vase, Carnival water set (n), while Carnival
punch bowl (n), 3 sllll banks, 6 Blue Bird milk glass salts,
pa ir Cranberry manlelluslers, oil lamps, electric trains,
olher carnival, China etc. A very nice 9xl2 Oriental rug.
Don't miss this one.

HAROLD GODDARD, INC.

SALE! SALE! I

I
I
I
I

I
I
I
I

I
1·
I

I·

I

I MF 135 .•• THE WORLD'S LARGEST SELLING
I TRACTOR! Dollar for dollar more value than any
I other J.plow t_racto_r l)'lade! Famous Perkins gas
I . or record·settmg dtesel en~ine. Options include
I !"ressure Control, differenttal lock, power steer·
1 mg. Advanced Ferguson hydraulics are standard!

I1
1
1

·1

1
1
1
I
I

69 Sq. Back, .white, black interior, 4 speed, loca 1car.
Sharp.
69 Bug, white, red interior, automatic stick shift. Nice
car.

Factory fresh!
Prtces may never be this low again! We will
g!ve you our special discount price and still
gtve you top dollar trade·in allowance on your
tractor!

No

I1

69 Bug, red, black interior, 4 speed, radio, white tires.
68 Fast Back, white, 4 speed. A local car. One owner.

$1495

68 Fast Back, light blue, 4 speed. This car is in nic~
condition.

1495

68 Bug, light blue, radio, leatherette, white trim.

67 Sq. Back, red with black interior, radio, white trim. $1488
67 Fast Back, red with black interior, radio, white tires. $1488

1
1

66 Bug, blue with white interior, radio, good transportation
.
._

1

I
I
II

1
Phone 446·1044
1 Bill Wooldridge. Owner

$995

63 V.W. Bug. We have redone this car completely. Perfect
shape.
$98B

I

I
I GALLIPOLIS
II TRACTOR

$1695
$1295

1
1

1
Investment credit?
1
LOW, LOW discount prices on all I
tractors!
I
AT YOUR
MASSEY-FERGUSON DEALER

$1995
$1788
$1788

I
I
I - 68 Sq. Back, beige in color, radio. In nice condition.
1·

La~ge selection now in stock!

I interesl
ALSO, consider these factors:
until March 1, 1972.

71 Sq .. Back, red with black interior, 4 speed, air condition,
low !l'•leage.
$3195

I
I
I
II
I
II

I

awms
•u,.rllhw ... ,......

"DOC"
SMITH
SAYS:

SEPT. 23rd WAS TO HAVE BEEN BUICK-OPEL SHOW DATE.
1972 BUICKS-OPELS ON
DISPLAY AND READY FOR
DELIVERY NOW I I I
1969 BUICK ELECTRA 2 DR. HDTP.

1969 BUICK LeSABRE CUST. 4 DR. HDTP•
Air Cond., lime green, dark green vinyl top . New
Electra trade.

1970 PONTIAC G.T.O. CONV.
Auto ., P.S., P. B., bucket seats, Was $2895 .

: ~;5 _~g.'p ., P.S., P. B., auto., factory air cond . Sharp . Wa s

2

VOLKSWAGEN ~

COMPLETE LINE of pipes and
accessories.
GBD
and
Charatan. Tawney Jewelers,
424 Second Ave .
173-lf

1967 DATSUN P.U.
1966 '12 T. GMC P.U .
1969 Plymouth Roadrunner
1969 Chev . '-" T. P.U.
1963 C7SO Ford truck
1965 112 T . GMC P.U.
1969 Chev . dump truck
1952 112 T. Chev. P.U.
1965 1 T. GMC
1969 GMC 4 T . 10!! truck
1962 'I• T. GMC pock up
1957 1h T. GMC P.U.
1965 o;, T. Ford P.U.
1963 '12 T. Chev. P.U.
1969 1 T. GMC
1967 1/ 2 T. GMC P.U .
1968 Chev . Suburban
1966 :If, T . Chev. P.U.
1967 ~· T., Che.v rolel pickup
1963 F600 Ford Truck
1961 2 T. GM'( , ..... ,
1964 3 T. GMC
1967 F700 Ford dump truck

NOW YOU CAN GET ACAR WITH ARADIATOR

FROM VOLKSWAGEN

~LLIS

CHALMERS Harvester
with grass and corn at tachments.
Also
All is
Chalmers blower used about
12 seasons on my farm.
Pr iced very reasonable. A. J.
Payne. Ironton . 0 . Ph. 532 0533.
212-3

69 Olds Delta 88,2 dr. H.T., air, P.S., P.B., vinyl top.

69 Camaro SS, 4 speed, 307 engine, red &amp; black.
69 Impala Custom, 4 speed, air, vinyl top, AM-FM.

241 -lf
1971
SL
350- Kl
Honda
Motosport. Ph . 446-1108 after
5: 30.
212-6

Wholesale Close Out, These Cars
Have To Be Sold!! WAS
1965 Buick Skylark Sed.
1965 Ford St. Wagon 9 Pass.
1965 Ford Sedan
196501ds Cutlass Cpe
1965 Corvair Cpe.

67 Ply. Fury II I, 4 dr. H. T., yellow, P.S., P. B., white
tires.

67 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
Silver, with Black Vinyl Top, P.S., P.B., Air

67 Pontiac Lemans, auto., P.$., P.B., air, mint cond.

$1695

SEWING MACHINE service in
your home. Special pre -school
offer . Clean, oil and adjust,
$4 .99. Call 675- 1589.
191 -tf

67 Fiaf-1100 4 dr., 4 speed. Good transportation

$688

Real Sharp Car. $1788
'

66 Dart G. T., V-8, automatic, P.S., air cond.
66 Catalina ~fa. Wgn., P.S., P.B., air, rack &amp; radio.
(Sharp.)
65 Elec. 225,4 dr., P.S., P.B., air, radio, white tires.
65 Mustang Conv., 6 cyl., radio, auto.
65Mercury4dr. H.T., P.S., P.B.,auto.
65 Chev. Imp., 2 dr. H. T., auto. V.a, P.S., P. B., radio
64 Olds F-85, 4 dr., auto., P.S., P. B., radio.
63 Olds 88,2 dr. P.S., P.B., radio.

Corbin &amp;
Snyder Furniture

DON ~ WI!SWAGDI, INC.
•u,.r.,_ ... ,...... Cleft\

For Sale

For Sale

2

------

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

$1188
$1395
$1188
$895
$595
$1088
$588
$395

For Sale

For Sale
SIGNS .
No
hun t ing
or
trespa ss ing or others . Protect
your rights . Simmons Ptg . &amp;
Office Equip .
203-lf

(12)

- - -- --

WHITE cement , all sizes tile in
stock. 12" &amp; 15" field tile,
suitable for highway ditch ing,
conc r ete
blocks .
GALLI POLIS BLOCK CO .•
ph . 446-2763.
97-11

1971
DODGES

PUBLIC seati ng, l olding tables
and Cllalrs - restaurants,
churc hes.. org anizations .
Comp lete line of office chairs
and desks . Simmons Pig . &amp;
Office Equip. Ph. 446-:397 .
141 -lf

IN STOCK!

CLOSE-OUT

1964 VALIANT, sld. trans .•
excel. cond . See at 541 Fourth
Ave .
212-3

WE ARE SELLING THESE LAST 12
NEW DODGES IN STOCK FOR

USED TRAILERS
1960 Nati onal 10x50, 2 br .
1967 Hori zon 12x50, 2 br .
1957 Glider 45x8, 3 br.
1966 Namco, 52xl0, 3 br .
1960 Van Dyke, 10x50 2 br .
1960 Van Dyke 10x50, 2 br .
1965 Kentuckian, 56x10, 3 br .
1962 Colonial 50x10, 2 br .
1960 Van Dyke 10x40, 2 br .
All trailers dean and recon ditioned. Ready for DC ·
cu pancy. Free Delivery and
set -up . Tri -Countv Mobile
Homes, 446-0175.
93-11

•100

6-ptunp
lo-Golf cry

14-Lassa
1!1-Yellowlsh
21-Towerd shafter
22~Way out
23-Wrote
24-0ratlfltd
26-Made Into law
28-Ailowtd

30-0t)t '

32-BitrTdah
33--Shakespetrlen

kine
3~vourtd

35-Stlnts
37-G,..et Ltke

39-Potsassed
40-Wender

IUCCUIIOn

84- Roams ·
&amp;~Related on
ftthilr's aide

95-Fold

98-The bl rds
99--lnflata
101-Cry of.horP

103-Gaellc
104-Communlst
105-Hendle
106-Nott of scale
107-Teutonle deity
111-llquid

41-Piaythlnl

50-Derk·pur,Jta
...... d

52-Hotpa
53-0ttek letter
. 55-Whip

146-Ctolhed

33-Grent use of

91-Rivtrln Fnnce
92-Ftmalt theep

36--Superclllous

93-Ptrt of neck

148-Coats with
IUIIr

150-Bew•ll

152-Sowtd
153-Sharpen

92-Babylonlan
horo

42-Lalrt

47-Row

28-Whtel tooth
31-Mttal plate

154-Evelultt

44-Racard
46-Frvlt

141-WIItrway
IU-Affectlon
145-Anlmal'a foot

17-Su,.
19-PotaHsts

108-HI&amp;h Clrdl
liD-Trtnllrtll

41-Rtllld

27-South Afriun

maasurt
(abbr.)

ll2-$mlll birds
113- PriSSII for
peyment

LIBERAL TRADEIN AUOWAfiCES
Will BE GIVEN!

~:;;;::::;;;;::;;;:~;;;;;;;;;;;:;::;;::;;;;;::;;:;:;

NORRIS DODGE

47-Gntultln

49--Dtpolltd

114-Btleh of ttlt

160--Cublc mater
OOWN
1-Tremulous
2-Trutad with
malt
3-Crled like temb
4-Guldo't hllh
note
·
5-Girl 't name
&amp;-Note of SCI II
7-Bevere..
~Pattofey•

119- Htar

12-Frte of

mamm1ls
121-Pierct

59--Snekee

60-Great Brittin

.12•-Roattr
126--Artemoon

13-L.ttln
conjunction
14-Hind ~rt

(abbr.)
62-Peld notlcn

127- Aatlonal

H--Prtpotftlon
&amp;a-conjunction

130-Smalllumps
132-Hiah
133-Fit

7o-tontend

15-Hostelry
16-Star In

Scorpio
17-Seesaw
I I -Totaled

intent ~..

51-Crystal·llned

stone
52-Toward ,..ar
of vessel
53-Cronlee

(c:olloq.)
.
54--Sac:,.d lmap
56-B,..vlty
59-Hauteur
60-Rhttr In
Arizona
61-Warnlnl' device
63- Piayed leadinl

... role
65-Qolf mounds
67-Brood of
phtnents
6~~mbol for COld
70-Thln layers of

wood

72-Quarrels
74-lndtflnltt
artie It
76--Pronoun

77-Ntmt'
79--Nahoor sheep
83-Sklp stone • ·

llf)-PHI

2D-£xl&amp;ttd
23- En&amp;llth baby
ctrrl111

tcrost water
as-Monsters
86--Giri's name

137-T.. rs

25-Extrtmtl~

87-Cavll
811-Newt (VIr.)

134-Soft food
139-.Q,..k letter

terrible

69 BUICK LeSABRE ·

100-Sun eod

158-City In Hussla
159-Rtteh across

120-FI~inl

· ?1-Pilarc:elt of land
73- nlnterestlnl

91-Ttmporary
shtlter

l 02-Pti-lod of time

time (abbr.f
51-Look for

subitctl

seltlement
-4G-Throw off fumes

105--Rivtr lsltnds
109--Pack away
J 12- Afrlltaant
113-Dtpretslon

57-Ptriod of

19-Aeademlc

96-A «:ontlnent

45-Mistakas
46-Looktd ••

11-&amp;aasts of
burdtn

64-food PI"'inm , 128-R•ply In kind

94-Threa-totd sloth

31-Grttnltnd
.(1-Proposltloni

Phone 446·060S or 446-0842
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

harmony

157- lctlandlc
wrltlnl•

115-Bont

p1rtlu

person

Upper Rl. 7

90-Brinllnto

43-Winter vthlclt

156--Aumored

9-Tanned hide
10--Nolsome

llf-Dines

fOXII

.

WE NEED USED CARS

89-Elcl•mttlo~

140-lmltated

OVER

OUR COSTI

DONT MISS THIS SALE!

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1971

78-Sirikts
80-FHIIRI
11- Duteh town
12-lndlcatlnc

'895 •600
•895 '600
•695
'895
'595

$1295

USED FURNITURE
1971 MODEL zig zag sewing 16
cu.
11 . frost clear
machine. buttonholes, fashion
refrigerator, like new, utillly
deslans, etc. Balance due
cabinet. bolh avocado ; break$26.10. Ph. 675-1589 .
fast set, 12x12 rug &amp; pad,
197-tf
rollaway bed, bedroom suite,
-::-:-:--=c':'=-::------::--wringer
washer, coli springs
BY OWNER - 1968 Cutlass S,
full size .
and
maftress,
J50cu . in . engine, auto., eKcel.
NEW
FURNITURE
cond. Ph . 446-2228 .
212-6 INNERSPRING mattresses
starting at $28.95 . Gel the rest
you deserve, select your
BUSINESS for sale, The
mattress
and box springs
Grande Cafe. Ph. 446-9520 or
now. Free parking. Open
446-3228.
Fridays 11118. 9SS Second Ave .
212-6
7),
'lt,·'*Ph . 446-1171 .
206-lf
.... ,IHII.
SINGER Sewing Machine Sales
0,.:
.....
-..f'lt.l .. l; lllti.N
&amp; Service. All models In
.
.
,lt,,PIIti,~M&amp;.f'rt.U.IIItl.•u
stock. Free delivery. Service
guaranteed. Models priced 24 ACRES on Brick Road 2
miles from Addison . Several
from $69 .95 . French Ci ty
excellent
Fabric Shoppe, Singer ap- 367-7598 . building lots. Ph .
proved dealer, 58 Court St.
204 -ff
Ph. 446-9255.
8 ROLLS of new barbed wire, IF YOU are building a new LOW, low prices on Bemco and
308-11
two 825 : 14 mounted snow
Serta mattresses and box
home or remodeling, see us .
SUNRAY, dou)lle oven gas
tires, round oak table, fuel oil
springs . Corbin &amp; Snyder
We
are
builders
.
Distributor
10 X 50 HOUSETRAILER
range, white, almost new,
stove, misc. Items. Ph. 256Furn ., 955 Second Ave . Ph.
for Holpoinl Appliances,
· bedroom, call 379-2506 after 4
$300. Call 367-7158.
6588.
446-1171.
Electric.
Allison
p.m .
195-11 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___:_
212-3
3-lf
154-lf
211 ·6

1-Folllf rnln

IS

$1988

WE specialize In portrait and
commercial photography,
church weddings, reunions,
etc. Tawney Studio.
88-11

15-Pttlta
77-Narratt

$239
$1995

$2288
69 Ford Country Sed., sta. wgn., automatic, radio, rack. $1995

GOOD CLEAN LUMP and
stoker coal. Carl Winters •. Rio ·
Grande. Phone 245-5115.
8-lf

SOMMER'S G.M.C.
TRUCKS, INC.
133 Pine St.
Ph, 446-25J2

$2788

Sharp,

$3495

Air cond., one owner, marlin blue. black vinyl top.
Sharp.

I
I

New GMC
·Truck HeadquarteJS

WE JUMPED
THE GUN!

1968 CHEV. CAPRICE

INC.

7),"4\ tlllt,'*t
,._(IH)I.IIII
~: ..... - ..f'lt.l .. I; IIII.U
.. olee,PIItl601b-•.f'rLU.IIII••U

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

29-Greek letter

IN
BARTI.ElT, OHIO

For Sale

r-----------------------,
1 GALUPO~IS TRACTOR 1

ACROSS

Farms,
Vacant Land
48 A . most tractor, cheap.
150 A. Farmer's farm . $16.000.
50 A. 25 Is bottom . S7 .500.
11 A. edge of lawn . $10.000.
25 A. St. Rt . 325. $7,500.

Wt: ~Ul LU, remoaet , repair,
c~stom buill kitchens , Install
bathrooms. 446-4764.
140-78

Camping Equipment

RUSSELL'S
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
7 MI. from new Gavin Plant ; 6
nice rms .• bath and base., 3 SEPTIC lank cleaning , electric
rms. and bath paneled, H. W.
sewer cleaning, d i tching .
Gal!ipolis, Ohio. Ph . 446-4782 .
lloors , copper plumbi ng,
plenty good soft water from _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
193-lf
dr. well. Located on 1.21 A .
lol. This house is 12yr. old and Brammer Plumbing &amp; Heating
in 9ood repair . See today.
300 Fourth Ave .•
Price 518,500.
Phone 446-1637 '
Gene Plants, Owner
Thurman
298-lf
GOOD 5 rm. home located on o;,
A. lot . House has had 1rea1DEWITT' S PLUMBING
ment for termites . It has a
ANO HEATING
garage and can be bought tor
Route 160 at Evergreen
$8,000 .
Phone 446-2735
281-lf
Dairy Farm
IDEAL set-up. 122 A .. lerlile
land. all llallo gentle roll, all
tillable except 5 A. in saw
timber. This land has been
improved over a generation of
good farming pract ices. II has
good fences, plenty water,
1,623 lb. lob. base ., 7 rm .
modern home. 5 barns ; block
and metal dairy barn 36' x 96',
31 metal stanchions, water
cups, milkers and 320 gal.
bulk lank. All bldgs. In good
repair and have metal roofs
tess than 10 years old. Owner
gr0ws roughage for 80 head
livestock and sells hay. This Is
an amazing opportunity for
anyone interested in farming .
Pnce S40.000.

Scha~:::g~.~-15l0j 88_ 11

WANT TO TRADE UP? Two WATER well drilling, Myers
luxury homes owners will
pumps Sales and Service.
trade for cheaper properties
Complete water line service
or farms . Both located wllin
and trenching . C. J. Lemley,
VInton , Ohio. Ph . 388-8543.
one mile of city limits. City
water, schools, good streets.
114-11

SIX room . two story home, 11/z LIST WITH US - If you want
bath , large storage room,
action on your properly, list
deep lot with detached
with Oscar and Doug.
garage. Now vacant.
Oscar Baird, 446-4632
Doub
Wetherholt, 446-4244
Opportunity Knocks

FOR SALE by owner, 2 story
br ick at 452 First Ave. 7
_ .
18 A. WITH 3 houses ; 1 brick, 1
rooms, 2 baths. gas hot air
BUSINESS
block , and 1 tile block. Only
furnace ,
p res en 1
OPPORTUNITY
$22,500.
arrangement 2 apartments. EVERYTHING you need 10 go
ANY HR. 446-1998
Ea sily co nverted to one
onto the feed business. In I;VE.: J. Fuller 446-3246
eludes building~. equipment ,
fa mily dwelling . Asking
S35,000
shown
by
ap a5
h
pointmenl. Ph . 446-0208.
room ouse and Inventory
199-11
Call today for details.
.
PRIME LOCATION

_________:::=

BAIRD REALTY CO.
Oscar Baird, Realtor

Down Town

10 ACRES at Cheshire, good
frontage. Ideal for any kind of
business.

212-lf

TV Antenna Sales lnslallatlon
- Service. Estimates. Ph .
446-1673. or 446-9679.
63-tf

35 ACRE FARM - Four miles
from Rio Grande, good house,
lots of outbuildings, priced
PEACE. Separate enlrances, 6
well below $20,000.
rooms &amp; balh--4 rooms &amp;
bath . Large lot with plenty 4 ACRES, GOOD HOUSE parking space, located on lsi
Less than 10 miles out. county
Ave., overlooking the Ohio
water , three BR. full bath,
River . Price 514,900.
buill -in kitchen, garage, level
land.

St. Rt. 554
(Enol

HERE 'S A HOME THAT
WILL SUIT YOU IF YOU
WANT ELBOW ROOM ,
COUNTRY
QUIETNESS
AND HANDY TO TOWN . 2
BEDROOMS,
SMALL
KITCHEN AND DINING
AREA .' 3,1.1 OF ACRE, 3
MILE s OUT .

