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· PLEASANT V.UU:Y

WEDGE RF.'!IGNS
u •SCijARGES: Teresa
PT. PLEASANT - Polni
Duncan,
Gallipolis ; Mrs .
Pleasut High School wUI
Robert Johnson, Racine ;lose - of Its coaches wbo
Jeanie
Mattox, 1\lrs. Herman
resigned to
COLUMBUS · ( UPI)
Fonner state Finance Director
Howard L. Collier said today
'the Gilligan administration's
· revenue . estimates are accurate and the state will ·a_;nto

·MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Saturday
October 27-28
PINK ANGELS
ITechnlcolor )

Jon Alderman
Tom Basham

SITTING TARGET
ITechnicolor)

GP

Oliver Reed

----R
Jill St. John

Sun., Mo.n. &amp; Tues.
Oct. 19-30-31
PRIME CUT
CTechnicolor)
Lee Marvin
Gene Hackman

Colorcartoons
· Show Starts 7 P.M.

debt by next May if the state
. income taxes are repealed.
Collier, who served under
former Republican Gov .
James A, Rhodes , is cochairman of the 'speaker's
bureau for Ohioans for Fair
Taxation, a citizens' group
favoring retention of the in·
come tax.
Collier held a joint news
conference with his successor,
state Finance Director Harold
A. Hovey, to dispute claims by
repeal supporters that current
spending levels could be
continued without the personal
and corporate income· taxes.
"I have examined the in·
come and spending estimates
of the Department of Finance
for the present fiscal year, "
said Collier, now a vice
president of Medical College of
Ohio at Toledo. These
· estimates are based on current ·
taxes and leg'islative ap·
propriations. I believe these
estimates to be as accurate as
possible."

Peace
, Tonight-Sat.-Sun.
October 27-28-29
Double Feature

••BLOOD
MANIA"
ALSO

"POINT
OF

TERROR"

(Continued from page I)
peace· talks warned Thursday
that delay could jeopardize the
agreement and that the United
States should override Thieu's
. objections. Bul they said they
would meet next Thursday for
the regular meeting, two days
after the deadline.
·The war increased . in
· violence and two more
Americans were wounded in
the fighting as both sides
stepped up their attacks in an
apparent effort to win all
territory possible before there
is a truce.

I

Our mattress
Is better than

your

,.

mattress.d.·a.o~

in Meigs County Common
proceed with core drlllhtg Ill
Pleas Court.
a aew school project.
Helen Lyons, Pomeroy, is
The Mason County ·Board
suing Theodore ·navis, Mason, • of Education accepted the
for damages in the amount of
resignation Thanday night
$836.20, charging that the
of Jimmy Joe Wedge who
defendant negligenUy drove
will . remain as a Biology
his car into the Meigs Theatre
teacher. No . reason was
Building in Pomeroy she owns
given.
on Dec. 18, 1971.
Plans were made • to
Mary E. Eblen, Pomeroy,
progress with core driUiog
asks divorce from Mahion G.
lor a proposed Henderson
Eblen, Middleport, and Helen
School ,site, · although no
Hubbard from Larry Hubbard,
actual purchases of land
each charging gross neglect of
have been made at this Ume.
duty and extreme cruelty.

:r~~~d :div~~~cf~~~~ii;~s . ,:,:,:::i::; :,:~;:~;:;:;:~;~:m;:;~~,,~:;:::;~:·~:;:;:m
Hutchison .

Weather

EXTENDED OUTLOOK

~

that.at least 1.3 mlllliln peraons

Holland, Mrs.
Wilson, all
Point Pleasant ; George
Vester, Gallipolis Ferry ; Mrs.
Clayton Bowles, jtobertsburg;
Lisa Hayes, New Haven;
Tomarra Williarils&lt;in, SOuihside; Liza Martin, Henderson ;
William Saunders·, Glenwood ;
Mrs. ManforttBauer, Sr., Point
Pleasant ; Mrs . Bar bara
Lucas, Point Pleasant.

A chance of showers
Suaday aad north pat11on
Tuesday. Highs mid 50s 1o
.m ld 60s. Lows In the · 4h
Sunday and Monday dropping to the mid 30s to low 40s
Tuesday morning.

-&lt;9

Open Both Friday and ·saturday
9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M.
•,

Save now during our store .wide sale on gir1s d1esses -

womens daytime sets - womens briefs and bikinis - Lee ·

work uniforms • mens sport shirts • boys sport Shirts.

pomeroy
national
bank

mens coats and jackets - on the 3rd floor - sale of framed
minors in all sizes - window shades - bed pillows - yam special values in the housewares department
And at the warehouse on Mechanic Street · a big sale of
The toy store is open - so bring the kiddies in for a visit

Use our free parking lots - on Second Street and
Mechanic St
Open Friday and Saturday Nights Til 9 P.M.

LADIES VISIT
Dutton's Beauty Center

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
LIVE IT UP - - ·. DO YOUR THING!
•

Saturday Night

•

10:00 TIL 2:00

The Aristocrats

*

Featuring
Bruce St~lnaker, vocalist.

The Meigs l'nn
Pomeroy

Ph. !192·3629

...
•.

Meigs
Property
Transfers

FACE GLAZER

By Dana
$400

Spell-Spinning
Spray

)

·-

&amp; $~

$115

Your Skin &amp; Cream Moisturizers

Loretta Young Creation
Lady Schick

Warmed in Seconds With
· Elec. Dispenser

Warm 'n Cream

Of Our.
-, rr--1· .]u;t To Mendon A Few
Famous Brands In Cosmetics
:..;11 Max Factor
White Shoulders
.

I

''

i

f;\

-:
£
'

.•.

jI'

.

.

Coty
Faberge
Dana

Shalimar

Channel No. 5.
Skinny Dip
Helena Ruomsteili · Hot Pants
.

·'

Caron Cologne
Jean Nate

signs along the way most of them strongly in support of the President.
proclaiming ."We love you President
'!lie President, standing up with his head
Nixon.' '
poked th rough tbe sunroof of his limousine,
Nearly every ethnic group in Cleveland moved slowly when the crowds were large
Wil$ represented at the airport, most by but in areas between towns where the
pretty fiirls dressed in the costume of their crowds were sparse the motorcade moved
native land.
at a fairly brisk clip. Just after the
ln the mainly white, working-class President passed one place, several
suburb of North. Royalton the President supporters wer&lt; heard to complain, "Boy,
launched an impassioned defense of the that was fast, '' and ~· ] didn 't even realize it ·
nation's law officers.
was him until he was by."
"Sometimes you see some scroungv
Earlier , Nixon pledged to . keep his
looking people spitting on policemen and economic policies on.their present course.
.calling them pigs. It makes my blood
"A dynamic eConomic e xpa_u~ io n is
boil," Nixon said.
SW'ging al1 across Arrierica," Nixon said in
Signs Support Nixon
a statement issued as he arrived at the
The President said he had been told that Cleveland airport and was greeted by
a policeman in Parma had been killed this between 3,000 and 4,000 supporters, ma ny
week while apprehending a criminal.
· of them in the colorful eastern European
"You can't pay these people enough," native costumes that represent the city's
Nixon said. "You can't pay people enough · ethnic base.
,
who risk their lives to save your life. What
"Ali this heart ening economic growtl&gt;
you can do is honor them."
shouid be sending us this clear policy
The crowds stood lour and five deep in message: Continue on course," Nixon
.some places along the route. Although said . "This is not a time to experiment
there was a sprinkling of signs supporting with chancy economic theories, or to add
Nixon's Democratic opponent, Sen . vast expenditures to the federal budget
George McGovern, most of the signs were and thereby force a tax increase."

Weather
Cloudy and cooler Sunday,
chance of light rain south.
Highs in the 50s. Sunday night
and Monday, mostly cloudy
south, chance of lighl. rain
Monday. Lows Sunday night
mid 30s to low 40s. High Sunday
in the 50s.

The. weather l!!as mild with sun poking
'!::·Ough the clo uds ·~1s Nixon bega n his
motorcade along a route that snaked from
Cleveland to the Youngstown area.
New American Majority
Belore leavin g Washin gton , Nixon
signed 44 bil ls including legislatio n
establishing a conswner safety program
and authori zing the Environmental
Protection Agency·to establish new conh·ols on noise.
The President also delivered a radio
address on time paid for by his campaib'TI
organization in wh ich he repeated his ca ll
for an overwhelming mandate for a "new
Ame rican ma jority."
Nixon had been scheduled to use the
purchased radio time fo r a major campaign statemenl on national defense. But
the White House said that the President
decided the speech needed mo re work and
postponed it unlii shortly alter hoon
Sunday.
·in its place , Nixon de li vered a speech on
"natio nal unity" which closely pa.ralleled
many ol his previous campaign speeches.
Ge ts Ethnic Support
At the Cleveland airport, Nixon .shook

hands wit~ many of his ·well-wis~ers, at
one point pushing throUgh the crowd to
where several people in Lithuanian
national dress were perched on an airline
ra mp unde r a si gn procla iming
"Lith uanians for Nixon ."
~~·
The President posed for pictures, waved
and pushed on.
\,
ll&gt;e President was greeted in Cleveland
by a wide variety of signs citing ethnic
gro ups such as "Byelorussiani; Say Four
More Years," "Ukrainians for Nixon·
Agnew" and "Serbs· lo; Freedom- NixonAgnew. "
The crowd along the early portion of the
motorcade route was overwhelmingly
friendly a.nd applauded lustily as the
President , clad in a tan ra incoat, stood in
the back seat of his black limousine, his
head protruding through the open top.
Mrs. Nixon stood at his side.
in his radio speech, Nixon said , "I urge
each of you- whether you are a
Democrat, a Republican or an in·
dependent- to be~"Ome part of the New
· American Majorlty:...to help us keep on
building a strong America, a just
America-One Ameri ca embodying the

hopes and faith of ail Americans.''
In another statement issued upon arrival
in Cleveland, Nixon said his ad·
ministration has "succeeded in stoppinl! ·
.
.
· the growth of criminal acli~ity . "
"The FBI crime index showed an (ncrease of only one per cent in the first half
of this year-the closest the nation has
come to an actual decrease since the index
began nearly 12 years ago," he said.
"In nearly half of our nation's largest ·
cities- including Cleveland, Columbus,
Youngstown, Akron and Panlia, Ohiocrime has already begun to decrease," he
said.
The President said if reelected he would
resubmit to Congress legislation requiring
"tough mandatory sentences" for heroil\
pushers.
In his radio speech, Nixon said he hoped
this year's campaign would unify .rather
than divide the nation.
"Too olten in past years, politicians of
both parties have made thetr appeal not to
what was good for America, but to the
divided and somewhat conflicting . In·
terests of various groupa and blocs," he
said.
'

Ondine
.. Blue Jeans

.. .._.~..~~~~iiiiiiMiiNiiiiiiiNi

•

+

Your Invited Guest
Reaching More
Than 11,500
Families

tmts
Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley
3~

PAGES

FOUR SECTIONS
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1972

Pomeroy-Middleport

New Community
College woUld
be big bargain

Dr. Christensen, who also is chairman
of the board of trustees of the new community college - ~pproved by the Ohio
~oard of Regenti; liut still in the planning
'stage - said the proposed two-year college
.'on the Rio campus is a first in Ohio, and
even unique in the nation. II is uniqu~, h~
. said, because the conununity college here
will use the facilities and staff of the fouryear Rio Grande College.
"If the people of our four counties had to
start from scratch to build a community
college, as people in other parts of Ohio
have, they would have millions of dollars
invested before they saw a brick raised,"
Dr. Christensen said. ·
He said under Ohio law students at
community colleges pay approximately
one-third of the cost of their education, the
state one-third, and the local area one·
lllird.
.
He recalled that Muskingum COllege
for example, now charges approximately
$2,450 per year tuition ani! room-board.
The cost to ·a student at the local
conununity college will be about $630, and
students will be able to live at home.
"Since education is the most important reason o_ur nation·has forged to a

position of wor1a leadership, tt is im·
~ ortant that this community college is
established to serve llle people of our four
coWlties," the si}eaker said.
"And there couldn 't be a better
~~r_g ai~ anywhere, " he. added.
Voters of the county will be asked to
approve a levy after it has been deter·
mined what costs will be, the speaker said.
He anticipated it would be in the area of
one milL
By 1975, when the college levy may be
offered voters, the tax duplicate of the four
counties is expected to be at or near $500
million.
Dr . Christensen complimented the two
members of the community college board
of trustees from Meigs County. Recently
appointed, they are Mrs. Carol Ohlinger , a
senior at Rio Grande College, J ho is a
homemaker of Pomeroy, and Orion Roush,
prominent dairyman of Salem Center. ·
. Mrs. Christensen accompanied her
husband to the dinner. Program Chairman
John Will introduced the speaker.
Other guests were Richard Poulln ,
Benny Ewing, and Rev. Raullin Moyer.
President Gene Riggs presided.
·

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Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

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It's time to retrieve
that lost hour
'
The ilme for the bi-81111Ual cbmge In time occun at Z a.m. Suuday
morning
aU clocb In Oblo mult be moved BACK one hour as Eastern
Daylight Savings Time ends and Eallem Studard Time begins Its sill·
month stlot.
The annaal backward movement wUI he made under the Unllorm Tline
Act wblcb was approved by Congreaa In 1H7. Under term• of tbe act, aU
Illites mtlll oblerve DayU&amp;bl SaviDca Time brclu•lag at Za.m. on tbe last
Sanday in April to 2 a.m. on ihe last Sunday Ill October. More htterestiog for
m..y penonala the fact that tile eadlng of Daylight SaviDge Time means an
boll' 'IIIII be added to the e!OIIng tlme of Oblo tavel'll8 which normally
remains .a.' 111iun:38 a.m.
·
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UNDAUNTED BY RAIN - Despite intermittent showers and cloudy skies,
18 bicycle riders left Middleport Saturday morning to ride to Point Pleasant and
back, all for the good of the fight against cancer. Each of the riders had a
sponsor paying a designated figure for each mile of the ride completed. Twobf
the riders, Mandy Carder and Dean Lutz, had sponsors who had pledged over
$100 each in their behalf to the Meigs County Unit of the American Cancer

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Nixon heavy favorite ·
Nixon was the "lesser of two evils" while
27 felt the
about Sen. McGovern.
Forty-three pupils felt the incumbent
preSident had more experience while 12
felt Sen. McGovern was not consistent.
Twenty thought Nixon spoke lor ail the
people while 41 felt McGovern was more
for the people~
Ninety.five of the Nixon voters were in
the 1&amp;:.21-year-&lt;Jld age bracket while .47
..new voters" were for McGovern.
Anothet poll will be conducted Nov. I.
Members ot the faculty are invited to
vote.next Wednesday.

same

Society. Starting on the trip Saturday morntDg were Dean Lutz, Dann'y om.,
Dave Wilcox, Arnold Johnson, Cindy Carder, Deanna Manley, J. F. Young,
Vicky Lee, Cheryl Woods, Doug Warden, Carol Sargent, Linda Roush, Mary
Blaettnar, Beth McKnight, Ricky Blaettnar, Be~y Thomaa, Deblile Har·
ten bach, Patty Warner and Mandy Carder. All funds raised will go to the cancer
society. Riders were provided with free refreshments along the route by the
Royal Crown Bottling Co.

Two men con-victed
of animal cruelty
POMEROY - Two Vinton County men
were fined in Meigs County Court Friday
when· found guilty by Judge Frank W.
Porter of cruelty to an animal.
Fined were Steven James, $75 and
costs, and Grant James, $5~ aild costs.
• Witnesses for the plaintiff, Walter F.
Garnes, Dexter, Rt. I, concurred that
Steven James placed a rope around a
pony's neck, ·nose and mouth, and pulled
the pony while Grant James beat it with a
board estimated two feet in length , four to
six inches wide, and one inch thick . The
incident occurred at a sale at the Ethel
Wright Farm in Western Meigs County on
Sept . 23 .
Witnesses testified the pony fell to the
ground several times and that defendan t
Giant James continued to hit the po ny
after it fell. The pony bucked and kicked in
its own defen s~ . but leUbefore the two men
reached the truck on which they intended
to loatl the pony. From the building from
where the pony was led to where the truck
was loaded was located was estimated at
150 yards.
One witness stated that he asked
steven Ja mes to slop but was told to mind
his own business.
The . pony · fell befo~e reaching the ·
truck. Witn~s said when Steven James
realized that the pony was dead he tried to
rev ive it.
·
·
A second pony was taken from the

.~~.~.;:;:;:;:::;::,;:;:o:::::::;;;:,o:~::?.~:!8::::r.:»».:;;:~::::~;::::~:::::::::::;;::~:::::::::%::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::~~:::::~:::~:t(.::

RIO GRANDE - The first of two
student opinion polls conducted recently at
Rio Grande College by PoUtlcal Science
Class 333 revealed 130 favored President .
Richard NilOil for reelection.
Sen. qeorge McGovern received 79
voles and others received 13 votes.
Other ~ulti in the elecUon survey
conducted by Prof. James
Porter.
. lhowed 133 studenta thought the economy
(welfare, jobl) wils the main laue of the
1t72 election. One hundred and lwfaty«ven llated the Vie!Dam war as the top
laue.
Flfty-~me atudents felt President

15 CENTS

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s.

.,
;

·-

Cologne By Styx

THE GOLDEN
CRYS1ALEJTE

e
on Iy..$2'

crow s we come

MIDDLEPORT - The twO-year Community College to be
e&lt;Jtablished on the campus of Rio Grande college will be a great
b!tQijtJQ !rut ~Qple of Gallla, Meigs, J11ckson and Vinton Countills.
i5r. Alphus R. Christensen, president of Rio Grande College,
speaking to the Middleport · Pomeroy Rotary Club here Friday
evening, said established colleges' costs are going out of sight and their
attendance dropping. At the same time, community colleges are
growing, primarily for three reasons:
- Because they are close, within commuting distance of the area
they serve, and thus economical.
- Because they offer occupational opportunity in voca tional skill
training.
- Because they are able to develop adult educational programs
serving their areas.

Tabu Perfume Spray Purser

Spray Body
. Cologne

Wanda Louise Eads, Jerry
Eads, Larry Virgil Parsons,
Sonia E. Parsons to VIrgil
By Coty
Parsons, Parcels, Columbia •
Salem.
Frank Gilkey, Jr:, Connie S.
Gilkey to A. L. Deeter, Ernest
Deeter, Lot, Middleport.
Buena L." Casey, Worthy
Arnold Casey, Minnie Jay,
Robert K.. Jay, Edythe L. Jay
'
to Bonnie Shaffer, Lula
Shaffer, Lot, Salisbury.
Nellie Pierce, admrx.,
Harold K. Ward, dec'd., to
By Max Factor
Mary Jane Herald, Parcels,
Rutland.
Mary Jane Herald, Frank
Herald to Franklin Louis
Nicinsky, John Nlcknsky, Eva
Nicinsky,. Parcelsr Rutland;
'· · Wi)liam A. Conn~lly, Erma . ·.
· M~ Connolly to Warren Con·
nolly, Connie K. Connolly, 5.5
Max Fac~r ·
Acres, Olive.
J 1 D. Hayes to Jimmy
·
·
Preston Hayes, Julia Sue
Hayes, Lola, Pomeroy • Scipio.
Alexander Local Bd. of ·Ed.,
Ek!gant
formerly Columbia Local Bd.
Spray Mist Colognes
of Ed. to Rei H. Cheadle,
.H ti
Bonnie Cheadle, .50 Acre,
e ypno que
Coiwnbia.
Golden Woods
Clarence E. NortQn, Etta
• Primitif
May Norton to Roy Leon
Hendrli&lt;, Erma Jean Hell!lrlx,
50
Lots, Hor~n Dabney's Add.,
Pomeroy,
.~_.~_..M _.~ ~

By NORMAN KEMPSTER'
BRECKSVILLE, Ohio (UPI ) - Paying
tribute to law enforcement officers and
vowing to continue his present economic
]rograms, President Nixon saturllay rode
' in a motorcade past large and friendly
crowds in northeastern Ohio.
On two occasions early in the 80-inile trip
the President stopped to deliver brief im·
]romptu speeches using a loud speaker
system in his black Continental
limousine.
The President drew larg~ crowds
through the first 25 miles of the motorcade
before he stopped lor lunch at Boston
Heights where he dined at·the Holiqay Inn.
He mel former C:eveland Indians pit·
ching star Bob Feller at Parma where he
was presented with an autogra:phed
baseball and a plaster cast of Feller's
pitching hand which broke but Feller told
. the president he would send him another
one.
Major Alan Morrison of the Summit
County sheriH's office estimated the
crowds along the way from Cleveland to
Boston Heights totaled 100,000.
There were hundreds .of homemade

VOL. VII NO. 39

metal wardrobes and cabinetS.

Blush &amp;Shine

· established 1872

10

Big sale too of mens knH slacks - insulated coveralls

Slimmed

MUSK OIL
By Dana

the bank of
the century

'

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ELBERFElDS IN POMEROY

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Charles
Beegle, Racine ; Namon
Joseph, Pomeroy; Marjorie
Hunt, Albany; Clara Smith,
Middleport ; Br£1! ·Cundiff,
Minersville; Earl Werner ,
Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Crystal
McCourt, Mary Shuler,
Clarence Norris , Robert
Parker, Richard Bearhs,
Leora Zwilling, Rex Argabrite.

$350

. 41

taxpayers since 1985. The bulk of ~oe dead are
Vietnamese military.
··:·
Pentagon totals iiielude 45,884 Alllericans killed in combat ,~
and 10,281 dead from no!H!ombat CIWJI!S. Sooth VIetnam has lost ;'·
i82,494 military arid other .allies: 5,1.99. Estimated North Viet-;·
namese military dead are 1104,000.
•·
. There _.e no meaningful ligures on North Vietnamese ::
civilian casualties but a then .secret U. S. government study :· .
estimated in 1969 that at the height of the 1985-Q bombing 1,000
Norlll Vietnamese were killed and injured each week.
:.

SPECIAL HOURS
Warmer today highs upper
Meigs County voters are 50s and low 60s. Rain likely
reminded that the ~Meigs tonight and Saturday. Lows
County Board .of Elecllons , tonight in the 40s .' .Highs
wlll malntafo speeial office Saturday upper 50s and low
hours Ibis Saturday - the 60s.
final Saturday before the
Nov. 7 election for abientee,
disabled aad servicemen's
NEEDS NAMF.'!
vollog.The Meigs County PTA
Salurday the office,
RALLY DAY SET
Council wiD meet at 7:30 p.m.,
located In lbe Masonic
Sunday will be Rally Day at next Thursday at the Salisbury
Temple, Pomeroy, will be the Pomeroy Church of the Elementary School. Mrs. Ruby
. open from 9 to IZ noon, I to 4 Nazarene, corner of Union and Vaughan, president, asks all
p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. lor the Mulberry Aves. Included on local PTA units to send her a
convenience of these votera. the program will be a Sings- list of names and addresses of
piration starting at 2 p.m.. to officers,
delegates and
which all area singers are alternates, and magazine and
invited. The Cox Family of membership chairmen before
Wilmington will attend the the meeting. Mrs. Vaughan
morning service and will lead resides at 671 SO. Third Ave.,
afternoon singing. There will Middleport.
be a basket dinner at 12:30 p.m.
(Continued from page I)
The
public is invited,
audience to stand up and state
those
who
how much weight they have especially
APPEAL ANSWERED
lost, and what phase of the previously attended the
Answers to an appeal for a
program (basic, leveling off, church.
range and refrigerator for a
and maintenance) they were in
needy Middleport family came
at this time.
thick and fast Thursday, Bob
. Climaxing the evening's RETURNED l'O HOSPITAL Haggerty , Middleport
· activities was an ·address by The Middleport E·R unit businessman said. Numerous
Mrs. Barbara Chandler, a answered a call for Earl calls were received by
Weight Watcher lecturer. Mrs. Werner, Bradbury, at6 :56 p.m. Haggerty offering ranges and
Chandler, before enrolling in Thursday. Mr. Werner who refrigerators for the family .
Weight Watchers, tipped the recently was discharged from The range was contributed by
scales at 360 pounds. In less Veterans .Memorial Hospital the RuUand Furniture Co.
than two years, she shed ZOO, follo~¥ing a heart .attack, was
and has managed to maintain returned to the hospital . an~
a trim figure since becoming a was readmitted.
Weight Watcher.
Mrs. Chandler told of her life
OAPSE TO MEET
experiences, bot)l as a fat
The Meigs Chapter of the
woman aqd a slim individual. Ohio Assn. of Public School
Mrs .
George
Grace , Employees will meet at 7:30 '
Gallipolis class leader, who has p.m. Monday at the Meigs
shed 32 pounds since joining Junior High School cafeteria in
weight watchers, displayed a Middleport. All non-certified
new winter outfit purchased personnel of the district are
"by the family; because the old urged to attend.
one is just too big for me now."
Here's the Zl Weight WatSALE SATURDAY
chers honored during ThursThe
Meigs
County
day night's two-hour program,
and the number of pounds lost : Alcoholism and Drug Abuse
Elizabeth Ramey, Rio Committee will sponsor a bake
Grande, Z2'1•; Sue Tracy, sale Saturday from 9 a.m. to
Pomeroy, 28 \l ; Joan Morris, noon in front of the New York
Pomeroy, 42 ; Joyce' Neal, Clothing House.
Arabia, 43%; Lena Bunce,
Middleport, 46; Paula Saun·
TO AIR RESULTS
ders, Rio Grand~. 4810; Evelyn
Lanning , Pomeroy , 481'. ; Meigs (;oun ty Sheriff Robert
Wanda Gardner, Gallipolis, C. Hart.enbach announced
sn·,; Joy Barlow, Gallipolis, today that election returns will
52%; Mary Wells, Middleport, be broadcast from his office
55; Becky Unroe, Gallipolis llle night of Nov . ~ . .
5610; Judy Dillon, Gallipolis,
~oz..
._5B; _Coach,~ C. L. (Johnny)
LOCAL
TEMPS
Ecker, Gallipolis, 6210;
The temperature in down·
Manning Wether,holt,
Gallipolis 63\l; Phyllls Holley, town Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Gallipolis, 6310 ; Au.drey Friday was 52 degrees, under
Porter, Galllpolis, 64; Mary sunny skies.
Lou Jones, Gallipolis, 6410 ;
Mary Marcum, Gailipolis ?Ill;
Katheryn Green, Gallipolis, 79;
Penny McKean, Gallipolis,
134'h, and Carolyn Taylor,
Gallipolis, 141'h.

died In the Vietnam war

The Fabulous Scents
Of The Century

When you Pill your money
In 1 Savlnga Account,
· you know it's sale.
Insured by the F.DJ.C. And earning a good Interest.
That's more than you can say lor your mattress.
ltnllt?

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·

Cosmetics In This A rea

Q;l

rullond

News

We Have The Greatest '$election Of

#9·

pomer~

on ;own

., "0 J(f(SJt JL 0bUd

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roco 1HE CLOWN IN TOWN -Coco the Clown, of the Hanneford Circus,
made appearances In the Gallipolis Public Square, Gallia County Children's
Home, and Holzer Medical Center Saturday reminding youngsters of Thursday's
free circus, to be held at Rio Grande College's Lyne Center. Two performances are.
scheduled Nov. 2, one atf:~ p.m., a special matinee for children, another at 8 p.m.
The circus is being sponsored ·by Rio Grande College~s Student body. Coco the
Clown, who has appe,..edon num~rous TV shows, iS pictured In the Ga.llipolls Park
presenting Irick balloohs to Connie Taylor, left, 12-year-oid daughter o.f Mr,: and
Mrs. Willard Taylor, 2189 Eastern Ave., Gallipoi!s, and Samantha Burrows, 12,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Burrows, of 262'h Third Ave., GallipoliS. A Rio
. student body apokesman Mid donations will be accepted at the door prior to Thurs·
day's performance .

PARADE ON TUESDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Residents were
' reminded Saturday that Lafaretie
Legion Post No. 27, American Legion,
will sponsor Its annual 'Halloween
parade and costume coolest Tuesday.
The parade will form at 6:30p.m., In
front of the Municipal Building. The
costume contest will be held later on the
Upstream Public Use Area.
Monday. Trick-or-Treat night will
be observ~d in the Old French City between 6 and 1 p.m.

same building and treated in llle same
manner. However, Steven and Granl
James were able to get it on the truclf
alive, according to witnesses.
The second pony placed on the truck
was purchased from Grant James by
Garnes and Garnes took the pony off th~
truck.
Grant James, .on the witness stand,
denied under oath he had anything to do
with beating of the pony, stating instead
that it was his nephew, Lawrence James of
Boyd County, Ky. He also stated that he
did not purchase the ponies, that it was
Lawrence James, instead. He also said he
did not knowhis nephew's address in order
(Continued·on page 2) -·

Five juveniles
are grounded
.
GALLIPOLIS - Five juveniles had
t~eir driver license suspended 15 dayi
Friday in Gallia County Juvenile Court.
Acting Judge Wray Bevens of Pike
Coun ty fined Dale Qrummond, 17,
Gallipolis, $Q5 and -costs for· having no
driver's ilcerise and $25 and . cosbl' !Or
reckless ·operation . The first fine wu
suspended.
·
Receiving license suspensions each
were Dennis Barker, !?, Gallipolis, speed;
James Day, 16, Rl. 2, Gallipolis, speed;
David Jenkins, 16, Rt. 2, Patriot, drivln&amp;
left .of center ; John Sheets, 16, Rt. :1,
Gallipolis, speed ; and Carl Johnson, 17,
Gallipolis, speed. They were also fined but
U&gt;e fin es were suspended.
·
·
.
.
MONEY STOLEN
. GALLIPOLIS c- . Gallia Count)'
sheciff's deputies Friday investigated a
U1eft involving money, Miss Brenda
Kiskis, RL 2, Gallipolis, reported lt"INII
took $59 in r.ash, change, and llampe 1raaa
her purse The Incident ·occ:urrtd II . .
Lower G. C. Murphy Store on Secaad A",

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3 ~The Sunday Tunes· sentmel, SUnday, Oct 29,1972

1

2- The Sunday Times-Sentmel, Sunctay.Oct 29,1972
Muldleport, Rt t, $10 and costs, no lags,
Everett R CaJ.any, ReedSVIlle. Rt I SIO

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(Continued from page 11
to get m contact With rum
Steven James also derued under oath
that hi$ father, Grant James, beat the
poll)', stating that 11 was hiS cousm,
Lawrence James Steven James also
stated that the pony was struck, but "not
with tQO much force "
Judge Porter ruled that 11 had not been
detenmned what actually caused the
death of the pony. Therefore, he fmed the
two men on charges of unlawfully,
maliciously and cruelly beating and tortunng an anunal
The pony gave b1rth to a foal after
death
In the same court Fr1day mommg
e~ght defendants were fmed, 12 others
forfeited bonds and one other was placed
on probation
Fined were Charles A Barnhart,
Tu~s Plams, $!&gt; and costs, defective
mufDer , Barbara Sargent, Chester, $IS
and costs, speeding, William Roger Black,

Barwn,
Rt I, $150 and &lt;11SL&gt;
five days confmement, hcense suspended
for SIX months, dnvmg while 10tox1cated,
Alan Aichinger, Athens, $10 and rosts,
speeding, OaVJd Lee Samons, Parkersburg, $150 and costs, thr&lt;e days ronfmement, license suspended for s1x
months, restncted dri'Jing prmleges,
&lt;lrlv10g wh1le 10toxtcated, Carl L Randolph, Crown C1ty, $19S and costs, $95
suspended, overload, Richard E LeWIS,
Langsville, Rt I, 30 days probation, 10·
tox1cahon
Forfeiting bonds 11 ere Larry J Queen ,
Middleport, failure to reg~ster, $27 SO,
Vmcent A Manca, E1ghtyfour, Pa, John
H Berry, Little Hock10g, Gury R Moms,
Pomeroy, Rt 2, John T Burnell, Parkersburg, Dorothy K Long, Pomeroy, Rl 3
and Frank Gaddy, Huntmgton, $27 50
each, speedmg, Robert J Bauer ,
Pomeroy, Rt 3 and Charles S10cla1r,
Middleport, $1S9 9S each, attempt10g to
take deer , Owen Damewood, Spr10gf1eld
and Grank1e Wooley, New Carhsle,

BRUCE BIOSSA1

Nixon 'Tearn' Not

So Expert, Either
Bv BRUCE BIOSSAT
CAMPAIGNING WITH PRESIDENT NIXON \NEAl
Pres1denl Nixon 's mfrequent forays mto th e country
s1de 1h1s fall1eflect t~ a h1 gh degree Ius atlempl lo p1 ac
t1ce what m1ght be called control pohhcs ' The trouble
IS, when ordmary people get mvolved control Is usuallv
somethmg less than perfect
H1s tr1p to Republican Westchester and Nassau Coun
hes outs1de New York City prov1ded an 1llustrat10n
A politiCian can make a plausible argument that 11 '"
WISe to VISit places of known strength, m hope of d1 aw
mg to the polls your max1mum poss1ble vo t~ powe1 In
such areas
But Mr N1xon 's campa1gmng m 1972 suggests also
that, for the most part he seeks out places thought to oe
secure, m lhe sense of bemg safe from strong v1s1ble
ev1dences of hostlhty Only his Oct 28 v1s11 to Eastem
Oh1o mdustnal towns m1ght seem an exception Perhaps
umntenhonaUy, New York's Gov Nelson Rockefeller at
the outset of the President' s Westchester motorcade put
thmgs m proper perspective when he laughed and told
reporters
"I've never spent th•s much lime 10 Westchester be

fore "

Yet, as md1cated , even the most energet•c efforts to
manage political SituatiOns ~an go awry And, m some
measure, that happened on the President's "New York

day "

First, off, 1t was Veterans Day, a holiday wh1ch turned
thousands of school k1ds free Maybe someone m the

ED'TORIAL

Autos
damaged

In,- Ottawa .. Bonn

MlDDLEPORf - Moderate damages
\\ere reported to l\\O cars man acc1den t C~l
lhe IOtcrsecl!on or Coal and NOI Lh Second
Sis at 10 40 a m Saturday
Middleport pollee sa1d a car dnven by
Otto I. Hoffman, Jackson, pulled from
Coal St mto a southbound car dr1ven by
Donna W1lson, Mason W Va There were
no In Junes Hoffman was Cited to mayors
court on a charge of fmhng to y1eld the
nght of way
Pollee said reSidents of the Locust St
area l'ere without phone and electnc
serv1ce for a short lime Fnda) about 3 30
p m when a truck struck a ulihty pole
Dr1ver of the truck was Ronald E Russell ,
Mmersv •lle Route I There were no m
Junes

$159 55, spothght10g deer, R1cky Blake,
Reedsville, Rt I, $27 50, fa1lure to reg1ster

N1xon h1 gh command 101 gol about that In any e1ent
one consequence wa s the appea• ance of far more I" o
McGove1 n anti N1xon and antiwar Signs along the Wesl
chesle• mol01 cade 1oute than •orne observers ev1dent lv
expected 111 such Republican ten 1t01 y
The Pres1den1 d1d of co u1 se hear much fn endly en
cou1 agement along the way from Ihe reasonab ly good
c1owds S1111 lhey p1obabl; totaled on ly a tou1 th of th e
425 000 olficially eslunaled b1 vanops polle e chiefs And
the •e ~&gt;e l en I all that manv pro N1 xon signs I alkmg
Ia Iei at Rockefelle1 s 1 arry town e•late to GOP polillcal
leadeiS f1 om II oeaboard stales I he President sought lo
make a good thm g of that
What 1111p1 essed me Incidentally was the fact that
the1e we~e nul a lot of s1gns th at we~e all made an d
d1s ti 1buled 10 advance At the bi g Nassau Co unt\ Coli
seum Iall y that mghl 10 Uniondale L 1 the manage
menl ol th10 gs seemed much beltfl on th e whole The
bU1 Id10g was packed With upwa1ds of 16 000 people man y
eqUipped with Amencan flags and read\ made Nixon
s•gns Balloons dnfted abo ul like fleec1 clouds The p1o
Nixon nOJ se was btg
Eve n ller e howeve r cont1u l wa s rmpe1fec1 rally 111
the l'I e.ld ent's speech an ugh f1st figh t b1oke out 10 l he
balconv as Intll te!lng aniii'ai youths unfml ed a big
peace banne1 and began shouung to d• o" n M1 Nixon
out fhe y we1 e hustled fr om lhe hall aftei laking some
punches f1 om the N1xomtes nea1 by
That was n l the end or It Scattered hecklers kept up
a runnmg fu e of verbal assault throughoul Obviously an
Amencan flag borne m hand ga med them easy ent1 y
So coni! ol neve• works perfectly Wh; trv• Well this
President knows he IS not te1 nbly popular personally But
to expose this vulnerability too often and 10 lhe wro ng
places nughl be to l'eakcn h1s evident st1 ong cam pa1gn
lead over Sen Ge01 ge McGovern himself none too pop
ular
In h1 s long ca1 ee1, Mr Nixon has had h1s full share of
shngs and a11 ows The difficult\ IS even when you choose
yoUI spots carefully II onl y takes a few sharpshootel s
to suggest a small army

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wl'' ld lpiiD pabllcatlon, howenr, ·on request. Leiters
lboald ~In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities

Each vote fulfills a 'principle
Dear Sir·
"Revolutiomze through the ballot box, and restore the
government once more to the affections and hearts of men "
Although thl$ was presented over a century ago by Abraham
Lincoln, it ts pertinent to the current campaign Before par·
tic1pating In the commg election, take a moment to reDect on
other remarks made by our nation's 16th President
"This country, With 1ts IIISlltullons, belongs to people who
!nhatilt It ... While some of us may differ In political opm10ns, sllll
we are all Wlited that thl$ nation shall have a new brrth of
freedom
makil\g 11 express, as 11 was intended to do, the
highest spmts of JUShce and Uberty .. "
By casting your vote for the candidates of your cho1ce you
are actively supportmg these Lincoln Ideals as a hvlng pattern
today and as a fum foWldallon for tomorrow's greater Amenca
-"a government of the people, by the people, for the people "
Max E ShiVely, Athens, Oluo

Gallia levy offers relief
To Voters of Gallia County
The half mill levy, presented to the voters November 7th , If
approved wUl relieve each township and corporation of a heavy
fiOanClal burden.
Section 37119 28 of the General Code of tbe State of Oh10
reqwres the board of a general health d1stnct to Rrepare an
itemized budget request on or before the f~rst Monday or Apnl of
each year which shall be certified to the county auditor The
Itemized budget request submitted to the county aud1lor must
mchlde the amounts needed for the current expenses of the board
beginning on the hrst of January next ensumg
When the budget request has been certif1ed to the county
auditor by the board of health, the next step IS for the county
auditor to submit such budget request to the county budget
commissiOn The budget IS rev•ewed, compared w1th previous
budgets and if found to be correct IS returned to the auditor to
make the necessary appropnations from each township and
corporation for the fmancmg of the general health distnct
Because of this method of fmancmg local health departments,
townships, and corporahons fmd themselves severaly handicapped and With httle or no money to operate on
The half m!U levy IS to correct this hardship on the tow sh1ps
and corporations by reliev10g them of thelf fmanc1al responsibilities to the health department
The annual appropnatlon of the GaU1a County Health
, ~entls$.49,760, w1th $11,524 oblamed from other sources
An approvalofthehalf mllllevy (SO cents per $1,000 property
evaluation ) will provide operational funds for the health
department and restore to the townships the1r proportionate
lhare ol tax monies
U there are any questtons about the need of thiS levy, please
feel free to call the health department or any one of your townlblp trustees. The books and records of the health department
are always available for your mspectlon
Franda W Shane, M.D , Health Commissioner

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PLEASANT - Monday n1ght IS
bemg set as1de as Trick or Treat N1ght m
several Mason County Communities, and a
parade IS scheduled 10 Pomt Pleasant
Pomt Pleasant, Henderson, Mason
and Hartford will aU observe the sp«:eial
occas10n Monday evenmg from 6 30
until730p m
Leon and New Haven town off1c1als
have set eventSIn their commun1tieotfor
Tuesday even10g between 6 and 7 p m
UNICEF collections will be made m
New Haven Monday evenmg from 6 30
until730om

! Area Deaths !
Carl Daniels

GALLIPOLIS - Carl Edward Damels 27, 2145 Eastern
Ave , Galhpohs, was found
dead m bed at h1s home around
8 am , Saturday Mr Damels
was a heavy equipment
'operator for the Blazer ConstructiOn Co
He was born Nov S, 1944, 10
Galllpohs, son of Roy c,
Damels, Rt I, Crowrl C1ty, and
Lou•se Day1Damels, Gallipolis
He IS also surv1ved by two
s1sters and two brothers, Mrs
Robert (Joyce ) Raynatd ,
Columbus, Mrs Bernard
(Sheba) Ross1ter, Gallipolis ,
James L Damels, Galhpohs,
and Wayne T Dan1els, Rt 1,
Crown City
He was a member of the
Volunteers drawing public praise
Eagles Club and Operatmg
Engmeers of Columbus
Oct 26,1972
Funeral services wtll be held
Dear Sir:
I p m , Tuesday at the Waugh
I wilh to publicly thank the "Volunteers" and the con- Halley-Wood Funeral Home
lrlllukn 1o tile Yah•"'• Ambu1ance Service ol Gallia County Burl81 10!111 be 111 Good Hope
b tbllr h!&amp;IJ""- in utablishlng and supporting this Cemel&lt;!ry Friends may call at
•• Mil pllllllc .vice In wr commuruty
'
the funeral home between 6-9
Jpw IC llllynatYid the bNt ot care llrough tile group when_ p .til, Monday

Carl W. Edwards
HARTFORD, W Va - Carl
W Ed11ards, 64, of Hartford,
d1ed Fnday 10 Veterans
Memonal
Hospital
111 1
Pomeroy He was a rellr~d
coal 10111er and painter
Mr Edwards was born June
22, 1908, m West Columbia, a
son of the late Walter Ed warda,
who d1ed m 1953, and Lillie
Bass Edwards of Pomeror
SurviVors mclude hi$ w1dow,
Bertice Dorman Edwards of
Hartford, two sisters, Mrs
Fred Laudermilt, Pomeroy,
and Mrs V10la Stewart of
Hnrlford
Funeral services w1U be
from the Hartford Church in
Chrlstian Union Sunday at 2
p m The Rev Howard
Killingsworth and the Rev BUl
Campbell will offlcl81e Burial
w11l followln the Graham
Cemetery, FnendS rna) call at
the Foglesong Funeral Home
after 3 p m Saturday The
body will be taken to the
church one hour before the
services

•

Sarah F. Weaver
REEDSVILLE - Mrs Sarah
F Weaver, 84, Piketon, and
formerly of Rt 1, Reedsville,
d1ed Thursday evemng at the
Spears and Spears Nursing
Home in Piketon follow10g an
extended Illness
She was born m Clarksburg,
W Va , Aug 5, 18118, daughter
of the late Feth and FranciS
Goodmght Morton
She was preceded m death by
her husband, Marcellous, m
1963 Survivors mclude two
sons, Lawrence, of Washmgton
C H ami Ray, of Waverly.
Three daughters surv1v01 Mrs
James (Lucy) Vmeyard, Ft
Myers, Fla , Mrs Charles
(Mary) Benedum, London,
Oh10, and Mrs Orval (Clara)
Blake, Greenfield
Two
brothers surviVe Guy Morton,
Parkersburg, and Ed Morton,
Clarksburg Ten grand and 13
great-grandchildren survive.
One son, two brothers and two
sisters preceded her In death
She was a member ol the
Umted Brethren Church, Bod
had served as a Sunday school
teacher for several years
Funeral 5e\\'1Ce&amp; will be held
2 p m , today at the White
Funeral !lome m CoolviUe with
Eldon Blake officiating Burial

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Television Log

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GALUPOUS- Ironton and
a steady ram spoiled Gallla
Academy H1gh School's
Parents N1ght actiVIties on
Memonal FJeld Fr1day,
Twenty.f1ve nunutes before
the parents of Gallia Academy
High School's football team
cheerleaders and trainers wer~
mtroduced, 1t began rammg It
never stopped, and it apparently didn't bother VISiting
' Ironton as the Tigers clinched
at least a share of the 1972
Southeastern Oh1o League gnd
champ10nsh1p w1th a conVIOClng 46-14 victory over the
,Blue DevUs
It was the fourth stra1ght
GAHS home game played 10
the mud and rairi on Memorial
F1eld this fall
Both the GAHS and Ironton
bands were on hand, but the
halftime shows were washed

PriOr to the game's openmg
kickoff, Odie O'Donnell IO·
troduced the folloWirig pare~ts
of GAHS gr~dders, cheerleaders and tramers
Ben Ba xter, Mr and Mrs
Robert Baxter, Mike Berndge,
Mrs Violet Berndge , Dav1d
Brown, Mr and Mrs J W
Brown, Jr , Doug Brown, Mr
and Mrs Don Brown , Pat
Boster, Mr and Mrs Eugene
Bosler, Leon Briggs Mr and
Mrs Dayton 1 Briggs , Dav1d
Bryan, Mr and Mrs David
Bryan. Ken Colller, Mr
Charles Collier , Jim Craft, Mr
and Mrs James Craft Dean
Epling, Mr &lt;nd Mrs Miles
Epling , Malt Epling, Mr and
Mrs John Epling , Scott
Epling, Mr and Mrs Miles
Epling, Mike Evans, Mr and
Mrs Tom Evnas, Cra1g
Fisher, Mr and Mrs Roger
Fisher, Fred Ford, Mrs Nettle
, Ford , Kirk Frazee, Mr and
Mrs William Frozee . Dav1d
Graham Mr and Mrs Glenn
Graham John, Grolh, Dr and
Mrs John Jroth, Rick
Grymes Mr and Mrs Ernesl

SUNDAY, OCTOMBER29

6 oo-.:-FII m 4

3(}-Day of Dlscovery4, Newsmaker 72, 13, Bob Harrmgton 6,
Faith for Today 10
7 oo-tommun1que 6, Old Time Gospel Hour 13 Societies In

6

...

Transition 4 Mormon Conference 10

•

' 7 3(}-T1me for T1mothy 4, Faith for Today 8 Rev1val Fires 6,
Herald of Truth 3 Lamp Unto My Feet 10
s1oo- Davey &amp; Goliath 4 Leonard Repass 8, Gospel Caravan 6,
Church Serv ice 13 Morman Cho1r 3, Look Up and LIVe10
B 15-Mornmg Report 4
B 3(}-0ral Roberts 3, Try Our Health 4, Kathry n Kuhlam 6,
Day of DIScovery S Camera 10, Rev Rex Humbard 13,
Revival F~res 15
9 oo-Si ngmg Jubilee 3 Cadle Cha pel 4 Rex Humbard 15 Oral
Roberts tO, Archie's Fun House S
9 3(}-Church by Side of Road 4 Old T1me Gospel Hour 8,
cartoons 10 Dr Pa ul Warren 13

10 oo-Church Serv1ce 4 Fa1lh tor Today 15, Cunouslty Shop 6,
13, ThiS IS t he Life 3 Archte's Fun House 8 Movie,
&amp; L1vmgstone" 10

0

Stanley

10 3(}-ThiSisthe Life 15 In sig ht 4 Captam Noah 3, Notre Dame
Highlights 8
11 oo-TV Chapel 3 Joy 1n L,.l ng 13, Camera Three s. Con
sumer Repor l 14 OS U Football Highlights 4, Jake's Place 6
11 3(}-ThiS IS the Answer 3, Insight 15 Make a WISh, 6, 13, Rex
Humbard 8
12 oo-CBPA Bowlmg 6 Columbus Town Meeting 10, Rev
Calv m Evans 13 Meet the Press 3, 4, 15
12 3(}-Revlva l F~res 13 Pro Football Pre Game Show 8,
1 oo- tssues &amp; Answers 13 Fa1th &amp; The Bible 4. P•o Football 3
4, 1S, B. 10
1 3D-Amencan Adventure 6

2 oo-Potnt of V~ew 6, Lower Lighthouse 13
2 3(}- tssues and Answers 6 College Football ' 72, 13
3 oo-Changlng Times 13
3 30-Wacky World of Jonathan Wmters 6, Rookies 13
4 oo-Mancln~ Generallllf1 6 Pro Football 15, 3, 4, Living 33
Face lhe Nation 10
4 J(}-Wor ld of Su rv1 val 6, 13 Age of Anx1ely 33, Log of the
Stne ma 10

5

oo-WIId W1ld West

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Ripples 33. Treasure Island

8,

Grymes

10,

5 3(}-Sesame Streel 33

oo- News &gt;'leather Sports 6, 60 M1nutes 8, 10
6 3(}-Untamed World 6, Hathayoga 33
7 oo-Lawrence Welk 13 Safari to Advenlure 3, ThiS Is Your
Ufe4 Wild K1ngdom 15, Walt Till Your Father Gets Home 6
UFOS lntheKnow10 Zoom33 , Zoom20
7 3(}-Worldof Disney 3, 4, 15, Anna &amp; the KlngiO , Lets Make a
Deal 6 Just General1on 33, 20, Peanuts 10
8 oo-FBI 13 6, Family Game 20, 33, Cartoon, ' Yellow Submarine ', 8, 10
8 3(}-French Chef 33, Hec Ramsey 3, 4, 15
9 GO-Masterpiece :rheatre 33&gt;~ ~. rii,Whot i'•er t&gt;H•p6

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pened to Aunt Allee." 6, 13

~ ~Mann1x,

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each end all across the field
The muSic of "Queen City
March" brought the band on
across the f1eld and to the
Sideline 10 thiS formation
In a company front from the
home s1delme tlie band went
back across the f1eld and
dropped band members on
each second count and formed
a g1ant "M" from one 20 yard
line to the other
The band had flash hghts on
their hats and when the lights
were turned out on the f1eld ,
the "M" formatiOn was lighted
up
The ma]orettes twirled fife
to ChiCago's "Make Me Smile"
as the band featured the
feature twirler, sophomore,
Joyce HutchiiiSOn tWJrlmg two
f1re batons
At the conclusiOn of the fife
baton routme the band played
the ever popular march "Hosts
of Freedom" Moving to the
s1delme and back off droppjng
squads of eight across the field
At the trio segment of the song,
the squads d1d a senes of
pmwheels From the pmwheels
the band moved sharply mto a
block band formatiOn and
played a sw10g verswn of
Chases' "Get It On "
The maJOrettes d1d a wh1te
glove routme to the enJoyment
of the crowd
D1rector Goms thought the
band played the best 11 has all
marchmg season He was also
pleased the band 1s progress10g
rap1dly mto the new style of
marchmg
Goms and assiStant drrector
Ruth chose R1ck Couch, Jerry
M1ller and Melanie Burt as the
outstandmg bandsmen for
their hard work all week and
outstandmg performance on
the f1eld
Goms commented, " It IS
gettmg harder and harder each

week to choose outslandmg
bandsmen as everyone 1s doing
a great JOb
Next week the crowd Will be
asked to participate w1th the
Marauder Band as they have
an exc1lmg show planned for
'Parents N1ght ''

EASTERN SHOW
REEDSVILLE - SENIORS
of tqe Eastern H1gh School
band and their parents were
recogmzed durmg the h.\Irtune
show Thursday mght on the
Eastern f1eld
The semors and the1r
representatives In cluded
Sandy Wood, Mr and Mrs
Robert Wood, Jill Swam, Mr
and Mrs James 0 Swam,
V1ck1 Spencer, Mr and Mrs
Jack Spencer, Lucy Holter,
Mr and Mrs Da v1d Holter ,
Jane An n Karr, Mr and Mrs
Horace Kanr , Debbie Jeffers,
Mr and Mrs John Jeffers,
Rosemary Reed, Mrs Franc1s
Reed, Cathy Pickens, Mrs
Harhss Frank, Marc1a Carr ,
Mrs Charles Carr
Followmg a fanfar e the band
moved downf~eld on diagonal
hoes to ' ChiCago" w1th
maJorettes presentmg a flag
rout10e The percussiOn sect10n
was featured on "DynamiC
Drwns" and the maJorettes d1d
a fire baton rout10e to "I Don't
Know How to Love Him "
Presentmg a preciSion
march drill to "The Billboard
March," the bandsmen moved
from concert formatiOn to a
cross, then pmwheels, a
floatmg diamond and an "X"
returmng to the cross formatiOn With maJorettes
presenting a routme durmg the
changmg formations
Majorettes are Debbie
Jeffers, head, V1ck1 Spencer,
Cheryl Kuhn, Louanna Newell
and Joanne F1ck

.q ~wa Wt~on Walifr Jllhrf &gt;

Hie W

Walters, Mr and Mrs R E
Walters, Tim Weaver, Mr and
Mrs L E Weav"" ; • Mike
Wolfe, Mr and Mrs Otho
wolfe, George Bush, Mr and
Mrs Roy Bush , Kenny Will,
Mr and Mrs Joe W1ll , Brad
Yoho, Mr and Mrs Allen
Yoho, Tom Daniels, Mr and
NITs Thomas Daniels, Danny
Woodward, Mr and Mrs.
George Woodward ; Bob
Condee, Mr and Mrs Robert
Con dee, Dean Rees, Mr and
NITs David Rees , Winston
Saunders, Mr and Mrs. Harold
Saunders, Bob Wood, Mr and
Mrs Harland Wood
Managers - Randy Gilliam,
Mr and Mrs James Gilliam ,
Roger Harbour, Mr and Mrs
Dale Harbour , Jerry Frazier,
Mr and Mrs Ralph Frazier ,
Gary Hood, Mr and Mrs John
Hood
Cheerleaders - Lori Miller,
Mr and Mrs Russell -Miller,
Jenny Weaver, Mr and Mrs L
E Weaver , Tam! Woodward,
Mrs Tom Woodward , Jan
Wiseman, Mr and Mrs Ike
Wiseman Rene Coonen, Mr
and Mrs James Coonen, Lee
Ann Johnson, Mr and Mrs
Floyd L Johnson

,
(
,
r '~
10•0G-Night Gallery,-3, 4, 15, Firing L ne, 20, 3J
, ,,
10 30 - We Think You Should Know J, Protectors 4, Evil Touch
s, High Road lo Adventure10 Pollee Surgeon 15
11 oo-News, Weather, Sports 3, 4, B, 10 15
11 t5 - CBS News, 8, 10, 15, 13
11 30- Joh nny Carson 3, 4, 15, Movtes, "Tokyo Joe " 8, ' Land

8. 10

Raiders ', 10 "Whtte Cmanche ', 13

12 15 - Judd 6
1 oo-News 4
I 3(}- News 13

MONDAY, OCT 30, 1972
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Farmt1me 10, Farm Report 13
6 20- Paul Harvey 13
6 25 - Good News 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4 Bible Answers a School Scene 10
6 45 - Corncob Report 3
7 00 - Today 3, 4, 15, News Weather Sports 6 8 10
7 25 - Sports 13
7 30 - Romper Room 6 Sleepy Jeffers 8, Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13
s 00 - c;a pt Kangaroo 10" New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame 51 33,
Timmy &amp; Lassie 6
a 30 - Jack LaLanne 13, Romper Room 8, New Zoo Review 6
s 55 - Local News 13
9 00 - What Every Woman Wants lo Know 3, Paul Dixon 4, Phil
Donahue 15 Capt Kangaroo 8 Concentration 6, Friendly
JunctiOn 10, Ben Casey 13
9 30 - ToTelltheTruth3, Jeopardy6, HazelS
9 55 - Chuck Wh1fe Reports 10
10 00 - Joker's Wild 8, 10, Columbus S1x Calling 6, Dinah Shore
3, 15, Dick Van Dyke 13, Phil Donahue4
10 30 - Concentration 3, 15 , Split Second 13
II 00 - Sale of Century 3, 15 Gambll 8, 10, Password 13, Love
Amencan Style 6
11 25 - Carol DuVagl 6
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 4, 15 , Bewllched 6, 13, Love of~lfe
8, 10
12 00 - Jeopardy 3 15, Password 6, Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4,
Contact 8 News 13, 10
12 25 - CBS News 8
12 30 - Spllt 5econd6, Search for TomorrowS, 10, News3, 3 W's
13
1 00 - All My Children 6, 13, News, Weather, Sports 3, Jackie
Obllnger8 , Green Attes 10, Watch Your Child 15
1 30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15. Let's Make A Deal 6, 13 As The
World Turns 8, 10
2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15 , Newlywed Game 13 , Mike
Douglas 6, Guiding Llghl 8, 10
2 30 - DallngGame 13 . Doctors3,4. 15, EdgeofNight8, 10
3 00 - Another World 3, 4, IS , General Hospital 6, 13, Love
Splendored Thmg 8, 10, The Family Game 20
3 30 - Return to Peylon Place 3, 4, 15. One L\le to Live 6, 13,
Secret Slorm 8, 10, The French Chef 20
4 00- Mr Cartoon 3, Somerset 15, Sesame St 15, 33, Love
American Slyte 13, Merv Griffin 4, Fllnfstones 6, Gilligan's
Is S, Mov1e "South Seas Sinner,'' 10 .
4 30 - I Love Lucy 6, Peltlcoat Junction 3, Merv Griffin 8,
Daniel Boone 13, Andy Griffith 15
5 oo - Mr Rogers33 Dick Van Dyke 15, Ponderosa J, 4, Daniel
Boone 6
5 30 - Eiec Co 33 , Marshall Dillon 15, Dragnet a, Gomer Pyle
13, Hodgepodg~ Lodge 20
6 00 - N~ws 3, 4, a, 10, Truth or Conseq 6, Newo 13, 15,
Soclefles (n Translflon 33, Sesame Street 20,
••
6 30- NBC News 3, 4, 15, ABC News 6, CBS News I, 10; ~olk
Gu1lar 33, I Dream of Jeannie 13
7 00- News 6, Truth or Conseq 3, BeettheCiod&lt; 4; CJrcusJ13 ,
Insight 33, What's My Line 8, Satn115, Read Your Woy,Up
33, Electric Company 20
1
7 30 - To Tell The Truth6; Traffic Cour t 10, Episode Action 33,
ParentsGame3, Hollywood Squares 4, Young Dr Kildare I ,
Movie
"Tarzan &amp; The Leopard Woman" 13, Hodgepodge
GOING TO THE PEOPU:
Lodge
20
to llreqlWD 11!1 hold OD
8 OO -Gunsmoke8, 10, Rowan and Merlin's Laugh-In 3, •· UFO
lbe Well German r;overn·
6, Till The Butcher Cuts Him Down20, 33.
meat, Cll"ftllor WIll y
9
00Here's Lucy 8, 101 Pro Footboll6, 13, Movie "CJrenge of
Braadl HI dluolved lbe
Habit" 3, 4, 15 Boboqutvarl ~o. 33
Baad~lll •1111 aet elee9.30-DorlsDoyl, 10. Book Beot30,33
liob for Nov. U. Rl1 So- 10 00- Bill Cosby8, 10. News20, From the HlllsJJ
clallata nrreally Mid us 10 30 - Concrrrlsln the Lawn33, Pollllcal Talk 20
seals ar;lbullbe eomblaed
II OO - News3,., 6,8, 10,15
'lfiPOIItlea'1 I o Ia I ol the
11 •30 - Dick C.v~t 6. Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, Movies "The
same number.
McKenzie Breek " 8. " Well of Noise" 10
12 00 - News 6.
12 30 - Movltt "Carryon TV" 6, " Badman's Country" 13
wiD be in Eden Cemetery. I 00 - Focus on Columbus •
I
Friends may call at the funeral 2 00 - N!IWS 4.
home any t.rme
2 30 - News 13

Dav1d Kerns, Mrs

Marlin Kerns, Mark Merola
Mr and Mrs Anthony Merola ,
John Myers , Mrs Jerry
Myers , Kenny New, Mr and
Mrs Edsel New , Bob Nlberl,
Mr and Mrs Merrill N1bert.
Jim Niday, Mr and Mrs
Wayne Niday , "Rex Plymale,
NIT and Mrs Evan Plymale,
Jr , Anthony Reese, Mr and
Mrs Ed Reese , Randy Rice,
Mrs Cecil Rice , Steve Rose,
Mr and Mrs Merrill Rose,
John Saunders, Mr and Mrs
Howard B Saunders , Kaven
Sheets, Mr and Mrs Warren
Sheets, Leon Smith, Mr and
Mrs Kenton Smtih , Tom
Valenllne Mr and Mrs Leo
Vatenllne, Weldon Wahl, Mr.

Mov1e, " Arrowhead ', 13

Parade
•
opemngs

•

~ut

I had to go to the hospital
Old Glory should be saluted
May I urgently request that every person 'O f Galha County
contribute now to mamtam thiSpublic serVICe Please JOin me m
sending contnbutlon to "Galha County Emergency Ambulance Dear S1r
Amencarusm IS rosy to define but diff.icull to practice m an
Semce"
area, namely, the Slat• of Ohio, where children are taught they
Funds are needed now
Yours very truly do not have to salute the Amencan F1ag
Mrs Robert M Breland
For S2 years the Amencan Leg•on, an orgaruzallon of
Just what day is left?
veterans of two World Ward and two Conflicts, have been strong
Dear Ed1tor
defenders and protectors of Democracy We are the1r Auxiliary
On October 23, I parked my car on the street 10 Pomeroy,
Through a better Wlderstanding of our bas1c liberties and the
thmk10g th1s was a National Legal Holiday,! d1d not put money character Which protect them, the Americarusm Comnuttee of
m tl;le meter When I returned from Kroger s I had a park10g the Amen can Leg10n Auxiliary, Post No 39, betieves that a
greater love of youth and the determination of the mdiVidual to
ticket
Dur10g World War II when the boys were drafted my f1ght and to defend Amenca at all tunes should be strehgthened
husband answered the call and d1d not Sit back as some I know, mstead of weakened by teachmg our youth they do not have to
and he fought for our country Now that l he Pres1dent has salute the F1ag of th1s Umted States of America.
changed Veterans Day from November II to October 23, the
Our forefathers la1d the foundation for a ClVilWitiOn that ts
V1Uage of Pomeroy does not recogmze thiS day as one of thelf
the
envy
of the whole world It has brought us greater sprrdual
legal holidays
It has always been November II was set as1de as Veterans and matenal wealth than any people have ever seen •
Let us not forget that we are the beneficiaries of the greatest
Day, smce World War I There was not one flag displayed on
October 23m the Village of Pomeroy m honor of the veterans If "Trust Fund" ever accumulated on this earth, the Youth of
such 1s the case that the VIllage does not th10k that this day Amenca , and may we teach them "!Ave of God and Country"
We, the members of American Leg1on Auxiliary, Post No 39,
should be observed as Veterans Day, then I feel sorry for the
off1c1als and would Just as soon that they remove my husband's go on record as opposmg the Ohio Supreme Court Ruling that
Children have the right to refuse to salute the American Flag
name from the county roster of veterans names
While AI)Jenca today Is tile beacon light of a disorgaruzed
Not once durmg the 31 years I have lived 111 Me1gs County d1d
I know the SIX (6) holidays thai the VIllage observes until October and diSillUSIOned world,lt IS ours to determine the character and
quality of SOCiety and our Citizenry of tomorrow.
25, when the Daily Sentmel published them
We s10cerely pray we have teacbers brave enough to enI have JUSt one quest1on that I would hke an answer to If
November IllS no longer Veterans Day, and the Vlllage does not courage all children to pray and to salute "Old Glory."
"For God and County We aS80Ciate Ourselves Together "
observe oCtober 23 as Veterans Day, then Jus! what day IS left to
Mrs Ray Fox, Amer1carusm O.airman of Drew Webster
be observed for the honor of the veterans?
Edith Hall Post No 39, Amencan Leg1on Auxiliary

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

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'

Night Monday

lbd Ihere m the eally Kennedy era, chansma became
a ve1 l big wo1d 111 the /lme11can pohllcal vocabulary
In a wmd 11 w1 apped up all those qualllles of person
al111 siYle and energetic ex!loverswn which John and
his b1 olhei s had m abundance and wh•ch II was w1dely
ag1 eed we1 c essential mgred1ents of Ihe successful pol
ltiClan m th e now generation
So along comes 1972 and cham ma, 111 a word IS one
c'lem&lt;nl tt IS "'del} agreed that this presidential election
Is notabl y lackmg But 1f Richard N1xon and George McGovern are not
exac tlv overwhetmmg the Amencan electorate With per
sonal m•gnetism thiS year 1t IS mter,estmg to note that
personalit y •s ve1y much at work-possibly the key factor
- m two other counlnes 10 the gnp of electiOn poht•csCan~da a nd West Germany
' Takmg the first first Pnme Mm1ster P1erre Elliott
Trudeau has considerably toned down the With-It 1mage
"luc h contnbutcd grea tly to h1s 1963 elect1on v1ctory
In the campa 1gmng lor C:anada 's Oct 30 parhamentary
vo tmg II has been Trudeau the statesman razr than
the swmger who has been on v1ew
But !he se11ous 1 rudeau c~n also be sharp to gued and
an oganl He has made enem1es There 1s noticeably less
adulal 1on and m01 e open d1sllke of Trudeau than four
vears ago
HIS opponent on the oth er hand Prog1 ess1ve Conservallve pa1 I&gt; leade1 Robert Stanfield IS sa1d not to have
a smgle 1ea t enemy 10 the entire coyntry Which sug
ges ls Ius maJor problem If there IS noth10g abo ut Stan
field to which voters react strongly negatively neither
does he turn them on m large numbers
TI udeau may be controversial but he reg1sters With
the public He may be admu ed by some Canad1ans and
hated by olhe1 s but he cant be Ignored Personality at
WO I k pOSSi bly deCISively
In ~ est Ge1many personal1ly IS nowhere near such
a divisive facto r , but 1! co uld be even more dec1s1ve m
th e Nov 19 election of a new Bundestag
Chancello1 W1lly Brandt 1s considerably more popular
than Ius own Soc1al Democratic party He IS m fact,
poss•bly the most popular politiCal figure 111 E urope to
day a stand10g wh1ch could have some mfluence on
Ge1 mans st 1l l concerned over postwar ostracism by their
neighbors
81 andt IS less a magnetic personality than a warm
one Much of his appeal to Germans may !1e m the con
II ast he p1 esents to the If traditionally authontanan leader
figuies A naiUial relaxed tnd lvldual he IS clearly not
the 1eli ead of the stiff formal prewa1 tvpe wh1ch so
man v ol Ge1 many s other co ntemporary poh!Ic1ans seem
to be
GCI mans seem generally to approve of Brandt's pol!cy
of 1app1 oachement w1th Commumst East Europe, wh•ch
he has made the key 1ssue of lh1s electwn But even
should the opposition Chnstlan Democrats wm, 1t IS gen
erally assumed the policy would be cont mued w1th httle
change
It 1s Brandt s personal populantv that the Soc1al Demo
crals a1 e countmg on as the deciSive factor
The Importance of personahty m politiCs 1s of course,
nothmg new In the Amencan expenence the Kennedys
and the1r contemporanes merely updated a pubhc rela
liOns too l the Roosevelts and numerous Predecessors
knew and explo1ted And long before then, Cicero, Caesar
and Pencles Wfl e makmg use of speCial g1fts for turn10g
the public on
The Creeks 10 fact, even had a word for 1t-char~sma

I1

,,.