New Listing,
Clean As A Pen
Ready for Occupancy

home
home
home
home

Dillon
Agency

•

CITY ,,. Builders

""T"'-t:""'R"'
M""
-1T"'E::-:::
PE
"'S""T""c"'
o;:-::NT"'R""OL
FREE inspection . Call446·3245,
Merrill O'Dell, DP.erator for
Exterminal Term1te Serv ice,
19 Belmont 'Dr.
267-lf

Two Family
Harmony

15 Acres Garden
Of Eden

Here Are2
Fantastic Buys

HOUSES
1- 2 bedroom
1-2 bedroom
1-3 bedroom
1- 4 bedroom

For Sale

Services Offered

q

1971 KIRKWOOD mobile home
complete, same as new . Ph.
576-2210 Glenwood, W. Va .
214-3

----=------

WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTOR WANTED
To sell to company, established. all cash accounts in th is
area. This is no! a coin operated vending route . Our
producl is sold in locations such as ollices, employee
lounges in retail stores, financial institutions. small
manufacturing plants, warehouses. schools and hospita_ls.
The dislributor we select will be responsible for maon telnlng lhese locations and reslockong inventory . All
locations are established by our com~nx. a 10 year old
company. We need a dependable dtslrobuJor, male or
female. in this area with $1.595 m inimum to invest in
equipment and inventory. which will turn over about two
times monthly. Earnings can grow to 525.000annually and
up. We will consider part-lime appl icants. Write lor
complete Information, including phone number and Area
Code. All Inquiries striclly confidential .
CONSOLIDATED CHEMICAL CORPORATION
. F.-.eze Dried Products Division
3115 Montrose Blvd., Suite 2t5
Houston, Texas 77006

Old people can stand more comfort than young people
can.

Month r;;_n .

- - -- - -

DUPLEX apartment, upstairs 1968 VW wit h sunr oof, R&amp;H,
good cond . Ph . 446-1615or 446furn . , d ow nstairs unfurn .,
1243.
water included. Must have
213·11
references . Henderson, W.
Va . Ph . 675-3886.
' 68 PLYMOUTH, 2 dr . hardtop,
_::214-3
sport coupe, 4 new ti res,
exce llent condition, 446-4018.
VINDALE mobile home . 2
211 -6
bedroom. auto. washer, air
conditioned, across from
Holzer Hospital by Shell
Station, Sl50 mo. Ph . 446-0175 .
213-3 NEW 3 bedroom home in Plantz
Subdiv., good location, in city
school district . Will be
TRAILER, 2 bedroom, utilities
finished soon. Ph. Delbert
furnished , everything tur Clark, 446-0390.
nished but linen in Henderson.
208-lf
Ph. 446-1330.
212-3
FARM lor sale . Price reduced.
50 acres 7 miles N. on Rl. 2,
TRAILER Spaces with walks
Pt . Pleasant , city water . Ph .
and patios , water furn .
675-2045
after 5 p. m .
Henderson Trailer Court, end
210-5
of Si lver Memorial Bridge.
Ph . 675-3886.
212-3

SLEEPING ROOMS, weekly
rates. Park Central Hotel.
306-11

$117

--------

For Rent

SLEEPING ROOMS week l y
rates, free garage parking,
Libby Hotel.
74-11

Is our mind geHing broader, or is our conscience stret.
ching?

IIW II NO MONEY .DOWN

FROM wa ll to wall, no soil at
all , on carpets cleaned with
Blue Lus tre . Rent electric
shampooer $1. Lower G. C.
Murphy Store.
214-6

213-3

1~6 - 11

......... 1.. 11

- - - -- - - -

210-5 1964 CHEV . Im pal a. 327 stan- - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - dard . Ph . 446-1461.

LOOKING fora real nice room?
Lowe M otor Hote l , Pl.
Pleasant, Ma in and 4th in vites your inspection. Singles,
$4.50. S5. 56. $7, $8, $9, $2 lor
extra person . Special weekly
rates . F pkg ., TV. Ind. air
cond ., self serv. elev. Ph . 6752260.

.REAl.TOR.
_
0.
446 1 66

SMALL Davis ditching machine
$400. 1971 Datsun coupe, 1
owner Sl ,400. Ph. 446-4335.
214-3

------

- - - -- Business Opportunities

'•

--------

- - - - - -- - -

____

.
wo
·
·
o
"
D
'
'
.
.
USSE.LL
-

1970 VW stalion wagon, good
cond ., $1.700. Ph. 446 -42~7.
214'3

- ---,-------

&lt;1028.

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

ANTIQUE marble lop dresser
in excellent condition was
$299.95 now $19'1.95, living
room suite less than 1 yr . old,
TV. 2 dinette sels, 2 rockers,
dresser, roll -away bed wilh
LAD! ES Santa needs helpers
mattress, twin mattress and
S3.73 an hour. 7 to 10 p.m ., no
spring, 2 beds, hassinet. 2
experience necessary. For
lawn mowers, auto. gas dryer
Holiday money call Mrs .
$29.95. Rice's New &amp; Used
Claus, Jachon 988-2705.
Furn ., 854 Second (across
175-11
from Tex aco Stat ion ). 4469523.
YOU' RE IN demand! Even if
213-11
you've never sold anything - -- - -- - before, you can become a PONY with saddle and bridle, 2
successful representative of
calves, Monogram fuel oil
the world's largest cosmeti c
stove complete with equipcompany. Call now and let
ment. Ph. 388 -8631.
Avon tell you how easily you
213 -3
can turn hours into extra fun
·and exira prolils . Call or '66 CHEV . Belair 4 dr ., auto .,
wrlle Mrs. Helen Yeager , Box
mo. Ph . 446-0782 .
1n. Jackson. Ohio. Ph. 286213-3

excluded. Open 6: 30a .m . to 6
p .m . Monday through Friday.
Fees: 520 for full five-day
week. S5 per day if less than
five days. S3 per day for
morn1ng sessions. Ph. 446. FURNISHED apartment, 3
3657 . Madge
Hauldren
r ooms and bath, upstairs,
Owner-Director ; John and
adulls on l y 446-0322 after 5
Loredilh
Hauldren ,
p .m .
operators.
211 -tf
JS~ tf

.: -----------------::

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

OC:81n

116-Ctl&amp;l
J 18-Henenly body
120-Ttrdy
121-RemuneraUd

Custom 400 · 4 dr. hardtop. radio &amp; heater
auto._ transmission, p. steering, p. brakes:
~erd! green metallic finish with matching
tnten or . Black vinyl roof, W· S·w tires in ex·
cellent cond.

122-Mend•
123-Ptrtalnlnl to

•2395

an era ·
125-Ptrtllnlnl' to
animal fat
126-~ade

Ieee

12 7-Pttltioned
129-W•Iktd on

131-Sitndere,
132-PI•tut
133-HurHed
· 134-Jury list
136-Smooth

J
}

138-Europttn
UO-Wu IOd
141-Wslkln&amp; stick
1-42-Jump

1&lt;44-Eplc poem
147- Mountaln on
Crttt
148-Tht heart
149-Muslc: 11
.. writltn
151-lllumlntted

153-Ekelllmatlon
J iS-Printer's

musun

·I

WOOD MOTOR SALES
EASTERN AVE.

For Sale

GALLI POLIS, 0.

For Sale

USED
Mobile
Home 17 FT. Fiberglas.s boat, 75 HP
motor, lr-iler and ski
Headquarters. All size mobile
equipment, SUI. Also 16 p .
homes in stock .. B 11. S Mobile
a.ulo. shotgun, $75. Ph. .._
Home .Sales, Second &amp; Viand,
2885.
Pt. Pleasant, next to Heck's.

Solution On Page 24 """"'~111.-.L-J...:.....I..-.L....J _ _ _ _ _ _ _6_7-11

21U

�.

2t- Tlr llimUy'l'lmes ; Sentinel, Somay' Sept. l%, 1971

{

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23- TheSundayTimes-Sentinei,Sunday,Sept. i2, 1971

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
'

Notice

Notice

'

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

"•

Notice

Notice

,.. TRYING 1o locale , first name P LAY E R P IANO. recon - GUNSHOOT, Su nday. Sep ·
ditioned inside and out
l~mber 12, 1 p. m . Rac ine Gun
l.Wiknown, last name, I,Aorri s.
2nd ll., H Co., 10911&gt; Infantry. $275. tuning incl uded.- Phone
Club.
9-9-31c
2111t Keystone Div. Contact
992-5509.
9-9-3tc
Warren Lynd. 1717 7th St.,
ANNUAL Eblin Reunion will be
Portsmaulh. Cflio ..s66?c
held on Sunday, September
9-12-3tc
19th, at lhe west side stale
GUN SAL E. Sunday. Sep·
park on Rt. 33. All descenI Will not be responsible lor
!ember 12. W. R. Manley , 1
dants
of Allen and Mary •Ann
*bts con tracted by anyOne
~
mile east of Tuppers Plains on
Eblin. friends and relatives
ather than myself. Signed :
68 1.
a re welcome . Dinner at 12: 30 .
Marion R. Hawk.
9-9-31p
9-12-61c
~
9-12-31p

r

...

..t

-...

MIDDLEPORT

CAB CO.
BACK IN BUSINESS
24 Hr. Service, Same Prices
As Always.

992-7338
DRIVERS: Eli &amp; James

~

TRAP AND still shoot Sunday,
September 12. 1 p.m., Rutland
Gun Club on New lima Road.

f...

ATTENTION
PRODUCTION CREDIT
ASSOCIATION MEMBERS
Plan to attend the P.C.A.
annual meeting at C!lnfer's
Cave , Jackson. Ohio, September 12, 1971. Support Joe
Bailey, Candidate for Board
of Directors. A free chicken
·dinner will be served be·
tween 12 noon and 1:30 p.m.
.Jlring your family and come
along.

c:

-§

....
:....E

..---..

SAVE UP to ooe half. Bring
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.
'·
Pomeroy.
4-23-tfc

-.
--..
-...
-.......
..
-.....
-....
-t

•

KOSCOT Kosmelics. September
Sales
Special :
Kreamy Lip Kote $2 now
$1.50, Frosllucent lip Kote
$2.50 now $2, 23 delicious
colors. Call 992-5113 or come
1
see at 161112 "'
h Ave .,
Middleport, Or.
8-29-lfc

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In Memory

...--

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WANT AD
Wanted
IN FORMATION
WOMAN needs someOne to slay
DEADliNES
5 days a week, some nights.
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
· Phone 992-SSU,
· 9-12-6tc
Ca~~ellatlon ~Corrections .
Will be a.c cepled until9a .m. for ---,---;- - - - - Day of Publication
·
He.lp Wanted
REGUlATIONS
.
The Publisher reserves the WOMAN to live in, light
right to edit or reject any ads
housework, cooking with a
deemed objectional. The
day off a week - · $35 per
publishe r will not be respbnsible
week . Phone 992-3507.
for more than one incorrec1 1
9-10·3fc
insertion .
WAITRESSES , prefer ex RATES
perienced, weekends only .
For Want Ad Service
Phone 985-3832.
5 cents per Word one insertion .
9-9-31p
Minimum Charge75c
,
12 oenls per word three.
consec '1tive insertions.
; EARN AT home addressing
18 cents per word six con envelopes. Rush stamped
secutive insertions.
self-addressed envelope. The
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
Ambrose Co., 4325 Lakeborn ,
ad s and ads paid within 10 days .
Davisburg , Mich .. 48019.
CARD OF THANKS
9-8-301p
&amp;OBITUARY
$1.50 fOr SO word minimum .
For Sale
Each additional word 2c.
BliND ADS
.
HALF RUNNER beans, $2
Additional 25c Charge per
bushel , watermelons, can Advertisement.
taloupes,
sweet
corn,
OFFICE HOURS
potatoes, Clarence Proffitt,
8:30 a .m . to 5:00 p.m. Daily.
Portland. Phone 843·2254.
8: 30 a . m . to 12 : 00 Noon
9-t-llc
Saturday .
H &amp; N DAY OLD or started
Male Help Wanted
Legttorn pullets. Both floor or
cage
grown available.
NEED MONEY? Sell Knapp
Poultry
housing
and
Shoes .. . Part lime or full
automation . Modern Poultry.
time. No investment. Send for
399 W. Main, Pomeroy. 992·
free selling kit. High com 2164.
mission plus bonus. Write to
9- 12-lfc
E. M. Bislow. Knapp Shoes,
Bro ckton, Massachusetts
1954 DODGE truck. 2 ton $400,
02401.
1962 Chrysler 300 - $200. Will
- - - -- - - : - -9:-,·:-:12-llc
trade for pickup. phone 949·
3915.
INCREASE YOUR INCOME :
9-12-61c
Add $15 to S25 commission
earnings e\'ery week by
OLDSMOBILE
Vista
showing Hanover shoes to '66
Cruiser
Wagon
$650,
'64
friends , neighbors , and
Buick Wlldcal-$450, 3 men's
associates. 196 styles for men
rings - 1 diamond, 1 black
and women. Work spare time
lindie sapphire, I blue sap.
or lull time. Write for free
phire, near Coopers' store,
sales kit. Hanover Shoe, Dept.
Rt. 124, Portland. Phone 843SOH. Hanover, Pa . 17331.
2608
.
9-12-ilp
9-12-3tc
----.-:-::--:-'--

Card of "Thanks

'

1971 MODEL

·RAWLINGS

MOBILE HOMES

Auto . transmission. P.S., lt. blue with matching Inferior.

69 OOBRA

4·Speed - red With black inferior .

68 PONTIAC TEMPEST V8

A~to. transmission, P.S., dark green, black vinyl top .

70 DODGE CORONET

LO US SAVE

318 Engine, V.s, P.S., red with black vinyl top.

••
~

k

V-8, auto transmission, P.S., gold with black vinyl top.

68 DODGE RT. V8

$1500

Auto. "transmission, P.S., blue and blue Interior.

68 DODGE RT CONVERTIBLE

KING - BELMONT

Loaded with all the hot rod goodies.

VAN DYKE - LIBERTY

FORD Tractor and low boy
IN MEMORY of Ocran Dailey WE WISH to express our thanks.
trailer. John Deere B, with
who passed away one year
No. 5 mower. Harold Brewer,
to Dr. Berkich, Dr. Brady.
ago, September 11 , 1970. God
Long Bottom, 985-3554.
nurses and nurses aides of
gave him a dream , of that
9-12-llp
Holzer Medical Center, Rev .
bright home above, a dream
Underwood, Rev . Moyer, :c
7
A::
Ib-a--;Y
:;o:-:s 1,- M;-;;:In::ers ·
that he told me, with a heart
Mrs. Chester Erwin, organist, H-::Ec:Nc:S:--:lot. Ph. 992-7004
If No Answer. 992-3422
tOll of love. God showed him a
ville.
Phone
949-~980
.
Loyal ·Men, Loyal Women' s
Dally
12to9.
Sunday1
lo6
mountain and a land sweet
9-12-31p
Classes of lhe Middleport
OPPOSITE GOBlE'S USED CAR LOT
and fair . Then he said,
Church of Christ, the
"Come, dear Ocran, and live
AUCTION
American Legion Post 128,
with me there." Oh. I miss
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Rawlings -Coats
Funeral SA TU R 0,' .,. , Sept. 18th, S p.m. I
him so dearly, no one can tell,
am
movmg
in
a
Trailer
Home
Home, neighbors and friends
and some day my loved one.
therefore wilt sell the
who helped in any way. Your
with him I will dwell . Sadly
following at the 2nd house
kindness will never be
missed by hi s wile and
east
of Syracuse school on For Sale
forgollen . Leo D. Childs
children.
College Rd . in Syracuse, Ohio. NO. 10 pull type, New Idea corn
family .
picker, good condillon. Phone
9-12· lip
Watch for sale signs. Detroit
9-12· lip
m-6214.
Jewel Gas Range, 30 in .
7-18-ffc
9-5-61c
Trailer
Gas
Range ,
-----Frigidaire
Refrigerator,
WIN AT BRIDGE
Dining Room Table and 3 CANNING tomatoes, already 3 BEDROOM home, wllh bath,
112 acre lol. On new public
picked, $1.25 bu., bring
chairs , Treadle sewing
wafer
system , located just off
containers.
Geraldine
machine (Singer), Electric
Rl. 7 on County Rd . 25 at
Cleland , East Main, Racine .
sewing machine, 2 pc. Living
ns.lfr Chesler, Ohio. II interested
room suite, Zenith T.V., Metal
call 985·4262.
saw no reason to waste a bed complete, Wood chif·
NORTH
II
9-5-12tc
trump when his partner hel&lt;j forobe . Chest of drawers, I -MOBILE trailer 7' x20' , I
• QJ98
the high heart but he saw Mirror. Gossip bench, Stands,
mobile trailer 8'x24', I . 30 cs .
• 10 9 6 3
the reason when Mrs. Mar- Coffee table, floor la~p, 2
dry bottle cooler with com - 3 BE-DROOM brick home.
• 85 4
Choice location In Middleport.
·
f Rugs 1x12 and SxiO, DIShes
pressor, 1-22 cs. dry bottle
row . dtscarded her three o
and Cooking utensils and
Seen
by appointment only .
"-AK
cooler with compressor. 3 ·
d1amonds
on
the,lO
of
~earts
•.
other
·art
icles·
not
listed
•
Phone
992-5523 alit&lt; 4 p.m .
WEST
EAST
lots 30' x90' each on Ohio
5-7-tfc
and
let
West
win
the
trick
Myron
Bess,
Owner.
Terms.
River, 1 . Commercial dish·
.3
.752
with his jack.
Cash. Not responsible for
.AKQJH
washer, I : Soda fountain 1:0NVENIENT but secluded
" This wa s the third and accidents. Bradford Auct1on
tKI07
tJ96 2
diSpenser
w1!h compre~sor, I·
building lots on 179 at Rock
last tric k for the defense Co. A. C. Bradford, Ma_nager .
.-,Q72 ·
"'JI0 6 54
sewmg
mach!ne,
1·
Springs . Within walking
treadle
C. C. Bradford, _Auchoneer .
commerCial ch1_cken
distance of Meigs High
SOUTH (D)
(9) 12. 16, 21c
broaster, 2-gas
kif chen
School . a 5 minute drive from
America's top experts explain their - - - - - - - - - • AK 1064
ranges, used lumber 2x6 · 2x4
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
.52 .
tournoment-winr..,g techniques ;, o NEW
DELUXE
sewing
etc.
3
fl.
candy
case,
_old
beer
Wille
weekends or after s.
new 728-page book on J A C 0 8 Y
tAQ3
machine, Zig - Zag , heavy
&amp; pop bottles, Mason tars, etc.
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992.98 3
MODERN. For your copy sent $1
duly, buill-in motor and light,
Call 992-5786.
9-5-61
6887.
with your name, oddreu onrl zip
does everything . Only $64.88.
Both vulnerabl e
7-11 -lfc
Twin City Sewing Machine.
code to : "Win al Bridge," (c/o this
West North Ea.t South
Phone m -7085 .
now•poperJ, P.O. Bo• 489, Radio City
9-I0-6tc
Station, New York, N.Y. 10019.
2•
3•
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
PORTABLE Singer sewing
Opening lead- • K
·
W t h d t 1 d "th
machine, will sell for repair
s mce es a O ea et er
bill. $19.22. Twin City Sewing
a heart or a diamond. The Machine. Phone 992-7085.
9-10-6tc
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby heart lead would allow a ruff
1
1
•
•
in dummy and a diamond - - - - -- - - - Today' s hand was sent us discard. A diamond I e ad
ACRE LOT wi th 110'
by our old friend J. Edward wou!d be _,up to , Mrs. Mar- 2112
fr ontage on Sta te Route 124
Broker
"
Morrow of Joplin , Mo. Jed, a rows a ce ~ueen ..
.
near High School just outside
110 Mechanic Street
reporter for the Dallas News
We always en)oy heann_g Rac ine corporation . All
Pomeroy, Ohio
in the '30s, used to write a from our old fnend . It ts utilities available. See Dale
1220 Washington Blvd ..
weekly bridge column as a particularly n i c e to know McGraw or phone 949-2832.
Belpre, Ohio
NEW LISTING- Kanauga - 3
9-10-3tc . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
side line. Long retired, he that JACOBY MODERN is
bedrooms. bath, gas forced
still likes to write an occa- a system for all ages .
air furnace . Modern kitchen,
Full basement .
sional article for us and the
POODLE puppies. Silver Toy , 327- 350 h.p., parts less cam
(NEWSPAPER. ENTERPRISE ASSN. )
and crankshaft. Will sell all or
rest of this article will be
Park view Kennels. Phone 992·
part. Phone 949-2571.
NEW liSTING - Dexter - 6
5443.
a direct quote from him .
9-5-61c
rooms. bath. gas furnace .
8-15-tfc
" Mrs. Morrow and I play
Business building, 30x44.
The bidding has been:
FARM and home latex house
a sort of JACOBY MODERN.
South ONE
A . K.C.
registered
paint sale. King Builders POMEROY- Nice 3 bedrooms.
My jump to three spades West
North
East
min iature dachshund , $50.
Supply, Middleport.
l'h baths, large living and
1•
was a limit raise and Mrs .
•
Ph
one
992
-5473
.
9-2-241c
dining, Double garage.
3
Pass
1•
Pass
Morrow decided she had
9-9-61c
Pass
3
•
Pass
enough for a continuation to
2 ACRES -On Rl. 33 North.
Pass
4 N.T.
Pass 5t
game.
Real
Estate
For
Sale
?
NYLON Ova l braided rug ,
Pass
5 N.T. . Pass
" She ruffed the third heart
approximately 12 ' x 15' - $50. NEW, 3-bedroom home in CHESHIRE - Fast lunch lot .
You, South, hold :
lead; took one high trump
Phone 949·2739.
Middleport. Built-In kitchen , POMEROY Renovated 3
and dummy' s ace and king .AK87 .KQ94 t6.KQ75
9·10-3tc
ceramic tile bath, all-electric
bedrooms.
bath,
furnace, nice
What do you do now?
-------.,---of clubs . Then she returned
heat , good neighborhood. Can
kitchen.
.
WHIRLPOOL
washer
and
to her hand with a second
arrange FHA financing .
A-B1d seven ~pades. Y~ur dryer , like new . Phone 992Telephone 992-3600 or 992- MINERSVILLE - Good 3
trump in order to ruff her two qu~ns and smg!eton d1a2ss5 or 992·7296.
2186.
l a s t club. If trumps had mond Insurance agBJnst most
9-10-6tc
bedrooms , bath, furnace.
7-2S·Ifc
Garage.
broken she would have been any loser outside the trump .,-.,--.,--: ---::--:::set for a sure elimination suit.
COAL , limestone . Excelsior.
play.
&lt;alf Works, E. Main St.,, 'SIX ROOM house , bath, full 30 ACRES- on Rl. 143 North.
TODAY'S QUESTION
1 ba sement. 133 Bullernul Ave, •. SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY
,'omeroy. Phone 992-3891.
" As it was she left East
W"at do you open with :
just walking distance from
A.9.tfc
HELEN l. TEAFORD,
with one t r u m p and led .AK8 .7 .K2 tAK5 .-,K832
downtown Pomeroy . Contact·
ASSOCIATE
dummy's 10 of hearts . East
=d Hedrick, 2137 Wadswo.lfl
992-3325
APPLES Fitzpatrick Or- .
urive, Columbus, Ohio, phone1 ~
9-12-6tc
chards, Stale Route 689 ,
237
-4334,
Columbus.
--5.9-lf
lk.i lct"Mf&amp;I.J ..-l , _ phone Wilkesville, 669-378S.
· 9-3-lfc

•

12: - 14

24 WIDE .

TEAFORD

MILLER
.

SR.

MOBIL£,HOMES

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•

•
••
•

•,.

No t race of t he criminal could

be found at t he. Museum -

•

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,a~-·.'~

~ :~­

/'
_;-~

...

' "'/~
.

I

'

~W/MlJJI!J];-

Unocramble these four JumMes,
one letter to each oquare, to
form four ordinary words.

Whor o pretty bonnet!

l

l (.'IIOAV

CLEAN RUGS like new, so easy
to do with Blue Lustre. Rent
e lectric shampooer, $1 . Baker
Furniture Company.
9·8-61c

I I J [J
I

_

-

~
,:1

I "::;..~

GREEN BEANS, pick your
own, Si.SO a bushel, Andrew
Cross, Racine, Ohio.
9-3-lBic
HALF ARABIAN mare colt, 6·
months, halter broke, very
gentle. Not registered, $175.
Coolville 667 -6214.
9-8-12tp

I'J 1/Utr\ '?)1 I {J
~."i" /,"'1/7 .~li""":'U_)-+~
I I I
t. I
1 1---,

jYOUR

WALNUT, MODERN STYLE,
AM-FM
STEREO-RADIO,
radio, 4 speaker sound
system, ~ speed automatic
changer, separate controls.
l'iow arrance the clrcl lettera
Balance $67.89. Use our
:budget terms. Call 992-7085.
to form the surprise ana er, u
9-5-6tc
sunested by the abovec ~n.

"(I I X I J [I I IT'

,.\ mn•rr': lt "M lmnwrmM u·iflt

.,u thr

1·un·f!IM;,

. . ...

MAPLE, Early American style.
stereo-radio comblnalion,
AM-.fM- radio, -~ speaker sound system , 4 speed
automatic changer. Balance
$78.57. Use our budget term&lt;.
Call m-7085 .
,9-5-61c
'

'

PUBliC SALE
Sept. 18, 12 p.m., 1971 on Route 124 above intersecllon of
248, next to Christian Church in Long Bottom, Ohio.
Having sold my farm and moving to new home will sell the
following at public auction :
Air compressor, good endless belt, tractor grass seed
sower, motor grinder, garden plow, shallow well pump,
cultivators for Gravely, pipe vise, bumper jack, bench
vise, handsaws, pipe wrenches, pump jack, h.p. electric
motor, like new; W' drill, stepladder, fence stretchers.
rope blocks. steel drums, window fan, approx. 250 bales of
'!lixed hay and 50 bates mixed ·hay~ straw. icxil "bo•es.
grease gu~s . c~alnblnder, odd lot of paint, steel horses,
log chains, log wedges, log grabs.
Old leather couch, rocking chair, school chairs, old
wooden beds, mantel clock, old silverware, dishes, ·
wooden bowl, apple peeler, 10 gal. milk can, bee smoker,
fans, dog Irons for flreplac~ . Many other Items too ..
numerous to mention .

'I•

-:-:-:-:::-::--::-:-:---

rlwir 1',.'1"'' ,mf,.,·- FACETIOUS

•

69 SUZUKI

4 PICKUP TRUCKS

(

Not responsible for accidents.
_·_.Harold Brewer, Auctioneer-,915-3554
Harold German, Owner.
-CUP THIS AD-"

NEW 71 CHEVY KINGSWOOO WAGON, Color sea aqua,
tinted gla ss, floor mats. door ed. guards, 4 season air, 255
H. P. 4 cu. in. eng ine, wh . covers, Comfortilt st. wheel . w-w
tires, E. c,lock, P.B., radio, turbo hydromatic , ~wer
steering &amp; brakes, luggage carrier . Retail $5041
SAVINGS PRICE 54441.

71 PONTIAC Catalina Brougham 4 dr . hard-

top, factory air conditioning, tilt steering
wheel , vinyl.top. Demo of less than 3,000 miles.
NEW 11 BUICK leSabre Cust~ 4 dr . sedan,
factory a ir conditioned, white with black vinyl
top. Fully equipped.

NEW71 CHEVY ST. WAGON, Concours Estate, color red,
*luxe bells, tinted glass , power tailgate, floor mats, rear
air deflector . ~ season a ir conditioning , turbo hydromatlc,
307 V-8 engine, luggage carrier. power steering, G/8-2-w
tires, wh. covers. P. B.• radio, frt. &amp; rear guards. Retail
$4684.45 . SAVINGS PRICE $4249.

NEW 71 BUICK Skylark, 2 dr . hardtop. fac·
tory air conditioned. Medium blue with white
vinyl top.

NEW 71 CHEVY VEGA WAGON , 90 H.P. engine,
automatic trans .. body side mldg ., A78 whitewall .tires,
P. B.. radio, choice of color, sandalwood or bright green .
SAVINGS PRICE $2640.

NEW 71 PONTIAC Catalina 4 dr., factory air
conditioned. Beautiful metallic green.
NEW 71 PONTIAC Catalina, 4 dr .• all white
with smart green cloth trim . Well equipped.

'71 CAMAROS

'

NEW 71 FIREBIRD Sprint Pontiac 2 dr,
hardtop. America's smartest sports car.

11 CAMARO HT CPE. 307 V-8, color black, custom sport
equip., sports mirror, lilt steering wheel, deluxe bells,
floor mats, P. B., radio, Rally wheels, accent group, style
trim group. power steering, turbo hydromatlc, console,
F70 w-w tires . Retail SJ904.75 ·SAVINGS PRICE $3248 •

70 GMC ~ TON Pickup 4 wheel drive.
69 VOLKSWAGEN 2 dr . sedan. Extra nice.
68 PONTIAC Executive 4 dr. sedan. factory
air conditioned, low mileage, one owner car by
local school teacher .

11 CAMARO H.T, CPE. Color lime green, 307 v:a, Turbc
Hydromatic, power steering, E78-w.w tires. wh . covers.
radio, style trim undersea!. Retail 53606.50 · SAVINGS
PRICE $3210.

MAKE US AN OFFER

OUR CLEARANCE
/SON

69 Dodge Super "Bee" 2 dr. hardtop.
67 Chev. V-8 Impala 2 dr. hardtop. like new
finish.
66 Plymouth Super Sport 2 dr. hardtop.
66 Rambler Classic, 6 cyl. 4 dr sta . wagon.
64 Ford V-8 Conv. Coupe.
64 Ford V-8 2 dr. hardtop.
61 Olds "88" 2 dr, hardtop.

SALES-SERVICE

New '71 Chevrolets
ere's a nme ro.lux
a Time To Savel
.Now-Do
!·

KARR &amp;" VAN ZANOT
MANY MORE

PRICES WILL NEVEl II LOWiftl

ON GOOD USED CARS &amp;-TRUCKS

See Ceward Calvert or Fred Blaettn ·

WE CREATE VALUES

Stop in and see Ray Riggs tor a
real deal at their new lot at
Chester.
.n

.••. ~,..c.., .. ,.1,v,!-i

"'"'""""'~

~---IDEMONSTRATOR----

1911 CADILLAC SEDAN DE VILLE

-SPECIAL

GAen wilh green .i~lerlor and green vinyl top, full
power equipment, AM-FM radio, T&amp; T steerin~ wheel ,
power door locks, Climate Control air cond1l1onmg,
approx . 2,000 miles. Mr. Karr' s demo.

"' - ·.;-

-·.

· '69 Ford Falcon ~-----· '1395
2 Dr .. stand. trans ., low mileage.

'69 Pl. Roadrunner .............;..... $1795
,, .

Priced New At 58,071.25
NOW AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICE

.•·

2 Dr ., 4 speed, radio.

'68 Plymouth Fury 111 ....... :........ '1395

KARR &amp; VAN ·ZANDT

Auto. trans .. radio. air condition.

'68 Ccl11et

I I I I I I I It I I I I I I It I I I I I I I I I I II It

'1395

Cadillac . Oldsmobile

Open Eves. Til 8-Til5 P.M. Sat.

2 Dr. H.T.

'66 Pontiac Tempest Conv............ '895

'

992-5342
GMAC Fl1111ncing Avoi..,ble
Pomeroy
"You'llllke OUr Qlallty Way of Doing Business"

2 Dr. Convertible, radio, auto .

'69 Olev. 'pickkp Truck ..............'1995
'!, Ton Fleelslde, long bed, radio, auto. trans., 14,000

miles .

'61 Ford Pickup Truck .................. 195
lf2 TOh.
'57 Ford Pickup Truck................. $195
lh

Ton.

See Ray Riggs or AI Zeigler

RIGGS 985-4100
BROS., INC.
located on S. Rt. 7

Cllester.o.

Reaf Estate For Sale

Real Estate Fcir Sale

=

RACIN.E
Lol"lor sale. 108' x
Real Estate Opportunity
240' - $2,000. Nice location.
CAN YOU SELl???
Phone 949-4703.
YOUR own full -time business,
9-9-6tc
Real Estate, right in this
area . National company,
established in 1900, largest in
i Is field . (Unlicensed? write us .) All advertising, all
signs, forms, supplies fur nished . Skilled Training and
Instruction given for rapid
608 East Main
development -'- from Start to
POMEROY
succe$$. Nationwide ad vertising brings Buyers from FARM ,- 63.37 ACRE\S Everywhere .
Can
you J' Rutland Township. ntce 5
i-oom home, out cellar, barn,
qualify? You must have
shop,
frui I frees, berries, A
initiative, excellent character
STEAL AT JUST $5,500.00.
(bondabl&lt;!), sales ability, be
LESS THAN SIOO.OO AN
financially responsible .
ACRE.
Commission - volume opportunity for man, woman ,
couple or team Thai Can Sell. POMEROY - I story frame ,
Information without ·bath, 3 bedrooms, basement,
porches. gas forced air heat .
obligation. .
$5,000.00.
"t."M, Diggs, Gen. Sales ~gr .
STROUT REAlTY, Inc.
POMEROY - 2 : JrY fra mR, 6
311-F Springfield Ave.
rooms, 3 bedrooms, utilily
Summit, N. J . 07901
room , bath, ALMOST NEW
9-10-3tc
GAS FORCED AIR HEAT,
some hardwood floors. JUST
$3,800.00 WORTH MUCH
MORE.
-

Deland.
Realty

ITEM: Jack Kane~
You somehow get ' the
eling' he has th{)t.Jght
bout
what · he's
liaring with you, Y'our
eeling is right.

WMP0/1390

RUTlAND- I If&gt;story frame, 3
bedrooms, bath, storm doors
and windows, nice porch;
large lot, GOOD FOR A
FAMILY. $6,900.00 TAKES
THIS PLACE,
PLACE THE SAlE OF
YOUR PROPERTY IN
CAPABlE HANDS
HENRY E. ClELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Residence 992-2s.t
9-8-61c

BLAETTNARS

NO. 1 BUYS

GMCTRUCKS
PONTIAC
118 Years of Continuous Business
PHONE-m-2143
... POMERO.Y, OHIO

BUICK

THE SHOP. Custom mea I
culling. Pleasant Ridge Road,
Pomeroy. Dick Vaughan, m .
33/4.and Dale Little, 992-6346 .
9-12-31ltc

.1970 CamarLtpe. __"!'___ -Ui.'\l
Less than 11 ,000 mlfis &amp; appearance of 71 model. Rally
Sport equipped, Classic copper with sandalwood Interior,
tinted glass, factory a ir conditioned, sports mirrors,
console, air spoiler, turbo hydrornatlc, power steering &amp;
brakes, 350 cu. ln . v.s engine. Really Sharp.

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes, 992·22U,
The FabriC Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-lfc

1970 Dlevrolet BelAir 4 Door.--'2895
Less than 10,000 miles by local owner. Sharp as new In all
ways, while over gold finish, 350 V-8 engine, power
steering, radio, white-walls. wh . covers.

O' DELL WHEEL alignment
located a t Crossroads, Rt. 12~ . REAbY ."MfX
CONCRETE
Complete front end service,
delivered right to I'_Our
tune up and brake service.
prgject. Fast and easy. Free
Wheels
bitlanced elec estimates . Phone 992-3284.
tronically .
All
work
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
guaranteed.
Reasonable
Middleport, Ohio.
rates. Phone m -3213.
6-JO.flc
7-27-tfc
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Crlfl Bradford
s.f.flc

1970 Dodge Polara ·-------.'2495
4 Dr., V-8 engine. automatic trans. , P.S,, factory air, good
tires. radio &amp; other extras, white finish, clean Interior.

1967 Ford Mustang ____ _: __ '1595

•CeS_
• ess, s
'Busm_
- ern.
. . j.

TRUCKS

4.

•

Middleport 992·2151 • 992-2152

KEITH .GOBLE
MOBILE HOME SALES

Virgil B.

71 BUICK, Custom Electra 4 dr . hardtop.
official 's car. factory air conditioning . 6-way
power seat and other full equipment.

\

3 VOLKSWAGEN$

Stop in, call or write or talk to Dan Thompson, Tom
lavender or John Ketchka.

7'ls ARE ALREADY HERE

Rawlings Dodge City

• sharp.
Auto. transmission. Extra

50' TO 65' LENGTHS

NEW 1971's &amp; DEMOS &amp; USED CARS

We Still Have A, Desirable
Seledion of New Dodge Cars
and AmericJJn Motors Cars•
Our New Car CIPArance Sale
Has Been A Success. So, '
Please HuiTy and
'
Take Advantage of
These Bargains.

69 EL CAMINO V8 .

12' and 15' WIDES

I.4.

110,000,000 MASTERPIECE.
"MONA LOUSA~ STOLEI'J !!

\

67 atEVIE IMPAlA 2 DR. H.T.

YOU UPTO

•s

•

••
•

NEW CAR SALE
CONTINUES

70 FORo'·TORINO V8

1971 IODIL CLOII-IUt

ALL OUT SALE

'

•

YEAR-END

NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED

"101" DEPENDABLE CITY

Morrows Borrow Modern

~

•

MAKE US A.N OFFER

•

EXPERT
Wheel Ali&amp;nment
'5.55
-GUARANTEED•,."
Phone 992-2094

PomeniJ

ttwne &amp; Auto

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
l oo PCT. FINANCING AVAILABlE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
salary of $5,000.00 and three children. 71/.o ~ct. annual

Residential,
Commercial
and
Industrial Wiring
24 Hoilr Service
949-4551
Racin&amp;,O.

Rt.2

BILL NElSON
992-3657

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
992-2094
606 E ..Mciin Pomeroy

Re-Charge

WORK

HilTON WOlFE
949-3211

Special
At

6.98

Plus
Parts

Bl•ttnar's
PHONE 992-1143

.'
TRENCHER and complete
water line installation. Phone
. 98S-3373 week days after S
p.m. or weekends.
9-9· 12tc
ROSEBERRY furnace In stallation . Free estimates on
new furnaces, oil or gas.
' Service work . Call Cecil
Roseberry, Racine, Ohio.
Phone 614 -843-227~.
. -' 9-8-JOtp
•

SPOUTING, ·
ROOF PAINTING
NEW &amp; OlD WORK
All Weather Roolidg &amp;
C011struction Ca. and An'fhony Plumbing &amp; Helling.
Complete
Plumbing,
Heating and Air Con.
dilioning.
240 Uhcoln St.. Midcltepoo-t

Open Eves. Til8

992-2126

Pomeroy

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

Pomeroy

F'""'---~----:-:----j

aMMRJ
M
JOHNSON
fto1UR
·'
·
t.omplete
Remodeling

NEIGLER Construction . For "3 ROOM apartment and ba1h:
Built-In electric wall oven and
building or remodeling your
home. Call Guy Nelgler,
table top range, double bowl
Racine, Ohio.
sink, overlooking the Cfllo
7-31-lfc
river, real clean an d nIce.
Phone Gallipolis 4&lt;16-9539
after 5 p.m.
*anted To Buy
9-5-ttc
OlD Furniture. dishes. clocks.
and-or complete households. ----~--Write M. D. Miller, Pomeroy,
Cflio. Call m -6271 .
1- - - - - - - - - - - - - 8-25-lfc I .
A~

I o:LOC;;;;&lt;;Anl=;MA,..-;N;-:w:it;;she::-s&lt;to;:- buy

Phone 992-2550
1nsured . Experienced
Work Guaranteed
-~~~~~~~-_j
See us tor Free ' BACI&lt;HUE ANO DOZER WQrk.
Septic tanks installed. GeOrge
Estimate on Furnace
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
lnstalation.
'-25-llc

t92-J60I

Your Chevy Dealer

Auto Sales

·BUEJ1JtARS

Septic Tanks
And lNch Beds.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

QUEEN Cons f.
Roofing , For Rent
remodeling,
aluminum
FURNISHED 2 bedroom (30) GMC's 1969 Model 5500
siding . Phone 992-732~ .
equipped with aluminum van
apar t ment , Middleport.
8-25-lfc
bodies 12' to 20' . 10,000
Phone 992-387~ average
miles.
Some
- - - -- - - - . , - 9-10-3tc
equipped with thermo-kings.
SEWING machine service in · , - - - - : - - - - - : La Plne Trucks, Cleveland,
yo~r home. Clean, oil and tRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Cfllo
(216) 6~1-~260 .
7085
adtust, only S~. Call m·
Cour t, Rt. 1H, Syracuse,
9-I0-6tc
9-12-ltc
Ohio. m -2951.
/
. -4-2-lfc 1970 GREMLIN, automatic,
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
.
good condition, one owner.
cancelled?
Lost
your FURNISHED and unfurnished
will sell or take over
operator's license? Call 992apartMents. Close to school.
payments. Phone 992-3663 oc.
2966.
Phone 992-S.t34,
see
at 448 S. Second St..
'"15-lfc
10-18-ftc
Middleport.

From the largest Truck or
Bulld02er Radiator to the
Smallest Healer Core.

Kitchens, B'a111s.
Room Additiofls
And !'alias
Bac:llhae And
EndiiNder Work

vi~yl root, maroon finish, radio. new w-w tires, V-8 wilt.
automatic trans. &amp; factory air conditioning - Specl~l.
Special.