MEIGS HALFTIME SHOW
POMEROY - The Meigs
Band, aware of the stiff
compehhon from a good
Athens Band, d1d an exciting
halftune show Friday mght
Entermg m a company front
from tile visiting s1de the band
dropped squads of eight from

RICHARD YOUNG
POMEROY - Richard
Michael Youug, son of Mr.
and Mr•. George R. Youug,
Route 3 Pomeroy, who bas
eallsted In the Marine Corps
180 day delay program, wtll
report oexl March for his
recruit training Ill' Parris
Island, S. C. Mike bas
enlisted under the teclmlcal
Speciality Guarantee He Is a
graduate of Meigs High
Sehool.
THE KEY to where to
practice for a concert for
16 pianists on eight pianos
turns out to. be a dealer's
showroom to Rochester,
N.Y. No concert hall had
that many pianos

CLEMSON ROMPS
WINSTON-SALEM, N C.
(UPI) - Fullbacks Wade
Hughes and Heide Davis each
ran for two touchdowns
Saturday as Clemson crwsed
to a 31.0 Atlantic Coast eon.
ference victory over Wake
Forest

c"enters will be set up m eac~
county and Will be annoWlced

RIO GRA\'IDE - MarUyn
NEW HA VEN - The Ne11 • Grant, Coordmator of Spec1~l
Hawn I'TA has ISsued an Serv1ces for lhe Areaw1de
lnv1lalioo to nil elnbs, Model Proj~ct on Agmg, anchurches, and orgamzat1ons nounced Saturday
th at
111 this area to enter a float In
volunteer dr~vers are needed
the1r second annual Wmter on elertlon rlnv 'T'nP srl1-1y
Festival Chnstmas Parade
Any group that IS mlerested
should call parade cha1nnan
Wllliam DeMoss at 882-2677
"F 882-2624 before Nov 20
Prizes of $25, $15 and $10
GALLIPOLIS Lew1s
w11l be offered to the first, Roger McBr~de, 26, Rt 2,
second and lhlrd place en- Bidwell, Fnday entered a
tries The parade da te is gmlty plea to a charge by c1ty
Friday, Dee. I, at 5 30 p m pollee of possessiOn of
All floats will meet at 5 p m mariJuana
at the New Haven ComHe had ongmally pleaded not
mumty Building for JUdgmg gu1lty Judge Robert S Betz
and parade placeroenl
fmed McBnde $100 and costs
and sentenced h1m to one year
m the county Jail
Judge Betz, however,
suspended the executiOn of the
sentence and comm1tted
McBnde to the Southeastern
Oh10 Regional Mental Health
Cenl&lt;!r at Atbens for 30 days
He will be exammed to
determ10e 1f he IS a drug
dependent person
Gregory Butts, 22, Eureka

November 7, to take older Jackson, Me~gs, Scwto and
ClltZens who are w1thout trans. VUiton counties
Sa1d Mrs Grant "What we
portatwn to the polls
des~re IS to have many voters
Th1s proJect will be m effeet of all ages saymg they are
lhroughout the proJect area w1lhng to lake an older person
wh1ch
mcludcs
Galha, to the polls We would then
d1rect the volunteer to the
nearby home of the person who
has Indicated they need transportation to lheiT voting
precmct "
Any lnd1v1duals or groups of
S!&lt;Ir Rt, was sentenced to f1ve
days m the county Jail and persons willmg to dnve should
fmed $SO and costs for m- contact the follow10g F~eld
P!ann10g Assistants In Galha
sufficlent funds
contact
Harry
Judge Betz also fined Boyd County
Ham1lton
at
446-1831
,
Jackson
Jones, Crown City, $SO and
costs for mtox1cat1on and County, contact Alberta Biddle
Helen W Strong, 65, Rt 2, at 286·1320, Me1gs, Leafy
Galhpohs $10 and costs for Chasteen at 669-4777, Scioto
gomg the wrong way on a County IS Evelyn Howard at
456-939knd Chet Jordon at 353d1v1ded highway
Forfe1tmg bonds were 4582 and m V10ton County,
Ric hard L Bennett, 21, Rt I, Els1e Ryther at 596-4157
Other s1tes to call mclude the
Ga llipolis , $18 defective
brakes , Thomas L Wnght, 33, proJect headquarters at Rio
Rt I, Crown City, $28 speed, Grande College at 245-53S3, ext
Marlm 0 Nichols, 43, Rt 1, 26, the Me1gs County Council
Crown C1ly, $28 speed; Stewart on Aging at 992-7400 and the
V Wilson, 55, W1llowooct, $28 Portsmouth Semor Center at
fa1lure to yield the n ght of 353-3736
Several additional telephone
way , Thomas F Miller, 47, Rt
2, Patnot, $28 mtoxiCahon,
Jack C D~ff1eld, 41, Spencer,
$18 no muffler, Roy L Shuff,
31, Wheelersburg, $18 speed,
Richard Lee Ph1ll1ps, 34, Rt 2,
Ton1ghl, Mon , Tuos
McDermolt, $28 speed, Dav1d
Oct 29 30 31
L Grate, 26, Rutland, $23
PRIME CUT
speed, Harold B Hazelbaker,
l Techn•color J
25, Galhpohs, $28 failure to
Lee Marvin
Gene H.ackman
yield the nght of way, and
Colorcartoons
Robert F Whiteman , 56,
Show Storts 7 P M
Wilkenson, lnd , $28 assured
clear d1stance

Guilty plea made

7 Mishaps
recorded

by police

GALLIPOLIS- John Robert
Johnson , 36, of 12 Nell Ave,
was Cited to Mun1c1pal Court
for Improper backmg Fr1day
followmg a traffic accident on
Third Ave
C1ty pollee sa1d Johnson
backed h1s truck mto an auto
operated by Lawrence E Lee,
87 Garfield Ave There was
mmor damage to both vehicles
A second m1shap occurred at
12 15 p m on State St , where
an auto dr1ven by Glen Roush,
72, Bidwell, backed 10to a
parked car owned by Robert E
Spears , 28, Galhpohs No
Cltatwn was ISSued
Another mishap occurred on
Third Ave , where an auto
dr~ven by Phyllis W Sheets, 46,
Galhpnlls, backed mto a
park10g space but h1t a parked
auto owned by Evelyn Sear·
berry of Rt I , Thurman
No one was mJured or c1ted
followmg an acc1dent at 2 SO
p m on F1rst Ave , where a
truck dnven by Gilbert Leroy
Mayo, 60, Rt 2, Gallipolis,
collided w1th a car dnven by
Carolyn J Layne, 24, 2027
Chatham Ave
Barry L Saunders, 25,
~'BIUI&gt;dh!, was charg'ed ''illth~
reckless operatiOn followmg an
accident on Vme St Off1cers
sa1d Saunders lost control of
h1s car which struck an ~ron
pole at the Ashland Serv1ce
Station There was moderate
damage to h1s car
A !mal Fr1day accident
occurred at II 01 p m on Court
St , where cars driven by Keith
R Voreh, 18, Gallipolis, and
Ora Lucas, Rt I, Gallipolis,
hacked mto each other
A Saturday accide nt occurred on the Burger Chef
parkmg lot where an 'auto
dr1ven by Linda Sunpkms, 29,
P01r.t Pleasant, backed mto a
car owned by John D Halley,
22, 502 Fourth Ave

SOONERS ROMP
NORMAN, Okla (UP!)
Oklahoma halfback Greg
Prwtt scampered for touchdowns on runs of 4, 3, and 22
yards Saturday to pace the
Sooners to a 52-0 v1ctory over
Kansas State

2 Accidents
on Friday
POMEROY- Two acc1dents
"ere mvesl1gated Fnday by
Pomeroy pollee
At 4 15 p m medium
damages were reported to two
cars on West Mam St near the
bndge traffiC hght when a car
dnven by Patr1c1a Van Maire,
Syracuse , pulled from a
busmess establishment 10tii a
car dnve n by Lois Jean
Duddmg, 25, Mason There
were no InJuries Mrs Van
Matre was Cited to mayor's
court on a charge of fa1lmg to
y1eld nght of way
M10or damages were mcurred to two cars on the nver
parkmg lot at 7 27 p m Fnday
when a Cllf dnven by Roger W
Partlow, 19, Pomeroy, attempted to pass a car driVen by
Dav1d Schm1tz, 16, Pomeroy,
wh1ch was attempting a left
turn to park There were no
InJuries and no arrests

ON CHANNEL 5
POMEROY - A segment of
Thursday mght's parentteacher conferences m the
Me•gs Local School District
Will be shown on Channel S TV
at 7 20 p m Monday Shown
f1rst w1ll be Robert Morris,
Pnnc1pal of the Pomeroy
Elementary School, with Ohio
Umverslty junwrs who are
ass1stmg 10 the school after
wh1ch Mrs Pat Thoma, PTA
president, and Moms will
discuss the oper at10g levy to be
voted upon m the district on
Nov 7

SPLIT LEVEL
Comem

a complete select1on

of f1ne, clean, healthy
bulbs- all from Holland
Reasonably priced
ond sure to
bloom

SOUTHERN
COLONIAL
1

3 BR. 212 bafhs, family room, basement, total electric
with Wltllamson heating and central ~lr cond1ftonlng
General El ~lrlc appliances, fully carpeled, landscaped,
concrete drive &amp; slceets. 2112 car garage, dining balcony,
101 95xl75, counfy water, Tara sewer system
'

CONTEMPORARY

3 BR, 1'1&gt; baths, famlty room, basement, I car garage,
total electric with Williamson healing and central •If
conditioning, General Electric appliances fully carpeted,
l.,dscaped, concrete drive &amp; •treets, din ing balcony, lol
95x175, county Wat~r. Tara sewer system

DUTCH
COLONIAL II-LEVEL
3 BR, 2baths, large family room, basement, 2 car garage,

·j·
\•1
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•

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McKNIGHT-DAVIES HOW•

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FOR INFORMAtiON OR APPOINTMENTS

BOTH STORES IN GALLIPOLIS· MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY

'
I

BRUTE CORPS

total electric with Williamson heating and central air
conditioning, General Electric appllan~es, fully carpeted,
landscaped, concrete drive &amp; streels, dining balcony, tot
95xl75, county wafer, Taro sewer system

367·7250

ADDISON,IiiOiiiltliiO_ _ _If!lll

R

and
Paul Carr m

TONIGHT
OCTOBER19

Buy Early and Save

4 BR, 2 baths, Family room, tolal electric with Wltilamson
Heahng and Cl!l1tral air condlltontng, Gene.-al Electric
appliances, tully carpeted, landscaped, concrole dnve S.
streets, 2'12 car garage, dining balcony lot 75xl75, county
water, Tara sewer system

BONNIE'S KIDS

·..

CHRISTMAS
ALBUMS

NEW HOMES FOR SALE

Ellie Thomas 1n

MASON DRIVE IN

GOOD SELECTION OF

DEVELOPMENT CORP.

I

Fn , Sat., Sun.
Oct. 27-28-27

MEIGS THEATRE

ALSO:

and choose from

dnver or the perwn needing
the r~de should call these
centers "We do not want any
older person not bemg able to
vote because they lack a nde to
the polls," she sa1d

G.

OPEN MONDAYS &amp; fRIDAYS. TIU 8

�r
3 ~The Sunday Tunes· sentmel, SUnday, Oct 29,1972

1

2- The Sunday Times-Sentmel, Sunctay.Oct 29,1972
Muldleport, Rt t, $10 and costs, no lags,
Everett R CaJ.any, ReedSVIlle. Rt I SIO

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(Continued from page 11
to get m contact With rum
Steven James also derued under oath
that hi$ father, Grant James, beat the
poll)', stating that 11 was hiS cousm,
Lawrence James Steven James also
stated that the pony was struck, but "not
with tQO much force "
Judge Porter ruled that 11 had not been
detenmned what actually caused the
death of the pony. Therefore, he fmed the
two men on charges of unlawfully,
maliciously and cruelly beating and tortunng an anunal
The pony gave b1rth to a foal after
death
In the same court Fr1day mommg
e~ght defendants were fmed, 12 others
forfeited bonds and one other was placed
on probation
Fined were Charles A Barnhart,
Tu~s Plams, $!&gt; and costs, defective
mufDer , Barbara Sargent, Chester, $IS
and costs, speeding, William Roger Black,

Barwn,
Rt I, $150 and &lt;11SL&gt;
five days confmement, hcense suspended
for SIX months, dnvmg while 10tox1cated,
Alan Aichinger, Athens, $10 and rosts,
speeding, OaVJd Lee Samons, Parkersburg, $150 and costs, thr&lt;e days ronfmement, license suspended for s1x
months, restncted dri'Jing prmleges,
&lt;lrlv10g wh1le 10toxtcated, Carl L Randolph, Crown C1ty, $19S and costs, $95
suspended, overload, Richard E LeWIS,
Langsville, Rt I, 30 days probation, 10·
tox1cahon
Forfeiting bonds 11 ere Larry J Queen ,
Middleport, failure to reg~ster, $27 SO,
Vmcent A Manca, E1ghtyfour, Pa, John
H Berry, Little Hock10g, Gury R Moms,
Pomeroy, Rt 2, John T Burnell, Parkersburg, Dorothy K Long, Pomeroy, Rl 3
and Frank Gaddy, Huntmgton, $27 50
each, speedmg, Robert J Bauer ,
Pomeroy, Rt 3 and Charles S10cla1r,
Middleport, $1S9 9S each, attempt10g to
take deer , Owen Damewood, Spr10gf1eld
and Grank1e Wooley, New Carhsle,

BRUCE BIOSSA1

Nixon 'Tearn' Not

So Expert, Either
Bv BRUCE BIOSSAT
CAMPAIGNING WITH PRESIDENT NIXON \NEAl
Pres1denl Nixon 's mfrequent forays mto th e country
s1de 1h1s fall1eflect t~ a h1 gh degree Ius atlempl lo p1 ac
t1ce what m1ght be called control pohhcs ' The trouble
IS, when ordmary people get mvolved control Is usuallv
somethmg less than perfect
H1s tr1p to Republican Westchester and Nassau Coun
hes outs1de New York City prov1ded an 1llustrat10n
A politiCian can make a plausible argument that 11 '"
WISe to VISit places of known strength, m hope of d1 aw
mg to the polls your max1mum poss1ble vo t~ powe1 In
such areas
But Mr N1xon 's campa1gmng m 1972 suggests also
that, for the most part he seeks out places thought to oe
secure, m lhe sense of bemg safe from strong v1s1ble
ev1dences of hostlhty Only his Oct 28 v1s11 to Eastem
Oh1o mdustnal towns m1ght seem an exception Perhaps
umntenhonaUy, New York's Gov Nelson Rockefeller at
the outset of the President' s Westchester motorcade put
thmgs m proper perspective when he laughed and told
reporters
"I've never spent th•s much lime 10 Westchester be

fore "

Yet, as md1cated , even the most energet•c efforts to
manage political SituatiOns ~an go awry And, m some
measure, that happened on the President's "New York

day "

First, off, 1t was Veterans Day, a holiday wh1ch turned
thousands of school k1ds free Maybe someone m the

ED'TORIAL

Autos
damaged

In,- Ottawa .. Bonn

MlDDLEPORf - Moderate damages
\\ere reported to l\\O cars man acc1den t C~l
lhe IOtcrsecl!on or Coal and NOI Lh Second
Sis at 10 40 a m Saturday
Middleport pollee sa1d a car dnven by
Otto I. Hoffman, Jackson, pulled from
Coal St mto a southbound car dr1ven by
Donna W1lson, Mason W Va There were
no In Junes Hoffman was Cited to mayors
court on a charge of fmhng to y1eld the
nght of way
Pollee said reSidents of the Locust St
area l'ere without phone and electnc
serv1ce for a short lime Fnda) about 3 30
p m when a truck struck a ulihty pole
Dr1ver of the truck was Ronald E Russell ,
Mmersv •lle Route I There were no m
Junes

$159 55, spothght10g deer, R1cky Blake,
Reedsville, Rt I, $27 50, fa1lure to reg1ster

N1xon h1 gh command 101 gol about that In any e1ent
one consequence wa s the appea• ance of far more I" o
McGove1 n anti N1xon and antiwar Signs along the Wesl
chesle• mol01 cade 1oute than •orne observers ev1dent lv
expected 111 such Republican ten 1t01 y
The Pres1den1 d1d of co u1 se hear much fn endly en
cou1 agement along the way from Ihe reasonab ly good
c1owds S1111 lhey p1obabl; totaled on ly a tou1 th of th e
425 000 olficially eslunaled b1 vanops polle e chiefs And
the •e ~&gt;e l en I all that manv pro N1 xon signs I alkmg
Ia Iei at Rockefelle1 s 1 arry town e•late to GOP polillcal
leadeiS f1 om II oeaboard stales I he President sought lo
make a good thm g of that
What 1111p1 essed me Incidentally was the fact that
the1e we~e nul a lot of s1gns th at we~e all made an d
d1s ti 1buled 10 advance At the bi g Nassau Co unt\ Coli
seum Iall y that mghl 10 Uniondale L 1 the manage
menl ol th10 gs seemed much beltfl on th e whole The
bU1 Id10g was packed With upwa1ds of 16 000 people man y
eqUipped with Amencan flags and read\ made Nixon
s•gns Balloons dnfted abo ul like fleec1 clouds The p1o
Nixon nOJ se was btg
Eve n ller e howeve r cont1u l wa s rmpe1fec1 rally 111
the l'I e.ld ent's speech an ugh f1st figh t b1oke out 10 l he
balconv as Intll te!lng aniii'ai youths unfml ed a big
peace banne1 and began shouung to d• o" n M1 Nixon
out fhe y we1 e hustled fr om lhe hall aftei laking some
punches f1 om the N1xomtes nea1 by
That was n l the end or It Scattered hecklers kept up
a runnmg fu e of verbal assault throughoul Obviously an
Amencan flag borne m hand ga med them easy ent1 y
So coni! ol neve• works perfectly Wh; trv• Well this
President knows he IS not te1 nbly popular personally But
to expose this vulnerability too often and 10 lhe wro ng
places nughl be to l'eakcn h1s evident st1 ong cam pa1gn
lead over Sen Ge01 ge McGovern himself none too pop
ular
In h1 s long ca1 ee1, Mr Nixon has had h1s full share of
shngs and a11 ows The difficult\ IS even when you choose
yoUI spots carefully II onl y takes a few sharpshootel s
to suggest a small army

1
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wl'' ld lpiiD pabllcatlon, howenr, ·on request. Leiters
lboald ~In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities

Each vote fulfills a 'principle
Dear Sir·
"Revolutiomze through the ballot box, and restore the
government once more to the affections and hearts of men "
Although thl$ was presented over a century ago by Abraham
Lincoln, it ts pertinent to the current campaign Before par·
tic1pating In the commg election, take a moment to reDect on
other remarks made by our nation's 16th President
"This country, With 1ts IIISlltullons, belongs to people who
!nhatilt It ... While some of us may differ In political opm10ns, sllll
we are all Wlited that thl$ nation shall have a new brrth of
freedom
makil\g 11 express, as 11 was intended to do, the
highest spmts of JUShce and Uberty .. "
By casting your vote for the candidates of your cho1ce you
are actively supportmg these Lincoln Ideals as a hvlng pattern
today and as a fum foWldallon for tomorrow's greater Amenca
-"a government of the people, by the people, for the people "
Max E ShiVely, Athens, Oluo

Gallia levy offers relief
To Voters of Gallia County
The half mill levy, presented to the voters November 7th , If
approved wUl relieve each township and corporation of a heavy
fiOanClal burden.
Section 37119 28 of the General Code of tbe State of Oh10
reqwres the board of a general health d1stnct to Rrepare an
itemized budget request on or before the f~rst Monday or Apnl of
each year which shall be certified to the county auditor The
Itemized budget request submitted to the county aud1lor must
mchlde the amounts needed for the current expenses of the board
beginning on the hrst of January next ensumg
When the budget request has been certif1ed to the county
auditor by the board of health, the next step IS for the county
auditor to submit such budget request to the county budget
commissiOn The budget IS rev•ewed, compared w1th previous
budgets and if found to be correct IS returned to the auditor to
make the necessary appropnations from each township and
corporation for the fmancmg of the general health distnct
Because of this method of fmancmg local health departments,
townships, and corporahons fmd themselves severaly handicapped and With httle or no money to operate on
The half m!U levy IS to correct this hardship on the tow sh1ps
and corporations by reliev10g them of thelf fmanc1al responsibilities to the health department
The annual appropnatlon of the GaU1a County Health
, ~entls$.49,760, w1th $11,524 oblamed from other sources
An approvalofthehalf mllllevy (SO cents per $1,000 property
evaluation ) will provide operational funds for the health
department and restore to the townships the1r proportionate
lhare ol tax monies
U there are any questtons about the need of thiS levy, please
feel free to call the health department or any one of your townlblp trustees. The books and records of the health department
are always available for your mspectlon
Franda W Shane, M.D , Health Commissioner

•

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PLEASANT - Monday n1ght IS
bemg set as1de as Trick or Treat N1ght m
several Mason County Communities, and a
parade IS scheduled 10 Pomt Pleasant
Pomt Pleasant, Henderson, Mason
and Hartford will aU observe the sp«:eial
occas10n Monday evenmg from 6 30
until730p m
Leon and New Haven town off1c1als
have set eventSIn their commun1tieotfor
Tuesday even10g between 6 and 7 p m
UNICEF collections will be made m
New Haven Monday evenmg from 6 30
until730om

! Area Deaths !
Carl Daniels

GALLIPOLIS - Carl Edward Damels 27, 2145 Eastern
Ave , Galhpohs, was found
dead m bed at h1s home around
8 am , Saturday Mr Damels
was a heavy equipment
'operator for the Blazer ConstructiOn Co
He was born Nov S, 1944, 10
Galllpohs, son of Roy c,
Damels, Rt I, Crowrl C1ty, and
Lou•se Day1Damels, Gallipolis
He IS also surv1ved by two
s1sters and two brothers, Mrs
Robert (Joyce ) Raynatd ,
Columbus, Mrs Bernard
(Sheba) Ross1ter, Gallipolis ,
James L Damels, Galhpohs,
and Wayne T Dan1els, Rt 1,
Crown City
He was a member of the
Volunteers drawing public praise
Eagles Club and Operatmg
Engmeers of Columbus
Oct 26,1972
Funeral services wtll be held
Dear Sir:
I p m , Tuesday at the Waugh
I wilh to publicly thank the "Volunteers" and the con- Halley-Wood Funeral Home
lrlllukn 1o tile Yah•"'• Ambu1ance Service ol Gallia County Burl81 10!111 be 111 Good Hope
b tbllr h!&amp;IJ""- in utablishlng and supporting this Cemel&lt;!ry Friends may call at
•• Mil pllllllc .vice In wr commuruty
'
the funeral home between 6-9
Jpw IC llllynatYid the bNt ot care llrough tile group when_ p .til, Monday

Carl W. Edwards
HARTFORD, W Va - Carl
W Ed11ards, 64, of Hartford,
d1ed Fnday 10 Veterans
Memonal
Hospital
111 1
Pomeroy He was a rellr~d
coal 10111er and painter
Mr Edwards was born June
22, 1908, m West Columbia, a
son of the late Walter Ed warda,
who d1ed m 1953, and Lillie
Bass Edwards of Pomeror
SurviVors mclude hi$ w1dow,
Bertice Dorman Edwards of
Hartford, two sisters, Mrs
Fred Laudermilt, Pomeroy,
and Mrs V10la Stewart of
Hnrlford
Funeral services w1U be
from the Hartford Church in
Chrlstian Union Sunday at 2
p m The Rev Howard
Killingsworth and the Rev BUl
Campbell will offlcl81e Burial
w11l followln the Graham
Cemetery, FnendS rna) call at
the Foglesong Funeral Home
after 3 p m Saturday The
body will be taken to the
church one hour before the
services

•

Sarah F. Weaver
REEDSVILLE - Mrs Sarah
F Weaver, 84, Piketon, and
formerly of Rt 1, Reedsville,
d1ed Thursday evemng at the
Spears and Spears Nursing
Home in Piketon follow10g an
extended Illness
She was born m Clarksburg,
W Va , Aug 5, 18118, daughter
of the late Feth and FranciS
Goodmght Morton
She was preceded m death by
her husband, Marcellous, m
1963 Survivors mclude two
sons, Lawrence, of Washmgton
C H ami Ray, of Waverly.
Three daughters surv1v01 Mrs
James (Lucy) Vmeyard, Ft
Myers, Fla , Mrs Charles
(Mary) Benedum, London,
Oh10, and Mrs Orval (Clara)
Blake, Greenfield
Two
brothers surviVe Guy Morton,
Parkersburg, and Ed Morton,
Clarksburg Ten grand and 13
great-grandchildren survive.
One son, two brothers and two
sisters preceded her In death
She was a member ol the
Umted Brethren Church, Bod
had served as a Sunday school
teacher for several years
Funeral 5e\\'1Ce&amp; will be held
2 p m , today at the White
Funeral !lome m CoolviUe with
Eldon Blake officiating Burial

&gt;'

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Television Log

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GALUPOUS- Ironton and
a steady ram spoiled Gallla
Academy H1gh School's
Parents N1ght actiVIties on
Memonal FJeld Fr1day,
Twenty.f1ve nunutes before
the parents of Gallia Academy
High School's football team
cheerleaders and trainers wer~
mtroduced, 1t began rammg It
never stopped, and it apparently didn't bother VISiting
' Ironton as the Tigers clinched
at least a share of the 1972
Southeastern Oh1o League gnd
champ10nsh1p w1th a conVIOClng 46-14 victory over the
,Blue DevUs
It was the fourth stra1ght
GAHS home game played 10
the mud and rairi on Memorial
F1eld this fall
Both the GAHS and Ironton
bands were on hand, but the
halftime shows were washed

PriOr to the game's openmg
kickoff, Odie O'Donnell IO·
troduced the folloWirig pare~ts
of GAHS gr~dders, cheerleaders and tramers
Ben Ba xter, Mr and Mrs
Robert Baxter, Mike Berndge,
Mrs Violet Berndge , Dav1d
Brown, Mr and Mrs J W
Brown, Jr , Doug Brown, Mr
and Mrs Don Brown , Pat
Boster, Mr and Mrs Eugene
Bosler, Leon Briggs Mr and
Mrs Dayton 1 Briggs , Dav1d
Bryan, Mr and Mrs David
Bryan. Ken Colller, Mr
Charles Collier , Jim Craft, Mr
and Mrs James Craft Dean
Epling, Mr &lt;nd Mrs Miles
Epling , Malt Epling, Mr and
Mrs John Epling , Scott
Epling, Mr and Mrs Miles
Epling, Mike Evans, Mr and
Mrs Tom Evnas, Cra1g
Fisher, Mr and Mrs Roger
Fisher, Fred Ford, Mrs Nettle
, Ford , Kirk Frazee, Mr and
Mrs William Frozee . Dav1d
Graham Mr and Mrs Glenn
Graham John, Grolh, Dr and
Mrs John Jroth, Rick
Grymes Mr and Mrs Ernesl

SUNDAY, OCTOMBER29

6 oo-.:-FII m 4

3(}-Day of Dlscovery4, Newsmaker 72, 13, Bob Harrmgton 6,
Faith for Today 10
7 oo-tommun1que 6, Old Time Gospel Hour 13 Societies In

6

...

Transition 4 Mormon Conference 10

•

' 7 3(}-T1me for T1mothy 4, Faith for Today 8 Rev1val Fires 6,
Herald of Truth 3 Lamp Unto My Feet 10
s1oo- Davey &amp; Goliath 4 Leonard Repass 8, Gospel Caravan 6,
Church Serv ice 13 Morman Cho1r 3, Look Up and LIVe10
B 15-Mornmg Report 4
B 3(}-0ral Roberts 3, Try Our Health 4, Kathry n Kuhlam 6,
Day of DIScovery S Camera 10, Rev Rex Humbard 13,
Revival F~res 15
9 oo-Si ngmg Jubilee 3 Cadle Cha pel 4 Rex Humbard 15 Oral
Roberts tO, Archie's Fun House S
9 3(}-Church by Side of Road 4 Old T1me Gospel Hour 8,
cartoons 10 Dr Pa ul Warren 13

10 oo-Church Serv1ce 4 Fa1lh tor Today 15, Cunouslty Shop 6,
13, ThiS IS t he Life 3 Archte's Fun House 8 Movie,
&amp; L1vmgstone" 10

0

Stanley

10 3(}-ThiSisthe Life 15 In sig ht 4 Captam Noah 3, Notre Dame
Highlights 8
11 oo-TV Chapel 3 Joy 1n L,.l ng 13, Camera Three s. Con
sumer Repor l 14 OS U Football Highlights 4, Jake's Place 6
11 3(}-ThiS IS the Answer 3, Insight 15 Make a WISh, 6, 13, Rex
Humbard 8
12 oo-CBPA Bowlmg 6 Columbus Town Meeting 10, Rev
Calv m Evans 13 Meet the Press 3, 4, 15
12 3(}-Revlva l F~res 13 Pro Football Pre Game Show 8,
1 oo- tssues &amp; Answers 13 Fa1th &amp; The Bible 4. P•o Football 3
4, 1S, B. 10
1 3D-Amencan Adventure 6

2 oo-Potnt of V~ew 6, Lower Lighthouse 13
2 3(}- tssues and Answers 6 College Football ' 72, 13
3 oo-Changlng Times 13
3 30-Wacky World of Jonathan Wmters 6, Rookies 13
4 oo-Mancln~ Generallllf1 6 Pro Football 15, 3, 4, Living 33
Face lhe Nation 10
4 J(}-Wor ld of Su rv1 val 6, 13 Age of Anx1ely 33, Log of the
Stne ma 10

5

oo-WIId W1ld West

'

6

Ripples 33. Treasure Island

8,

Grymes

10,

5 3(}-Sesame Streel 33

oo- News &gt;'leather Sports 6, 60 M1nutes 8, 10
6 3(}-Untamed World 6, Hathayoga 33
7 oo-Lawrence Welk 13 Safari to Advenlure 3, ThiS Is Your
Ufe4 Wild K1ngdom 15, Walt Till Your Father Gets Home 6
UFOS lntheKnow10 Zoom33 , Zoom20
7 3(}-Worldof Disney 3, 4, 15, Anna &amp; the KlngiO , Lets Make a
Deal 6 Just General1on 33, 20, Peanuts 10
8 oo-FBI 13 6, Family Game 20, 33, Cartoon, ' Yellow Submarine ', 8, 10
8 3(}-French Chef 33, Hec Ramsey 3, 4, 15
9 GO-Masterpiece :rheatre 33&gt;~ ~. rii,Whot i'•er t&gt;H•p6

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pened to Aunt Allee." 6, 13

~ ~Mann1x,

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each end all across the field
The muSic of "Queen City
March" brought the band on
across the f1eld and to the
Sideline 10 thiS formation
In a company front from the
home s1delme tlie band went
back across the f1eld and
dropped band members on
each second count and formed
a g1ant "M" from one 20 yard
line to the other
The band had flash hghts on
their hats and when the lights
were turned out on the f1eld ,
the "M" formatiOn was lighted
up
The ma]orettes twirled fife
to ChiCago's "Make Me Smile"
as the band featured the
feature twirler, sophomore,
Joyce HutchiiiSOn tWJrlmg two
f1re batons
At the conclusiOn of the fife
baton routme the band played
the ever popular march "Hosts
of Freedom" Moving to the
s1delme and back off droppjng
squads of eight across the field
At the trio segment of the song,
the squads d1d a senes of
pmwheels From the pmwheels
the band moved sharply mto a
block band formatiOn and
played a sw10g verswn of
Chases' "Get It On "
The maJOrettes d1d a wh1te
glove routme to the enJoyment
of the crowd
D1rector Goms thought the
band played the best 11 has all
marchmg season He was also
pleased the band 1s progress10g
rap1dly mto the new style of
marchmg
Goms and assiStant drrector
Ruth chose R1ck Couch, Jerry
M1ller and Melanie Burt as the
outstandmg bandsmen for
their hard work all week and
outstandmg performance on
the f1eld
Goms commented, " It IS
gettmg harder and harder each

week to choose outslandmg
bandsmen as everyone 1s doing
a great JOb
Next week the crowd Will be
asked to participate w1th the
Marauder Band as they have
an exc1lmg show planned for
'Parents N1ght ''

EASTERN SHOW
REEDSVILLE - SENIORS
of tqe Eastern H1gh School
band and their parents were
recogmzed durmg the h.\Irtune
show Thursday mght on the
Eastern f1eld
The semors and the1r
representatives In cluded
Sandy Wood, Mr and Mrs
Robert Wood, Jill Swam, Mr
and Mrs James 0 Swam,
V1ck1 Spencer, Mr and Mrs
Jack Spencer, Lucy Holter,
Mr and Mrs Da v1d Holter ,
Jane An n Karr, Mr and Mrs
Horace Kanr , Debbie Jeffers,
Mr and Mrs John Jeffers,
Rosemary Reed, Mrs Franc1s
Reed, Cathy Pickens, Mrs
Harhss Frank, Marc1a Carr ,
Mrs Charles Carr
Followmg a fanfar e the band
moved downf~eld on diagonal
hoes to ' ChiCago" w1th
maJorettes presentmg a flag
rout10e The percussiOn sect10n
was featured on "DynamiC
Drwns" and the maJorettes d1d
a fire baton rout10e to "I Don't
Know How to Love Him "
Presentmg a preciSion
march drill to "The Billboard
March," the bandsmen moved
from concert formatiOn to a
cross, then pmwheels, a
floatmg diamond and an "X"
returmng to the cross formatiOn With maJorettes
presenting a routme durmg the
changmg formations
Majorettes are Debbie
Jeffers, head, V1ck1 Spencer,
Cheryl Kuhn, Louanna Newell
and Joanne F1ck

.q ~wa Wt~on Walifr Jllhrf &gt;

Hie W

Walters, Mr and Mrs R E
Walters, Tim Weaver, Mr and
Mrs L E Weav"" ; • Mike
Wolfe, Mr and Mrs Otho
wolfe, George Bush, Mr and
Mrs Roy Bush , Kenny Will,
Mr and Mrs Joe W1ll , Brad
Yoho, Mr and Mrs Allen
Yoho, Tom Daniels, Mr and
NITs Thomas Daniels, Danny
Woodward, Mr and Mrs.
George Woodward ; Bob
Condee, Mr and Mrs Robert
Con dee, Dean Rees, Mr and
NITs David Rees , Winston
Saunders, Mr and Mrs. Harold
Saunders, Bob Wood, Mr and
Mrs Harland Wood
Managers - Randy Gilliam,
Mr and Mrs James Gilliam ,
Roger Harbour, Mr and Mrs
Dale Harbour , Jerry Frazier,
Mr and Mrs Ralph Frazier ,
Gary Hood, Mr and Mrs John
Hood
Cheerleaders - Lori Miller,
Mr and Mrs Russell -Miller,
Jenny Weaver, Mr and Mrs L
E Weaver , Tam! Woodward,
Mrs Tom Woodward , Jan
Wiseman, Mr and Mrs Ike
Wiseman Rene Coonen, Mr
and Mrs James Coonen, Lee
Ann Johnson, Mr and Mrs
Floyd L Johnson

,
(
,
r '~
10•0G-Night Gallery,-3, 4, 15, Firing L ne, 20, 3J
, ,,
10 30 - We Think You Should Know J, Protectors 4, Evil Touch
s, High Road lo Adventure10 Pollee Surgeon 15
11 oo-News, Weather, Sports 3, 4, B, 10 15
11 t5 - CBS News, 8, 10, 15, 13
11 30- Joh nny Carson 3, 4, 15, Movtes, "Tokyo Joe " 8, ' Land

8. 10

Raiders ', 10 "Whtte Cmanche ', 13

12 15 - Judd 6
1 oo-News 4
I 3(}- News 13

MONDAY, OCT 30, 1972
6 00 - Sunrise Seminar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Farmt1me 10, Farm Report 13
6 20- Paul Harvey 13
6 25 - Good News 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4 Bible Answers a School Scene 10
6 45 - Corncob Report 3
7 00 - Today 3, 4, 15, News Weather Sports 6 8 10
7 25 - Sports 13
7 30 - Romper Room 6 Sleepy Jeffers 8, Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13
s 00 - c;a pt Kangaroo 10" New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame 51 33,
Timmy &amp; Lassie 6
a 30 - Jack LaLanne 13, Romper Room 8, New Zoo Review 6
s 55 - Local News 13
9 00 - What Every Woman Wants lo Know 3, Paul Dixon 4, Phil
Donahue 15 Capt Kangaroo 8 Concentration 6, Friendly
JunctiOn 10, Ben Casey 13
9 30 - ToTelltheTruth3, Jeopardy6, HazelS
9 55 - Chuck Wh1fe Reports 10
10 00 - Joker's Wild 8, 10, Columbus S1x Calling 6, Dinah Shore
3, 15, Dick Van Dyke 13, Phil Donahue4
10 30 - Concentration 3, 15 , Split Second 13
II 00 - Sale of Century 3, 15 Gambll 8, 10, Password 13, Love
Amencan Style 6
11 25 - Carol DuVagl 6
11 30 - Hollywood Squares 3 4, 15 , Bewllched 6, 13, Love of~lfe
8, 10
12 00 - Jeopardy 3 15, Password 6, Bob Braun's 50 50 Club 4,
Contact 8 News 13, 10
12 25 - CBS News 8
12 30 - Spllt 5econd6, Search for TomorrowS, 10, News3, 3 W's
13
1 00 - All My Children 6, 13, News, Weather, Sports 3, Jackie
Obllnger8 , Green Attes 10, Watch Your Child 15
1 30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15. Let's Make A Deal 6, 13 As The
World Turns 8, 10
2 00 - Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 15 , Newlywed Game 13 , Mike
Douglas 6, Guiding Llghl 8, 10
2 30 - DallngGame 13 . Doctors3,4. 15, EdgeofNight8, 10
3 00 - Another World 3, 4, IS , General Hospital 6, 13, Love
Splendored Thmg 8, 10, The Family Game 20
3 30 - Return to Peylon Place 3, 4, 15. One L\le to Live 6, 13,
Secret Slorm 8, 10, The French Chef 20
4 00- Mr Cartoon 3, Somerset 15, Sesame St 15, 33, Love
American Slyte 13, Merv Griffin 4, Fllnfstones 6, Gilligan's
Is S, Mov1e "South Seas Sinner,'' 10 .
4 30 - I Love Lucy 6, Peltlcoat Junction 3, Merv Griffin 8,
Daniel Boone 13, Andy Griffith 15
5 oo - Mr Rogers33 Dick Van Dyke 15, Ponderosa J, 4, Daniel
Boone 6
5 30 - Eiec Co 33 , Marshall Dillon 15, Dragnet a, Gomer Pyle
13, Hodgepodg~ Lodge 20
6 00 - N~ws 3, 4, a, 10, Truth or Conseq 6, Newo 13, 15,
Soclefles (n Translflon 33, Sesame Street 20,
••
6 30- NBC News 3, 4, 15, ABC News 6, CBS News I, 10; ~olk
Gu1lar 33, I Dream of Jeannie 13
7 00- News 6, Truth or Conseq 3, BeettheCiod&lt; 4; CJrcusJ13 ,
Insight 33, What's My Line 8, Satn115, Read Your Woy,Up
33, Electric Company 20
1
7 30 - To Tell The Truth6; Traffic Cour t 10, Episode Action 33,
ParentsGame3, Hollywood Squares 4, Young Dr Kildare I ,
Movie
"Tarzan &amp; The Leopard Woman" 13, Hodgepodge
GOING TO THE PEOPU:
Lodge
20
to llreqlWD 11!1 hold OD
8 OO -Gunsmoke8, 10, Rowan and Merlin's Laugh-In 3, •· UFO
lbe Well German r;overn·
6, Till The Butcher Cuts Him Down20, 33.
meat, Cll"ftllor WIll y
9
00Here's Lucy 8, 101 Pro Footboll6, 13, Movie "CJrenge of
Braadl HI dluolved lbe
Habit" 3, 4, 15 Boboqutvarl ~o. 33
Baad~lll •1111 aet elee9.30-DorlsDoyl, 10. Book Beot30,33
liob for Nov. U. Rl1 So- 10 00- Bill Cosby8, 10. News20, From the HlllsJJ
clallata nrreally Mid us 10 30 - Concrrrlsln the Lawn33, Pollllcal Talk 20
seals ar;lbullbe eomblaed
II OO - News3,., 6,8, 10,15
'lfiPOIItlea'1 I o Ia I ol the
11 •30 - Dick C.v~t 6. Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15, Movies "The
same number.
McKenzie Breek " 8. " Well of Noise" 10
12 00 - News 6.
12 30 - Movltt "Carryon TV" 6, " Badman's Country" 13
wiD be in Eden Cemetery. I 00 - Focus on Columbus •
I
Friends may call at the funeral 2 00 - N!IWS 4.
home any t.rme
2 30 - News 13

Dav1d Kerns, Mrs

Marlin Kerns, Mark Merola
Mr and Mrs Anthony Merola ,
John Myers , Mrs Jerry
Myers , Kenny New, Mr and
Mrs Edsel New , Bob Nlberl,
Mr and Mrs Merrill N1bert.
Jim Niday, Mr and Mrs
Wayne Niday , "Rex Plymale,
NIT and Mrs Evan Plymale,
Jr , Anthony Reese, Mr and
Mrs Ed Reese , Randy Rice,
Mrs Cecil Rice , Steve Rose,
Mr and Mrs Merrill Rose,
John Saunders, Mr and Mrs
Howard B Saunders , Kaven
Sheets, Mr and Mrs Warren
Sheets, Leon Smith, Mr and
Mrs Kenton Smtih , Tom
Valenllne Mr and Mrs Leo
Vatenllne, Weldon Wahl, Mr.

Mov1e, " Arrowhead ', 13

Parade
•
opemngs

•

~ut

I had to go to the hospital
Old Glory should be saluted
May I urgently request that every person 'O f Galha County
contribute now to mamtam thiSpublic serVICe Please JOin me m
sending contnbutlon to "Galha County Emergency Ambulance Dear S1r
Amencarusm IS rosy to define but diff.icull to practice m an
Semce"
area, namely, the Slat• of Ohio, where children are taught they
Funds are needed now
Yours very truly do not have to salute the Amencan F1ag
Mrs Robert M Breland
For S2 years the Amencan Leg•on, an orgaruzallon of
Just what day is left?
veterans of two World Ward and two Conflicts, have been strong
Dear Ed1tor
defenders and protectors of Democracy We are the1r Auxiliary
On October 23, I parked my car on the street 10 Pomeroy,
Through a better Wlderstanding of our bas1c liberties and the
thmk10g th1s was a National Legal Holiday,! d1d not put money character Which protect them, the Americarusm Comnuttee of
m tl;le meter When I returned from Kroger s I had a park10g the Amen can Leg10n Auxiliary, Post No 39, betieves that a
greater love of youth and the determination of the mdiVidual to
ticket
Dur10g World War II when the boys were drafted my f1ght and to defend Amenca at all tunes should be strehgthened
husband answered the call and d1d not Sit back as some I know, mstead of weakened by teachmg our youth they do not have to
and he fought for our country Now that l he Pres1dent has salute the F1ag of th1s Umted States of America.
changed Veterans Day from November II to October 23, the
Our forefathers la1d the foundation for a ClVilWitiOn that ts
V1Uage of Pomeroy does not recogmze thiS day as one of thelf
the
envy
of the whole world It has brought us greater sprrdual
legal holidays
It has always been November II was set as1de as Veterans and matenal wealth than any people have ever seen •
Let us not forget that we are the beneficiaries of the greatest
Day, smce World War I There was not one flag displayed on
October 23m the Village of Pomeroy m honor of the veterans If "Trust Fund" ever accumulated on this earth, the Youth of
such 1s the case that the VIllage does not th10k that this day Amenca , and may we teach them "!Ave of God and Country"
We, the members of American Leg1on Auxiliary, Post No 39,
should be observed as Veterans Day, then I feel sorry for the
off1c1als and would Just as soon that they remove my husband's go on record as opposmg the Ohio Supreme Court Ruling that
Children have the right to refuse to salute the American Flag
name from the county roster of veterans names
While AI)Jenca today Is tile beacon light of a disorgaruzed
Not once durmg the 31 years I have lived 111 Me1gs County d1d
I know the SIX (6) holidays thai the VIllage observes until October and diSillUSIOned world,lt IS ours to determine the character and
quality of SOCiety and our Citizenry of tomorrow.
25, when the Daily Sentmel published them
We s10cerely pray we have teacbers brave enough to enI have JUSt one quest1on that I would hke an answer to If
November IllS no longer Veterans Day, and the Vlllage does not courage all children to pray and to salute "Old Glory."
"For God and County We aS80Ciate Ourselves Together "
observe oCtober 23 as Veterans Day, then Jus! what day IS left to
Mrs Ray Fox, Amer1carusm O.airman of Drew Webster
be observed for the honor of the veterans?
Edith Hall Post No 39, Amencan Leg1on Auxiliary

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

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'

Night Monday

lbd Ihere m the eally Kennedy era, chansma became
a ve1 l big wo1d 111 the /lme11can pohllcal vocabulary
In a wmd 11 w1 apped up all those qualllles of person
al111 siYle and energetic ex!loverswn which John and
his b1 olhei s had m abundance and wh•ch II was w1dely
ag1 eed we1 c essential mgred1ents of Ihe successful pol
ltiClan m th e now generation
So along comes 1972 and cham ma, 111 a word IS one
c'lem&lt;nl tt IS "'del} agreed that this presidential election
Is notabl y lackmg But 1f Richard N1xon and George McGovern are not
exac tlv overwhetmmg the Amencan electorate With per
sonal m•gnetism thiS year 1t IS mter,estmg to note that
personalit y •s ve1y much at work-possibly the key factor
- m two other counlnes 10 the gnp of electiOn poht•csCan~da a nd West Germany
' Takmg the first first Pnme Mm1ster P1erre Elliott
Trudeau has considerably toned down the With-It 1mage
"luc h contnbutcd grea tly to h1s 1963 elect1on v1ctory
In the campa 1gmng lor C:anada 's Oct 30 parhamentary
vo tmg II has been Trudeau the statesman razr than
the swmger who has been on v1ew
But !he se11ous 1 rudeau c~n also be sharp to gued and
an oganl He has made enem1es There 1s noticeably less
adulal 1on and m01 e open d1sllke of Trudeau than four
vears ago
HIS opponent on the oth er hand Prog1 ess1ve Conservallve pa1 I&gt; leade1 Robert Stanfield IS sa1d not to have
a smgle 1ea t enemy 10 the entire coyntry Which sug
ges ls Ius maJor problem If there IS noth10g abo ut Stan
field to which voters react strongly negatively neither
does he turn them on m large numbers
TI udeau may be controversial but he reg1sters With
the public He may be admu ed by some Canad1ans and
hated by olhe1 s but he cant be Ignored Personality at
WO I k pOSSi bly deCISively
In ~ est Ge1many personal1ly IS nowhere near such
a divisive facto r , but 1! co uld be even more dec1s1ve m
th e Nov 19 election of a new Bundestag
Chancello1 W1lly Brandt 1s considerably more popular
than Ius own Soc1al Democratic party He IS m fact,
poss•bly the most popular politiCal figure 111 E urope to
day a stand10g wh1ch could have some mfluence on
Ge1 mans st 1l l concerned over postwar ostracism by their
neighbors
81 andt IS less a magnetic personality than a warm
one Much of his appeal to Germans may !1e m the con
II ast he p1 esents to the If traditionally authontanan leader
figuies A naiUial relaxed tnd lvldual he IS clearly not
the 1eli ead of the stiff formal prewa1 tvpe wh1ch so
man v ol Ge1 many s other co ntemporary poh!Ic1ans seem
to be
GCI mans seem generally to approve of Brandt's pol!cy
of 1app1 oachement w1th Commumst East Europe, wh•ch
he has made the key 1ssue of lh1s electwn But even
should the opposition Chnstlan Democrats wm, 1t IS gen
erally assumed the policy would be cont mued w1th httle
change
It 1s Brandt s personal populantv that the Soc1al Demo
crals a1 e countmg on as the deciSive factor
The Importance of personahty m politiCs 1s of course,
nothmg new In the Amencan expenence the Kennedys
and the1r contemporanes merely updated a pubhc rela
liOns too l the Roosevelts and numerous Predecessors
knew and explo1ted And long before then, Cicero, Caesar
and Pencles Wfl e makmg use of speCial g1fts for turn10g
the public on
The Creeks 10 fact, even had a word for 1t-char~sma

I1

,,.

MEIGS HALFTIME SHOW
POMEROY - The Meigs
Band, aware of the stiff
compehhon from a good
Athens Band, d1d an exciting
halftune show Friday mght
Entermg m a company front
from tile visiting s1de the band
dropped squads of eight from

RICHARD YOUNG
POMEROY - Richard
Michael Youug, son of Mr.
and Mr•. George R. Youug,
Route 3 Pomeroy, who bas
eallsted In the Marine Corps
180 day delay program, wtll
report oexl March for his
recruit training Ill' Parris
Island, S. C. Mike bas
enlisted under the teclmlcal
Speciality Guarantee He Is a
graduate of Meigs High
Sehool.
THE KEY to where to
practice for a concert for
16 pianists on eight pianos
turns out to. be a dealer's
showroom to Rochester,
N.Y. No concert hall had
that many pianos

CLEMSON ROMPS
WINSTON-SALEM, N C.
(UPI) - Fullbacks Wade
Hughes and Heide Davis each
ran for two touchdowns
Saturday as Clemson crwsed
to a 31.0 Atlantic Coast eon.
ference victory over Wake
Forest

c"enters will be set up m eac~
county and Will be annoWlced

RIO GRA\'IDE - MarUyn
NEW HA VEN - The Ne11 • Grant, Coordmator of Spec1~l
Hawn I'TA has ISsued an Serv1ces for lhe Areaw1de
lnv1lalioo to nil elnbs, Model Proj~ct on Agmg, anchurches, and orgamzat1ons nounced Saturday
th at
111 this area to enter a float In
volunteer dr~vers are needed
the1r second annual Wmter on elertlon rlnv 'T'nP srl1-1y
Festival Chnstmas Parade
Any group that IS mlerested
should call parade cha1nnan
Wllliam DeMoss at 882-2677
"F 882-2624 before Nov 20
Prizes of $25, $15 and $10
GALLIPOLIS Lew1s
w11l be offered to the first, Roger McBr~de, 26, Rt 2,
second and lhlrd place en- Bidwell, Fnday entered a
tries The parade da te is gmlty plea to a charge by c1ty
Friday, Dee. I, at 5 30 p m pollee of possessiOn of
All floats will meet at 5 p m mariJuana
at the New Haven ComHe had ongmally pleaded not
mumty Building for JUdgmg gu1lty Judge Robert S Betz
and parade placeroenl
fmed McBnde $100 and costs
and sentenced h1m to one year
m the county Jail
Judge Betz, however,
suspended the executiOn of the
sentence and comm1tted
McBnde to the Southeastern
Oh10 Regional Mental Health
Cenl&lt;!r at Atbens for 30 days
He will be exammed to
determ10e 1f he IS a drug
dependent person
Gregory Butts, 22, Eureka

November 7, to take older Jackson, Me~gs, Scwto and
ClltZens who are w1thout trans. VUiton counties
Sa1d Mrs Grant "What we
portatwn to the polls
des~re IS to have many voters
Th1s proJect will be m effeet of all ages saymg they are
lhroughout the proJect area w1lhng to lake an older person
wh1ch
mcludcs
Galha, to the polls We would then
d1rect the volunteer to the
nearby home of the person who
has Indicated they need transportation to lheiT voting
precmct "
Any lnd1v1duals or groups of
S!&lt;Ir Rt, was sentenced to f1ve
days m the county Jail and persons willmg to dnve should
fmed $SO and costs for m- contact the follow10g F~eld
P!ann10g Assistants In Galha
sufficlent funds
contact
Harry
Judge Betz also fined Boyd County
Ham1lton
at
446-1831
,
Jackson
Jones, Crown City, $SO and
costs for mtox1cat1on and County, contact Alberta Biddle
Helen W Strong, 65, Rt 2, at 286·1320, Me1gs, Leafy
Galhpohs $10 and costs for Chasteen at 669-4777, Scioto
gomg the wrong way on a County IS Evelyn Howard at
456-939knd Chet Jordon at 353d1v1ded highway
Forfe1tmg bonds were 4582 and m V10ton County,
Ric hard L Bennett, 21, Rt I, Els1e Ryther at 596-4157
Other s1tes to call mclude the
Ga llipolis , $18 defective
brakes , Thomas L Wnght, 33, proJect headquarters at Rio
Rt I, Crown City, $28 speed, Grande College at 245-53S3, ext
Marlm 0 Nichols, 43, Rt 1, 26, the Me1gs County Council
Crown C1ly, $28 speed; Stewart on Aging at 992-7400 and the
V Wilson, 55, W1llowooct, $28 Portsmouth Semor Center at
fa1lure to yield the n ght of 353-3736
Several additional telephone
way , Thomas F Miller, 47, Rt
2, Patnot, $28 mtoxiCahon,
Jack C D~ff1eld, 41, Spencer,
$18 no muffler, Roy L Shuff,
31, Wheelersburg, $18 speed,
Richard Lee Ph1ll1ps, 34, Rt 2,
Ton1ghl, Mon , Tuos
McDermolt, $28 speed, Dav1d
Oct 29 30 31
L Grate, 26, Rutland, $23
PRIME CUT
speed, Harold B Hazelbaker,
l Techn•color J
25, Galhpohs, $28 failure to
Lee Marvin
Gene H.ackman
yield the nght of way, and
Colorcartoons
Robert F Whiteman , 56,
Show Storts 7 P M
Wilkenson, lnd , $28 assured
clear d1stance

Guilty plea made

7 Mishaps
recorded

by police

GALLIPOLIS- John Robert
Johnson , 36, of 12 Nell Ave,
was Cited to Mun1c1pal Court
for Improper backmg Fr1day
followmg a traffic accident on
Third Ave
C1ty pollee sa1d Johnson
backed h1s truck mto an auto
operated by Lawrence E Lee,
87 Garfield Ave There was
mmor damage to both vehicles
A second m1shap occurred at
12 15 p m on State St , where
an auto dr1ven by Glen Roush,
72, Bidwell, backed 10to a
parked car owned by Robert E
Spears , 28, Galhpohs No
Cltatwn was ISSued
Another mishap occurred on
Third Ave , where an auto
dr~ven by Phyllis W Sheets, 46,
Galhpnlls, backed mto a
park10g space but h1t a parked
auto owned by Evelyn Sear·
berry of Rt I , Thurman
No one was mJured or c1ted
followmg an acc1dent at 2 SO
p m on F1rst Ave , where a
truck dnven by Gilbert Leroy
Mayo, 60, Rt 2, Gallipolis,
collided w1th a car dnven by
Carolyn J Layne, 24, 2027
Chatham Ave
Barry L Saunders, 25,
~'BIUI&gt;dh!, was charg'ed ''illth~
reckless operatiOn followmg an
accident on Vme St Off1cers
sa1d Saunders lost control of
h1s car which struck an ~ron
pole at the Ashland Serv1ce
Station There was moderate
damage to h1s car
A !mal Fr1day accident
occurred at II 01 p m on Court
St , where cars driven by Keith
R Voreh, 18, Gallipolis, and
Ora Lucas, Rt I, Gallipolis,
hacked mto each other
A Saturday accide nt occurred on the Burger Chef
parkmg lot where an 'auto
dr1ven by Linda Sunpkms, 29,
P01r.t Pleasant, backed mto a
car owned by John D Halley,
22, 502 Fourth Ave

SOONERS ROMP
NORMAN, Okla (UP!)
Oklahoma halfback Greg
Prwtt scampered for touchdowns on runs of 4, 3, and 22
yards Saturday to pace the
Sooners to a 52-0 v1ctory over
Kansas State

2 Accidents
on Friday
POMEROY- Two acc1dents
"ere mvesl1gated Fnday by
Pomeroy pollee
At 4 15 p m medium
damages were reported to two
cars on West Mam St near the
bndge traffiC hght when a car
dnven by Patr1c1a Van Maire,
Syracuse , pulled from a
busmess establishment 10tii a
car dnve n by Lois Jean
Duddmg, 25, Mason There
were no InJuries Mrs Van
Matre was Cited to mayor's
court on a charge of fa1lmg to
y1eld nght of way
M10or damages were mcurred to two cars on the nver
parkmg lot at 7 27 p m Fnday
when a Cllf dnven by Roger W
Partlow, 19, Pomeroy, attempted to pass a car driVen by
Dav1d Schm1tz, 16, Pomeroy,
wh1ch was attempting a left
turn to park There were no
InJuries and no arrests

ON CHANNEL 5
POMEROY - A segment of
Thursday mght's parentteacher conferences m the
Me•gs Local School District
Will be shown on Channel S TV
at 7 20 p m Monday Shown
f1rst w1ll be Robert Morris,
Pnnc1pal of the Pomeroy
Elementary School, with Ohio
Umverslty junwrs who are
ass1stmg 10 the school after
wh1ch Mrs Pat Thoma, PTA
president, and Moms will
discuss the oper at10g levy to be
voted upon m the district on
Nov 7

SPLIT LEVEL
Comem

a complete select1on

of f1ne, clean, healthy
bulbs- all from Holland
Reasonably priced
ond sure to
bloom

SOUTHERN
COLONIAL
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with Wltllamson heating and central ~lr cond1ftonlng
General El ~lrlc appliances, fully carpeled, landscaped,
concrete drive &amp; slceets. 2112 car garage, dining balcony,
101 95xl75, counfy water, Tara sewer system
'

CONTEMPORARY

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total electric with Williamson healing and central •If
conditioning, General Electric appliances fully carpeted,
l.,dscaped, concrete drive &amp; •treets, din ing balcony, lol
95x175, county Wat~r. Tara sewer system

DUTCH
COLONIAL II-LEVEL
3 BR, 2baths, large family room, basement, 2 car garage,

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McKNIGHT-DAVIES HOW•

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CLOSES FOR THE
SEASON

Ton1ght thru

Wednesday

lAMES
WILL BlOW YOU APART!

Double Feature

"BLOOD
MANIA"
ALSO

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OF

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• Eddy Arnold • And many more

OUR OWN

TRIPLE

QT.

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REG. '2.99

CHECK

LATEX
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CLEANS UP WITH WATER

white and colols

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PIECE GOODS ·
REMNANTS

12

OF
ORIGINAL
PRICE

THESE PLUS HUNDREDS OF MONEY SAVING ITEMS DURING
END OF
CLEARANCE.

FOR INFORMAtiON OR APPOINTMENTS

BOTH STORES IN GALLIPOLIS· MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY

'
I

BRUTE CORPS

total electric with Williamson heating and central air
conditioning, General Electric appllan~es, fully carpeted,
landscaped, concrete drive &amp; streels, dining balcony, tot
95xl75, county wafer, Taro sewer system

367·7250

ADDISON,IiiOiiiltliiO_ _ _If!lll

R

and
Paul Carr m

TONIGHT
OCTOBER19

Buy Early and Save

4 BR, 2 baths, Family room, tolal electric with Wltilamson
Heahng and Cl!l1tral air condlltontng, Gene.-al Electric
appliances, tully carpeted, landscaped, concrole dnve S.
streets, 2'12 car garage, dining balcony lot 75xl75, county
water, Tara sewer system

BONNIE'S KIDS

·..

CHRISTMAS
ALBUMS

NEW HOMES FOR SALE

Ellie Thomas 1n

MASON DRIVE IN

GOOD SELECTION OF

DEVELOPMENT CORP.

I

Fn , Sat., Sun.
Oct. 27-28-27

MEIGS THEATRE

ALSO:

and choose from

dnver or the perwn needing
the r~de should call these
centers "We do not want any
older person not bemg able to
vote because they lack a nde to
the polls," she sa1d

G.

OPEN MONDAYS &amp; fRIDAYS. TIU 8

�s- The Sunday Tlinea. Sentinel, Sunday, t?ct- 29,1m

.I

Blue Cross covers certain
increases in Medicare cost ·

WILLIAM T. GRUE8ER, center •.of the Pomeroy Motor Co. has returned from Lordstown,
Ohio where he visited the new, modern Chevrolet Vega plan! to watch Vegas being built.
•Grueser said.the plant is the most modern and clean he has ever visited in his many years in
the automobile business. With Grueser, are T.. J. Ryan, left, Cl)evrolet Charleston wne
manager, and the mid-Eastern regional sales manager.

COLUMBVS 7, Blu~ Cross of 3.. Daily c.,.insurnnce during
Central Ohw ~111 cover the . use of 60 lilellme reserve days
increased MediCare hosp1Lal in hospil.al increase from $34 to
Insurance Part "A" deductible $6 5.
and. C(}-insurance amounts at
4. Daily c.,.insurance from
no mcrease m rates for those Zlst through IOOth day in a
over 65 who are enrolled in the skilled nursing .facility inBlue Cross-65 program.
crease from $8.50 to $9.
The Department of Health,
The Blue Cross-liS program,
EducatiOn and Welfare available on an individual
recently announced increases basis only' carries a bim the amounts to be effective· month ly rate of $5:10.
,
J
1 1973
anuary. .
- .
.
In announcing the increased
Blue Cross-65 wi ll cover the benefits Blue Cross of Central
following Part "A': changes Ohio pr~sident Howard Franz
n'Ot covered by Medicare:
said that a special Blue Cross1.
In-pati ent hospital 65 _ Blue Shield areawide
deductible per spell of illness enrollment would he held in
increase from $68 to $72.
mid-November.
·1
·
r
2. Da1 y c.,.msurance rom
"Anyone in reasonably good
61 t th
h 90 h d
f
s
roug
t
ay o health who is eligible for Parthospil.alization increase from A of Medicare and is retired,
$17 to $18.
self-employed or working

_pistribution of n&amp;OIJI!Y made

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB One VQte could switch it all

Diabetics Should
Limit All Swe~ts

Auditor Joseph T. Ferguson Ohio's 88 counties. ·Ferguson
announced Saturday the said the funds distributed ·by
quarterly distribu.tion of the state comprise 80 pet. of the
cuunty general relief and local · cost of' operating county
where there are fewer u1an five welfare &lt;!dminlsttation .costs . welfare departments and their
general .relief progralns. 'The
(5) will be eligible for this low- ·
·
counties
furnish the remainder
cost program," Franz said.
NO ONE HURT
of ihe money. No f~eral funds
GALUPOUS- No one was are involved ·in general relief.
.. .....injured or cited in a -truck General relief subsidy
accident at 7:30p.m. Friday at payments were $16,291.35 to
LEVY ENDORSED
the junction of Rt. 588 and Rt. Gallia County and $6,230.03 to
RACINE - The 'Racine Fire 35. According to the Gallia-' Meigs 'county.
Department's Ladies Auxiliary . Meigs Post State Highway
has endorsed the five mill Patrol, a wrecker operated by
school levy up for renewal on Tommy K. Matthews ; 21,
· Nov. 7 in the Southern Local Lower River Rd., slid left of
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
· ·
MIDDLEPORT
- .The
School Dlstnct.
center into an embankment.
The car it was towing was not Middleport emergency. ,squad
answered a call to' the
damaged.
Firestone Store in Middleport
Must Be Real
early
Friday afternoon for an
No artificial flowers are
employe, Gary Wolfe, 'Letart
allowed to adorn the flo~ts
C OF C TO MEET
used for the Tournament of
POMEROY - The Pomeroy Township, who had become ill.
-Roses Parade in Pasadena , Chamber of Commerce will Unconscious, Wolfe was taken
California. The floats must
be completely covered with meet Monday at noon at the to Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was adniitted.
Meigs .Inn.
no part exposed.

Ry Lawrence Lamb, M.J).

of' .

...,

YouD.g Goblins·need to know
how to stay healthy, safe
GALUPOLIS- That spooky
night of October 31st will.soon '
be with us - much to the
delighl
of
youngsters
everywhere. On this night
'"swarms" or make-believe
. gobUns will be out trick or
treating and
attending
Halloween parties. Each year,
however, many of these
children become pedestrian
victims resulting from poor
, safety training, lack of proper
· supervision or a careless
motorist.
11efore children. set out on
Halloween adventures parents
are urged to take an evening or
afternoon with them to review
the basic rules for their safety.

J

The Accident Prevention Unit
of the Ohio Department of
Health, in cooperation with
City Health Departments jn
Gallipolis and the county
agencies in Gallia and Meigs,
recommend a careful explanation of basic traffic and
pedestrian rules as well as
Halloween safety tips.
Cross streets only at intersections with traffic signals
or well-lighted pedestrian
cross walks.
Look both ways before
crossing streets.
• Children should stay
together in groups of four or
five and avoid running or

:Nuclear reactors'
safety testing
·.

pushing.
White shopping bags or bags
with retro-reflectiv e materials
should be carried ·for treats.
Costumes should i~cl ude
decorative pieces of · retr.,_
reflective materials purchased
from most leading stores.
Make-up or grease paint
shou ld replace the use of
masks which may obstruct
vision .
Guide your child away from
thin, sheer, or baggy clothing.
Flame-proof all decorations
and Halloween Clothing (add 9
oz. of borax powder and 5 oz. of
boric acid to one gallon of
warm water. Dip clothing af\er
each washing.)
For protection, go with the .
small fry to collect their
Halloween treats.
For safety, children should
always slay in their own neighborhood, visiting..Jlllly those
homes where they know they
are welcomed.
Young children should be

Weknow·t he
a man
·look.
a man.
Drizzler'
RamJet
.

.'

''..'