SEPTIC TANKS ClEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph . W&gt;-~782,
Gallipolis . John Russell ,
Owner &amp; Operator.
5-13-ftc

EXPERIENCED
Radiaa Snce

Pti: 992-214l

~Door Sedan. power steering &amp; brakes, vinyl interior, blk,

AWNINGS. storm doors and.
windows, carports ,
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing . Call A. Jacob,
sales representafive. For free ·
estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
5-27-llc

FURNITURE

ROOFING &amp;CARPENTER

1967 Ford LlD·----------'1595

'lARRlSON'S TV AND AN
TENNA SERVICE . Phono
992-2522.
o-111-lf•

And
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

270 Series. vinyl roof, while finish , all good tires, 6 cyl ..
automatic trans., radio, clean interior.

ROOF PAINT and minor
repair. For estimate, call 9922239.
9-8-61p

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Hate Your Sr &amp;lal
Air Condililning
Inspection and

1968 Dodge Dart 4 Docr-----'1495

3EPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation. Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
7-17-lfc

Open8Til 5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

O'BRIEN ·
El£CI'RIC SERVICE

HT Cpe., I owner &amp; very nice, \i.s engine, wide oval tires.
P.S., P . B., factory air cond., radio &amp; other extras.

I

acreage close to Pomeroy. I
Phone m -33H.
9-12-12tc
GINSENG. Clean bone dry. S38 :
lb. Snake Root, S5 lb. Bill
Bailey, Reedsville. Ohio, I
1
Second St. Phone 378-6208.
B-31-IOic I

1

Classified

I
I

brin&amp; you
ntrl CISh
for
shopp In&amp; -sp r us

--·------:------

- - - ---= =- - - '·-lUte
1950 CHEVROLET pickup. runs
and looks good, Herold
Bre-. ~Boltom, Ohio
915-3554. Also
Fordqlne,
clutch .nc1 bell '-•tng.
9-12-11p
----------'67 MERCURY Colony "-rk

WIIIJCIII, V-1, -

IMnng,

power br•kes. •utom•ttc,
meny extras. 10 f'l'llllllllr.
PIW 367-lSS..

9-12-211:

1 ~----------I 'EmpiOJment 11101

~. . ~
~tJ:~~tl":.w 111. tllru

119-YEAR-OLD

I
1 m-s70t.
1

9-12-311:

�.

2t- Tlr llimUy'l'lmes ; Sentinel, Somay' Sept. l%, 1971

{

.

.

"

'

23- TheSundayTimes-Sentinei,Sunday,Sept. i2, 1971

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
'

Notice

Notice

'

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

"•

Notice

Notice

,.. TRYING 1o locale , first name P LAY E R P IANO. recon - GUNSHOOT, Su nday. Sep ·
ditioned inside and out
l~mber 12, 1 p. m . Rac ine Gun
l.Wiknown, last name, I,Aorri s.
2nd ll., H Co., 10911&gt; Infantry. $275. tuning incl uded.- Phone
Club.
9-9-31c
2111t Keystone Div. Contact
992-5509.
9-9-3tc
Warren Lynd. 1717 7th St.,
ANNUAL Eblin Reunion will be
Portsmaulh. Cflio ..s66?c
held on Sunday, September
9-12-3tc
19th, at lhe west side stale
GUN SAL E. Sunday. Sep·
park on Rt. 33. All descenI Will not be responsible lor
!ember 12. W. R. Manley , 1
dants
of Allen and Mary •Ann
*bts con tracted by anyOne
~
mile east of Tuppers Plains on
Eblin. friends and relatives
ather than myself. Signed :
68 1.
a re welcome . Dinner at 12: 30 .
Marion R. Hawk.
9-9-31p
9-12-61c
~
9-12-31p

r

...

..t

-...

MIDDLEPORT

CAB CO.
BACK IN BUSINESS
24 Hr. Service, Same Prices
As Always.

992-7338
DRIVERS: Eli &amp; James

~

TRAP AND still shoot Sunday,
September 12. 1 p.m., Rutland
Gun Club on New lima Road.

f...

ATTENTION
PRODUCTION CREDIT
ASSOCIATION MEMBERS
Plan to attend the P.C.A.
annual meeting at C!lnfer's
Cave , Jackson. Ohio, September 12, 1971. Support Joe
Bailey, Candidate for Board
of Directors. A free chicken
·dinner will be served be·
tween 12 noon and 1:30 p.m.
.Jlring your family and come
along.

c:

-§

....
:....E

..---..

SAVE UP to ooe half. Bring
your sick TV to Chuck's TV
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.
'·
Pomeroy.
4-23-tfc

-.
--..
-...
-.......
..
-.....
-....
-t

•

KOSCOT Kosmelics. September
Sales
Special :
Kreamy Lip Kote $2 now
$1.50, Frosllucent lip Kote
$2.50 now $2, 23 delicious
colors. Call 992-5113 or come
1
see at 161112 "'
h Ave .,
Middleport, Or.
8-29-lfc

•

""

•

In Memory

...--

-•

~

•

.:'..1
-....

WANT AD
Wanted
IN FORMATION
WOMAN needs someOne to slay
DEADliNES
5 days a week, some nights.
5 P.M. Day Before Publication
Monday Deadline 9 a.m.
· Phone 992-SSU,
· 9-12-6tc
Ca~~ellatlon ~Corrections .
Will be a.c cepled until9a .m. for ---,---;- - - - - Day of Publication
·
He.lp Wanted
REGUlATIONS
.
The Publisher reserves the WOMAN to live in, light
right to edit or reject any ads
housework, cooking with a
deemed objectional. The
day off a week - · $35 per
publishe r will not be respbnsible
week . Phone 992-3507.
for more than one incorrec1 1
9-10·3fc
insertion .
WAITRESSES , prefer ex RATES
perienced, weekends only .
For Want Ad Service
Phone 985-3832.
5 cents per Word one insertion .
9-9-31p
Minimum Charge75c
,
12 oenls per word three.
consec '1tive insertions.
; EARN AT home addressing
18 cents per word six con envelopes. Rush stamped
secutive insertions.
self-addressed envelope. The
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
Ambrose Co., 4325 Lakeborn ,
ad s and ads paid within 10 days .
Davisburg , Mich .. 48019.
CARD OF THANKS
9-8-301p
&amp;OBITUARY
$1.50 fOr SO word minimum .
For Sale
Each additional word 2c.
BliND ADS
.
HALF RUNNER beans, $2
Additional 25c Charge per
bushel , watermelons, can Advertisement.
taloupes,
sweet
corn,
OFFICE HOURS
potatoes, Clarence Proffitt,
8:30 a .m . to 5:00 p.m. Daily.
Portland. Phone 843·2254.
8: 30 a . m . to 12 : 00 Noon
9-t-llc
Saturday .
H &amp; N DAY OLD or started
Male Help Wanted
Legttorn pullets. Both floor or
cage
grown available.
NEED MONEY? Sell Knapp
Poultry
housing
and
Shoes .. . Part lime or full
automation . Modern Poultry.
time. No investment. Send for
399 W. Main, Pomeroy. 992·
free selling kit. High com 2164.
mission plus bonus. Write to
9- 12-lfc
E. M. Bislow. Knapp Shoes,
Bro ckton, Massachusetts
1954 DODGE truck. 2 ton $400,
02401.
1962 Chrysler 300 - $200. Will
- - - -- - - : - -9:-,·:-:12-llc
trade for pickup. phone 949·
3915.
INCREASE YOUR INCOME :
9-12-61c
Add $15 to S25 commission
earnings e\'ery week by
OLDSMOBILE
Vista
showing Hanover shoes to '66
Cruiser
Wagon
$650,
'64
friends , neighbors , and
Buick Wlldcal-$450, 3 men's
associates. 196 styles for men
rings - 1 diamond, 1 black
and women. Work spare time
lindie sapphire, I blue sap.
or lull time. Write for free
phire, near Coopers' store,
sales kit. Hanover Shoe, Dept.
Rt. 124, Portland. Phone 843SOH. Hanover, Pa . 17331.
2608
.
9-12-ilp
9-12-3tc
----.-:-::--:-'--

Card of "Thanks

'

1971 MODEL

·RAWLINGS

MOBILE HOMES

Auto . transmission. P.S., lt. blue with matching Inferior.

69 OOBRA

4·Speed - red With black inferior .

68 PONTIAC TEMPEST V8

A~to. transmission, P.S., dark green, black vinyl top .

70 DODGE CORONET

LO US SAVE

318 Engine, V.s, P.S., red with black vinyl top.

••
~

k

V-8, auto transmission, P.S., gold with black vinyl top.

68 DODGE RT. V8

$1500

Auto. "transmission, P.S., blue and blue Interior.

68 DODGE RT CONVERTIBLE

KING - BELMONT

Loaded with all the hot rod goodies.

VAN DYKE - LIBERTY

FORD Tractor and low boy
IN MEMORY of Ocran Dailey WE WISH to express our thanks.
trailer. John Deere B, with
who passed away one year
No. 5 mower. Harold Brewer,
to Dr. Berkich, Dr. Brady.
ago, September 11 , 1970. God
Long Bottom, 985-3554.
nurses and nurses aides of
gave him a dream , of that
9-12-llp
Holzer Medical Center, Rev .
bright home above, a dream
Underwood, Rev . Moyer, :c
7
A::
Ib-a--;Y
:;o:-:s 1,- M;-;;:In::ers ·
that he told me, with a heart
Mrs. Chester Erwin, organist, H-::Ec:Nc:S:--:lot. Ph. 992-7004
If No Answer. 992-3422
tOll of love. God showed him a
ville.
Phone
949-~980
.
Loyal ·Men, Loyal Women' s
Dally
12to9.
Sunday1
lo6
mountain and a land sweet
9-12-31p
Classes of lhe Middleport
OPPOSITE GOBlE'S USED CAR LOT
and fair . Then he said,
Church of Christ, the
"Come, dear Ocran, and live
AUCTION
American Legion Post 128,
with me there." Oh. I miss
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Rawlings -Coats
Funeral SA TU R 0,' .,. , Sept. 18th, S p.m. I
him so dearly, no one can tell,
am
movmg
in
a
Trailer
Home
Home, neighbors and friends
and some day my loved one.
therefore wilt sell the
who helped in any way. Your
with him I will dwell . Sadly
following at the 2nd house
kindness will never be
missed by hi s wile and
east
of Syracuse school on For Sale
forgollen . Leo D. Childs
children.
College Rd . in Syracuse, Ohio. NO. 10 pull type, New Idea corn
family .
picker, good condillon. Phone
9-12· lip
Watch for sale signs. Detroit
9-12· lip
m-6214.
Jewel Gas Range, 30 in .
7-18-ffc
9-5-61c
Trailer
Gas
Range ,
-----Frigidaire
Refrigerator,
WIN AT BRIDGE
Dining Room Table and 3 CANNING tomatoes, already 3 BEDROOM home, wllh bath,
112 acre lol. On new public
picked, $1.25 bu., bring
chairs , Treadle sewing
wafer
system , located just off
containers.
Geraldine
machine (Singer), Electric
Rl. 7 on County Rd . 25 at
Cleland , East Main, Racine .
sewing machine, 2 pc. Living
ns.lfr Chesler, Ohio. II interested
room suite, Zenith T.V., Metal
call 985·4262.
saw no reason to waste a bed complete, Wood chif·
NORTH
II
9-5-12tc
trump when his partner hel&lt;j forobe . Chest of drawers, I -MOBILE trailer 7' x20' , I
• QJ98
the high heart but he saw Mirror. Gossip bench, Stands,
mobile trailer 8'x24', I . 30 cs .
• 10 9 6 3
the reason when Mrs. Mar- Coffee table, floor la~p, 2
dry bottle cooler with com - 3 BE-DROOM brick home.
• 85 4
Choice location In Middleport.
·
f Rugs 1x12 and SxiO, DIShes
pressor, 1-22 cs. dry bottle
row . dtscarded her three o
and Cooking utensils and
Seen
by appointment only .
"-AK
cooler with compressor. 3 ·
d1amonds
on
the,lO
of
~earts
•.
other
·art
icles·
not
listed
•
Phone
992-5523 alit&lt; 4 p.m .
WEST
EAST
lots 30' x90' each on Ohio
5-7-tfc
and
let
West
win
the
trick
Myron
Bess,
Owner.
Terms.
River, 1 . Commercial dish·
.3
.752
with his jack.
Cash. Not responsible for
.AKQJH
washer, I : Soda fountain 1:0NVENIENT but secluded
" This wa s the third and accidents. Bradford Auct1on
tKI07
tJ96 2
diSpenser
w1!h compre~sor, I·
building lots on 179 at Rock
last tric k for the defense Co. A. C. Bradford, Ma_nager .
.-,Q72 ·
"'JI0 6 54
sewmg
mach!ne,
1·
Springs . Within walking
treadle
C. C. Bradford, _Auchoneer .
commerCial ch1_cken
distance of Meigs High
SOUTH (D)
(9) 12. 16, 21c
broaster, 2-gas
kif chen
School . a 5 minute drive from
America's top experts explain their - - - - - - - - - • AK 1064
ranges, used lumber 2x6 · 2x4
Pomeroy. Call or see Bill
.52 .
tournoment-winr..,g techniques ;, o NEW
DELUXE
sewing
etc.
3
fl.
candy
case,
_old
beer
Wille
weekends or after s.
new 728-page book on J A C 0 8 Y
tAQ3
machine, Zig - Zag , heavy
&amp; pop bottles, Mason tars, etc.
p.m. weekdays. Phone 992.98 3
MODERN. For your copy sent $1
duly, buill-in motor and light,
Call 992-5786.
9-5-61
6887.
with your name, oddreu onrl zip
does everything . Only $64.88.
Both vulnerabl e
7-11 -lfc
Twin City Sewing Machine.
code to : "Win al Bridge," (c/o this
West North Ea.t South
Phone m -7085 .
now•poperJ, P.O. Bo• 489, Radio City
9-I0-6tc
Station, New York, N.Y. 10019.
2•
3•
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
PORTABLE Singer sewing
Opening lead- • K
·
W t h d t 1 d "th
machine, will sell for repair
s mce es a O ea et er
bill. $19.22. Twin City Sewing
a heart or a diamond. The Machine. Phone 992-7085.
9-10-6tc
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby heart lead would allow a ruff
1
1
•
•
in dummy and a diamond - - - - -- - - - Today' s hand was sent us discard. A diamond I e ad
ACRE LOT wi th 110'
by our old friend J. Edward wou!d be _,up to , Mrs. Mar- 2112
fr ontage on Sta te Route 124
Broker
"
Morrow of Joplin , Mo. Jed, a rows a ce ~ueen ..
.
near High School just outside
110 Mechanic Street
reporter for the Dallas News
We always en)oy heann_g Rac ine corporation . All
Pomeroy, Ohio
in the '30s, used to write a from our old fnend . It ts utilities available. See Dale
1220 Washington Blvd ..
weekly bridge column as a particularly n i c e to know McGraw or phone 949-2832.
Belpre, Ohio
NEW LISTING- Kanauga - 3
9-10-3tc . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
side line. Long retired, he that JACOBY MODERN is
bedrooms. bath, gas forced
still likes to write an occa- a system for all ages .
air furnace . Modern kitchen,
Full basement .
sional article for us and the
POODLE puppies. Silver Toy , 327- 350 h.p., parts less cam
(NEWSPAPER. ENTERPRISE ASSN. )
and crankshaft. Will sell all or
rest of this article will be
Park view Kennels. Phone 992·
part. Phone 949-2571.
NEW liSTING - Dexter - 6
5443.
a direct quote from him .
9-5-61c
rooms. bath. gas furnace .
8-15-tfc
" Mrs. Morrow and I play
Business building, 30x44.
The bidding has been:
FARM and home latex house
a sort of JACOBY MODERN.
South ONE
A . K.C.
registered
paint sale. King Builders POMEROY- Nice 3 bedrooms.
My jump to three spades West
North
East
min iature dachshund , $50.
Supply, Middleport.
l'h baths, large living and
1•
was a limit raise and Mrs .
•
Ph
one
992
-5473
.
9-2-241c
dining, Double garage.
3
Pass
1•
Pass
Morrow decided she had
9-9-61c
Pass
3
•
Pass
enough for a continuation to
2 ACRES -On Rl. 33 North.
Pass
4 N.T.
Pass 5t
game.
Real
Estate
For
Sale
?
NYLON Ova l braided rug ,
Pass
5 N.T. . Pass
" She ruffed the third heart
approximately 12 ' x 15' - $50. NEW, 3-bedroom home in CHESHIRE - Fast lunch lot .
You, South, hold :
lead; took one high trump
Phone 949·2739.
Middleport. Built-In kitchen , POMEROY Renovated 3
and dummy' s ace and king .AK87 .KQ94 t6.KQ75
9·10-3tc
ceramic tile bath, all-electric
bedrooms.
bath,
furnace, nice
What do you do now?
-------.,---of clubs . Then she returned
heat , good neighborhood. Can
kitchen.
.
WHIRLPOOL
washer
and
to her hand with a second
arrange FHA financing .
A-B1d seven ~pades. Y~ur dryer , like new . Phone 992Telephone 992-3600 or 992- MINERSVILLE - Good 3
trump in order to ruff her two qu~ns and smg!eton d1a2ss5 or 992·7296.
2186.
l a s t club. If trumps had mond Insurance agBJnst most
9-10-6tc
bedrooms , bath, furnace.
7-2S·Ifc
Garage.
broken she would have been any loser outside the trump .,-.,--.,--: ---::--:::set for a sure elimination suit.
COAL , limestone . Excelsior.
play.
&lt;alf Works, E. Main St.,, 'SIX ROOM house , bath, full 30 ACRES- on Rl. 143 North.
TODAY'S QUESTION
1 ba sement. 133 Bullernul Ave, •. SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY
,'omeroy. Phone 992-3891.
" As it was she left East
W"at do you open with :
just walking distance from
A.9.tfc
HELEN l. TEAFORD,
with one t r u m p and led .AK8 .7 .K2 tAK5 .-,K832
downtown Pomeroy . Contact·
ASSOCIATE
dummy's 10 of hearts . East
=d Hedrick, 2137 Wadswo.lfl
992-3325
APPLES Fitzpatrick Or- .
urive, Columbus, Ohio, phone1 ~
9-12-6tc
chards, Stale Route 689 ,
237
-4334,
Columbus.
--5.9-lf
lk.i lct"Mf&amp;I.J ..-l , _ phone Wilkesville, 669-378S.
· 9-3-lfc

•

12: - 14

24 WIDE .

TEAFORD

MILLER
.

SR.

MOBIL£,HOMES

•
•

•
••
•

•,.

No t race of t he criminal could

be found at t he. Museum -

•

'

,a~-·.'~

~ :~­

/'
_;-~

...

' "'/~
.

I

'

~W/MlJJI!J];-

Unocramble these four JumMes,
one letter to each oquare, to
form four ordinary words.

Whor o pretty bonnet!

l

l (.'IIOAV

CLEAN RUGS like new, so easy
to do with Blue Lustre. Rent
e lectric shampooer, $1 . Baker
Furniture Company.
9·8-61c

I I J [J
I

_

-

~
,:1

I "::;..~

GREEN BEANS, pick your
own, Si.SO a bushel, Andrew
Cross, Racine, Ohio.
9-3-lBic
HALF ARABIAN mare colt, 6·
months, halter broke, very
gentle. Not registered, $175.
Coolville 667 -6214.
9-8-12tp

I'J 1/Utr\ '?)1 I {J
~."i" /,"'1/7 .~li""":'U_)-+~
I I I
t. I
1 1---,

jYOUR

WALNUT, MODERN STYLE,
AM-FM
STEREO-RADIO,
radio, 4 speaker sound
system, ~ speed automatic
changer, separate controls.
l'iow arrance the clrcl lettera
Balance $67.89. Use our
:budget terms. Call 992-7085.
to form the surprise ana er, u
9-5-6tc
sunested by the abovec ~n.

"(I I X I J [I I IT'

,.\ mn•rr': lt "M lmnwrmM u·iflt

.,u thr

1·un·f!IM;,

. . ...

MAPLE, Early American style.
stereo-radio comblnalion,
AM-.fM- radio, -~ speaker sound system , 4 speed
automatic changer. Balance
$78.57. Use our budget term&lt;.
Call m-7085 .
,9-5-61c
'

'

PUBliC SALE
Sept. 18, 12 p.m., 1971 on Route 124 above intersecllon of
248, next to Christian Church in Long Bottom, Ohio.
Having sold my farm and moving to new home will sell the
following at public auction :
Air compressor, good endless belt, tractor grass seed
sower, motor grinder, garden plow, shallow well pump,
cultivators for Gravely, pipe vise, bumper jack, bench
vise, handsaws, pipe wrenches, pump jack, h.p. electric
motor, like new; W' drill, stepladder, fence stretchers.
rope blocks. steel drums, window fan, approx. 250 bales of
'!lixed hay and 50 bates mixed ·hay~ straw. icxil "bo•es.
grease gu~s . c~alnblnder, odd lot of paint, steel horses,
log chains, log wedges, log grabs.
Old leather couch, rocking chair, school chairs, old
wooden beds, mantel clock, old silverware, dishes, ·
wooden bowl, apple peeler, 10 gal. milk can, bee smoker,
fans, dog Irons for flreplac~ . Many other Items too ..
numerous to mention .

'I•

-:-:-:-:::-::--::-:-:---

rlwir 1',.'1"'' ,mf,.,·- FACETIOUS

•

69 SUZUKI

4 PICKUP TRUCKS

(

Not responsible for accidents.
_·_.Harold Brewer, Auctioneer-,915-3554
Harold German, Owner.
-CUP THIS AD-"

NEW 71 CHEVY KINGSWOOO WAGON, Color sea aqua,
tinted gla ss, floor mats. door ed. guards, 4 season air, 255
H. P. 4 cu. in. eng ine, wh . covers, Comfortilt st. wheel . w-w
tires, E. c,lock, P.B., radio, turbo hydromatic , ~wer
steering &amp; brakes, luggage carrier . Retail $5041
SAVINGS PRICE 54441.

71 PONTIAC Catalina Brougham 4 dr . hard-

top, factory air conditioning, tilt steering
wheel , vinyl.top. Demo of less than 3,000 miles.
NEW 11 BUICK leSabre Cust~ 4 dr . sedan,
factory a ir conditioned, white with black vinyl
top. Fully equipped.

NEW71 CHEVY ST. WAGON, Concours Estate, color red,
*luxe bells, tinted glass , power tailgate, floor mats, rear
air deflector . ~ season a ir conditioning , turbo hydromatlc,
307 V-8 engine, luggage carrier. power steering, G/8-2-w
tires, wh. covers. P. B.• radio, frt. &amp; rear guards. Retail
$4684.45 . SAVINGS PRICE $4249.

NEW 71 BUICK Skylark, 2 dr . hardtop. fac·
tory air conditioned. Medium blue with white
vinyl top.

NEW 71 CHEVY VEGA WAGON , 90 H.P. engine,
automatic trans .. body side mldg ., A78 whitewall .tires,
P. B.. radio, choice of color, sandalwood or bright green .
SAVINGS PRICE $2640.

NEW 71 PONTIAC Catalina 4 dr., factory air
conditioned. Beautiful metallic green.
NEW 71 PONTIAC Catalina, 4 dr .• all white
with smart green cloth trim . Well equipped.

'71 CAMAROS

'

NEW 71 FIREBIRD Sprint Pontiac 2 dr,
hardtop. America's smartest sports car.

11 CAMARO HT CPE. 307 V-8, color black, custom sport
equip., sports mirror, lilt steering wheel, deluxe bells,
floor mats, P. B., radio, Rally wheels, accent group, style
trim group. power steering, turbo hydromatlc, console,
F70 w-w tires . Retail SJ904.75 ·SAVINGS PRICE $3248 •

70 GMC ~ TON Pickup 4 wheel drive.
69 VOLKSWAGEN 2 dr . sedan. Extra nice.
68 PONTIAC Executive 4 dr. sedan. factory
air conditioned, low mileage, one owner car by
local school teacher .

11 CAMARO H.T, CPE. Color lime green, 307 v:a, Turbc
Hydromatic, power steering, E78-w.w tires. wh . covers.
radio, style trim undersea!. Retail 53606.50 · SAVINGS
PRICE $3210.

MAKE US AN OFFER

OUR CLEARANCE
/SON

69 Dodge Super "Bee" 2 dr. hardtop.
67 Chev. V-8 Impala 2 dr. hardtop. like new
finish.
66 Plymouth Super Sport 2 dr. hardtop.
66 Rambler Classic, 6 cyl. 4 dr sta . wagon.
64 Ford V-8 Conv. Coupe.
64 Ford V-8 2 dr. hardtop.
61 Olds "88" 2 dr, hardtop.

SALES-SERVICE

New '71 Chevrolets
ere's a nme ro.lux
a Time To Savel
.Now-Do
!·

KARR &amp;" VAN ZANOT
MANY MORE

PRICES WILL NEVEl II LOWiftl

ON GOOD USED CARS &amp;-TRUCKS

See Ceward Calvert or Fred Blaettn ·

WE CREATE VALUES

Stop in and see Ray Riggs tor a
real deal at their new lot at
Chester.
.n

.••. ~,..c.., .. ,.1,v,!-i

"'"'""""'~

~---IDEMONSTRATOR----

1911 CADILLAC SEDAN DE VILLE

-SPECIAL

GAen wilh green .i~lerlor and green vinyl top, full
power equipment, AM-FM radio, T&amp; T steerin~ wheel ,
power door locks, Climate Control air cond1l1onmg,
approx . 2,000 miles. Mr. Karr' s demo.

"' - ·.;-

-·.

· '69 Ford Falcon ~-----· '1395
2 Dr .. stand. trans ., low mileage.

'69 Pl. Roadrunner .............;..... $1795
,, .

Priced New At 58,071.25
NOW AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICE

.•·

2 Dr ., 4 speed, radio.

'68 Plymouth Fury 111 ....... :........ '1395

KARR &amp; VAN ·ZANDT

Auto. trans .. radio. air condition.

'68 Ccl11et

I I I I I I I It I I I I I I It I I I I I I I I I I II It

'1395

Cadillac . Oldsmobile

Open Eves. Til 8-Til5 P.M. Sat.

2 Dr. H.T.

'66 Pontiac Tempest Conv............ '895

'

992-5342
GMAC Fl1111ncing Avoi..,ble
Pomeroy
"You'llllke OUr Qlallty Way of Doing Business"

2 Dr. Convertible, radio, auto .

'69 Olev. 'pickkp Truck ..............'1995
'!, Ton Fleelslde, long bed, radio, auto. trans., 14,000

miles .

'61 Ford Pickup Truck .................. 195
lf2 TOh.
'57 Ford Pickup Truck................. $195
lh

Ton.

See Ray Riggs or AI Zeigler

RIGGS 985-4100
BROS., INC.
located on S. Rt. 7

Cllester.o.

Reaf Estate For Sale

Real Estate Fcir Sale

=

RACIN.E
Lol"lor sale. 108' x
Real Estate Opportunity
240' - $2,000. Nice location.
CAN YOU SELl???
Phone 949-4703.
YOUR own full -time business,
9-9-6tc
Real Estate, right in this
area . National company,
established in 1900, largest in
i Is field . (Unlicensed? write us .) All advertising, all
signs, forms, supplies fur nished . Skilled Training and
Instruction given for rapid
608 East Main
development -'- from Start to
POMEROY
succe$$. Nationwide ad vertising brings Buyers from FARM ,- 63.37 ACRE\S Everywhere .
Can
you J' Rutland Township. ntce 5
i-oom home, out cellar, barn,
qualify? You must have
shop,
frui I frees, berries, A
initiative, excellent character
STEAL AT JUST $5,500.00.
(bondabl&lt;!), sales ability, be
LESS THAN SIOO.OO AN
financially responsible .
ACRE.
Commission - volume opportunity for man, woman ,
couple or team Thai Can Sell. POMEROY - I story frame ,
Information without ·bath, 3 bedrooms, basement,
porches. gas forced air heat .
obligation. .
$5,000.00.
"t."M, Diggs, Gen. Sales ~gr .
STROUT REAlTY, Inc.
POMEROY - 2 : JrY fra mR, 6
311-F Springfield Ave.
rooms, 3 bedrooms, utilily
Summit, N. J . 07901
room , bath, ALMOST NEW
9-10-3tc
GAS FORCED AIR HEAT,
some hardwood floors. JUST
$3,800.00 WORTH MUCH
MORE.
-

Deland.
Realty

ITEM: Jack Kane~
You somehow get ' the
eling' he has th{)t.Jght
bout
what · he's
liaring with you, Y'our
eeling is right.

WMP0/1390

RUTlAND- I If&gt;story frame, 3
bedrooms, bath, storm doors
and windows, nice porch;
large lot, GOOD FOR A
FAMILY. $6,900.00 TAKES
THIS PLACE,
PLACE THE SAlE OF
YOUR PROPERTY IN
CAPABlE HANDS
HENRY E. ClELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
Residence 992-2s.t
9-8-61c

BLAETTNARS

NO. 1 BUYS

GMCTRUCKS
PONTIAC
118 Years of Continuous Business
PHONE-m-2143
... POMERO.Y, OHIO

BUICK

THE SHOP. Custom mea I
culling. Pleasant Ridge Road,
Pomeroy. Dick Vaughan, m .
33/4.and Dale Little, 992-6346 .
9-12-31ltc

.1970 CamarLtpe. __"!'___ -Ui.'\l
Less than 11 ,000 mlfis &amp; appearance of 71 model. Rally
Sport equipped, Classic copper with sandalwood Interior,
tinted glass, factory a ir conditioned, sports mirrors,
console, air spoiler, turbo hydrornatlc, power steering &amp;
brakes, 350 cu. ln . v.s engine. Really Sharp.

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes, 992·22U,
The FabriC Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-lfc

1970 Dlevrolet BelAir 4 Door.--'2895
Less than 10,000 miles by local owner. Sharp as new In all
ways, while over gold finish, 350 V-8 engine, power
steering, radio, white-walls. wh . covers.

O' DELL WHEEL alignment
located a t Crossroads, Rt. 12~ . REAbY ."MfX
CONCRETE
Complete front end service,
delivered right to I'_Our
tune up and brake service.
prgject. Fast and easy. Free
Wheels
bitlanced elec estimates . Phone 992-3284.
tronically .
All
work
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
guaranteed.
Reasonable
Middleport, Ohio.
rates. Phone m -3213.
6-JO.flc
7-27-tfc
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Crlfl Bradford
s.f.flc

1970 Dodge Polara ·-------.'2495
4 Dr., V-8 engine. automatic trans. , P.S,, factory air, good
tires. radio &amp; other extras, white finish, clean Interior.

1967 Ford Mustang ____ _: __ '1595

•CeS_
• ess, s
'Busm_
- ern.
. . j.

TRUCKS

4.

•

Middleport 992·2151 • 992-2152

KEITH .GOBLE
MOBILE HOME SALES

Virgil B.

71 BUICK, Custom Electra 4 dr . hardtop.
official 's car. factory air conditioning . 6-way
power seat and other full equipment.

\

3 VOLKSWAGEN$

Stop in, call or write or talk to Dan Thompson, Tom
lavender or John Ketchka.

7'ls ARE ALREADY HERE

Rawlings Dodge City

• sharp.
Auto. transmission. Extra

50' TO 65' LENGTHS

NEW 1971's &amp; DEMOS &amp; USED CARS

We Still Have A, Desirable
Seledion of New Dodge Cars
and AmericJJn Motors Cars•
Our New Car CIPArance Sale
Has Been A Success. So, '
Please HuiTy and
'
Take Advantage of
These Bargains.

69 EL CAMINO V8 .

12' and 15' WIDES

I.4.

110,000,000 MASTERPIECE.
"MONA LOUSA~ STOLEI'J !!

\

67 atEVIE IMPAlA 2 DR. H.T.

YOU UPTO

•s

•

••
•

NEW CAR SALE
CONTINUES

70 FORo'·TORINO V8

1971 IODIL CLOII-IUt

ALL OUT SALE

'

•

YEAR-END

NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED

"101" DEPENDABLE CITY

Morrows Borrow Modern

~

•

MAKE US A.N OFFER

•

EXPERT
Wheel Ali&amp;nment
'5.55
-GUARANTEED•,."
Phone 992-2094

PomeniJ

ttwne &amp; Auto

FOUR NEW HOMES
OPEN FOR INSPECTION
ONE HOME IN RACINE
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
ONE HOME IN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
l oo PCT. FINANCING AVAILABlE
A 3 bedroom $16,900.00 home can be purchased with a
monthly payment as low as $65.00 for a family with a base
salary of $5,000.00 and three children. 71/.o ~ct. annual

Residential,
Commercial
and
Industrial Wiring
24 Hoilr Service
949-4551
Racin&amp;,O.

Rt.2

BILL NElSON
992-3657

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
992-2094
606 E ..Mciin Pomeroy

Re-Charge

WORK

HilTON WOlFE
949-3211

Special
At

6.98

Plus
Parts

Bl•ttnar's
PHONE 992-1143

.'
TRENCHER and complete
water line installation. Phone
. 98S-3373 week days after S
p.m. or weekends.
9-9· 12tc
ROSEBERRY furnace In stallation . Free estimates on
new furnaces, oil or gas.
' Service work . Call Cecil
Roseberry, Racine, Ohio.
Phone 614 -843-227~.
. -' 9-8-JOtp
•

SPOUTING, ·
ROOF PAINTING
NEW &amp; OlD WORK
All Weather Roolidg &amp;
C011struction Ca. and An'fhony Plumbing &amp; Helling.
Complete
Plumbing,
Heating and Air Con.
dilioning.
240 Uhcoln St.. Midcltepoo-t

Open Eves. Til8

992-2126

Pomeroy

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

Pomeroy

F'""'---~----:-:----j

aMMRJ
M
JOHNSON
fto1UR
·'
·
t.omplete
Remodeling

NEIGLER Construction . For "3 ROOM apartment and ba1h:
Built-In electric wall oven and
building or remodeling your
home. Call Guy Nelgler,
table top range, double bowl
Racine, Ohio.
sink, overlooking the Cfllo
7-31-lfc
river, real clean an d nIce.
Phone Gallipolis 4&lt;16-9539
after 5 p.m.
*anted To Buy
9-5-ttc
OlD Furniture. dishes. clocks.
and-or complete households. ----~--Write M. D. Miller, Pomeroy,
Cflio. Call m -6271 .
1- - - - - - - - - - - - - 8-25-lfc I .
A~

I o:LOC;;;;&lt;;Anl=;MA,..-;N;-:w:it;;she::-s&lt;to;:- buy

Phone 992-2550
1nsured . Experienced
Work Guaranteed
-~~~~~~~-_j
See us tor Free ' BACI&lt;HUE ANO DOZER WQrk.
Septic tanks installed. GeOrge
Estimate on Furnace
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
lnstalation.
'-25-llc

t92-J60I

Your Chevy Dealer

Auto Sales

·BUEJ1JtARS

Septic Tanks
And lNch Beds.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

QUEEN Cons f.
Roofing , For Rent
remodeling,
aluminum
FURNISHED 2 bedroom (30) GMC's 1969 Model 5500
siding . Phone 992-732~ .
equipped with aluminum van
apar t ment , Middleport.
8-25-lfc
bodies 12' to 20' . 10,000
Phone 992-387~ average
miles.
Some
- - - -- - - - . , - 9-10-3tc
equipped with thermo-kings.
SEWING machine service in · , - - - - : - - - - - : La Plne Trucks, Cleveland,
yo~r home. Clean, oil and tRAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
Cfllo
(216) 6~1-~260 .
7085
adtust, only S~. Call m·
Cour t, Rt. 1H, Syracuse,
9-I0-6tc
9-12-ltc
Ohio. m -2951.
/
. -4-2-lfc 1970 GREMLIN, automatic,
AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
.
good condition, one owner.
cancelled?
Lost
your FURNISHED and unfurnished
will sell or take over
operator's license? Call 992apartMents. Close to school.
payments. Phone 992-3663 oc.
2966.
Phone 992-S.t34,
see
at 448 S. Second St..
'"15-lfc
10-18-ftc
Middleport.

From the largest Truck or
Bulld02er Radiator to the
Smallest Healer Core.

Kitchens, B'a111s.
Room Additiofls
And !'alias
Bac:llhae And
EndiiNder Work

vi~yl root, maroon finish, radio. new w-w tires, V-8 wilt.
automatic trans. &amp; factory air conditioning - Specl~l.
Special.

SEPTIC TANKS ClEANED
Reasonable rates. Ph . W&gt;-~782,
Gallipolis . John Russell ,
Owner &amp; Operator.
5-13-ftc

EXPERIENCED
Radiaa Snce

Pti: 992-214l

~Door Sedan. power steering &amp; brakes, vinyl interior, blk,

AWNINGS. storm doors and.
windows, carports ,
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing . Call A. Jacob,
sales representafive. For free ·
estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
5-27-llc

FURNITURE

ROOFING &amp;CARPENTER

1967 Ford LlD·----------'1595

'lARRlSON'S TV AND AN
TENNA SERVICE . Phono
992-2522.
o-111-lf•

And
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

270 Series. vinyl roof, while finish , all good tires, 6 cyl ..
automatic trans., radio, clean interior.

ROOF PAINT and minor
repair. For estimate, call 9922239.
9-8-61p

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Hate Your Sr &amp;lal
Air Condililning
Inspection and

1968 Dodge Dart 4 Docr-----'1495

3EPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation. Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
7-17-lfc

Open8Til 5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

O'BRIEN ·
El£CI'RIC SERVICE

HT Cpe., I owner &amp; very nice, \i.s engine, wide oval tires.
P.S., P . B., factory air cond., radio &amp; other extras.

I

acreage close to Pomeroy. I
Phone m -33H.
9-12-12tc
GINSENG. Clean bone dry. S38 :
lb. Snake Root, S5 lb. Bill
Bailey, Reedsville. Ohio, I
1
Second St. Phone 378-6208.
B-31-IOic I

1

Classified

I
I

brin&amp; you
ntrl CISh
for
shopp In&amp; -sp r us

--·------:------

- - - ---= =- - - '·-lUte
1950 CHEVROLET pickup. runs
and looks good, Herold
Bre-. ~Boltom, Ohio
915-3554. Also
Fordqlne,
clutch .nc1 bell '-•tng.
9-12-11p
----------'67 MERCURY Colony "-rk

WIIIJCIII, V-1, -

IMnng,

power br•kes. •utom•ttc,
meny extras. 10 f'l'llllllllr.
PIW 367-lSS..

9-12-211:

1 ~----------I 'EmpiOJment 11101

~. . ~
~tJ:~~tl":.w 111. tllru

119-YEAR-OLD

I
1 m-s70t.
1

9-12-311:

�.., , 91t1t12, 1m

, • -Tile lblday Times- $Wine), s

,Cubs Blank Cards 7-0
Natiooal Leape Rowldup
the Pittsburgh Pirates, 4-1.
By Ullited Presslateruu.al
Tbe sc«e was tied all-1 and
Paul Popovich hlt his first there were two out in the flflh
career grand slam bomer wben Rusty Staub doubled and
• $aturday following an error by JIA)I1 Fairly drew a lelckJlf wall
joe Torre to help tbe Cbicago off losillg pik:ber Bruce Kism,
Cubs and Juan Piz.rro · wbo wu tagged with Ills fifth
whitewasb the St. Louis Car- loss in 10 decisions. Fairey
dinals, 7--ll.
doubled over tbe head of left
Popovich, who has been fieldei'WljlieStargeU todrivelri
filling in for the injured Gleli Staub and Fairly. BOb Bailey
Beckert, hit a Jerry Reilss followed wilh another double to
fastball into the left field chase KisOO tram tbe mouild
bleacbers in the bottom of tbe and Montreal took a ~1 lead.
third for his third home run of
In other Natibnal League
the season. The Cubs had loaded action Saturday night, Houston
the bases on asingle by Carmen was at Cincinnati, ~ FranFa11zone, a walk ·to Jim Hick- cisco at Atlanta, and
man and an error by Torre on Philadelphia at New York.
an easy two-out grounder by
Frank Fernandez.
Jim Fairey drove in two runs
with a fifth·innmg double and
rookie lefthander Ernie
McAnally pitched a six-bitter as Col.. Mohawk 2•' M•rlon
•
the Montreal Expos defeated
Ha=~ 26 (lie)
Gmel
8 Springfield North 8
Alhens 28 MarieHa 25
- - - - - - - - - Akron Buchtel 28 Maysville 8
LAZARO WINS MATCH
lakota U Ross n
HOUSTON (UPI)-Joe Laza- Elyria 35 Toledo Sd&gt;!l 7 .
ro of Waltham, Mass., was C:0.1~mbUs Northland 17 Findlay

Friday's High
Sdtool Soores

named winner Friday of the
26th Annual . Blind Golf~
Tournament wtth an operung
round score of 89. Lazaro sbot
his 89 on Thursday before
hurricane Fern dumped several
inches of rain on the H &amp; H
Country Club cqurse, wasbing
·out the second round of the
scheduled two-day event.