'

McGregor takes rugged Drizzler
cloth, guaranteed waterproof for
two whole;ears, insulates it with
Curon foam, and adds warm
knit collar and cuffs. All machine
washable and dryable.'26.50 ·

•

Mr. and Mrs. David Howard Samples

;., jeraldine Nan Payne weds
: : David Howard Samples
~··'

VINTON - Miss Jeraldine Tamara Stobart, cousins of the
Nan Payne, daughter of Mr. bride, _served as rice passers.
and Mrs. John A. Payne, Their dresses were similar to
Vinton, and Mr. David Howard those 'of the attendants.
Samples, Gallipolis, son of Mr.
Miss Lowlette Stewart was
and Mrs. Howard C. Samples, the , flower girl. She wore a
were united in marriage on dress similar to the other atAug. 20, at 2:30 p.m. in 'the tendantS and carried a basket
Vinton Baptist Church. Pastor of rose' petals. Master Todd
Kirby Oiler performed the Deel served as ringhearer.
double ring ceremony.
Se ·
b
The altar was decorated with ·
rvmg as est man was
Mike Thompson. Ushers were
one basket of white gladioli, Dave Carter, Tom Folden,
mums and daisies with a pair brother-in-law of the groom,
of seven branch candelabra and John'Payne, brother of the
accented with greenery and bride.
blue tinted mwns.
For her daughter's wedding,
Miss .Margaret Tracy, Mrs. Payne wore a street
organist, presented " Love length, light blue knit dressStory," "Wedding Stong" and coat ensemble with navy acmany other selections. Vocalist cessories and a corsage of blue
'Merlyn Ross, sang "Theme ' tinted carnations. The groom's
!rom Romeo and Juliet," "Ave
, · Maria" and " The Lord's ~~~h~~~~r:i:~f~~· ;;o;e a~
' Prayer.
the neck and ruffled sleeves.
; ; The bride, given in marriage She wore matching achy her father, was attired in an cessories. Her corsage was of
~. imported de-lustered satin and white carnations edged with
; peau D' Ange lace gown blue.
Mrs. George Seiberling, Mr.
• ; fashioned with a fitted bodice,
and
Mrs. Robert Samples, Mr.
A reception was held in the
&gt;· a wedding ring neckline with church basement with Mrs. and Mrs. H. E. Denny, Akron;
'l:· lorig fitted sleeves and self Georgena Harrison, Miss Mr. and Mrs. M. J . Harter,
~::., button closings. Lace adorned
Sherry Finney, and Mrs. Jeri West Salem.
·~\th e sleeves, neckline, and McCormick .serving..
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Harter,
f;; enriched the waistline of the
Miss
Jean Harter, Mr . Jerry
For a wedding trip to Carter
'l'!~ controlled A-line skirt with an Caves State Park, Ky., the Skinner, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
•:;attached chapel
train. bride changed inlo a navy blue Harter, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
~::scalloped lace edged the two-piece knit dress with Swigart, Barberton; Mr. and
~~complete hemline. Her tiered matching accessories and wore Mrs. Joseph Payne and family,
-~1:bouffant veiling of imported the white baby orchid from her Woodbridge, Virginia; Mr. and
:'::Illusion ·cascaded from a silk bridal bguquet.
Mrs. Ar! Boland, l!3n Jose,
'• ' , roSl!tmd "llladplece adorned
California;
Mrs. Roselene
The bride is a graduate of
~;;with lace crystals and .seed North Gallia High School and is Warthman and Miss Vicky
~~!pearls . The bride carried a a senior at Rio Grande College. War thma n, McArthur ; Mr.
~'~white Bible · topped with a The .groom is a · graduate of and Mrs. G. R. ThompsoQ,
li'-bouquet
of white mums and Gallia Academy High School Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
~··
~;;daisies centered with a corsage and is a senior at the Ohio SLate Atkins, Rutland ; Mr. and Mrs.
~~of a white baby orchid. ·
Thomas Folden , Indianapolis,
University.
~'1: The only jewelrY worn by the
Miss
Janet
DeVault Indiana .
;:.!·bride, was diamond studded registered the guests. Out of
Miss Janice Markeson and
~;;earrings, a gift from the town guests were Mr. and Mrs. Miss Cathy Cooley, Cedarville;
~~ groom.
Dale Allard, Mr. and Mrs. W. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Roush,
Miss Kathy Payne, twin T. Urwin, Mike Urwin and Miss Belpre; Mr. and Mrs. Carl
&gt;}'sister of the bride, served as Lydia Wright, Waverly ; David Calcara and Ricky, Columbus;
::ithe maid of honor. Mrs. Suellen Vrwin, .Huntsville, Alabama ; Randy Williams, Granville,
~'Folden , sister of the g~oom, Mrs. Vera Frampton, Mr. and and Robert Stewart, Athens.
·~;served as matron of honor. The
•'bridesmaids were Mrs. Ann
;:.;~tine and Miss Jan Long, also
•::;-twin sisters. Their gowns were
;.:floor length blue chiffon
:;; trimmed in .white lace at the
!~'empire waist and neck, long
f::slee'ves, with a ruffle at the
t::bottom of .the skirt. Their
•: headpieces 'l'ere of matching
:, .blue chiffon over three art::lificial mums. They each wore
•!:1vory earrings, a gift from the
;:;bride. The .attendants carried
!:,nosegays edged in lace, cen::·tered with blue edged white
,,·,carnations and circled with
Silver lrldce
Center
!::white daisies. The streamers
:;·;were of blue satin.
·
Miss Lu Ann Payne and Miss
11

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (VPI) regarding safety system
- A group of scientists last performance.
week released documents · "Our group has earlier
purportedly belonging to the carried out an independent
Since1859
Atomic Energy Commission review of the results obtained
(AEC) which question the in this key program and pinsafety of nuclear power pointed a number of grave
reactors.
weaknesses that showed l!lat
The Union of Concerned margins of safety in some
Scientists ( UCS ) said the cases were nonexistent. The
documents "discredit the AEC internal memoranda we
WII(R[ lCDIIOMI !lRtC!Nil(S
results of a key AEC testing have m&amp;de public today conprogram that the AEC publicly firm overwhelmingly our
uses as the basis for licensing conclusions."
decisions on · commercial
nuclear power plants."
To
- The scientlsts- said the MCKENZIE TRADED
PORTLAND, Ore. (VPI )testing progdim depended on
reactor manufacturers " to SI.an McKenzie, the only man
perform sensitive tests on their who played in every game for
the Portland Trail Blazers,
own safety systems."
won't
pl8y in any more for
"The Internal memos
released by UCS were written them.
McKenzie was traded to
by the AEC experts who
Houston
Friday for Greg Smith.
lb .
supervised the testing work
performed by the manufac- McKenzie was one of the three
turers," the group said. "These remaining original members of
memos document the shod- · the Portland team and had
diness of the testing program played in alll71 games.
and point to major conflicts of
interest ...
y - Sliced Turll:ey
"So poorly were tests perQ-What is the distin- Beef Stew - Spaghetti
formed by the manufacturers
guishing feature of Angel IMeat Balls.
that the AEC safety experts F'alls in Venezuela?
analyzing the ' tests for the
2 lb. pkg.
A- It Is the world's high.commission reached the est with a drop of 3,212 feet.
conclusion
that
the
manufacturers were in effect
deliberately sabotaging the '!!;-,::i_~-~..;.~-~e:::;:~==!!!!!i::::::i!l~!!!'"'=!i!!~-~-~-~~~-~'"'::1-~--~=~z!!!_~--~~!!!-~'"
experiments to prevent
weaknesses in their safety
systems from being exposed."
The safety system in
question - the emergency core
cooling system --' is incorporated in nuclear power
plants to prevent the
~atastroph ic
release of
. radioactiv ity into the environment in the event the
reactor core overheats as the ·
result of·a pipe rupture and Joss
ol normal coolin~ water: .
· lne pne of the .docwnents, a
safety expert cominenting on a
testing program 'per(ormed by
General Electric Co. concluded: "This was not a
satisfactory demonstration
tell - the same need exists
today - in fact the need is
greater because margin . appears .to be less than originally
expected."
Prof. Henry Kendall of'
Mauachusetts lostitute of
Technology, a
nuclear
pbylicllt and II!Okeaman for
the UCS, told a news conftC-e. "A major acandal is FOR &lt;
BIG DISCOUNT·
SAVINGS!
.
• DCIIted With . the AEC's .
paUcy 01 ~tUng tile lndu.ltry do
the tettinll
check out the
l•'!'Y '• . ~n · claim~

Everything Is
Guaranteed
Satisfy-Or Money Back

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•

F.ahiring a Manhattanstyle Delicateisen · Plus
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Plus Top Value Stamps

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GALLIPOLIS

OPENING •••

9:30 AM to 8 PM

.
.
UlNG BOTTOM - Susan J. Tuttle has been preeented
the Air · Force Commendation · Medal ~Y U. Col. JaCk
Waterfield, commander of the 564th Strategic MtBeue
Squadron at Malmstrom Air Force Base for service in
Okinawa. The daughter of Mrs. John Bogard of Long Bott0m1
Miss Tuttle is curt~ntlyaSsigned to the 341st Combat SUpport
Group, consolidated base perSQ_nnel office. She enlist~ in
Sept., 1969 and served 18 monthh t the Kadena Air Force
'
.
Base, Okinawa. According to the citation, "Sgt. Susan J.
Tuttle distinguiShed herself by meritorious service as ad·
minlstralive clerk, logistics plan! division, 18th Tactl!'BI
Fighter Wing, Kadena Air Base, Okinawa, from 24 Sept. 1972
to 21 of March 1972." MIS!! Tuttle is a 1969 graduate of South·
ern High School.
·

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MEN'S, BOYS', WOMEN'S

..

WEO

··,

Dear nr. Lamb-! can understand that in the case of
a diabetic, all sweet stuff is
.taboo. Yet honey is on that
list also, but it is the natural
sweetener. Why isn't it allowed?
Dear Reader-Not all doctors restrict all sweets for
diabetics although most doctors prefer that the carbohydrates be in less r~ ncen ­
trated form, namely in- vegetables or natur~l fruits. The
reason for this is to keep the
sweets from being absorbed
too quickly into the blood
and causing a sharp rise in
the level of the blood sugar.
R ecent recommendations
from the diabetic society
have liberalized the amount
of carbohydrates that diabetics can use while restricting
the amoun t of fats , particularly saturated or animal
fats in an effort .to decrease
the possible influence of the
diet in diabetics on causing
·the high incidence of heart
disease that' diabetics often
have.
Now the common t a b I e
s u g a r that people · use is
really a double sugar and
when it is absorbed through
the digestive tract, it is split
into two simple sugars, one
of· these is called glucose , the
other is readily converted to
glucose which is the form of
sugar that the body uses for ·
energy. Incidentally, most of
the foods, including proteins
and fat , are converted to the
glucose sugar by the body to
be burned by the body for
energy.
It's true that honey is a
natural sweetener and its
carbohydrates are composed
of a single sugar which are
directly absorbed into the
.bloodstream where they are
converted to g I u c o s e the
same as ordinary sugar and .
have the same effect s in that
regard. Thus as far. as raising the blood sugar level is
concerned in the diabetic,
both normal sugar and honey
will cause this .
Don't be confused about
the term " natural sweeten·
er." Sugar is a natura I
sweetener, it is a natural
concentrated extract ·from
beets and sugar cane. Honey
Is a natural sweetener extracted from flowers by the
ac tion of bees. Whether bees
·Or man do tbe· extracting
from plants, both products
are natural sweeteners, and
neither one in large amounts
is advisable for individuals

re&lt;1u1rea to restrwt t h e 1r
sweet intake.
Dear Dr. Lamb _ 1 am
wntmg regarding your article on eggs versus high cholesterol 1which 1 have ) and
w h a I. to do with the egg
yolks.
I r e a d an a1·ticle in a
mov1e magazi ne that some
of the bea uticians use the
egg. yolks )ike a mud pack
for the face . I tried it and it
really works.
Dear Reader- Thank yo u
for your suggestion . Using
egg yolks on the face won't
affect the cholesterol intake
of the diet and your sugges tiOn that this might be one
use for egg. yolks for people
who are trymg to avoid them
IS ap~rec i ated . I can't speak
for how effective they are as
a mud pack but it surely
wouldn't ha rm anyone who
wants to try it.

i\llorncy &lt;iencral William J. the guals which we have set in!
Brown Saturday told the 41st areas such as air and water
annual meeting ·of the· pollution , drug abuse · and
Feder;• ted Democratic Women consumer protection."
of Ohio .a single vote . could
··
··
change the course or history. ·
1~
"The Presidential election of
1876 was decided by a margin
of one vote in the electoral :
college, 185 to 184," said Brown
c.'OLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
adding Woodrow Wilson state liquor control director
became president over Charles said Friday his agency )Vill
Evans Hughes by a margin of save the state $850,000 a year
less than one vote per precinct through ~ new efficiency
in California.
program.
"Thirty-two years later," he
Richard E. Guggenheim sald
added, "California went to among the efficiency moves
Harry S Truman over Thomas recommended by Golightly &amp;
Dewey by approximately one Co. International, Inc. is the
'
vote per precincV 1
elimination of 66 central office
" I agein ask you for an effori sl.aff jobs. The management
comparable to that which you consul !.ant firm performed the
'gave in 1970," Brown added, · study for $12,000.
"so tha t we may gain the
Any savings would be
returned to the slate general
fund, Guggenheim told a n~ws
conference. Liquor price
Q- WIIat is the direction l'eductions, if possible, would
of the Parama Canal?
amount to only "pennies a
A- Notth-south.
bottle at the most," he said.

On .AU Three
Floors.

PLUS

Bath Towels

}0~
~ioht

. Ji...,uklr

of 1.9&amp;

Y9u6d Top
Value Stamps.

SPORTSWEAR
REDUCED·UP
.TO 50%
'

Cell'elttlnyOIId hr1y • • fliniod battl ........ il. ~
ID. Wd colon olld ilotat.ptfllh 1ft lois of 011ot1v1 1h Is' • ·

�s- The Sunday Tlinea. Sentinel, Sunday, t?ct- 29,1m

.I

Blue Cross covers certain
increases in Medicare cost ·

WILLIAM T. GRUE8ER, center •.of the Pomeroy Motor Co. has returned from Lordstown,
Ohio where he visited the new, modern Chevrolet Vega plan! to watch Vegas being built.
•Grueser said.the plant is the most modern and clean he has ever visited in his many years in
the automobile business. With Grueser, are T.. J. Ryan, left, Cl)evrolet Charleston wne
manager, and the mid-Eastern regional sales manager.

COLUMBVS 7, Blu~ Cross of 3.. Daily c.,.insurnnce during
Central Ohw ~111 cover the . use of 60 lilellme reserve days
increased MediCare hosp1Lal in hospil.al increase from $34 to
Insurance Part "A" deductible $6 5.
and. C(}-insurance amounts at
4. Daily c.,.insurance from
no mcrease m rates for those Zlst through IOOth day in a
over 65 who are enrolled in the skilled nursing .facility inBlue Cross-65 program.
crease from $8.50 to $9.
The Department of Health,
The Blue Cross-liS program,
EducatiOn and Welfare available on an individual
recently announced increases basis only' carries a bim the amounts to be effective· month ly rate of $5:10.
,
J
1 1973
anuary. .
- .
.
In announcing the increased
Blue Cross-65 wi ll cover the benefits Blue Cross of Central
following Part "A': changes Ohio pr~sident Howard Franz
n'Ot covered by Medicare:
said that a special Blue Cross1.
In-pati ent hospital 65 _ Blue Shield areawide
deductible per spell of illness enrollment would he held in
increase from $68 to $72.
mid-November.
·1
·
r
2. Da1 y c.,.msurance rom
"Anyone in reasonably good
61 t th
h 90 h d
f
s
roug
t
ay o health who is eligible for Parthospil.alization increase from A of Medicare and is retired,
$17 to $18.
self-employed or working

_pistribution of n&amp;OIJI!Y made

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB One VQte could switch it all

Diabetics Should
Limit All Swe~ts

Auditor Joseph T. Ferguson Ohio's 88 counties. ·Ferguson
announced Saturday the said the funds distributed ·by
quarterly distribu.tion of the state comprise 80 pet. of the
cuunty general relief and local · cost of' operating county
where there are fewer u1an five welfare &lt;!dminlsttation .costs . welfare departments and their
general .relief progralns. 'The
(5) will be eligible for this low- ·
·
counties
furnish the remainder
cost program," Franz said.
NO ONE HURT
of ihe money. No f~eral funds
GALUPOUS- No one was are involved ·in general relief.
.. .....injured or cited in a -truck General relief subsidy
accident at 7:30p.m. Friday at payments were $16,291.35 to
LEVY ENDORSED
the junction of Rt. 588 and Rt. Gallia County and $6,230.03 to
RACINE - The 'Racine Fire 35. According to the Gallia-' Meigs 'county.
Department's Ladies Auxiliary . Meigs Post State Highway
has endorsed the five mill Patrol, a wrecker operated by
school levy up for renewal on Tommy K. Matthews ; 21,
· Nov. 7 in the Southern Local Lower River Rd., slid left of
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
· ·
MIDDLEPORT
- .The
School Dlstnct.
center into an embankment.
The car it was towing was not Middleport emergency. ,squad
answered a call to' the
damaged.
Firestone Store in Middleport
Must Be Real
early
Friday afternoon for an
No artificial flowers are
employe, Gary Wolfe, 'Letart
allowed to adorn the flo~ts
C OF C TO MEET
used for the Tournament of
POMEROY - The Pomeroy Township, who had become ill.
-Roses Parade in Pasadena , Chamber of Commerce will Unconscious, Wolfe was taken
California. The floats must
be completely covered with meet Monday at noon at the to Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was adniitted.
Meigs .Inn.
no part exposed.

Ry Lawrence Lamb, M.J).

of' .

...,

YouD.g Goblins·need to know
how to stay healthy, safe
GALUPOLIS- That spooky
night of October 31st will.soon '
be with us - much to the
delighl
of
youngsters
everywhere. On this night
'"swarms" or make-believe
. gobUns will be out trick or
treating and
attending
Halloween parties. Each year,
however, many of these
children become pedestrian
victims resulting from poor
, safety training, lack of proper
· supervision or a careless
motorist.
11efore children. set out on
Halloween adventures parents
are urged to take an evening or
afternoon with them to review
the basic rules for their safety.

J

The Accident Prevention Unit
of the Ohio Department of
Health, in cooperation with
City Health Departments jn
Gallipolis and the county
agencies in Gallia and Meigs,
recommend a careful explanation of basic traffic and
pedestrian rules as well as
Halloween safety tips.
Cross streets only at intersections with traffic signals
or well-lighted pedestrian
cross walks.
Look both ways before
crossing streets.
• Children should stay
together in groups of four or
five and avoid running or

:Nuclear reactors'
safety testing
·.

pushing.
White shopping bags or bags
with retro-reflectiv e materials
should be carried ·for treats.
Costumes should i~cl ude
decorative pieces of · retr.,_
reflective materials purchased
from most leading stores.
Make-up or grease paint
shou ld replace the use of
masks which may obstruct
vision .
Guide your child away from
thin, sheer, or baggy clothing.
Flame-proof all decorations
and Halloween Clothing (add 9
oz. of borax powder and 5 oz. of
boric acid to one gallon of
warm water. Dip clothing af\er
each washing.)
For protection, go with the .
small fry to collect their
Halloween treats.
For safety, children should
always slay in their own neighborhood, visiting..Jlllly those
homes where they know they
are welcomed.
Young children should be

Weknow·t he
a man
·look.
a man.
Drizzler'
RamJet
.

.'

''..'

'

McGregor takes rugged Drizzler
cloth, guaranteed waterproof for
two whole;ears, insulates it with
Curon foam, and adds warm
knit collar and cuffs. All machine
washable and dryable.'26.50 ·

•

Mr. and Mrs. David Howard Samples

;., jeraldine Nan Payne weds
: : David Howard Samples
~··'

VINTON - Miss Jeraldine Tamara Stobart, cousins of the
Nan Payne, daughter of Mr. bride, _served as rice passers.
and Mrs. John A. Payne, Their dresses were similar to
Vinton, and Mr. David Howard those 'of the attendants.
Samples, Gallipolis, son of Mr.
Miss Lowlette Stewart was
and Mrs. Howard C. Samples, the , flower girl. She wore a
were united in marriage on dress similar to the other atAug. 20, at 2:30 p.m. in 'the tendantS and carried a basket
Vinton Baptist Church. Pastor of rose' petals. Master Todd
Kirby Oiler performed the Deel served as ringhearer.
double ring ceremony.
Se ·
b
The altar was decorated with ·
rvmg as est man was
Mike Thompson. Ushers were
one basket of white gladioli, Dave Carter, Tom Folden,
mums and daisies with a pair brother-in-law of the groom,
of seven branch candelabra and John'Payne, brother of the
accented with greenery and bride.
blue tinted mwns.
For her daughter's wedding,
Miss .Margaret Tracy, Mrs. Payne wore a street
organist, presented " Love length, light blue knit dressStory," "Wedding Stong" and coat ensemble with navy acmany other selections. Vocalist cessories and a corsage of blue
'Merlyn Ross, sang "Theme ' tinted carnations. The groom's
!rom Romeo and Juliet," "Ave
, · Maria" and " The Lord's ~~~h~~~~r:i:~f~~· ;;o;e a~
' Prayer.
the neck and ruffled sleeves.
; ; The bride, given in marriage She wore matching achy her father, was attired in an cessories. Her corsage was of
~. imported de-lustered satin and white carnations edged with
; peau D' Ange lace gown blue.
Mrs. George Seiberling, Mr.
• ; fashioned with a fitted bodice,
and
Mrs. Robert Samples, Mr.
A reception was held in the
&gt;· a wedding ring neckline with church basement with Mrs. and Mrs. H. E. Denny, Akron;
'l:· lorig fitted sleeves and self Georgena Harrison, Miss Mr. and Mrs. M. J . Harter,
~::., button closings. Lace adorned
Sherry Finney, and Mrs. Jeri West Salem.
·~\th e sleeves, neckline, and McCormick .serving..
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Harter,
f;; enriched the waistline of the
Miss
Jean Harter, Mr . Jerry
For a wedding trip to Carter
'l'!~ controlled A-line skirt with an Caves State Park, Ky., the Skinner, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
•:;attached chapel
train. bride changed inlo a navy blue Harter, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
~::scalloped lace edged the two-piece knit dress with Swigart, Barberton; Mr. and
~~complete hemline. Her tiered matching accessories and wore Mrs. Joseph Payne and family,
-~1:bouffant veiling of imported the white baby orchid from her Woodbridge, Virginia; Mr. and
:'::Illusion ·cascaded from a silk bridal bguquet.
Mrs. Ar! Boland, l!3n Jose,
'• ' , roSl!tmd "llladplece adorned
California;
Mrs. Roselene
The bride is a graduate of
~;;with lace crystals and .seed North Gallia High School and is Warthman and Miss Vicky
~~!pearls . The bride carried a a senior at Rio Grande College. War thma n, McArthur ; Mr.
~'~white Bible · topped with a The .groom is a · graduate of and Mrs. G. R. ThompsoQ,
li'-bouquet
of white mums and Gallia Academy High School Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
~··
~;;daisies centered with a corsage and is a senior at the Ohio SLate Atkins, Rutland ; Mr. and Mrs.
~~of a white baby orchid. ·
Thomas Folden , Indianapolis,
University.
~'1: The only jewelrY worn by the
Miss
Janet
DeVault Indiana .
;:.!·bride, was diamond studded registered the guests. Out of
Miss Janice Markeson and
~;;earrings, a gift from the town guests were Mr. and Mrs. Miss Cathy Cooley, Cedarville;
~~ groom.
Dale Allard, Mr. and Mrs. W. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Roush,
Miss Kathy Payne, twin T. Urwin, Mike Urwin and Miss Belpre; Mr. and Mrs. Carl
&gt;}'sister of the bride, served as Lydia Wright, Waverly ; David Calcara and Ricky, Columbus;
::ithe maid of honor. Mrs. Suellen Vrwin, .Huntsville, Alabama ; Randy Williams, Granville,
~'Folden , sister of the g~oom, Mrs. Vera Frampton, Mr. and and Robert Stewart, Athens.
·~;served as matron of honor. The
•'bridesmaids were Mrs. Ann
;:.;~tine and Miss Jan Long, also
•::;-twin sisters. Their gowns were
;.:floor length blue chiffon
:;; trimmed in .white lace at the
!~'empire waist and neck, long
f::slee'ves, with a ruffle at the
t::bottom of .the skirt. Their
•: headpieces 'l'ere of matching
:, .blue chiffon over three art::lificial mums. They each wore
•!:1vory earrings, a gift from the
;:;bride. The .attendants carried
!:,nosegays edged in lace, cen::·tered with blue edged white
,,·,carnations and circled with
Silver lrldce
Center
!::white daisies. The streamers
:;·;were of blue satin.
·
Miss Lu Ann Payne and Miss
11

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (VPI) regarding safety system
- A group of scientists last performance.
week released documents · "Our group has earlier
purportedly belonging to the carried out an independent
Since1859
Atomic Energy Commission review of the results obtained
(AEC) which question the in this key program and pinsafety of nuclear power pointed a number of grave
reactors.
weaknesses that showed l!lat
The Union of Concerned margins of safety in some
Scientists ( UCS ) said the cases were nonexistent. The
documents "discredit the AEC internal memoranda we
WII(R[ lCDIIOMI !lRtC!Nil(S
results of a key AEC testing have m&amp;de public today conprogram that the AEC publicly firm overwhelmingly our
uses as the basis for licensing conclusions."
decisions on · commercial
nuclear power plants."
To
- The scientlsts- said the MCKENZIE TRADED
PORTLAND, Ore. (VPI )testing progdim depended on
reactor manufacturers " to SI.an McKenzie, the only man
perform sensitive tests on their who played in every game for
the Portland Trail Blazers,
own safety systems."
won't
pl8y in any more for
"The Internal memos
released by UCS were written them.
McKenzie was traded to
by the AEC experts who
Houston
Friday for Greg Smith.
lb .
supervised the testing work
performed by the manufac- McKenzie was one of the three
turers," the group said. "These remaining original members of
memos document the shod- · the Portland team and had
diness of the testing program played in alll71 games.
and point to major conflicts of
interest ...
y - Sliced Turll:ey
"So poorly were tests perQ-What is the distin- Beef Stew - Spaghetti
formed by the manufacturers
guishing feature of Angel IMeat Balls.
that the AEC safety experts F'alls in Venezuela?
analyzing the ' tests for the
2 lb. pkg.
A- It Is the world's high.commission reached the est with a drop of 3,212 feet.
conclusion
that
the
manufacturers were in effect
deliberately sabotaging the '!!;-,::i_~-~..;.~-~e:::;:~==!!!!!i::::::i!l~!!!'"'=!i!!~-~-~-~~~-~'"'::1-~--~=~z!!!_~--~~!!!-~'"
experiments to prevent
weaknesses in their safety
systems from being exposed."
The safety system in
question - the emergency core
cooling system --' is incorporated in nuclear power
plants to prevent the
~atastroph ic
release of
. radioactiv ity into the environment in the event the
reactor core overheats as the ·
result of·a pipe rupture and Joss
ol normal coolin~ water: .
· lne pne of the .docwnents, a
safety expert cominenting on a
testing program 'per(ormed by
General Electric Co. concluded: "This was not a
satisfactory demonstration
tell - the same need exists
today - in fact the need is
greater because margin . appears .to be less than originally
expected."
Prof. Henry Kendall of'
Mauachusetts lostitute of
Technology, a
nuclear
pbylicllt and II!Okeaman for
the UCS, told a news conftC-e. "A major acandal is FOR &lt;
BIG DISCOUNT·
SAVINGS!
.
• DCIIted With . the AEC's .
paUcy 01 ~tUng tile lndu.ltry do
the tettinll
check out the
l•'!'Y '• . ~n · claim~

Everything Is
Guaranteed
Satisfy-Or Money Back

FRY-ERS
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GALLIPOLIS

OPENING •••

9:30 AM to 8 PM

.
.
UlNG BOTTOM - Susan J. Tuttle has been preeented
the Air · Force Commendation · Medal ~Y U. Col. JaCk
Waterfield, commander of the 564th Strategic MtBeue
Squadron at Malmstrom Air Force Base for service in
Okinawa. The daughter of Mrs. John Bogard of Long Bott0m1
Miss Tuttle is curt~ntlyaSsigned to the 341st Combat SUpport
Group, consolidated base perSQ_nnel office. She enlist~ in
Sept., 1969 and served 18 monthh t the Kadena Air Force
'
.
Base, Okinawa. According to the citation, "Sgt. Susan J.
Tuttle distinguiShed herself by meritorious service as ad·
minlstralive clerk, logistics plan! division, 18th Tactl!'BI
Fighter Wing, Kadena Air Base, Okinawa, from 24 Sept. 1972
to 21 of March 1972." MIS!! Tuttle is a 1969 graduate of South·
ern High School.
·

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MEN'S, BOYS', WOMEN'S

..

WEO

··,

Dear nr. Lamb-! can understand that in the case of
a diabetic, all sweet stuff is
.taboo. Yet honey is on that
list also, but it is the natural
sweetener. Why isn't it allowed?
Dear Reader-Not all doctors restrict all sweets for
diabetics although most doctors prefer that the carbohydrates be in less r~ ncen ­
trated form, namely in- vegetables or natur~l fruits. The
reason for this is to keep the
sweets from being absorbed
too quickly into the blood
and causing a sharp rise in
the level of the blood sugar.
R ecent recommendations
from the diabetic society
have liberalized the amount
of carbohydrates that diabetics can use while restricting
the amoun t of fats , particularly saturated or animal
fats in an effort .to decrease
the possible influence of the
diet in diabetics on causing
·the high incidence of heart
disease that' diabetics often
have.
Now the common t a b I e
s u g a r that people · use is
really a double sugar and
when it is absorbed through
the digestive tract, it is split
into two simple sugars, one
of· these is called glucose , the
other is readily converted to
glucose which is the form of
sugar that the body uses for ·
energy. Incidentally, most of
the foods, including proteins
and fat , are converted to the
glucose sugar by the body to
be burned by the body for
energy.
It's true that honey is a
natural sweetener and its
carbohydrates are composed
of a single sugar which are
directly absorbed into the
.bloodstream where they are
converted to g I u c o s e the
same as ordinary sugar and .
have the same effect s in that
regard. Thus as far. as raising the blood sugar level is
concerned in the diabetic,
both normal sugar and honey
will cause this .
Don't be confused about
the term " natural sweeten·
er." Sugar is a natura I
sweetener, it is a natural
concentrated extract ·from
beets and sugar cane. Honey
Is a natural sweetener extracted from flowers by the
ac tion of bees. Whether bees
·Or man do tbe· extracting
from plants, both products
are natural sweeteners, and
neither one in large amounts
is advisable for individuals

re&lt;1u1rea to restrwt t h e 1r
sweet intake.
Dear Dr. Lamb _ 1 am
wntmg regarding your article on eggs versus high cholesterol 1which 1 have ) and
w h a I. to do with the egg
yolks.
I r e a d an a1·ticle in a
mov1e magazi ne that some
of the bea uticians use the
egg. yolks )ike a mud pack
for the face . I tried it and it
really works.
Dear Reader- Thank yo u
for your suggestion . Using
egg yolks on the face won't
affect the cholesterol intake
of the diet and your sugges tiOn that this might be one
use for egg. yolks for people
who are trymg to avoid them
IS ap~rec i ated . I can't speak
for how effective they are as
a mud pack but it surely
wouldn't ha rm anyone who
wants to try it.

i\llorncy &lt;iencral William J. the guals which we have set in!
Brown Saturday told the 41st areas such as air and water
annual meeting ·of the· pollution , drug abuse · and
Feder;• ted Democratic Women consumer protection."
of Ohio .a single vote . could
··
··
change the course or history. ·
1~
"The Presidential election of
1876 was decided by a margin
of one vote in the electoral :
college, 185 to 184," said Brown
c.'OLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
adding Woodrow Wilson state liquor control director
became president over Charles said Friday his agency )Vill
Evans Hughes by a margin of save the state $850,000 a year
less than one vote per precinct through ~ new efficiency
in California.
program.
"Thirty-two years later," he
Richard E. Guggenheim sald
added, "California went to among the efficiency moves
Harry S Truman over Thomas recommended by Golightly &amp;
Dewey by approximately one Co. International, Inc. is the
'
vote per precincV 1
elimination of 66 central office
" I agein ask you for an effori sl.aff jobs. The management
comparable to that which you consul !.ant firm performed the
'gave in 1970," Brown added, · study for $12,000.
"so tha t we may gain the
Any savings would be
returned to the slate general
fund, Guggenheim told a n~ws
conference. Liquor price
Q- WIIat is the direction l'eductions, if possible, would
of the Parama Canal?
amount to only "pennies a
A- Notth-south.
bottle at the most," he said.

On .AU Three
Floors.

PLUS

Bath Towels

}0~
~ioht

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of 1.9&amp;

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Value Stamps.

SPORTSWEAR
REDUCED·UP
.TO 50%
'

Cell'elttlnyOIId hr1y • • fliniod battl ........ il. ~
ID. Wd colon olld ilotat.ptfllh 1ft lois of 011ot1v1 1h Is' • ·

�'

•
·li-The Sunday Tim!'S ·'Sentinel, Swulay, Oct. 29,1972

lJnited women Jo meet Mrs. Paul Burnette_
w
ts

POtl.rs POINTERS

GA
Church
Women United · in Gallia
County will celebrate World
Community Day on Sunday,
.Nov . S, at 2 p.m. in . Grai!e
United Methodist Church,
Gallipolis . Joining . hands
acrosS the generations in a
"Coming of Age Celebration," special focus ' this
year will be on millions of 18 to
21 year . olds who will be par,
ticipating in their first national
election.
Women of aU denominations
in churches across the nation
are invited to join in this united
celebration. The program ,
under the leadership of Mrs.
. Chester Scott and Mrs. Stanley
Folden, will feature joyous
songs; reminderS of God's
eternal · promises and the
. sharing of dreams between old
and young. Hope for society
will be expressed, concern for

Marks
With These Tips
By. POJ;LY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY-I am answering the reader whose two·
year-old had marked on her stereo with a felt tipped pen .
My UtUe l!oy marked up my dresser, a door and the dryer
w1th a black, a blue and a green one. While putting on
some cologne I dabbed some of the marks to see what
would happen. They were removed completely and with
no damage to the, finish on any of the things. I thought it .
was the alcohol in the cologne that worked the trick.MRS. T. C. G.
I
•
DEAR GIRLS-Always test an Inconspicuous spot flrat
at finishes vary. Denatured alcohol Is a remedy often
auggealed for the removal of ballpoint Ink from fabrics.. POLLY
DEAR POLLY-My iittle boy marked all over the deep
freeze aluminum screen door and a hardwood door with
a black felt tipped pen. It cleaned off very easily with a.
well-known spot remover cleaning fluid . It even faded
marks that had been on my husband's tool box for over
a y~ar.-JOYCE
'•
Polly's Problem 1m1!iim
a~
DEAR POLLY-My lovely ·crystal bud vase has a ~
rust stain in the bottom made by the stem of an
artificial flower. I do hope some reader can tell me
how to remove thls rust. Soap and water do not faze ,
it. Thank,you so mucb.-ANN
~
'/.

W'

~,

DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve is with companies who
make glasses with gold decorations that wash off.-MRS.
R. T.
DE~R

POLLY-I am a college art student and so many
people in art classes have duplicate equipment. I use
adhesive-backed plastic-coated paper to identify my tools .
A small patch or strip of a distinctive design is on everything I carry with me . This takes a bit of time but certainly beats trying to scratch my initials on everything. This
also would be useiul for all school children no matter
what age. In our dorm we are not allowed to put anything
on the walls that would make a hOle. or scratch. Conse·
quenily there ar~ a lot of barefaced walls. I put inex·
pensive adhesive backed cork tiles on a wall so they cover
an area 4x6 feet and on them I hang my drawings, posters, pictures or just about anything and have no ~orries
about the plaster. The cork panel makes a dramatic focal
'point for the entire room.-DEBORAH

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES : Mary M.
Plumley, Glenwood; Mrs.
Willard Gray, Polnt Pleaaant;
Mrs. LoweD Collins, Shade, 0 .;
Mrs. Gratho Ward, Vinton, 0. ;
·Mrs.
Roger
Bennett,
Ga(Upoli8; Mrs. Samuel Lyons,
Syracuse; Kevin Amburgey,
Point Pleasant; Frank Fultz,
Buffalo;
Mrs.
Herbert
Wallace,! Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Elias David, Buffalo; Mrs.
David Lipscomb, Syracuse;
Mrs. Alice Chapman, Milton ;
Mrs. John Melton,! Bidwell;
Mrs. George VanMatre,
Mason, and Mrs.Woodrow
Russell, Point Pleasant: ·

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Thomas Gooch

Audette L. Rossiter
weds . Thomas·Gooch

1

••••••••••••••Iii••••••

LUC~Y
N\0(~

N\0(
•• the· musical instrument

ss ..
nderful

,,M,

l'~
Open Friday &amp; Mbnday Till I p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - At 25, Del
Fehsenfeld, Jr . is one of
America's youngest
evangelists
- w so- thenational director of Life Action
Crusade. He will direct the Life
Action Crusade Team this
week at the First Baptist
Church, beginning today with
the 9: IS Bible School hour. Del
and "team" will also minister
in the 10:30 morning worship
service and again Sunday
evening at 6:30 and 7:30.
Evangelist Fehsenfeld has
appeared in over 300 churches
in 48 states before teens and
'adults. His messages have
been termed "dynamic." Del
and members of his team will
hold an informal discussion
hour for all teens each week
dar evening beginning at 7
prior to the regular 7:30
evening service. ·
While Evangelist Fehsenfeld
is ministering to teens, Dr. Ed
Hindson, associate director of
Life Action crusade, will
conduct an adult seminar. Dr.
Hindson is recognized as one of
America's leading experts on
adult-teen relationships. His
adult seminars will deal with
solving family conflicts emphasizing such ·arefs p~ the
adl'florl~}( ot " ~jj~"pas!hr ' ' ihe

Center,
Armor,Point
Ft. Knox,
Ky.
He attended
Pleasant
High SchooL Before entering
the Army he was employed as
a deckhand by the G. and C.
Towing in Point Pleasant.
REPEAL OPPOSED
RIO GRANDE - The
Morfield Advisory Couricil of
the Farm Bureau, has approved a resolution putting the
council on recotd as opposing
repeal of the Ohio state income
tax. The members of the
council believe that the' present
income lax is the best way to
support public education in
Ohio and that the alternative to
the Income tax would probably
be an increase in the state sales
tali. The income tax Is believed
to be preferable to an iricrease
in other taxes, said W. Luther
secretary.

Now you can rent a farr1nu&lt;
CONN band instrument.
IN HOSPITAL
trial plan and nrn••An
LETART FALLS- St. Clair
selection method l.e t you·
Letart Falls, is a patient
Holzer
Medical Center for
. certain before YQU
iests · .and observation. His
Off~r the wonderful
room number
Is m.
.
.
ot music to youd:hild _th
easy way. See us for
details. No obligal:ion.
DIVORCE ASKED
, POMEROY ..,. Filing for
Reniil/lppliu
divorce Friday' In Meigs
To Purch•-• , .
County Common Pleas Court
If You lur
wu Gathel L(wia; ReedmUe,
Rt, 1, agalnet WUUam E. Lewta
arid the Firat National Bank of
Grayson, Ky. Mrs. L!!wls
charges grou negleCt of duty
lnd extreme cruelty and filed a
'temporary . injunction · to
restrain the defendant from
Gallipolis
drawmg any money or moneys
' i146-0687
out of the Firat National Bank
of Gra)'IOil.

BRUNICARDI.

· ·HOUSE OF MUSIC
'
54 State St.,

'

fwd , local and world con·.dilions, life styles and other
spt'Cific dreams wiU be shared.
. Cothing for the .sewing
. project , in answer to the
Clothing Appeal of Church
World Services, will be
presented at this meeting. G.iit
certificates costing $3 can be
designated to dress an overseas child, provide training
books . and materials for
American Indians, provide
blankets for refugee and
disaster situations, or as
emergency funds to be "used
wherever needed.''
Coupons and labels for the
Treat of Life program may be
brought to the meeting Sunday.
These will be redeemed for
UNICEF, the United National
Children's Fund. Coupons are
listed in October issue of
Readers Digest, pages 273-280.

mother-daughter tea

(.'ORA - Mrs. Paul Burnette · Etta Altizer and Gladys .Akers,
: welcomed . the Cora WSCW to flower committee. l'our
,her h.ome for' 'the October members asked to be
meeting. Fourteen members dismissed as members for next
·and three gues!s, Mrs. Marlin · year, and Mrs. Marlin Rose
..Rpseand daughter, Karen, and will be a new member.
' Richie Speirs attended. A
Months to entertain during '
· delicious meal was served at 1973 were chosen by the
noon . Mrs. John Gilbert and members. The program
Jeanette and Mrs·, Melvin committee will meet before
Gilbert also attended · the af· November meeting' to select
ternoon program and business program 'studies for the new
meeting.
' ·
yea r.
Mrs. Susan Gilliam and \\Irs.
N6vember meeting will be
Sylvia Gilliam had the with Mrs. J. T. Walller at
program · which included a Thurman with Ze11_ Altizer
song, "He Keeps Me Singing"; co-hostess. Program leaders
Scripture from the 12th chapter are Gladys Akers and Sue
of Matthew read by Mrs. Sylvia Waugh . Study chapters,
Gilliam and prayer by Susan Psalms 92·95. A White
Gilliam. Questions were asked Elephant Sllle will be conon study chapters, Acts, 25 thru dueled at the n~t meeting.
28, ,lll!d a general discussion
followed .
Mrs. Gilliam played an in·
teresting tape recording of
Paul's tripbyboatasa Roman
prisoner from Adramyltiuru to
Rome. He was in care of the
BARBS
Roman Army officer Julius.
By PHIL PASTORET
assortment of flannelgraph The story tells of !he.. violent
storm
at
sea
which
destrQyed
visuals·worth over $600. '
The XXth Olympiad this
Paul's
enSixteen college students the ship,
year
unfortunately omitted
from seven different states couragement to the others a contest for persons runmake up the Life Action Team helped them reach safety to the ning for office.
• • •
along with the two directors. Island of Malta. They later
took
another
ship
to
Rome.
The
Postal
Service
These young adults present in
This
concluded
our
study
of
the
should
take
a
tip
from the
song and verse life worth
stamp
peopletrading
living, America worth having, book of Acts. The Gilliams also
they
hove
glue
that
tastes
people worth loving, authority give a safety demonstration much better.
worth respecting, purity worth "How to revive a drowning
• • •
person."
The
program
closed
keeping and a God worth
with the Lord's Prayer.
serving.
President Gladys Akers
The Life Action Crusade will
present a high school assembly conducted the business
program on Monday at 12:30 meeting . Minutes of last
and 1:30 in the Kyger Creek meeting were read and ap.
When, on· a rainy night;
High School. Tuesday mornihg-· proved and treasurer's report
the drinks are on the house, .
was
given.
Mrs
:
Evans
at 8:30 they will be appearing
there's usually more water
in the Southwestern High reported that a donation of $100 inside than outside.
'
School, while on Wednesday at w~s paid to the Emergency
Ambulance
Fund.
Ever notice how much
9:15 they will give an assembly
New
ofticers
elected
are:
easier
it is to get over a
program in the North Gallia
president,
Leona
Burnette
;
bad
habit
when it's the
High School. These school
other
fellow
who has the
assemblies consist of songs by vice-president, Anise Wood ;
job
of
doing
it?
·
the Life Action Singers, plus an secretary, ·Florence Gilbert;
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.}
audio-visual presentation that treasurer, Gladys Akers and

1 .

'·

~

DATE •No DAY "P"
14K Solid Gold.
$250.

v

GALLIPOLIS - For anyone who is
disappointed that your artist-in'
,
residence isn't a painter-type artist, I
want you to know that I h~ve applied .
brush and paint at The French Art
&lt;li. Colony ... check the baseboards and
&lt;li
window frame in the back hall. Canvas
§·
scaresme,butmaybebeforetheyearis
::!~ ,out there will be~ floor to paint and I'll
have the opportunity to do one of my
~

~~
.:;:;
~

.

.

I

but perhaps his house didn't have a

hath;:,::;~r what Gallipolis )ooked like

Laf tte 'both 1 k'
f
aye
oo mg pre 11Y ormai
and important; then I ll)et a new face,
hanging there between them . Such a
glum expression and what a jaw! I
figured nobody important enough to
have a portrait made could be serious
all the time. I watched awhile, and sure
h h
ed
.
enoug • e start to sml1e.
I couldn't help but. laugh with him
at being caught. I'm sure he has some
interesting stories to tell. I hope my

::~

when he knew it' Wonder if a camera
could have made a picture of his face
that would seem as alive as they
if
painting we have? Wonder anyone
else can let him smile?
·
Parent-Child workshop today, 24
p.m. at the French Art Colony: art and
technique of spinning. BorroW a child if
you need to, or a parent. Also, your last

~h~~~t. to see the Seinsheimer Print
IF ANYONE has a question he

~~.~~~~te~;~~~:o~~'t.:::~:;s~~d ~~~ditli~e ~~s~er:adreinot:a:~~;~

the
·
woodwork Sunday, I step[&gt;ejl into the he IS an ancestor of a Gall1pohtan.
Sch 1 If 1 d 't k
th
I'll
library to see how the hangings had
More important, 1 think, is that he tr ~ d /n now e answer •
gone.Foundol'Gj!orgeWashingtonand. was a human being like the rest of us; Y 0 '" 1 ·

i·

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·'·'·'·'·'•'·'·'•'·'·'•'o'·'•'·'·'·'·'·';o,o,o,o,o,
o,o;o;o,o;o,•.-.•.•.o..-.•.•.• . o.o . o.o~.-•.o.o,o.o,o
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Mr. and· Mrs . Merrill Cox
were recent guests of his
Mr. and Mrs, Oral Wallace parents •. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
and Mr. and Mrs. Russell Cox .
Wallace of Dayton were recent
Mr . and Mrs . Clarence
· guests of their mother, Mrs. Halley were recent guests of
Verba Wallace.
his father, Brodie Halley and
Mrs. Alice Board and sister Mrs. Rachel Stovers.
were recent gucots of ~nother
Mr. and Mrs. Otis Rice are
HUNTINGTON, W. Va.
sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Fin. having a new home built on Rt.
nicum.
218. Rev . han Myers of Because intelligent discipli~e
Miss Lou Aon Folden called Gallipolis Ferry and son are is the individual's basic
defens~ throughout his life,
on Mr. and Mrs. Harold doing the carpenter work.
leaders of the Boy Scouts of
SaWiders and family Saturday
Mr. and Mrs. Mifflin M_oore
evening.
of Circleville spent the America use a boy's Jl&lt;rsonal
Mrs. Tom Fellure and two weekend with her mother, Mrs. code of conduct to assure
safety in all Scouting's acdaughters of Ashtabula and her Vesta Sheets and Dillnon.
mother,Mrs. Leota Call visited
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hasz of tivities.
John Schneider, Health and
Mr. and .Mrs. Carl James and Dayton spent some time with
family recenUy.
her mother, Mrs. Orpha Safety Chairman of the TriMr. and Mrs.Morris Smith of Wooten and Junior Roberts. State Area Council, Boy Scouts
of America , explained the
Columbus were recent guesls
Gord~n Wooten has been ilr
importance
of safety standards
of his brother, Mr. and Mrs. with a vinis.
·
Grover Smith and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Wooten are in preparation for fall and
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Cox were having a new home built on .Winter activities that include
, )l'~kend campo0 ts, vocational
t gu~!S._ of
moth~, Kerr-HaJrisb~g Rd11 .
II !f,lp~ - and, camporees,.
• ,, . ·'
~ e;
~)lbine '' f~t$. CWI Janle$ ;V.llllted her
As a leader in the health and
Qf
"' and Mr . Ellunett niothe ,' M C Leota \:;a11 1
safety fie!d since its beginning
,Hall~y and fi!D)ily.
Holzer Medical Center.
in 1910, the national youth
organization set up over 40
years ago a Safe Swim Defense
plan that has been a model
protective method for con·
ducting safe group swims.
" Intelligent discipline is,
first, based on strict but fair
supervision," Schneider explained. "A leader must
communicate the reasons for
rules and procedures to gain
their full acceptance, and,
when boys fully understand
their purpose, they are liekly to
conform.''
The aim is to gain the boy's
understanding and acceptance
of a personal code of conduct,
Schneider said, and the vitality
of his personal code will
depend on the strength of a
self-imposed discipline .
"Self-discipline is an
essenti~l __ in ll!~dient
in
character development,"
Schneider said. "In our safety
program it has always been the
basic defense against · the
potential hazards cif adventurous/ activity. It is also
the basis of right decisions for
healthful livlng and moral
conduct. Our job of preparing
youth for the days and years
ahead requires intensive
f.ostering of , self-discipline."

Blue Lake

Personal codes
key to safety
'in Scouting

s

'

Gallipolis, Ohio

•we wtll•dJust to this tole111nce, If nettnary, Cuuqtn Is for one year.

MONDAY ONLY!

WESTERN

MEN'S &amp;
WOMEN'S

N
.otes from the Studio

~~ real::;ti~~~! finished ~inting

;342CLARK'
S
·JEWELRY
STORE
Second Ave.

Special!

Montgomery, Sue Ross, Betty Stapleton, Cheryl James,
Sheila Waugh and Pam Taylor. Jo Lyno O'Dell not pictured.

.

i
·.i

LAY-AWAY NOW--,...----~--1

DEL FEHSENFELD, JR.

,

By KAT! MEEK .

dff6n®;:~y:~~~~.~w:~~J';~~4~~~~~u
The most welcome gilt of all is an'·
Accutron by Bulova. So precise is
the Accutron tu'ning fork
movement that accuracy is .
~ guaranteed to
. within a minute
a month . •
See our full
selection of
Acoutron
models now.
From $110.

Clary; secondrow,Pai:icia Holley, Debbie Murphy, Frances

~:::::::::::::~:::::::::~::w~::8~::?.::?.:::::::;:8!S~~:;:::;:;:~:;:~:::S!:!~::~!3!:::0J.:~:!!::!::::::::::::::::-.:::::"!:~:::3!:YZ*:?~:~:~::::::~:~::~:::~::S::~:~::~::::::,::::~::~::::::~:::::.'i!::::~:~::;.~::::~::::::~o:::::::::::::::::::::::::

~

For Christmas
Give the watch with
tuning fork accuracy
b·•;iAl.O·{I':!.

'

HANNAN TRACE FHA initiates 15 new members. Left
to right, first row, Brenda Shaffer, Annette &lt;lsco, Debra
Stapletori, Roberta Unroe, La Nora Parcen, and Rhonda

..

uses equipment wortb over
$12,000. This equipment includes three eight-foot screens,
six
synchronized
slide
projectors and a computerized
sound tract.
Rev. Wilson Wahl, Pastor of
the First Baptist Church,
cordially invites everyone to
hear the 'Life' JA'c!iotl&gt;~i&amp;'lle
•il'eam each moonin'g•ai 7:45 on
the ''EcHoes of'JOy'' broa'dciist
over WJEH and to hear and
meet them each evening next
week at 7 and 7:30.

the group went to the ·
Economics Department for
refreshments. The table was
covered with a white lace:
tablecloth with a red underlay
and a formal arrangement of
inch octagonal shape piece of red roses. Small cookies,'tiny
white paper with a miniature homemade banana nut breadplastic red rose attache!( to and butter sandwiches, mints,
R&gt;ggedy Ann's shoulder.
and fruit punch with sherbet
Arlene Brumfield, song were se rved by Connie
leader, led the group in singing Saunders and Marilyn Cline:

),*

• \.lt

•

.

;;:a
. .

MERCERVILLE - The
Hannan Trace FHA held its
regular monthly meeting
Tuesday, Oct. 24, at 3:20p.m.
in the school cafeteria. Fifty
FHA members and guest,&lt;; .
were present and a mother·
daughter tea ivas ·observed.
The officers' table was
covered with a white cloth with
eight
white
candles
representing the eight purposes of FHA and a red one
representing the light of home
economics. In the"center of the
table .· wa~ a red rose
arrangement, the flower of the
organization and the emblem
was on front of the table.
Virginia
Saunders,
· president, called the meeting
to order using the official
opening ceremony. Rhonda
Mooney , secretary, called the
roll and each girl introduced
her guest.
. Bonnie Johnson reported on
U1e Ways and Means Com·
mittee plans; Julie Hineman,
District Recreation Leader ,
reported on the District Of.
fleers' meeting she attended
Oct. io at Meigs Inn in
Pomeroy. She stated that the
fall district rally will be held at
Eastern H_igh School on Nov.

14. Mrs. Campbell told the
group of the e!lucational field
trip being planned for Nov. 10
for FHA members and Home
Economics students to the TriCounty Joint Vocational School
ut Nelsonville. Kathy Halley
was elected girl of the month
by the members.
Immediately following the
closin g of the business
meeting, the ceremony got
under way to initiate IS new
members. The officers,
Virginia, Saunders, Rebecca
Rankin, Rhonda Mooney and
Connie Saunders helj5ed with
the ceremoi1Y. Eight members
served as guides to tap the new
members and escort them to
the front of the room. Each
guide lighted a white candle
from the burning red one and
recited one of the eight pur·
poses . Guides were Jean
Waugh, Nancy Cox, Diana
Perkins, Bonnie Johnson,
Sherri Chapman, Jackie
Sanders, Beverly James, ~nd
Julie Hall. Near the end of the
ceremony, the president
pinned each new member with
a six-inch red and white paper
Rag gedy Ann (Ohio FHA
symbol this year) with a one·

EVERYTHING YOU
LOOK FOR IN A
'

SHEER
STRETCH
PANTY
HOSE

Kroger ordered to back policy
WASHINGTON ( l)PII - The
Internal Revenue Service
Friday ordered Kroger Co., the
nation's third largest retail
grocery chain, to justify price
increases on non.perishable
grocery products.
The order from the IRS came
after the price watchdog said it
had found inconsistencies in
the prices Kroger charged for

certain grocery ) terns. It was
the second consecutive
government order for the
Cincinnati-based firm. The IRS
said Kroger could continue
pricing .perishable foods and
meats on an aggregate or
category basis.

Governor will

$100
Monday&amp;
Frldor
.

Ring making
at its loveliest
In new

to I p.m.

''IDtollnTues. Wed. Sot.0
9:30tosp.m.

TEXTURED

speak Monday
BILLY HOUCK
GALLIPOLIS - Billy
Houck, staff manager in the
Huntington district office of
the National Life and Ac·

•

GOLD

WEDDING RINGIB

for De11Wcrats

by

ATHENS - Gov. John J.
Gilligan will appear in a rally
at Ohio University, Monday,
", Rid~.~.t I~sq~\Y'"f, C,~ 11 .,,\¥~o ,e,lr1301where 'he r\Vtu s\)l!~k' ~n
·~e~~nt(Y,· ~~~~~~r•,\",4 , ~IJ; ,;511! · behalf·of the •entire DehlO&lt;'ratic
_, nar l'ilh U.e... firm .. ,was slate, including presidential 1 '
honored at a celebration In candidates McGovern and
the district office located at , Shriver; Bob
Whealey,
I415 Route 60 East. The Congressional candidate, andNational Life and Accident Harry
Crewson,
State
Insurance Co. is the nation's Representative candidate.
fifth largest combination life
Hosted by the Citizens for
insurance firm and has $12 Crews on Commi !tee, Gov.
billion of life Insurance in Gilligan will be joined by
force and assets over $1.9 William Lavelle, Democratic
billion. The company has one State Chairman, as well as ail
district office and more than local democratic candidates .
23 lull· time representatives
Following the rally, to be held
serving Huntington and the at 4 p.m. at the West Portico of
surrounding area. Houck Memorial Auditorium, a press
resides wiih his family at 12 conference is scheduled in the
Hillcrest Dr.·, Gallipolis.
Alumni Lounge of Baker
Center.

Qarved·
e

For Perfect Fit,
'"
II

,

'r .

1··h n·1! · ,1,

~)

...

....

l •r•1'

l 1~

!l

(11•&gt;'1

Colors: Harr?~ny. Brownette . -. 1\;iaV~· ·'· ''
Black · White · Tumbleweed Sierra .
Gardenia. Sizes Petite, Medium &amp;
Medium Tall.
·
HAND-FL.ORIINTINED
OAWN Sll

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS
404

y SltOI $1011
Wbt1e tho family shops lototh•
328 Second A11.
Gallipolis, 0.

Second Ave ,

Gallipolis, Ohio

BIGGEST CONTRACTOR
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Pentagon 'lists Lockheed
Aircraft Corp. as the nation's
biggest defense contractor for
the fourth straight year. The
Pentagon said Lockheed gol
contracts of $1.7 billion in fiscal
1973. Lockheed's main work is
on the C5'A and Cl30 cargo
planes, the S3A · and T3 antisubmarine planes and the
Poseidon missile. Second _place
in contracts for fiscal!973 goes
to McDonnell Douglas-Corp.,
St. Louis.
·

B rrs

•

your cholteJ

Fup, funky . . . ,the vamp runabout
with a hearty heel. For skirts and
.
sHorts and jeans. For tree:
· climbing, :bicycling, .or just scuffing along .·
A Miss Wonderful type.
·

lllo!t tilt IMUy 1111111 to&amp;ollw
l2l Second Att.
Gslllpolls, 0.

the environment, race,

Local church to host Life .
Action Crusade Team

GALLIPOLIS
Miss baby's breath.
Serving as best man for the
Audette Leigh Rossiter ,
daughter of Emmett N. bridegroom was WilUam Davis
Rossiter, Crown City, and of Gallipolis .
·
Mary M. Rossiter, Akron , , Guests were registered by
Ohio, and Thomas Raymond · Miss Cindy R. Rossiter, sister
Gooch, son of Mr. and Mrs. of the bride.
Raymond 0. Gooch, Gallipolis,
Following th~ ceremony, a
were united In marriage reception honoring the couple,
August 18, at 7:30 p.m. at the was held at the home of the
First
Baptist
Church, groom's parents on Chillicothe
Gallipolis.
Road.
The Rev. E. Wilson Wahl
The bride's table, covered
JUDGE APPOINTED
performed lhe double ring with a hand drawn Irish linen
COLUMBUS (UP!)
ceremony in the presence of cloth, was centered with a
Joseph I. Tripodi of New the immediate families and a three tiered wedding cake,
Philadelphia has been ap· few close friends.
flanked on either side with tall
pointed judge of
the
The bride was lovely in a white tapers . . The cake,
Tuscarawas County Court.
white sleeveless, floor length decorated with yellow roses
Tripodi, named to the post by sculptured pique gown and topped with the traditional
Gov. John J. Gilligan, will fill featuring a wide wing collal bride and groom, was enthe unexpired term of Judge White daisy appliques on a circled witll ivy and yellow
Robert Pietro who resigned .. yellow velvet sash formed a daisies. Miss Peggy Scarberry
bow at the back and extended served the cake and Miss Cindy
· READY FOR TALKS
to the hem. Her headpiec~ was Rossiter presided at the punch
WASHINGTON (UP!)- The a circle of yellow and white bowL Also assisting at the
United States has told the daisies. She carried a bouquet reception were Mrs. Joe Giles
Soviet Union it is ready to of daisies, ferns and baby's and Mrs. Wendell Thomas.
begin preliminary talks for .. breath.
The new Mrs. Gooch was
companion conferences on 1 ~Ita Barbara Park•of Akron ,/)0/lored wjth.,a ·bridljlllghower
Eurepean security and served as maid of honor .. She at C\'p)I'Jtl CiJY ·.by. hostesses, · t&amp;i\'1(/Su~'ci\ ; il\e1 fat1\e¥' 1s 'ihe
reducing NATO and Com- wore a. floor length gown of ,!llrs, ,Kenne)h,,Shee.ts, Mrs. leader in''the home and"chl!d
munr~t' troop levels in Europe. yellow crepe and Ia~ and Charle~ Burgess, and Mrs. discipline.
carried a bouquet of green Larry Church. Mrs. Wendell
Not only will a nursery be .
tinted and yellow daisies and Thomas also hosted a shower provided for each service
in Gallip~lis..
during the crusade , but a
The br~de IS a graduate of "Dynamite Club" will be
Hannan Trace High School, condutted for children in
MARRIAGE
and
of Ga!Hpolis Business grades 1 through 6. Miss Candy
APPLICATION
College. She IS employed as a Erhard, a trained Life Action
Earl David Mattox, 19, West phlebotamist at Holzer Team member, will present
Columbia and Edith Aonette Med1cal Center.
.
flannelgraph lessons, stories
Patrick, 23, Gallipolis 0. made
The bridegroom IS a and songs. She has a wide
application for a marriage graduate of Gallia Academy
license in Mason County Court. High School, and a graduate of
Bowling
Green
State
University. In the future, Mr.
BASIC COMPLETED
Seen and Heard
Gooch plans to add to his year
PT. PLEASANT - Army
Jack Mink, David Tawney, of law -at Ohio State University Private Richard F. Simpkins,
Hank Thompson, -Stanley Law School.
19, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carr W.
Folden and Gilbert Meal
Following
a
short Simpkins, Route 2, Point
returned Thursday evening honeymoon, the couple is Pleasant, recently completed
from ,a week's pheasant residing in Crown City.
eight weeks of basic training at
hunting trip in South Dakola.
the U. S. Army Training

THE

J)P;t (,.'e,

th~ FHA Prayer song and other
upproprlate songs.

\

OPEN
MONDAY
NIGHT
'TIL

VALUES TO $33
MONDAY $

JIIICII
DAN THOMAS &amp; SON
........_._.__..........._ ......___...
ONLY

.

·"SERVING YOU SINCE 1936"

324 SECONPAVENUE

GALLIPOLIS.OHeO

\

'
'

..

·AnnounCing The Ope~ini ot

.

"Legion" - A dash of foreign intrigue takes
you non-stop rain or shine. Superb fashion
strategy with military collar, epaulets and
patch pockets. A cOmpletely .wiSh and wear
COif buckled up In "Yachtsman Canvas" of 65
percent Dacron(RJ pOlyester, 35 percent ·
cotton. In Old Salt &amp; Dllnlm Blue. •

'50.00

•
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412-414 Slcltd AIL

SHARON'S BEAUTY SALON
...
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 1st

Specializing in perms, hair pieces,
frosting. 12 years experience. Call for
appointment Tuesday thru Saturday 9 ·
to 5. Open evenings Tuesday and ..
Thursday by appointment. In We!lt·
brook .Subdivision .on Rt . .35, Jackson
Pike .
Phone 446-1232
Owner-Sharon Fife

· An

outsta~ding

don~-

exhibit . ~ .

miss it!

see what is believed to be one of
·.the fi'rst traveling displays of
Unlfed States gold coins. In this
exhibit, all denominations of U.S.
gold coins are represented, from
1903 back to 1803, the. life span of
such coinage· in this cquntry. ()pen
. tree to the public during regular
banking hours.
1

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·li-The Sunday Tim!'S ·'Sentinel, Swulay, Oct. 29,1972

lJnited women Jo meet Mrs. Paul Burnette_
w
ts

POtl.rs POINTERS

GA
Church
Women United · in Gallia
County will celebrate World
Community Day on Sunday,
.Nov . S, at 2 p.m. in . Grai!e
United Methodist Church,
Gallipolis . Joining . hands
acrosS the generations in a
"Coming of Age Celebration," special focus ' this
year will be on millions of 18 to
21 year . olds who will be par,
ticipating in their first national
election.
Women of aU denominations
in churches across the nation
are invited to join in this united
celebration. The program ,
under the leadership of Mrs.
. Chester Scott and Mrs. Stanley
Folden, will feature joyous
songs; reminderS of God's
eternal · promises and the
. sharing of dreams between old
and young. Hope for society
will be expressed, concern for

Marks
With These Tips
By. POJ;LY CRAMER
DEAR POLLY-I am answering the reader whose two·
year-old had marked on her stereo with a felt tipped pen .
My UtUe l!oy marked up my dresser, a door and the dryer
w1th a black, a blue and a green one. While putting on
some cologne I dabbed some of the marks to see what
would happen. They were removed completely and with
no damage to the, finish on any of the things. I thought it .
was the alcohol in the cologne that worked the trick.MRS. T. C. G.
I
•
DEAR GIRLS-Always test an Inconspicuous spot flrat
at finishes vary. Denatured alcohol Is a remedy often
auggealed for the removal of ballpoint Ink from fabrics.. POLLY
DEAR POLLY-My iittle boy marked all over the deep
freeze aluminum screen door and a hardwood door with
a black felt tipped pen. It cleaned off very easily with a.
well-known spot remover cleaning fluid . It even faded
marks that had been on my husband's tool box for over
a y~ar.-JOYCE
'•
Polly's Problem 1m1!iim
a~
DEAR POLLY-My lovely ·crystal bud vase has a ~
rust stain in the bottom made by the stem of an
artificial flower. I do hope some reader can tell me
how to remove thls rust. Soap and water do not faze ,
it. Thank,you so mucb.-ANN
~
'/.

W'

~,

DEAR POLLY-My Pet Peeve is with companies who
make glasses with gold decorations that wash off.-MRS.
R. T.
DE~R

POLLY-I am a college art student and so many
people in art classes have duplicate equipment. I use
adhesive-backed plastic-coated paper to identify my tools .
A small patch or strip of a distinctive design is on everything I carry with me . This takes a bit of time but certainly beats trying to scratch my initials on everything. This
also would be useiul for all school children no matter
what age. In our dorm we are not allowed to put anything
on the walls that would make a hOle. or scratch. Conse·
quenily there ar~ a lot of barefaced walls. I put inex·
pensive adhesive backed cork tiles on a wall so they cover
an area 4x6 feet and on them I hang my drawings, posters, pictures or just about anything and have no ~orries
about the plaster. The cork panel makes a dramatic focal
'point for the entire room.-DEBORAH

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES : Mary M.
Plumley, Glenwood; Mrs.
Willard Gray, Polnt Pleaaant;
Mrs. LoweD Collins, Shade, 0 .;
Mrs. Gratho Ward, Vinton, 0. ;
·Mrs.
Roger
Bennett,
Ga(Upoli8; Mrs. Samuel Lyons,
Syracuse; Kevin Amburgey,
Point Pleasant; Frank Fultz,
Buffalo;
Mrs.
Herbert
Wallace,! Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Elias David, Buffalo; Mrs.
David Lipscomb, Syracuse;
Mrs. Alice Chapman, Milton ;
Mrs. John Melton,! Bidwell;
Mrs. George VanMatre,
Mason, and Mrs.Woodrow
Russell, Point Pleasant: ·

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Thomas Gooch

Audette L. Rossiter
weds . Thomas·Gooch

1

••••••••••••••Iii••••••

LUC~Y
N\0(~

N\0(
•• the· musical instrument

ss ..
nderful

,,M,

l'~
Open Friday &amp; Mbnday Till I p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - At 25, Del
Fehsenfeld, Jr . is one of
America's youngest
evangelists
- w so- thenational director of Life Action
Crusade. He will direct the Life
Action Crusade Team this
week at the First Baptist
Church, beginning today with
the 9: IS Bible School hour. Del
and "team" will also minister
in the 10:30 morning worship
service and again Sunday
evening at 6:30 and 7:30.
Evangelist Fehsenfeld has
appeared in over 300 churches
in 48 states before teens and
'adults. His messages have
been termed "dynamic." Del
and members of his team will
hold an informal discussion
hour for all teens each week
dar evening beginning at 7
prior to the regular 7:30
evening service. ·
While Evangelist Fehsenfeld
is ministering to teens, Dr. Ed
Hindson, associate director of
Life Action crusade, will
conduct an adult seminar. Dr.
Hindson is recognized as one of
America's leading experts on
adult-teen relationships. His
adult seminars will deal with
solving family conflicts emphasizing such ·arefs p~ the
adl'florl~}( ot " ~jj~"pas!hr ' ' ihe

Center,
Armor,Point
Ft. Knox,
Ky.
He attended
Pleasant
High SchooL Before entering
the Army he was employed as
a deckhand by the G. and C.
Towing in Point Pleasant.
REPEAL OPPOSED
RIO GRANDE - The
Morfield Advisory Couricil of
the Farm Bureau, has approved a resolution putting the
council on recotd as opposing
repeal of the Ohio state income
tax. The members of the
council believe that the' present
income lax is the best way to
support public education in
Ohio and that the alternative to
the Income tax would probably
be an increase in the state sales
tali. The income tax Is believed
to be preferable to an iricrease
in other taxes, said W. Luther
secretary.

Now you can rent a farr1nu&lt;
CONN band instrument.
IN HOSPITAL
trial plan and nrn••An
LETART FALLS- St. Clair
selection method l.e t you·
Letart Falls, is a patient
Holzer
Medical Center for
. certain before YQU
iests · .and observation. His
Off~r the wonderful
room number
Is m.
.
.
ot music to youd:hild _th
easy way. See us for
details. No obligal:ion.
DIVORCE ASKED
, POMEROY ..,. Filing for
Reniil/lppliu
divorce Friday' In Meigs
To Purch•-• , .
County Common Pleas Court
If You lur
wu Gathel L(wia; ReedmUe,
Rt, 1, agalnet WUUam E. Lewta
arid the Firat National Bank of
Grayson, Ky. Mrs. L!!wls
charges grou negleCt of duty
lnd extreme cruelty and filed a
'temporary . injunction · to
restrain the defendant from
Gallipolis
drawmg any money or moneys
' i146-0687
out of the Firat National Bank
of Gra)'IOil.

BRUNICARDI.

· ·HOUSE OF MUSIC
'
54 State St.,

'

fwd , local and world con·.dilions, life styles and other
spt'Cific dreams wiU be shared.
. Cothing for the .sewing
. project , in answer to the
Clothing Appeal of Church
World Services, will be
presented at this meeting. G.iit
certificates costing $3 can be
designated to dress an overseas child, provide training
books . and materials for
American Indians, provide
blankets for refugee and
disaster situations, or as
emergency funds to be "used
wherever needed.''
Coupons and labels for the
Treat of Life program may be
brought to the meeting Sunday.
These will be redeemed for
UNICEF, the United National
Children's Fund. Coupons are
listed in October issue of
Readers Digest, pages 273-280.

mother-daughter tea

(.'ORA - Mrs. Paul Burnette · Etta Altizer and Gladys .Akers,
: welcomed . the Cora WSCW to flower committee. l'our
,her h.ome for' 'the October members asked to be
meeting. Fourteen members dismissed as members for next
·and three gues!s, Mrs. Marlin · year, and Mrs. Marlin Rose
..Rpseand daughter, Karen, and will be a new member.
' Richie Speirs attended. A
Months to entertain during '
· delicious meal was served at 1973 were chosen by the
noon . Mrs. John Gilbert and members. The program
Jeanette and Mrs·, Melvin committee will meet before
Gilbert also attended · the af· November meeting' to select
ternoon program and business program 'studies for the new
meeting.
' ·
yea r.
Mrs. Susan Gilliam and \\Irs.
N6vember meeting will be
Sylvia Gilliam had the with Mrs. J. T. Walller at
program · which included a Thurman with Ze11_ Altizer
song, "He Keeps Me Singing"; co-hostess. Program leaders
Scripture from the 12th chapter are Gladys Akers and Sue
of Matthew read by Mrs. Sylvia Waugh . Study chapters,
Gilliam and prayer by Susan Psalms 92·95. A White
Gilliam. Questions were asked Elephant Sllle will be conon study chapters, Acts, 25 thru dueled at the n~t meeting.
28, ,lll!d a general discussion
followed .
Mrs. Gilliam played an in·
teresting tape recording of
Paul's tripbyboatasa Roman
prisoner from Adramyltiuru to
Rome. He was in care of the
BARBS
Roman Army officer Julius.
By PHIL PASTORET
assortment of flannelgraph The story tells of !he.. violent
storm
at
sea
which
destrQyed
visuals·worth over $600. '
The XXth Olympiad this
Paul's
enSixteen college students the ship,
year
unfortunately omitted
from seven different states couragement to the others a contest for persons runmake up the Life Action Team helped them reach safety to the ning for office.
• • •
along with the two directors. Island of Malta. They later
took
another
ship
to
Rome.
The
Postal
Service
These young adults present in
This
concluded
our
study
of
the
should
take
a
tip
from the
song and verse life worth
stamp
peopletrading
living, America worth having, book of Acts. The Gilliams also
they
hove
glue
that
tastes
people worth loving, authority give a safety demonstration much better.
worth respecting, purity worth "How to revive a drowning
• • •
person."
The
program
closed
keeping and a God worth
with the Lord's Prayer.
serving.
President Gladys Akers
The Life Action Crusade will
present a high school assembly conducted the business
program on Monday at 12:30 meeting . Minutes of last
and 1:30 in the Kyger Creek meeting were read and ap.
When, on· a rainy night;
High School. Tuesday mornihg-· proved and treasurer's report
the drinks are on the house, .
was
given.
Mrs
:
Evans
at 8:30 they will be appearing
there's usually more water
in the Southwestern High reported that a donation of $100 inside than outside.
'
School, while on Wednesday at w~s paid to the Emergency
Ambulance
Fund.
Ever notice how much
9:15 they will give an assembly
New
ofticers
elected
are:
easier
it is to get over a
program in the North Gallia
president,
Leona
Burnette
;
bad
habit
when it's the
High School. These school
other
fellow
who has the
assemblies consist of songs by vice-president, Anise Wood ;
job
of
doing
it?
·
the Life Action Singers, plus an secretary, ·Florence Gilbert;
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.}
audio-visual presentation that treasurer, Gladys Akers and

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DATE •No DAY "P"
14K Solid Gold.
$250.

v

GALLIPOLIS - For anyone who is
disappointed that your artist-in'
,
residence isn't a painter-type artist, I
want you to know that I h~ve applied .
brush and paint at The French Art
&lt;li. Colony ... check the baseboards and
&lt;li
window frame in the back hall. Canvas
§·
scaresme,butmaybebeforetheyearis
::!~ ,out there will be~ floor to paint and I'll
have the opportunity to do one of my
~

~~
.:;:;
~

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I

but perhaps his house didn't have a

hath;:,::;~r what Gallipolis )ooked like

Laf tte 'both 1 k'
f
aye
oo mg pre 11Y ormai
and important; then I ll)et a new face,
hanging there between them . Such a
glum expression and what a jaw! I
figured nobody important enough to
have a portrait made could be serious
all the time. I watched awhile, and sure
h h
ed
.
enoug • e start to sml1e.
I couldn't help but. laugh with him
at being caught. I'm sure he has some
interesting stories to tell. I hope my

::~

when he knew it' Wonder if a camera
could have made a picture of his face
that would seem as alive as they
if
painting we have? Wonder anyone
else can let him smile?
·
Parent-Child workshop today, 24
p.m. at the French Art Colony: art and
technique of spinning. BorroW a child if
you need to, or a parent. Also, your last

~h~~~t. to see the Seinsheimer Print
IF ANYONE has a question he

~~.~~~~te~;~~~:o~~'t.:::~:;s~~d ~~~ditli~e ~~s~er:adreinot:a:~~;~

the
·
woodwork Sunday, I step[&gt;ejl into the he IS an ancestor of a Gall1pohtan.
Sch 1 If 1 d 't k
th
I'll
library to see how the hangings had
More important, 1 think, is that he tr ~ d /n now e answer •
gone.Foundol'Gj!orgeWashingtonand. was a human being like the rest of us; Y 0 '" 1 ·

i·

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o.;o,o,' ;·;·;•;·;o;o;·;o;·;•:-;.;.;v;•;·;
·'·'·'·'·'•'·'·'•'·'·'•'o'·'•'·'·'·'·'·';o,o,o,o,o,
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Mr. and· Mrs . Merrill Cox
were recent guests of his
Mr. and Mrs, Oral Wallace parents •. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
and Mr. and Mrs. Russell Cox .
Wallace of Dayton were recent
Mr . and Mrs . Clarence
· guests of their mother, Mrs. Halley were recent guests of
Verba Wallace.
his father, Brodie Halley and
Mrs. Alice Board and sister Mrs. Rachel Stovers.
were recent gucots of ~nother
Mr. and Mrs. Otis Rice are
HUNTINGTON, W. Va.
sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Fin. having a new home built on Rt.
nicum.
218. Rev . han Myers of Because intelligent discipli~e
Miss Lou Aon Folden called Gallipolis Ferry and son are is the individual's basic
defens~ throughout his life,
on Mr. and Mrs. Harold doing the carpenter work.
leaders of the Boy Scouts of
SaWiders and family Saturday
Mr. and Mrs. Mifflin M_oore
evening.
of Circleville spent the America use a boy's Jl&lt;rsonal
Mrs. Tom Fellure and two weekend with her mother, Mrs. code of conduct to assure
safety in all Scouting's acdaughters of Ashtabula and her Vesta Sheets and Dillnon.
mother,Mrs. Leota Call visited
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hasz of tivities.
John Schneider, Health and
Mr. and .Mrs. Carl James and Dayton spent some time with
family recenUy.
her mother, Mrs. Orpha Safety Chairman of the TriMr. and Mrs.Morris Smith of Wooten and Junior Roberts. State Area Council, Boy Scouts
of America , explained the
Columbus were recent guesls
Gord~n Wooten has been ilr
importance
of safety standards
of his brother, Mr. and Mrs. with a vinis.
·
Grover Smith and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Wooten are in preparation for fall and
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Cox were having a new home built on .Winter activities that include
, )l'~kend campo0 ts, vocational
t gu~!S._ of
moth~, Kerr-HaJrisb~g Rd11 .
II !f,lp~ - and, camporees,.
• ,, . ·'
~ e;
~)lbine '' f~t$. CWI Janle$ ;V.llllted her
As a leader in the health and
Qf
"' and Mr . Ellunett niothe ,' M C Leota \:;a11 1
safety fie!d since its beginning
,Hall~y and fi!D)ily.
Holzer Medical Center.
in 1910, the national youth
organization set up over 40
years ago a Safe Swim Defense
plan that has been a model
protective method for con·
ducting safe group swims.
" Intelligent discipline is,
first, based on strict but fair
supervision," Schneider explained. "A leader must
communicate the reasons for
rules and procedures to gain
their full acceptance, and,
when boys fully understand
their purpose, they are liekly to
conform.''
The aim is to gain the boy's
understanding and acceptance
of a personal code of conduct,
Schneider said, and the vitality
of his personal code will
depend on the strength of a
self-imposed discipline .
"Self-discipline is an
essenti~l __ in ll!~dient
in
character development,"
Schneider said. "In our safety
program it has always been the
basic defense against · the
potential hazards cif adventurous/ activity. It is also
the basis of right decisions for
healthful livlng and moral
conduct. Our job of preparing
youth for the days and years
ahead requires intensive
f.ostering of , self-discipline."

Blue Lake

Personal codes
key to safety
'in Scouting

s

'

Gallipolis, Ohio

•we wtll•dJust to this tole111nce, If nettnary, Cuuqtn Is for one year.

MONDAY ONLY!

WESTERN

MEN'S &amp;
WOMEN'S

N
.otes from the Studio

~~ real::;ti~~~! finished ~inting

;342CLARK'
S
·JEWELRY
STORE
Second Ave.

Special!

Montgomery, Sue Ross, Betty Stapleton, Cheryl James,
Sheila Waugh and Pam Taylor. Jo Lyno O'Dell not pictured.

.

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LAY-AWAY NOW--,...----~--1

DEL FEHSENFELD, JR.

,

By KAT! MEEK .

dff6n®;:~y:~~~~.~w:~~J';~~4~~~~~u
The most welcome gilt of all is an'·
Accutron by Bulova. So precise is
the Accutron tu'ning fork
movement that accuracy is .
~ guaranteed to
. within a minute
a month . •
See our full
selection of
Acoutron
models now.
From $110.

Clary; secondrow,Pai:icia Holley, Debbie Murphy, Frances

~:::::::::::::~:::::::::~::w~::8~::?.::?.:::::::;:8!S~~:;:::;:;:~:;:~:::S!:!~::~!3!:::0J.:~:!!::!::::::::::::::::-.:::::"!:~:::3!:YZ*:?~:~:~::::::~:~::~:::~::S::~:~::~::::::,::::~::~::::::~:::::.'i!::::~:~::;.~::::~::::::~o:::::::::::::::::::::::::

~

For Christmas
Give the watch with
tuning fork accuracy
b·•;iAl.O·{I':!.

'

HANNAN TRACE FHA initiates 15 new members. Left
to right, first row, Brenda Shaffer, Annette &lt;lsco, Debra
Stapletori, Roberta Unroe, La Nora Parcen, and Rhonda

..

uses equipment wortb over
$12,000. This equipment includes three eight-foot screens,
six
synchronized
slide
projectors and a computerized
sound tract.
Rev. Wilson Wahl, Pastor of
the First Baptist Church,
cordially invites everyone to
hear the 'Life' JA'c!iotl&gt;~i&amp;'lle
•il'eam each moonin'g•ai 7:45 on
the ''EcHoes of'JOy'' broa'dciist
over WJEH and to hear and
meet them each evening next
week at 7 and 7:30.

the group went to the ·
Economics Department for
refreshments. The table was
covered with a white lace:
tablecloth with a red underlay
and a formal arrangement of
inch octagonal shape piece of red roses. Small cookies,'tiny
white paper with a miniature homemade banana nut breadplastic red rose attache!( to and butter sandwiches, mints,
R&gt;ggedy Ann's shoulder.
and fruit punch with sherbet
Arlene Brumfield, song were se rved by Connie
leader, led the group in singing Saunders and Marilyn Cline:

),*

• \.lt

•

.

;;:a
. .

MERCERVILLE - The
Hannan Trace FHA held its
regular monthly meeting
Tuesday, Oct. 24, at 3:20p.m.
in the school cafeteria. Fifty
FHA members and guest,&lt;; .
were present and a mother·
daughter tea ivas ·observed.
The officers' table was
covered with a white cloth with
eight
white
candles
representing the eight purposes of FHA and a red one
representing the light of home
economics. In the"center of the
table .· wa~ a red rose
arrangement, the flower of the
organization and the emblem
was on front of the table.
Virginia
Saunders,
· president, called the meeting
to order using the official
opening ceremony. Rhonda
Mooney , secretary, called the
roll and each girl introduced
her guest.
. Bonnie Johnson reported on
U1e Ways and Means Com·
mittee plans; Julie Hineman,
District Recreation Leader ,
reported on the District Of.
fleers' meeting she attended
Oct. io at Meigs Inn in
Pomeroy. She stated that the
fall district rally will be held at
Eastern H_igh School on Nov.

14. Mrs. Campbell told the
group of the e!lucational field
trip being planned for Nov. 10
for FHA members and Home
Economics students to the TriCounty Joint Vocational School
ut Nelsonville. Kathy Halley
was elected girl of the month
by the members.
Immediately following the
closin g of the business
meeting, the ceremony got
under way to initiate IS new
members. The officers,
Virginia, Saunders, Rebecca
Rankin, Rhonda Mooney and
Connie Saunders helj5ed with
the ceremoi1Y. Eight members
served as guides to tap the new
members and escort them to
the front of the room. Each
guide lighted a white candle
from the burning red one and
recited one of the eight pur·
poses . Guides were Jean
Waugh, Nancy Cox, Diana
Perkins, Bonnie Johnson,
Sherri Chapman, Jackie
Sanders, Beverly James, ~nd
Julie Hall. Near the end of the
ceremony, the president
pinned each new member with
a six-inch red and white paper
Rag gedy Ann (Ohio FHA
symbol this year) with a one·

EVERYTHING YOU
LOOK FOR IN A
'

SHEER
STRETCH
PANTY
HOSE

Kroger ordered to back policy
WASHINGTON ( l)PII - The
Internal Revenue Service
Friday ordered Kroger Co., the
nation's third largest retail
grocery chain, to justify price
increases on non.perishable
grocery products.
The order from the IRS came
after the price watchdog said it
had found inconsistencies in
the prices Kroger charged for

certain grocery ) terns. It was
the second consecutive
government order for the
Cincinnati-based firm. The IRS
said Kroger could continue
pricing .perishable foods and
meats on an aggregate or
category basis.

Governor will

$100
Monday&amp;
Frldor
.

Ring making
at its loveliest
In new

to I p.m.

''IDtollnTues. Wed. Sot.0
9:30tosp.m.

TEXTURED

speak Monday
BILLY HOUCK
GALLIPOLIS - Billy
Houck, staff manager in the
Huntington district office of
the National Life and Ac·

•

GOLD

WEDDING RINGIB

for De11Wcrats

by

ATHENS - Gov. John J.
Gilligan will appear in a rally
at Ohio University, Monday,
", Rid~.~.t I~sq~\Y'"f, C,~ 11 .,,\¥~o ,e,lr1301where 'he r\Vtu s\)l!~k' ~n
·~e~~nt(Y,· ~~~~~~r•,\",4 , ~IJ; ,;511! · behalf·of the •entire DehlO&lt;'ratic
_, nar l'ilh U.e... firm .. ,was slate, including presidential 1 '
honored at a celebration In candidates McGovern and
the district office located at , Shriver; Bob
Whealey,
I415 Route 60 East. The Congressional candidate, andNational Life and Accident Harry
Crewson,
State
Insurance Co. is the nation's Representative candidate.
fifth largest combination life
Hosted by the Citizens for
insurance firm and has $12 Crews on Commi !tee, Gov.
billion of life Insurance in Gilligan will be joined by
force and assets over $1.9 William Lavelle, Democratic
billion. The company has one State Chairman, as well as ail
district office and more than local democratic candidates .
23 lull· time representatives
Following the rally, to be held
serving Huntington and the at 4 p.m. at the West Portico of
surrounding area. Houck Memorial Auditorium, a press
resides wiih his family at 12 conference is scheduled in the
Hillcrest Dr.·, Gallipolis.
Alumni Lounge of Baker
Center.

Qarved·
e

For Perfect Fit,
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Colors: Harr?~ny. Brownette . -. 1\;iaV~· ·'· ''
Black · White · Tumbleweed Sierra .
Gardenia. Sizes Petite, Medium &amp;
Medium Tall.
·
HAND-FL.ORIINTINED
OAWN Sll

PAUL DAVIES
JEWELERS
404

y SltOI $1011
Wbt1e tho family shops lototh•
328 Second A11.
Gallipolis, 0.

Second Ave ,

Gallipolis, Ohio

BIGGEST CONTRACTOR
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Pentagon 'lists Lockheed
Aircraft Corp. as the nation's
biggest defense contractor for
the fourth straight year. The
Pentagon said Lockheed gol
contracts of $1.7 billion in fiscal
1973. Lockheed's main work is
on the C5'A and Cl30 cargo
planes, the S3A · and T3 antisubmarine planes and the
Poseidon missile. Second _place
in contracts for fiscal!973 goes
to McDonnell Douglas-Corp.,
St. Louis.
·

B rrs

•

your cholteJ

Fup, funky . . . ,the vamp runabout
with a hearty heel. For skirts and
.
sHorts and jeans. For tree:
· climbing, :bicycling, .or just scuffing along .·
A Miss Wonderful type.
·

lllo!t tilt IMUy 1111111 to&amp;ollw
l2l Second Att.
Gslllpolls, 0.

the environment, race,

Local church to host Life .
Action Crusade Team

GALLIPOLIS
Miss baby's breath.
Serving as best man for the
Audette Leigh Rossiter ,
daughter of Emmett N. bridegroom was WilUam Davis
Rossiter, Crown City, and of Gallipolis .
·
Mary M. Rossiter, Akron , , Guests were registered by
Ohio, and Thomas Raymond · Miss Cindy R. Rossiter, sister
Gooch, son of Mr. and Mrs. of the bride.
Raymond 0. Gooch, Gallipolis,
Following th~ ceremony, a
were united In marriage reception honoring the couple,
August 18, at 7:30 p.m. at the was held at the home of the
First
Baptist
Church, groom's parents on Chillicothe
Gallipolis.
Road.
The Rev. E. Wilson Wahl
The bride's table, covered
JUDGE APPOINTED
performed lhe double ring with a hand drawn Irish linen
COLUMBUS (UP!)
ceremony in the presence of cloth, was centered with a
Joseph I. Tripodi of New the immediate families and a three tiered wedding cake,
Philadelphia has been ap· few close friends.
flanked on either side with tall
pointed judge of
the
The bride was lovely in a white tapers . . The cake,
Tuscarawas County Court.
white sleeveless, floor length decorated with yellow roses
Tripodi, named to the post by sculptured pique gown and topped with the traditional
Gov. John J. Gilligan, will fill featuring a wide wing collal bride and groom, was enthe unexpired term of Judge White daisy appliques on a circled witll ivy and yellow
Robert Pietro who resigned .. yellow velvet sash formed a daisies. Miss Peggy Scarberry
bow at the back and extended served the cake and Miss Cindy
· READY FOR TALKS
to the hem. Her headpiec~ was Rossiter presided at the punch
WASHINGTON (UP!)- The a circle of yellow and white bowL Also assisting at the
United States has told the daisies. She carried a bouquet reception were Mrs. Joe Giles
Soviet Union it is ready to of daisies, ferns and baby's and Mrs. Wendell Thomas.
begin preliminary talks for .. breath.
The new Mrs. Gooch was
companion conferences on 1 ~Ita Barbara Park•of Akron ,/)0/lored wjth.,a ·bridljlllghower
Eurepean security and served as maid of honor .. She at C\'p)I'Jtl CiJY ·.by. hostesses, · t&amp;i\'1(/Su~'ci\ ; il\e1 fat1\e¥' 1s 'ihe
reducing NATO and Com- wore a. floor length gown of ,!llrs, ,Kenne)h,,Shee.ts, Mrs. leader in''the home and"chl!d
munr~t' troop levels in Europe. yellow crepe and Ia~ and Charle~ Burgess, and Mrs. discipline.
carried a bouquet of green Larry Church. Mrs. Wendell
Not only will a nursery be .
tinted and yellow daisies and Thomas also hosted a shower provided for each service
in Gallip~lis..
during the crusade , but a
The br~de IS a graduate of "Dynamite Club" will be
Hannan Trace High School, condutted for children in
MARRIAGE
and
of Ga!Hpolis Business grades 1 through 6. Miss Candy
APPLICATION
College. She IS employed as a Erhard, a trained Life Action
Earl David Mattox, 19, West phlebotamist at Holzer Team member, will present
Columbia and Edith Aonette Med1cal Center.
.
flannelgraph lessons, stories
Patrick, 23, Gallipolis 0. made
The bridegroom IS a and songs. She has a wide
application for a marriage graduate of Gallia Academy
license in Mason County Court. High School, and a graduate of
Bowling
Green
State
University. In the future, Mr.
BASIC COMPLETED
Seen and Heard
Gooch plans to add to his year
PT. PLEASANT - Army
Jack Mink, David Tawney, of law -at Ohio State University Private Richard F. Simpkins,
Hank Thompson, -Stanley Law School.
19, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carr W.
Folden and Gilbert Meal
Following
a
short Simpkins, Route 2, Point
returned Thursday evening honeymoon, the couple is Pleasant, recently completed
from ,a week's pheasant residing in Crown City.
eight weeks of basic training at
hunting trip in South Dakola.
the U. S. Army Training

THE

J)P;t (,.'e,

th~ FHA Prayer song and other
upproprlate songs.

\

OPEN
MONDAY
NIGHT
'TIL

VALUES TO $33
MONDAY $

JIIICII
DAN THOMAS &amp; SON
........_._.__..........._ ......___...
ONLY

.

·"SERVING YOU SINCE 1936"

324 SECONPAVENUE

GALLIPOLIS.OHeO

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·AnnounCing The Ope~ini ot

.

"Legion" - A dash of foreign intrigue takes
you non-stop rain or shine. Superb fashion
strategy with military collar, epaulets and
patch pockets. A cOmpletely .wiSh and wear
COif buckled up In "Yachtsman Canvas" of 65
percent Dacron(RJ pOlyester, 35 percent ·
cotton. In Old Salt &amp; Dllnlm Blue. •

'50.00

•
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412-414 Slcltd AIL

SHARON'S BEAUTY SALON
...
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 1st

Specializing in perms, hair pieces,
frosting. 12 years experience. Call for
appointment Tuesday thru Saturday 9 ·
to 5. Open evenings Tuesday and ..
Thursday by appointment. In We!lt·
brook .Subdivision .on Rt . .35, Jackson
Pike .
Phone 446-1232
Owner-Sharon Fife

· An

outsta~ding

don~-

exhibit . ~ .

miss it!

see what is believed to be one of
·.the fi'rst traveling displays of
Unlfed States gold coins. In this
exhibit, all denominations of U.S.
gold coins are represented, from
1903 back to 1803, the. life span of
such coinage· in this cquntry. ()pen
. tree to the public during regular
banking hours.
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8- TbeSundayTimes-Sentinei,SUnday,Oct. 29,1972

·

:-

Q. Who is credited witt

•inventffig baseball?

•

·

A-Abner DoUbleday.

Events
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Connie ]o Tueker

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GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. Roy Tucker, II West Walnut
j .; St., Christiansburg, Ohio, are aMouncing the engagement and
approaching marriage of therr daughter, Con rue Jo, to KeMeth
Michael Riffle, 49 Cedar St., Gallipolis. Mr. Riffle is the son of
Mrs. Beatrice Riffle of 20703 E. Marie St., Warren, Michigan and
the late John B. Riffle.
•
• The bride-elect is a 1971 graduate 'of Graham High School
and is employed by Dettmer Hospital. Her fiance is a 1968
grad~te of Gallia Academy High School and a Vietnam veteran.
He is employed by Holzer Medical Center .
·
The wedding will take place at the Troy Baptist Temple,
1Troy, Ohio, on Saturday, Jan. 20.

II ·

SUNDAY
,
TRiCK or Treat for UNICE;~'
. collections, by area children
and youth.
· -•
REV. Bob Howell will preach
at Walnut Ridge Church at 7:30
p.m. Rev. Billy Payne, Pastor
of the church and the members, invites the public.
MONDAY
THURMAN Village Council
will sponsor a Halloween party
a.t the Grange Hall from 7 to 9
p.m. Children are to come
masked. Each family is ~sked
to bring a dozen cookies and
treats for the children.
HALLOW!':EN party - Village
of Vin to n - Masqu erade
beginning at 7 p. m. All
children 12 and under may
participate .
Also
en tertainment for the older
children. Parents are invited.
SOUTHWESTERN Athletic
Boosters will have an oldfa shion pie social at the school
at 7:30. There will be several
cake walks.
TUESDAY
CHICKEN supper at Rodney
Community Bldg. at 7 p.m. for
all members and wives of the
Ga.llia County Trustees and
Clerks Association. Also aU
honorary members and-wives.
GRACE •United lolethodist
Church Golden Circle will meet
at 12 noon. Covered dish dinner. Bring table service.
Program by Edna Borden.

I

PAINT CREEK Regular
Baptist Sunday School will
treasurer, Nila Raynes and have an annual Halloween
seci·eiary, Nancy Sager. The party from 5:30 to 7 p. m. in the
club advisor is Mr. Edwin Fellowsh ip Room. Come
Prince.
dressed in costumes. Judging
at 6. There will be ·prizes.

i

WEDNESDAY
·,
RIO
GRANDE
United
Uberty Visited
Methodist
Church
will
have a
.
The Statue of Liberty is
open for visitors every day spaghetti supper from 5 to 7:30
of the .year. Only fog, which p.m.
can prevent the ferry sail·
ings, will close the statue, THURSDAY
and this has happened only REGISTERED Nurses '
one time in the last 20 years . Association Dinner at Oscar's
at 6:30 p.m. Dr. Morgan will
speak on the proposed
emergfncy squad. Reservations should be called in by
'Tuesday at 446-9290 or 446-4973.

New club begun

I

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GALLIPOLIS - The new
,' · Junior Intensive Office
~~ Education .club of Gallia
$ Academy High School h~d Its
~~ first activity on Thursday, Oct.
It was a wiener rpast out on
:· "' Possum Trot road. Different
~ groups presented skits and the
;•., evening was enJoyed by all.
•l The club's officers are
~ president, Joyce Reynolds ;
~ J
Lynn Rice;

' '1 26.

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

~

,,"....

METALLIC GOLD OR SILVER

.:
.~

MEXICAN GLASSWARE
VASES, GOBLETS
¢
BOWLS, ETC .

~

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••
••
,,
~

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EVERY DAY VALUES
TO $1.94

EA.

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SUNDAY ONLY SPECIALS
SUNDAY ONLY

PLASTIC
FLASHLIGHT-

SCHOOL
SUPPLIES

HOL OS 2 S.ll E
DBATTERIES
SUNDAY ONLY!

ENTIRE STOCK
ON SALE
FOR 5 HOURS!

29

each

1h

PRICE

THERMOS BOTTLES
ALADDIN QUALITY
PINTS, QUARTS
SUNDAY ONLY

BOYS ·

:

YESTER :pANTS

REGULAR T0$5.94. VALUES!$
.
SIZEB.to .18
.
·REGULAR &amp; Sl,IMS!
FLARE LEGS-DENIMS!

WILL MEET THURSDAY
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Retired Teachers will
meet Thursday, Nov. 2, at the
Gallipolis Presbyterian Church
for the regular meeting .
The program, Expo 72/ '
will be presented by Mrs.
Russell Sarre tt, her daughter,
Mrs . McBride and Mrs.
Warren Sheets. There will be
the usual potluck luncheon at

Kyger
Grange held ils annual upcn
meeting at th.- Grange Hall
Saturdiiy night, Oct. 21. Ashort
business session was held and
il was decided that a contribution should be sent to
Brownsville Grange in Ross
County in behalf of one of its
elderly members , All bills
were . ordered paid and
members were asked to send
cards to Mrs. Alice Swisher
and Mrs. H. A. Kirby who Are

IC

the

H ' lll .

evening was spent in an open·

leci ttre hour during 'which ·
seve ral guests joined the

members iri

musi ~,

games,

square dancing;good food, and
interesting conversation.
Members are reminded that
the next meeting, Nov. 18, will
be the Thanksgiving turkey
dinner at 7 p.m. The Grange
will furnish the turkey and the
remainder of the meal will be
potluck. The business session
will foll ow the meal.

ilL

Thursday Club begins year
GALLIPOLIS - The Thursday Club, the oldest Literary
Club in Gallipolis, founded in
1682, began its new club year.
with a luncheon at Riverby,
·home of the French Art Colony
Oct. 26. The luncheon was
originally plannerl to be held at
the Holida y Inn but the opening
of . the lnn was unavoidably
delayed.
The lovely luncheon was
served at a table beautifully
appointed with Mrs. Charles

Holzer , Jr.'s table service.
Mrs. John W. Brown, Jr., the
club president, thanked the
Program Committee for the
luncheon and the pretty, and
unusual programs . The
Program Committee consisted
of Mrs. Charles Holzer, Jr.,
Mrs. Oscar W. Clarke and Mrs.
James M. Orr.
Mrs . Holzer introduced the
speaker, Mis,s Ruth Thomas of
Rio Grande College .· Miss
Thoma s has written and

.Nature·'s Garden Club
GALLi POLIS - Star Garden
CluiJof Meigs County served as
hostess club when the Nature's
Garden Club held their regular
meeting Thursday, Oct. 26, at I
p.m. at Collage 7, Gallipolis
State Institute.
Pumpkin name tags, made
by a member of Nature's
Garden Club, were ·distributed.
Mrs. W. Donald Galloway of
the Ga llipolis Garden Club,
published many poems. Her
reading of her poems was
enjoyed by the members of' the
club . Miss Thomas was
presented with a gift of two
books.
The next meeting will be at
the home of Mrs. Sigismund
Harder with · Mrs. John
Halliday in charge of the
program.

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BETTY CANARY

A Child's Room·~
Just No Solution

~e&lt;c nd I I ~~· Po~ r.ov!

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1 m 1t1e r "' f&gt; o&lt;nero ~ Qn .o Po&gt;' O l! .c~
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By BETTY CANARY
The pro blem of children's rooms is universal and dates
from antiquity. Surely. someday, anthropologists will
discover cave drawings shoWing a mother pulling at her
tangled hair while a daughter sits unconcernedly upon a
stack of wadded furs .
Naturally, the two will be surro unded by a litter of
fishbone combs. dirty gourds the daughter has used for
the ancients ' version of soft drinks, and several broken
seedpod belts half-hidden under a pile of cracked bone
necklaces .
I said the problem was universal. But . perhaps not.
A woman once said to me that her son never fai led to
make his bed each morning.
With . my conditionin g, aU I co uld do was wonder what
he was hiding under the mattress.
So, about our almost-universal problem . AU I ever get
from the ex perts is conflicting advice. I'm told either to
make a game of it or to make rules and enforce them
with the enthusiasm of a warden .
l do try to remember that, supposedly , the rooms belong to the children and they should have some sort of
freedom in deciding how and when to clean them .
Some women use a messy room as one more club to
wield. " You got a 'D' in mathematics! :' she cries . "An\1 ,
you. haven 't c,leaned your room in a 11\onth, either!"
Some women use reasoning. as iq "Don't you agree
that spe ndin g fifty dollars on a bedspread is idiotic as
long as you keep the spread under the bed ?"
Others attempt the hard-facts-of-life approach . " Okay,
you broke the lamp because you didn 't see it under the
pile of clothes-so study by a candle! "
After years of futile games and rules , r have settled
down to being a member of the closed-door cult. If their
mess is out of my sight, I won't go out of my mind.
If nothing seems to work for you, then the onl y thing
left is the Little Red Hen routine. Say, "Then , I'll do it
myself.'' and•start dusting.

opened the me.eting with the
mem])ers · · regeating the
GJirdenet's Pledge. The
secretary's report was give'!
and roll call was conducted.
Mrs. Garnet Wood of Occupational Therapy distributed
Ohio Association of Garden
Club membership cards and
the Garden Path magazines.
The hostess club distributed
squares of wallpaper which
wet.e used for backs and
borders · for wall hangings. A
ribbon was attached to these to .
be used as a hanger.. Scenes
and flower arrangements were
distributed and. pasted to the
wallpaper, which was put back
to hack. Each girl then had a
reversible picture to take to the
cottage.
Delicious refreshments were
served with the Halloween
theme being carried out.
Darling favors, made of felt
and marbles and resembling
small
animals,
were
distributed and each member
was presented a gift by the Star
Garden Club.
Those representing the
hostess club were Miss Ruby
Diehl, Mrs. Grace Turner, .
Virginia Nelson, Anna Ogden,
Blanche Nelson and Martha
Chapman.
Two members were reported
in the hospital and Mrs.
Galloway delivered to them the
favors and refreshments sent
by .the Siar Club.

-G

...

88
PAIR

noon .

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Sunday, Oct. 29, the
303rd .day of 1972 with 63 to
follow.
The moon is between its last
quarter and new phase.
The morning-stars are Venus,
Saturn and Mars.
The evening siars are Mercury and Jupiter.
Those born on this dale are
under the sign of Scorpjo.
American statesman Thomas
Bayard was born Oct. 29, 1828.
On this day in history :
ln 1616, Sir Walter Raleigh
was executed in London,
charged with participating in a
treasonable plot to oust J(ing
·James I from the throne:
In 1901 , Leon Czolgosz was
electrocuted for the assassination of · American Presiqent
William McKinley.'
In 1023, Turk ey became a
republic.
In 1929, pandemonium
reigned on the New York Stock
Exchange as collapsing prices
set the stage for t~e Great
Df!pressio~ of the 1930s.
A thought for the day:
Americ~n novelist Willa Cather
said, "I like trees because they
'seem more resigned to the way
they · have to live than other
things do. "

To

Gallipolis
and
Point Pleasant
·Area
A New Concept
In Modern-Day
Shopping·

Moshier's New Chess Set

·White opening
.

is explained·

'

.

By Bertrom Glenn Mo.shier
President, Kyger Creek
J:tlgh School Chess Ctub
GALLI POLIS - This Is the
third of six articles lhat the
, su.nday Times-Sentinel has
agreed to publish. If you liked
or learned something from the
. ·firs! two, write to me.
. This ar.ficle is on openings:
•There are four basic kinds of
apenings, bul here I will be
.felling of !he two for White. The
first one Is the king pawn
opening·. I suggest that we
study fhe Ruy Lopez.
NOTE ... I am going to use
descriptive nptal ion' for the
'"planations, and algebra ic for

12. f2-f4
12. e5xf4
13. 4-es
13. Nf6-e8
14: Qd1-h5
14. hl-h6
15 . Bb3xfl ch
15. Kg8-hB
16. Rel-fl
16: Nc3xe5
17. Rfl xf4
17. Qd7-c6
18. Kgl -11
· 18. Qc6xg2 ch
19. Kfl -e1
19. RaB-d2
20. Qh5xh6 ch
20. Ne5-c4
21. Qh5xh6 ch
21. g7xh6
22. Rh4xh6 ch
22. Kh8.g7
2LBc1-f4ch
23. Be7-c5
24. Bf4-e5
24. resign
On !he Queen pawn opening,
I suggest you use the Orthodox
Defense . The Orthodox
Defense starts after 1. P-Q4 p.
Q4 2. P-QB4 B-K3 3. N-QB3 NKB3 4. B-N5 B-K2 5. P-K3 0-0.

the games.
White'§ first move is P-K4.

Wh ite's sixth move is N-83.
This move is a basic move for

This Is a _gOOd move, as much
as If is controlling the center of

1. it helps protect !he king after
0-0 and 2. it is a good

the board. Black's first move is

developing

mov e.

Bla ck'S

'
2. el .e6
3. NgB.f6
4. Bf8-f6
5. 0-0
6. Nb8-dl
7. c7-c6
8. d5xc4
9. Nf6-d5
10. Qd8xe7
II . Nd5xc3
12. e6-e5
13. e5xd4
14. Nd7-f6??
15. Oe7-d6
16. Bc8-d7
17. Nf6:g4
18. Kg8-h8
19. Ng4-hB
20. Bd2-14
21. g7-g6
22. resign

2. c2-c4 ·
3. Nb 1-g5
4. Bc1 -g5
5. e2-e3
6. Ngl -IJ
7. Ral -c1
8. Bfl-d~
9. Bd3xc4
10. BgSxdl
11. 0-0
12. Rclxc3
13. Qd1 -c2
14. eJxd4
15. Rfl -e1
16. Nf3-g5!!
17. Qc2-bJ
18. Bc4xf7 ch
19. Rc3-h3
20. Qb3-d3
21 . QdJxf4
22. Rh3xhB

We Want You -

learn some more, go to your

public library.
Diq you know that Pl.

Pl easant Jr. High has entered

!heir chess players . Why
doesn't Ga ll ia High School? Is
it lhal Pl. Pleasant is better?
So till next week.
P.S. Anyone wanting to enler
the Gall ia County Chess

T1wo s:peak at
0 VAL event

Tournamen t , :&gt;e nd entry fee to

1

To• Know • • •

All Homes Sold by K&amp;K are complete~
set-up and utniti~ connected ready for.

you to move in to!

SCHULT
I'

THIS STORE OPEN:
DAILY 9 to 9,
SUNDAY 252 THIRD AVENUE
We reser"e the right to tim II qu1ntltin on Jlllltm~ In this ad .

performed the ceremony
before an altar decorated with
large vases of colored carnations.
The bride was given in
marriage by her father. ~he
wore an A-line formal gown of
chiffon with a ruffled flounce,
scoop neckline, three quarter
length sleeves . Her veil was
full length tr immed in lace and
she carried a bouquet of carnations.
Maid of honor was the bride's
sister, Miss Joyce Sprecher.
She was in a full length gown of
white and orange chiffon.with a
coral satin hand at· the waistline and a bow in the back. Her
short veil was in coral and she
ca1-ried a bouquet of mixed
carnations.
Best man was the groom's
brother , Mr . David W.
Dollarhide. Ushers were Mr.
William Morris and Mr. Lari
Callen.
The bride is a graduate of El
Cerrito High School, class of
1968, and of the Athena Beauty
College. The groom graduated
from Anza High School and
attended Contra Costa College.
A reception honoring the
couple was held foll&lt;iwing the
wedd ing at San Pablo, Calif.
The bride is a niece of Mr. and
Mrs, Forrest Neigler 1 and Mr.
and Mrs. ' Junior Neigler Of' ·
Racine; and Mrs. Dorothy
Harden and Mr. and Mrs.'
Carroll Neigler of Syracuse.

Nov. 4, 1971. non t toltl to dtlltn.

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

Family Pak Chicken Parts
Includes: 3 Breast Quarters with backs,
3 Leg Quarters with backs, 2 Pkgs.
Giblets &amp; 2 Necks.

now is P·K4. Th is is a good
move, be'cause 13. PxP Nx P

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Dean
Wheatcraft, 35, Columbus,
business manag~r in the city's
Land Acquisition _Center, was
charged Saturday with forging
four checks for about $60,000,
cashing them and depositing
the money in various b!V)ks
heaven's sake .
For end resulf see picture here and in Somerset in Perry
number 2.
A game using !he Orthodox County .
Defense.
White
Black
ARMS. STOLEN
1. d2-d4
I. d7-d5
HIJ..LSBORO, Ohio ( UPI) . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , One hundred - thirty nine
shotguns, rifles and handguns
were stolen from the Town and
Country store here some time
Friday night. Police refused to
release additional information,
but said their Investigation was

MOilLE NOME SALIS ·

(Black Is attacking the important KB and !he KN.) 14.
NxN QxN (Black Iiberafing !he
the queen and attacking th e ·
QR, which could very easy by
Ihe back bon~ of White's attack .
White's thirteenth move Is up
to you tiut don'! do PxP, for

MADGE NORTHU'

~

Pl Pleasant, W. Va.

•

AnENTION

LAWNBOY OWNERS
Beat the rush next year and bring your mower
in before you put it away.

eTUNE-UP

eOIL CHANGE

•CLEANED

•SHARPENED

DIRECT FROM

DO IT TODAY!

McKNIGHT-DAVIES HOW.

L-------------..;,_____,
Court St.

Gallipolis, Ohio

lb.
•

STATE FARE
SLICED

$

WHITE BREAD

for

1·1b. Loaves
JOAN OF ARC
LIGHT RED

CAMPER
WAGON, GT OR • • •
WE'RE AUTO LOAN
SPECIALISTS!

1,001

ITEM~

eLEAlHER
HOT PANTS
eLEATHER
PURSES
eLEAlHER
BIUFOLDS
eatAJRS
•PICTURES
•
•MIRRORS
eWAU. PlAQUES

We can fit you into the car. camper
or tru ck of your choice with
ease. When you finance_
directly through us. you save
on interest and have the
option of either 24 or
36 months to .repay the loan .
To make it easier; we 'll approve

you go

•GRAPE DESIGN
HANGING LAMPS
eJEWELRY BOXES

'

'lHE OLD BANK WITH NEW.IDEAS"

DNEY BEANS
1-lb. 14·oz.Cans

Sunday· Mond.By- Tuesday · ·Wednesday

Pt. Bottle 7 Flavors
LIMIT. 10

SNACK BOX

·'

2 PIECES CHICKEN
ROLL &amp; POTATQJS

-

•

lHIS IS ONLY A FEW OF THE MANY UNUSUA~

new car deal in town .

ITEMS, SO OOME IN AND SEE FOR youRSELf.

•••

BRUNI'CARDI
HOUSE Of MUSIC

''109 YEARS OF SERVICE"

NO
COUPONS
TO CLIP!

"IT'S .
INCOMPARABLE"

·BOX

jqaltt t}Jnppr
"THAT OLD FASHIONED GOODNESS"

.

FLEISCHMANN'S ·

DOG

MARURIIE

PH. 446.2682

'

OOFT

FOOD ·

29e

14lf.-oz.
Can

WHY COOK?
PICK UP A SNACK BOX
'.
FOR DINNER OR SUPPER!

- 2nd &amp;OUVE ST.

ALPO ·. Chunk Beef.

1-Jb:
Pkg.

51~

Reci Raipberry Preserves ..... 1];'· 61c
Seedle~s Blackberry Jam · ...•• 1 1~~· 53c
. Strawberry Preserves, ........ 1 1~~- 49c
Peach Butter . ... .. . ... .• ... ··~;,::••· stc
Goober Jelly &amp;
Butter 1 • 1~a~" -65c

KER'S.
luRES

GAU.iPOUS, OHIO
'

4410&amp;87

'

J

BLUE BONNET .MARGARINE
FORIUU 409
FEATURES
'·•·31c .Household Cleaner
Regular Margarine • • • . ' ' ......
li-Gal.
$]'57
·
,
.•
47c
Soft Marga~ne . . . . . . .. ..... .: .
Bottle
~

loan . So. see us today for the best

;

THOROFARE

BEVERAGES

and Thursday Only!

the insurance payments into the

See J-iarold Thomp~n or Lou Lutton

POMEROY - Mr . and Mrs.
Jack Sprecher, the former Jim
Neigler of Racine, of 5931 Wenk
Ave., Richmond, Calif., are
announcing the marriage of
their daughter, Janine Roberta
Sprecher, to Mr. Roger Eugene
Dollarhide, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Uoyd Dollarhide, 10879 San
Pablo Ave., Richmohd, Calif. ,
on Oct. 1 at 2 p.m. at the St.
Luke Methodist Church at
Richmond.
The Rev. Richard W. Smith

This ends our study of the
openings for White , there are
many more. So if you want to

continuing.

car shopping. We 'll also include

·

Costume prizes
be aw

need acar?-

. your loan before

Couple w~d
w.
t'n Rar . est

THI:: Evangeliars, male
quartet fro m near Bremen at
MI.. ije1·mon United Brethren
. _i11 ·christ Church,. (:30 p.m.
. Sunday. Public invited.
MONDAy
HALLOWEEN P&amp;rty in the
basement of the Long Bottom
Methodist Church, Monday,
6, 30 • 7,3o p.m. All Long Botlom area children invited to
attend masked.
TUESDAy
1\ACINE. American Legion
Auxiliary, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
at the hall.
MIDDLEPORT Community
Halloween party, Tuesday ,
starting with a parade at 6:30
p.m. from A. &amp; P. moving to
Middleport football field for
cos tume judging. Refr eshments and candy treats .
COMMITTEE Opposing
local option to be voted Nov. 7
in Racine meets 7:30 p.m.
Tuesda y at Racine First
Baptist Church. Any opposing
the issue asked to attend.

move is QN-02. Black must me, Bertram Moshier, 224
POMEROY - Ohio Valley
White's secon d move Is N- keep an eye on White' s possible First Ave.. Gallipoli s, Ohio
KBJ. This Is a good move sacrifi ce of his bishop on KR7. 45631. Sr. $5; Jr. $3, to be held Area Libraries trustees,
because If attacks Black's king
White's seventh move Is R- at Kyger ·creek High School. at librarians, and guests met in a
pawn. Black's move is N-QBJ. Bl. This is a good move 10:30, Nov. 11 -12.
quarterly meeting at the
Btack did this to protect his because it protects !he square
Holiday Inn in Chillicothe
king pawn .
Q!l3, which might be a little
While's third move Is 8-NS. battle ground later on . Black's
Thursday, Oct. 26, at 6:30p.m.
. Now starts !he Ruy Lopez· move is P-B3. This is lo help
for a luau and work session .
opening. 'l{hife is . indirectly defend Black's queen pawn . tO
nti'L J
Attending from the Pomeroy
attacking Black's king pawn.
While's eight h move is B-QJ.
._. ueu,
Black's only goo&lt;f move is p. While's thinki ng behind !his
Public Library were C. E.
QRJ.
move is to attack Black's KR2
TUPPERS PLAINS
Blakeslee, President, Board of
While's fourth move is B-R4. square.
Black's
mo ve
Costume
prizes
will
be
Trustees
; Mrs. Pat Holter,
Now you say, why not 4. BxN therefore is PxP. Black Is
PxB 5. ·NxP. That Is good frying and is li berating hiiJJ· awarded at the Tuppers Plains Mrs: Nellie Vale, Mrs. Vilma
because While would be ahead self.
community party to be .held . Pikkoja and Jon Louden .
. positionally and materi ally.
While's ninth move is BxP.
Speakers
were
Jean
But I say this 4. BxN PxB 5. This is to even up both sides. Monday night 6:30 to 6 p.m. at
Plains
gymColeman,
library
trustee
from
the
Tuppers
NxP Q-05, now Black owns Black's move Is N-Q4. This
your knight or your king pawn, move is also freeing Black.
nasiwn.
Dayton l'v)Qntgomery Library
which ever one ycu don't
White's tenth move is Bx B.
Judging
will
be
done
in
three
Board, on the duties and
protect. Black's move Is N-BJ. While's thinking behind this Is
This i ~ a good developing simple. "If I mu st lose my age groups, pre--school, first responsibilities of the library
move, and puts an attac k on bishop then I should fake !he through fourth grades, and board and its members, and
White's king pawn.
biggest piece I can !" Black's . fifth through eighth grades. Richard M. Cheski, assistant
White'sfifthmovels0-0. Now
move of course is QxB.
some of you are saying what
White's 11th move is 0-0. This The categories are prettiest, State Librarian , on th e
about NxP.. Well , Wh ile can is lo protect the king and to the funniest, the ugliest and the Revenue Sharing law and its
counter attack·wlth 6. R-Kl or develop ~ he rook . Bla ck's move most unusual costume in each priorities.
P-Q4. If Black moves his knight is NxN . Black also thinks that a
Jerry Grim, the OVAL
to
II
loses his king fair tr ade is no steal. This is a age group.
pawn .
p 6. R-KI good move In as much as Black
Games will also be con- Project Director, submitted his
N-BJ 7.
. Or is liberating a few pieces. Also ducted in11ge groups and prizes quarterly report ending Sep·
If
. NxP if. White is not careful Black will be awarded. There will be temqer 30; 1972 which showed
u WJII12 .... NxQ 13. RxN. Bla~ k .,._ .
d fresh
•·
a R Vo(l nn lng lhe exchange. . "~'·if '"""' .Pt~e$ an re
men.., h otilir~ry dlil.&lt;;iors in l)l~ 'are~
'while's 121hitnov.e Js RX N.~ ·ana · parents are invited to reporting upgraded collections
WhHo••'.•li•lh mOYf Is R-Kl. • F.or PxN ,gains nothinQ, al~o attend with their children .
·of adult non .fiction, including
~ove, 1beoecc1ause if
Black could do P-B4f Th1s
Meigs Local School District
also liberating the knight, bishop,
and queen. Black's only move
reporting more books.
MANAGER CHARGED
P-K4, for the same reason .

'

.. I

• SUI\'DA Y
MEMBERS OF Sacred
Heart Parish mee!ing in
special session, 6 p.m. Sunday
al church in Pomeroy. Meeting
preceded by mass ; refreshments.
HYMN SING, Sunday , 1:30 p.
m. at Stiversville Community
Church featuring Heavenly
Highway Trio , Hoffman
Family, Jimmy Gavett and
others. Public welcome.

Soon!
the

11

REGULAR44c

¢ .

ANNOUNCE BIRTH
Mr. and Mrs. George ·B.
Somerville, 6628 Red . Coach
Lan e, Reynoldsburg , Ohio,
announce the birth of their first
child. The daughter, Micole
Marie, was born Oct. 25, at 9: 15
p.m.. at Grant Hospital,
. Columbus.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Yoby, New
Athens , Ohio . Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs .
A. B. Somerville, Burkhart
Lane, Gallipolis.

.

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8- TbeSundayTimes-Sentinei,SUnday,Oct. 29,1972

·

:-

Q. Who is credited witt

•inventffig baseball?

•

·

A-Abner DoUbleday.

Events
•
•

~

•

• !

~-

'~

-~
l

!

'l

l
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l

!

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~

•t
I

Connie ]o Tueker

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.~

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. Roy Tucker, II West Walnut
j .; St., Christiansburg, Ohio, are aMouncing the engagement and
approaching marriage of therr daughter, Con rue Jo, to KeMeth
Michael Riffle, 49 Cedar St., Gallipolis. Mr. Riffle is the son of
Mrs. Beatrice Riffle of 20703 E. Marie St., Warren, Michigan and
the late John B. Riffle.
•
• The bride-elect is a 1971 graduate 'of Graham High School
and is employed by Dettmer Hospital. Her fiance is a 1968
grad~te of Gallia Academy High School and a Vietnam veteran.
He is employed by Holzer Medical Center .
·
The wedding will take place at the Troy Baptist Temple,
1Troy, Ohio, on Saturday, Jan. 20.

II ·

SUNDAY
,
TRiCK or Treat for UNICE;~'
. collections, by area children
and youth.
· -•
REV. Bob Howell will preach
at Walnut Ridge Church at 7:30
p.m. Rev. Billy Payne, Pastor
of the church and the members, invites the public.
MONDAY
THURMAN Village Council
will sponsor a Halloween party
a.t the Grange Hall from 7 to 9
p.m. Children are to come
masked. Each family is ~sked
to bring a dozen cookies and
treats for the children.
HALLOW!':EN party - Village
of Vin to n - Masqu erade
beginning at 7 p. m. All
children 12 and under may
participate .
Also
en tertainment for the older
children. Parents are invited.
SOUTHWESTERN Athletic
Boosters will have an oldfa shion pie social at the school
at 7:30. There will be several
cake walks.
TUESDAY
CHICKEN supper at Rodney
Community Bldg. at 7 p.m. for
all members and wives of the
Ga.llia County Trustees and
Clerks Association. Also aU
honorary members and-wives.
GRACE •United lolethodist
Church Golden Circle will meet
at 12 noon. Covered dish dinner. Bring table service.
Program by Edna Borden.

I

PAINT CREEK Regular
Baptist Sunday School will
treasurer, Nila Raynes and have an annual Halloween
seci·eiary, Nancy Sager. The party from 5:30 to 7 p. m. in the
club advisor is Mr. Edwin Fellowsh ip Room. Come
Prince.
dressed in costumes. Judging
at 6. There will be ·prizes.

i

WEDNESDAY
·,
RIO
GRANDE
United
Uberty Visited
Methodist
Church
will
have a
.
The Statue of Liberty is
open for visitors every day spaghetti supper from 5 to 7:30
of the .year. Only fog, which p.m.
can prevent the ferry sail·
ings, will close the statue, THURSDAY
and this has happened only REGISTERED Nurses '
one time in the last 20 years . Association Dinner at Oscar's
at 6:30 p.m. Dr. Morgan will
speak on the proposed
emergfncy squad. Reservations should be called in by
'Tuesday at 446-9290 or 446-4973.

New club begun

I

l

GALLIPOLIS - The new
,' · Junior Intensive Office
~~ Education .club of Gallia
$ Academy High School h~d Its
~~ first activity on Thursday, Oct.
It was a wiener rpast out on
:· "' Possum Trot road. Different
~ groups presented skits and the
;•., evening was enJoyed by all.
•l The club's officers are
~ president, Joyce Reynolds ;
~ J
Lynn Rice;

' '1 26.

t

:i

.:
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•

l

i•
l
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'.••j,

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

~

,,"....

METALLIC GOLD OR SILVER

.:
.~

MEXICAN GLASSWARE
VASES, GOBLETS
¢
BOWLS, ETC .

~

.
~

••
••
,,
~

~

EVERY DAY VALUES
TO $1.94

EA.

~

•

~

•

SUNDAY ONLY SPECIALS
SUNDAY ONLY

PLASTIC
FLASHLIGHT-

SCHOOL
SUPPLIES

HOL OS 2 S.ll E
DBATTERIES
SUNDAY ONLY!

ENTIRE STOCK
ON SALE
FOR 5 HOURS!

29

each

1h

PRICE

THERMOS BOTTLES
ALADDIN QUALITY
PINTS, QUARTS
SUNDAY ONLY

BOYS ·

:

YESTER :pANTS

REGULAR T0$5.94. VALUES!$
.
SIZEB.to .18
.
·REGULAR &amp; Sl,IMS!
FLARE LEGS-DENIMS!

WILL MEET THURSDAY
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Retired Teachers will
meet Thursday, Nov. 2, at the
Gallipolis Presbyterian Church
for the regular meeting .
The program, Expo 72/ '
will be presented by Mrs.
Russell Sarre tt, her daughter,
Mrs . McBride and Mrs.
Warren Sheets. There will be
the usual potluck luncheon at

Kyger
Grange held ils annual upcn
meeting at th.- Grange Hall
Saturdiiy night, Oct. 21. Ashort
business session was held and
il was decided that a contribution should be sent to
Brownsville Grange in Ross
County in behalf of one of its
elderly members , All bills
were . ordered paid and
members were asked to send
cards to Mrs. Alice Swisher
and Mrs. H. A. Kirby who Are

IC

the

H ' lll .

evening was spent in an open·

leci ttre hour during 'which ·
seve ral guests joined the

members iri

musi ~,

games,

square dancing;good food, and
interesting conversation.
Members are reminded that
the next meeting, Nov. 18, will
be the Thanksgiving turkey
dinner at 7 p.m. The Grange
will furnish the turkey and the
remainder of the meal will be
potluck. The business session
will foll ow the meal.

ilL

Thursday Club begins year
GALLIPOLIS - The Thursday Club, the oldest Literary
Club in Gallipolis, founded in
1682, began its new club year.
with a luncheon at Riverby,
·home of the French Art Colony
Oct. 26. The luncheon was
originally plannerl to be held at
the Holida y Inn but the opening
of . the lnn was unavoidably
delayed.
The lovely luncheon was
served at a table beautifully
appointed with Mrs. Charles

Holzer , Jr.'s table service.
Mrs. John W. Brown, Jr., the
club president, thanked the
Program Committee for the
luncheon and the pretty, and
unusual programs . The
Program Committee consisted
of Mrs. Charles Holzer, Jr.,
Mrs. Oscar W. Clarke and Mrs.
James M. Orr.
Mrs . Holzer introduced the
speaker, Mis,s Ruth Thomas of
Rio Grande College .· Miss
Thoma s has written and

.Nature·'s Garden Club
GALLi POLIS - Star Garden
CluiJof Meigs County served as
hostess club when the Nature's
Garden Club held their regular
meeting Thursday, Oct. 26, at I
p.m. at Collage 7, Gallipolis
State Institute.
Pumpkin name tags, made
by a member of Nature's
Garden Club, were ·distributed.
Mrs. W. Donald Galloway of
the Ga llipolis Garden Club,
published many poems. Her
reading of her poems was
enjoyed by the members of' the
club . Miss Thomas was
presented with a gift of two
books.
The next meeting will be at
the home of Mrs. Sigismund
Harder with · Mrs. John
Halliday in charge of the
program.

.

r-------------------·
~U :~IJA \
:

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TIMES-SE.~TINH

Pvbl , ~h
t·~ . rvrrv ~"~~ d. 1&gt;~ ·~.~
P~M .,~."~ c~

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G A L l r P OU~ O~ILV Hii!!I U NI:
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BETTY CANARY

A Child's Room·~
Just No Solution

~e&lt;c nd I I ~~· Po~ r.ov!

Onoo -'6 11
IHE DAII Y ~f: NliNEL
(ou d ~I
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I h l vr dJy EniPr&lt;&lt;l ~'~~con~ ( I ~.,., "' " dong
1 m 1t1e r "' f&gt; o&lt;nero ~ Qn .o Po&gt;' O l! .c~
1F&lt;.! M 5 Of ' IJ!I~(~IP'IO"'

I 8~ c.o&lt;r .cr do d¥ IMI '&gt;~l'l~lly , $1)(
I W«~
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l~f G •l lo poH l r•b v n~ on Oh10 • no 1\o t!l
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I lhr ep mon•n• t• 10 tl' ~"' m- r e ~ne vur
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Tne D• •l, """ '"''I Or&gt;~ r e O&lt; I I• 00 . \ "
I m~n~~~
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I lnp U n ol~d f&gt;r p" l n iNM i oM ~I · ~ h
1 c tv1 ove oy ~nlollrll •o tn ~ ult IC• o vb lor d loa n

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ot "' "~"' ' a··~~''""' uedoiPd l o th o~
n ew•pd po•r 3nd ~ \0 1ne IQ( dl ne "" 1
Publl•~ ..ll ''~ "''"

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L------------------J

By BETTY CANARY
The pro blem of children's rooms is universal and dates
from antiquity. Surely. someday, anthropologists will
discover cave drawings shoWing a mother pulling at her
tangled hair while a daughter sits unconcernedly upon a
stack of wadded furs .
Naturally, the two will be surro unded by a litter of
fishbone combs. dirty gourds the daughter has used for
the ancients ' version of soft drinks, and several broken
seedpod belts half-hidden under a pile of cracked bone
necklaces .
I said the problem was universal. But . perhaps not.
A woman once said to me that her son never fai led to
make his bed each morning.
With . my conditionin g, aU I co uld do was wonder what
he was hiding under the mattress.
So, about our almost-universal problem . AU I ever get
from the ex perts is conflicting advice. I'm told either to
make a game of it or to make rules and enforce them
with the enthusiasm of a warden .
l do try to remember that, supposedly , the rooms belong to the children and they should have some sort of
freedom in deciding how and when to clean them .
Some women use a messy room as one more club to
wield. " You got a 'D' in mathematics! :' she cries . "An\1 ,
you. haven 't c,leaned your room in a 11\onth, either!"
Some women use reasoning. as iq "Don't you agree
that spe ndin g fifty dollars on a bedspread is idiotic as
long as you keep the spread under the bed ?"
Others attempt the hard-facts-of-life approach . " Okay,
you broke the lamp because you didn 't see it under the
pile of clothes-so study by a candle! "
After years of futile games and rules , r have settled
down to being a member of the closed-door cult. If their
mess is out of my sight, I won't go out of my mind.
If nothing seems to work for you, then the onl y thing
left is the Little Red Hen routine. Say, "Then , I'll do it
myself.'' and•start dusting.

opened the me.eting with the
mem])ers · · regeating the
GJirdenet's Pledge. The
secretary's report was give'!
and roll call was conducted.
Mrs. Garnet Wood of Occupational Therapy distributed
Ohio Association of Garden
Club membership cards and
the Garden Path magazines.
The hostess club distributed
squares of wallpaper which
wet.e used for backs and
borders · for wall hangings. A
ribbon was attached to these to .
be used as a hanger.. Scenes
and flower arrangements were
distributed and. pasted to the
wallpaper, which was put back
to hack. Each girl then had a
reversible picture to take to the
cottage.
Delicious refreshments were
served with the Halloween
theme being carried out.
Darling favors, made of felt
and marbles and resembling
small
animals,
were
distributed and each member
was presented a gift by the Star
Garden Club.
Those representing the
hostess club were Miss Ruby
Diehl, Mrs. Grace Turner, .
Virginia Nelson, Anna Ogden,
Blanche Nelson and Martha
Chapman.
Two members were reported
in the hospital and Mrs.
Galloway delivered to them the
favors and refreshments sent
by .the Siar Club.

-G

...

88
PAIR

noon .

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Sunday, Oct. 29, the
303rd .day of 1972 with 63 to
follow.
The moon is between its last
quarter and new phase.
The morning-stars are Venus,
Saturn and Mars.
The evening siars are Mercury and Jupiter.
Those born on this dale are
under the sign of Scorpjo.
American statesman Thomas
Bayard was born Oct. 29, 1828.
On this day in history :
ln 1616, Sir Walter Raleigh
was executed in London,
charged with participating in a
treasonable plot to oust J(ing
·James I from the throne:
In 1901 , Leon Czolgosz was
electrocuted for the assassination of · American Presiqent
William McKinley.'
In 1023, Turk ey became a
republic.
In 1929, pandemonium
reigned on the New York Stock
Exchange as collapsing prices
set the stage for t~e Great
Df!pressio~ of the 1930s.
A thought for the day:
Americ~n novelist Willa Cather
said, "I like trees because they
'seem more resigned to the way
they · have to live than other
things do. "

To

Gallipolis
and
Point Pleasant
·Area
A New Concept
In Modern-Day
Shopping·

Moshier's New Chess Set

·White opening
.

is explained·

'

.

By Bertrom Glenn Mo.shier
President, Kyger Creek
J:tlgh School Chess Ctub
GALLI POLIS - This Is the
third of six articles lhat the
, su.nday Times-Sentinel has
agreed to publish. If you liked
or learned something from the
. ·firs! two, write to me.
. This ar.ficle is on openings:
•There are four basic kinds of
apenings, bul here I will be
.felling of !he two for White. The
first one Is the king pawn
opening·. I suggest that we
study fhe Ruy Lopez.
NOTE ... I am going to use
descriptive nptal ion' for the
'"planations, and algebra ic for

12. f2-f4
12. e5xf4
13. 4-es
13. Nf6-e8
14: Qd1-h5
14. hl-h6
15 . Bb3xfl ch
15. Kg8-hB
16. Rel-fl
16: Nc3xe5
17. Rfl xf4
17. Qd7-c6
18. Kgl -11
· 18. Qc6xg2 ch
19. Kfl -e1
19. RaB-d2
20. Qh5xh6 ch
20. Ne5-c4
21. Qh5xh6 ch
21. g7xh6
22. Rh4xh6 ch
22. Kh8.g7
2LBc1-f4ch
23. Be7-c5
24. Bf4-e5
24. resign
On !he Queen pawn opening,
I suggest you use the Orthodox
Defense . The Orthodox
Defense starts after 1. P-Q4 p.
Q4 2. P-QB4 B-K3 3. N-QB3 NKB3 4. B-N5 B-K2 5. P-K3 0-0.

the games.
White'§ first move is P-K4.

Wh ite's sixth move is N-83.
This move is a basic move for

This Is a _gOOd move, as much
as If is controlling the center of

1. it helps protect !he king after
0-0 and 2. it is a good

the board. Black's first move is

developing

mov e.

Bla ck'S

'
2. el .e6
3. NgB.f6
4. Bf8-f6
5. 0-0
6. Nb8-dl
7. c7-c6
8. d5xc4
9. Nf6-d5
10. Qd8xe7
II . Nd5xc3
12. e6-e5
13. e5xd4
14. Nd7-f6??
15. Oe7-d6
16. Bc8-d7
17. Nf6:g4
18. Kg8-h8
19. Ng4-hB
20. Bd2-14
21. g7-g6
22. resign

2. c2-c4 ·
3. Nb 1-g5
4. Bc1 -g5
5. e2-e3
6. Ngl -IJ
7. Ral -c1
8. Bfl-d~
9. Bd3xc4
10. BgSxdl
11. 0-0
12. Rclxc3
13. Qd1 -c2
14. eJxd4
15. Rfl -e1
16. Nf3-g5!!
17. Qc2-bJ
18. Bc4xf7 ch
19. Rc3-h3
20. Qb3-d3
21 . QdJxf4
22. Rh3xhB

We Want You -

learn some more, go to your

public library.
Diq you know that Pl.

Pl easant Jr. High has entered

!heir chess players . Why
doesn't Ga ll ia High School? Is
it lhal Pl. Pleasant is better?
So till next week.
P.S. Anyone wanting to enler
the Gall ia County Chess

T1wo s:peak at
0 VAL event

Tournamen t , :&gt;e nd entry fee to

1

To• Know • • •

All Homes Sold by K&amp;K are complete~
set-up and utniti~ connected ready for.

you to move in to!

SCHULT
I'

THIS STORE OPEN:
DAILY 9 to 9,
SUNDAY 252 THIRD AVENUE
We reser"e the right to tim II qu1ntltin on Jlllltm~ In this ad .

performed the ceremony
before an altar decorated with
large vases of colored carnations.
The bride was given in
marriage by her father. ~he
wore an A-line formal gown of
chiffon with a ruffled flounce,
scoop neckline, three quarter
length sleeves . Her veil was
full length tr immed in lace and
she carried a bouquet of carnations.
Maid of honor was the bride's
sister, Miss Joyce Sprecher.
She was in a full length gown of
white and orange chiffon.with a
coral satin hand at· the waistline and a bow in the back. Her
short veil was in coral and she
ca1-ried a bouquet of mixed
carnations.
Best man was the groom's
brother , Mr . David W.
Dollarhide. Ushers were Mr.
William Morris and Mr. Lari
Callen.
The bride is a graduate of El
Cerrito High School, class of
1968, and of the Athena Beauty
College. The groom graduated
from Anza High School and
attended Contra Costa College.
A reception honoring the
couple was held foll&lt;iwing the
wedd ing at San Pablo, Calif.
The bride is a niece of Mr. and
Mrs, Forrest Neigler 1 and Mr.
and Mrs. ' Junior Neigler Of' ·
Racine; and Mrs. Dorothy
Harden and Mr. and Mrs.'
Carroll Neigler of Syracuse.

Nov. 4, 1971. non t toltl to dtlltn.

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

Family Pak Chicken Parts
Includes: 3 Breast Quarters with backs,
3 Leg Quarters with backs, 2 Pkgs.
Giblets &amp; 2 Necks.

now is P·K4. Th is is a good
move, be'cause 13. PxP Nx P

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Dean
Wheatcraft, 35, Columbus,
business manag~r in the city's
Land Acquisition _Center, was
charged Saturday with forging
four checks for about $60,000,
cashing them and depositing
the money in various b!V)ks
heaven's sake .
For end resulf see picture here and in Somerset in Perry
number 2.
A game using !he Orthodox County .
Defense.
White
Black
ARMS. STOLEN
1. d2-d4
I. d7-d5
HIJ..LSBORO, Ohio ( UPI) . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , One hundred - thirty nine
shotguns, rifles and handguns
were stolen from the Town and
Country store here some time
Friday night. Police refused to
release additional information,
but said their Investigation was

MOilLE NOME SALIS ·

(Black Is attacking the important KB and !he KN.) 14.
NxN QxN (Black Iiberafing !he
the queen and attacking th e ·
QR, which could very easy by
Ihe back bon~ of White's attack .
White's thirteenth move Is up
to you tiut don'! do PxP, for

MADGE NORTHU'

~

Pl Pleasant, W. Va.

•

AnENTION

LAWNBOY OWNERS
Beat the rush next year and bring your mower
in before you put it away.

eTUNE-UP

eOIL CHANGE

•CLEANED

•SHARPENED

DIRECT FROM

DO IT TODAY!

McKNIGHT-DAVIES HOW.

L-------------..;,_____,
Court St.

Gallipolis, Ohio

lb.
•

STATE FARE
SLICED

$

WHITE BREAD

for

1·1b. Loaves
JOAN OF ARC
LIGHT RED

CAMPER
WAGON, GT OR • • •
WE'RE AUTO LOAN
SPECIALISTS!

1,001

ITEM~

eLEAlHER
HOT PANTS
eLEATHER
PURSES
eLEAlHER
BIUFOLDS
eatAJRS
•PICTURES
•
•MIRRORS
eWAU. PlAQUES

We can fit you into the car. camper
or tru ck of your choice with
ease. When you finance_
directly through us. you save
on interest and have the
option of either 24 or
36 months to .repay the loan .
To make it easier; we 'll approve

you go

•GRAPE DESIGN
HANGING LAMPS
eJEWELRY BOXES

'

'lHE OLD BANK WITH NEW.IDEAS"

DNEY BEANS
1-lb. 14·oz.Cans

Sunday· Mond.By- Tuesday · ·Wednesday

Pt. Bottle 7 Flavors
LIMIT. 10

SNACK BOX

·'

2 PIECES CHICKEN
ROLL &amp; POTATQJS

-

•

lHIS IS ONLY A FEW OF THE MANY UNUSUA~

new car deal in town .

ITEMS, SO OOME IN AND SEE FOR youRSELf.

•••

BRUNI'CARDI
HOUSE Of MUSIC

''109 YEARS OF SERVICE"

NO
COUPONS
TO CLIP!

"IT'S .
INCOMPARABLE"

·BOX

jqaltt t}Jnppr
"THAT OLD FASHIONED GOODNESS"

.

FLEISCHMANN'S ·

DOG

MARURIIE

PH. 446.2682

'

OOFT

FOOD ·

29e

14lf.-oz.
Can

WHY COOK?
PICK UP A SNACK BOX
'.
FOR DINNER OR SUPPER!

- 2nd &amp;OUVE ST.

ALPO ·. Chunk Beef.

1-Jb:
Pkg.