Fremont Ross 52 Toledo Rogers
Sa~dusky 28 Toledo DeVilbiss 6
Pleasant 2~ Wynford o
Col. Crawford 20 Ridgedale 0
Carey 29 Elgin 0

)

~~r~~rc::.:,5 ~r~fu"~~~~

0
Northr""- 35 Big Walnut 2~
CX.tarlo~
1~ Bucyrus 1~ (tie
·
Port Clinton 15 Bellevue 1
Huron 50 Norwalk 1~ ·
Stow 30 Hartville 0
Fairview 2~ Payne 0
Shadyside ~ Paden Cily (W.
Va.l 1
Cleve . . Kennedy 12 Cleve .
Glenville o
·
Oeve. Harding 44 Cleve. Adams
0
Padua U John Marshall 0
Oeve. C. C. 1( Cleve. West Tech
8
St. J-ph 7 Eudld 0
Garfield Heights 14 Chane! 7
St. Edward 37 lakewood 6
Eastlake North 12 Larain Admira! King 0
Stuebenville 13 Cathedral latin
0

Chagrin Falls 19 Warrensville 8
Kensfon 20 Conneaut 0
~:"e~~~:n;~~~~::,lyn o
Independence 52 Richmond
Heights 30
Buckeye 19 Norwayne 6
Prairie He~ Ind.) 19 Edon 0
Bryan 1 Ll
Center 6
Patrick Henry 18 Archbold 20

rt::...se::. ~ ~~ller o

good

.a.rt

~- 7, witb

011

'l'ueldaJ Dlcbt.

14llllma ligned up
fll' tbe League. '

Five.tMIIII bave jiJmped to a
lint-place · alanrling with six
poinla eac;h fll' tbe flrat nlgbt. American Lllllltl Standint$
ClmpeUUCII pnmilel to be By United Pms lnteriNIIIonal ,
teen tbla year. Tbeflntweek's I Night G-mes Not hlcluded)
slllndlDp are as followa:
(Eiost
.
.
.
·
W. l. Pd. GB
Won I:alt Baltimore
88 51 .633 · •'
~No. 2
8 2 Detroit
80 6~ .556 IO'h

Team No. a

Boston
76 70 .521 15'h
2 New
York
72 72 .500 18112
2
6
Te11n No.10
Washington
58 85 . ~ 32
TeamNo. ll
6
2 Cleveland
55 88 .385 35
TeamNo.13
6 2
West ·
·
,
,
W. L. Pd. Ga •.
TeamN0 .•3
~
~ Oakland ·
92 52 .1139
TeamNo.4
4 4 KansasCity
77 .M .538 14112
TeaDINo.5
4 4 California
68 76 .4n 24
Chicago
67 76 .469 24112
TeamNo.6
4
4 MIMesola
65 77 .458 26
Team No.7
2 ~ Milwaukee
61 -82 . ~27 30'1i
Team No.9
2 6
Satvrday's Results
York 10 Cleveland 8 ·
TeamNo: 1
2 6 New
Delroit 1 Boston 0
.
TeamNo.l2
2 6 Oakland 5 Minnesota 3 120 Inns)
· 2 6 Washlnaton at Baltimore.
Team NO · 1~'
Sept 7 T
N0 2 ,_,_ Inight, ppd, wet grounds)
()J
• • eam
· """' · Chicago ai Kansas-City (night)
six points from Team No. 1. Milwaukee al California (night)
Gilbert Meal ,.a blgb far Team
Sunday's G-mes
2 with 553 pliut, lllld Dwlgbt Minnesota at Okaland (~:30
~er'll'llllltlgb fCII' Tellll 1 with p./Uilwaukee at California (5
493 pUis. .
p.m.)
. .
Team No. 8 took ·six poinla . Chicago at Kansas City (2:30
frun Team No.7. Cbarles Neal P-~~ton at Detroit (2:30 p.m.) ·
was blgb fCII' TellD No. -1 wilb New York' at Cleveland 11 :30
560 pins, and Lee Gardner was p.m.)'
Jagh far Te1111 No. 7 with 490 Washington al Baltimore 2, 12
pius
··
·
· p.m.)
No. 10 took six points
Mandayts Gaiii!!S
frcm Team No. 8. Paul Joyal Minnesota 6t California 2
was blgh for TellD No. 10 with ~~-»
Oakland at Kansas Cityi
481 p1DB and Elmer Gardner (nlghH
_.
Chicago at Milwaukee (night)
was blgb fc.- TellD No. 9 " 1th washington at Cleveland
491 pins.
(ni]lhH
.
· Team No. 11 took six poillts 'Detroit al Baltimore 2 (lwi""''·- night)
·
frcm Team No. 12. """""' New York at Boston (night)
Houck was ltlgb fer Team No. 11
_
with 4113 piDB 111111 Jim Isaac was
National League Standings
hlfth f
N 12 'th '"1 By United Presslnternotional
. _ c.- TellD 0•
WI ..,
(Night Games Not Included)
pius.
East
Team No. 13 took six poillts
W. L. Pet. GB
fr
T
N
, W
Pittsburgh
87 59 .5%·
em eam 0· 1•· ayne st. Louis
81 64 .55'1 S'l2
Sba¥er was blgh for Team No. New York
73 69 .514 i2
13 wl.tb 511 pins lllld Jobn Lane Chicago
74 70 .5i4 12
"'ftb f Te N 14 'th Montreal
63 79 .44,1 22
wu- or 8111 f· 111 Philadelphia ~9 85 .~10 27
487 pUis. ..
West · ,
Team No. 3 spilt elgbt poillts
w. L. Pet. GB
with Team No. 4. Steve Carter San Francisco 82 62 .569
wu blgb fer Team No .. 3 wilb kfl.~rles ~~ ~ : : ~~~
561 pins and Merida Sbaw wu Cincinnati
71 75 .486 12
Jag~~ for TellD No. 4 with 493 Houston
70 7~ .486 12
.,;""
San Diego
5~ 91 .372 28'12
..--·
·
.
Satvrday's Results
Team No. 5spUt elght pomta Chicago 1 st. Louis o
wltb Team No. 6. t!.alph Montreal ~ Plltsburgh 1
~wasblgbforTeamNo. rn~~~~~elphla at New York
5 witb 502 pins and Dan Hcnn San Francisco at Atlanta
wu blgb fCII' TellD No. 6 with (night)
456 pins
Houston' at Clncinnali (night)
Hlgb .lingle game for the (&lt;Xllys~:.e;;~e,::ed)
ladles fCII' tbe evening was 7111
(All Times £On
,._ be!d by Eileen Houck and Pittsburgh at Montreal (2: i5
,.....
)
fCII'tbe~nwas21,plnaheldb:y r:sAngelesatSan Dlego(~pml ·
Gltirt Meai·IIJICI Mel lila ·91ft Pfillidilljihlli.at New: YOfk (2

" hot" deal on a new
speed up your ownership
you have the financing hon·
a

by usl We offer attrQdive
and torms ...no belli.,..,..,.
~el1oys . Come in ond talk afinancing ""ds NOW!

•

•

See OUr Oul3tantling .

0
0 ••

•

I

•
tmts

1&gt;P.voted To The Greater Middle Ohin VnllPV

Seiection of

WOMEN'S .BLOUSES
•'

The pretty blouse look is back -- gently ~iled
with lace. shirring and embroidery - pnnts and
solids. Full sleeve treatments- wide cuffs - Peter
Pan collars and turn-back tailored shirts.

SIZES 30 10 38
AND 4010 44

.

;,_

'

.,

.
~

CHICK~ GO
FOR THE~E

•.

TVRTLE-NeCI&lt;(

Them

L=r

DO YOU

SEE mE LATEST STYLES IN WEARING APPAREL FOR WOMEN MD GIRLS. AllTOP BRAID IllES.
COMPLET£ SIZE RANGES FOR EVERYONL SlOP IN AND LOOK AROUND AN.DlEI' US II1P IOU
WllH YOUR SElfCTIOftS.

6

Hiiltup ~ Antwerp 7
Younastown
North
18
d.~':'~ 0East Palestine 14
Champion 20 Sebring 12
Maple Heights 20 Rhodes 8
Parma 36 Oeve. St. Ignatius 22
North otmsled 6 Berea 0
Avon U.ke33 Oberlin 16
MidllliW 30 FaiNiew 18
CSllcrvtfteafllleJ622MedOI ~~~ F II ' each.
.
ronQSv
m....... a s • · "'"" . f the ladles
WesflakelS North Ridgeville 12
....,... senes Cll'
was
Hudson 2~ Aurora 8
483 tot.) pins, bal4 b:y Eileen
Orange 26 Cuyahoga Heights 14 Houck arid for tbe men 561 total
Perry 13 F-airport 12
·
Lorain alihollc 14 Amherst 0 Jins beld by Stieve Carter.
, Lutheran East a Wickliff" o
~nsc:.~e~~9
West 3.
TIMBER SPLITTERS
Bedford .a Noodonla 1 ~
last Wednesday night saw
Mentor -41 Ashtabula 14
the Timber Spl!ll•rs leaglltl get
Willoughby South 26 Painesville un~er w~y as f•ye teams ended
Harvey 6
up In a f•rsl place tie. Foii?Win,g
Barbertou 8 Bay VIllage o
are the results of the n1ght s
Palnt!svllle Riverside 3~ action.
Chardon 1~
larry's Wayside Furniture
Brecksville 7 Solon 6
with K. Bostic's 268-679 series
Kent Roosevelt27 West Geauga over French City Homes and J.
18
Casto's 193-533.
Vermilion 1~ ft'largaretta 6
Falls City and F. Burke's 205South Amherst 30 Weslern 580 over Marchi's Carry Out
Reserve o
and M. Null's 186-532.
Akron St. VIncent 26 Southview
Tawney's Studio wtlh K.
o
While's 216-578 over Ashland Oil
and J. Hellman's 189-502.
WILDCATS WIN
McKnl!lht . Davies Hdwr.
ClEMSON, S. C. (UPI) - and C. Thompson's 192-~ over
Kentucky Sophomore Doug Rio Grande College and J.
15~-415.
Kolar turned in a 9&amp;-yard Ramsey's
Dock Inn and W. Allison's 191·
kickoff return on bis first 539 over Happy Corner and A.
varsity play Saturday and tbe Gabr Ioiii's 103-536.
G. &amp; J. Auto and M.
Wildcats added two field goals Hoydahsell's
195-503 won six
to beat Clemsm, 1~10.
over the Moose Lodge and D.
Gabritsch's 197-537.
Some of the lop scores of the
SOLUTION night
was larry's Wayside with
a three game series oi7U, Falls
Clly's single game 978, K.
Bostic's 268 single and also
series high 679.
Standings .
LArry's Wayside
s 0
Falls City
8 0
Tawney's Studio
8 0
Dock Inn
8 0
McKnlghl &amp; Davies
8 0
G.&amp;J.Aulo
6 2
Moose Lodge
2 6
Marchi's Carry Out
0 8
Happy Corner
0 8
0 8
French CltT Homes
AshlandOI
0 8
Rio Grande College
0 8

: H&lt;)W'

.Com·e to Elberfelds Busy ·Ready to Wear DeparJment

'lbe Keltb Goble Ford Mhed
llowllnc LMgue got off to a

&lt;SWEATER5..

..

·featufinq

:"'

•.

oa··

~

..'·

,- .•·.-

•·.

·.

'

,__ .

Important New Sweaters and
Slack Tops For

HERE'S JOE COOL
HANGING AROUND THE·

DORM' ON A

AFTERNOON ..

Tops in fashion - select cardigans. long sleeve
slipovers · short sleeve slipovers - blazers - smooth
knits and bulky knits. Beauti ful solid colors and bold
stripes. See our complete line - all popular priced space dyed tweed look - all wool - nylon and acrylic
·
knits:

REGUlAR AND
EXTRA SIZES

~UNDA'l

MAI{6E I'LL GO
OVER TO THE
STUDENT UNION
AND CHECK OUT
THE !S"CENE

I

UNION

L:OOKING FOR ACTION ••

11

CITIZEN KANE AGAIN ...
I'VE ONLl( 5EEN IT
TWENT't-TH~EE TIMES ••

11

MAifBE I'LL GO OVER
l&gt; THE LI6RAR4', AND
~EE WH0'5 THERE

RATS' .. NO

CHICKS!
MAI&lt;SE I ?HOULD 60 OVE~
10 THE G't'M A~D SHOOT

A FEW BMKET&amp;...

pm)
pm)

Houslon Ill Cincinnati 12: 15 pm)
Mondoy's G-mes
Montreal al New York, 2 (twl·
nlghl)
Plttsbur~h at Chlca~o
Phllade phi a at t. Louis
·~~~~~~~ al Cincinnati (night)
San Diego at Houston (night)
Los Angeles at San Francisco
(night)
·
PLAYED SATURDAY
PORTSMOUTH - Waverly
opened its 1971 campaign bere
Saturday night against Portsmouth Notre Dame. CeredoKenova blanked Coal Grove 23.(1
in a Friday night contest.

TREMBLAY SIGNS
MONTREAL (UPI)-J. C.
Tremblay, the All.Star defenseman of the Stanley Cup
Champion Montreal Canadiens,
has signed his contract for lhe
1971-72 National Hockey League
season.
It will be the 12111 season with
Montreal for the 32-year~ld
Ttembiay.

IF I HAD 50ME _

Women's
Slacks

WHE~LS I I'D CRUI~E

AIWIJND FOR AWHILE ..

MAI{8E I SHOULD WALK
AND LOOK AT THt:
IGWL061C'AL EXHI61f...

See the season's
most wanted styles
in women's slacks
- styled in
acrylic plaids.
stripes. checks,
herringbones · tweeds
and solids and
a beautiful selection
of solid color
nylon stretch and
polyester stretchslim styles and
bell bottoms ""'
all the new
tall colors in
regular and
extra sizes.

I'VE GOTIA BE
KIDDING ... LOOK AT
THOSE ROCKS AGAIN?

NO IJAI{!

LANCELOT
WHAT

~
110/N{#
••

l'tlS'q'ONED
FORESTliiUS, N.Y. (UPI)
- Rain forced postponement of
all matches today ln the U.S.
Open tennis cha.mplonships,
pushing the men's singles semifinali to Sunday and the men's
and·women's finsla to Monday.

,
•

said the government's case
against Dr. Blazewicz was "the
most poorly investigated I've
VISIT ntE atllDREN'S DEPARTMENT
seen in a lifetime."
He said at the time Dr.
ON mE SECOND FLOOR••••
Blazewicz entered the claims
See a beautiful selection ot girls wearing
the doctCII' was unable to make
apparel Including dresses, coats. suits,
personal calls to bed-ridden
blouses•. pants suits. slacks, sweaters, slack
tops, granny dresses. beautiful coordinate
, physicaan was convicted after elderly patients because a
groups. Hundreds of beautiful items to choose
five hours of jury deliberation. dalJ8hler was fatally lU and the
from
. all the lattst styles, fabrics and colors.
He bad finnly denied wrong- doctCII' bimself was ill. ·
All ~izes from tots to teens.
doing earlier in the day
·testifying in his own behalf.
He "noted Dr. Blazewicz is
SEE OUR OUIDMDING GROUP
Dr. Blazewicz said the late highly respected in Meigs
1
1968 and early 1989 calls at the County, and the only physician
OF WEARING APPAREL
residence of Mr. and Mrs. Fred who makes house calls ln lhe
FOR atUBBY GIRLS •••
: Larkin, of Long Bottom, were mountainous · Appalachian
F:ir Aulll, Ufe &amp; FiN fn: : made under his direction by region. He said ·"follow-up"
Including slacks, blouses. sweaters. jac~ets,
surance
office nurse, Mrs. Daisy house calls by visiting nurses
dresses, jumpers, pants suits, and coats Clnlll K. Slow den
Frecker.
are not unusual in such rural
dressy dresses and tailored styles - stretch
slacks
in .solid colors and all wool plaids Larkin
had
been
the
doctCII''s
areas.
·P•rl Ctotral Hetti Bhi1.
jumpers
In bonded knits and tweeds -- long
S"on~ Ave. Ph. 446-42H
.. patient but Mrs. l.arl(ln'a name
Asst. U.S. Atty. Robert Zitko
Homo Ph. 446-4511
sleeve
cotton
tailored blouses-2 piece pants'
was given as the pei'SOII treated reminded the jury in closing
. ,GaiiiMiis
suit in bonded acrylic knit.
wben Medicare claims totaling argwnen1illilit Mr. and Mrs.
Sizes 8'12 lo 16'/2
$256 for house calls and mileage ,Larkins bolh denieil under oath
i'61111 were submitted.
lhal Mrs.
Frecker
had made
IIISVFIItCe COMpaftie&amp;
Defense Atty. Fred Crow, of house
calls.
Senten.ing
will lhe
be .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Home OHice
II.. Mifttton,
!lllftli$
Pcmeroy, a former FBI agent, later, the court said.

1' .

•

. COLUMBUS - Sentencing
was delayed Friday for Dr.
Selim Blazewicz, 54, of
Pcmeroy, found guilty Thursday in U.S. District Court on
five counts of making

Go.oo·Guv· fr;~~~e~~~~~~f::y-=d

..

ELBERFELDS

IN POMEROY

STATE FARM

'

.

ST~DENT

I SEE THE'I''RE 5HOWING

St. Louis at Chicago (2: 15 pml
San Francisco at Atlanta (2: 15

·GOOD--BUY Doctor is Found Guilty ·

'"'

HERE'~ JOE COOL.
HANGING AROUND THE

...

_______

-~~

•

IF ltOIJ flAW iHS: TREE "fVV.J
HAVE 10 &amp;AW ME IN HALF, TOO.

1HERE'5 A GULf
WITH TWO CHICK~..
HOII) POE!? HE

DO IT?

THE -LEAVES AR~
BEGINNING TO FALL ..
THE SUN IS WARM, BUT
IT'S KIND OF CHILL'(
IN T(.{E SHADE

I WONDER WHAT'S'
601NG ON AT HOME' ..

MA'{BE I 5HOIJLD .GO
6ACK TO lHE DORM ANO
WRITE SOME LETTERS ...

,¥ -71GH ~ JOE COOL.
HATES :;VNOA'{
AFTERNOONS'...

by Coker &amp; Penn·

-•
'

�.., , 91t1t12, 1m

, • -Tile lblday Times- $Wine), s

,Cubs Blank Cards 7-0
Natiooal Leape Rowldup
the Pittsburgh Pirates, 4-1.
By Ullited Presslateruu.al
Tbe sc«e was tied all-1 and
Paul Popovich hlt his first there were two out in the flflh
career grand slam bomer wben Rusty Staub doubled and
• $aturday following an error by JIA)I1 Fairly drew a lelckJlf wall
joe Torre to help tbe Cbicago off losillg pik:ber Bruce Kism,
Cubs and Juan Piz.rro · wbo wu tagged with Ills fifth
whitewasb the St. Louis Car- loss in 10 decisions. Fairey
dinals, 7--ll.
doubled over tbe head of left
Popovich, who has been fieldei'WljlieStargeU todrivelri
filling in for the injured Gleli Staub and Fairly. BOb Bailey
Beckert, hit a Jerry Reilss followed wilh another double to
fastball into the left field chase KisOO tram tbe mouild
bleacbers in the bottom of tbe and Montreal took a ~1 lead.
third for his third home run of
In other Natibnal League
the season. The Cubs had loaded action Saturday night, Houston
the bases on asingle by Carmen was at Cincinnati, ~ FranFa11zone, a walk ·to Jim Hick- cisco at Atlanta, and
man and an error by Torre on Philadelphia at New York.
an easy two-out grounder by
Frank Fernandez.
Jim Fairey drove in two runs
with a fifth·innmg double and
rookie lefthander Ernie
McAnally pitched a six-bitter as Col.. Mohawk 2•' M•rlon
•
the Montreal Expos defeated
Ha=~ 26 (lie)
Gmel
8 Springfield North 8
Alhens 28 MarieHa 25
- - - - - - - - - Akron Buchtel 28 Maysville 8
LAZARO WINS MATCH
lakota U Ross n
HOUSTON (UPI)-Joe Laza- Elyria 35 Toledo Sd&gt;!l 7 .
ro of Waltham, Mass., was C:0.1~mbUs Northland 17 Findlay

Friday's High
Sdtool Soores

named winner Friday of the
26th Annual . Blind Golf~
Tournament wtth an operung
round score of 89. Lazaro sbot
his 89 on Thursday before
hurricane Fern dumped several
inches of rain on the H &amp; H
Country Club cqurse, wasbing
·out the second round of the
scheduled two-day event.