51~

Reci Raipberry Preserves ..... 1];'· 61c
Seedle~s Blackberry Jam · ...•• 1 1~~· 53c
. Strawberry Preserves, ........ 1 1~~- 49c
Peach Butter . ... .. . ... .• ... ··~;,::••· stc
Goober Jelly &amp;
Butter 1 • 1~a~" -65c

KER'S.
luRES

GAU.iPOUS, OHIO
'

4410&amp;87

'

J

BLUE BONNET .MARGARINE
FORIUU 409
FEATURES
'·•·31c .Household Cleaner
Regular Margarine • • • . ' ' ......
li-Gal.
$]'57
·
,
.•
47c
Soft Marga~ne . . . . . . .. ..... .: .
Bottle
~

loan . So. see us today for the best

;

THOROFARE

BEVERAGES

and Thursday Only!

the insurance payments into the

See J-iarold Thomp~n or Lou Lutton

POMEROY - Mr . and Mrs.
Jack Sprecher, the former Jim
Neigler of Racine, of 5931 Wenk
Ave., Richmond, Calif., are
announcing the marriage of
their daughter, Janine Roberta
Sprecher, to Mr. Roger Eugene
Dollarhide, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Uoyd Dollarhide, 10879 San
Pablo Ave., Richmohd, Calif. ,
on Oct. 1 at 2 p.m. at the St.
Luke Methodist Church at
Richmond.
The Rev. Richard W. Smith

This ends our study of the
openings for White , there are
many more. So if you want to

continuing.

car shopping. We 'll also include

·

Costume prizes
be aw

need acar?-

. your loan before

Couple w~d
w.
t'n Rar . est

THI:: Evangeliars, male
quartet fro m near Bremen at
MI.. ije1·mon United Brethren
. _i11 ·christ Church,. (:30 p.m.
. Sunday. Public invited.
MONDAy
HALLOWEEN P&amp;rty in the
basement of the Long Bottom
Methodist Church, Monday,
6, 30 • 7,3o p.m. All Long Botlom area children invited to
attend masked.
TUESDAy
1\ACINE. American Legion
Auxiliary, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
at the hall.
MIDDLEPORT Community
Halloween party, Tuesday ,
starting with a parade at 6:30
p.m. from A. &amp; P. moving to
Middleport football field for
cos tume judging. Refr eshments and candy treats .
COMMITTEE Opposing
local option to be voted Nov. 7
in Racine meets 7:30 p.m.
Tuesda y at Racine First
Baptist Church. Any opposing
the issue asked to attend.

move is QN-02. Black must me, Bertram Moshier, 224
POMEROY - Ohio Valley
White's secon d move Is N- keep an eye on White' s possible First Ave.. Gallipoli s, Ohio
KBJ. This Is a good move sacrifi ce of his bishop on KR7. 45631. Sr. $5; Jr. $3, to be held Area Libraries trustees,
because If attacks Black's king
White's seventh move Is R- at Kyger ·creek High School. at librarians, and guests met in a
pawn. Black's move is N-QBJ. Bl. This is a good move 10:30, Nov. 11 -12.
quarterly meeting at the
Btack did this to protect his because it protects !he square
Holiday Inn in Chillicothe
king pawn .
Q!l3, which might be a little
While's third move Is 8-NS. battle ground later on . Black's
Thursday, Oct. 26, at 6:30p.m.
. Now starts !he Ruy Lopez· move is P-B3. This is lo help
for a luau and work session .
opening. 'l{hife is . indirectly defend Black's queen pawn . tO
nti'L J
Attending from the Pomeroy
attacking Black's king pawn.
While's eight h move is B-QJ.
._. ueu,
Black's only goo&lt;f move is p. While's thinki ng behind !his
Public Library were C. E.
QRJ.
move is to attack Black's KR2
TUPPERS PLAINS
Blakeslee, President, Board of
While's fourth move is B-R4. square.
Black's
mo ve
Costume
prizes
will
be
Trustees
; Mrs. Pat Holter,
Now you say, why not 4. BxN therefore is PxP. Black Is
PxB 5. ·NxP. That Is good frying and is li berating hiiJJ· awarded at the Tuppers Plains Mrs: Nellie Vale, Mrs. Vilma
because While would be ahead self.
community party to be .held . Pikkoja and Jon Louden .
. positionally and materi ally.
While's ninth move is BxP.
Speakers
were
Jean
But I say this 4. BxN PxB 5. This is to even up both sides. Monday night 6:30 to 6 p.m. at
Plains
gymColeman,
library
trustee
from
the
Tuppers
NxP Q-05, now Black owns Black's move Is N-Q4. This
your knight or your king pawn, move is also freeing Black.
nasiwn.
Dayton l'v)Qntgomery Library
which ever one ycu don't
White's tenth move is Bx B.
Judging
will
be
done
in
three
Board, on the duties and
protect. Black's move Is N-BJ. While's thinking behind this Is
This i ~ a good developing simple. "If I mu st lose my age groups, pre--school, first responsibilities of the library
move, and puts an attac k on bishop then I should fake !he through fourth grades, and board and its members, and
White's king pawn.
biggest piece I can !" Black's . fifth through eighth grades. Richard M. Cheski, assistant
White'sfifthmovels0-0. Now
move of course is QxB.
some of you are saying what
White's 11th move is 0-0. This The categories are prettiest, State Librarian , on th e
about NxP.. Well , Wh ile can is lo protect the king and to the funniest, the ugliest and the Revenue Sharing law and its
counter attack·wlth 6. R-Kl or develop ~ he rook . Bla ck's move most unusual costume in each priorities.
P-Q4. If Black moves his knight is NxN . Black also thinks that a
Jerry Grim, the OVAL
to
II
loses his king fair tr ade is no steal. This is a age group.
pawn .
p 6. R-KI good move In as much as Black
Games will also be con- Project Director, submitted his
N-BJ 7.
. Or is liberating a few pieces. Also ducted in11ge groups and prizes quarterly report ending Sep·
If
. NxP if. White is not careful Black will be awarded. There will be temqer 30; 1972 which showed
u WJII12 .... NxQ 13. RxN. Bla~ k .,._ .
d fresh
•·
a R Vo(l nn lng lhe exchange. . "~'·if '"""' .Pt~e$ an re
men.., h otilir~ry dlil.&lt;;iors in l)l~ 'are~
'while's 121hitnov.e Js RX N.~ ·ana · parents are invited to reporting upgraded collections
WhHo••'.•li•lh mOYf Is R-Kl. • F.or PxN ,gains nothinQ, al~o attend with their children .
·of adult non .fiction, including
~ove, 1beoecc1ause if
Black could do P-B4f Th1s
Meigs Local School District
also liberating the knight, bishop,
and queen. Black's only move
reporting more books.
MANAGER CHARGED
P-K4, for the same reason .

'

.. I

• SUI\'DA Y
MEMBERS OF Sacred
Heart Parish mee!ing in
special session, 6 p.m. Sunday
al church in Pomeroy. Meeting
preceded by mass ; refreshments.
HYMN SING, Sunday , 1:30 p.
m. at Stiversville Community
Church featuring Heavenly
Highway Trio , Hoffman
Family, Jimmy Gavett and
others. Public welcome.

Soon!
the

11

REGULAR44c

¢ .

ANNOUNCE BIRTH
Mr. and Mrs. George ·B.
Somerville, 6628 Red . Coach
Lan e, Reynoldsburg , Ohio,
announce the birth of their first
child. The daughter, Micole
Marie, was born Oct. 25, at 9: 15
p.m.. at Grant Hospital,
. Columbus.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Yoby, New
Athens , Ohio . Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs .
A. B. Somerville, Burkhart
Lane, Gallipolis.

.

·'

.-fl·

'

�r.

It-The Sunday Times -ikntinel,Sunday,Oct. 29,1972
- TheSundayTimes-Sentinei,Sunday,Oct. 29,1972

Jv!arriage
vows
POMEROY - Va!'!S of while
gladioli with aprt,vt and yellow
pompons flanJr1d•by two eight
bi'anch can•l!labra arid' two
single ca,.,Jies decorated the
altar r1 the Helen Mauck
Galbnat~ Memorial Chapel at
Ohio University, Athens, for
the wedding of Mi~· Jennifer
Lynn Davis to Mr. Edward
Jerome Davidson.
'
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene'E. DaVis,
Racine, Route . 2, and the
bridegroom Is the son of· Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Davidson,
Beachwood. The double ring
ceremony was performed by
Athens Mayor Donald Barrett
at 1:30 p.m. on Aug. 20. Nuptial
music was furnished by Mrs.
Harold Robison, Athens,
organist, and included
"Greensleeves' by Vaughan,
"Chorale in A. Minor" by
Franck; "Air and Hornpipe"
from Mater Music by Handel,
ancC'Song of Peace."
· Given in marriage by her
father, the bride was attired in
a gown of. champagne satin
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Orland W. Floyd are an·
LONG BO'ITOM -Mrs. Joan Bogard of Lorrg Bottom is fashioned with ~ fitted bodice
nouncing the engagement of their daughter, Leta Carol, to
announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of and fll)l skirt telminating in a
Mr. Jay Wiseman, son of Mr. John Wiseman, Gallipolis, arrd
her daughter, Sgt. Susan J. Tuttle, to Sgt'. Thomas Gownley, long train. Chantilly lace ac·
Mrs. Evelyn Wiseman, Point Pleasant. Miss Floyd is a senior
Jr., son of Mrs. Anne Gownley of Collingdale, Pa. and the cented the.bodice and the lace
at Meigs High School. Mr. Wiseman graduated from the
late Thomas Gownley, Sr. The wedding wiU be an event of sleeves came to points at the
Point Pleasarit liigh School in 1972. He is employed at Jones
Nov. 4 in the chapel at the Malmstrom Air Force Base in wris~ The bride's headpiece ·
Boys in Gallipolis. Wedding plans are incomplete.
Montana
was of champagne with a large
bow and a bouffant veil of
nylon tulle. Her only jewelry
1 was a single strand of pearls. a
. 'J g1ft of the bndegroom. The
bride carried a cascade of .
white miniature carnations
APPLE GROVE, Ohio - prayer by Mrs. Dolly Wolfe. Ruth Riffle, Jimmy, Dale,
and
Norma
Jarrell,
Kathy
with yellow sweetheart roses
Members of the Apple Grove
Refreshmen Is of hot dogs, Steve, Kathy , Tony and
Wolfe,
Eddie,
David,
Sharon
and satin streamers.
United Methodist Church potato chips and Kool-Aid were Johnnie Riffle, Darla, Deanna
sponsored a Halloween party served. Sacks of candy were Keith and Kevin White, Mrs: and Cindy Roush, Dean lim, Mrs. Pamela Grant of
Mrs. Patsy Laudennilt, Vicki Baltimore, Md. served as
Thursday evening at the given to each attending.
Susie Pierce and Joey, Kim Ables, Mike and Karen matron of honor for her sister.
church annex; for the Apple
Hostesses were Mrs. James
Rhodes, Mrs. Joyce White.
Grove and Fairview · com- Hupp, Mrs. Orville Jarrell,
Decorations in the annex She wore a fioor length gown
. k .
ith th with fitted bodice and long
munities to take the place of Mrs. Dallas Hill, Mrs. Russell
111
were
eepmg
w
e sleeves in mint green chiffon.
the trick or treat night which Roush, Mrs . Dolly Wolfe, Mrs.
Halloween
season
arrd
were
. Ruffles were used at the
will not be beld.
Jack Ables, Mrs . Dorsey
GREAT BEND - Mr. and
sleeves, neckline and down the
Devotions were in charge of Parsons, Mrs. Bob Rhodes . ' Mrs . Leonard D. Smith of the made by Mike Rhodes.
front of the gown, and acAttending were Jimmy and Great Bend area celebrated
Mr~. Bob Rhodes with singing
centing the waist was a band of
Of choruses and Mrs. Rhodes Billy Hupp, · Carl, Randy, their 4Jrd wedding an·
dark
green velvet with a large
reading the 23rd Psalm, with Jimmy and Linda Alley, Mrs. niverssary Oct. 26.
.
bow accent. The bouffant skirt
·
Married Oct. 26, 1929 at
was of a floral design in
Dunbar, W.
they are
apricot, green and yellow. Her
parents
of Va
six., children,
headpiece was two circlets of
Richard, Hollywood, Florida;
velvet with a short veil of mint
James, Cleveland; Wesley,
green. She carried a colonial
Charleston; William, BrunsMIDDLEPORT - A party bouquet of yellow daisy
wick; Clarence, St. Albans,
ONE DAY ONLY
and a daughter, Mrs. Darlene. honoring Mrs. Maltilda pompons with long green
Chapman, of Charleston, and Rowley, who is leaving her streamers.
employment with the Betsy
The bridesmaids were Mrs.
24 grandchildren.
Ross
Bakeries,
Inc.
after
11
Marilyn Smith of Columbus
1'&gt;\1', Smith retired from the
•
'•
•'\~
,
Union Carbide Corp. at South years, was held Tuesday nig)lt and Miss Shelly Katz of Pillsburgh, !'a. Their gowns and
Charleston and returned to at the Middleport bakery.
"Best
A
cake
inscribed
headpieces were · identical in
Great ·Bend to his former home·
Wishes"
center~d the refresh· styling to the one worn by the
place where he and his wife are
ment table. George Grate, matron of honor but were of
enjoying retirement.
Mrs . Smith is an active manager, presented a money apricot chiffon. They carried
member of the Church at tree to Mrs. Rowley from the colonial bouquets of yellow
employes.
daisy pompons with apricot
Chris t at Mason. W.Va .
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. streamers.
Cleo Chevalier, Julie Boyles,
Mr . Barry Smith of
Wilbur Rowley, Mr. and Mrs. Columbus, cousin of the groom,
George Batey and son, Mr. and was best man and the ushers
ARMCO PAYS OFF
Mrs. Brady Huffman, Mr. and were Mr. Robert Grant,
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio (UP!) Mrs. Darrell Bechtle, Mr. and Baltimore, Md., brother-In-law
- Armco Steel Corp. Friday Mrs. Arthur Stobart, Mr. and of the bride, and Mr. Ronald
announced .a dividend of 24 Mrs. Ernie Wells, Mr. arid Mrs. Katz, New York. The shirts
cents per share or common Ernest Van Inwagen, Mr. and worn by the male attendants
stock payable Dec. 11 to Mrs. Gene Houdashelt,Mr. and were · in colors to match the
shareholders of record Nov.IO. Mrs . Kenneth Haley, Mr. and
bridal attendants.
The corporation also · an- Mrs. RohertWood, Tom Darst,
For her da1,1ghter's wedding,
nounced a quarterly dividend Lowell Beaver, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Davis wore a street length
of 52.5 cents for each share of Don Betzing, Mr. and Mrs. dress of mint green chiffon
cumulative - convertable · Harry
Rhodes,
Bonnie with a fitted bodice, long full
preferred stock. The dividend · Nicholson, Sonny Randolph, sleeves, and a full skirt. Her
is payable Dec. 29 to Mrs. Janice Gibbs, and Mr. accessories were of silver and
Middleport, 0.
4th &amp; Locust Sl
shareholders of record Dec. I. and Mrs. George Grate.
she wore a corsage of yellow
carnations. Mrs. Davidson

Leta Carol Floyd to wed

OPEN
SUNDAY
1210 6

Sgt. Susan Tuttle to wed

Appk Grove WSCS gives comniun~ty Halloween part

43rd Celebrated

Mrs. Rowlery
given party

.---------------•---"l
SUNDAE SPECIAL

TODAY, OCTOBER 29

Mr. and Mrs. Edward J Davidson
hosted a rehearsal dinner at
the University Inn, Athens.
Out-of-town guests . at the
wedding were Mr. and Mrs.
Ben Lubin, Warrensville
Heights; Mr. and Mrs. Irvin
Smith, Mrs: Jean Cohen, Cella
and Arlene, and Mark Moss,
University Heights; Mr. and
Mrs. Maurice Senkfor, Sherry
Anne, Ave, Stuart, Howard,
.Shaker Heights; Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Kaminsky, Wickliffe;
Mr. and Mrs. Sleven Gold,
Bedford; Andy Krauser,
Teaneck, N. J.; Randy Clark,
Chappaqua, N. Y.; Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Magistro, Charles
Price, Miss Betty Wilson,
Athens; Mr . and Mrs. Barry
Rifkan, Avery and Carl,
Rochester, N. Y.; Steve
Randall, Xenia; Miss Ellene
Marcy, Cleveland; Mrs. Sarah
Hamburk,
Mrs.
Rose
Kaminsky, Mr. and Mrs .
Leonard Hamburk and Mark,
Mayfield Heights; Mr. and

PRESENTS

REVUE '72
BEGINNING .TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7
q.~

TilE NEW IMPRESSIONS
"Three- Record Breaking Years
in Daytona Beach"
With th.e great Freddie Spicer on drums
((;omparable. to louis Bellsonl. plus Harry .
Kinzey' on _sax, Boots ·R.a ndolpli style. · with
specialties by

.Exotic Midori Ashikawa and Lovely Joni Craig

AND ·STARRING
JAY HARVEY
"One of the Best Comedians of our Time"
· Dahcing ;:~nd continuous entertainment 9 p.m. to 2 jl.m. nitely. Popular
prices ~ small cover· charge. ·
.

FOR

PRESTONE
'
PRE MIXED
' WINDSHIELD
WASHER
ANTI-FREEZE

JOE

DENISON
FOR
County Commissioner
Term Commenctna

Is a vote for Meigs County provress.
'

January

3, 1973

Fl RST QUALITY

k'
$\1(
;

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK

•

EXTRA HEAVY

WASH
CLOTHS

.

of Racine ·In the stale of Ohio, at. the close ol bulness
. on October 10 1J'I2
pubUshed In respolllle to caD made by Comptroller of the currency, under tttle
12, United States Code, Seetion 181.
·
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks • • • • • • • • • • • - • • • • • • • $ 514,572.21
U.S. Treasury securities • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1,424,185.39
Obligations of States and political subdivisions • • • • • • . . 98,284.82
Other securities • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . - 12,515.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell • • ·, . • • • • •
• • 750,000.00
Loans····· · · · · · · '- · · · · · .· . • • . • 3234'"02
' ,~.
Bank premises, .furniture and ~lxtures, and
other assets representing bank premises • • • • • • • • 16,829.58.
&lt;Jther assets .. .. • • • .. .. - .. • - • - • • • • • - • 1,744.93 .
. f6, 052,567.95
TOTAL ASSETs • • • • • • • • • • • •
LIABD.rt!ES
Demand deposits of Individuals, partnershlpa,
and corporations • • • • • • • - • . . •
.. $1,423,!177.4.3
Time and savings deposits of Individuals, '
partnerships, and corporaUons • • • • • • • .• • • • • • 3,357,0110.79
Deposits of United Stales Goverrunent • • • • • • • • • • • 33,836.06
Deposits of stales and political subdivisions • • • • , • • • • • 584,432.18
Certified and officers' checks, etc. • • • • • • - . • • • . . 13,68H4
TOTAL DEPOSI'l'S • • • • 1 • • • • • $5,413,1109.90
(a) Total demand deposits • • • • • • • - $1,735,929.11
(b) Total lime and savings deposits • • · • • • $3,677,080.79
Other liabilities • • - • • • • - • · • • • • • .•
• 154,147.51
TOTAL !JABIUTIES • • • • · • • • • • • · • • • • $5,567,11$7,41
RESERVE ON LOANS AND SECURrriES
Otherreserves on loans. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • !4U1L01
Rl!serves on securities • .• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • , • • • · - • 160.00
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SE;CURITIES • • •
• ~,111.01
CAP.r r AL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital-total • • • • • • • • • • • •
.... 71?.53
Common Stock-total par value - • • • • •
125,000.00
No. shires authorized 5,000
, No. shares oUtstanding 5,000 ·
SurplUB • • • • • • • • , ·.. • • • .. .. • .. .. .. .:. .. .. .. .. .. 125,000.00/
181,749.53
Undivided profits • .• • • • • • • • • • • • • •
TOTAL CAPrrAL ACCXltlNTS
431,749.53
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
ill]
•,
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS . • • • • •

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE

3 MilES SOUTH. OF MIDDlEPORT ON ST. RT. 7

A O.ocrat VOTE November 7

Call No. 483

--

r-----------:---------------------------.. .
KINGS A~RMS NITE CLUB

Johnstown; Mr. and Mrs. John
Ptehm, Cindy, Mr. · and Mrs.
Gene Clyse,Mrs. Jennie Davis, ,
·Columbus; Mr. · and Mrs.
Henry Deem, Belpre; Mrs. Ted
Dyer, Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
Elwood Sberidar), Tom, Steve,
and Roy, Groveport; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Grant and son,
Jason, Baltiinore, Md.

\

EACH

HURRY TO-

Mrs.
Delnius
Moore,
Powhattan Point; Miss Phyllla
Weiss, Miss Shelly Kat~. Pitts·
burgh, Pa.; Ricky Massey,
Silver Springs, Md.; Mr. and
Mrs. Kelly Weller, In·
dependence, Mo.; Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Price, Johnstown;
Mr. · and Mrs. Jack Price,
Jamie; Shelly, and ·Tracy,

chose
floral chiffon
with lorrg
full asleeves,
ruffles
at
the neckline and in the front,
and a bouffant skirt. She also
had accessories of silver and a
corsage of yellow carnations.
Guests were registered by Miss
Betty Wilson, Athens.
A reception · honoring the
couple ' was held at Baker
Center, Ohio J..tniverslty . .The
bride's table featured a three
tiered wedding cake. While
columns adorned with apricot,
green and yellow roses
separated the tiers and the
cake was topped · with the
traditional miniature bride and
groom.
Centerpiece for the luncheon
table was of while gladioli, and
yellow and apricot snowdrift
pOmpons .. Bags of green rice
wrapped in apricot netting,
tied with yellow ribbon and
topped with wedding bands
were given to the guests at the
invitation luncheon.
For. her wedding trip the·
bride changed into a jersey .
~RANDA
prlni with whicfi· she wore -. .• Average of 'total deposlli -the 15 calendar
· white accessOr-Ies.
·
days ending with.call date • • ' . • • • • • • • • • • • . • • f$,413,171.85
Both the bride and groom are
Average of total loans for the 15 calendar ·
·
.
J.une graduates of Ohio
days ending tjlth call date • • • • • • ; • • • • • • • • • P,Zlt,$83.83
University. The new Mrs.
Davi~son · received · ner
· · . I, John T. Wolfe, ~er, of .the allovHBIJIId bank do !MnbY.declare that
bachelor of science degree In'
thui report, of. condition LII!'Ue and correct to the bell! of my llnoWiedc
. eand ·
elementary education with
belief.
.
certification In special
..
education. Mr. Davidson
graduated summa cum laude
We, the Undei'IICned directors attelt the con ectnea of tiU repurt of emwith a bachelor of arts degm
dillon and declare that It llu been eqmlned by us 111111 to the belt of our
in history. Mrs. Davidlon Ia
'knowledce 111111 beUef Ia true and l'GI'I ect.
·
e!llplayed ln ·C!IIcago and her

PAIR

EA.

UM\T 5

M&amp;R COUPON
PUFFS
FACIAL
TISSUES

I

'

~

...

......, .,

.GEORGE HAJJ. AND THE HAJJ.MARKS
t":a';: ~~nd~:l. N:;
· -a~n.d.-..e_.n,~o;.r~Krea~~t.;e;nt;;;e;.;rta;;;in;me;;;.;n;t.;.n;.;it;'.e;l:..;.·-...:.-.-..1· :~d~~~:.
Buena Ave., APl
• ~!11111-••C•o•me·
•The bridegxoom's parenll
}.

.

'

J. "·

WllH
OOUPON

··coNTAC
CAPSULES
lO's

•&amp;~

Dm. en.

.

200

e

GALLON .

EXPIRES 11/4/72 .

fee

Pit'

COUNT

VALVOLINE
'PERMANENT

.!... Dlreeten

"·-·h.
.

'

'---

•
I.

r\

'

�r.

It-The Sunday Times -ikntinel,Sunday,Oct. 29,1972
- TheSundayTimes-Sentinei,Sunday,Oct. 29,1972

Jv!arriage
vows
POMEROY - Va!'!S of while
gladioli with aprt,vt and yellow
pompons flanJr1d•by two eight
bi'anch can•l!labra arid' two
single ca,.,Jies decorated the
altar r1 the Helen Mauck
Galbnat~ Memorial Chapel at
Ohio University, Athens, for
the wedding of Mi~· Jennifer
Lynn Davis to Mr. Edward
Jerome Davidson.
'
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene'E. DaVis,
Racine, Route . 2, and the
bridegroom Is the son of· Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Davidson,
Beachwood. The double ring
ceremony was performed by
Athens Mayor Donald Barrett
at 1:30 p.m. on Aug. 20. Nuptial
music was furnished by Mrs.
Harold Robison, Athens,
organist, and included
"Greensleeves' by Vaughan,
"Chorale in A. Minor" by
Franck; "Air and Hornpipe"
from Mater Music by Handel,
ancC'Song of Peace."
· Given in marriage by her
father, the bride was attired in
a gown of. champagne satin
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Orland W. Floyd are an·
LONG BO'ITOM -Mrs. Joan Bogard of Lorrg Bottom is fashioned with ~ fitted bodice
nouncing the engagement of their daughter, Leta Carol, to
announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of and fll)l skirt telminating in a
Mr. Jay Wiseman, son of Mr. John Wiseman, Gallipolis, arrd
her daughter, Sgt. Susan J. Tuttle, to Sgt'. Thomas Gownley, long train. Chantilly lace ac·
Mrs. Evelyn Wiseman, Point Pleasant. Miss Floyd is a senior
Jr., son of Mrs. Anne Gownley of Collingdale, Pa. and the cented the.bodice and the lace
at Meigs High School. Mr. Wiseman graduated from the
late Thomas Gownley, Sr. The wedding wiU be an event of sleeves came to points at the
Point Pleasarit liigh School in 1972. He is employed at Jones
Nov. 4 in the chapel at the Malmstrom Air Force Base in wris~ The bride's headpiece ·
Boys in Gallipolis. Wedding plans are incomplete.
Montana
was of champagne with a large
bow and a bouffant veil of
nylon tulle. Her only jewelry
1 was a single strand of pearls. a
. 'J g1ft of the bndegroom. The
bride carried a cascade of .
white miniature carnations
APPLE GROVE, Ohio - prayer by Mrs. Dolly Wolfe. Ruth Riffle, Jimmy, Dale,
and
Norma
Jarrell,
Kathy
with yellow sweetheart roses
Members of the Apple Grove
Refreshmen Is of hot dogs, Steve, Kathy , Tony and
Wolfe,
Eddie,
David,
Sharon
and satin streamers.
United Methodist Church potato chips and Kool-Aid were Johnnie Riffle, Darla, Deanna
sponsored a Halloween party served. Sacks of candy were Keith and Kevin White, Mrs: and Cindy Roush, Dean lim, Mrs. Pamela Grant of
Mrs. Patsy Laudennilt, Vicki Baltimore, Md. served as
Thursday evening at the given to each attending.
Susie Pierce and Joey, Kim Ables, Mike and Karen matron of honor for her sister.
church annex; for the Apple
Hostesses were Mrs. James
Rhodes, Mrs. Joyce White.
Grove and Fairview · com- Hupp, Mrs. Orville Jarrell,
Decorations in the annex She wore a fioor length gown
. k .
ith th with fitted bodice and long
munities to take the place of Mrs. Dallas Hill, Mrs. Russell
111
were
eepmg
w
e sleeves in mint green chiffon.
the trick or treat night which Roush, Mrs . Dolly Wolfe, Mrs.
Halloween
season
arrd
were
. Ruffles were used at the
will not be beld.
Jack Ables, Mrs . Dorsey
GREAT BEND - Mr. and
sleeves, neckline and down the
Devotions were in charge of Parsons, Mrs. Bob Rhodes . ' Mrs . Leonard D. Smith of the made by Mike Rhodes.
front of the gown, and acAttending were Jimmy and Great Bend area celebrated
Mr~. Bob Rhodes with singing
centing the waist was a band of
Of choruses and Mrs. Rhodes Billy Hupp, · Carl, Randy, their 4Jrd wedding an·
dark
green velvet with a large
reading the 23rd Psalm, with Jimmy and Linda Alley, Mrs. niverssary Oct. 26.
.
bow accent. The bouffant skirt
·
Married Oct. 26, 1929 at
was of a floral design in
Dunbar, W.
they are
apricot, green and yellow. Her
parents
of Va
six., children,
headpiece was two circlets of
Richard, Hollywood, Florida;
velvet with a short veil of mint
James, Cleveland; Wesley,
green. She carried a colonial
Charleston; William, BrunsMIDDLEPORT - A party bouquet of yellow daisy
wick; Clarence, St. Albans,
ONE DAY ONLY
and a daughter, Mrs. Darlene. honoring Mrs. Maltilda pompons with long green
Chapman, of Charleston, and Rowley, who is leaving her streamers.
employment with the Betsy
The bridesmaids were Mrs.
24 grandchildren.
Ross
Bakeries,
Inc.
after
11
Marilyn Smith of Columbus
1'&gt;\1', Smith retired from the
•
'•
•'\~
,
Union Carbide Corp. at South years, was held Tuesday nig)lt and Miss Shelly Katz of Pillsburgh, !'a. Their gowns and
Charleston and returned to at the Middleport bakery.
"Best
A
cake
inscribed
headpieces were · identical in
Great ·Bend to his former home·
Wishes"
center~d the refresh· styling to the one worn by the
place where he and his wife are
ment table. George Grate, matron of honor but were of
enjoying retirement.
Mrs . Smith is an active manager, presented a money apricot chiffon. They carried
member of the Church at tree to Mrs. Rowley from the colonial bouquets of yellow
employes.
daisy pompons with apricot
Chris t at Mason. W.Va .
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. streamers.
Cleo Chevalier, Julie Boyles,
Mr . Barry Smith of
Wilbur Rowley, Mr. and Mrs. Columbus, cousin of the groom,
George Batey and son, Mr. and was best man and the ushers
ARMCO PAYS OFF
Mrs. Brady Huffman, Mr. and were Mr. Robert Grant,
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio (UP!) Mrs. Darrell Bechtle, Mr. and Baltimore, Md., brother-In-law
- Armco Steel Corp. Friday Mrs. Arthur Stobart, Mr. and of the bride, and Mr. Ronald
announced .a dividend of 24 Mrs. Ernie Wells, Mr. arid Mrs. Katz, New York. The shirts
cents per share or common Ernest Van Inwagen, Mr. and worn by the male attendants
stock payable Dec. 11 to Mrs. Gene Houdashelt,Mr. and were · in colors to match the
shareholders of record Nov.IO. Mrs . Kenneth Haley, Mr. and
bridal attendants.
The corporation also · an- Mrs. RohertWood, Tom Darst,
For her da1,1ghter's wedding,
nounced a quarterly dividend Lowell Beaver, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Davis wore a street length
of 52.5 cents for each share of Don Betzing, Mr. and Mrs. dress of mint green chiffon
cumulative - convertable · Harry
Rhodes,
Bonnie with a fitted bodice, long full
preferred stock. The dividend · Nicholson, Sonny Randolph, sleeves, and a full skirt. Her
is payable Dec. 29 to Mrs. Janice Gibbs, and Mr. accessories were of silver and
Middleport, 0.
4th &amp; Locust Sl
shareholders of record Dec. I. and Mrs. George Grate.
she wore a corsage of yellow
carnations. Mrs. Davidson

Leta Carol Floyd to wed

OPEN
SUNDAY
1210 6

Sgt. Susan Tuttle to wed

Appk Grove WSCS gives comniun~ty Halloween part

43rd Celebrated

Mrs. Rowlery
given party

.---------------•---"l
SUNDAE SPECIAL

TODAY, OCTOBER 29

Mr. and Mrs. Edward J Davidson
hosted a rehearsal dinner at
the University Inn, Athens.
Out-of-town guests . at the
wedding were Mr. and Mrs.
Ben Lubin, Warrensville
Heights; Mr. and Mrs. Irvin
Smith, Mrs: Jean Cohen, Cella
and Arlene, and Mark Moss,
University Heights; Mr. and
Mrs. Maurice Senkfor, Sherry
Anne, Ave, Stuart, Howard,
.Shaker Heights; Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Kaminsky, Wickliffe;
Mr. and Mrs. Sleven Gold,
Bedford; Andy Krauser,
Teaneck, N. J.; Randy Clark,
Chappaqua, N. Y.; Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Magistro, Charles
Price, Miss Betty Wilson,
Athens; Mr . and Mrs. Barry
Rifkan, Avery and Carl,
Rochester, N. Y.; Steve
Randall, Xenia; Miss Ellene
Marcy, Cleveland; Mrs. Sarah
Hamburk,
Mrs.
Rose
Kaminsky, Mr. and Mrs .
Leonard Hamburk and Mark,
Mayfield Heights; Mr. and

PRESENTS

REVUE '72
BEGINNING .TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7
q.~

TilE NEW IMPRESSIONS
"Three- Record Breaking Years
in Daytona Beach"
With th.e great Freddie Spicer on drums
((;omparable. to louis Bellsonl. plus Harry .
Kinzey' on _sax, Boots ·R.a ndolpli style. · with
specialties by

.Exotic Midori Ashikawa and Lovely Joni Craig

AND ·STARRING
JAY HARVEY
"One of the Best Comedians of our Time"
· Dahcing ;:~nd continuous entertainment 9 p.m. to 2 jl.m. nitely. Popular
prices ~ small cover· charge. ·
.

FOR

PRESTONE
'
PRE MIXED
' WINDSHIELD
WASHER
ANTI-FREEZE

JOE

DENISON
FOR
County Commissioner
Term Commenctna

Is a vote for Meigs County provress.
'

January

3, 1973

Fl RST QUALITY

k'
$\1(
;

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK

•

EXTRA HEAVY

WASH
CLOTHS

.

of Racine ·In the stale of Ohio, at. the close ol bulness
. on October 10 1J'I2
pubUshed In respolllle to caD made by Comptroller of the currency, under tttle
12, United States Code, Seetion 181.
·
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks • • • • • • • • • • • - • • • • • • • $ 514,572.21
U.S. Treasury securities • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1,424,185.39
Obligations of States and political subdivisions • • • • • • . . 98,284.82
Other securities • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . - 12,515.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell • • ·, . • • • • •
• • 750,000.00
Loans····· · · · · · · '- · · · · · .· . • • . • 3234'"02
' ,~.
Bank premises, .furniture and ~lxtures, and
other assets representing bank premises • • • • • • • • 16,829.58.
&lt;Jther assets .. .. • • • .. .. - .. • - • - • • • • • - • 1,744.93 .
. f6, 052,567.95
TOTAL ASSETs • • • • • • • • • • • •
LIABD.rt!ES
Demand deposits of Individuals, partnershlpa,
and corporations • • • • • • • - • . . •
.. $1,423,!177.4.3
Time and savings deposits of Individuals, '
partnerships, and corporaUons • • • • • • • .• • • • • • 3,357,0110.79
Deposits of United Stales Goverrunent • • • • • • • • • • • 33,836.06
Deposits of stales and political subdivisions • • • • , • • • • • 584,432.18
Certified and officers' checks, etc. • • • • • • - . • • • . . 13,68H4
TOTAL DEPOSI'l'S • • • • 1 • • • • • $5,413,1109.90
(a) Total demand deposits • • • • • • • - $1,735,929.11
(b) Total lime and savings deposits • • · • • • $3,677,080.79
Other liabilities • • - • • • • - • · • • • • • .•
• 154,147.51
TOTAL !JABIUTIES • • • • · • • • • • • · • • • • $5,567,11$7,41
RESERVE ON LOANS AND SECURrriES
Otherreserves on loans. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • !4U1L01
Rl!serves on securities • .• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • , • • • · - • 160.00
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SE;CURITIES • • •
• ~,111.01
CAP.r r AL ACCOUNTS
Equity capital-total • • • • • • • • • • • •
.... 71?.53
Common Stock-total par value - • • • • •
125,000.00
No. shires authorized 5,000
, No. shares oUtstanding 5,000 ·
SurplUB • • • • • • • • , ·.. • • • .. .. • .. .. .. .:. .. .. .. .. .. 125,000.00/
181,749.53
Undivided profits • .• • • • • • • • • • • • • •
TOTAL CAPrrAL ACCXltlNTS
431,749.53
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
ill]
•,
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS . • • • • •

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE

3 MilES SOUTH. OF MIDDlEPORT ON ST. RT. 7

A O.ocrat VOTE November 7

Call No. 483

--

r-----------:---------------------------.. .
KINGS A~RMS NITE CLUB

Johnstown; Mr. and Mrs. John
Ptehm, Cindy, Mr. · and Mrs.
Gene Clyse,Mrs. Jennie Davis, ,
·Columbus; Mr. · and Mrs.
Henry Deem, Belpre; Mrs. Ted
Dyer, Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
Elwood Sberidar), Tom, Steve,
and Roy, Groveport; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Grant and son,
Jason, Baltiinore, Md.

\

EACH

HURRY TO-

Mrs.
Delnius
Moore,
Powhattan Point; Miss Phyllla
Weiss, Miss Shelly Kat~. Pitts·
burgh, Pa.; Ricky Massey,
Silver Springs, Md.; Mr. and
Mrs. Kelly Weller, In·
dependence, Mo.; Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Price, Johnstown;
Mr. · and Mrs. Jack Price,
Jamie; Shelly, and ·Tracy,

chose
floral chiffon
with lorrg
full asleeves,
ruffles
at
the neckline and in the front,
and a bouffant skirt. She also
had accessories of silver and a
corsage of yellow carnations.
Guests were registered by Miss
Betty Wilson, Athens.
A reception · honoring the
couple ' was held at Baker
Center, Ohio J..tniverslty . .The
bride's table featured a three
tiered wedding cake. While
columns adorned with apricot,
green and yellow roses
separated the tiers and the
cake was topped · with the
traditional miniature bride and
groom.
Centerpiece for the luncheon
table was of while gladioli, and
yellow and apricot snowdrift
pOmpons .. Bags of green rice
wrapped in apricot netting,
tied with yellow ribbon and
topped with wedding bands
were given to the guests at the
invitation luncheon.
For. her wedding trip the·
bride changed into a jersey .
~RANDA
prlni with whicfi· she wore -. .• Average of 'total deposlli -the 15 calendar
· white accessOr-Ies.
·
days ending with.call date • • ' . • • • • • • • • • • • . • • f$,413,171.85
Both the bride and groom are
Average of total loans for the 15 calendar ·
·
.
J.une graduates of Ohio
days ending tjlth call date • • • • • • ; • • • • • • • • • P,Zlt,$83.83
University. The new Mrs.
Davi~son · received · ner
· · . I, John T. Wolfe, ~er, of .the allovHBIJIId bank do !MnbY.declare that
bachelor of science degree In'
thui report, of. condition LII!'Ue and correct to the bell! of my llnoWiedc
. eand ·
elementary education with
belief.
.
certification In special
..
education. Mr. Davidson
graduated summa cum laude
We, the Undei'IICned directors attelt the con ectnea of tiU repurt of emwith a bachelor of arts degm
dillon and declare that It llu been eqmlned by us 111111 to the belt of our
in history. Mrs. Davidlon Ia
'knowledce 111111 beUef Ia true and l'GI'I ect.
·
e!llplayed ln ·C!IIcago and her

PAIR

EA.

UM\T 5

M&amp;R COUPON
PUFFS
FACIAL
TISSUES

I

'

~

...

......, .,

.GEORGE HAJJ. AND THE HAJJ.MARKS
t":a';: ~~nd~:l. N:;
· -a~n.d.-..e_.n,~o;.r~Krea~~t.;e;nt;;;e;.;rta;;;in;me;;;.;n;t.;.n;.;it;'.e;l:..;.·-...:.-.-..1· :~d~~~:.
Buena Ave., APl
• ~!11111-••C•o•me·
•The bridegxoom's parenll
}.

.

'

J. "·

WllH
OOUPON

··coNTAC
CAPSULES
lO's

•&amp;~

Dm. en.

.

200

e

GALLON .

EXPIRES 11/4/72 .

fee

Pit'

COUNT

VALVOLINE
'PERMANENT

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Gardeners
-met
·c' ·.omer By'CharIene Hoefl'ICh:'
·. Monday
POMEROY - Discussions
oo the upcomi.ng Chrislmas
fl ower shows and the
possibility of sponsoring a
lighting contest .in the Raci~re
area highlighted a meeting of
the Bend 0' the River Garden
Club held at the home of Mrs.
Edward Simpson Monday
ni~~~ Rutland Garden Club's

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Chrislmas·show to be staged
Nov. 18 and 19 in the Rutland
Unl.ted Method'15 t Church was
announced and members
discussed the invitational
classes of the show _ "We

Mr. and Mrs. jerry Sw~rtz

Yates-Swartz vows
~- taken· October 13th
..
POMEROY - The altar of shoes and hat, and carried.fall
" the Pomeroy Baptist Church flowers . Both of the gowns
, was decorated with baskets of were made by Mrs. Dorothy
, :fall flowers for the wedding of Yowtg, grandmother of the
1 Miss Cathy Yates to Mr. Jerry bride.
Swartz.
Mr. Roger Swartz, Belpre,
Thtnvedding was an event of served as best man for his
Friday, Oct. 13, at 5:30 p.m. brother.
with the Rev. Robert Kuhn
For her daughter's wedding,
• officiating at the double . ring Mrs. Patricia Yates wore a
ceremony.
Music
was long sleeves A-line dress in
presented by Mrs , Robert aqua with black. accessories
Kuhn, organist, and her and a white carnation corsage.
selections included "Romeo Mrs. Harold Swartz, moth-.r of
and Juliet," "Love Story," and the groom, was in a yelloW knit
"We Have Only Just Begun." suit with which she wore a
, The bride was given in white carnation corsage.
marriage by her eldest
A reception honoring the
, brother, Mr· Randy Yates. For couple ·was held in the church
. her weddmg she wore a full social room. The bride's table
:, length gown of satin and lace. featured a three tiered wed:
" The floor-length veil was ~' ding cake with the traditional
:, •tiered. The bride carried a miniature bride and groom.
" bouquet of roses and fall
d'uests were registered by
;, flowers. Her only jewelry was Miss Joyce Kerns. Hostesses
a necklace and heart-shaped were Miss .Cindy Snider and
,. earrings, a gift of the groom. Miss Maureen Hennesy.
,: Miss Sandy Yates, sister of
For a wedding trip the couple
the bride, was the maid of went to Myrtle Beach and
honor, Sl)e was attired in a Washin~ton, D. C. They reside
• coral gown with matching at Spring Ave., Pomeroy.

·~ ~Ckri~tmas ~trb.~m:f1!
~,"(il Fall Me'e'ting

POMEROY - "Chrlslmas chairmen of the various
All Through The House" is the committees. Area clubs are
theme chosen by Mrs. Allen reminded to submit reports of
Grossman for her presentation .their club activities to the
to members of Region II, Ohio respective regional chairmen
'
Association of Garden Clubs, at for presentation
at the'
the fall meeting to be held meeting.
Saturday, Nov. 18, at the
Lunch will be served at noon.
Methodist Church, Route 33, at Prepaid reservations of $2
NeLsonville.
must be sent to Mrs. Victor
Mrs. Joe Bolin, of Rutland, Oakley, Pine Grove Drive,
regional director , has an- Nelsonville, Ohio, 45764, by
nounced that Mrs. Grossman's November 15, The afternoon
demonstration will feature a session will incllltle annumber of holiday items, nouncements and Mrs .
suitable for decorating Grossman's presentation. Mrs.
throughout the house, as well Bolin urges that all area club
as exterior trimmings. Mrs. members attend this InGrossman, a resident of teresting and informative
·Orient, will present seasonal meeting, and that each club
· floral arrangements for dif- have at least one member
ferent rooms in the house , as present to report back to the
well as wall hangings, wreaths, club.
and swags, /incorporating
materials from nature in novel
J.EVY ENDORSED
ways. Sho is an accredited
The
Middleport Elementary
OAGC judge and is an experienced demonstrator , School PTA has endorsed the
giving presentations at Meigs Local School District
meetiqgs of garden clubs and operating levy, This levy will
other organizations throughout be on the November 7 ballot.
Members of the organization
the state.
are
encouraged to work for and
The Nelsonville Garden Club
will host the event, with Mrs. vote for this levy.
Frank Mellinger as chairman.
The day will open with
registration and a coffee hour ·
IN HOSPITAL
,
from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m., to :be
MASON - . Mrs. Wllllam
followed by the business Jacobs, Mason, Is a patient at
meeting, under the direction of Pleasant Valley Hospital. Her
Mrs. Bolin, with reports by room number is 132.

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MJDDI~EPORT
The required to COWl! hours of
J.adies Auxiliary of Feeney- volunteer service in rest
~: . fle.nnelt P01;t 128 endorsed the' homes, lo.cal . hospitals. •· or
POMERoY - II'S .so nice to be'remembered.
· t'mg 1ev)'for
'
· fi ve m1·u opera
the veierans hospitals. Mrs. Lyle
So why not get a card of! to Mabel Sanborn who has a birth&gt; Meigs · Local School DiStrict Roush of Minerva wit) be inday Saturday. Mabel, who left Middleport when her health got so following a talk by Supt. structor and discuss this at the
bad, is extremely anxious to hear from her friends here. Her Ge~rg@ Hargraves· Wednesday field service orientation
address is 4557 Quick Road, Wayside Farm, Peninsula,Ohto.
night·
,
mee tin'g.
ANOTHER DCrOGENARIAN celelratlng a birthday just
Meeting at the hall members
The Firing Une, the carville
recently was Mrs. Jennie Hansher.
received li!erature on the levy Star, and the legislative
Mrs. HanSher is 88 and lives with her son.Jil.Jaw 'and from the school superintendent bulletin were . subscribed to.
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Burdelle MdKirtney on Sycamore St. in who was intrn?uced by Mrs. AcUvities of the junior ~it
Middleport, The family had a celelration laSt SUnday. Peggy, Etta Wlll, pres1d~nt,
. were discussed. It was noted
Lewis and Uretta Jo presented their grilddmotber with a cake
Also praaent for the ~eetlng that the juniors had conand the familY was joined for a dinn~ by Patti Well and Ea"rie were three of.the four girls who · tributed 25 quarts of
Wood.
at~nded Buckeye .Girls State ' homema~e soup plus $10 cash
Relatives and fri~da dropping by during the aften.,.,n to un er ~P~~~otshlp ·or · co- to the Middleport firemen with
extend their good wishes were· Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ward and sponsorshlp of the unit. Each proceeds from the soup going
da gh'• Vi
w. va.; Mr .,an d Mrs. Uoyd Roush '"''
""esh'
rela.ted her experience at toward work at the new
...r, derma,
u-e; Capt
U
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th ·u Rev
Mrs Geo
Mr
·
hi
. nivers1·tY · in firehouse . Another project for
011
8
e
· Cynt a Gohring, Mrs. Columb
· an
·
rge er,
d Ia ed 1 t
Alma NeWton, and Mr
. s. Ebner Wehrung _of Middleport.
us, 1Sp Y P cures the liremen is being planned.
and momentos of · her week
.
ltwasquiteahappyoccasionforMrs.Hansher.
On Nov. 9 a veteran:s party
AND SPEAKING OF BIRTHDAYS and octogenarians, our there. · .
will be held at the Southeastern
be
Beth Fultz, daughter of Mr. Ohio Mental Health Center.
stTh
wishes go to Marcia
Karr
of
Syracuse,
~
and
M.rs. Bernard Fultz
.1
, .' co- The juniors on Nov. 12 at 12
~e was certam Ynothing dull about her 8?nd! Just one big spo~sored by the C1hzens noon wiU serve· a dinner for
week of eel
_ elrations
. and to say she enjoyed ev"'""
•• , minute is Nallonal .B"nk
• . • reported
..
. that members on the ,Round-up
putting it lightly. She was wined, (weD, not really) and dined, as. a res1den~ of Hayes ·City, Train in Middleport to pickup
~aded, and showered with.gifts and flowers. Who could ask Nmon Cqunty, ~he . was due payment cards.· FOod for
for anything more!
,
defeated ln the prunary for the' dinner will be provided by
The week began when Mr. and Mrs. Carl Weese took her .on a pro~cuting attor~ey, but was . the post. The jwtiors will also
scenic tour of Meigs and Gallia Counties ending up at Bob Evans appomted a page m the ~nate. furnish 1,000 game books for
Steak House· for a dinner.
·
Barbara Archer, daughter of the U!gion Halloween party to
On Thursday the Eagles aass of the Syracuse United Mr · and Mrs. Charle~ Archer, be staged Tuesday.
Methodist Church honored her. She was presented with a lovely · sponsored by the un1t, told of
Reported ill were Mrs.
pink sweater, a pink raincoat and a decorated cake inscribed her expemnce as a member of Pauline Gallagher, a patient at
with a scripture and having 10 candles _one for each year she the Board of Education ·m Veterans Memorial Hospital ·
has taught the class.
.
Clark City, Demerus County; Fern Bradbury confined to~
Friday, her birthday amiversary, turned out equally as nice. and Patti Well commented on Holzer Medical Center; Mrs.
Eleanor Crow entertained with. a luncheon for Miss Karr and .b~r role of f1re chief of .Toe Turner, a patient at a
several of her friends. Sle was presented gifts along with a dozen B1ckerd1ke CltY, Allstock Marion hospital, Charles Diehl
red roses from Mr. and Mrs: Millard Van Meter .In the afternoon Cowtty ·
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the group drove to the U!tart area to view the countrY home
Reporting on the fall district
whlch Mr. and Mrs. Crow are renovaUng. It is the former Will .conference held recently at
Crow home.
Lithopolis were Mrs. Albert
Roush, Mrs. Ermjl Hendricks,
Miss Karr's delightful week was topped off with a visit from Mrs. Shaula Roush, and Mrs.
Rose Am Jenkins and a group of young people. They serenaded Charles Kessinger, district
her and then presented her with a plate of cookies and candy.
president. Middleport was one
Aswesald,therewasnothin~dullaboutMarcia's82nd!
of nine units In the district to
CAN'T THINK OF A SOUl. that's not interested in seeing an have reached the goal at that
animal shelter established in Meigs County. The problem is are time. 11 was noted that the wtit
you interested ENOUGH to get behind the project and really help noll' has 157 paid members, tw'o
see that it becomes a reality,
over goal.
There is a way that you can help now.
The field service orientation
Next Saturday a bazaar will be staged at the Grace was announced for Nov. 19 at
EptscopaiParishHouseandallproceedswillgointotheshelter Junction City, 2to 4 p.m. It Is
lund. Contributions are needed, and just about anything and open to both J.egion and •
everything will be accepted by the Meigs County Humane auxiliary members of District
Society conunittee of Mrs, Rita U!wis and Mrs. Dorothy Am· 8. Members were reminded
t&gt;erger.
that a field service card Is
They will be at the parish house onIFriday evening from 7 to 9
to receive whatever cornes in and setup for the bazaar which will
$18 HEEL
be held all day on Saturday. Handwork, baked goods, an.iques,
whatever, will be appreciated, .
WA$.SORRY TO HEAR that genial AnneGrace Torchiano,
home economist for the Ohio Power Co. in this district, bad
uff d
ck
{I
. s ere a heart au.a • Currently she Is st l hospitalized,.. 1 ·,::l froo.t\~~~~r.l.
although progressing, but Is now faced with a · three •month
Vivid Fall 'Colors
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recuperative period. When we get her address, we'll pasa It
along. So many have enjoyed her demonstrations over the past

Three Kings of Orient Are,'"in
the Ja panese manner; an d
"There's a Song in the Air" and
"There's A Star in the Sky,"
both modern .arrangement
classes.
Mrs. Robert Kuhn, county
contact chairman, spoke of the
Chrislmas show of the Meigs
County
Garden
Club
Association and of the fall
meeting of county clubs tO be
scheduled soon. Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter and Mrs. Bert
Grimm
requested · .the
assistance of club members
with the county holiday show
which this year will ,be held on
Dec. 2 and 3.
Mrs. carpenter presented to
the club a certificate of appredation from the Gallipolis
State Institute.
Read at the meeting from the
fall Garden Path by Mrs.
Grinun were suggestions that
clubs encourage children to
keep from littering their
homes, schools and places they
visit, that members' gardens
be visited and that each person
choose a section of their yard
or lawn for a change in planting next year. This i&lt;,lea is to
be developed at the November
meeting to be held at the home
of Mrs. Andrew Cross. The
planning of tours to various
outstanding garden spots in the
state was also urged.
The program was the
making of dried arrangements,
modern and traditional from
the materials brought by the
m~mbers. Committee§ ano\mt~~- '''" ., r.f , '"tJ" ,
bh!hl, · Mr;,e~fp;:ier; ar:;r~ ·
Kuhn, lhEl!'apy; Mrs. Ernest
Wingett, Mrs. Clifford Morris,
Mrs. Cross, horticulture ; Mrs. years.
Carpenter, Mrs. Cross, Mrs.
EUGENE E. DAVIS OF RACINE, Route 2, is literally
Simpson, civic; Mrs. w. o. thanking his lucky stars. Friday while working on a corr. picker
Barnitz, green thumb; Mrs. he got his arm caught. It was pretty badly mashed, but there
Ben Philson, Mrs. Wingett,
tours; and Mrs. Carpenter and
Mrs. Simpson, publicity.
Mrs. Andrew Cross gave
devotions using the theme "I
Thank My God." An Important
thought was that each person
should set aside a special week
in which he or she write notes
to persons who do much but go
wtthanked. The club prayer
and poem were read by the
group from the new program
books w~ich had been compiled
by Mrs. Simpson, Mrs. Morris,
and Mrs. Ralph Webb. Mrs.
Grimm, president, thanked the
committee for their work.
Roil call was the showing and
Identification of dried plant

were no broken bones and no
other problems.

·awarded by Grange

confined to the University
Hospital, ahd Mrs. · Mildred
Garson ill at her .home In Rich.
mond; Ind. It was also noted
that Mrs. Beatrice Robson and
Mrs. Martha Fox are both
Improving from illness at their
homes.
Mrs. Freda Clark and Mrs.
Ka\hleen Manley were ap- ,
pointed to fill vacancies on the
executive board. Mrs. Shaula
Roush ·and Mrs . Kathleen
Manley received chair- ·
inanships in the unit.
Plans were made for a corn
bread and soup dinner at 6:30
p.m. on Nov, 22 at the hall.
Members are to take either
salad or dessert.
Preceding Wednesday
night's meeting a potluck
dinner :was served. The door
prize donated by Mrs. Clark
was won by, Shauia Roush.
Officers report:s were read with
the treasur.er's report being
filed for audit. There was
prayer by the chaplain, silent
prayer for the war dead, and
the pledge to the flag.

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Mr. and Mrs. Buckley.

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BELPRE - Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Buckley, 919 Braun Ave.,
Belpre, were honored on their
golden wedding anniversary,
Sept. 23, with a luncheon hosted
by their chllaren at the Elks
Club in Parkersburg. A surprise card shower was also
held for the honored couple.
Mr. and Mrs. Buckley were
married in Pomeroy and
resided in Reedsville for 40

BOOSTERS TO MEET
RACINE - The Southern
Band B..o91kU willlll£c.li17; aL
p.m. Tuesday at the Racine
High School.

PP,~.!

Black or Brown leather
and Brushed Pig Skin

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1Ht'~~sHot~~·

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Dudley's Aorist

:so·x :;,~
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Whtrt Sllot1 Art Stnllllly Priced I

59 N. Second St.

SON BORN OCT. 13
MINERSVILLE - Mr. and
Mrs. James Theodore (Ted)
Russell of Minersvllle, are
announcing the birth of their
first child, a seven pound, eight
ounce son, Michael James, on
Oct. 13 at the Holzer Medical
Cenler.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Pugh of
Minersville, and paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
William Russell, Mil)ersvill~.
The
maternal
greatgrandparents are Mrs. Wilda
Pugh of Stockport and Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Pettibone of
Lo.';jll. Paterna~-

Hush• . .
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Wolf Pen.

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JUST RECEIVED
LARGE SELECTION

BUDGET
DRESSES

material for fall arrangements. Money plant,
teasals, cattails, Chinese
lanlerns, dock, straw flowers,
snowballs, beech grass were
among · the
materials
displayed,
A mass arrangement of
autumn nowers centered the
refreshment table and other
arrangements were displayed
throughout the home. A dessert
course was served.

Sizes 10 to 20
9.95 to 15.00
All Washable
Main &amp; Sycamore

lolA'S

Twice

POMEROY

You've Ev·er

Knownl

FOR SALE

BUSINESS BUILDING
. Sycamore and Main Streets, Pomeroy,
Ohio. Good rental from businesses. 2
apartments, one with 3 bedrooms . .
(:ould finance from rentals. Good
investment property.

PHILCO®
STEREO· SOUND
, CENTER

992-2642 or 992-2562

wllh built-in :

MEIGS

Olli f8 75 WITH ,

~h• Hidden ltecllner!

INN·

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Striking beauty,
~it ;.clintt' cei.fert without
bit chair size. Tht two· in-one Mystery Chair Ml It-alii Juit
shift your weight, tho hidden heQ.I•tosl and ottollllft ~•J.IIII to
makt a full siu rfcllw. Thtw t...,tl chairs faatM' M1111 ,..
.iniO~od solid hordw.-4 fro..-1,, ~- Fl•-•'"1\"' ,llll'lfltt.
oft!~ •-th, ciMilplo~ly •-i-ll•lanctil teclint.. 111t'-1t.,.•
Flusteel1q-llty,

SATURDAY NIGHT
10 P.M. • 2 A.M.

by

........ J

wlrh fo01oua •rue:.,.,1o;~ntlnt

The Amlter Lounge Opens At 11dHJ A.M.

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·37 GuE$T ROOMS.- NEW, MODERN, BY DAY OR WEEK
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PARTY ·MD BANQUET ROOMS - BY RESERVATION
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Nuggets
Granulated dog food ,
Tas-T-Chew cat
hearty and pailit8tlle-:forom)Jtated with the same nulritional know-how that ma:~es
LANDMARK poultry and
stock feed Ohio 's le&lt;tdir1gl
brand . Your pets
the,m. you'll like the price_!

lANDMARKe

•

Now is· a. greot time to _put the ntw
MYSTE.RY CHAIR in yolll' ho111tl

BAKERMIDDLEPORT,
FURNITURE.
OHIO
,.

• 8 TRACK TAPE
CARTRIDGE PLAYER
• 4-SPEED AUTOMATiC
RECORD CHANGER
• FM STEREO, FM/ AM
• RADIO

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E.O.M. ·SALE
MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY, OCT. 30-31

GIRLS SHOES
. Look elegant and stately in a sweep of plaid ..
when you wetifthis separatea-look long dreaa.
In machine washable polrester. Red/Black, .
·
Yellow/Black. S1zes 10-18.
·

-AND MISSES ·

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I'URCIIAS£ Of 25ll, lA&amp; Of DOG
OR CAT FOOI~.I5 VAlUE! . . .

Reg. lo· $8.99

$3800

SALE

POMEROY. LANDMARK
JackW. Clrse_y ,Mgr.
Serving Meigs, Glllla &amp; Mason Counties
Pll- 992-2111
Open Mon.-Set. untll6 p.m.
,.

(Buffet Luncheon ll:OOto 1:~. Mondaylhru Saturday&gt;"

J

Observance theme noted

FRED W, CROW

greal giN. too .

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Spooks highlight of day

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The New

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'~:RIAL DELAYED
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
trial of seven men indicted in
the Watergale bugging case,
originally scheduled to begin
Nov. -15, has been postponed for
two months' because the
presiding judge has a pinched
nerve. ·u. S.' District Court
Judge John J. Sirica issued a
two-page statement Friday
announcing that the trial will
now begin J~n. 8, the earliest of
three alternative dates given to
him by derense lawyers.

the Chair

An official size and weight
Rellcn basketball, vinyl covered with red, white and blue
panels, and black seams .
iike those used by lhe pros.
(Who, knows. you may have
a future star lhere!) Makes a

POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 992-3629

CHEERLEADER HURT
POMEROY - Nedra RiggB,
17, '!be Plaln.s, an Albena High
School cheerleader was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the Pomeroy E-R S(jiUid
during the Meigs-Athens game
Friday night. 'Miss Riggs
sufiered a fractured left wrist
while leading ~eers. She was

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You'll Love These!

lr-••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

years. They moved to Belpre
two years ago. Mrs. Buckley
was the former Wilma
Whiteside of Long Bottom, Mr.
Buckley is a retired member of
Teamsters Local Union of
Parkersburg and was last
.employed by the Dupont Co.
They have four surviving
children, Mrs. Charles
(Phyllis) Ayers, Belpre; Mrs.
Harold (Mary Helen) Humphrey, Belleville, W.Va.; Paul
Buckley, Coolville, and
Howard Buckley, Marietta. A
son, Keith, and a daughter,
Darlene, are deceased. There
are five grandchildren.
Mr, and Mrs. Buckley are
affiliated with the Belpre
Church of Christ.

~ ~:~~~sVIlle
~d~~"~1'tf
'r"f·
~.
and Mrs. Howard Russell of

MIDDLEPORT,O:

Middleport, 0.

Holcomb .
A mixer game was enjoyed
by all 'l'ilh Mrs . Maude
Holcomb winning the prize.
Mrs. Holcomb is also a · fifty
year member anll was.honored
several years ago. .
Mrs . C. E. Stout, former
master, spoke briefly as did
Miss Octa Gillogly whose
grandmother did the needle
point work of the Laurel
Grange sign that has been used
in the hall since the grange was
organized in 1874. The singing
of "God Be With You" closed
the program.
HONORED - Fifty year members of l.aurel Grange
The group was invited to the
were bonored recently. Members honored were left,
dinning room where a table
Marguerite Bigony and Nellie Vale, right, center Is Everett
with a gold cloth was decorated
Holcomb,
master. Fifty year Golden Sheaf Certificates were .
with white candles, and nowers
· presented by Deputy Master of the Ohio State Grange, Virgil
and cake bearing the words
Nellie and Marguerite - 50
Atkins.
, years.
Presiding at Ute punch howl
.
was Mrs . Vale's daughter-in • . coffee servtce was Mrs. John
IN CLEVELAND
law, Mrs. John Vale 0 ( V~le's sister, Mrs . Neva
MIDDLEPORT - Among
POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs. Purley Karr, above, will
Columbus and presiding at the Nicholson .
the members of Evangeline
Chapler 172, Order of the
observe their golden wedding anniversary Sunday, Nov: 5,
Eastern Star, in Cleveland for
with open bouse from 2 to 4 p.m. at their home in Chester.
Grand Chapler were Mr. and
. Relatives and friends are invited to call during the open
.
Mrs. Bob King, Mr. and Mrs.househoursbyMr.andMrs. Karrs' daughter, Mrs. Woodrow
Haymond Wilcox, Mrs. Evelyn
Mora, and sons, Paul Karr and Horace Karr, who are hosting
Lewis,
Mr, and Mrs. William
the observance.
By Alma Marshall
in Mason County who are Mrs. throughout the room . Items King, Mrs. Helen Mllhoan, and
PT, PI.EASANT - Comic Girard Fowler, Mrs. Odus were displayed by Leon, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Chesher.
characters and spooks galore Smith, Mrs. Oak Thomas, Mrs. lllahee , Mason, Haven ,
made their appearance Thurs- Howard Roush, Mrs. John Pleasant, Wohelo, Anne
day at Mason Cqunty Smith, Mrs. Harry Staats, Mrs. Bailey, Avalanche, Pioneer,
'
Achievement Day at the Moose Leo Thompson, Mrs. Ray Letart and Sassafras Clubs.
Hall in Pt. Pleasant. "Fun and Thompson, Mrs. Otmer Roush, Many individuals received blue were Mrs. Edwin Winters,
Frolic, " the theme, was Mrs . Iva Capehart, Mrs. and red ribbons.
Mrs. Ronald Rickard and Mrs.
carried out to the fullest when Emory Hart, Mrs. Sadie
Two clubs received blue Freddie Thabet.
·
clubs put on skits during the Warth, Mrs. Lester Foreman, ribbons on their scrapbooks.
Mrs. Ray Fox, Charleston
afternoon session.
These
included
U!tart
and
Area
. Representative, was
Mrs. Homer Johnson, Mrs.
"Grandfather's Cow," a Hester J.ee, Mrs. B. S. lllahee; Mason, Anne Bailey, introduced.
replica or a cow was hilarious. Greenlee, Mrs. Curtis Hunt, both received red ribbons and
Recalving door prizes were
The Helping Hand Club, the Mrs. Ray Friend, Mrs. Roy Haven, U!on and Pocahontas, Mrs. Landon Smith, Mrs. Patty·
ere a tor of this character, Friend, Mrs. Louis Sayre, Mrs. while ribbons.
U!e, Mrs. James Blain, Linda
received a blue ribbon for the John Marshall , Mrs. John
Cowtty committee chairmen Rice, Mrs. Harold U!wls, Mrs.
best acting. Taking part in this l'clcDaniel, Mrs. Madge Byus, were recognized and given a A. P. Roush, Mrs. Carl Dab- ·
were Mary, Thabet, Mrs. Mrs. C. E. McCulloch, Mrs. gilt on beha)( of the council. ney, Fay Meadows, Miss Irene
Homer Johnson, Mrs. Lester Leslie Bennett, Mrs , Otis Committees and chairman of Sayre, Mrs. Norman Foss,
Foreman, Doris Roberts, Litchdield, Mrs . A. P. Roush, each are, Projects for In- Margaret Capehart, Florence
Linda Jewell and Lois Yowtg. Mrs. Robert Hoffman, Mrs. dependent Study; Mrs. Ray Culllns, Mrs. C. F. Buckle and.
Mrs..Mary Casto of the U!on Charles Jewell, Mrs. T. Bert Thompson; Citizenship, Mrs. Flo Spears.
Club received a blue ribbon for Roush, Mrs. Henry Elias, Mrs. U!onard Miller ; Arts, Mrs. Club reports were given by
her impressive patriotic Marvin Fry, Mrs . George Vurl Randolph; Family Life, Anne Bailey, Haven, lllahee,
reading about "Old Glory." Keener, Mrs. Bill McDermitt, Mrs. Harry Staats; Health, J.etart, Mason, P1oneer,
Background music made this Mrs. Elmer Newberry, . Mrs. Mrs. Marvin Fry; In- Upland and U!on .
outstanding.
Those that masked and were
Ronald Rickard, Mrs. H. 1.. ternational Relations, Mrs.
The Mason Homemakers Smith, Mrs. Larry Sullivan, Jolin Marshall; Safety, Mrs. judged included Marjorie
.
(Ziegfleld Follies) received a Mrs. Marcus Weaver, Mrs. Gene Jewell; Yearbook, Mrs. , Grueser, Roberta Maynard,
..~1'\Mr~ _a if l4Jis&lt; ,W.aq~ ,D.lBlack,Rutlt1J1d&gt;''· •red ribbon• ton their 1 tlailce. Raymon(Zusp~li, , ¥-rs, (;. S. l.IOf.!..' l\ ~~"J~; Metn(\J'Ia L!nda Jewell,~ ·E~l\111: Ql]l,
abMe;'"wil1 '6\illei've thl\!r iiOtb · weddmg .. anruversar.y. on.. Takihg ··part ·were' Edlth' Fbx Dabney, Mrs. 'ilooort f:.tng, Book, Mrs. Harofd IlwiB .
· SharonMcCieuan;r.tarY'ca!«&gt;,
·Tuesday,.October 31. They:were married in 1942 at Gallipolis, Roberta Young, Matilda Noble: Mrs. G. E. Lunsford, Maude
The Achieyement Day A. Marshaii,..Jean Henderson,
Ohio and have resided in Rutland throughout their marriage. Catherine Smith, Hazel Smith, Oyke, Mrs. 'Jay Keister and Committee
members Carolyn J.llchfleld, Bonnie
The Bia~s are the parents of seven children, Jerry of Joyce Carson and Evelyn Mrs. Abigail Thompson.
recognized ·and Introduced Waldie and Betty Rickard.
Rutland; Ronald of Danville; Roger of Rutland; Kenneth Stewart. The Letart Club's skit
Mrs. Keefer introduced the
Lynn at home, and three girls, Debra, Linda and Brenda, all was a baking demonstration,
judges, Mrs. Julia Lowery,
at home. They also haVe seven grandchililren.
which received a while ribbon . area representative In
Taking part were Mrs. Dorothy Nutrition and Mrs. Charlotte
Click, Jr. and Mrs. Mrs. Lois Critchfield, Putnam Co. Home
Durst. Other clubs taking part Denionstration Agent and
were Anne Bailey, Avalanche, Virginia
Black,
Home
Pioneer, Pleasant, Pocahontas Eco nomi st, Appalachian
and Sassafras.
Power . Kathy Yost, Home
Mrs . Howard
(Lida) Economist Appalachian
POMEROY .,.. "AComing of Church.
Mrs.
Campbell
Harper,
Garla
nd,
Mason
Coun
ty Power, was also introduced ..
Age~· 18 the theme of the World
Mrs. Landon Smith of the
Community Day observance of president, reports that the Homemakers president, and
program
is
based
on
Mrs.
Vicki
Keefer,
County
nominating
committee named
Church Women United of
Meigs County to be hel.d Friday "creation's awe at watching Extens ion Agent , Home the candidates for Mason
at1 :30p.m. at Grace Episcopal the sight of God's sons and Demonstration, welcomed the County Homemakers Council
daughters come into their guests and club members, 127 offices. Of the two candidales,
own." Olurch organizations registering.
Mrs. Ray Fox, by unanimous
are reminded that $3 cer- Following the flag salute, the vote, was elected president,
tificates for mission work will group sang "America." Mrs. su.cceeding Mrs , Howard
he sold.
Marvin
Chapman
ac- Garland. Mrs. Jesse Brown
Participating in the program companied by Mrs. Vurl was elected treasurer.
Veter111111 Memorial Hoopltal will be Mrs. 0. B. Stout, Mrs. Randolph at the piano led in
A past presfdent's pin and a
ADMITTED
Dewey William Frecker, Mrs. Edward group singing. Mrs. Eimer gift of glassware were
Pullins, Pomeroy; Ronald Foster, Mrs. Patrick Locbary, Grueser assisled during the presented · to her by Mrs.
liostic, Point Pleasant; Gary Mrs. Allen Hampton, Mrs. Karl singing.
Keefer. She also presented a
Wolfe, Racine; Wllllam Dye, Grueser, Mrs. James Criswell, Mrs . Marvin Fry, vice gift to Mrs. Jesse ·Brown, who
New Haven; Maggie Gilmore, Mrs. Ervin Bumgardner, Mrs. president, was in charge of filled the treasurer vacancy
Racine; Carl Thomas, Long Arnold Richards, Mrs. Ben devotionals and Mrs. Ray Fox, due to Mrs. Wilbur Planta'
Bottom.
Neutzling, Mrs. Thomas Kelly, Charleston area represen- illness.
DIIICHARGEI&gt;' - Charles Mrs. J . E. D. Hartinger, Mrs. tative, led in prayer.
· Mro. Brown gave a financial
Decker, ~ Dalley, Clifford Marvin Burt, Mrs. Grett~ Mrs. Keefer named the Blue report and Mrs. James Blain
Ellilltt, Edna BurtiB, Norman SimpsWl, Mrs. Edith Sisson, Ribbon clubs and these in- secretary ~s report.
l.lludermllt, Dwight Haley.
and Mrs. Harper.
· eluded Haven, Avalanche,
Mrs. Keefer.installed the two
Letart, Illahee, Mason, officers and explained the
meaning of the Home
-~-----------------• Rhododendron
and Pocahontas Demonstration emblem.
Homemakers Clubs.
She also named the charter
Craft items and projects
members of the various clubs were displayed on tables

Children give party for
parents on September 23rd

a

BOOTS FOR THE LADIES

DRIED
FLOWER
ARRANGEMENTS

CARPENTER - At an open
meeting o[ I.aurel Grange
recently Nellie Vale and
Marguerite 'Bigony were
presented :;o year ~olden Sheaf
Certificates by Deputy Master
of the Ohio State Grange, Virgil
Atkins.
Plans for the occasion were
made by r,trs. Avanef Holliday
and her mothfr,_Mrs. G. A.
.. Radikin.More than 60 people,
friends or . the honored ladies
attended and. were welcomed
by Worthy Master Everett
Holcomb.
Earl Starkey; Gatekeeper of
the Ohio State Grange and
former member of Laurel
Grange , was the featured
speaker. CorsageB were
presented to the two honored
membep by Mrs. Neva
Nicholson.
·
A musical program of piano
and instrumental music was
presenled by Judy and Gary
Holliday and Pam and Marcia

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Gardeners
-met
·c' ·.omer By'CharIene Hoefl'ICh:'
·. Monday
POMEROY - Discussions
oo the upcomi.ng Chrislmas
fl ower shows and the
possibility of sponsoring a
lighting contest .in the Raci~re
area highlighted a meeting of
the Bend 0' the River Garden
Club held at the home of Mrs.
Edward Simpson Monday
ni~~~ Rutland Garden Club's

I

Chrislmas·show to be staged
Nov. 18 and 19 in the Rutland
Unl.ted Method'15 t Church was
announced and members
discussed the invitational
classes of the show _ "We

Mr. and Mrs. jerry Sw~rtz

Yates-Swartz vows
~- taken· October 13th
..
POMEROY - The altar of shoes and hat, and carried.fall
" the Pomeroy Baptist Church flowers . Both of the gowns
, was decorated with baskets of were made by Mrs. Dorothy
, :fall flowers for the wedding of Yowtg, grandmother of the
1 Miss Cathy Yates to Mr. Jerry bride.
Swartz.
Mr. Roger Swartz, Belpre,
Thtnvedding was an event of served as best man for his
Friday, Oct. 13, at 5:30 p.m. brother.
with the Rev. Robert Kuhn
For her daughter's wedding,
• officiating at the double . ring Mrs. Patricia Yates wore a
ceremony.
Music
was long sleeves A-line dress in
presented by Mrs , Robert aqua with black. accessories
Kuhn, organist, and her and a white carnation corsage.
selections included "Romeo Mrs. Harold Swartz, moth-.r of
and Juliet," "Love Story," and the groom, was in a yelloW knit
"We Have Only Just Begun." suit with which she wore a
, The bride was given in white carnation corsage.
marriage by her eldest
A reception honoring the
, brother, Mr· Randy Yates. For couple ·was held in the church
. her weddmg she wore a full social room. The bride's table
:, length gown of satin and lace. featured a three tiered wed:
" The floor-length veil was ~' ding cake with the traditional
:, •tiered. The bride carried a miniature bride and groom.
" bouquet of roses and fall
d'uests were registered by
;, flowers. Her only jewelry was Miss Joyce Kerns. Hostesses
a necklace and heart-shaped were Miss .Cindy Snider and
,. earrings, a gift of the groom. Miss Maureen Hennesy.
,: Miss Sandy Yates, sister of
For a wedding trip the couple
the bride, was the maid of went to Myrtle Beach and
honor, Sl)e was attired in a Washin~ton, D. C. They reside
• coral gown with matching at Spring Ave., Pomeroy.