Fremont Ross 52 Toledo Rogers
Sa~dusky 28 Toledo DeVilbiss 6
Pleasant 2~ Wynford o
Col. Crawford 20 Ridgedale 0
Carey 29 Elgin 0

)

~~r~~rc::.:,5 ~r~fu"~~~~

0
Northr""- 35 Big Walnut 2~
CX.tarlo~
1~ Bucyrus 1~ (tie
·
Port Clinton 15 Bellevue 1
Huron 50 Norwalk 1~ ·
Stow 30 Hartville 0
Fairview 2~ Payne 0
Shadyside ~ Paden Cily (W.
Va.l 1
Cleve . . Kennedy 12 Cleve .
Glenville o
·
Oeve. Harding 44 Cleve. Adams
0
Padua U John Marshall 0
Oeve. C. C. 1( Cleve. West Tech
8
St. J-ph 7 Eudld 0
Garfield Heights 14 Chane! 7
St. Edward 37 lakewood 6
Eastlake North 12 Larain Admira! King 0
Stuebenville 13 Cathedral latin
0

Chagrin Falls 19 Warrensville 8
Kensfon 20 Conneaut 0
~:"e~~~:n;~~~~::,lyn o
Independence 52 Richmond
Heights 30
Buckeye 19 Norwayne 6
Prairie He~ Ind.) 19 Edon 0
Bryan 1 Ll
Center 6
Patrick Henry 18 Archbold 20

rt::...se::. ~ ~~ller o

good

.a.rt

~- 7, witb

011

'l'ueldaJ Dlcbt.

14llllma ligned up
fll' tbe League. '

Five.tMIIII bave jiJmped to a
lint-place · alanrling with six
poinla eac;h fll' tbe flrat nlgbt. American Lllllltl Standint$
ClmpeUUCII pnmilel to be By United Pms lnteriNIIIonal ,
teen tbla year. Tbeflntweek's I Night G-mes Not hlcluded)
slllndlDp are as followa:
(Eiost
.
.
.
·
W. l. Pd. GB
Won I:alt Baltimore
88 51 .633 · •'
~No. 2
8 2 Detroit
80 6~ .556 IO'h

Team No. a

Boston
76 70 .521 15'h
2 New
York
72 72 .500 18112
2
6
Te11n No.10
Washington
58 85 . ~ 32
TeamNo. ll
6
2 Cleveland
55 88 .385 35
TeamNo.13
6 2
West ·
·
,
,
W. L. Pd. Ga •.
TeamN0 .•3
~
~ Oakland ·
92 52 .1139
TeamNo.4
4 4 KansasCity
77 .M .538 14112
TeaDINo.5
4 4 California
68 76 .4n 24
Chicago
67 76 .469 24112
TeamNo.6
4
4 MIMesola
65 77 .458 26
Team No.7
2 ~ Milwaukee
61 -82 . ~27 30'1i
Team No.9
2 6
Satvrday's Results
York 10 Cleveland 8 ·
TeamNo: 1
2 6 New
Delroit 1 Boston 0
.
TeamNo.l2
2 6 Oakland 5 Minnesota 3 120 Inns)
· 2 6 Washlnaton at Baltimore.
Team NO · 1~'
Sept 7 T
N0 2 ,_,_ Inight, ppd, wet grounds)
()J
• • eam
· """' · Chicago ai Kansas-City (night)
six points from Team No. 1. Milwaukee al California (night)
Gilbert Meal ,.a blgb far Team
Sunday's G-mes
2 with 553 pliut, lllld Dwlgbt Minnesota at Okaland (~:30
~er'll'llllltlgb fCII' Tellll 1 with p./Uilwaukee at California (5
493 pUis. .
p.m.)
. .
Team No. 8 took ·six poinla . Chicago at Kansas City (2:30
frun Team No.7. Cbarles Neal P-~~ton at Detroit (2:30 p.m.) ·
was blgb fCII' TellD No. -1 wilb New York' at Cleveland 11 :30
560 pins, and Lee Gardner was p.m.)'
Jagh far Te1111 No. 7 with 490 Washington al Baltimore 2, 12
pius
··
·
· p.m.)
No. 10 took six points
Mandayts Gaiii!!S
frcm Team No. 8. Paul Joyal Minnesota 6t California 2
was blgh for TellD No. 10 with ~~-»
Oakland at Kansas Cityi
481 p1DB and Elmer Gardner (nlghH
_.
Chicago at Milwaukee (night)
was blgb fc.- TellD No. 9 " 1th washington at Cleveland
491 pins.
(ni]lhH
.
· Team No. 11 took six poillts 'Detroit al Baltimore 2 (lwi""''·- night)
·
frcm Team No. 12. """""' New York at Boston (night)
Houck was ltlgb fer Team No. 11
_
with 4113 piDB 111111 Jim Isaac was
National League Standings
hlfth f
N 12 'th '"1 By United Presslnternotional
. _ c.- TellD 0•
WI ..,
(Night Games Not Included)
pius.
East
Team No. 13 took six poillts
W. L. Pet. GB
fr
T
N
, W
Pittsburgh
87 59 .5%·
em eam 0· 1•· ayne st. Louis
81 64 .55'1 S'l2
Sba¥er was blgh for Team No. New York
73 69 .514 i2
13 wl.tb 511 pins lllld Jobn Lane Chicago
74 70 .5i4 12
"'ftb f Te N 14 'th Montreal
63 79 .44,1 22
wu- or 8111 f· 111 Philadelphia ~9 85 .~10 27
487 pUis. ..
West · ,
Team No. 3 spilt elgbt poillts
w. L. Pet. GB
with Team No. 4. Steve Carter San Francisco 82 62 .569
wu blgb fer Team No .. 3 wilb kfl.~rles ~~ ~ : : ~~~
561 pins and Merida Sbaw wu Cincinnati
71 75 .486 12
Jag~~ for TellD No. 4 with 493 Houston
70 7~ .486 12
.,;""
San Diego
5~ 91 .372 28'12
..--·
·
.
Satvrday's Results
Team No. 5spUt elght pomta Chicago 1 st. Louis o
wltb Team No. 6. t!.alph Montreal ~ Plltsburgh 1
~wasblgbforTeamNo. rn~~~~~elphla at New York
5 witb 502 pins and Dan Hcnn San Francisco at Atlanta
wu blgb fCII' TellD No. 6 with (night)
456 pins
Houston' at Clncinnali (night)
Hlgb .lingle game for the (&lt;Xllys~:.e;;~e,::ed)
ladles fCII' tbe evening was 7111
(All Times £On
,._ be!d by Eileen Houck and Pittsburgh at Montreal (2: i5
,.....
)
fCII'tbe~nwas21,plnaheldb:y r:sAngelesatSan Dlego(~pml ·
Gltirt Meai·IIJICI Mel lila ·91ft Pfillidilljihlli.at New: YOfk (2

" hot" deal on a new
speed up your ownership
you have the financing hon·
a

by usl We offer attrQdive
and torms ...no belli.,..,..,.
~el1oys . Come in ond talk afinancing ""ds NOW!

•

•

See OUr Oul3tantling .

0
0 ••

•

I

•
tmts

1&gt;P.voted To The Greater Middle Ohin VnllPV

Seiection of

WOMEN'S .BLOUSES
•'

The pretty blouse look is back -- gently ~iled
with lace. shirring and embroidery - pnnts and
solids. Full sleeve treatments- wide cuffs - Peter
Pan collars and turn-back tailored shirts.

SIZES 30 10 38
AND 4010 44

.

;,_

'

.,

.
~

CHICK~ GO
FOR THE~E

•.

TVRTLE-NeCI&lt;(

Them

L=r

DO YOU

SEE mE LATEST STYLES IN WEARING APPAREL FOR WOMEN MD GIRLS. AllTOP BRAID IllES.
COMPLET£ SIZE RANGES FOR EVERYONL SlOP IN AND LOOK AROUND AN.DlEI' US II1P IOU
WllH YOUR SElfCTIOftS.

6

Hiiltup ~ Antwerp 7
Younastown
North
18
d.~':'~ 0East Palestine 14
Champion 20 Sebring 12
Maple Heights 20 Rhodes 8
Parma 36 Oeve. St. Ignatius 22
North otmsled 6 Berea 0
Avon U.ke33 Oberlin 16
MidllliW 30 FaiNiew 18
CSllcrvtfteafllleJ622MedOI ~~~ F II ' each.
.
ronQSv
m....... a s • · "'"" . f the ladles
WesflakelS North Ridgeville 12
....,... senes Cll'
was
Hudson 2~ Aurora 8
483 tot.) pins, bal4 b:y Eileen
Orange 26 Cuyahoga Heights 14 Houck arid for tbe men 561 total
Perry 13 F-airport 12
·
Lorain alihollc 14 Amherst 0 Jins beld by Stieve Carter.
, Lutheran East a Wickliff" o
~nsc:.~e~~9
West 3.
TIMBER SPLITTERS
Bedford .a Noodonla 1 ~
last Wednesday night saw
Mentor -41 Ashtabula 14
the Timber Spl!ll•rs leaglltl get
Willoughby South 26 Painesville un~er w~y as f•ye teams ended
Harvey 6
up In a f•rsl place tie. Foii?Win,g
Barbertou 8 Bay VIllage o
are the results of the n1ght s
Palnt!svllle Riverside 3~ action.
Chardon 1~
larry's Wayside Furniture
Brecksville 7 Solon 6
with K. Bostic's 268-679 series
Kent Roosevelt27 West Geauga over French City Homes and J.
18
Casto's 193-533.
Vermilion 1~ ft'largaretta 6
Falls City and F. Burke's 205South Amherst 30 Weslern 580 over Marchi's Carry Out
Reserve o
and M. Null's 186-532.
Akron St. VIncent 26 Southview
Tawney's Studio wtlh K.
o
While's 216-578 over Ashland Oil
and J. Hellman's 189-502.
WILDCATS WIN
McKnl!lht . Davies Hdwr.
ClEMSON, S. C. (UPI) - and C. Thompson's 192-~ over
Kentucky Sophomore Doug Rio Grande College and J.
15~-415.
Kolar turned in a 9&amp;-yard Ramsey's
Dock Inn and W. Allison's 191·
kickoff return on bis first 539 over Happy Corner and A.
varsity play Saturday and tbe Gabr Ioiii's 103-536.
G. &amp; J. Auto and M.
Wildcats added two field goals Hoydahsell's
195-503 won six
to beat Clemsm, 1~10.
over the Moose Lodge and D.
Gabritsch's 197-537.
Some of the lop scores of the
SOLUTION night
was larry's Wayside with
a three game series oi7U, Falls
Clly's single game 978, K.
Bostic's 268 single and also
series high 679.
Standings .
LArry's Wayside
s 0
Falls City
8 0
Tawney's Studio
8 0
Dock Inn
8 0
McKnlghl &amp; Davies
8 0
G.&amp;J.Aulo
6 2
Moose Lodge
2 6
Marchi's Carry Out
0 8
Happy Corner
0 8
0 8
French CltT Homes
AshlandOI
0 8
Rio Grande College
0 8

: H&lt;)W'

.Com·e to Elberfelds Busy ·Ready to Wear DeparJment

'lbe Keltb Goble Ford Mhed
llowllnc LMgue got off to a

&lt;SWEATER5..

..

·featufinq

:"'

•.

oa··

~

..'·

,- .•·.-

•·.

·.

'

,__ .

Important New Sweaters and
Slack Tops For

HERE'S JOE COOL
HANGING AROUND THE·

DORM' ON A

AFTERNOON ..

Tops in fashion - select cardigans. long sleeve
slipovers · short sleeve slipovers - blazers - smooth
knits and bulky knits. Beauti ful solid colors and bold
stripes. See our complete line - all popular priced space dyed tweed look - all wool - nylon and acrylic
·
knits:

REGUlAR AND
EXTRA SIZES

~UNDA'l

MAI{6E I'LL GO
OVER TO THE
STUDENT UNION
AND CHECK OUT
THE !S"CENE

I

UNION

L:OOKING FOR ACTION ••

11

CITIZEN KANE AGAIN ...
I'VE ONLl( 5EEN IT
TWENT't-TH~EE TIMES ••

11

MAifBE I'LL GO OVER
l&gt; THE LI6RAR4', AND
~EE WH0'5 THERE

RATS' .. NO

CHICKS!
MAI&lt;SE I ?HOULD 60 OVE~
10 THE G't'M A~D SHOOT

A FEW BMKET&amp;...

pm)
pm)

Houslon Ill Cincinnati 12: 15 pm)
Mondoy's G-mes
Montreal al New York, 2 (twl·
nlghl)
Plttsbur~h at Chlca~o
Phllade phi a at t. Louis
·~~~~~~~ al Cincinnati (night)
San Diego at Houston (night)
Los Angeles at San Francisco
(night)
·
PLAYED SATURDAY
PORTSMOUTH - Waverly
opened its 1971 campaign bere
Saturday night against Portsmouth Notre Dame. CeredoKenova blanked Coal Grove 23.(1
in a Friday night contest.

TREMBLAY SIGNS
MONTREAL (UPI)-J. C.
Tremblay, the All.Star defenseman of the Stanley Cup
Champion Montreal Canadiens,
has signed his contract for lhe
1971-72 National Hockey League
season.
It will be the 12111 season with
Montreal for the 32-year~ld
Ttembiay.

IF I HAD 50ME _

Women's
Slacks

WHE~LS I I'D CRUI~E

AIWIJND FOR AWHILE ..

MAI{8E I SHOULD WALK
AND LOOK AT THt:
IGWL061C'AL EXHI61f...

See the season's
most wanted styles
in women's slacks
- styled in
acrylic plaids.
stripes. checks,
herringbones · tweeds
and solids and
a beautiful selection
of solid color
nylon stretch and
polyester stretchslim styles and
bell bottoms ""'
all the new
tall colors in
regular and
extra sizes.

I'VE GOTIA BE
KIDDING ... LOOK AT
THOSE ROCKS AGAIN?

NO IJAI{!

LANCELOT
WHAT

~
110/N{#
••

l'tlS'q'ONED
FORESTliiUS, N.Y. (UPI)
- Rain forced postponement of
all matches today ln the U.S.
Open tennis cha.mplonships,
pushing the men's singles semifinali to Sunday and the men's
and·women's finsla to Monday.

,
•

said the government's case
against Dr. Blazewicz was "the
most poorly investigated I've
VISIT ntE atllDREN'S DEPARTMENT
seen in a lifetime."
He said at the time Dr.
ON mE SECOND FLOOR••••
Blazewicz entered the claims
See a beautiful selection ot girls wearing
the doctCII' was unable to make
apparel Including dresses, coats. suits,
personal calls to bed-ridden
blouses•. pants suits. slacks, sweaters, slack
tops, granny dresses. beautiful coordinate
, physicaan was convicted after elderly patients because a
groups. Hundreds of beautiful items to choose
five hours of jury deliberation. dalJ8hler was fatally lU and the
from
. all the lattst styles, fabrics and colors.
He bad finnly denied wrong- doctCII' bimself was ill. ·
All ~izes from tots to teens.
doing earlier in the day
·testifying in his own behalf.
He "noted Dr. Blazewicz is
SEE OUR OUIDMDING GROUP
Dr. Blazewicz said the late highly respected in Meigs
1
1968 and early 1989 calls at the County, and the only physician
OF WEARING APPAREL
residence of Mr. and Mrs. Fred who makes house calls ln lhe
FOR atUBBY GIRLS •••
: Larkin, of Long Bottom, were mountainous · Appalachian
F:ir Aulll, Ufe &amp; FiN fn: : made under his direction by region. He said ·"follow-up"
Including slacks, blouses. sweaters. jac~ets,
surance
office nurse, Mrs. Daisy house calls by visiting nurses
dresses, jumpers, pants suits, and coats Clnlll K. Slow den
Frecker.
are not unusual in such rural
dressy dresses and tailored styles - stretch
slacks
in .solid colors and all wool plaids Larkin
had
been
the
doctCII''s
areas.
·P•rl Ctotral Hetti Bhi1.
jumpers
In bonded knits and tweeds -- long
S"on~ Ave. Ph. 446-42H
.. patient but Mrs. l.arl(ln'a name
Asst. U.S. Atty. Robert Zitko
Homo Ph. 446-4511
sleeve
cotton
tailored blouses-2 piece pants'
was given as the pei'SOII treated reminded the jury in closing
. ,GaiiiMiis
suit in bonded acrylic knit.
wben Medicare claims totaling argwnen1illilit Mr. and Mrs.
Sizes 8'12 lo 16'/2
$256 for house calls and mileage ,Larkins bolh denieil under oath
i'61111 were submitted.
lhal Mrs.
Frecker
had made
IIISVFIItCe COMpaftie&amp;
Defense Atty. Fred Crow, of house
calls.
Senten.ing
will lhe
be .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Home OHice
II.. Mifttton,
!lllftli$
Pcmeroy, a former FBI agent, later, the court said.

1' .

•

. COLUMBUS - Sentencing
was delayed Friday for Dr.
Selim Blazewicz, 54, of
Pcmeroy, found guilty Thursday in U.S. District Court on
five counts of making

Go.oo·Guv· fr;~~~e~~~~~~f::y-=d

..

ELBERFELDS

IN POMEROY

STATE FARM

'

.

ST~DENT

I SEE THE'I''RE 5HOWING

St. Louis at Chicago (2: 15 pml
San Francisco at Atlanta (2: 15

·GOOD--BUY Doctor is Found Guilty ·

'"'

HERE'~ JOE COOL.
HANGING AROUND THE

...

_______

-~~

•

IF ltOIJ flAW iHS: TREE "fVV.J
HAVE 10 &amp;AW ME IN HALF, TOO.

1HERE'5 A GULf
WITH TWO CHICK~..
HOII) POE!? HE

DO IT?

THE -LEAVES AR~
BEGINNING TO FALL ..
THE SUN IS WARM, BUT
IT'S KIND OF CHILL'(
IN T(.{E SHADE

I WONDER WHAT'S'
601NG ON AT HOME' ..

MA'{BE I 5HOIJLD .GO
6ACK TO lHE DORM ANO
WRITE SOME LETTERS ...

,¥ -71GH ~ JOE COOL.
HATES :;VNOA'{
AFTERNOONS'...

by Coker &amp; Penn·

-•
'

�\

ALLEY OOP

lby Dick

WINTHROP
1-Tr"~,..,..;;.i'"r::"l · .'NELL, I FINALLY Mer iHE

~ ... ANp OOW SHE~ COM~
0\I~R TO MOO MID DONE;

SQMJ;l"HING TO AU.EY/

. J..IKE W1f'~~

"YYU 6U · ·

... AND WA611-te 6CQ !CGEOF
"Tl-iE' NE:IGHBCJI&lt;HCOD..,

'NHO t.leEO 10 GO

~DBEA11NG

FANDl.J5 NA5TY M'-NARF•••

· cavalli·-~ -

FEAQI;D 6Y EVERYONE.

UPQ.l KIDS •••

.

-....

.

0

AND IF "'IU OOt.rl't.

I 1LL DO IT M~ELF"

·~

I MI...Y5T HAVE C4Llal-fr
HIM IN "THE MIDDLE

NE:VE3210 RA.I6E Hl9 HAND

UNTIL ONE 04Y HE
RE'F0/2ME:Q AND
100K A 60L.EN.N

IN ANGER AGAJN5rANOTHER
Hl.Vv\.AN BEl fiG .A.GAIN.

yow •..

.,..

~--.,..~
; .. -

_:
,. -

OF A RELAF5E.

..-;.:------:--

..

.f

.

c

'

'---

ANDY CAPP

by Al Ve:r•neer ·

PRISCILLA'S POP

by

REAPY TO RIDE AND
SPREAD THE ALARM
THROUGH EVERY MIDDLESEX
VI.L LAGe AND FARM ••• 11

,.-(

I. j

3.

H
••

·-

I

~-l~
.I

•

i1

••
=l

~8

,..

-·
9

JOHNKY WONDER
••••
•• •

CAN YOU

::.o;;:

'!'~AC~ rH~·

~­

•.....
~·

t.IN !!S OF=

•'

'!'HE: 'T'I&lt;IANGI..E:
W11HOU1 CIWSSING A

'.••...,..

....

L.IN!i 0~ I.IF11NG YOUr&lt;

P6NCII.. F~M 1H6 PN'S~1

'!'He:Re
ARES

Aeou-r

3, 000
'!'AST!i 6UP5

ON
WE'RE GOHNA

YOU I&lt;
'!'ON6U~ •

THIS WEEK 'STOP
PRIZE QU£STION :

... Flie51-1-WA1'6~ FISH
PRINK veltY 1..111'1.! OR
NO WA'feR Ar AI. I..
51NC6 'f'H61R 800111~
AR~ SAL.'!'IIiR 'fHP.N
· rHE WA'flt( 'fl.lliY

M

w

.

..I

I.NE: IN,TI1~Y
WOUL." e8 IN
~~It Ofl

tWJI.I.IN6 UP.

~-

f

'

'

A.

r.::?"

~.

.

~--~

.

~

•

&lt;A....'-- ••

�.TilE ·BORN LOSER

•
GOOOIV V.AC,l'TIQN ...

EC$WJC,

JIIELLO CAMPUS!

by Art Sansoza.

t c.AH RiA&amp;.LV FLASM ON Till$
DIL!C!OUS DINING IW.I. FOOOJ
FltEN&lt;-OLn; TASTa IUDS J,

~MO~tT'S
SNANM.I

tAt

'FROM 'DOOLITTLE COL~"EG.E

hi~ riJa,iA_
All! ~V RIGilTEOliS

llUNNlNG WATER,
JNDOOl FACILITIES,
ELECTRICIT'f ••

Oi.D llOOST··"THE DORMJ
BEAUTIFUL ,!

PRACTIClm,
M'l B()){IWo!

--.,;;;=•

•

!' tm

"HU.

k .

nt

l .rg_ U.! .

'et Off

.

•

by Stoffel &amp;

BUGS BUNNY

•

•

WHERE HA\11=:;
YOU 5E:EN 'f

I LIKE. TO KeeP

~eTWO

PLANTED 6Y PLACING

SCHEDUl-e!

MINUl}:5

w

IVE INDICATED WHERE 1.
WANT iHE. SHWues

THII'JGSON

STICK?

T'~ACH

I.ATE/

IN iHI;;

HIS CJWN!

l?WOUND!

Hei~ndahl

GE:T BUSY.'
srMT DIOOING
THe HOl-ES
10 Pl.ANT THE

SHwues .,....._-'
IN!

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

Cl
A

I-

~~

D .

Clllll ., NEA, Joe. 9•/Z.

- .......- ·

.....

~~

'!NF~A1JorJ!

WHATS TI-lE lOEA,
YOU WACKV

WASSIT''l ARE
YOU iWYING iO

'1A'I.!J

SORRY! 1 WAS
ONLV CAL.LING

11-t' POOCH!

81SCU\TS.'

WUPT.UREMY

EAADWUMS?

OUR BOARDING .HOUSE
M'i 'WORD, 'WE CM~ MAKE.
(&gt;. FORTUNE! ltl PHONE
DISCOVERY UNLIMITED
FOR ,.._!11
INIERVIE.W!

E6,.._0, KI6GI1'4S ..eLD
· ME. UP 60 LONG

(

.MPI
..

iHt\T 'I'M lATE!

'

t\E'r'!

wP...rt

FOR "THE,
SkSNA.l..

..

~'·

OSGOOD'S Tr-4' ~EST
HEl-PeR I'VE CV~
HAO ..,AN' HE 6fT5
PAID OFf:' IN DOG

THEY DIDN'T $0UND
VERY IMPRESSED! I'LL
HAVE TO PLAN A.
DRAMATIC
DEMONSTRATION!

by Les Carroll
MY A?POINTMENT 15
FOR if P.M.! 'I'Ll. $ET
Ttll ~ Ftm lf:IO-IT
WILL STA~T DURING
TtlE l~TERVI EW!

�.

. .

.

'72 ·
Laurie Schaefer

Of Bexley .Takes
Devoted To 1Jw Interest. Of 11w Meigs-MfUOn Area

Boardwalk :Prize

NO. XXIV NO. 105

POMEROY-MIDDLEPnRT. OHlO

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1971

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

f

'

~.

.,.. .
··""" "',
'

'·

Operat/on
Head st:artAH't:L FOLLY '#ORE.
SON WMOI&gt;.R'I ·

\1\t)kt.~'- ANOTHS(

MAWNII-l'-AN'

SCORCHER!!

ftOLVE. TH

GoO' BYE, FOLKSAH IS OFF!! ·

I

_...... M'I'STERY-

BY BOB HOEFLICH
It's a long way from the tiny stage at the Pomeroy Junior
High School auditiirium to the vast Convention Hall in Atlantic
City,N. J. -In more ways than one.
However, bridging the gap beautifully fD become Miss
America of 1972 Saturday night In the Boardwalk City was Miss
Laurel Lea (Laurie) Schaefer of Bexley.
Miss Schaefer first caught the Miss America ''fever'' ln.
Pomeroy in 1968 when she was crowned Miss Southern Ohio
among a field of 17 contestants from Gallia, Meigs, Washington
and Athens Counties.
Her national vicfDry Saturday :-:·.·. .·"'.·,·:·:·. ··..,;·.···.·:···:·.·.·:·:·. ··:·.·:···:.··:··
night in AUantic City was no
The new Miss America '·'overnight success." Since Miss Laurel Lea Schaefer,
winning her first crown in the Bexley - wm make a perPomeroy Junior High School sonal appearance on the ·
way back in 1968, she has been Tonight Show of Johnny
constantly working fDwards seH Carson at 11:30 tonight.
improvement and grooming
herself for bigger things. Those
bigger things came Saturday all of the girls taking part in the
night and her composure was 1969 pageant. Local residents
amazing. Only toward the very who came into contact with her
end of the Miss America found her dynamic and
Pageant did Laurie seem to lose refreshing. She was sincere,
that calmness, and then it was ambitious and lovely.
While giving up her Miss
only momentarily.
After winning the Miss Southern Ohio Iitle in 1969, Miss
Southern Ohio Pageant in Schaefer the ssme year was
Pomeroy in 1968, Miss Schaefer named Miss Central Ohio at a
went to Cedar Point to compete pageant held in Colwnbus. Once
in the Miss Ohio finals. She "got more, she returned to the Miss
her feet wet" but that was about Ohio Pageant in Cedar Point.
it. However, there was a She did well, but couldn 'I come
up with the state tiUe.
challenge and she took it.
In 1970, Laurie took part in no
In 1969, Laurie returned to
Pomeroy to take part again in pageants but did however,
the 1969 Miss Southern Ohio appear as a performer during
Pageant, not as a contestant, ol the . between segment en~ourse, but ·as the reigning tertainment at the state
queen about to relinquish her pageant. It was good exposure
title. She thrilled local and good experience. .
audiences when she moved onto This year, Miss Schaefer
the runway in the junior high again tDok the Miss Central
auditorium to present her ef- Ohio title and for the third time
fective version of "The 1m- returned to the state compossible Dream." Her im- petition. There was no defeating
possible dream undoubtedly her ; she, by that time, had
came true Saturday night in become a top flight contestant.
ConsequenUy, she walked off
AUantic City.
When Miss Schaefer returned with the Miss Ohio tiUe and her
fD Pomeroy in 1969 her poise, chance at the national title
her talent, her style, and her which she captured Saturday
·
personality reflected vast night.
Probably
none
of
the 50
improvement. She was the
epitome
of graciOIIBiless toward
{Continued on Page 8)
... . ...... ... _. . .,
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Seven reeks
Over eekend
4 Thefts I
I
:: :::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::;;:::::~::::::::::=:~:::::::::::::~::.-:::::::..~oe·

Agnew Asks Governors End

Reported

C'MON CXJT!! R
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MOOMIUATI. ME"
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CAPTAIN EASY
Mcl&lt;E&lt;I?~

by Crooks &amp; Lawrence

A 13U~INS~5 D'INAMO 51NCe

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WA~ RATHE:Ft
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l.tW ~SADING " THE NAPOl£0N TOUCH"!

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OF THAT COMPANY
VOU TOOK OVER
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THI? l.ITTI.S

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The 22-year.old beauty from
Bexley, Ohio, a suburb of
Columbus, was crowned Miss
America at midnight Saturday
in crowded convention hall
here. She stayed dry-eyed after
winning the title to keep her
false eyelashes from slipping.
She accepted congratulations
from her widowed mother, her
12-year old brother and her
"terribly proud" boy friend,
and slept for two hours.
She then appeared at the
news conference and fielded
questions about abortion, premarital sex, campus drugs and
politics. Under a new ruling,
Miss America is allowed to
comment on controversial
fDpics.

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PeUy Partisan Bickering

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LUNCH TOMORROW!

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MISS MIEJUCA 1972 ON POMEROY STAGE - This was the scene in Pomeroy in 1968
when Miss Laurel Lea (Laurie) Schaefer, Bexley, won her first crown in a preliminary Miss
America Pageant. Saturday night Miss Schaefer who was named Miss Ohio this summer at
Cedar Point after three attempts at the state crown, was named Miss America at AUantic City,
N.J . Shown with her court selected on May 4, 1968in Pomeroy, Miss Schaefer is third from the
left. Others, from the left, are Gloria Jean Jones, Grove City, a student at Marietta College at
the time, Miss Congeniality; Unda Moore, Canal Winchester, who was attending Ohio
University, second runner-up; Jeanne Diane Capri, Rye, N.Y., a Marietta College student at
the time, first runnerup, and Jayne Lee Hoeflich, Pomeroy, attendant to the queen and her
court.

Accompanied by a retinue of
state policemen and her chaperone, Miss America drove to a
convention in King of Prussia,
Pa . For an hour she greeted
guests at the convention of the
Holiday Fair Chrisbnas show,
sponsored by three large
Philadelphia wholesale druggists.
This morning she was attending another news conference in
New York City.

'"I'm conservative and I'm
very proud of it," said the new
Miss America, daughter of a
school teacher and grandaugh·
ter of a member of the
Dapghters of the American
Revolution.
In her four years at Ohio

University in Athens, Ohio,
where she majored in fine arts,
Miss Schaefer said she had
been offered drugs, but she

always turned them down .
"I faced a lot of pressure
from my peers, but I feel that
I'm a secure enougb individual,
I don 't need any escape," she
said.
On premarital sex she said,
"I'm against it. I know that I
am of a minority of girls of my ~~:e*:;:;o;:;:;s;:::;:,';:;.;;;:;:;.~-:;:;:;:-.;&amp;~'3~
age to believe as l do. I have
WARRINGTON, England
been brought up in such a way {UPII - About 200 cars and
that these are not the values I trucks crashed into o.ach
set for myself. "
other today on a fog-bound
superhighway
In northwestern Eugland, leaving
dead, Injured and crushed
vehicles in one of the worst
automobile pileups in British
freed but there was no im- history.
mediate word on the fate of the
Pollee said at least nine
others. The prisoners had persons died and more than
threatened to kill the '13 guards 60 were injured ID the mileand 11 civilian employes if long Irati of wreckage on the
amnesty demands were not M6
motorw~y
oear
met. Authorities rejected the Warrington,
15
miles
demands.
southeast of Liverpool.
A plea went out for "all
available ambulances" to come ss::0.~:;:;_-;:::;~~&gt;:::::s::;:,.~-».!!.~~~
to the scene to carry out the
"suffering and the injured,"
MEIGS MARRIAGE UC~E
Newsmen on the scene ssid Nicholas Joseph Neutzlmg,
23, and Rosemary Morris, 21,
(Continued on Page 8)
both of Pomeroy.

Some Hostages Freed
ATTICA,N. Y. (UP!) -More
than 1,000 state police and
sheriffs' deputies stormed the
Atlica prison today with guns
blazing in a tid to free 31

hostages held by rebellious
prisone111. Hellc~lers bovered
overhead, dr~plng tear gas on
tile facility .
At least U bostages were
,

By Uolled Press InternatiODal

MIG 17 Fired on over Heights
A MWTARY SPOKESMAN SAID in Tel Aviv that !Braeli
troops fired at a Syrian Soviekonstrucled MIG17 as it soared
over the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights today. It was not
disclosed whether the craft was hit. Israel protested the Olght fD
the U. S. Truce Supervisory Commission in Jerusalem. It was the
third overflight of the Golan Heights by Syrian planes since the
start of the current ceasefire.

soot nas
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Scientists reported today that
two environmental problems
have been successfully attacked
by using smokestack soot to
reclaim !arid wasted by coal
mining .
Soot, or Oy ash, presents a
giant disposal problem to
utilities that burn coal fD
generate electricity. · Power
plants produce 30 million tons
of it a year.
By applying the soot, which is
alkaline, to acidic coal mine
spoil and refuse areas, the land
can he made less sour and
more hospitable to plant life.
There are more than 600,000
acres of acid land in the big

.•

Value

strip mining states of Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio,
lllinois and Kentucky.
John P. Capp and Lester M.
Adams of the Bureau of Mine's
Morgantown, W. Va ., Energy
Research Center reported the
findings to the American
Chemical Society at its annual
meeting.
Yields of hay grown on onceacid land reclaimed with fly
ash were comparable fD those
from nearby pastures and
meadows, they ,said.

Detmner
• on
Wanted Man
Adetainer has been placed on
Frances Levi (Hack) Pickens,
being returned from Florida fD
Talmadge, Ohio , by Meigs
County law enforcement
agencies, the office of Sheriff
Robert C. Hartenbach said
Sunday.
Sarasota County Sheriff Ross
E. Boyer has notified Harienbach and Meigs Prosecutor
Bernard V. Fultz that Pickens,
wanted here on a charge of
forgery, has waived extradition, and will .&gt;be
returned
II\.'
to Talmadge to answer to a
felony warrant. The detainer
will insure Pickens' return fD
Meigs County upon his release
at Talmadge.

A LiUle Late, for Some

TROPICAL STORM HEIDI, ONE of four stqrms in the
Atlantic Ocean and the Gillf of Mexico, parallel~d the Eastern
seaboard today and small craft warnings flew from Cape Hatteras fD New England. .
There appeared fD be no immedla!" danger, bow~ver, that the
toniJ,
with peak 50 mile per bour winds, would st!1ke the U.S.
8
mainland.

ij

§

I

. Heidi Lurking off Coast

$

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1

•
WASHINGTON- MANUFACI'URERS OF synthetic football
turf have been asked fD provide Congress with reports on safety
tests of their products. Rep. John E. Moss, D-Calif., sent lelte111
asking for the findings to Monsanto, the manufacturer of
Astroturl; 3M Co., the maker of '!'arlan Turf; and American
Blltrite Rubber Co., which produces Polyturf.
Moss, chairman of a House Commerce subconunittee, said
over the weekend the tests were sought becall8e a recent study
indicated athletes playing on synthetic turf suffered 50 pet. more
injuries than:thoSe playing on natural grass. The study was made
by Dr. James Garrick of the University of Washington.

t

*

SAIGON -MILITARY SPOKESMEN SAID today that South
Vietnamese Black Panther troops seized jhree 12?nun long-l'ange
North Viefnanlese guns In the mountain jungles near the Laotian
border, and also wrecked a concealed Communist supply cache in
the same area. The Saigon forces found in this same region the
bodies of '13 enemy soldiers killed earlier in some of the heavy
allied air strikes.

IT

i*
:~

SAN' JUAN, P.R. {UPI) -Vice President Spiro T. i:i
Sheriff Robert Harten bach 's
l:'
:
Department was. busy in Agnew called on the nai!OD's governors today to shun ij
?:
vestigating a wave of accidents
"petty bickering and partlsao joekeyiag" in debate over ~
that plagued the county
President Nlx011's new economic policy.
~
%
Saturday night and Sunday.
"fn this period of a freeze 011 wages, prices and ~
At 11:20 p. m, Sunday on
rents, and indeed in the stage that follows tbe freeze, let
Route . 124 in Rutland, minor
us work together ID the pubUc loterest through a rational ·!:i
damages were incurred to a ' discussion aod a spirit of cooperatiOD," Agnew told tbe
vehicle driven east by Paul E.
63nl annual National Governors Conference.
il.!
Ervin, 22, Racine, when two
In remarks prepared for the opening business :.~
deer ran into the highway,
sessioo of the meeting, Agnew returned to his role as :~
striking the right door of Erchief White House link with state government. He
vin's vehicle.
defended Nlx011's new economic policy agalust 1§
At 2:30 a. m. Sunday on
Democratic and labor movement charges tballt offered ~
County Road 4, a pickup truck
unfair tax relief based m a trickle down theory and tllat ~
was demolished when it went
profit controls shonld be tied to other controls as they
out of control in loose gravel
were not lo tile 91Mlay wage-{lrlce freeze . He said he was .
and off the right side of the
a believer io "honest partisanship, that the Nixon policy
road, overturning onfD its top in
til
was nothauded down from MI. Olympus aud was subject
a deep ditch. The vehicle was
to searching study leading to Improvement where It
owned by Clarence Hoffman,
Langsville Rt. 1 and was $, coold be Improved."
believed to have been driven by
•••·:
Kenneth D. McCune, Hi,
Rutland .
An
apparent
passenger, Jim Harmon, 16, John Newlun , a passenger, had 22, Pomeroy Rt. 3, traveling ·
Rulland , suffered a collarbone a scratched forehead and Er- west, had $400 damages when it
injury.
nest Newlun a sprained arm. skidded out of control into a.
At 7:05p.m. Saturday on Vine They were not treated im- ditch .
St. in Racine, mediwn damges mediately .
Meantime, several thefts
were reported when vehicles Saturday at 10 p. m. at the were reported. to the sheriff's
driven by Lynda D. Young, 22, intersection of County Road 28 dept. over the weekend .
Two guns were stDlen from
Racine , backed out of a and State Route 124, a vehicle
driveway and did not see an driven by Thomas L. the Mickey Hutton property,
oncoming car driven by Burroughs, 45, Tuppers Plains, l Rutland Rout~,kand 150tlfeetof
Deborah L. La Valley, 16, turning south onto the county lwnber from the VirgO Parions
Racine Route I.
road, skidded and went over 8 property at Pomeroy Route 3.
Earlier Saturday at 6:30p.m. slight embankment. Burroughs Fred Whitehead, New Albany,
on State Route 248, three miles was arrested for driving while reported the theft of a tent,
camp stove 81\d other equiP&lt;
east of Chester, a vehicle driven intoxlcatOO.
by Ernest Gale Newlun, 24, At 11:48 p. m. 1;8turaay "' ment from property he owns
Long Bottom, was a total loss Salem Township, at the in- near Pagetown, and Sam Hicks,
when it went out of controlfor 56 tersection of the Salem Langsville Route 1, said an auto
feet before skidding sideways ·Township Road and County engine, a car shaft and other
for 96 feet more and rolling over Road 31, an International Scout auto parts were removed from a
once, landing on its wheels. driven by William P. Radford, shed on his property.

Three Big Guns Seized

·r~V 5rU66S~TlNCS

llli

~

Miss Schaefer in Mainstream America
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (UP!)
- Laurel Lea Schaefer of Ohio,
. Miss America 1972, is brownhaired, green-eyed, 36-24-34,
and, of course, beautifuL
She is against premarital sex,
has been offered drugs by her
peers but refused, always wore
skirts or dresses fD class, feels
President Nixon is doing a good
job, says she is a political
conservative, and has a boy
friend in Columbus.
The boy friend says "the
country's choice merely points
up my good taste."
"l'm not a typical co-ed, but
l feel the majority of my peers
feel the way I do," she said
Sunday in her first press
conference.

tM'c"O

Weather
RECEPTION - Mrs. James Carpenter, Ohio's
Hcmemakerofthe Year,washonoredwitharecepilon by the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners in conjunction with their annual
Dower show Saturday. On behaH of the club, Mrs. Harold
WQI.fe, left, president, made a gift of jewelry to Mrs. Carpenter. The silver tea service was awarded fD her when she
was selected Homemaker of the Year at the r.j!Cent stale fair.
Other silver pieces were gifts fr001 her family, and the
flowers were presented by the Pomeroy Flower t.1op. (See
account on Page 5. )

•'

Light rain in the east ending
this afternoon; party cloudy
elsewhere. Hlglla In the 71111.
Pardy cloudy !might witll lows
In the SOS. Mostly sunny
.Tue:!daywith little temperature
change. Highs In the 7011.

~P~~ow

BEST OF SHOW AWARD- Mrs. Homer Pal-ker, right, received
of show award
for her modern arrangement in the "Saturday's Night.Out" class. Top blue ribbon winner in ·
the show was Mrs. Tom Stewart who displays her winner in the "Sunday's Peace" class. (See
acr.onnt on Page 5.)

Final plans for a horae allow
will be made when the F.tern
LocRI School District Atbletlc
Boosters meet at &amp; p. m.
Tuesday at the hlah ac:hool •

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