·~ ~Ckri~tmas ~trb.~m:f1!
~,"(il Fall Me'e'ting

POMEROY - "Chrlslmas chairmen of the various
All Through The House" is the committees. Area clubs are
theme chosen by Mrs. Allen reminded to submit reports of
Grossman for her presentation .their club activities to the
to members of Region II, Ohio respective regional chairmen
'
Association of Garden Clubs, at for presentation
at the'
the fall meeting to be held meeting.
Saturday, Nov. 18, at the
Lunch will be served at noon.
Methodist Church, Route 33, at Prepaid reservations of $2
NeLsonville.
must be sent to Mrs. Victor
Mrs. Joe Bolin, of Rutland, Oakley, Pine Grove Drive,
regional director , has an- Nelsonville, Ohio, 45764, by
nounced that Mrs. Grossman's November 15, The afternoon
demonstration will feature a session will incllltle annumber of holiday items, nouncements and Mrs .
suitable for decorating Grossman's presentation. Mrs.
throughout the house, as well Bolin urges that all area club
as exterior trimmings. Mrs. members attend this InGrossman, a resident of teresting and informative
·Orient, will present seasonal meeting, and that each club
· floral arrangements for dif- have at least one member
ferent rooms in the house , as present to report back to the
well as wall hangings, wreaths, club.
and swags, /incorporating
materials from nature in novel
J.EVY ENDORSED
ways. Sho is an accredited
The
Middleport Elementary
OAGC judge and is an experienced demonstrator , School PTA has endorsed the
giving presentations at Meigs Local School District
meetiqgs of garden clubs and operating levy, This levy will
other organizations throughout be on the November 7 ballot.
Members of the organization
the state.
are
encouraged to work for and
The Nelsonville Garden Club
will host the event, with Mrs. vote for this levy.
Frank Mellinger as chairman.
The day will open with
registration and a coffee hour ·
IN HOSPITAL
,
from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m., to :be
MASON - . Mrs. Wllllam
followed by the business Jacobs, Mason, Is a patient at
meeting, under the direction of Pleasant Valley Hospital. Her
Mrs. Bolin, with reports by room number is 132.

r

MJDDI~EPORT
The required to COWl! hours of
J.adies Auxiliary of Feeney- volunteer service in rest
~: . fle.nnelt P01;t 128 endorsed the' homes, lo.cal . hospitals. •· or
POMERoY - II'S .so nice to be'remembered.
· t'mg 1ev)'for
'
· fi ve m1·u opera
the veierans hospitals. Mrs. Lyle
So why not get a card of! to Mabel Sanborn who has a birth&gt; Meigs · Local School DiStrict Roush of Minerva wit) be inday Saturday. Mabel, who left Middleport when her health got so following a talk by Supt. structor and discuss this at the
bad, is extremely anxious to hear from her friends here. Her Ge~rg@ Hargraves· Wednesday field service orientation
address is 4557 Quick Road, Wayside Farm, Peninsula,Ohto.
night·
,
mee tin'g.
ANOTHER DCrOGENARIAN celelratlng a birthday just
Meeting at the hall members
The Firing Une, the carville
recently was Mrs. Jennie Hansher.
received li!erature on the levy Star, and the legislative
Mrs. HanSher is 88 and lives with her son.Jil.Jaw 'and from the school superintendent bulletin were . subscribed to.
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Burdelle MdKirtney on Sycamore St. in who was intrn?uced by Mrs. AcUvities of the junior ~it
Middleport, The family had a celelration laSt SUnday. Peggy, Etta Wlll, pres1d~nt,
. were discussed. It was noted
Lewis and Uretta Jo presented their grilddmotber with a cake
Also praaent for the ~eetlng that the juniors had conand the familY was joined for a dinn~ by Patti Well and Ea"rie were three of.the four girls who · tributed 25 quarts of
Wood.
at~nded Buckeye .Girls State ' homema~e soup plus $10 cash
Relatives and fri~da dropping by during the aften.,.,n to un er ~P~~~otshlp ·or · co- to the Middleport firemen with
extend their good wishes were· Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ward and sponsorshlp of the unit. Each proceeds from the soup going
da gh'• Vi
w. va.; Mr .,an d Mrs. Uoyd Roush '"''
""esh'
rela.ted her experience at toward work at the new
...r, derma,
u-e; Capt
U
1 aI
th ·u Rev
Mrs Geo
Mr
·
hi
. nivers1·tY · in firehouse . Another project for
011
8
e
· Cynt a Gohring, Mrs. Columb
· an
·
rge er,
d Ia ed 1 t
Alma NeWton, and Mr
. s. Ebner Wehrung _of Middleport.
us, 1Sp Y P cures the liremen is being planned.
and momentos of · her week
.
ltwasquiteahappyoccasionforMrs.Hansher.
On Nov. 9 a veteran:s party
AND SPEAKING OF BIRTHDAYS and octogenarians, our there. · .
will be held at the Southeastern
be
Beth Fultz, daughter of Mr. Ohio Mental Health Center.
stTh
wishes go to Marcia
Karr
of
Syracuse,
~
and
M.rs. Bernard Fultz
.1
, .' co- The juniors on Nov. 12 at 12
~e was certam Ynothing dull about her 8?nd! Just one big spo~sored by the C1hzens noon wiU serve· a dinner for
week of eel
_ elrations
. and to say she enjoyed ev"'""
•• , minute is Nallonal .B"nk
• . • reported
..
. that members on the ,Round-up
putting it lightly. She was wined, (weD, not really) and dined, as. a res1den~ of Hayes ·City, Train in Middleport to pickup
~aded, and showered with.gifts and flowers. Who could ask Nmon Cqunty, ~he . was due payment cards.· FOod for
for anything more!
,
defeated ln the prunary for the' dinner will be provided by
The week began when Mr. and Mrs. Carl Weese took her .on a pro~cuting attor~ey, but was . the post. The jwtiors will also
scenic tour of Meigs and Gallia Counties ending up at Bob Evans appomted a page m the ~nate. furnish 1,000 game books for
Steak House· for a dinner.
·
Barbara Archer, daughter of the U!gion Halloween party to
On Thursday the Eagles aass of the Syracuse United Mr · and Mrs. Charle~ Archer, be staged Tuesday.
Methodist Church honored her. She was presented with a lovely · sponsored by the un1t, told of
Reported ill were Mrs.
pink sweater, a pink raincoat and a decorated cake inscribed her expemnce as a member of Pauline Gallagher, a patient at
with a scripture and having 10 candles _one for each year she the Board of Education ·m Veterans Memorial Hospital ·
has taught the class.
.
Clark City, Demerus County; Fern Bradbury confined to~
Friday, her birthday amiversary, turned out equally as nice. and Patti Well commented on Holzer Medical Center; Mrs.
Eleanor Crow entertained with. a luncheon for Miss Karr and .b~r role of f1re chief of .Toe Turner, a patient at a
several of her friends. Sle was presented gifts along with a dozen B1ckerd1ke CltY, Allstock Marion hospital, Charles Diehl
red roses from Mr. and Mrs: Millard Van Meter .In the afternoon Cowtty ·
. . '
the group drove to the U!tart area to view the countrY home
Reporting on the fall district
whlch Mr. and Mrs. Crow are renovaUng. It is the former Will .conference held recently at
Crow home.
Lithopolis were Mrs. Albert
Roush, Mrs. Ermjl Hendricks,
Miss Karr's delightful week was topped off with a visit from Mrs. Shaula Roush, and Mrs.
Rose Am Jenkins and a group of young people. They serenaded Charles Kessinger, district
her and then presented her with a plate of cookies and candy.
president. Middleport was one
Aswesald,therewasnothin~dullaboutMarcia's82nd!
of nine units In the district to
CAN'T THINK OF A SOUl. that's not interested in seeing an have reached the goal at that
animal shelter established in Meigs County. The problem is are time. 11 was noted that the wtit
you interested ENOUGH to get behind the project and really help noll' has 157 paid members, tw'o
see that it becomes a reality,
over goal.
There is a way that you can help now.
The field service orientation
Next Saturday a bazaar will be staged at the Grace was announced for Nov. 19 at
EptscopaiParishHouseandallproceedswillgointotheshelter Junction City, 2to 4 p.m. It Is
lund. Contributions are needed, and just about anything and open to both J.egion and •
everything will be accepted by the Meigs County Humane auxiliary members of District
Society conunittee of Mrs, Rita U!wis and Mrs. Dorothy Am· 8. Members were reminded
t&gt;erger.
that a field service card Is
They will be at the parish house onIFriday evening from 7 to 9
to receive whatever cornes in and setup for the bazaar which will
$18 HEEL
be held all day on Saturday. Handwork, baked goods, an.iques,
whatever, will be appreciated, .
WA$.SORRY TO HEAR that genial AnneGrace Torchiano,
home economist for the Ohio Power Co. in this district, bad
uff d
ck
{I
. s ere a heart au.a • Currently she Is st l hospitalized,.. 1 ·,::l froo.t\~~~~r.l.
although progressing, but Is now faced with a · three •month
Vivid Fall 'Colors
'
recuperative period. When we get her address, we'll pasa It
along. So many have enjoyed her demonstrations over the past

Three Kings of Orient Are,'"in
the Ja panese manner; an d
"There's a Song in the Air" and
"There's A Star in the Sky,"
both modern .arrangement
classes.
Mrs. Robert Kuhn, county
contact chairman, spoke of the
Chrislmas show of the Meigs
County
Garden
Club
Association and of the fall
meeting of county clubs tO be
scheduled soon. Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter and Mrs. Bert
Grimm
requested · .the
assistance of club members
with the county holiday show
which this year will ,be held on
Dec. 2 and 3.
Mrs. carpenter presented to
the club a certificate of appredation from the Gallipolis
State Institute.
Read at the meeting from the
fall Garden Path by Mrs.
Grinun were suggestions that
clubs encourage children to
keep from littering their
homes, schools and places they
visit, that members' gardens
be visited and that each person
choose a section of their yard
or lawn for a change in planting next year. This i&lt;,lea is to
be developed at the November
meeting to be held at the home
of Mrs. Andrew Cross. The
planning of tours to various
outstanding garden spots in the
state was also urged.
The program was the
making of dried arrangements,
modern and traditional from
the materials brought by the
m~mbers. Committee§ ano\mt~~- '''" ., r.f , '"tJ" ,
bh!hl, · Mr;,e~fp;:ier; ar:;r~ ·
Kuhn, lhEl!'apy; Mrs. Ernest
Wingett, Mrs. Clifford Morris,
Mrs. Cross, horticulture ; Mrs. years.
Carpenter, Mrs. Cross, Mrs.
EUGENE E. DAVIS OF RACINE, Route 2, is literally
Simpson, civic; Mrs. w. o. thanking his lucky stars. Friday while working on a corr. picker
Barnitz, green thumb; Mrs. he got his arm caught. It was pretty badly mashed, but there
Ben Philson, Mrs. Wingett,
tours; and Mrs. Carpenter and
Mrs. Simpson, publicity.
Mrs. Andrew Cross gave
devotions using the theme "I
Thank My God." An Important
thought was that each person
should set aside a special week
in which he or she write notes
to persons who do much but go
wtthanked. The club prayer
and poem were read by the
group from the new program
books w~ich had been compiled
by Mrs. Simpson, Mrs. Morris,
and Mrs. Ralph Webb. Mrs.
Grimm, president, thanked the
committee for their work.
Roil call was the showing and
Identification of dried plant

were no broken bones and no
other problems.

·awarded by Grange

confined to the University
Hospital, ahd Mrs. · Mildred
Garson ill at her .home In Rich.
mond; Ind. It was also noted
that Mrs. Beatrice Robson and
Mrs. Martha Fox are both
Improving from illness at their
homes.
Mrs. Freda Clark and Mrs.
Ka\hleen Manley were ap- ,
pointed to fill vacancies on the
executive board. Mrs. Shaula
Roush ·and Mrs . Kathleen
Manley received chair- ·
inanships in the unit.
Plans were made for a corn
bread and soup dinner at 6:30
p.m. on Nov, 22 at the hall.
Members are to take either
salad or dessert.
Preceding Wednesday
night's meeting a potluck
dinner :was served. The door
prize donated by Mrs. Clark
was won by, Shauia Roush.
Officers report:s were read with
the treasur.er's report being
filed for audit. There was
prayer by the chaplain, silent
prayer for the war dead, and
the pledge to the flag.

'•

I.

Mr. and Mrs. Buckley.

,

BELPRE - Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Buckley, 919 Braun Ave.,
Belpre, were honored on their
golden wedding anniversary,
Sept. 23, with a luncheon hosted
by their chllaren at the Elks
Club in Parkersburg. A surprise card shower was also
held for the honored couple.
Mr. and Mrs. Buckley were
married in Pomeroy and
resided in Reedsville for 40

BOOSTERS TO MEET
RACINE - The Southern
Band B..o91kU willlll£c.li17; aL
p.m. Tuesday at the Racine
High School.

PP,~.!

Black or Brown leather
and Brushed Pig Skin

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59 N. Second St.

SON BORN OCT. 13
MINERSVILLE - Mr. and
Mrs. James Theodore (Ted)
Russell of Minersvllle, are
announcing the birth of their
first child, a seven pound, eight
ounce son, Michael James, on
Oct. 13 at the Holzer Medical
Cenler.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Pugh of
Minersville, and paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
William Russell, Mil)ersvill~.
The
maternal
greatgrandparents are Mrs. Wilda
Pugh of Stockport and Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Pettibone of
Lo.';jll. Paterna~-

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DRESSES

material for fall arrangements. Money plant,
teasals, cattails, Chinese
lanlerns, dock, straw flowers,
snowballs, beech grass were
among · the
materials
displayed,
A mass arrangement of
autumn nowers centered the
refreshment table and other
arrangements were displayed
throughout the home. A dessert
course was served.

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E.O.M. ·SALE
MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY, OCT. 30-31

GIRLS SHOES
. Look elegant and stately in a sweep of plaid ..
when you wetifthis separatea-look long dreaa.
In machine washable polrester. Red/Black, .
·
Yellow/Black. S1zes 10-18.
·

-AND MISSES ·

"1 .'

I'URCIIAS£ Of 25ll, lA&amp; Of DOG
OR CAT FOOI~.I5 VAlUE! . . .

Reg. lo· $8.99

$3800

SALE

POMEROY. LANDMARK
JackW. Clrse_y ,Mgr.
Serving Meigs, Glllla &amp; Mason Counties
Pll- 992-2111
Open Mon.-Set. untll6 p.m.
,.

(Buffet Luncheon ll:OOto 1:~. Mondaylhru Saturday&gt;"

J

Observance theme noted

FRED W, CROW

greal giN. too .

'

Spooks highlight of day

•

The New

'

'~:RIAL DELAYED
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
trial of seven men indicted in
the Watergale bugging case,
originally scheduled to begin
Nov. -15, has been postponed for
two months' because the
presiding judge has a pinched
nerve. ·u. S.' District Court
Judge John J. Sirica issued a
two-page statement Friday
announcing that the trial will
now begin J~n. 8, the earliest of
three alternative dates given to
him by derense lawyers.

the Chair

An official size and weight
Rellcn basketball, vinyl covered with red, white and blue
panels, and black seams .
iike those used by lhe pros.
(Who, knows. you may have
a future star lhere!) Makes a

POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 992-3629

CHEERLEADER HURT
POMEROY - Nedra RiggB,
17, '!be Plaln.s, an Albena High
School cheerleader was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the Pomeroy E-R S(jiUid
during the Meigs-Athens game
Friday night. 'Miss Riggs
sufiered a fractured left wrist
while leading ~eers. She was

:l

You'll Love These!

lr-••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

years. They moved to Belpre
two years ago. Mrs. Buckley
was the former Wilma
Whiteside of Long Bottom, Mr.
Buckley is a retired member of
Teamsters Local Union of
Parkersburg and was last
.employed by the Dupont Co.
They have four surviving
children, Mrs. Charles
(Phyllis) Ayers, Belpre; Mrs.
Harold (Mary Helen) Humphrey, Belleville, W.Va.; Paul
Buckley, Coolville, and
Howard Buckley, Marietta. A
son, Keith, and a daughter,
Darlene, are deceased. There
are five grandchildren.
Mr, and Mrs. Buckley are
affiliated with the Belpre
Church of Christ.

~ ~:~~~sVIlle
~d~~"~1'tf
'r"f·
~.
and Mrs. Howard Russell of

MIDDLEPORT,O:

Middleport, 0.

Holcomb .
A mixer game was enjoyed
by all 'l'ilh Mrs . Maude
Holcomb winning the prize.
Mrs. Holcomb is also a · fifty
year member anll was.honored
several years ago. .
Mrs . C. E. Stout, former
master, spoke briefly as did
Miss Octa Gillogly whose
grandmother did the needle
point work of the Laurel
Grange sign that has been used
in the hall since the grange was
organized in 1874. The singing
of "God Be With You" closed
the program.
HONORED - Fifty year members of l.aurel Grange
The group was invited to the
were bonored recently. Members honored were left,
dinning room where a table
Marguerite Bigony and Nellie Vale, right, center Is Everett
with a gold cloth was decorated
Holcomb,
master. Fifty year Golden Sheaf Certificates were .
with white candles, and nowers
· presented by Deputy Master of the Ohio State Grange, Virgil
and cake bearing the words
Nellie and Marguerite - 50
Atkins.
, years.
Presiding at Ute punch howl
.
was Mrs . Vale's daughter-in • . coffee servtce was Mrs. John
IN CLEVELAND
law, Mrs. John Vale 0 ( V~le's sister, Mrs . Neva
MIDDLEPORT - Among
POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs. Purley Karr, above, will
Columbus and presiding at the Nicholson .
the members of Evangeline
Chapler 172, Order of the
observe their golden wedding anniversary Sunday, Nov: 5,
Eastern Star, in Cleveland for
with open bouse from 2 to 4 p.m. at their home in Chester.
Grand Chapler were Mr. and
. Relatives and friends are invited to call during the open
.
Mrs. Bob King, Mr. and Mrs.househoursbyMr.andMrs. Karrs' daughter, Mrs. Woodrow
Haymond Wilcox, Mrs. Evelyn
Mora, and sons, Paul Karr and Horace Karr, who are hosting
Lewis,
Mr, and Mrs. William
the observance.
By Alma Marshall
in Mason County who are Mrs. throughout the room . Items King, Mrs. Helen Mllhoan, and
PT, PI.EASANT - Comic Girard Fowler, Mrs. Odus were displayed by Leon, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Chesher.
characters and spooks galore Smith, Mrs. Oak Thomas, Mrs. lllahee , Mason, Haven ,
made their appearance Thurs- Howard Roush, Mrs. John Pleasant, Wohelo, Anne
day at Mason Cqunty Smith, Mrs. Harry Staats, Mrs. Bailey, Avalanche, Pioneer,
'
Achievement Day at the Moose Leo Thompson, Mrs. Ray Letart and Sassafras Clubs.
Hall in Pt. Pleasant. "Fun and Thompson, Mrs. Otmer Roush, Many individuals received blue were Mrs. Edwin Winters,
Frolic, " the theme, was Mrs . Iva Capehart, Mrs. and red ribbons.
Mrs. Ronald Rickard and Mrs.
carried out to the fullest when Emory Hart, Mrs. Sadie
Two clubs received blue Freddie Thabet.
·
clubs put on skits during the Warth, Mrs. Lester Foreman, ribbons on their scrapbooks.
Mrs. Ray Fox, Charleston
afternoon session.
These
included
U!tart
and
Area
. Representative, was
Mrs. Homer Johnson, Mrs.
"Grandfather's Cow," a Hester J.ee, Mrs. B. S. lllahee; Mason, Anne Bailey, introduced.
replica or a cow was hilarious. Greenlee, Mrs. Curtis Hunt, both received red ribbons and
Recalving door prizes were
The Helping Hand Club, the Mrs. Ray Friend, Mrs. Roy Haven, U!on and Pocahontas, Mrs. Landon Smith, Mrs. Patty·
ere a tor of this character, Friend, Mrs. Louis Sayre, Mrs. while ribbons.
U!e, Mrs. James Blain, Linda
received a blue ribbon for the John Marshall , Mrs. John
Cowtty committee chairmen Rice, Mrs. Harold U!wls, Mrs.
best acting. Taking part in this l'clcDaniel, Mrs. Madge Byus, were recognized and given a A. P. Roush, Mrs. Carl Dab- ·
were Mary, Thabet, Mrs. Mrs. C. E. McCulloch, Mrs. gilt on beha)( of the council. ney, Fay Meadows, Miss Irene
Homer Johnson, Mrs. Lester Leslie Bennett, Mrs , Otis Committees and chairman of Sayre, Mrs. Norman Foss,
Foreman, Doris Roberts, Litchdield, Mrs . A. P. Roush, each are, Projects for In- Margaret Capehart, Florence
Linda Jewell and Lois Yowtg. Mrs. Robert Hoffman, Mrs. dependent Study; Mrs. Ray Culllns, Mrs. C. F. Buckle and.
Mrs..Mary Casto of the U!on Charles Jewell, Mrs. T. Bert Thompson; Citizenship, Mrs. Flo Spears.
Club received a blue ribbon for Roush, Mrs. Henry Elias, Mrs. U!onard Miller ; Arts, Mrs. Club reports were given by
her impressive patriotic Marvin Fry, Mrs . George Vurl Randolph; Family Life, Anne Bailey, Haven, lllahee,
reading about "Old Glory." Keener, Mrs. Bill McDermitt, Mrs. Harry Staats; Health, J.etart, Mason, P1oneer,
Background music made this Mrs. Elmer Newberry, . Mrs. Mrs. Marvin Fry; In- Upland and U!on .
outstanding.
Those that masked and were
Ronald Rickard, Mrs. H. 1.. ternational Relations, Mrs.
The Mason Homemakers Smith, Mrs. Larry Sullivan, Jolin Marshall; Safety, Mrs. judged included Marjorie
.
(Ziegfleld Follies) received a Mrs. Marcus Weaver, Mrs. Gene Jewell; Yearbook, Mrs. , Grueser, Roberta Maynard,
..~1'\Mr~ _a if l4Jis&lt; ,W.aq~ ,D.lBlack,Rutlt1J1d&gt;''· •red ribbon• ton their 1 tlailce. Raymon(Zusp~li, , ¥-rs, (;. S. l.IOf.!..' l\ ~~"J~; Metn(\J'Ia L!nda Jewell,~ ·E~l\111: Ql]l,
abMe;'"wil1 '6\illei've thl\!r iiOtb · weddmg .. anruversar.y. on.. Takihg ··part ·were' Edlth' Fbx Dabney, Mrs. 'ilooort f:.tng, Book, Mrs. Harofd IlwiB .
· SharonMcCieuan;r.tarY'ca!«&gt;,
·Tuesday,.October 31. They:were married in 1942 at Gallipolis, Roberta Young, Matilda Noble: Mrs. G. E. Lunsford, Maude
The Achieyement Day A. Marshaii,..Jean Henderson,
Ohio and have resided in Rutland throughout their marriage. Catherine Smith, Hazel Smith, Oyke, Mrs. 'Jay Keister and Committee
members Carolyn J.llchfleld, Bonnie
The Bia~s are the parents of seven children, Jerry of Joyce Carson and Evelyn Mrs. Abigail Thompson.
recognized ·and Introduced Waldie and Betty Rickard.
Rutland; Ronald of Danville; Roger of Rutland; Kenneth Stewart. The Letart Club's skit
Mrs. Keefer introduced the
Lynn at home, and three girls, Debra, Linda and Brenda, all was a baking demonstration,
judges, Mrs. Julia Lowery,
at home. They also haVe seven grandchililren.
which received a while ribbon . area representative In
Taking part were Mrs. Dorothy Nutrition and Mrs. Charlotte
Click, Jr. and Mrs. Mrs. Lois Critchfield, Putnam Co. Home
Durst. Other clubs taking part Denionstration Agent and
were Anne Bailey, Avalanche, Virginia
Black,
Home
Pioneer, Pleasant, Pocahontas Eco nomi st, Appalachian
and Sassafras.
Power . Kathy Yost, Home
Mrs . Howard
(Lida) Economist Appalachian
POMEROY .,.. "AComing of Church.
Mrs.
Campbell
Harper,
Garla
nd,
Mason
Coun
ty Power, was also introduced ..
Age~· 18 the theme of the World
Mrs. Landon Smith of the
Community Day observance of president, reports that the Homemakers president, and
program
is
based
on
Mrs.
Vicki
Keefer,
County
nominating
committee named
Church Women United of
Meigs County to be hel.d Friday "creation's awe at watching Extens ion Agent , Home the candidates for Mason
at1 :30p.m. at Grace Episcopal the sight of God's sons and Demonstration, welcomed the County Homemakers Council
daughters come into their guests and club members, 127 offices. Of the two candidales,
own." Olurch organizations registering.
Mrs. Ray Fox, by unanimous
are reminded that $3 cer- Following the flag salute, the vote, was elected president,
tificates for mission work will group sang "America." Mrs. su.cceeding Mrs , Howard
he sold.
Marvin
Chapman
ac- Garland. Mrs. Jesse Brown
Participating in the program companied by Mrs. Vurl was elected treasurer.
Veter111111 Memorial Hoopltal will be Mrs. 0. B. Stout, Mrs. Randolph at the piano led in
A past presfdent's pin and a
ADMITTED
Dewey William Frecker, Mrs. Edward group singing. Mrs. Eimer gift of glassware were
Pullins, Pomeroy; Ronald Foster, Mrs. Patrick Locbary, Grueser assisled during the presented · to her by Mrs.
liostic, Point Pleasant; Gary Mrs. Allen Hampton, Mrs. Karl singing.
Keefer. She also presented a
Wolfe, Racine; Wllllam Dye, Grueser, Mrs. James Criswell, Mrs . Marvin Fry, vice gift to Mrs. Jesse ·Brown, who
New Haven; Maggie Gilmore, Mrs. Ervin Bumgardner, Mrs. president, was in charge of filled the treasurer vacancy
Racine; Carl Thomas, Long Arnold Richards, Mrs. Ben devotionals and Mrs. Ray Fox, due to Mrs. Wilbur Planta'
Bottom.
Neutzling, Mrs. Thomas Kelly, Charleston area represen- illness.
DIIICHARGEI&gt;' - Charles Mrs. J . E. D. Hartinger, Mrs. tative, led in prayer.
· Mro. Brown gave a financial
Decker, ~ Dalley, Clifford Marvin Burt, Mrs. Grett~ Mrs. Keefer named the Blue report and Mrs. James Blain
Ellilltt, Edna BurtiB, Norman SimpsWl, Mrs. Edith Sisson, Ribbon clubs and these in- secretary ~s report.
l.lludermllt, Dwight Haley.
and Mrs. Harper.
· eluded Haven, Avalanche,
Mrs. Keefer.installed the two
Letart, Illahee, Mason, officers and explained the
meaning of the Home
-~-----------------• Rhododendron
and Pocahontas Demonstration emblem.
Homemakers Clubs.
She also named the charter
Craft items and projects
members of the various clubs were displayed on tables

Children give party for
parents on September 23rd

a

BOOTS FOR THE LADIES

DRIED
FLOWER
ARRANGEMENTS

CARPENTER - At an open
meeting o[ I.aurel Grange
recently Nellie Vale and
Marguerite 'Bigony were
presented :;o year ~olden Sheaf
Certificates by Deputy Master
of the Ohio State Grange, Virgil
Atkins.
Plans for the occasion were
made by r,trs. Avanef Holliday
and her mothfr,_Mrs. G. A.
.. Radikin.More than 60 people,
friends or . the honored ladies
attended and. were welcomed
by Worthy Master Everett
Holcomb.
Earl Starkey; Gatekeeper of
the Ohio State Grange and
former member of Laurel
Grange , was the featured
speaker. CorsageB were
presented to the two honored
membep by Mrs. Neva
Nicholson.
·
A musical program of piano
and instrumental music was
presenled by Judy and Gary
Holliday and Pam and Marcia

PET ·FOODS

, . Model H35tBPC

lledlllrr.- Armoire
Pecan veneer top and base,
deep molded doors.

Large Sel11clic&gt;n
Girls cind Misses
Shoes ·
Size81f2to4

'2''
.,.,
·

TO

Parkshire Original oilers
a whole new world or ~air and freshness,"
while eliminating 001tly alterations.

'

ALL FOR ONLY ·

$399

95

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOn
MIDDUPORT, O.

heritage house
'

'

,~&amp;~~natlc.An:. STORE

YOUR-..

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~--__;,-----"'-1

BAHR CLOTHIERS..:.
'

'

. MIDDLEPORT, 0.

�.

•

•

14- ~Sunday Times . sentinel, SWJday. Oct. 29, 1972 .

Robbins &amp; Myers sales,
..

earnings off for 1972
'
SPRINGFIELD - -Robbins comple te lurn-&lt;li'O tJnd will not
&amp;Myers,lhc., re(&gt;Qrted Frida y. be rapid, but as cur rent
in sales and earnings prug rams
are
im,.I• a·decline
for the fiscal year ended plemented and addi tional
' August 31, 1912. ..
programs are developed. we
The year's earnings, before · anticipate solid, steady iman extr:-aordinary. charge, w.ere provement in .earnings .."
.
~71,170, or 51 cents per share
. Robbins &amp; Myers is a mulllcom(ll!r_ed to $1,;!41;721. llr m a ~ke t corporation se,..ing
~'"4-~~·--"""1': · per share a _year ago: users of equi pment and
After provision for an ex· products in comfort con·
traordinary charge of 16 cents dilioning, electric and gearper share, resulting from the drive motors, fluid transport
loss on the sale of Wascon and
materia l handling
Systems, Inc., a whole;owned equipment. It operates one
subsidiary , net income was plant in . Ga llipolis tha t
~71,170, or 33 cents per share. manufactures electric motors
Sales for the year were for appliances.
~2.290,361 as compared to
$52,396,146 reported last year.
· In a message to shareholders
and employees, Fred G. Wall,
President, attributed most of
the decline in earnings to
problems in the Electric Motor
Group.
COLU.MBUS .( UP! ) - Five
He commented, "Before the groups, including three conloss incurred in selling Wascon servation groups, announced
Systems, Inc. , earnings their support Friday for the
amounted to 51 cents per share. sulle income tax.
In looking ahead, it is
Urging Ohioans to vote "no"
significant to note that II cents on State Issue No. 2 were the
of that amount was earned in Ohio Federation of Conthe third quarter and 34 cents servation Clubs, the Sierra
in the fourth quarter. It is also Club in Central Ohio, Rivers
significant that the Board has Un limited, Columbus Urban
maintained the 20 cents League and the Ohio Comquarterly dividend rate."
mittee on Crime and
He
stated
further , Delinquency.
"Economic conditions have
The Ohio Federation of
improved and our markets are Conservation Clubs urged the
currently strong for an in- issue voted down, fearing it
crease in sales in 1973. A would weaken the Depariment
'
of Natural Resources.
"We have fought long and
hard to pass an adequate strip
MARINER 9 RETIRED
mine · bill and the EnPASADENA, Calif. (UP! )- vir onmental
Protection
The Mariner 9 spacecraft, Agency, and to cut these
which mapped the en tire programs at this embrionic
surface of Mars with more than stage of theii; development is
7,000 photographS, was retired . not only illogical, but a crime
· Friday after successfully against our fellow man ," said
completing a mission that the · conservation group 's
began May 30, 1971. Mariner's president Thomas West.
radio transmitter was shut off .
·
at 2 p.m. EDT on orders from
scientists at the Jet Propulsion
Q- What act or won an
Laboratory moments after the
Oscar
as star of "The Afri·
satellite's supply of attitude can Queen"
in l95l?
control gas ran out.
A- Humphrey Bogart.

More groups
support tax

.

By UQlted' Press International

HUNTING SHIRT

77e

'499
HECK'S
REG. '7.99
SIZES
15, 16, 16'/z

I
II

I
.II ______

TOY

OVER 6,000 SQ.

LAND

CANTEEN
BELT KII

IS •••

"I lost 40 Jl!&gt;UndS in 13 weeks. You can
lose 20 pounds before Christmas,"
says Patrick J. Conway

1 ~~~~~ [;,11

pra c tices,

or

ion a t p ress ures . It 's

l i7;~~t'vlant to unders tand
lc
I which factors an~

l intlue,nci nc you il you are
l~ o i n ~ to control them .
The . third thing is in lligen t mot iv at ion, a
that appeals to
di gnit y
and
i n-

•

QUILT

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PIECES
KODEL RED, WHITE
&amp; BLUE SHORT SLEEVE

THERMO-WARE

I

You will save the usual Seminar fee of

1

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I

s2.00 if you bring this coupon with you to ·

I
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.I .

~~ ·

any of our meetings this coming week.

.·

~-~

.

.

·

.

, · ·
. •

I

I

1

·I

J

------·-------------.·.

'

WEEKLY "INSIGHl'' SEMINARS

MONDAYS, 7:30 P.M.
The Or&lt;: hid Room . _
E;ast Mal" Sl.
Pomeroy; Ohio
(over tina 's Dress Shop)

lew

~.

· S, M, L, XL

!

I

FLAIR FELT
TIPPERS

SWEAT
SHIRTS

HECK'S
REG. ~1.44

I SAVE '2.00
I

•2••

HECK'S REG.· '3.79

VASELINE
. INTENSIVE .

HAIR STYLING
DRYER

CARE

CALL 992-2936
members always welcome ·

~ 15.00 1~d \14Hki,Y"-minors $2.00,

Y DIET INSTITUTE
I

Vaseline
eiiiAND

HECK'S
REG. 96'

AM

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'2''

HECK'S
REG; 13.77

2 PC. SMOKELESS FAMILY SIZE

.BROILING PAN

,,~ R~~~~58

Beads

78e

REALTONE .

,. _, ..
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INTENSIVE CARE'

BATH
.BEADS

HECK'S
REG. '9.88

I~-----------------------1I

,,

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A
study group working for sen.
George S. McGovern accused
the Nixon administration
Saturday of caving into in·
dustry pre.9SUI'e by ignoring
consumer needs for qu~lity and
safety in everything from cars
to drugs.
"The Nixon .record on
product safety and quality
cegulation is · .one of
procrastination, inaction,
delay, deference to industry
pressure, proposing weak
legislation ... and lack of
commitment to enforce strong
laws that already are on the
books," the report said.
·
The attack was made by
McGovern's "Consumer Task
Force" -one of several study
panels w~rking. to ~elp th_e
Democratic prestdential nom1!!.~: establish positions on

;&lt;

· mer teporr W'as· release(! a

NOW OPEN

~3 99

CUBE
RADIO
,$ , ., .
I

TENDER TOUCH.

~BATH
HECK'S
·REG.·
$gaa

15 FL OZ.

09
HECK'S
REG. sl 54

(/espicilble lie'

September when a House
subconunittee investigating
criine links with horse racing
planned to re-&lt;jullstion Jacobs,
the Emprise president, and his
brothe~:. He claimed that after
that , the hearings being condueled by Rep. Claude Pepper,
D-Fla ., were "mysteriously
called off."
"It should be of great in- ·
terest to the American people
to find out how the Jacobs'
managed to get the crin1e
hearings turned off just before
the presidential election ," the
GOP chairman commCI)ted.
"lt is also of great interest to
!mow of L&lt;!rry O'Brien 's role in
helping to get those hearings
(Continued on page 161

esty?
Never ever
MANTUA CORNER, Ohio
tU PI) - Pres id ent Nixoo,
motorcading through the Ohio
countryside , said Saturday he
will "never" grant amnest y to
draft dodgers and deserters.
The President made his
mrongest statement to date on
the emotional amnesty issue in
a conversation with a farm
family that lost a son in the
Vietnam fighting.
"'The 200 who have deserted
their country-the draft dodgers-are never going to get
anmesty when boys ' like yours
ha ve died," Nixon told Mr. and
Mrs. Frank l,.orence in front of

their farm just outside '.his
rural community of 100.
The President stopped his
limousine when he spotted a
huge sign on the L.orence
pickup truck, "Mr. President
please stop and shake hands.
No amnesty. We lost a son in
Vietnam .''
The President, after getting .
out of his car, said to them,
"don't worry about that amnesty-never." Nixon gestured
with a clenched fist as he
talked.
The stop came during a 13city trip through northeastern
Ohio which began in Cleveland.

OIL

VOL. VII NO. 39

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1972

PAGE 15

Nixon record
under attack

OF NEW FLOOR
SPACE IS NOW
OPEN FOR
OUR GIGANTIC
TOYLAND

SEAWAY Gl STYLE

$199 .

George McGovern

HECK'S
REG. 971

'

cow1ter.~

Richard Nixon

HECK'S

BAG OF

IE

Republican National Chairman Bob Dole charged Saturday that Lawrence F. O'Brien,
Sen. George S. McGovern's
campaign director, mel secretly with the president of a finri
allegedly linked to organized
crime shortly befor e a
congressional hearing on the
c ompa ~y was halted.
O'Brien called Dole's allegation "a desperate and .despicable lie" and denied he had any
secret meeting with Jeremy
Jacobs, head of Emprise Corp.,
a race track concessionaire
firm.
Dole claimed in a statement
that O'Brien met with Jacobs
and his attorney in mid-

PRICES GOOD SUNDAY,· OCTOBER 29 • 1 P.M. TO 7 P.M.
FROSTPROOF WOOL
LEAF RAKE

,25FT.

tcl li gence , that reawakens
your r eal :,elf -inter est, and
that c·ant inuatty strengthen s
your se nse of purpo se .
1 thi nk you' ll fi f'd all three
...... a re markably effect ive
di e t , kn ow ledg e and un der standing, and int elli gent
moti vat ion -- at our weekly
Insigh t Sem inars. They are
the real keys to per manent
weight loss.
Ther e's ius l ei ght week s
unt il
t he
Chri stma s
Hol ida ys . You can lose at
leas t 20 poun ds before then If
you sta r t now . I hope we' ll
see you at our Insi g ht
Se minar thi s corn ing week .
Sinc-er ely
PATRI CK J . CO NWA ~

thicken .with

''

HECK'S REG.

Dear Friend:
After being over we ight for
10 years I lost 40 pounds in 13
weeks. That wa s over 5 years
ag o and I've never rega ined
an y of thai weigh!.
It was a fam iliar story , a
li llie·overweight, toll owed by
a
growing
se lf consciousness, foll owed by
les s soc i al and phy slc al
activity, foll owed by sllll
more wei ght gains.
I've found fr om study and
e.~&lt;perlen ce that it takes
three things to l ose wei ght
and sta y slim , TH e first is a
satisfying diet that is
balanced nutriti onally and
low in ca lor ies . You -can ' t
fool arou nd wi th potat oes,
oil , bulfer and spaghetti , ' or
eat large quant ities of unpl easant foods and get really
good weigh t tosses. It si mp l y
can ' t be done.
The ne xt th ing yo u need is
knowledge. Ther e are five
ta·ctor s Invol ved in
l over..,i gh l improp er
ulr i t ion,
phys ica l
l predispc&gt;S i li on,
p~y s i c al
y,
soci a l
and

0 'Brien

,,

1,_. ~~or..f.ffliP'I,~ll }~es~ ~r·

few hours after Nixon signed
Into Jaw legislation setting up
th~ machinery for safety
standards ,for most consumer
products. Nixon's consumer
adviser, Mrs . Virginia H.
Knauer, called the new law an
outgrowth of Nixon's concern
for product safety and a victory for consumers.
The task force, however, said
the administration would have
settled for only "complex,
time-cons,uming rule making
proCedures before new standards could ~ imposed on
products or products banned."
It was Congress, the report
said,
which
''enacted
legislation setting up an independent product safety
agency" established by the
new law.

"The fact that the administration so vigorously opposes
strong consumer protection
legislation 1s a measure of its
commitment to industry and
business at the expense of the
consumer," the report said.
1n specific areas the task
force claimed:
-A "scandalous" situation
in 'which the administration opposed "every major piece of
legislation and watered down
regulation concerning autos."
The task force endorsed
national no .fault insurance and
regulatlon.of auto repair costs.
- A lire Safety record that
"betrays a concern not for the
safety of the motorist, but for
the well-being of its friends in
the rubber industry." It proposed a "clear, useful grading
system to aid consumers in
selecting tires" and a re'ev$9ation qf ~!ety standar\ls.
- The administration opposes legislation that would
require tlie government to set
minimum safety standards for
the structure of school buses. lt
said school bus safety has the
lowest priority even though
·more than 15,000 such vehicles
have been recalled for safety
defects during the past five
years.
_'The admini~tratlon has not
tried to remove ineffective
patent medicines from the
market even though one study
found 25 per cent of such
products to be totally ineffective. "Instead of removing
those drugs from the market. ..
th·e FDA called for 'further
study' while Americans continue to waste millions of
dollars on worthless medicines," lt said.

1

Seven. Saig.o n hamlets fall to
hard pushing Communist units
SAIGON (UPI)-Communist
Four Americans Wounded ment officers said they feared critical peace negotiations
troops captured and held seven
Rockets and mortar slam- a commando-6!yle attack on · break dQwn.
hamlets within an hour's drive med Into U.S. installations in thewesternsuburbofPimLam
At Saigon 's Tan Son Nhut
Saigon ' Saturday In their Da Nang and Long Blnh, "soon." They did not say what airport, Am~rican C5A Galaxy
campaign tv gain control of wounding lour Americans, thf ·led them to expect such a push. cargo
planes
l;1nded
population centers before a command said . Two other
A South Vietnam~se bat- throughout the day with
cease-fire, military sources Amer.icans were wounded talion recapturing a town 20 weapons, including tank-like
said.
.
l)'hen Communist ground fire miles east of Saigon found 30 armored personnel carriers.
The country'smain Highway brought down their helicopter VietCong flags on the bodies of
Communists Rebuild
I, which runs from Phnom near Saigon.
slain Communist troops. ·
North Vietnamese troops
Penh to Hanoi through Saigon,
Communist soldiers,
''Battle of nags" .
moved military goods southwas Cut on both sides of Saigon carrying the red and blue
Both the Communist and ward.
, because of the fighting, spokes- National Liberation Front flag, govenunent sides in the war
The U.S. -corrtmand quoted
men said.
had taken 12 hamlets .. near have begun a "IJ:IIttle of the Cdr. Milton Beach, . Houston,
· The Vie!" Cong- Ubei'ation Saigon Saturday, but South flags"in an effort to plant their Tex., a Navy pilot Who flew
Radio called , on the United Vietnamese soldiers,. with the standard In as many places as missions over North Vietnam
States to sign a peace treaty, Saigon goverrunent's red and possible before any cesse-ftre, Friday as saying , "There is
but eald it's forces would fight gold banner, drove them out of to show control of the area.
much evidence of road, bridge
''for, completa victory" If ari five. In \he fighting closest .to
In Saigon, residents lined up and communication line reconagreement were not si_gned.
the capital, field officers said to buy red and gold . govern- struction going on along HighIt sald the so-called . Provi- the Communists infiltrated ment flags to hling from their way I north of the Demilltasional Rei'Olutlonary Govern- 'Ttung Qla_nh, ..IO miles fl-?11\. homes, · Q(ll.;e ·lluildlngs, ~d · rized Zo~ which could not be.
ment (PRG J would carry 'out Saigon, ~rly Saturday and · vehicles. · The . South . Vtet- seen durmgJhe past w\'(!k dup
''correctly" all terms of the . held " hundreds" · of the ' namese administration said it . extremely bad visibility."
cease-fire · and "the · PRG remdenta hoatage, preventing would check next Wednesday,
Beach's b9mbing mission
pledses there will be no air strikes or artillery by the the country's national day, to over North Vletnlll11 was one of
reprlsala, It will forget about government troopa.
make sure every household more than 100 launched by U.S.
hatred and will carry out
The Jlepped-Gp drive repre- was flying a flag .
jet fighter-bombers Friday, the
national
harmony
and · oenteO no major threat to
Both sides also JX'epared for U.S.Comrnandsaid. Atleasf24
reconclliatloh."
Saigon itself, although govern- more war, however, in case 1152s in eight waves also at-

to

• k mg
• Co unty men get maJOr
• posts
LlC

'
•
·
,
00(-UMBUS (UPI ) - TWo
· Ucklng County men who held
poaltlons ln. the old Ohio
Department ol Hlghwaya have
been appoiptad to tnaJ(Ir poets
in the newly created. Ohio
llepm1ment ol 'l'rlnlpclrtatlm.
Bobby •.. Everhart, 42, ol

tacked the north.
All strikes were below the
20th parallel, 65 miles south of
Hanoi.
·
The command said a Navy '
A7 Corsair was shot down
S!lturday morning during renewed raids in North :Vietnam's lower panhandle. A
Radio llanoi broadcast said the
pilot "has illed," althou'gh the
command•said he was "miss-

·
·
.
director of the division of vari~us state urb!ln studies.
transportation . plaMing,
. Baker, formerly ' a deputy
William W. Baker, 45, of Heath, director of the division of highwas name!f chief engineer of WJr/s, joine!! th~ !1lsl.bighway ·
the dlvlslon of ~lghways.
deparbnent in 1961.
.
Everhart, with the Ohio
Gov. Jobn J. Gilligan made
DeJiartment oUIIghways for 18 the appointments effective
years, 1erved as chief design Sunday.
Granville, wu lllllled'deputy qineer and wu Involved in
lng." '

and

' I

"

Search

still is
, ,::~,:,:;,:::,~, ,:,:,:::,:,~,:;, , , , ,~, , , . pres sed

Paris for signing
By United Press International
In Saigon, President Nguyen
French and Communist Van Thieu, who says there will
diplomatic sources in Paris be no peace agreemenl without
said Saturday that U.S. his aGcord , was reported
Secretary of State William P. sending his chief ambassadors
Rogers is expected to fly to on a tour of Asian countries in
Paris to sign the cease-fire an effort to convince their
agreement with North Viet- leaders he is ''not an obstacle
nam. The Viet Cong joined to peace," Vietnamese sources
Hanoi in insisting the accord be said .
signed Tuesday and promised
But South Vietnam's Radio
there would be no reprisals Saigon said the Communist
after the war ,
peace proposal was simply a
In Washington , the State move to get 'American troo ps
department said it had no out of Vietnam so they could
comment on the Paris report. attack the South again later.
But diplomatic sources said it
In the intensifying war
would be logical for Rogers to Communist troops captured
go since such an agreement and held seven hamlets within
wollld be ·.signed by an official an hour's drive of ~lgon
bei6W presidential rlmk.
•· Saturtt~y In \vhilt military
The Washiligton sources ad- sources said was ·a drive to
ded however that the United gain control ·of population
States does not consider the centers before a cease-fire.
draft treaty ready for signing
South Vietnam's main Highyet and said Rogers was still in way I, which runs from Phnom
Washington with no immediate Penh to Hanoi through Saigon,
plans to leave.
was cut on both sides of Saigon
In Paris the diplomatic because of the fighting, spokessources also said the United men said.
States, Russia, Britain ,
The Viet Cong Liberation
France, China and North and Radio called on the United
South Vietnam had agreed to States to sign the peace treaty,
take part in an international but said its forces would fight
conference on Vietnam in the "for complete victory" if an
French capital about a month agreement were' not signed
after a cease-fire.
Tuesday.
One of the main purposes of
It said the the Viet Cong's sothe conference woald be to set c a II e d P r o v i s i on a 1
up an internatio~al control Re volutionary Gove rn me nt
commission to police the (PRG ) would carr y out
ceasefire under the terms of "correctly" all terms of the
the draft peace agreement cease-fire and "The PRG
between the United States and pledges there will be no
North Vietnam.
reprisals, it will forget ahout

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook Monday through Wednesday: A chance of rain
Tuesday and Wednesday.
Highs in the 50s and low 60s.
Lows mid and upper aos
Monday morning and moslly
in the 40s Tuesday and

.

·
Washington enigmatic
about
CeaSe fire being Concluded
and in;,_;nled n rn .J_
o'

uur
l. lleSWIY
hatred and will carry out Viet Cong, too.
national
harmony and
Hanoi has said flatly )he
l'econciliation. The Saigo n historic agreement to end the
regime has expressed fear of fighting must be signed Oct. 31
bloody Viet Cong reprisals if a and that the United States will
cease-fire were signed.
"bear responsibility for the
In Moscow, the official Soviet consequences" if it is not.
Tass news agency said ComBut Kissinger said Thursday
munist forces would step up that a nwnber of points remain
their attacks iin South Vietnam unsettled and that a final
if the United States does not negotiating session Is necessasign the cease·fi1·e agreement ry. Hanoi . insist~ no f'll;ther
Oct. 31.
negotiations are nee&lt;\ed 1but,
The Paris diplomatic Nguyen Vanh Ne, the chief
sources, quoted by UPI ~h ie! Hanoi spokesman, said some ·
diploma tic correspondent points could be clarified alter
Joseph W. Grigg, said Rogers the formal signing.
was expected to c-ome to Paris
There was a complete blackfor the signing even though out from both sides on whether
Pres ident Nixon's security Kissinger would be in Paris
adviser, Hen ry A. Kissinger, Oct. 31 and whether there
negotiated the agreement in a would be more talks. But the
series of top-secret talks with North Vietnamese stood pat on
Hanoi leaders.
their ultimatum that the
The sources said No rth United States must sign Oct.
Vietnam 's Foreign Minister, 31-&lt;&gt;r else. .
Nguyen Duy Trinh, would sign
The treaty, first disclosed
on behalf of Hanoi.
Thursday by North Vie!narn
Communist sources denied and confirmed the same day by
ea rlier re port s that South the United States, calls for the
Vietnam and the Viet Cong also fighting to end 24 hours after
would sign . They said there the signing of the document.
would be only two signatures Within the next 60days au U.S.
on the document and that the an ~ non-Vietnamese allied
preamble states specifically troops would be withdrawn
lhat the United States is acting from South VIetnam and
also on behalf of South Vietnam . American prisoners of war
and tha t Hanoi is acting for the repatriated.

,- t no
'
Oh10
guilty Of
b urgIary

By PAUL ANDERSON
ANCHORAGE,Ataska(UPl)
Having covered 210,000
square miles, the search ror
House Majority Leader Hale
Boggs and three others Satur·
day reached ita 13th day u
planes .continued to check out
the slightest clue to the fate of·
the missing men.
Maj. Henry Stocker, director
of the Rescue Coordination
Center at Elmendorf Air Force
Base said the Boggs hunt may
be the first of the year to be
suspended .
"But we have n't reached the
point yet where we have
considered lessening our actlvi·
ty," he said.
Bo,sgs dlsap~eared Oct. ~on
1a !light, frpJ:II A!l\'h,~al'll to
Juneau with Alaska s congrllssman, Nick Begich, Begich'l
aide, Russell Brown, and Don
E. Jon, the pilot.
Three dozen planes took off
Saturday to continue the effort.
A helicopter was dispatched to
inspect another so.&lt;:alled sightlng,.a T-shaped object noted In
photos taken by a . RF4
Phan tom reconnalssan~e jet.
Not only was the search
hindered by snow and rain, but
it was made difficult by the
coloring of the mlsslng planewhite with orange markinga;
The white color would make tilt
Cessna 310 almost undistlngulshableagalnsta background
of snow.
The longest aerial search at
Elmendorf was three winter
weeks In 1968 spent looking for
three men in a small plane.
Their bodies were found the
following summer.
So far the Boggs search hat
involved 687 sorties crlascrossing the Alaskan coastline ,
for a total of 2,414 houra.
Almost 100 "slghtings" of
possible wreckage have been
checked out.

LOS ANGELES (UPJ ) - Aftcr two days of deliberation, a
federaf jury has convicted three
Ohio men of the multimilliondollar burglary of a bank in an
exclusive southern California
community.
The seven-man , five-woman
panel late Friday found Ami!
Dinsio, 36, Charles A. Mulligan,
38"Jip~ Rhlllp, B. C~riftopher,
31, gUilty ol conspiracy, bank
burglary and larceny . •
The defendants were charged
with a "mission impossible"
raid on the United California
Bank branch in Laguna Niguel in Orange County , The
bank was robbed during the
weekend of March 24-26 by
thieves who broke through the
top of the vault and systcmatically looted more than 450 safe
deposit boxes.
Exactly how much the boxes
contained is not known. Many
persons reported the loss of
jewelry, cash, negotiable securities and other valuables. Authorities estimated the loss at
about $3 million. but witnesses
at the trial testified that Mulligan and Dinslo admitted partlclpating in the burglary and
bragged that their haul was $5
million.
More than $1 million of the
:::::::::::::::::::;:::;:;:;:::;:;:;:::·;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::~:::::~:::::~:::::~::~::~::~:= ~::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:·
loot has bcenrecovered, lncludin a. duffel bag found on a
hillside above the apartment
!:_!
believed used by the gang dur·
NOlR ETABLE , Fran ce saw the plane go down and ing the burglary.
(UPI) - Nine survivors, some finally located the mangled
Another $98,000 was f.oWJd by
of them virtually WJscratched, wreckage with the aid of police FBI agents buried in a vacant
Saturday told ~ow they and firemen .
lot ac ross from Dinslo 's home
escaped death in the crash of a
The hilly terrain hampered in Boardman , Ohio, and $30,000 '
Air Inter Vickers Viscount that
rescue efforts and local far- was recovered from a closet m
killed 59 other persons Friday
.mers used tractors to take the Christopher's Cleveland home.
on a hilltop near this farming
Survivors and the dead tv Hdwever, authori ties said some
community in southern ambulances waiting two miles of the cash found in those two
France.
away.
places came from a bank in
The French domestic
ANAHEIM, Call!. (UPI)Rescuers set up a temporary Lordstown , Ohio, whicl1 was
airliner , on a Gight from Lyon mortuary a few miles from the looted of more than $430,000 Sen, George McGovern told
to Clermont-Ferrand, crashed crashed plane and took'survi· fi ve weeks after the Laguna Democratic workers at two
into a 3,630-foot-high Picon
breakfasts at Dis\eyland today
vors to a hospital in Clermpnt- Niguel burglary.
Peak, five miles from here. Ferrand .
there
will be "enormoua"
Authorities said the defendRescueteamsdidnotarriveon
ants may have been involved problems left when the Viet-.
the heavily wooded site for five
·
in several other bank burglar- nam war is settled.
RETURN TO OHIO
hours, according to a passe nThe Democratic presidential
ies over the past fi ve years.
WASHIN GTO N (UPl )
ger, Marcel Delcroix.
candidate,
making his last
Delcrolx, 55, a businessman, 'Sen. George McGovern Is
California appearance before
said he thought the turboprop scheduled to ca rry his
the election, told the estimated
WEAPONS TAKEN
engines were not running Democra tic Pr es id enti al
MUNICH, Germany (UP! ) 1,500 party workers that when
properly and just before the campaign back into Ohio next - Police confiscated a large
crash he unfastened his seat- Thursday with an appearance number of weapons and ~~e~a~ i~~ded, ~~~~~0=
in Cincinnati. sen. Edward
belt.
arres ted three persons · problems, of employment,
"'That'showlwas thrown out Kennedy, D-Mass., camsuspected o! ,having CQJltacts inflation, tax reform and
at the moment Of impact·," he paigning !OJ' McGovern, also wi th Arab· gu errill~s. palice providing some better meaM ...
,Yas scheduled to visit the ~tlltc
said.
'
said Saturday. AMunich police of solving the problema at
Delcroix, who received cuts during the final week O\ the
spokesman said agent.!! raided · home."
on his face, said he lived campaign . Kennedy was to be
In a speech prepared lor a
a house Friday and found three
because he sat in the back of in Akron on Monday with a machineguns, slx handguns, later Gonzaga University ran,
the plane, which tore off. Parts possible visit to Youngstown six hand grenades and am- at Spokane, Wash., he ,aaJd
of It were recovered more than set for Friday.
Americans could .loll! their
munition.
600 feet from the fuselage .
The raid also netted a republtc more from ''lltodclr,
After the crash , Delcroix
number of forged ·documents. self-seeking leadenblp" IliaD
RHOOES TO TOUR
said, he found two chUdren,
from attacks from alnad. Be
COLUMBUS ( UP!) . also WJbUrt, flung clear with Former Ohio Gov. James A.
accused the Nixon atlmbUtra.
DOCTOR RESIGNS
him-ll four-year&lt;Jld boy, Syl· t!on of neglecting the tJn1M4
Rhodes has announced he will · URBANA, Ohio (UP! ) ·
vain Monthonnex, and a II· tour southern and eastern Citing "personal needs," Dr. !iatlons.
:vear&lt;Jid . 'girl , Catherine Cuyahoga County next Wed· Paul Zehner an·nounced his
At .Disneyland ha 111 II I
Clzeron.
.
nesday, campa1gning on behalf resignatio~esidenl of · his remarks of Friday..._ ..
"We waited for help for -five of five candidates to · the Urbana College h~re in a letter deno111ced Nixon's v....., If
hours," Delcr-olx sald.-"Dur.ing General Assembly . Rhodes fo tlie ,school's board · of nine measures "a 1IIDIIl
this lime . I talked to the was to make the one-day trustees. Zehner has served as ootrage" and ilr&amp;ad Mill&amp;
chUdr~n and c9mforted them. campaign swing aboard a GOP head of the school since his call "a special
Every three minutes J shoaled campaign bus called "Ohio • appoinbnent lri 1969. No sue- Congress and stve •
for help."
' ,
'
override the " ' House and Senate Victory cessor was immed(ately to
today."
Police said a local !ann~ Special."
'
named.

Nine tell .story

iii

p ro
. blems
•
remazn

�.

•

•

14- ~Sunday Times . sentinel, SWJday. Oct. 29, 1972 .

Robbins &amp; Myers sales,
..

earnings off for 1972
'
SPRINGFIELD - -Robbins comple te lurn-&lt;li'O tJnd will not
&amp;Myers,lhc., re(&gt;Qrted Frida y. be rapid, but as cur rent
in sales and earnings prug rams
are
im,.I• a·decline
for the fiscal year ended plemented and addi tional
' August 31, 1912. ..
programs are developed. we
The year's earnings, before · anticipate solid, steady iman extr:-aordinary. charge, w.ere provement in .earnings .."
.
~71,170, or 51 cents per share
. Robbins &amp; Myers is a mulllcom(ll!r_ed to $1,;!41;721. llr m a ~ke t corporation se,..ing
~'"4-~~·--"""1': · per share a _year ago: users of equi pment and
After provision for an ex· products in comfort con·
traordinary charge of 16 cents dilioning, electric and gearper share, resulting from the drive motors, fluid transport
loss on the sale of Wascon and
materia l handling
Systems, Inc., a whole;owned equipment. It operates one
subsidiary , net income was plant in . Ga llipolis tha t
~71,170, or 33 cents per share. manufactures electric motors
Sales for the year were for appliances.
~2.290,361 as compared to
$52,396,146 reported last year.
· In a message to shareholders
and employees, Fred G. Wall,
President, attributed most of
the decline in earnings to
problems in the Electric Motor
Group.
COLU.MBUS .( UP! ) - Five
He commented, "Before the groups, including three conloss incurred in selling Wascon servation groups, announced
Systems, Inc. , earnings their support Friday for the
amounted to 51 cents per share. sulle income tax.
In looking ahead, it is
Urging Ohioans to vote "no"
significant to note that II cents on State Issue No. 2 were the
of that amount was earned in Ohio Federation of Conthe third quarter and 34 cents servation Clubs, the Sierra
in the fourth quarter. It is also Club in Central Ohio, Rivers
significant that the Board has Un limited, Columbus Urban
maintained the 20 cents League and the Ohio Comquarterly dividend rate."
mittee on Crime and
He
stated
further , Delinquency.
"Economic conditions have
The Ohio Federation of
improved and our markets are Conservation Clubs urged the
currently strong for an in- issue voted down, fearing it
crease in sales in 1973. A would weaken the Depariment
'
of Natural Resources.
"We have fought long and
hard to pass an adequate strip
MARINER 9 RETIRED
mine · bill and the EnPASADENA, Calif. (UP! )- vir onmental
Protection
The Mariner 9 spacecraft, Agency, and to cut these
which mapped the en tire programs at this embrionic
surface of Mars with more than stage of theii; development is
7,000 photographS, was retired . not only illogical, but a crime
· Friday after successfully against our fellow man ," said
completing a mission that the · conservation group 's
began May 30, 1971. Mariner's president Thomas West.
radio transmitter was shut off .
·
at 2 p.m. EDT on orders from
scientists at the Jet Propulsion
Q- What act or won an
Laboratory moments after the
Oscar
as star of "The Afri·
satellite's supply of attitude can Queen"
in l95l?
control gas ran out.
A- Humphrey Bogart.

More groups
support tax

.

By UQlted' Press International

HUNTING SHIRT

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The . third thing is in lligen t mot iv at ion, a
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WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A
study group working for sen.
George S. McGovern accused
the Nixon administration
Saturday of caving into in·
dustry pre.9SUI'e by ignoring
consumer needs for qu~lity and
safety in everything from cars
to drugs.
"The Nixon .record on
product safety and quality
cegulation is · .one of
procrastination, inaction,
delay, deference to industry
pressure, proposing weak
legislation ... and lack of
commitment to enforce strong
laws that already are on the
books," the report said.
·
The attack was made by
McGovern's "Consumer Task
Force" -one of several study
panels w~rking. to ~elp th_e
Democratic prestdential nom1!!.~: establish positions on

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(/espicilble lie'

September when a House
subconunittee investigating
criine links with horse racing
planned to re-&lt;jullstion Jacobs,
the Emprise president, and his
brothe~:. He claimed that after
that , the hearings being condueled by Rep. Claude Pepper,
D-Fla ., were "mysteriously
called off."
"It should be of great in- ·
terest to the American people
to find out how the Jacobs'
managed to get the crin1e
hearings turned off just before
the presidential election ," the
GOP chairman commCI)ted.
"lt is also of great interest to
!mow of L&lt;!rry O'Brien 's role in
helping to get those hearings
(Continued on page 161

esty?
Never ever
MANTUA CORNER, Ohio
tU PI) - Pres id ent Nixoo,
motorcading through the Ohio
countryside , said Saturday he
will "never" grant amnest y to
draft dodgers and deserters.
The President made his
mrongest statement to date on
the emotional amnesty issue in
a conversation with a farm
family that lost a son in the
Vietnam fighting.
"'The 200 who have deserted
their country-the draft dodgers-are never going to get
anmesty when boys ' like yours
ha ve died," Nixon told Mr. and
Mrs. Frank l,.orence in front of

their farm just outside '.his
rural community of 100.
The President stopped his
limousine when he spotted a
huge sign on the L.orence
pickup truck, "Mr. President
please stop and shake hands.
No amnesty. We lost a son in
Vietnam .''
The President, after getting .
out of his car, said to them,
"don't worry about that amnesty-never." Nixon gestured
with a clenched fist as he
talked.
The stop came during a 13city trip through northeastern
Ohio which began in Cleveland.

OIL

VOL. VII NO. 39

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1972

PAGE 15

Nixon record
under attack

OF NEW FLOOR
SPACE IS NOW
OPEN FOR
OUR GIGANTIC
TOYLAND

SEAWAY Gl STYLE

$199 .

George McGovern

HECK'S
REG. 971

'

cow1ter.~

Richard Nixon

HECK'S

BAG OF

IE

Republican National Chairman Bob Dole charged Saturday that Lawrence F. O'Brien,
Sen. George S. McGovern's
campaign director, mel secretly with the president of a finri
allegedly linked to organized
crime shortly befor e a
congressional hearing on the
c ompa ~y was halted.
O'Brien called Dole's allegation "a desperate and .despicable lie" and denied he had any
secret meeting with Jeremy
Jacobs, head of Emprise Corp.,
a race track concessionaire
firm.
Dole claimed in a statement
that O'Brien met with Jacobs
and his attorney in mid-

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FROSTPROOF WOOL
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you sta r t now . I hope we' ll
see you at our Insi g ht
Se minar thi s corn ing week .
Sinc-er ely
PATRI CK J . CO NWA ~

thicken .with

''

HECK'S REG.

Dear Friend:
After being over we ight for
10 years I lost 40 pounds in 13
weeks. That wa s over 5 years
ag o and I've never rega ined
an y of thai weigh!.
It was a fam iliar story , a
li llie·overweight, toll owed by
a
growing
se lf consciousness, foll owed by
les s soc i al and phy slc al
activity, foll owed by sllll
more wei ght gains.
I've found fr om study and
e.~&lt;perlen ce that it takes
three things to l ose wei ght
and sta y slim , TH e first is a
satisfying diet that is
balanced nutriti onally and
low in ca lor ies . You -can ' t
fool arou nd wi th potat oes,
oil , bulfer and spaghetti , ' or
eat large quant ities of unpl easant foods and get really
good weigh t tosses. It si mp l y
can ' t be done.
The ne xt th ing yo u need is
knowledge. Ther e are five
ta·ctor s Invol ved in
l over..,i gh l improp er
ulr i t ion,
phys ica l
l predispc&gt;S i li on,
p~y s i c al
y,
soci a l
and

0 'Brien

,,

1,_. ~~or..f.ffliP'I,~ll }~es~ ~r·

few hours after Nixon signed
Into Jaw legislation setting up
th~ machinery for safety
standards ,for most consumer
products. Nixon's consumer
adviser, Mrs . Virginia H.
Knauer, called the new law an
outgrowth of Nixon's concern
for product safety and a victory for consumers.
The task force, however, said
the administration would have
settled for only "complex,
time-cons,uming rule making
proCedures before new standards could ~ imposed on
products or products banned."
It was Congress, the report
said,
which
''enacted
legislation setting up an independent product safety
agency" established by the
new law.

"The fact that the administration so vigorously opposes
strong consumer protection
legislation 1s a measure of its
commitment to industry and
business at the expense of the
consumer," the report said.
1n specific areas the task
force claimed:
-A "scandalous" situation
in 'which the administration opposed "every major piece of
legislation and watered down
regulation concerning autos."
The task force endorsed
national no .fault insurance and
regulatlon.of auto repair costs.
- A lire Safety record that
"betrays a concern not for the
safety of the motorist, but for
the well-being of its friends in
the rubber industry." It proposed a "clear, useful grading
system to aid consumers in
selecting tires" and a re'ev$9ation qf ~!ety standar\ls.
- The administration opposes legislation that would
require tlie government to set
minimum safety standards for
the structure of school buses. lt
said school bus safety has the
lowest priority even though
·more than 15,000 such vehicles
have been recalled for safety
defects during the past five
years.
_'The admini~tratlon has not
tried to remove ineffective
patent medicines from the
market even though one study
found 25 per cent of such
products to be totally ineffective. "Instead of removing
those drugs from the market. ..
th·e FDA called for 'further
study' while Americans continue to waste millions of
dollars on worthless medicines," lt said.

1

Seven. Saig.o n hamlets fall to
hard pushing Communist units
SAIGON (UPI)-Communist
Four Americans Wounded ment officers said they feared critical peace negotiations
troops captured and held seven
Rockets and mortar slam- a commando-6!yle attack on · break dQwn.
hamlets within an hour's drive med Into U.S. installations in thewesternsuburbofPimLam
At Saigon 's Tan Son Nhut
Saigon ' Saturday In their Da Nang and Long Blnh, "soon." They did not say what airport, Am~rican C5A Galaxy
campaign tv gain control of wounding lour Americans, thf ·led them to expect such a push. cargo
planes
l;1nded
population centers before a command said . Two other
A South Vietnam~se bat- throughout the day with
cease-fire, military sources Amer.icans were wounded talion recapturing a town 20 weapons, including tank-like
said.
.
l)'hen Communist ground fire miles east of Saigon found 30 armored personnel carriers.
The country'smain Highway brought down their helicopter VietCong flags on the bodies of
Communists Rebuild
I, which runs from Phnom near Saigon.
slain Communist troops. ·
North Vietnamese troops
Penh to Hanoi through Saigon,
Communist soldiers,
''Battle of nags" .
moved military goods southwas Cut on both sides of Saigon carrying the red and blue
Both the Communist and ward.
, because of the fighting, spokes- National Liberation Front flag, govenunent sides in the war
The U.S. -corrtmand quoted
men said.
had taken 12 hamlets .. near have begun a "IJ:IIttle of the Cdr. Milton Beach, . Houston,
· The Vie!" Cong- Ubei'ation Saigon Saturday, but South flags"in an effort to plant their Tex., a Navy pilot Who flew
Radio called , on the United Vietnamese soldiers,. with the standard In as many places as missions over North Vietnam
States to sign a peace treaty, Saigon goverrunent's red and possible before any cesse-ftre, Friday as saying , "There is
but eald it's forces would fight gold banner, drove them out of to show control of the area.
much evidence of road, bridge
''for, completa victory" If ari five. In \he fighting closest .to
In Saigon, residents lined up and communication line reconagreement were not si_gned.
the capital, field officers said to buy red and gold . govern- struction going on along HighIt sald the so-called . Provi- the Communists infiltrated ment flags to hling from their way I north of the Demilltasional Rei'Olutlonary Govern- 'Ttung Qla_nh, ..IO miles fl-?11\. homes, · Q(ll.;e ·lluildlngs, ~d · rized Zo~ which could not be.
ment (PRG J would carry 'out Saigon, ~rly Saturday and · vehicles. · The . South . Vtet- seen durmgJhe past w\'(!k dup
''correctly" all terms of the . held " hundreds" · of the ' namese administration said it . extremely bad visibility."
cease-fire · and "the · PRG remdenta hoatage, preventing would check next Wednesday,
Beach's b9mbing mission
pledses there will be no air strikes or artillery by the the country's national day, to over North Vletnlll11 was one of
reprlsala, It will forget about government troopa.
make sure every household more than 100 launched by U.S.
hatred and will carry out
The Jlepped-Gp drive repre- was flying a flag .
jet fighter-bombers Friday, the
national
harmony
and · oenteO no major threat to
Both sides also JX'epared for U.S.Comrnandsaid. Atleasf24
reconclliatloh."
Saigon itself, although govern- more war, however, in case 1152s in eight waves also at-

to

• k mg
• Co unty men get maJOr
• posts
LlC

'
•
·
,
00(-UMBUS (UPI ) - TWo
· Ucklng County men who held
poaltlons ln. the old Ohio
Department ol Hlghwaya have
been appoiptad to tnaJ(Ir poets
in the newly created. Ohio
llepm1ment ol 'l'rlnlpclrtatlm.
Bobby •.. Everhart, 42, ol

tacked the north.
All strikes were below the
20th parallel, 65 miles south of
Hanoi.
·
The command said a Navy '
A7 Corsair was shot down
S!lturday morning during renewed raids in North :Vietnam's lower panhandle. A
Radio llanoi broadcast said the
pilot "has illed," althou'gh the
command•said he was "miss-

·
·
.
director of the division of vari~us state urb!ln studies.
transportation . plaMing,
. Baker, formerly ' a deputy
William W. Baker, 45, of Heath, director of the division of highwas name!f chief engineer of WJr/s, joine!! th~ !1lsl.bighway ·
the dlvlslon of ~lghways.
deparbnent in 1961.
.
Everhart, with the Ohio
Gov. Jobn J. Gilligan made
DeJiartment oUIIghways for 18 the appointments effective
years, 1erved as chief design Sunday.
Granville, wu lllllled'deputy qineer and wu Involved in
lng." '

and

' I

"

Search

still is
, ,::~,:,:;,:::,~, ,:,:,:::,:,~,:;, , , , ,~, , , . pres sed

Paris for signing
By United Press International
In Saigon, President Nguyen
French and Communist Van Thieu, who says there will
diplomatic sources in Paris be no peace agreemenl without
said Saturday that U.S. his aGcord , was reported
Secretary of State William P. sending his chief ambassadors
Rogers is expected to fly to on a tour of Asian countries in
Paris to sign the cease-fire an effort to convince their
agreement with North Viet- leaders he is ''not an obstacle
nam. The Viet Cong joined to peace," Vietnamese sources
Hanoi in insisting the accord be said .
signed Tuesday and promised
But South Vietnam's Radio
there would be no reprisals Saigon said the Communist
after the war ,
peace proposal was simply a
In Washington , the State move to get 'American troo ps
department said it had no out of Vietnam so they could
comment on the Paris report. attack the South again later.
But diplomatic sources said it
In the intensifying war
would be logical for Rogers to Communist troops captured
go since such an agreement and held seven hamlets within
wollld be ·.signed by an official an hour's drive of ~lgon
bei6W presidential rlmk.
•· Saturtt~y In \vhilt military
The Washiligton sources ad- sources said was ·a drive to
ded however that the United gain control ·of population
States does not consider the centers before a cease-fire.
draft treaty ready for signing
South Vietnam's main Highyet and said Rogers was still in way I, which runs from Phnom
Washington with no immediate Penh to Hanoi through Saigon,
plans to leave.
was cut on both sides of Saigon
In Paris the diplomatic because of the fighting, spokessources also said the United men said.
States, Russia, Britain ,
The Viet Cong Liberation
France, China and North and Radio called on the United
South Vietnam had agreed to States to sign the peace treaty,
take part in an international but said its forces would fight
conference on Vietnam in the "for complete victory" if an
French capital about a month agreement were' not signed
after a cease-fire.
Tuesday.
One of the main purposes of
It said the the Viet Cong's sothe conference woald be to set c a II e d P r o v i s i on a 1
up an internatio~al control Re volutionary Gove rn me nt
commission to police the (PRG ) would carr y out
ceasefire under the terms of "correctly" all terms of the
the draft peace agreement cease-fire and "The PRG
between the United States and pledges there will be no
North Vietnam.
reprisals, it will forget ahout

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook Monday through Wednesday: A chance of rain
Tuesday and Wednesday.
Highs in the 50s and low 60s.
Lows mid and upper aos
Monday morning and moslly
in the 40s Tuesday and

.

·
Washington enigmatic
about
CeaSe fire being Concluded
and in;,_;nled n rn .J_
o'

uur
l. lleSWIY
hatred and will carry out Viet Cong, too.
national
harmony and
Hanoi has said flatly )he
l'econciliation. The Saigo n historic agreement to end the
regime has expressed fear of fighting must be signed Oct. 31
bloody Viet Cong reprisals if a and that the United States will
cease-fire were signed.
"bear responsibility for the
In Moscow, the official Soviet consequences" if it is not.
Tass news agency said ComBut Kissinger said Thursday
munist forces would step up that a nwnber of points remain
their attacks iin South Vietnam unsettled and that a final
if the United States does not negotiating session Is necessasign the cease·fi1·e agreement ry. Hanoi . insist~ no f'll;ther
Oct. 31.
negotiations are nee&lt;\ed 1but,
The Paris diplomatic Nguyen Vanh Ne, the chief
sources, quoted by UPI ~h ie! Hanoi spokesman, said some ·
diploma tic correspondent points could be clarified alter
Joseph W. Grigg, said Rogers the formal signing.
was expected to c-ome to Paris
There was a complete blackfor the signing even though out from both sides on whether
Pres ident Nixon's security Kissinger would be in Paris
adviser, Hen ry A. Kissinger, Oct. 31 and whether there
negotiated the agreement in a would be more talks. But the
series of top-secret talks with North Vietnamese stood pat on
Hanoi leaders.
their ultimatum that the
The sources said No rth United States must sign Oct.
Vietnam 's Foreign Minister, 31-&lt;&gt;r else. .
Nguyen Duy Trinh, would sign
The treaty, first disclosed
on behalf of Hanoi.
Thursday by North Vie!narn
Communist sources denied and confirmed the same day by
ea rlier re port s that South the United States, calls for the
Vietnam and the Viet Cong also fighting to end 24 hours after
would sign . They said there the signing of the document.
would be only two signatures Within the next 60days au U.S.
on the document and that the an ~ non-Vietnamese allied
preamble states specifically troops would be withdrawn
lhat the United States is acting from South VIetnam and
also on behalf of South Vietnam . American prisoners of war
and tha t Hanoi is acting for the repatriated.

,- t no
'
Oh10
guilty Of
b urgIary

By PAUL ANDERSON
ANCHORAGE,Ataska(UPl)
Having covered 210,000
square miles, the search ror
House Majority Leader Hale
Boggs and three others Satur·
day reached ita 13th day u
planes .continued to check out
the slightest clue to the fate of·
the missing men.
Maj. Henry Stocker, director
of the Rescue Coordination
Center at Elmendorf Air Force
Base said the Boggs hunt may
be the first of the year to be
suspended .
"But we have n't reached the
point yet where we have
considered lessening our actlvi·
ty," he said.
Bo,sgs dlsap~eared Oct. ~on
1a !light, frpJ:II A!l\'h,~al'll to
Juneau with Alaska s congrllssman, Nick Begich, Begich'l
aide, Russell Brown, and Don
E. Jon, the pilot.
Three dozen planes took off
Saturday to continue the effort.
A helicopter was dispatched to
inspect another so.&lt;:alled sightlng,.a T-shaped object noted In
photos taken by a . RF4
Phan tom reconnalssan~e jet.
Not only was the search
hindered by snow and rain, but
it was made difficult by the
coloring of the mlsslng planewhite with orange markinga;
The white color would make tilt
Cessna 310 almost undistlngulshableagalnsta background
of snow.
The longest aerial search at
Elmendorf was three winter
weeks In 1968 spent looking for
three men in a small plane.
Their bodies were found the
following summer.
So far the Boggs search hat
involved 687 sorties crlascrossing the Alaskan coastline ,
for a total of 2,414 houra.
Almost 100 "slghtings" of
possible wreckage have been
checked out.

LOS ANGELES (UPJ ) - Aftcr two days of deliberation, a
federaf jury has convicted three
Ohio men of the multimilliondollar burglary of a bank in an
exclusive southern California
community.
The seven-man , five-woman
panel late Friday found Ami!
Dinsio, 36, Charles A. Mulligan,
38"Jip~ Rhlllp, B. C~riftopher,
31, gUilty ol conspiracy, bank
burglary and larceny . •
The defendants were charged
with a "mission impossible"
raid on the United California
Bank branch in Laguna Niguel in Orange County , The
bank was robbed during the
weekend of March 24-26 by
thieves who broke through the
top of the vault and systcmatically looted more than 450 safe
deposit boxes.
Exactly how much the boxes
contained is not known. Many
persons reported the loss of
jewelry, cash, negotiable securities and other valuables. Authorities estimated the loss at
about $3 million. but witnesses
at the trial testified that Mulligan and Dinslo admitted partlclpating in the burglary and
bragged that their haul was $5
million.
More than $1 million of the
:::::::::::::::::::;:::;:;:;:::;:;:;:::·;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::~:::::~:::::~:::::~::~::~::~:= ~::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:·
loot has bcenrecovered, lncludin a. duffel bag found on a
hillside above the apartment
!:_!
believed used by the gang dur·
NOlR ETABLE , Fran ce saw the plane go down and ing the burglary.
(UPI) - Nine survivors, some finally located the mangled
Another $98,000 was f.oWJd by
of them virtually WJscratched, wreckage with the aid of police FBI agents buried in a vacant
Saturday told ~ow they and firemen .
lot ac ross from Dinslo 's home
escaped death in the crash of a
The hilly terrain hampered in Boardman , Ohio, and $30,000 '
Air Inter Vickers Viscount that
rescue efforts and local far- was recovered from a closet m
killed 59 other persons Friday
.mers used tractors to take the Christopher's Cleveland home.
on a hilltop near this farming
Survivors and the dead tv Hdwever, authori ties said some
community in southern ambulances waiting two miles of the cash found in those two
France.
away.
places came from a bank in
The French domestic
ANAHEIM, Call!. (UPI)Rescuers set up a temporary Lordstown , Ohio, whicl1 was
airliner , on a Gight from Lyon mortuary a few miles from the looted of more than $430,000 Sen, George McGovern told
to Clermont-Ferrand, crashed crashed plane and took'survi· fi ve weeks after the Laguna Democratic workers at two
into a 3,630-foot-high Picon
breakfasts at Dis\eyland today
vors to a hospital in Clermpnt- Niguel burglary.
Peak, five miles from here. Ferrand .
there
will be "enormoua"
Authorities said the defendRescueteamsdidnotarriveon
ants may have been involved problems left when the Viet-.
the heavily wooded site for five
·
in several other bank burglar- nam war is settled.
RETURN TO OHIO
hours, according to a passe nThe Democratic presidential
ies over the past fi ve years.
WASHIN GTO N (UPl )
ger, Marcel Delcroix.
candidate,
making his last
Delcrolx, 55, a businessman, 'Sen. George McGovern Is
California appearance before
said he thought the turboprop scheduled to ca rry his
the election, told the estimated
WEAPONS TAKEN
engines were not running Democra tic Pr es id enti al
MUNICH, Germany (UP! ) 1,500 party workers that when
properly and just before the campaign back into Ohio next - Police confiscated a large
crash he unfastened his seat- Thursday with an appearance number of weapons and ~~e~a~ i~~ded, ~~~~~0=
in Cincinnati. sen. Edward
belt.
arres ted three persons · problems, of employment,
"'That'showlwas thrown out Kennedy, D-Mass., camsuspected o! ,having CQJltacts inflation, tax reform and
at the moment Of impact·," he paigning !OJ' McGovern, also wi th Arab· gu errill~s. palice providing some better meaM ...
,Yas scheduled to visit the ~tlltc
said.
'
said Saturday. AMunich police of solving the problema at
Delcroix, who received cuts during the final week O\ the
spokesman said agent.!! raided · home."
on his face, said he lived campaign . Kennedy was to be
In a speech prepared lor a
a house Friday and found three
because he sat in the back of in Akron on Monday with a machineguns, slx handguns, later Gonzaga University ran,
the plane, which tore off. Parts possible visit to Youngstown six hand grenades and am- at Spokane, Wash., he ,aaJd
of It were recovered more than set for Friday.
Americans could .loll! their
munition.
600 feet from the fuselage .
The raid also netted a republtc more from ''lltodclr,
After the crash , Delcroix
number of forged ·documents. self-seeking leadenblp" IliaD
RHOOES TO TOUR
said, he found two chUdren,
from attacks from alnad. Be
COLUMBUS ( UP!) . also WJbUrt, flung clear with Former Ohio Gov. James A.
accused the Nixon atlmbUtra.
DOCTOR RESIGNS
him-ll four-year&lt;Jld boy, Syl· t!on of neglecting the tJn1M4
Rhodes has announced he will · URBANA, Ohio (UP! ) ·
vain Monthonnex, and a II· tour southern and eastern Citing "personal needs," Dr. !iatlons.
:vear&lt;Jid . 'girl , Catherine Cuyahoga County next Wed· Paul Zehner an·nounced his
At .Disneyland ha 111 II I
Clzeron.
.
nesday, campa1gning on behalf resignatio~esidenl of · his remarks of Friday..._ ..
"We waited for help for -five of five candidates to · the Urbana College h~re in a letter deno111ced Nixon's v....., If
hours," Delcr-olx sald.-"Dur.ing General Assembly . Rhodes fo tlie ,school's board · of nine measures "a 1IIDIIl
this lime . I talked to the was to make the one-day trustees. Zehner has served as ootrage" and ilr&amp;ad Mill&amp;
chUdr~n and c9mforted them. campaign swing aboard a GOP head of the school since his call "a special
Every three minutes J shoaled campaign bus called "Ohio • appoinbnent lri 1969. No sue- Congress and stve •
for help."
' ,
'
override the " ' House and Senate Victory cessor was immed(ately to
today."
Police said a local !ann~ Special."
'
named.

Nine tell .story

iii

p ro
. blems
•
remazn

�17-TheSundayTimes-Sentinei,Sunday,Oct. 29,1972
•

18-TheSwldayTimes-&amp;mtinel, Swulay,Od. 29,1972

(Continued lt'om page 15)
turned off when many
questions remained unan-ed as to .the .extent of .
Emprise's operations."
Pepper, reached by UP! at
Ids· Miami law office, said
Dole's implication that the
hearings were called off because of O'Brien's intervention '
"a f$ehood fabricated
out of the whole cloth."
lie said he had never talked
to O'Brien, that the hearings
bad · never been finnly schemled to resume in September,
and that Dole had never talked
to hlrD about Ute allegations
before making them . .
"I resent any insinuation or
..
inference that we have done
anything whatsoever In
relation to such a matter, " '
Pepper said. "We have not.
Thi8 Is utterly unfoWJded."
Pepper said the Jacobs
brothers had been "fully
cooperatl ~e." appearing
'lrilllngly without subpoenas,
and l!ad agreed lo come back in
the fall for more questioning.
Rep. Sam Steiger, R-Ariz.,
grilled Ute Jacobs brothers
hardest at last spring's hearqs about their alleged ties to
the underworld. But Utere was
no sworn t~stlmony implicating either Jeremy Jacobs
or his younger brother, Max, as
members of . organized
crime.
While Pepper confirmed It
was Stelger who asked that the
Jacot. lrothers be summoned
... DKre questiOnlOg in the fall,
he declined to suggest that
Steiger had prodded Dole into
releasing his statement.
Dole also sald there were
''tllc:onflnned reports of large
1mounts of cash flowing
through Emprise and its
lllblidl.-les Into !lie McGovern
CNDJI"lgn."
O'Brien responded with this
lllatement:
"Bob Dole's allegaUon is a
de~~perate and despicable Ue. I
After being renominato!d
have bad no secret meeilng for President, Abraham
with Jeremy Jacobs. I solicited Lincoln quipped: "I do not
a.-A- fo
allow myself to suppose
oo •w.... r the -McGovern that either the convention
campelgn.
or the Lea g u e have con"1 have abaolutely no know- eluded to decide that I am
ledge of congressional activity either the greatest or best
relating to the Emprise corpor- man in America, but rather
aticll. Thls sleazy performance they have concluded that it
by Dole Is just another is not best to swap horses
.d e-ate effort to hide the . while crossing the river,
..,....
and have further concluded
criminal acUons that have that I' anL l!.o~ ~- 1p9or. a
befn·pert,etn~E~d dn behalf of ·horse' 'tii~F1tBey''rtligllf''il8t
Mr. Nbon and his campaign." make a botch of it trying to

·D ateline

WHAT AMERICANS .THINK
McGovern
In Trouble
\

On Welfare
By Stanley C. Plog; Ph.D.
President, Behavior Science
Corp. I BAS/CO), Los Angeles

'

I
I
l'

l

When Sen. George McGovern proposed his $1 ,000-perperson welfare reform plan,
he did irreparable damage to
his effort to becom'e president.
This conclusion grew out
of r e c e n tl y completed indepth r e sear c h by Behavior S c i en c e Corporation
(BASI CO I on the issues of
the 1972 presidential campaign.
Nearl y 800 voters all over
the c o u n try have participated in the study conducted
by senior BASICO psychologists using personal intervi e ws and encounter-type
discussion groups.

DAVID POLING, D.D.

'Lib/ Not Around
When Need Arises
By REV. DAVID POLING

The study
rev eals that
most voter~
show a strong
work ethic .
d e eply distrusting a n y
program that
w o u I d inc re ase the
number of
persons who
Dr. Plog
receive "wei ·
fare ." Further, most Ameri·
cans have an intense desire
to reduce the costs of welfare and eliminate welfare
fraud .

By Hobart · Wilson ·Jr.

that welfare and its proble•ns are a very important
subject to most Americans
but that McGovern's recommendations put him at odds
with a majority of the vote
ers, surprisingly including
those who presumably would
receive the greatest advantage from the program: the
poor and ,the varlou·s ethnic
minorities. The research affirms that, for broad seg·
ments of the U.S. population,
employment In a job that
demonstrate)! one's s k i'll s
and abilities is · still a primary goal and a source of
pride. Voters interviewee
take a great satisfaction in
earning their own way in
life and are strongly opposed
to the idea of contributing
tax dollars to peo~le "who
don't want to work. '
The study reveals that the
issues or unemployment and
we I f a r e are closely intertwined. Voters participating
in the research were giVen a
list of seven domestic issues
arid were asked to rank them
as to their importance. The
result are, in order of perceived importance:

require many years. But they
believe that the government
can c h a n g e unemployment
rates and cut back on welfare expenditures very
quickly-if it wants to.
The great majority of people of all elhl\ic groups want
to work. They recogmze that
some . pe o pIe legitimately
cannot 'work and th~y are
glad that •welfare exists to
support the needy through
contributions from workers'
taxes. Yet there is a strong
belief that large number$ of
non-deserving persons are
on welfare and the voters
are irritated with politicians
for :&gt;ot "cracking down" on
welfare fraud.
Programs . that have the
apllearance of increasing
welfare costs, such as McGovern's original $1,000 plan
or his more recent ,6,500
a n n u a 1 income minimum,
elicit the voters' distrust.
And our researchers found
that voters discussing welfare frequently expressed

1) Crime

2) Pollution
3)

Unemployment

4)

Education

S)

Drugs

6)

Welfare

7) Problems of the citie1

Although the voters rate
crime and pollution highest,
the i s s u e s they talk most
about in encounter-type dis·
cussion ·g r o u p s are ·unemployment and welfare. They
feel that successful P.rogress
to combat crime anif drugs,
clean up the environment
and solve the problems of

Hot Stove League
will be{Pn Monday
.'~'

Grid Scores

Cease-Fire Could
Intensify Hostilities

opposition to McGovern on
the basis of his welfare programs.
The .strength of feeling
about this issue can be seen
in the answers to this question: "Which of the following programs would you be
willing to support if each
program cost you $15 a year

Addirioriol
Fun4t for :

"Wovld

Woold
Not

Support

Support

Cleaner '
en•iro1unent

Drvg
problems
Polict

71~

66

.34

63

37

"41

39

State coll•gn, IUtiYCr.

57

Welfare
recipients

21

79

potet:tiDII

Eleme•tarr#
high Khool1

Miles, who set one school
record and tied another, had
TD runs of 29, 62, 42 and 4 yards
and broke open a close game
wiUt his long-distance jaunts.
He Ued the single game mark
for TDs and set a new standard
for rushing yardage.

.

++ +

&lt;YrHO Burdette, Bill Welker, Garland (Chick) Plymale,
MUes Epling, Capt. John Epling, the late Bob Vesner, Georg~
Rout, Alex Borden, Gee Marchi, Allen Romaine, the late Jim
Jarvis, Bob Marchi, John Epple, Gene Wetherholt, Wayne
Folcten, Bill Joe Johnson, Sammy Plantz, Cilrl Baker, Ehner
Davis, Forrest Borden, John Stebbins, Jack JaQuay, Fred
Burdette, Bob Tope, AI Mackenzie and Ed Rainey. Managers
, were Merrill Evans and Frank (Lujack) Lyons.

++ +

TilE Epling brothers, MUes and John, have boys playing on
the 1972GAHSsquad. Wayne Folden, Bill Joe Johnson and Fred
, Burdette have boys coming on in the freshman and eighth grade
classes. John Stebbins and Allen Romaine's boys (Steve and
David-)-have already graduated from GAHS where both played
athleticsfortheBlueDevils. BobMarchihasafuiureBiueDevil
coming in the lvwer grades while Gene WeUterholt has several
"cheerleaders" on the way up.

+++

.

AREA motorists have been asked to take extra precautions
during trick-or-treat Qlght activities Monday. Youngsters will be
making their rounds In Gallipolis between 6 and 7p.m. Gallipolis
Lafayette Legion Post No. 'll will spohoor its annual Halloween
parade and costume party on Tuesday, beginning at 6:30p.m., in
front of the Uty Building.,Excited children dressed in costumes
may forget to watch out for cars, Utus local drivers should be
extra careful during the Halloween season Monday and Tuesday.

++ +

MRS. William J. Brown reminds arPa residents that dozens
of Gallipolis children wiD be knocking on doors today, not to stuff
their stomachs, but rather to obtain ftmds to put food in the
stomachs of starving children elsewhere in Ute world. It's the
IIQIIuallJNICEF ,drive .
biS~·900 R hnR • 1!'1\flnnill•+~,+ ·• 1'·/ ·moJ• • ''I H"l •,li'W
LAST YEAR'S Halloween collection of pennies, nickels and
dimes added up to $31&lt; million in the United States (including
· approximately $900 In Vmeland.) Relative to the total needs of
Ute povertyofltrlcken masses in this world, $31f• million -or even
, $Mif• million_ buys little. Vet perhaps doing some good is better

money to help less fort~mate people is a habitthey oughtto learn·
So If some yoWJgste!i' taps on your door today and says,
"Trick or Trest for UNICEF", smile kindly and put some coins
In the box he carries. You may save him ,a bellyache and help
relieve some other child's hunger pain.

++ +

TWENTY YEARS AGO, from Ute ftles of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallia· Times ... Cheshire site selected for
'!45,000,000 power plant, will .leed atomic energy job in Pike
County ... Robert M. Switzer, 89, dean of Galllii CoWJty lawyers,
dies . . . Dry spell conilnues, numerous forest fires reported
Kn
fin
In
throughout area.· .GAHSjuniorBryon utsen !shes sixth
di8trlct cross cotmtrY meet ... GAllS defeats Athens 13-6 in
homecoming battle with '32 SEOAL grid champs on hand . . .
Capt. Jim Gilliam crowns Eleanor Gatewood queen before large
a-owd.

28 Pupils.make
RACINE- Twenty. eight
pupils of the Southern Junior
High School were named to Ute
honar roll at Ute close of the
first six weeks grading period.
Making a grade o!B or above
"to be listed with those names in
"capltalletters receiving all A's
were:
Grade 8 - · PATRICIA
.

.

.

MaUs blamed
for late letter

Jr. High roll
AUTHERSON, BOBBI
CHAPMAN, Donna Dee!, Eric
Dunning, Anna Frank, Carl
Johnston, Debbie Norris, Vicki
. Roush, Lee Smith, TRACI
WEESE, SCOTT WOLFE,
David Bass, Brenda Lewis.
Grade 7 - JAVE ORD,
CARMEN THOMA, Lois
Bailey, Stephen Baker, Vicki
Boso, Larry Fisher, Perry Hill,
Teresa Meadows, .Jean llltchhart, Ricliard .Teaford, Debbie
Weddle, Nlle Wilson, Barbara
Theiss, Shelley Chevalier,
Patty Robinson.

,

By NICHOLAS DANILOFF
WASHINGTON (UP! ) High SOviet officials have told
Jewish leaders in Moscow that
their requests to leave the
Soviet Union will he decided on
a case-by-ease basis, and some
may have to wait 20 years to
get out , it was learned
Satur\lay.
"Perhaps you will he kept for
a year, 'Perhaps for three,
perhaps for five, perhaps for
~0," Acting Minister Boris T.
Shumilin of Internal affairs
told a group of 80 Jews, according to one of the participants in the unprecedented
encoWJter on Thursday.
Details of the meeting hetween the Jews and Shumilin
were relayed by participants to
supporters in the United States
on Thursday and Friday by
telephone. Aspokesman for the
Union of Council for Soviet
Jewry Saturday released
transcripts of the conversations.
Tanya Levich, the wile of a
well-known, dismissed physics
professor, relayed most of the
details and conveyed the sense
of frustration and disappointment which the group experienced. She said:
· Encounte'r Recalled
"It was a depressing atmosphere you know. We were
made fun of. We were mocked:
A very depressing and un-

drive souUt through Kentucky and Tennessee. Norris dam and
lake near Knoxville were points of interest and after lunch at the
Captain's Table Restaurant, on a boat anchored in the lake, the
route was through Knoxville to Townsend, Tenn., the western
entrance to the Smoky Mountain National Park. The group
visited cade's Cove to view many of the original pioneer homes
still standing, a waterilOwered grist mlll still operating, a horse
powered grinder and open air cooking vats stye in use for pioneer
style oorghum manufacturing. Gatlin berg, Tenn., for lunch and
oouvenior shopping and a ride to the top of the space needle for a
scenic view, visit to Newfound Gap and Clingman's Dome,
highest peak In Tennessee, Uten to Cherokee, N.C., rounded out
the trip. Mrs. Pooler is now at her home In Chester.
CONTRIBUTIONS 1'0 THE ANNUAL Middleport Community Halloween party to be held Tuesday night aren 't exactly.
''pouring in." More contributions are needed to meet the ex-

.

pleasant feeling . As a matter of
fact, he (Shumilin ) never
answered any of our questions.
He just said, •Don~ get excited
- just wait. For how long, I
don't know. Perhaps for never,
perhaps for some time."
Anot,her Jewish activist, Vla·
dimir Slepak, recalled an
encounter he had recently with
another official who heads a
department known as ovm,
which issues exit visas. The
official , Identified only as
Verin, reportedly said:
HThere is no influence, no
pressure from outside that will
have any meaning or any
significance for our decisions.
We should decide. We ourselves."
Both Shumllln and Verin
alluded to "government considerations." But neither explained what government con·
sideratlons might be involved
In granting permission to emi·
grate or to excuse emigrants
from paying the recently Instituted education tax. The tax
is meant to compensate the
Soviet government for free
education provided to the
emigrants. The tax can run
from $5,000 to $25,000, depending on the education received.
Hope Not Abandoned
The administration has
raised the Issue of Ute controversial tax with Soviet officjals, and Is hopeful It will be

quietly dropped. A movement
has been developing in
Congress to prevent the
granting of favorable trade
terms to the Soviet Union until
Ute tax is rescinded.
State Department officials
said Saturday they were aware
of Ute substance of Ute Moscow
meeting with the Jewish activists. They said they were not
surprised by the hard-line
which the Soviet officials took.
But the State Department
officials added they were not
giving up hope. They noted that
the Soviet government recently
permitted about 200 famllies to
leave the Soviet Union without
paying Ute education tax.
"In the short term, the Soviet
goverruilent has shown Utat it
Is willing to deal with the
problem In a fairly pragmatic
way," one U.S. official said.
On a related matter, Mrs.
Levlch denied that !ilumllln
had said that 93 per cent of
Jews wishing to emigrate
would be allowed to do so, as
reported by Western news
agencies from Moscow on
Friday.
She said Shumilln had
claimed that In the past, the
Soviet government had permit·
ted 93 per cent of the applicants
to leave.. She disputed this
claim, saying that It did not
correspond to informatlon
published In ·Ill~ /N~.preas.

ways."

Poczik, a member of the
Michigan City Yacht Club, has
owned ''Waylen" six years and

has sailing experience on Lake
Michigan and Long Island
Sound . Poczik says his route
will'be the easiest one possible,
' staying within 20 degrees
latitude of the equator, which
should provide warm weather
and favorable winds.
ment Act of 1972.
-Legislation creating
mineral research and training
institutes in all 50 states.
- A measure increasing federal funds lor airport safety
Including additional antl)lijacking personnel and
devices. It would also h~ve
outlawed the imposition of
local air travel head taxes.
- Aveterans' heaiUt care bill
which would open VA hospitals
to nonveterans.
-A measure giving 1,500
deputy U.S. msrshals a 38 per
cent pay increase.
MEN ONLY, NO
TOLEDO (UPI) - While
women still may not be
welcomed at Dyers restaurant,
at least they are served. U. S.
District Court Judge Don
Young ruled Friday that
women must be serven at the
establishment, ending 55 years
of male-only status al Dyers.
Two women who filed the suit,
Carole Nolen and ·C~rl~ne
Bennett, were among tl),e. l!~st
':.)VQII)en C\lSto~neu.{'ri~ay_,-.:1

DEAR JOHN:

.

Sorry to advise you that your political ads are a bit
antiquated .. .
I have never operated a theatre in my life, nor
have I seen an "X-rated" picture.
Collins Mining Company, out of business for six
months, had only minimal use of the recently . completed section of State Highway 650. But 60,000 other
people of Lawrence County appreciate it daily.

penses involved and residents are asked to drop by their
donations to the Citizens National Bank or to Mrs. Ann Harvey.
Mrs .. Harvey will pick up contributions If anyone desires and
Utese folks may contact her at 992-7132. Deadline lor giving is 3
p.m. Monday when Ute bank closes.
Incidentally, the Meigs Hi~ School band will be taking part
in Ute parade which begins at 6:30p.m. from. Ute A&amp;P parking lot
moving to the Middleport football field. Several groupa are
helping with the party but contributions from individual
residents are needed. There will be no trick or treat night for
Middleport

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
msils apparently caused a
copy !Jf a campaign expense Search £o~ Boggs
report prepared by Rep.
Clarence E. Miller to arrive
late at Ute Secretary Of State's :may .be copcluded
office:
""
-- . " ·· .,
. Earlier lhi8 · week It was ·
repotted that Mlller was the
ANCHOR-AGE, Alaska
'only l~ctUDbenl congressinan · (UP!) _ The leader of ~
who failed to beat~ Tuesday search tiarty looking for H•
deadline for flUng rePD,"ts with Majority 'Leader Hale BoggS,
Ute Secretary of Stele s offtce ,D-La., and th.-ee ·others said
or the clerk of the House of Friday Ute efforts to find the
Representatives. Aspokesman . mlsalng twm~ngine Cessna 310
for Miller said the expeuae may be suspended.
report wu fUed Monday wl~
But A1t Force Maj. henry
the Houae Clerk but Brown s · Slacker dine tor of the search·
office didn't gel a copy untll added, :'We haven't given
W!!dnesday..
~!opt o1 finding II." The light
aircraft carrying Boggs,
.,
Alaska- Congressman Nick
JleBich, Beglch's aide Russell
j'«)W YOU KNOW
BrO\lll IIIII pUot Don E. Jonz
In aome coun,lrles, okra diAppeared oct. 16 on a
· eeedl., )lied u a ·aubltttute campil&amp;ii · fllsht from Art·
lw c:oifee. •
chorl&amp;e ID Jlllllllu. ·

Such ill-structured schemes of "guilt by
association" aimed at me by a couple of the big city_
Democrat newspapers the past year and a half are
common knowledge here.
Had I been guilty of any wrong -doing they would
have reported it "loud and clear" long ago.
The-people of Southeastern Ohio are not stupid.
They are well aware that strong rural leadership
make's us a frequent target of these wild attempts at
public deceit.
For the benefit of the voters, let's concern ourselves with iss.ues of value- rather than the same old
over-worked, re-hashed and out-dated stories of the
Cleveland Plain Dealer and the Dayton Dally News.
I am sure_!b_~_Qublic WQuld much rather.know.y.o.ur_
views on Governor Gilligan's Tax and Spend programs
for the next two years.
Sincerely,
Oakley

OPENING _•••
Silver Brld&amp;t Shopplnc Center

lOON

. VOTE FOR THE .MAN WHO KEEPS SOIJTHIEAST'E;RN
. : NEEDS BEFORE THE 'STATE .LEG'ISLA

WITH: · .
•RECORD
•RURAL
RECOGNITION BENEFITS

•OUTSTANDING • RESPONSIBL£
LEADERSHIP
REPRESENTATION

Where Kroger ·
Gets It All Together
'

.

Featuring an impressive
..lection of Gourmet Foods'
for elegant restaurant.din·lng right in'your home. --

~--

f

•

16 months but that he is taking
longer so he can sightsee.
"I've been a nut about boats
a'll my life and have always
wan ted to do something like
this," he said , But his wife,
Ima , isn't so sure. "She is not
crazy about sailing and she
thinks Utis trip is hazardous.
But I consider it safer than
running up and down the high-

request it.
MRS. INEZ POOLER, CHESTER, spent last weekend in the
scenic Great Smoky Mountains of Tennessee and NorUt carolina
with her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Wiener of
Fairborn, Ohio.
Mrs. Pooler found .the weather and scenery beautiful for the

uP .

"They Ollfht lo Jo -'ltint lllloJ file .-Ill; ol -~
, Clition kills ~ ,.u;., tltni ,.,.,..
·

!·

POMEROY- Wha~with the energy shortage, we read with
interest the colwnn of Jack Anderson, Washington colwnnist,,
who reports that a device which would cut the homeowners' gas•
bills by 20 to 30 pet. has not been put on the market.
Anderson says the fuel saver is an automatic damper which
can be attached to the flue of a gas furnace. It has been approved
by the Canadian Gas Association which tested the device and
foWJd it safe, Anderson says.
The columnist charges that the American Gas Association
has not even started the testing after a four-year waitlltg period.
As a practice matter, no gas furnace fixture can be marketed
and installed imtil it has been tested and approved by the AGA
because contractors won't use it, Anderoon writes.
In 1971 the AGA's approval committee auUtorized a task
force to test the.damper and write standards for it but no task
force had been eStablished a year later and the task force was
reauthorized but still nothing has happened, the writer charges.
. . Meantime, homeowners continue to pay for gas the device .
could save, Anderson concludes.
ON BEHALF OF THE MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society,
which is planning a Christmas bazaar in November, Mrs. Mary
Seaman gives a big vote of thanks to Mrs. J. M. Thornton,
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. Mrs. Thornton has crocheted a
number of colorful potholders for the bazaar. She's known in the
community for her willingness to help any organization or group
on a worthy project.
REHEARSALS FOR THE NOV. 24 Fall Follies of Ute Big
Bend Minstrel Association are moving right along. Dancers will
rehearse at 7 p.m·. on Monday and· Wednesday and ooloists at 7
'fuesday at the Pomeroy Elementary School. The Meigs Band
Boosters are spom/oring the presentation. Incidentally, Gerald
Powell, a former professional ballroom dance instructor, and his
daughter, Mila , will be seen in one of1the numbers planned for
this fall's show.
VERNER SEE, 348GRANT ST., says he has had 1,000 copies
of the ordinance dealing with the automotive license tax to be
Yll~wlr,11Jl011 i!JI fyliddl~ll!lrt .on Nov: 7 reproduced and invites
anyonewlshingacopyofthelegisJ&amp;tlOll(Odropbyhishomeand

· than doing oo good at all. It may weD he that what's equally
important about ·UNICEF is the learning experience it gives
American boys and girls. UNICEF gives them a chance to think
about other kids and maybe even to realize how good, by comparlson, are their own lives. Giving a couple of hours to raise

"menace. ''
Nixon conceded it might be
"politically very damaging" to
veto the legislation oo close to
the Nov . 7 election.
But, he said that if he were
"to sign these measures mto
law , I would in effect be
making promises that could
not be ·kept, since the funds
required to finance the promised services are not available
and would not be available
without Ute higher taxes I have
promised to resist."
18 Measures Signed

I
I

1 By Bob Hoeflich

++ +

· lmmLodiale Outcry
The vetoes drew an immediate outcry from Democratic
leaders.
Sen. George S. McGovern
told a campaign audience in
North Hollywood, calif., that
the vetoes were a "moral
outrage."
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey,
D·Minn., \ old a Minneapolis
press conference "this is sheer
political demagoguery ... utter
disdain and contempt for Ute
people's elected representativ~s ." He called Nixon a

encircle .oorld .

Jews may wait 20 years to
,. 1I
depart Russia for Israel
I

'

1

FOR NEWCOMERS in the area, members of the 1947 GAHS
championship team whlch downed Wahama :&lt;l).O, Pt. Pleasant216, Athens 21.(), Middleport 28-13, Pomeroy 28-li, Jackson 33-7,
Logan 13-8, Neloonville 13-0, Wellston 26-7 and Oak Hill 21HJ were:

Bowling Green, running its
record to 4-2·1 and avenging an Pioneers get
embarrassing loss to MarShall
a year ago, had little success tomahawked 19-8
against the Thunder(ng Herd in
•
MARIE'ITA, Ohio (UP!) ,the first half exc~pt for Miles'
29-yard first quarter TD run Chuck Lowe and Jeff Elrod
and a 62-yarder for anoUter scored touchdowns and· Tom
score in the second.
Burke kickect two field goals to
lead Ohio Wesleyan to a 19-8
Following the second half Ohio Conference victory rr{er
kickoff, however, Miles broke Marietta Saturday.
loose for his third long run of
Burke kicked fiel4 goals of 41
the day, a 42-yard scoring play, and 24 yards and Lowe scored
and then Ute roof caved in on from low- yards out to give
Ute Thundering Herd.
Wesleyan a 13-j) haiiUme adThe Falsons' Gary Zelonis vantage.
blocked a Mike McKinney punt
Marietta narrowed the
and Bill Fisher picked It up and margin to 13-8 on a two-yard
went into the end zone from the' TD rtm by Steve Morris and .
two to make it 21Hl, and Morris' conversion run, but ,
following the next kickoff, Elrod then scored for Wesleyan
middle guard Bill Centa to give the visitors the win.
blocked another Marshall punt'
Ohio Wesleyan I~ now 3-3-1
with the Falcons recovering on overall and l.O.lln the league·,
the nine. Miles scored from the while Marietta is 4-3 and 1-2.

"::!:1'

=
.......

weekend f~ivities.

four three plays later.
BG's other two scores came
on a three-yard ; run by·• Don
Dillingham and a one:-yard
plunge by Mike Watson.!
Marshall's only score came
following a BG fumble on the
Falcon 27 yard line.
. The Falcons rolled up 304
yards on Ute ground and had
another 81 through the air.
Marshall, now 1-6 on the
season, luid a minus 31 yards
rushing and 120 passing on 9,of
29.

BERRr'S WORLD

• ' -•

·1Of the Bend

'

J

a

JOHN A. Epling, captain+++
of the 1947 SEOAL champs, an- I
notmces James ,F. (Jim) Halderman, 'head coach, Maurice .I
(Grinny) Fowler and OlarlesSwanson, assistant coaches, along 'I
with Supt. Ed Higgins, Principal M. Harold Brown, board
r.1ernber Dr. H. B. Thomas, SEO official Harold Rolph, and !he
1947 cheerleaders and ·managers are expected to attend the 1

BG wrecks Marshall
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
(UP!) - Paul Miles exploded
for four touchdowns and 217
yards rushing Saturday to lead
Bowling Green to a 46-7 victory
over Marshall.
·

necessi!yofataxincreasenext
year, " Nixon said in a
statement ·Frid~y .
·
Among the vetoed bills was a
$30.5 billion appropriation
measure for the Depariments
of Labor and Health,
Education and Welfare. The
two agencies will continue to
operate at last year's spending
level-$28 billion-until Feb. 28
under
a
"continuing
resolution"
passed
by
Congress. It was the second
time Nixon has vetoed the
!lEW-Labor money measure.

r-------------------------,
Beat
.
I

Although' a majority favors most of .the programs,
voters are strong.Jy against
a d d I n g dollars to welfare
p r o gram s. Participanli in
discussion groups cannot understand why_welfare' rolls
increased during· the period
of great prosperity in the
1950s and 1960s. Their con·
cern: If welfare can Increase
during good times, bow large
would it grow and how big
a burden would·it become If
we had a severe economic
recession?
Their uneasiness Is compounded by fears about their
own f•1tures. During the recent economic slump many
were temporarily out of
work or had friends who lost
their jobs. If they were to
lose their jobs in the future,
would they be able to receive the temporary support
and benefits that welfare is
supposed to provide? Or
would the welfare funds
have been used up by "freeloaders who got to the
trough first"?
Welfare is a vital issue
and the feelings of the
voters about this issue are
unified and strong. George
McGovern's proposals have
intensified his Republican
ooposition and weakened his
Democratic support. ·

gridders by .46 to 7

·EDA bills; signs fat. military Acts

WASil!NGTON (UPI J !'resident Nixon , declarjng
TilE Silver AM!versary of Gallia Academy High School's that his actions were aimed at
. undefeated an'd untied I!M7 mue Devil football team will be ob- avoiding a tax hike in 1973,
served here Ute weekend of Nov.lO,ll, and 12.
vetoed nine bills Friday
++ +
because they exceed his ·self-·
MEMBERS of that powerhouse squad of 25 years ago, imposed federal spending limit
coaches and managers will attend the 1972 Blue Dt•lls' home by $2.75 billion over the next
. finale' against PortsmouUt. A banquet will he held in the ·two years.
Washington gym on Saturday, Nov. 11, beginning at 7 p.m. .
Nixon was expected to an(That's where the '47 SouUteastern Ohio League champs were nounce additional vetoes tohonored.) On Sunday, Nov. 11, the '47 champs will attend 10:30 day.
a.m. services at the First Presbyterlari Church·where they will
"I cannot sign (them) ·
he_ar a grid sermon by Rev. (Retired) Linson H. Stebbins. Rev. without breaking my promise
Stebbins, former pastor at Ute church, delivered grid sermons to to Ute American people to do all
in my power to avoid . the
Blue Devil teams during Ute "Golden Era" years.

Results o1 the study show education and the cities will more in taxes?'l

Those active in women 's liberation zoomed in on the
church two years ago. Boards and agencies were pressur~d to check out their hiring practices and job descriptions. More women sought ordination and several national denominations elected women to top offices. Chai~­
man gave wa y to chairperson . Tim es were changing.
But this is not two years ago and a quiet pause has
come to Women's Liberation. Liberal clergymen in New
York have been angered that the marching gals who
banner Fifth Avenue can never seem to get up to Albany
when the abortion hearings r.eed their presence and voice.
The leading denominations in the Christian ranks (save
the mighty Roman Catholics 1are quite satisfied with the
abortion law in New York.
CINCINNATI - Opening Sponsors Include Stroh's,
Yet the recall movement is racing along, in spite of
Day
is Monday in the Hot Stove -Marathon Oil, Admiral, First
;!50,000 abortions in the past two years, and might strike
l
• "Redsline
,
I " 11th•
Jo hour~owq the ,present state law permittin g such medical at- I "• gue.
National ' Bank of 'Cin'cihnati,
long
baseball
talk-show
which Fedders on Buick and · W'oody
[en!!on. Some clergy workers feel that the Women's Lib
is great in the editorial offices but invisible in day-to-day proved so popular last winter' Sander Ford.
swap."_
struggles.
returns Monday, Oct. 30 on
' The quanda ry for mainline denominations and their Station WLW radio (700 on the
seminanes is this: Who is going to hire all these women dial 1, The show will run from
who want to be ordained? Will the con gregation in Des 7:05 to 8 p.m:
Lakewood , St. Edward 28
Moines or the parish in St. Louis? There are not enough
Parma Padua.20
on
the
call-in
First
guest
board job and institutional positions to take on those
Chardon
14 Aurora 12
who cannot or will not make the scene in the local show will be Reds Manager Kirtland 21 Berkshire 7
Sparky Anderson , Sparky will North
church. Most churchmen (again, the male bias ) are aimRidgeville
24
mg at legal change and support for women 's rights at the
Wellington 14
talk and answer questions
slate and national' leveL They also realize that the vast about the Reds National Highland 42 Cleve. Lutheran
West 16
majority of their membership (which is female) is not
League Championship year. Keystone' 10 South Amherst 0
parading
and
boycotting,
but
reflecting
on
the
words
of
By RAY CROMLJ;:V
He'll be on the line from his Cleve. C.C. 7 Bedford Chane/
Lois Wyse, who has produced som e startling comment in
0
the new book, "A Weeping Eye Can Never See'" (Double- home in Thousand Oaks, Calif. Cloverleaf 14 Brunswick 0
WASHINGTON \NEA l
day and Co.).
The weekly show will feature Parma Byzantine 20
,
If history repeats itself, the intensity of the ground war
Painesville River 6
Reds voices AI Michaels and
could increase under the Vietnam leopard-spot type cease- Under False Lashes
Jefferson 26 Hamilton
fire in which each side held to the bits ar.d pieces of ter- It ill the las.t part of the twentieth centu-ry
Joe Nuxhall. They will take a West
Township
12
ritory occupied w)\en the stop-the-shooting agreement
brief look at the week's news in Dublin 27 Teays Valley 7
And
I
am
tzred
of
making
beds
and
lying
in
them
.
went into effect.
the baseball world. Then will Newark 2&amp; Lancaster 14
I have earned the right to ten Mays
The bombing would halt. So, temporarily, would major
And two Octobers every year.
come an interview with a Pickerington 14 Liberty
Unlop 0
ground action by conventional units . But underground
I have earned the right to be with people I like
baseball personality, followed Utica 21 Heath 18
killings and assassinations would likely increase dramatAnd to avoid the people I don't.
by a chance for fans to call in Centerburg 20 East · Knox 0
icallr as both sides sought to assert permanent suprem·
I hav~ played so many roles that
and question the guest. The StCharles 21 New Albany 15
acy m the areas their troops cohtrolled.
The lmes are repeating themselves.
lrontot\ 46 Gallipolis 14 ·
Redsllne telephone number is Sheridan
This is what happened in North Vietnam at the end of I have gone through every fas hion cycle
14 Trl Valley 13
World War II during a cease fir~ between the Nationalists
749-2345.
Springfield
North 7 CenAnd I kf!OW more than one way to make chocolate cake.
and the Communists.
terville
6
Redsline will air every
8 Watkins Memorial
The objective of the assassinations could be every
Is this what my life is supposed to be?
Monday from Oct. 30 to April2. Morgan.
6
minor citizen of influence who favored the other side, and
Is tllis what I was milled for'
Guests on.the show will be top Nelsonville York 56 Miller 0
every military and guerrilla cadre in every hamlet in
14
New
names in baseball, including Coshocton
South Vietnam. The major political types would be able to
Did I learn French and Spanish in order to perfect my
Philadelphia
7
the National League Cham- Riverview 33 Ridgewood •0
protect themselves for the most part.
menu-readwg?
pions.
It is the small man who would be targeted- the South
Portsmouth West 55 Minford
And what does it do fo·r my soul. to translate escargots?
0
Vietnames;, cooperative treasurer, the fishing co-&lt;Jp
Redsline is produced by Ute
Lima
Central Catholic 20
leader, the. small union official, the hamlet chief, the
Somewhe-re betweeu the Jazz Age and the Age of
broadcasting department of
Urbana
7
small farmer with a mind of his own, the schoolteache1·
Liberation
the Cin cinnati Reds, .Inc . Shawnee 18 Anthony Wayne
who stands last to what he believes.
I come of age.
16
A cease-fire would also be a time of arms build-up .and
But i~zz is not the rhyiltm that ge nerated me,
Elida 38 Coldwater 6
intense negotiations with .outside allies. In the post World And hberatlOn came too iate to change the pattern of my
Minster 22 Bradford 20
Versailles 14 Parkway 1
War II truce, Ho Chi Minh 's Communists wangled a deal
precut life,
Lehman Cathoflc 42 St.
with the French to supply them with artillery, rifles and
Fu r even though the goals of liberation are the same as
FIELD GOAL WINS IT
Henry 22
machineguns to knock out the Nationalists with whom
mine
NEW
YORK
(UP!
)A
21St.
Marys 63 Delphos St.
they were at "peace."
'
I do not like the noisy leaders.
Johns 20
yard
field
goal
midway
in
the
In a 1972 cease-fire, the North Vietnamese, if they Their strident voices turn me off .
· 56 Lancaster
fourth quarter by John Pesce Malabar
operate as in the rast, would use the truce to bring in
Reemelln o
' .
enabled Rutgers to defeat Crestline 34 Crestview 2
heavy quantities o arms and equipment from the Soviet
Every movement · begins ,with noise and commotion
Union and China and distribute these arms down the Ho then. if it is real, consolidation sets in . For the church
Colwnbia , 6-3, Saturday in the Cols. Academy 23 Danville 12
Chi Minh trails or across the Demilitarized· Zone to their certain quiet has been established, but not silence Just a 45th renewal of" college foot- PlymO\Jth 8 Clearfork o
Philo 13 Maysville 12
cadre in the Hanoi-held leopard spot ~ in South· Vietnam. giving way to longer goals and wider understanding.
ball's second oldest rivalry.
Bedford 37 Mayfield 6
That is, as in the first agreement in Laos , which did
Chagrin Fells 17 Twinsburg 0
allow the Communist areas in two provinces, the North
Perry 19 Pymatuning Valley
Vietnamese would use a cease-fire to build their military
14
strength in base areas in the South,
·
Firelands 56 Avon 12
Buckeye 30 Columbia 6
The South Vietnamese, of course, would counter this
Communist build-up with a similar program of their own.
They'll Do It Every Time ®
E~~i~~~':"th 20 Wlllough.
if able to secure the corttinued flow of · American arms
:-----------::.....____r--:::-.:_~----=-------..J, Westlake 27 North Olmsted
and equipment.
n
n . 1i
18
I'H,I.S&amp; \\O•uD£RVIS14 NEVER IM:lRI&lt;EC)
Weirton Madonna (W. Ve.)
Meanwhile, the killing would go on. The ratio of civilian \ ~ICktiT PROMISED SOlOOt.. PI&gt;&lt;L DERV~ A..
HARDER FOR LESS, AND TI-lE ONLY t:W.\1
22
to military deaths would probaoly increase dramatically. I ro.IND ~GIRLS, J:l&lt;.RriES AND GOOD EAl'S!
HE SAW WI'S MRS. 6W(IN LEGREE"•
MeadowbrOQk 0
Thus far, in recent history, policing cease-fires has
'Buckeye North 15 Cadi,. 13
failed miserably.
·
,
·
";~R"V~Clj~[_r;j~~~~Cambridge 8. Carrollton 8..
. · The treaty oq Laos was violated within hours after the
-~
~- tflel '"" . .
pact was signed, ·despite a three-nat,ion control commis· ·
Martins Fe.rry 40 Bellaire St.
slon. North Vietnamese troops, though agreeing to return ·
Jotms 6 · .
,
.
· home, blatantly and ilpelily continued to use the eastern ·
St. Clairsville 26 Barnesville
24
he!f of that coun!fy (the Ho Chi Minh trails) as a military
Paden · City (W. Va.) 41
bighway, storage, rest and recuperation and assembly
Warren Local 26
&amp;Ha for the war in South Vietnam . They also .P-eriodically
Niles
McKinley 41 Allla,nce
raided western Laos for the ·rice and opiuln crops.
21
.
The ceaae·flre in Korea saw an e11d to the fightlng
North Canton Hoover 36
(thougb after some considerable lime) because the United
Oakwood 7
Natlona forces had absolute control In the South. There
C..nta~ South 10 Jackson 7
East Canton 16 Tuskey ,
wu no leophd spot pattern. But the provisions. of the
Valley t1
lnlty which called ,lor no military build-up were violated
Heights 26 Northby the North Koreans and their allies before the ink was
dry oa the pact despite international inspection teams .
wkt 25 Springfield 18
Tbe Soutl! thereupon followed suit in self-defense. I
Northmont
23
Weal
Tbe International control commissions set up In Vjet·
C.malllon 0
Brookville 'S7 Nor111rldQf 12
IIID after the 18&amp;4 Geneva agreements had no effective
Grttnvltlt
7 Trolwood
I!IIWtJ .to prevent wldescale killings so far as can be
Mlcl'-1
0
........... Ho Chi Minh, in cooperation with the eomCarlisle 26 Nllfla~al Trail 14
1111 "neutral" ml!mbers of the Inspection com"Brern~n 34 Ansonia o
10
etfeetively prevented any meaningful checkup
Minster 22 Br•dford 0
IW\liE 1-W.JGi .
'
Grlham Local 3 Miami East
621 N. w. 85"'St
Q
All filii i. M ID n•t there should be no cease-fire
Lima &amp;.Ill 10 C.tlndo a
SEATTLE,
Jf w C1111ll ~. All reasonable approJic,hes to end
Spencervlllf .U Mlrlon Local
WASH.
die ,.. _. 11e aplond.
But let's not expect miracles.
.
14
I

GLOBAL VIEW

Gallia

sets sail to

I
I
I
I

Plus Top Value Stamps

' I

RE-ELECT··

OAKLEY C. COLLINS
,

.

I

STATE REPRESENTATIVE
Pd. Pol'. Mv. Collins For Representative Committee, I. D. Keys, Sec'y.

'.

�17-TheSundayTimes-Sentinei,Sunday,Oct. 29,1972
•

18-TheSwldayTimes-&amp;mtinel, Swulay,Od. 29,1972

(Continued lt'om page 15)
turned off when many
questions remained unan-ed as to .the .extent of .
Emprise's operations."
Pepper, reached by UP! at
Ids· Miami law office, said
Dole's implication that the
hearings were called off because of O'Brien's intervention '
"a f$ehood fabricated
out of the whole cloth."
lie said he had never talked
to O'Brien, that the hearings
bad · never been finnly schemled to resume in September,
and that Dole had never talked
to hlrD about Ute allegations
before making them . .
"I resent any insinuation or
..
inference that we have done
anything whatsoever In
relation to such a matter, " '
Pepper said. "We have not.
Thi8 Is utterly unfoWJded."
Pepper said the Jacobs
brothers had been "fully
cooperatl ~e." appearing
'lrilllngly without subpoenas,
and l!ad agreed lo come back in
the fall for more questioning.
Rep. Sam Steiger, R-Ariz.,
grilled Ute Jacobs brothers
hardest at last spring's hearqs about their alleged ties to
the underworld. But Utere was
no sworn t~stlmony implicating either Jeremy Jacobs
or his younger brother, Max, as
members of . organized
crime.
While Pepper confirmed It
was Stelger who asked that the
Jacot. lrothers be summoned
... DKre questiOnlOg in the fall,
he declined to suggest that
Steiger had prodded Dole into
releasing his statement.
Dole also sald there were
''tllc:onflnned reports of large
1mounts of cash flowing
through Emprise and its
lllblidl.-les Into !lie McGovern
CNDJI"lgn."
O'Brien responded with this
lllatement:
"Bob Dole's allegaUon is a
de~~perate and despicable Ue. I
After being renominato!d
have bad no secret meeilng for President, Abraham
with Jeremy Jacobs. I solicited Lincoln quipped: "I do not
a.-A- fo
allow myself to suppose
oo •w.... r the -McGovern that either the convention
campelgn.
or the Lea g u e have con"1 have abaolutely no know- eluded to decide that I am
ledge of congressional activity either the greatest or best
relating to the Emprise corpor- man in America, but rather
aticll. Thls sleazy performance they have concluded that it
by Dole Is just another is not best to swap horses
.d e-ate effort to hide the . while crossing the river,
..,....
and have further concluded
criminal acUons that have that I' anL l!.o~ ~- 1p9or. a
befn·pert,etn~E~d dn behalf of ·horse' 'tii~F1tBey''rtligllf''il8t
Mr. Nbon and his campaign." make a botch of it trying to

·D ateline

WHAT AMERICANS .THINK
McGovern
In Trouble
\

On Welfare
By Stanley C. Plog; Ph.D.
President, Behavior Science
Corp. I BAS/CO), Los Angeles

'

I
I
l'

l

When Sen. George McGovern proposed his $1 ,000-perperson welfare reform plan,
he did irreparable damage to
his effort to becom'e president.
This conclusion grew out
of r e c e n tl y completed indepth r e sear c h by Behavior S c i en c e Corporation
(BASI CO I on the issues of
the 1972 presidential campaign.
Nearl y 800 voters all over
the c o u n try have participated in the study conducted
by senior BASICO psychologists using personal intervi e ws and encounter-type
discussion groups.

DAVID POLING, D.D.

'Lib/ Not Around
When Need Arises
By REV. DAVID POLING

The study
rev eals that
most voter~
show a strong
work ethic .
d e eply distrusting a n y
program that
w o u I d inc re ase the
number of
persons who
Dr. Plog
receive "wei ·
fare ." Further, most Ameri·
cans have an intense desire
to reduce the costs of welfare and eliminate welfare
fraud .

By Hobart · Wilson ·Jr.

that welfare and its proble•ns are a very important
subject to most Americans
but that McGovern's recommendations put him at odds
with a majority of the vote
ers, surprisingly including
those who presumably would
receive the greatest advantage from the program: the
poor and ,the varlou·s ethnic
minorities. The research affirms that, for broad seg·
ments of the U.S. population,
employment In a job that
demonstrate)! one's s k i'll s
and abilities is · still a primary goal and a source of
pride. Voters interviewee
take a great satisfaction in
earning their own way in
life and are strongly opposed
to the idea of contributing
tax dollars to peo~le "who
don't want to work. '
The study reveals that the
issues or unemployment and
we I f a r e are closely intertwined. Voters participating
in the research were giVen a
list of seven domestic issues
arid were asked to rank them
as to their importance. The
result are, in order of perceived importance:

require many years. But they
believe that the government
can c h a n g e unemployment
rates and cut back on welfare expenditures very
quickly-if it wants to.
The great majority of people of all elhl\ic groups want
to work. They recogmze that
some . pe o pIe legitimately
cannot 'work and th~y are
glad that •welfare exists to
support the needy through
contributions from workers'
taxes. Yet there is a strong
belief that large number$ of
non-deserving persons are
on welfare and the voters
are irritated with politicians
for :&gt;ot "cracking down" on
welfare fraud.
Programs . that have the
apllearance of increasing
welfare costs, such as McGovern's original $1,000 plan
or his more recent ,6,500
a n n u a 1 income minimum,
elicit the voters' distrust.
And our researchers found
that voters discussing welfare frequently expressed

1) Crime

2) Pollution
3)

Unemployment

4)

Education

S)

Drugs

6)

Welfare

7) Problems of the citie1

Although the voters rate
crime and pollution highest,
the i s s u e s they talk most
about in encounter-type dis·
cussion ·g r o u p s are ·unemployment and welfare. They
feel that successful P.rogress
to combat crime anif drugs,
clean up the environment
and solve the problems of

Hot Stove League
will be{Pn Monday
.'~'

Grid Scores

Cease-Fire Could
Intensify Hostilities

opposition to McGovern on
the basis of his welfare programs.
The .strength of feeling
about this issue can be seen
in the answers to this question: "Which of the following programs would you be
willing to support if each
program cost you $15 a year

Addirioriol
Fun4t for :

"Wovld

Woold
Not

Support

Support

Cleaner '
en•iro1unent

Drvg
problems
Polict

71~

66

.34

63

37

"41

39

State coll•gn, IUtiYCr.

57

Welfare
recipients

21

79

potet:tiDII

Eleme•tarr#
high Khool1

Miles, who set one school
record and tied another, had
TD runs of 29, 62, 42 and 4 yards
and broke open a close game
wiUt his long-distance jaunts.
He Ued the single game mark
for TDs and set a new standard
for rushing yardage.

.

++ +

&lt;YrHO Burdette, Bill Welker, Garland (Chick) Plymale,
MUes Epling, Capt. John Epling, the late Bob Vesner, Georg~
Rout, Alex Borden, Gee Marchi, Allen Romaine, the late Jim
Jarvis, Bob Marchi, John Epple, Gene Wetherholt, Wayne
Folcten, Bill Joe Johnson, Sammy Plantz, Cilrl Baker, Ehner
Davis, Forrest Borden, John Stebbins, Jack JaQuay, Fred
Burdette, Bob Tope, AI Mackenzie and Ed Rainey. Managers
, were Merrill Evans and Frank (Lujack) Lyons.

++ +

TilE Epling brothers, MUes and John, have boys playing on
the 1972GAHSsquad. Wayne Folden, Bill Joe Johnson and Fred
, Burdette have boys coming on in the freshman and eighth grade
classes. John Stebbins and Allen Romaine's boys (Steve and
David-)-have already graduated from GAHS where both played
athleticsfortheBlueDevils. BobMarchihasafuiureBiueDevil
coming in the lvwer grades while Gene WeUterholt has several
"cheerleaders" on the way up.

+++

.

AREA motorists have been asked to take extra precautions
during trick-or-treat Qlght activities Monday. Youngsters will be
making their rounds In Gallipolis between 6 and 7p.m. Gallipolis
Lafayette Legion Post No. 'll will spohoor its annual Halloween
parade and costume party on Tuesday, beginning at 6:30p.m., in
front of the Uty Building.,Excited children dressed in costumes
may forget to watch out for cars, Utus local drivers should be
extra careful during the Halloween season Monday and Tuesday.

++ +

MRS. William J. Brown reminds arPa residents that dozens
of Gallipolis children wiD be knocking on doors today, not to stuff
their stomachs, but rather to obtain ftmds to put food in the
stomachs of starving children elsewhere in Ute world. It's the
IIQIIuallJNICEF ,drive .
biS~·900 R hnR • 1!'1\flnnill•+~,+ ·• 1'·/ ·moJ• • ''I H"l •,li'W
LAST YEAR'S Halloween collection of pennies, nickels and
dimes added up to $31&lt; million in the United States (including
· approximately $900 In Vmeland.) Relative to the total needs of
Ute povertyofltrlcken masses in this world, $31f• million -or even
, $Mif• million_ buys little. Vet perhaps doing some good is better

money to help less fort~mate people is a habitthey oughtto learn·
So If some yoWJgste!i' taps on your door today and says,
"Trick or Trest for UNICEF", smile kindly and put some coins
In the box he carries. You may save him ,a bellyache and help
relieve some other child's hunger pain.

++ +

TWENTY YEARS AGO, from Ute ftles of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallia· Times ... Cheshire site selected for
'!45,000,000 power plant, will .leed atomic energy job in Pike
County ... Robert M. Switzer, 89, dean of Galllii CoWJty lawyers,
dies . . . Dry spell conilnues, numerous forest fires reported
Kn
fin
In
throughout area.· .GAHSjuniorBryon utsen !shes sixth
di8trlct cross cotmtrY meet ... GAllS defeats Athens 13-6 in
homecoming battle with '32 SEOAL grid champs on hand . . .
Capt. Jim Gilliam crowns Eleanor Gatewood queen before large
a-owd.

28 Pupils.make
RACINE- Twenty. eight
pupils of the Southern Junior
High School were named to Ute
honar roll at Ute close of the
first six weeks grading period.
Making a grade o!B or above
"to be listed with those names in
"capltalletters receiving all A's
were:
Grade 8 - · PATRICIA
.

.

.

MaUs blamed
for late letter

Jr. High roll
AUTHERSON, BOBBI
CHAPMAN, Donna Dee!, Eric
Dunning, Anna Frank, Carl
Johnston, Debbie Norris, Vicki
. Roush, Lee Smith, TRACI
WEESE, SCOTT WOLFE,
David Bass, Brenda Lewis.
Grade 7 - JAVE ORD,
CARMEN THOMA, Lois
Bailey, Stephen Baker, Vicki
Boso, Larry Fisher, Perry Hill,
Teresa Meadows, .Jean llltchhart, Ricliard .Teaford, Debbie
Weddle, Nlle Wilson, Barbara
Theiss, Shelley Chevalier,
Patty Robinson.

,

By NICHOLAS DANILOFF
WASHINGTON (UP! ) High SOviet officials have told
Jewish leaders in Moscow that
their requests to leave the
Soviet Union will he decided on
a case-by-ease basis, and some
may have to wait 20 years to
get out , it was learned
Satur\lay.
"Perhaps you will he kept for
a year, 'Perhaps for three,
perhaps for five, perhaps for
~0," Acting Minister Boris T.
Shumilin of Internal affairs
told a group of 80 Jews, according to one of the participants in the unprecedented
encoWJter on Thursday.
Details of the meeting hetween the Jews and Shumilin
were relayed by participants to
supporters in the United States
on Thursday and Friday by
telephone. Aspokesman for the
Union of Council for Soviet
Jewry Saturday released
transcripts of the conversations.
Tanya Levich, the wile of a
well-known, dismissed physics
professor, relayed most of the
details and conveyed the sense
of frustration and disappointment which the group experienced. She said:
· Encounte'r Recalled
"It was a depressing atmosphere you know. We were
made fun of. We were mocked:
A very depressing and un-

drive souUt through Kentucky and Tennessee. Norris dam and
lake near Knoxville were points of interest and after lunch at the
Captain's Table Restaurant, on a boat anchored in the lake, the
route was through Knoxville to Townsend, Tenn., the western
entrance to the Smoky Mountain National Park. The group
visited cade's Cove to view many of the original pioneer homes
still standing, a waterilOwered grist mlll still operating, a horse
powered grinder and open air cooking vats stye in use for pioneer
style oorghum manufacturing. Gatlin berg, Tenn., for lunch and
oouvenior shopping and a ride to the top of the space needle for a
scenic view, visit to Newfound Gap and Clingman's Dome,
highest peak In Tennessee, Uten to Cherokee, N.C., rounded out
the trip. Mrs. Pooler is now at her home In Chester.
CONTRIBUTIONS 1'0 THE ANNUAL Middleport Community Halloween party to be held Tuesday night aren 't exactly.
''pouring in." More contributions are needed to meet the ex-

.

pleasant feeling . As a matter of
fact, he (Shumilin ) never
answered any of our questions.
He just said, •Don~ get excited
- just wait. For how long, I
don't know. Perhaps for never,
perhaps for some time."
Anot,her Jewish activist, Vla·
dimir Slepak, recalled an
encounter he had recently with
another official who heads a
department known as ovm,
which issues exit visas. The
official , Identified only as
Verin, reportedly said:
HThere is no influence, no
pressure from outside that will
have any meaning or any
significance for our decisions.
We should decide. We ourselves."
Both Shumllln and Verin
alluded to "government considerations." But neither explained what government con·
sideratlons might be involved
In granting permission to emi·
grate or to excuse emigrants
from paying the recently Instituted education tax. The tax
is meant to compensate the
Soviet government for free
education provided to the
emigrants. The tax can run
from $5,000 to $25,000, depending on the education received.
Hope Not Abandoned
The administration has
raised the Issue of Ute controversial tax with Soviet officjals, and Is hopeful It will be

quietly dropped. A movement
has been developing in
Congress to prevent the
granting of favorable trade
terms to the Soviet Union until
Ute tax is rescinded.
State Department officials
said Saturday they were aware
of Ute substance of Ute Moscow
meeting with the Jewish activists. They said they were not
surprised by the hard-line
which the Soviet officials took.
But the State Department
officials added they were not
giving up hope. They noted that
the Soviet government recently
permitted about 200 famllies to
leave the Soviet Union without
paying Ute education tax.
"In the short term, the Soviet
goverruilent has shown Utat it
Is willing to deal with the
problem In a fairly pragmatic
way," one U.S. official said.
On a related matter, Mrs.
Levlch denied that !ilumllln
had said that 93 per cent of
Jews wishing to emigrate
would be allowed to do so, as
reported by Western news
agencies from Moscow on
Friday.
She said Shumilln had
claimed that In the past, the
Soviet government had permit·
ted 93 per cent of the applicants
to leave.. She disputed this
claim, saying that It did not
correspond to informatlon
published In ·Ill~ /N~.preas.

ways."

Poczik, a member of the
Michigan City Yacht Club, has
owned ''Waylen" six years and

has sailing experience on Lake
Michigan and Long Island
Sound . Poczik says his route
will'be the easiest one possible,
' staying within 20 degrees
latitude of the equator, which
should provide warm weather
and favorable winds.
ment Act of 1972.
-Legislation creating
mineral research and training
institutes in all 50 states.
- A measure increasing federal funds lor airport safety
Including additional antl)lijacking personnel and
devices. It would also h~ve
outlawed the imposition of
local air travel head taxes.
- Aveterans' heaiUt care bill
which would open VA hospitals
to nonveterans.
-A measure giving 1,500
deputy U.S. msrshals a 38 per
cent pay increase.
MEN ONLY, NO
TOLEDO (UPI) - While
women still may not be
welcomed at Dyers restaurant,
at least they are served. U. S.
District Court Judge Don
Young ruled Friday that
women must be serven at the
establishment, ending 55 years
of male-only status al Dyers.
Two women who filed the suit,
Carole Nolen and ·C~rl~ne
Bennett, were among tl),e. l!~st
':.)VQII)en C\lSto~neu.{'ri~ay_,-.:1

DEAR JOHN:

.

Sorry to advise you that your political ads are a bit
antiquated .. .
I have never operated a theatre in my life, nor
have I seen an "X-rated" picture.
Collins Mining Company, out of business for six
months, had only minimal use of the recently . completed section of State Highway 650. But 60,000 other
people of Lawrence County appreciate it daily.

penses involved and residents are asked to drop by their
donations to the Citizens National Bank or to Mrs. Ann Harvey.
Mrs .. Harvey will pick up contributions If anyone desires and
Utese folks may contact her at 992-7132. Deadline lor giving is 3
p.m. Monday when Ute bank closes.
Incidentally, the Meigs Hi~ School band will be taking part
in Ute parade which begins at 6:30p.m. from. Ute A&amp;P parking lot
moving to the Middleport football field. Several groupa are
helping with the party but contributions from individual
residents are needed. There will be no trick or treat night for
Middleport

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
msils apparently caused a
copy !Jf a campaign expense Search £o~ Boggs
report prepared by Rep.
Clarence E. Miller to arrive
late at Ute Secretary Of State's :may .be copcluded
office:
""
-- . " ·· .,
. Earlier lhi8 · week It was ·
repotted that Mlller was the
ANCHOR-AGE, Alaska
'only l~ctUDbenl congressinan · (UP!) _ The leader of ~
who failed to beat~ Tuesday search tiarty looking for H•
deadline for flUng rePD,"ts with Majority 'Leader Hale BoggS,
Ute Secretary of Stele s offtce ,D-La., and th.-ee ·others said
or the clerk of the House of Friday Ute efforts to find the
Representatives. Aspokesman . mlsalng twm~ngine Cessna 310
for Miller said the expeuae may be suspended.
report wu fUed Monday wl~
But A1t Force Maj. henry
the Houae Clerk but Brown s · Slacker dine tor of the search·
office didn't gel a copy untll added, :'We haven't given
W!!dnesday..
~!opt o1 finding II." The light
aircraft carrying Boggs,
.,
Alaska- Congressman Nick
JleBich, Beglch's aide Russell
j'«)W YOU KNOW
BrO\lll IIIII pUot Don E. Jonz
In aome coun,lrles, okra diAppeared oct. 16 on a
· eeedl., )lied u a ·aubltttute campil&amp;ii · fllsht from Art·
lw c:oifee. •
chorl&amp;e ID Jlllllllu. ·

Such ill-structured schemes of "guilt by
association" aimed at me by a couple of the big city_
Democrat newspapers the past year and a half are
common knowledge here.
Had I been guilty of any wrong -doing they would
have reported it "loud and clear" long ago.
The-people of Southeastern Ohio are not stupid.
They are well aware that strong rural leadership
make's us a frequent target of these wild attempts at
public deceit.
For the benefit of the voters, let's concern ourselves with iss.ues of value- rather than the same old
over-worked, re-hashed and out-dated stories of the
Cleveland Plain Dealer and the Dayton Dally News.
I am sure_!b_~_Qublic WQuld much rather.know.y.o.ur_
views on Governor Gilligan's Tax and Spend programs
for the next two years.
Sincerely,
Oakley

OPENING _•••
Silver Brld&amp;t Shopplnc Center

lOON

. VOTE FOR THE .MAN WHO KEEPS SOIJTHIEAST'E;RN
. : NEEDS BEFORE THE 'STATE .LEG'ISLA

WITH: · .
•RECORD
•RURAL
RECOGNITION BENEFITS

•OUTSTANDING • RESPONSIBL£
LEADERSHIP
REPRESENTATION

Where Kroger ·
Gets It All Together
'

.

Featuring an impressive
..lection of Gourmet Foods'
for elegant restaurant.din·lng right in'your home. --

~--

f

•

16 months but that he is taking
longer so he can sightsee.
"I've been a nut about boats
a'll my life and have always
wan ted to do something like
this," he said , But his wife,
Ima , isn't so sure. "She is not
crazy about sailing and she
thinks Utis trip is hazardous.
But I consider it safer than
running up and down the high-

request it.
MRS. INEZ POOLER, CHESTER, spent last weekend in the
scenic Great Smoky Mountains of Tennessee and NorUt carolina
with her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Wiener of
Fairborn, Ohio.
Mrs. Pooler found .the weather and scenery beautiful for the

uP .

"They Ollfht lo Jo -'ltint lllloJ file .-Ill; ol -~
, Clition kills ~ ,.u;., tltni ,.,.,..
·

!·

POMEROY- Wha~with the energy shortage, we read with
interest the colwnn of Jack Anderson, Washington colwnnist,,
who reports that a device which would cut the homeowners' gas•
bills by 20 to 30 pet. has not been put on the market.
Anderson says the fuel saver is an automatic damper which
can be attached to the flue of a gas furnace. It has been approved
by the Canadian Gas Association which tested the device and
foWJd it safe, Anderson says.
The columnist charges that the American Gas Association
has not even started the testing after a four-year waitlltg period.
As a practice matter, no gas furnace fixture can be marketed
and installed imtil it has been tested and approved by the AGA
because contractors won't use it, Anderoon writes.
In 1971 the AGA's approval committee auUtorized a task
force to test the.damper and write standards for it but no task
force had been eStablished a year later and the task force was
reauthorized but still nothing has happened, the writer charges.
. . Meantime, homeowners continue to pay for gas the device .
could save, Anderson concludes.
ON BEHALF OF THE MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society,
which is planning a Christmas bazaar in November, Mrs. Mary
Seaman gives a big vote of thanks to Mrs. J. M. Thornton,
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. Mrs. Thornton has crocheted a
number of colorful potholders for the bazaar. She's known in the
community for her willingness to help any organization or group
on a worthy project.
REHEARSALS FOR THE NOV. 24 Fall Follies of Ute Big
Bend Minstrel Association are moving right along. Dancers will
rehearse at 7 p.m·. on Monday and· Wednesday and ooloists at 7
'fuesday at the Pomeroy Elementary School. The Meigs Band
Boosters are spom/oring the presentation. Incidentally, Gerald
Powell, a former professional ballroom dance instructor, and his
daughter, Mila , will be seen in one of1the numbers planned for
this fall's show.
VERNER SEE, 348GRANT ST., says he has had 1,000 copies
of the ordinance dealing with the automotive license tax to be
Yll~wlr,11Jl011 i!JI fyliddl~ll!lrt .on Nov: 7 reproduced and invites
anyonewlshingacopyofthelegisJ&amp;tlOll(Odropbyhishomeand

· than doing oo good at all. It may weD he that what's equally
important about ·UNICEF is the learning experience it gives
American boys and girls. UNICEF gives them a chance to think
about other kids and maybe even to realize how good, by comparlson, are their own lives. Giving a couple of hours to raise

"menace. ''
Nixon conceded it might be
"politically very damaging" to
veto the legislation oo close to
the Nov . 7 election.
But, he said that if he were
"to sign these measures mto
law , I would in effect be
making promises that could
not be ·kept, since the funds
required to finance the promised services are not available
and would not be available
without Ute higher taxes I have
promised to resist."
18 Measures Signed

I
I

1 By Bob Hoeflich

++ +

· lmmLodiale Outcry
The vetoes drew an immediate outcry from Democratic
leaders.
Sen. George S. McGovern
told a campaign audience in
North Hollywood, calif., that
the vetoes were a "moral
outrage."
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey,
D·Minn., \ old a Minneapolis
press conference "this is sheer
political demagoguery ... utter
disdain and contempt for Ute
people's elected representativ~s ." He called Nixon a

encircle .oorld .

Jews may wait 20 years to
,. 1I
depart Russia for Israel
I

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1

FOR NEWCOMERS in the area, members of the 1947 GAHS
championship team whlch downed Wahama :&lt;l).O, Pt. Pleasant216, Athens 21.(), Middleport 28-13, Pomeroy 28-li, Jackson 33-7,
Logan 13-8, Neloonville 13-0, Wellston 26-7 and Oak Hill 21HJ were:

Bowling Green, running its
record to 4-2·1 and avenging an Pioneers get
embarrassing loss to MarShall
a year ago, had little success tomahawked 19-8
against the Thunder(ng Herd in
•
MARIE'ITA, Ohio (UP!) ,the first half exc~pt for Miles'
29-yard first quarter TD run Chuck Lowe and Jeff Elrod
and a 62-yarder for anoUter scored touchdowns and· Tom
score in the second.
Burke kickect two field goals to
lead Ohio Wesleyan to a 19-8
Following the second half Ohio Conference victory rr{er
kickoff, however, Miles broke Marietta Saturday.
loose for his third long run of
Burke kicked fiel4 goals of 41
the day, a 42-yard scoring play, and 24 yards and Lowe scored
and then Ute roof caved in on from low- yards out to give
Ute Thundering Herd.
Wesleyan a 13-j) haiiUme adThe Falsons' Gary Zelonis vantage.
blocked a Mike McKinney punt
Marietta narrowed the
and Bill Fisher picked It up and margin to 13-8 on a two-yard
went into the end zone from the' TD rtm by Steve Morris and .
two to make it 21Hl, and Morris' conversion run, but ,
following the next kickoff, Elrod then scored for Wesleyan
middle guard Bill Centa to give the visitors the win.
blocked another Marshall punt'
Ohio Wesleyan I~ now 3-3-1
with the Falcons recovering on overall and l.O.lln the league·,
the nine. Miles scored from the while Marietta is 4-3 and 1-2.

"::!:1'

=
.......

weekend f~ivities.

four three plays later.
BG's other two scores came
on a three-yard ; run by·• Don
Dillingham and a one:-yard
plunge by Mike Watson.!
Marshall's only score came
following a BG fumble on the
Falcon 27 yard line.
. The Falcons rolled up 304
yards on Ute ground and had
another 81 through the air.
Marshall, now 1-6 on the
season, luid a minus 31 yards
rushing and 120 passing on 9,of
29.

BERRr'S WORLD

• ' -•

·1Of the Bend

'

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a

JOHN A. Epling, captain+++
of the 1947 SEOAL champs, an- I
notmces James ,F. (Jim) Halderman, 'head coach, Maurice .I
(Grinny) Fowler and OlarlesSwanson, assistant coaches, along 'I
with Supt. Ed Higgins, Principal M. Harold Brown, board
r.1ernber Dr. H. B. Thomas, SEO official Harold Rolph, and !he
1947 cheerleaders and ·managers are expected to attend the 1

BG wrecks Marshall
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
(UP!) - Paul Miles exploded
for four touchdowns and 217
yards rushing Saturday to lead
Bowling Green to a 46-7 victory
over Marshall.
·

necessi!yofataxincreasenext
year, " Nixon said in a
statement ·Frid~y .
·
Among the vetoed bills was a
$30.5 billion appropriation
measure for the Depariments
of Labor and Health,
Education and Welfare. The
two agencies will continue to
operate at last year's spending
level-$28 billion-until Feb. 28
under
a
"continuing
resolution"
passed
by
Congress. It was the second
time Nixon has vetoed the
!lEW-Labor money measure.

r-------------------------,
Beat
.
I

Although' a majority favors most of .the programs,
voters are strong.Jy against
a d d I n g dollars to welfare
p r o gram s. Participanli in
discussion groups cannot understand why_welfare' rolls
increased during· the period
of great prosperity in the
1950s and 1960s. Their con·
cern: If welfare can Increase
during good times, bow large
would it grow and how big
a burden would·it become If
we had a severe economic
recession?
Their uneasiness Is compounded by fears about their
own f•1tures. During the recent economic slump many
were temporarily out of
work or had friends who lost
their jobs. If they were to
lose their jobs in the future,
would they be able to receive the temporary support
and benefits that welfare is
supposed to provide? Or
would the welfare funds
have been used up by "freeloaders who got to the
trough first"?
Welfare is a vital issue
and the feelings of the
voters about this issue are
unified and strong. George
McGovern's proposals have
intensified his Republican
ooposition and weakened his
Democratic support. ·

gridders by .46 to 7

·EDA bills; signs fat. military Acts

WASil!NGTON (UPI J !'resident Nixon , declarjng
TilE Silver AM!versary of Gallia Academy High School's that his actions were aimed at
. undefeated an'd untied I!M7 mue Devil football team will be ob- avoiding a tax hike in 1973,
served here Ute weekend of Nov.lO,ll, and 12.
vetoed nine bills Friday
++ +
because they exceed his ·self-·
MEMBERS of that powerhouse squad of 25 years ago, imposed federal spending limit
coaches and managers will attend the 1972 Blue Dt•lls' home by $2.75 billion over the next
. finale' against PortsmouUt. A banquet will he held in the ·two years.
Washington gym on Saturday, Nov. 11, beginning at 7 p.m. .
Nixon was expected to an(That's where the '47 SouUteastern Ohio League champs were nounce additional vetoes tohonored.) On Sunday, Nov. 11, the '47 champs will attend 10:30 day.
a.m. services at the First Presbyterlari Church·where they will
"I cannot sign (them) ·
he_ar a grid sermon by Rev. (Retired) Linson H. Stebbins. Rev. without breaking my promise
Stebbins, former pastor at Ute church, delivered grid sermons to to Ute American people to do all
in my power to avoid . the
Blue Devil teams during Ute "Golden Era" years.

Results o1 the study show education and the cities will more in taxes?'l

Those active in women 's liberation zoomed in on the
church two years ago. Boards and agencies were pressur~d to check out their hiring practices and job descriptions. More women sought ordination and several national denominations elected women to top offices. Chai~­
man gave wa y to chairperson . Tim es were changing.
But this is not two years ago and a quiet pause has
come to Women's Liberation. Liberal clergymen in New
York have been angered that the marching gals who
banner Fifth Avenue can never seem to get up to Albany
when the abortion hearings r.eed their presence and voice.
The leading denominations in the Christian ranks (save
the mighty Roman Catholics 1are quite satisfied with the
abortion law in New York.
CINCINNATI - Opening Sponsors Include Stroh's,
Yet the recall movement is racing along, in spite of
Day
is Monday in the Hot Stove -Marathon Oil, Admiral, First
;!50,000 abortions in the past two years, and might strike
l
• "Redsline
,
I " 11th•
Jo hour~owq the ,present state law permittin g such medical at- I "• gue.
National ' Bank of 'Cin'cihnati,
long
baseball
talk-show
which Fedders on Buick and · W'oody
[en!!on. Some clergy workers feel that the Women's Lib
is great in the editorial offices but invisible in day-to-day proved so popular last winter' Sander Ford.
swap."_
struggles.
returns Monday, Oct. 30 on
' The quanda ry for mainline denominations and their Station WLW radio (700 on the
seminanes is this: Who is going to hire all these women dial 1, The show will run from
who want to be ordained? Will the con gregation in Des 7:05 to 8 p.m:
Lakewood , St. Edward 28
Moines or the parish in St. Louis? There are not enough
Parma Padua.20
on
the
call-in
First
guest
board job and institutional positions to take on those
Chardon
14 Aurora 12
who cannot or will not make the scene in the local show will be Reds Manager Kirtland 21 Berkshire 7
Sparky Anderson , Sparky will North
church. Most churchmen (again, the male bias ) are aimRidgeville
24
mg at legal change and support for women 's rights at the
Wellington 14
talk and answer questions
slate and national' leveL They also realize that the vast about the Reds National Highland 42 Cleve. Lutheran
West 16
majority of their membership (which is female) is not
League Championship year. Keystone' 10 South Amherst 0
parading
and
boycotting,
but
reflecting
on
the
words
of
By RAY CROMLJ;:V
He'll be on the line from his Cleve. C.C. 7 Bedford Chane/
Lois Wyse, who has produced som e startling comment in
0
the new book, "A Weeping Eye Can Never See'" (Double- home in Thousand Oaks, Calif. Cloverleaf 14 Brunswick 0
WASHINGTON \NEA l
day and Co.).
The weekly show will feature Parma Byzantine 20
,
If history repeats itself, the intensity of the ground war
Painesville River 6
Reds voices AI Michaels and
could increase under the Vietnam leopard-spot type cease- Under False Lashes
Jefferson 26 Hamilton
fire in which each side held to the bits ar.d pieces of ter- It ill the las.t part of the twentieth centu-ry
Joe Nuxhall. They will take a West
Township
12
ritory occupied w)\en the stop-the-shooting agreement
brief look at the week's news in Dublin 27 Teays Valley 7
And
I
am
tzred
of
making
beds
and
lying
in
them
.
went into effect.
the baseball world. Then will Newark 2&amp; Lancaster 14
I have earned the right to ten Mays
The bombing would halt. So, temporarily, would major
And two Octobers every year.
come an interview with a Pickerington 14 Liberty
Unlop 0
ground action by conventional units . But underground
I have earned the right to be with people I like
baseball personality, followed Utica 21 Heath 18
killings and assassinations would likely increase dramatAnd to avoid the people I don't.
by a chance for fans to call in Centerburg 20 East · Knox 0
icallr as both sides sought to assert permanent suprem·
I hav~ played so many roles that
and question the guest. The StCharles 21 New Albany 15
acy m the areas their troops cohtrolled.
The lmes are repeating themselves.
lrontot\ 46 Gallipolis 14 ·
Redsllne telephone number is Sheridan
This is what happened in North Vietnam at the end of I have gone through every fas hion cycle
14 Trl Valley 13
World War II during a cease fir~ between the Nationalists
749-2345.
Springfield
North 7 CenAnd I kf!OW more than one way to make chocolate cake.
and the Communists.
terville
6
Redsline will air every
8 Watkins Memorial
The objective of the assassinations could be every
Is this what my life is supposed to be?
Monday from Oct. 30 to April2. Morgan.
6
minor citizen of influence who favored the other side, and
Is tllis what I was milled for'
Guests on.the show will be top Nelsonville York 56 Miller 0
every military and guerrilla cadre in every hamlet in
14
New
names in baseball, including Coshocton
South Vietnam. The major political types would be able to
Did I learn French and Spanish in order to perfect my
Philadelphia
7
the National League Cham- Riverview 33 Ridgewood •0
protect themselves for the most part.
menu-readwg?
pions.
It is the small man who would be targeted- the South
Portsmouth West 55 Minford
And what does it do fo·r my soul. to translate escargots?
0
Vietnames;, cooperative treasurer, the fishing co-&lt;Jp
Redsline is produced by Ute
Lima
Central Catholic 20
leader, the. small union official, the hamlet chief, the
Somewhe-re betweeu the Jazz Age and the Age of
broadcasting department of
Urbana
7
small farmer with a mind of his own, the schoolteache1·
Liberation
the Cin cinnati Reds, .Inc . Shawnee 18 Anthony Wayne
who stands last to what he believes.
I come of age.
16
A cease-fire would also be a time of arms build-up .and
But i~zz is not the rhyiltm that ge nerated me,
Elida 38 Coldwater 6
intense negotiations with .outside allies. In the post World And hberatlOn came too iate to change the pattern of my
Minster 22 Bradford 20
Versailles 14 Parkway 1
War II truce, Ho Chi Minh 's Communists wangled a deal
precut life,
Lehman Cathoflc 42 St.
with the French to supply them with artillery, rifles and
Fu r even though the goals of liberation are the same as
FIELD GOAL WINS IT
Henry 22
machineguns to knock out the Nationalists with whom
mine
NEW
YORK
(UP!
)A
21St.
Marys 63 Delphos St.
they were at "peace."
'
I do not like the noisy leaders.
Johns 20
yard
field
goal
midway
in
the
In a 1972 cease-fire, the North Vietnamese, if they Their strident voices turn me off .
· 56 Lancaster
fourth quarter by John Pesce Malabar
operate as in the rast, would use the truce to bring in
Reemelln o
' .
enabled Rutgers to defeat Crestline 34 Crestview 2
heavy quantities o arms and equipment from the Soviet
Every movement · begins ,with noise and commotion
Union and China and distribute these arms down the Ho then. if it is real, consolidation sets in . For the church
Colwnbia , 6-3, Saturday in the Cols. Academy 23 Danville 12
Chi Minh trails or across the Demilitarized· Zone to their certain quiet has been established, but not silence Just a 45th renewal of" college foot- PlymO\Jth 8 Clearfork o
Philo 13 Maysville 12
cadre in the Hanoi-held leopard spot ~ in South· Vietnam. giving way to longer goals and wider understanding.
ball's second oldest rivalry.
Bedford 37 Mayfield 6
That is, as in the first agreement in Laos , which did
Chagrin Fells 17 Twinsburg 0
allow the Communist areas in two provinces, the North
Perry 19 Pymatuning Valley
Vietnamese would use a cease-fire to build their military
14
strength in base areas in the South,
·
Firelands 56 Avon 12
Buckeye 30 Columbia 6
The South Vietnamese, of course, would counter this
Communist build-up with a similar program of their own.
They'll Do It Every Time ®
E~~i~~~':"th 20 Wlllough.
if able to secure the corttinued flow of · American arms
:-----------::.....____r--:::-.:_~----=-------..J, Westlake 27 North Olmsted
and equipment.
n
n . 1i
18
I'H,I.S&amp; \\O•uD£RVIS14 NEVER IM:lRI&lt;EC)
Weirton Madonna (W. Ve.)
Meanwhile, the killing would go on. The ratio of civilian \ ~ICktiT PROMISED SOlOOt.. PI&gt;&lt;L DERV~ A..
HARDER FOR LESS, AND TI-lE ONLY t:W.\1
22
to military deaths would probaoly increase dramatically. I ro.IND ~GIRLS, J:l&lt;.RriES AND GOOD EAl'S!
HE SAW WI'S MRS. 6W(IN LEGREE"•
MeadowbrOQk 0
Thus far, in recent history, policing cease-fires has
'Buckeye North 15 Cadi,. 13
failed miserably.
·
,
·
";~R"V~Clj~[_r;j~~~~Cambridge 8. Carrollton 8..
. · The treaty oq Laos was violated within hours after the
-~
~- tflel '"" . .
pact was signed, ·despite a three-nat,ion control commis· ·
Martins Fe.rry 40 Bellaire St.
slon. North Vietnamese troops, though agreeing to return ·
Jotms 6 · .
,
.
· home, blatantly and ilpelily continued to use the eastern ·
St. Clairsville 26 Barnesville
24
he!f of that coun!fy (the Ho Chi Minh trails) as a military
Paden · City (W. Va.) 41
bighway, storage, rest and recuperation and assembly
Warren Local 26
&amp;Ha for the war in South Vietnam . They also .P-eriodically
Niles
McKinley 41 Allla,nce
raided western Laos for the ·rice and opiuln crops.
21
.
The ceaae·flre in Korea saw an e11d to the fightlng
North Canton Hoover 36
(thougb after some considerable lime) because the United
Oakwood 7
Natlona forces had absolute control In the South. There
C..nta~ South 10 Jackson 7
East Canton 16 Tuskey ,
wu no leophd spot pattern. But the provisions. of the
Valley t1
lnlty which called ,lor no military build-up were violated
Heights 26 Northby the North Koreans and their allies before the ink was
dry oa the pact despite international inspection teams .
wkt 25 Springfield 18
Tbe Soutl! thereupon followed suit in self-defense. I
Northmont
23
Weal
Tbe International control commissions set up In Vjet·
C.malllon 0
Brookville 'S7 Nor111rldQf 12
IIID after the 18&amp;4 Geneva agreements had no effective
Grttnvltlt
7 Trolwood
I!IIWtJ .to prevent wldescale killings so far as can be
Mlcl'-1
0
........... Ho Chi Minh, in cooperation with the eomCarlisle 26 Nllfla~al Trail 14
1111 "neutral" ml!mbers of the Inspection com"Brern~n 34 Ansonia o
10
etfeetively prevented any meaningful checkup
Minster 22 Br•dford 0
IW\liE 1-W.JGi .
'
Grlham Local 3 Miami East
621 N. w. 85"'St
Q
All filii i. M ID n•t there should be no cease-fire
Lima &amp;.Ill 10 C.tlndo a
SEATTLE,
Jf w C1111ll ~. All reasonable approJic,hes to end
Spencervlllf .U Mlrlon Local
WASH.
die ,.. _. 11e aplond.
But let's not expect miracles.
.
14
I

GLOBAL VIEW

Gallia

sets sail to

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I

Plus Top Value Stamps

' I

RE-ELECT··

OAKLEY C. COLLINS
,

.

I

STATE REPRESENTATIVE
Pd. Pol'. Mv. Collins For Representative Committee, I. D. Keys, Sec'y.

'.

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18- The SWlday Times -Sentinel; Sunday. Od. 29,1972

18- The &amp;nlayTimea-Sentlnel, Sunday, Oct. 29,1972

Missouri.
Commission, created by the
By LEE LEONARD
legislature, has been at work
UPI Statehouse Rtporter
. COLUMBVS (UPI) - State ror two years, recommeooing
lssue 1 is the "orphan" of the piece-meal changes in the
November ballo\ - few people state's basic charter.
A package of 14' changes was
want it aoo nobody's talking
for the primary
prepared
about it.
Everybody knows about ballot last May buT)was
Issue No.2. That's the question removed on a technicality four
cf repealing the state income days before the election by the
Ohio Supreme Court.
The package was not resub· Ohio politics
mitted for the November ballot
because of the automatic ap~x. and it took signatures from · pearance of the convention
'more than 300,000 voters to get question .
it on the ballot.
Hope For Defeat
Issue No. 1- calls for a state
Legislative leaders and
Constitutional Convention, and others are hoping the conit took nobody's signature to vention is rejected so the
get it on the ballot. Every 20 package, chopped into sections
years, Ohio voters are to satisfy the court, can go on
automatically asked if they next May's ball~t and the
want a convention. They commission can get on with
haven't said "yes" since 1912. proposing further amendThe Ohio Constitution has ments.
been cbanged 62 times since
Opponents of a convention
then, always by public votes on can offer plenty of anununition
separate amendments.
against one. The cost has been
A Constitutional Revision estimated at $1 million pr

.
· more, with no h~lArantee the
voters wvuld buy the recommended changes to the Constitutio'l.
New York spertt an
estimaled $10 million on a
c0&gt;1vention in 1967, and the
pt oposed amendn1ents went
down the drain by a vote of
better than two to one.
'

Michigan and Pennsylvania
held successful conventions in
the 1960's, but recommendations of conventions in
Maryland, Rhode lslaoo, New
Mexico, Arkansas and, this
year, North Dakota , were
rejected by the voters.
· Sen. Oliver Ocasek, the Senate Democratic whip from Akron, favors a convention although "I'm quite sure the
thing will be defeated."
"I'm generally satisfied with
the way the commission is
working," said Ocasek, a
member of the commission.,
"but I see no harm in having
some delegates sit down and

SAN t'RANCISCO ( UPJ 1
di:JCUSS amendments.
"It would cos: us some money," Ocasek; eonceded, "but
whenever we like so111ething
we don 't . care how much . it
costs. lf we don't like
something then we care. I don't
really care how much it would
cosl.lf it's worth it, it should be
done."
Cites Arguments
The chairman of the
Revision Commission, Richard
H: Carter of Fostoria,
professes neutrallty on the
question and offers arguments
for both sides.
''There are advantages to
both the commission approach
and the convention approach,"
Carter said. " It depends on the
time, but I believe 1972 is a
time that a commission is likely to produce more meaningful
results for the people of Ohio.
"I don't oppose a con·
vention,"Carter said. "I'm lor
constitutional reform,
whichever way it comes. If a

- f. leading dentist says

. conventi~n is approved by the
there's something you can do
voters, I would be happy to
if your child knocks out a
support it 100 per cent,"
Garter pointed out that con- . tooth - lind it fast.
·· Dr. Irving Posnick ,
ventlon reeommeurlations may
outgoing president of the
· be submitted direclly to the
American Society of Delis try
people, while his commission
for Children, said the tooth
mnst go through the legislature
can
be reimplanted.
with its suggestions.
"II you gel the child and
But he said the convention
the
tooth to the dentist within,
approach would place an entire
half an hour, there's good
Constitution on the ballot, paschance
it can be reimsibly confusing voters or hangplanted,", he told newsmen
ing ihem up on one controverat the society meeling.
sial issue in ari ali-&lt;Jr-nothing
choice.
The commission, he said
THEY CAME CLOSE
eliminates the time pressure
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs.
and political · lobbying of a Marauder 8th grade grid team
convention and presents voters pulled a near gigantic upset
with a limited number of Thursday night when they lost
constitutional questions.
a 14-12 heartbreaker to the
Voters are
normally Athens Junior High Team.
suspicious of tampering with a Coach Jon Arnott's Baby
Constitution unless there is a Marauders are now 0-5· on the
specific . reason. Ohio· voters year. The 7th grade team is 2-2.
rejected the convention apThe Ninth Graders, coached
proach by almost one million by Butch Meier, dropped a 14-0
votes in 1952, and probably will decision to the Athens Freshagain.
man also Thursday. The Meigs
Yearlings are now 2-3 on the
I
year.

ByUnltedPresslntematlonal
Three statewide organiza-•
lions
issued
position
the
papers
during
weekend - all against passage of state Issue No. 2 on next
week's ballot which would provide for a constitutional amendment repealing the present
graduated state income tax.
The Ohio Sehool Boards Association, through its executive
vice president David B. Martin,
warned the issue was not "just
' another tax issue, but ' rather
the very serious .question of
amending the Ohio Constitution."

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"Unless Issue No.2 is defeated, the resulting constitutional
amendment would seriously
handcuff future legislatures,
making .it very difficult at any
future time to levy an income
tax., no matter what the prevailing circumstances," said
Martin In the statement.
He obarged taxpayers were
not being informed of the real
consequences.He said the present income tax "constitutes the
most equitable approach to
funding state services."
Leonard Schnell, president of
!he Ohio Farm Bureau Federation, said 80 per cent of Ohio

Immigrant, 90, receives
present from ~r. Nixon
By JOHN SPETZ
ClEVELAND (UPI)- Mrs.
Cynthia Monger, a German
immigrant who fled her
homeland because of Hitler,
was 90 years old Sept. 19 and
.Saturday ·• she · received a
Iii ~111118'9 ~ pre~e ni~~&gt;lr orrt" the
Presldent•of the United States.
Mrs. Monger was In a crowd
of 3,000 to 4,000 who greeted
Prelident NiXon at Cleveland
Hopkins International Airport
as he began a l~ity, ll().mile
motorcade through northeastern Ohio in an attempt to
woo the ethnic vole In this
heavUy Industrialized area.
Nearly every ethnic group in
Cleveland was ·represented,
mOI!t by !l'etty girls dressed in
the costume of their native
land.
.
When Nixon and his wife
stepped off Air Force One and
began mingling with the
crowd, the President saw Mrs.
Monger ·aoo began talking to
her.
When ·she told him she had
reached her . 90th birthday,
Nixon reached into his pocket,
took out a gold fountain pen
and presented it to her.
"Here is a small present for

you Mrs. Monger," said Nixon.
"I hope that you have 90 more
years."
·
Tearfully, the woman accepted and told the President
he has her vote.

Th~ .P[~~e~t

aJW

~(ted

slivetil'slgliS'lleldily'a gro'1\P'b1
Russians that were written In
Russllm . They were translated
for him by Cleveland Mayor
Ralph J. Perk. One read
"President Nixon, Now More
Than Ever."
·
Also greeting the President
on a cloudy, misty, mild day
was Rep. William Minshall, ROhlo:
former
Nationa!
Republican Ghairman Ray
Bliss, and Ohio Sen. Robert
Taft Jr.
The S\lll broke through the
clouds as Nixon, dressed In a
tan trench coat, and his wife, .
emerged from the plane to begin the motorcade from here to
the Youngstown area.
About 50 protestors demonstrated outside. the terminal
and ~atched closely by police.
The demonstrators carried
signs which read "politicians
Oy while AsiansmDie" and
"Workers need jobs not

promises."

Gen. Ellis to retire

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GALLIPOLIS - Air Force phase or flight instruction with
Brig. Gen. Richard N. Ellis, Tom McCauley as ground'
Civil Air Patrol's national school instructor. The group
commander, will retire at the will resume regular meetings
eoo of this month, according to each Monday evening at 7 at
2nd Lt. Ray Friend, com- the conclusion of the course.
mander cf Sqdn.1207, local unit
of the CAP.
Gen. Ellis, a veteran of more
than 30 years of military
DOCTORS CONFER
service, was recalled to active
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!)duty to co!llmand the Civil Air A group of Chinese doctors
Patrol. His tour of duty in this tou_ring American health
post ·began Nov : I , 1969 . f~ctlilie~ stopped at Kansas
Commander Friend noted that . ~1ty Fr1d~y to discuss mutual
no replacement for Gen. Ellis fields of mterests With U. s.
has been named by the speelahsts.- They p~nned to
Secretary cf the Air Force. lea~e for Sa~ Franc1sco today
CAP's national commander to fmlsh the~r American tour.
always is an Air Force officer The delegation of, 11 Chinese
the local C::AP commande; physicians talked o~er
pointed out.
anesthesiology, mcludmg
CAP is a volunteer, civilian acupuncture; and prenatal
. auxiliaryoftheU.S.AirForce. ~are, cancer · research ·and .
·As suclf, ifperfonqs a num]ler pharmacology. ·
of emergency · services . ·
nationwide.
BOWHUNTERs HIT
The local unit is In Its !Ina!
WASHINGTON (UPI)
President Nixon Saturday
signed a bill imposing an 11
pet. federal tax on the sale of
bows and arrows, with
ADDED TO ROSTER ·
revenues
earmarked for
CINCINNATI (UP[)
Pitehera WlU McEaney and wildlife restoration and hunter
programs ,
The '
Santo Alc,Ja, 1long · with safety
c1lcber Bob 81rton, were measure, one of the last passed
lidded lo IIIII Cincimutli Reds before Congress quit for the
year, will make archers share
,....... FIWa71'11e lllcla ualcned out- . equal responsibility with
'' dii • 'hd VNun• and AI firearm hunters for mainthe
Wildlife
Qwfad .. lhelr a.. """ taining
Restoration
Fund.
A
similar
.... t111D Indi~Upolll, .
lloh- lllllrl'tllllr to it, the tax is now collected on

q Jilt II all ud.

ftreannJ sal...

!amiles would pay more under
ult is quite evident~" he ada flat rate income tax than un· ded, "that the average worker
der the present income tax . .
and wage earner is the guy who
"Proponents of the flat rate would get burned with a flat
lax, which is the only kind of rate tax. ~'
income tax which would be al·
The Conservation Society of
lowed if Issue No. 2 passes, say Ohio also during the weekend
it is the fairest because every- urged il~ 3,200 members to vote
body would pay at the same against the issue.
rate, " said Schnell.
"Realizing that the clean- up
"This is just not rue," he said.
"The middle income families
are the ones which would pay
the highest rates and the most
money under the flat rate tax."
Schnell, in a report to the orga nization's board of trustees,
said it was easy to "proclaim
smooth, nice sQ.ll!lding phrases
about taxes, but when you' re •
faced with the real responsibiJi.
ty of fair taxation you need to
look a bit deeper into the pro·
clamation of the repeal · POMEROY - Winners in an
Americanism .essay contest
£orces.1'
held lor fourth, fifth and sixth
graders of Meigs County by the
Ladies Auxiliary of Drew
Webster Post 39, American .
Legion, were announced today
by Mrs. Edith Fox, chairman
of the project.
Grand prize winner ol a $10
cash prize was Randy Keller,
POMEROY - The Meigs sixth grader of the Chester
County Sheriff's Dept. in. Elementary School. Winners of
vcstigated two accidents, one $3 each for the best entries in
Friday and one early Saturday the1r grade level were Paige
morning.
Carr and Jay ne Hoeflich,
Friday at 4 p.m. on SR 248, fourth graders at the Pomeroy
near the old Chester Golf Elementary School, who tied
Course, Robert L. Price, 28, Rt. but will be awarded $3 each;
2, Maryville, Tenn ., was Todd Morrison , Bradbury, fifth
driving on 248 as was Carl ·R. and sixth grade school, fifth
Thomas 17, Rt. I, Long Bottom, grade, and Cynth.ia Sue Pitwhen their cars collided in a zeer, sixth grade, Chester
curve at a hill crest.
Elementary School.
Barbara Price, a passenger
Mrs . Fox, Americanism
in the Price car, and Thomas, chairman of the auxiliary,
complained of injuries but commented . that the contest
were not immediately treated. was tremendously successful
There was medium damage to with over 150 entries from the
both cars. There was no arrest. grade levels of the entire
Saturday at .J: 15 a.m. county. Judges had a difficult
Richard S. Williams, Parkers- time in final selections, she
burg, was traveling west on Rt. said. Judges were Mrs. W. P.
681 when a deer ran in fronl of Lochary, Kenneth Harris and
his car. Williams swerved to Robert Wingett.
miss the deer, but his car went
Winners will be presented
over an embankment, struck their prizes next week.
and oroke off a utility pole, and
tore down a fence owned by Bili
Robinson. The car stopped in a
Q-What determined the
state location of the Statue
field .
There were no arrests or of Liberty?
A- By a pact between
injuries. There was heavy
&lt;New York and New Jersey
damage to the car.
in 1833 it is in New York. ·

chance for victory wl\en Hill
missed a 22-yard attempt wifh
I :38 to play. But the Tigers got
the ball back with 52 seconds to
go and using all their timeout$,
moved 38 yards to the Colorado
17 with 11 seeonds remainin~ .
Hill's (ield goal signal!l&lt;f
Missouri's first Big Eight
Conference victory in two
years after nine straight
league losses.

of Ohio
environmental
problems - long overdue will take a great deal
of money on the · state
level and that the graduated in·
come tax is by far the most
equitable ... the Conservation
Society urges all voters to retain the state income tax," the
group said in a statement.

BANQUET DEC. 2
RACINE - The Southern
Tornado football banquet will
be held Dec. 2 at 6:30 p.m. at
the Southern Local High
School, Athletic Director Ralph
Wigal announced Saturday.
The banquet had previously
been scheduled for Dec. 18. Jim
Vennari, former Ohio Class A
football coach of the year and
presently scout for the Cincinnati Reds, will be the guest
spe,aker.

._ '-

MADISON, Wis. (UP!) - Third-ranked Ohio
. St_ate, with Greg Hare and Harold Henson running
With _aweso~e power, scored every time it got the
:' ball m the ftrst half and held off Wisconsin 28-20
i Saturday . .
' The Buckeyes got the ball only four times in the
~ .opening half, but took advantage of their chances on
~ a 37-yard touchdown pass from Hare to Richard
~ Galbos, two one-yard plunges by Henson and an
5eighty yard jaunt by Hare.
They were shut out In the
!&lt; second half by the stiffening
i- Wisconsin defense playing
~ before a record Badgerfootball
~ crowd of 78,713 at Camp
: Randall Stadium.
·l Hare finished with 118 yards
• on the grolllld and Henson, the
••'

JOHN E. HALLIDAY
For State Representative, 92ntl District

. Browns

JOE STEWART

:take on

TRESSA CREMEENS .
For Clerk of Courts

..',

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For Sheriff

:B roncos

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GEORGE McGOVERN
Pd. Pol. Adv.

-Here's What An Ohio Newspaper Thinks of Him!

_Collins' Strip Mine Fails
To File PollutiQn Reports
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the company to ignore the
Br PARKER BAUER ·I· }\erms, ·qf,, thel pe~nlits~u.;,~tJ 11 l'
Dispatch'r:lutdoor'writer ·
IN AN INTERVIEW, a top
A recent examination of health official told The
public records indicates that Dispatch that George Zeigler,
State Sen. Oakley C. Collins a department mine drainage
has failed for six years to engineer, "rides herd" on the
make required annual effluent reports, and that the
pollution reports . on his reports (rom Collins Mining
Lawrence County strip mine. were probably in Zeigler's
Files checked by The files. .
Dispatch at the Ohio
It turned out that Zeigler
Department of Health and the didn't have them. Who, if not
Water Pollution Control Board he, was responsible for Inshow that the Collins Mining suring that mine companies
Co. was issued a waste filed the reports? "I suppose
discharge permit early in 1965 the Water Pollution Control
for a coal stripping operation Board," said Zeigler. "I don't
several miles north of Ironton. know."
Under terms of the permit the
He thought the Collins
company submitted an initial reports were probably in the
six-month effluent report, but district · health office at
since then it has made none of Nelsonville.
the required reports.
They
weren't.
The
MEMBERS
OF
the Nelsonville district sanitary
Lawrence County Fish aoo
engineer Bald mine reports
Game Protective Association were not his responsibility. /&gt;is
say sediment draining from
for the coal washer reports, he
the mine has seriously said, Collins Mining was not
polluted a lake they own aoo
out of line. None of the coal
that Collins will not correct the
companies bothered to submit
problem . .
them.
The state records also In14
Anyway," he said, "you
dicate the Collins company
couldn't trust what they would
has not made regular pollution tell you. The only way Is to
r,eports - required monthly in inspect them."
this case - on a coal washing
THE MINE inspector is
plant near the mine. The plant . Zeigler,
whom
enhas a 10-year history, of vironmentalists have lfccused
citizens' complaints, stream of being too lenient with coal
pollution and repeated operalm's. In 1969 Zeigler
flooding of a state highway. authored a report whtctt the
Since the discharge permit Ohio
Reclamation
system is the key to state Association, a strip mine
pollution enforcement, the lobby, reprinted In press
obvious question Is why the releases to rebut con·
health department and the servationists' arguments that
pollution board are allowing stripping pollutes the state's

waters.
Zeigler told The DispatCh" •
that the health department
does not concern itself with
sediment pollution from strip
mines or, for that matter, with
acid drainage unless a
downstream domestic water
supply
is
threatened.
"Sedimentation/' he said, ~~is
a problem only In one region In
Southern Ohio."
SURELY LAWCO LAKE
and the Collins mine are in
that region. Clarke Haney of
Ironton, the 72-year-old
secretary of the lake
association , describes the
mining as a " disaster"
clogging the lake with mud.
He recalls that a dozen
fiShermen with shovels aoo
wheelbarrows built the Lawco
dam in the 1920's and that with
liiUe help he dismantled a 1.00year-&lt;Jld cabin near Ohio
Furnace, jeeped it log by log
over the hills to Lawco aoo
reassembled it as an angling
retreat.
Today, he says, the
association numbers some 600
Ironton families, but, due to
the mine, drainage, parts of
the lake "look like the
Mississippi Delta."
IN ASTAB at containing the
pollution, Co111ns built an
earthen dam across one
tributary, but a U.S. Soil
Conservation Service official
described the structure as
"totally inadequate." An SCS
study made at Haney's
request concluded that 1,800
tons of mine sediment would ·
reach the lake annually' aoo
that a satisfactory control

di!IP~,;~rtAIJd,nPr.9P!\I!IMJ '~i:J

$80,000 o~ rr;s.ot'e. ''
Although. Collins says
land reclamation work in
area is "very good," the SCS
said the three of seven soil
samples from the mine ou~-:1
slope would not support either•l
grass or trees and cited many
"dead or stuntep locust
that have already ho•·n'l
planted."
Several times Haney ap·
pealed to state reclamation
supervisor G. Orville Bates,
who said his department
mined land. Bates has since
been fired by the present state
administration, but Haney's
pleas remain unanswered.
Even if the pollution
stopped, Haney says the
stili must be drained aoo
dredged.
MOST OF THE Collins
mining in the Lawco drainage
was on land owned by the
Marquette Cement
32.6 acres was on U.S. Fm·••t
Service Property. Collins,
according to a USFS official,
bad been denied a permit
strip the federal area,
the mining might pollute
Lawco Lake.
Collins mined the
anyway, but. says it was a
"mistake." Damage to the
federal land has been
estimated at $657,000.

Columbus

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:· ·.· ::;:·::: .. ··.·: :..... ::. ,.·::". : ::;:·· .·::::.; :. :::::::: ...:.:::.; .:::·::/ ...:::::: ;:: ·:·~=·· ;:~~·.;::::

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ALL SAVINGS GUARANTEED IN FULL

2 Year, Savings \'
Certificates ·
$5,000

[

:~

:::

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minimum

i

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Savings Certificates
$1,000 minimum
1 Year

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SOON

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·eon't send "Specii!l .lnterests"' back to.the Ohio Legislature to
represent · you; b'ut vote for John E. Halliday, the Oemocra!lc
nominee who will represent you, not j.ust spec·iallnterests.

.

Where Kroger
Ge.ts It All Together
The largest store in the
area featu,.s expandecl
departments with more
brands, kinds and sizes to
choose from.
·
•

Plus Top Value Stomps

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Vote Your Way • Vote Halliday!
Pd. Pol. Adv., Sponsored By Republicans For Halliday
E. E. Null, Chairman.

Committee;·

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Passbook Savings Accounts
Save Any,Amount Any Time .

~~
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f

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tt
,.r
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John E. Halliday is the best qualified candidate .... pest
· 'qualified by education. by experience, and by a fine record 'as a
public servant. No one will be looking over your shoulder when you
cast your ballot on November 7.

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Halliday's record of public service is unblemlsh.id by sci!ndf!l,
and by charges in Ohio) newspapers of special interests.
,

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fi

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futerest paid quarterly on all certificates .
Deposit by the lOth of the month and earn from the first.
Interest a~ailable monthly on accounts of $1,000 or more

l)

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1.~

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"

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i$

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GALLIPOUS, OHIO

1~::.

DAN THOMAS ..

..,~1

AND SON

•

q 11 Iii 11 'lit"'··:•t.1f.;._1(.~.&amp;~'-lii!Ii$iiiiil'l~··:~j#~lll~!JJ!III!~11#1~J~:JiilllliilillilliilliiH~Ii!!f:;.~·lii!lli~iltll'llll.li~IIJ:~W'-®:\l~JJ&gt;#c,,~ $

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PREPARE NOW!

Georgia tops
'Cats, 13-7 .
IIPLACIMINT

GUARANTEIJ

44q.o.c,tow con~ nou DOORs,
WillOWS, NICH IICLOSUIIS

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE

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COLUMBUS (UPI) - Hunters ages 10 through 15 In
Ohio may take advantage ol a speclal early upland game
season on Nov. f and 11, the Ohlo Wtldllle Division of the
state Department of Natural Resourcell announced
Saturday.
Officials said the special hunl wlll he lor rlnglleeked
pheasant, bobwhite quail and cottontail rabblll on
Delaware, Grand River, Resthaven, Spencer, Spring
Valley and Woodbury wtldUfe areas.
The young hunters will be required to have a safe
hunter cerilfleate from the division aad must be accompanied by a licensed non-ltuntlng allllll8 yean of age
orolder.Hunting hours will be from 9a.m. to5 p.m.

LYNE CENTER SCHEDULE
October 30. NovemberS, 1972

' :~:

"S.fl' SRt•in/(11 Sin•·e 1886 ··
.
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MITCH Nease (16) grabs wet pigskin for a gain on a pass
play during Friday night's game against the Glouster
Tomcats. Southern won, 14--6. (See game details on page 20.
Photos by Leo Hill ).

LEXINGTON, Ky. IUPI ) - big play of the drive was a 35Georgia used two second-half yard pass play from Andy
field goals by Kim Braswell Johnson to Boh Burns.
NEW CONCORD , Ohio Saturday to spoil Kentucky's . Johnson was the workhorse
(UP!) - Tailback Jim Rock- homecoming 13-7 and remain lor Georgia, now 3,1 in the SEc·
well and fullback Dave Hayes in contention in the South· and 5-2 overall, as he hit seven
combined for 390 yards rushing eastern Conference.
or 17 passes for 125 yards and
and five touchdowns to lead
Georgia broke a 7-7 halftime carried'22 times for another 61
Muskingum to a 35-26 win over tie on a 33-yard field goal by yards.
·
·Denison here Saturday in an Braswell with 4:59 left in the
Poulos was Georgia's
Ohio Conference game.
third quarter, then stretched leading rusher with 94 yards in
Rockwell .Cored three touch· their margin on Braswell's 34- 20 carries, as the bulldogs got"
downs on runs of 36, 18 and o~e yard fourth quarter field goal. 240 yards on the ground. They
yard and picked up 155 yards in
Kentucky had scored the added another 125 passing for
22 carries .
second time it got the ball on a 365 total yards offense.
Hayes scored on a pair of one one-yard plunge by Gary
yard plw1ges and · gained 235 Knutson following a 2S:.yard
yards in 36 carries.
punt return by Steve Phillips
CURTIS SHINES
The Denison offense was led and runs of four and 11 yards
PITTSBURGH (UP!) - Bob
by Delaine Winningham who by Doug Kolar .
Curtis rushed for 100 yards In
scored three touchdowns on
Kentucky led 7-0 at the end of 19 carries . and scored two .
runs of four and ohe yard and a . the first quarter but Georgia touchdowns and Bryan Garlock
69 yard pass reception and tied it .with 3:33 left on~ 2-yard caught.a pass for another.t~lly·
· tailback Ed Exler who gained run by Jim Poulos and an extra Saturday· to lead - Carnegie· 94 yards in I~ ·carries. . point kick It)' Braswell.
Mellon to an 111-0 victory over
·. Muskingurn is 2-0 in the Ohio Georgia 's score carne just Case Western Reserve in a
Conference and 3-4 ovefall three plays after they got the Preslde,n ts' Athletic Con·
while Denison is 1-1·1 in the ball on the Kentucky 47. The ference game.
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conference and S.l·l.
~~=?."~!~~!:~;:~::::::::::::::~:::::-.::::::::&gt;,::::&gt;.:-;;&gt;,:~~~::::x:-;:::;~:;&gt;,:r.o;$.~.W.:$~8~:::-::;:::::::~::;::!~~:::::::::·

.u
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and 'LOA·N COMPANY
OPPOSITE POST oma:

Rockwell shines
in Muskies win

t'

THE GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS

Trevino drops
out of classic

Penn St . 28 West Virginia 19

.·.

:S:

FOR 92nd DISTRICT,
. OHIO HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

By United Press International

Nq[!he~st~rn

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Oct 31, 1971

'I

again from four yards away
the third time Minnesota gave
up the football. The big junior
completed his line afternoon
with a one-yard score 56
seconds before the first hall
ended.
Michigan scored four of the
first five times it had the ball
and Shuttlesworth gained 84
yards in 18 carries before
retiring midway through the
third quarter.
The ball did not get into the
Wolverines' territory ,- excluding kickoffs, until early in
the second quarter.
Franklin showed continued
improvement in his play
selection and was posed with
his passing. The sophomore
completed five of eight for 94
yards and contributed 57 yards
on nine rushing attempts.
It was Michigan's third
shutout of the season. The
Wolverines' defense has
allowed only one touchdown in
its four conference games thus
far.

Saturday's results

Suit Your Needs

I

Silver Bridge Shopping Center

Gophers, 42-0
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP!)
- Ed Shuttlesworth rattled off
four touchdowns Saturday to
lead steadily-improving
Michigan to a methodical 42-0
destruction of Minnesota".
Dave Brown also went 68
yards with a pass interception
and quarterback Dennis
Franklin scored from one yard
out to help the fifth-ranked
Wolverines win their seventh
game without a loss, four of
them in the Big Ten. Minnesota
was won only one game in
seven tries.
· Minnesota never really had a
chance to win back the Little
Brown Jug it lost in 1966.
Gophers quarterback Bob
Morgan kept finding receivers,
but only three of his seven
passes were ·caught by Min·
nesota players.
Shuttlesworth scored from
one yard out the first time
Michigan. had the ballr went
over from four yards out the
second time the Wolverines
had possession and scored

TOLEDO,Ohio (UPI)- Tole- yards.
do quarterback Bruce Arthur
Toledo , 1&gt;-3 overall and 2-2 In
passed for 339 yar~s and two the MAC, jumped to a 22-t
toucttdowns Saturday to lead halftime lead over the sur·
the Rockets to a 35-21 home- prised Redskins, now 5-2
coming upset over Miami 1n a overall and 1-2 in the league.
Mid-American Conference The loss snapped a four-t~ame
game. ~_ Miami winning streak.
Arthur connected on 20 of 31
Miami tailback Bob Hit·
passes, Including a 26-yard TO chens, the nation's leading·
toss to Jeff Calabrese and a 3(). rusher with 937 yards In 217
yard scoring aerial to John carries going Into the game,
Ross.
was throttled by the Toledo
ToledOtailback Joe Sehwl!rb: defense.
scored t~J-ee tOuchdowns on
Hitchens managed only 80
runs of 18, one and one yards, yards in 22carries, scoring one
giving him 42 career TDs a touchdown on a three-yard run.
conference record.
'
Miami's other touchdown
Calabrese set two Toledo came on a 15-yard run by Joe
single game records by receiv- Booker and a 31}-ysrd pass play
ing 13 passes and collecting 203 from Steve Willlams to 'lbn
Williams .
George Keirn added · a U_yard field goal for the Rockelll.
Toledo, in addition to its 338
yards passing, rolled up 156 on
the ground for 495 total of·
fenslve yards. Miami had 120
yards rushing and 107 through
the air.
The Rockets lost the ball i!lx
times on fumbles but still kept
control of the game.
CINCINNATI (UPI)-Rookie
stan Walters, a ninth-round
' draft choice from the University of Syracuse, may start at
left tackle when the Cincinnati
Bengals meet Houston here
SUnday. And there may be other changes.
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI)"We might start out with
Defending
champion Lee
Walters and see how it goes,"
said Bengals head coach Paul Trevino quit the Saliara InBrown. "Walters' strength Is vitational in the third round
Saturday and without a word to
hls pass protection."
Walters would fill In for the PGA officials left the golf
course. ·
injured Rufus Mayes.
The 31-year-&lt;Jid star, who has
Brown reiterated he would
not announce his starting been out of sorts at this tourquarterback until game time. naf11ent . and complained
Ken Anderson suffered a Friday of slow playing pros,
neck injury and may be was in a threesome with Chuck
replaced by Virgil Carter who Courtney and Jack Ewing.
guided the Bengals to their They started on the loth tee in
only touchdown in the 15-12loss the third round and played nine
1Q Los Angeles.
holes to the 18th where 'I'revino ·
Carter will also do the hold- picked up his ball from the
ing for placekicker Horst green.
Without a word, he went to
Muhlmann instead of punter
Dave Lewis. ~Uhlmann the parking. lot of the Saha~a ;
missed three field ~oat. at- lj~vaM Qolf"Cii!A gotl®l, a
cab and went back to his hotel,
tempts las! week.
witriesses
said.
·
"VIrgll was so used to it over
On Saturday when he blasted
the years that we&lt;lectded to go
slow
players he said he almoal
back the other way," said
quit the tournament the day
Brown.
"I don't want it to sound Uke before.
It was Dave's fault, because it
"I haven 'I been pl~ying .
well," he said. "I've been ·
wasn't at all," said Brown.
I.Al.wis l.s lhe only meml!er of traveling to Japan and London
the team who has not signed his and then my famUy got sick
contract and he is playing out and I took them down to
his option.
Mexico. There was no golf
"He's the ·only one we've course there. My attitude Is
ever had do. it," said Brown. bad."

Rookie
may start
for Bengals

'

? New Hamp· Maryland St. 19 Delaware St. o
sh1re 7 ·
Georgia Tech 21 Tulane 7
Plattsburgh 21 Plymouth St. 6 Mississippi 31 Vanderbilt 7
Delaware 28 Temple 9
Michigan 42 Minnesota 0
Miami !Fla.) 28 Army 7
Noire Dame 21 TCUO '
Duke 17 Navy 16
Youngstown 47 Xavier {Ohio) 7
Central Conn. 68 Glassboro 6 Williams 42 Tufts 15
Maine 16 Lafayette 6
Rutgers 6 Columb ia J
St. Peter's 25 Western Conn. 6 Syracuse lO Pittsburgh 6
North Carolina St. 42 Sooth Trinity (Conn.) 28 Rochester 6
Carolina 24
Brockport 26 Bridgewater
Northwestern 23 Indiana 1.4
(Mass.) 21 '
Amherst 35 Wesleyan 12
Shepherd 14 Bridgewater IVa .l
Harvard 21 Dartmouth 21
7
Tennessee 34 Hawaii 2
Cornell 24 Yale 13
Mississippi
13
..,..,,,.,.,_.. ,...,,, ..,,,. ,,,.,,,.;"·.·.·,·: ·· ,_,,.,.....,, Fayelleville St.St.2715Houston
Eliza beth
·.:::·::··,~ :··:·:·: .:·
City St. 14
Western Maryland 14 Ran dolph-Macon 12
Missouri 20 Colorado 17
'~~
Michigan St. 6 Iowa 6
Purdue 20 Illinois 14
. , Louisville 38 Cincinnati 13
.,, Ohio St. 28 Wisconsin 20
.,, Auburn 27 Florida St. 14
;;; Nebraska 34 Oklahoma St . 0
•
Toledo 35 Miami {Ohio) 21
Shippensburg 14 Ed inboro 9

l.·•

night. The Tornadoes won th~ir. sixth game, !U. others In
photo are Mike Nease (32); Joe Olbers (62); steve Moore
(51) and Tony Trl!oce (65).

Michigan rips

~

it

D~patch

VOTE FOR 'JOHN E. HALliDAY

HARD MAN TO BRING DOWN -Southern's Nick Ihle
(34) rambles for yardage against the winless Glouster
Tomcats in this action photo by Leo Hill at Glouster Friday

tNOW- •Three Savings Plans to

:;;;

OPENING •••

game's top rusher, had 122.
The unbeaten Ohioans, who
have won six in a row, spurted
ahead 21-0 before Wisconsin's
Rudy Steiner hit the first of his
two touchdown passes - a 12yard strike to tight end Jack
Novak.
·
On the first series of the third
period, Steiner guided the
Badgers on a 54-yard drive
which ended with a 15-yard
touc hdown pass to Novak ,
making the score 28-14.
1
Steiner Scored on a one-yard
plunge with 1:52 left in the
game after a 68-yard march .
An attempted two-point con·
version failed.
The Badgers, who are 3-4
overall, had little trouble
moving the ball against the
heavily favored Buckeyes and
blew a touchdown opportunity
in the first period when they
penetrated to the Ohio State
eight but lost the ball on a
fumble.
Steiner had his finest day of
the year, completing 16 of '!I
passes for 252 yards and two
touchdowns. Hare, besides a
fine day · running, completed
nine of 12 passes for 120 yards
and a touchdown.
By Quarters:
Ohio State
14 14 0 0-28
Wisconsin
0 7 7 6-20
OSU - Galbos 37 pass from
Hare (Conway kick:
OSU - Henson I run (Con·
way kick );
WIS - Novak 12 pass from
Steiner (Barrios kick);
OSU - Hare 8 run 1Conway
kick);
WIS - Novak 15 pass from
Steiner (Barrios kick);
WJS - Steiner I run (pass
failed l.
A - 78,713.

DENVER (UPI)-The Cleve·
land Browns' anemic rushing
game is going to get another
rough test )!ere Sunday.
The Browns, ,have averaged
only 99 yards a game on the
ground, and the Broncos are
second in the American Football Conference against the
rush.
Denver is cather weak
against the pass but the
Browns aren't exactly tearing
' up the league In that department either as Mike Phipps is
last In the AFC quarterback
ratings and the team is
averaging only 134 yards a
game through the air.
Physically the Browns are in
their best shape In weeks offensively and while Dale Lindsey is out at middle linebacker
because of a sore back, Bob
Briggs has returned to right
end. Jim Houston, backed by
Rick Kingrea, will handle
Lindsey's job.
0ne thing ,in the Browns favor is that they do better on the
,road than at home.
[ Cleveland has won It's last
.five straight games on the road
j.bile only 1-'1 at Cleveland this
!:year.
DUSANOBTAINED
!· The Broncos can run the ball
ST. LOUIS (UPI)-Minor
:,Sajnst just about anybody 'league catcher Gene Dusan,
)pith Floyd Little and Bob And- who hit .311 at Iowa City this ·
~son doing' the ball carrying · past season, was obtained iiy
~hind an aggressive offensive the St. Louis ~ardinals from
jjne.
the world champion Oakland
~ The Browns certainly aren't A's Friday.
going to underestimate Denver
Dusan was the player to be
Is they did last year. At tbat named later in the August
time the Broncos won '!1-0 to trade in which Dal Maxvlli was
I'
ltart the Browns on a four- sent from St. Louis to Oakland
lame losing streak, the longest and Joe Lindsey, a third
lit Cleveland history.
· baseman,
went to St. Louis.
.

For President

Back to the ·O hio Legislature

at hillcrest

"

'

Representing Employees At Fede~al- ;
Mog.ul To Support the Followmg 1
Candidates:

Chester has

Cars collide

•

a

Don't Send "Mr. Special Interests"

essay

I

UNITED AUTO WORKERS

Keller of

h est

Wisconsin

LOCAL 1685

JAMES M. PRATT.

big surprise,
trip Redskins

.'

For County Commissioner

Big organizations oppose tax repeal
•

. l'ULUMillA, Mo. IUPI) Greg Hill kicked a 33-yard field
goal with six sl'&lt;'onds to play
Saturday, boOsbng giant-killer
Missouri to a 26-17 victory over
se venth -rank ed Colorado
before a stunned but jubilant
crowd of 55,:i00.
Missouri; w!tich knocked
Notre Dame from the undefeated ranks a week ago,
apparently had muffed its

Dat..-Gymnasium
Poot
Oct. 30-7:30.9: 30 College Rec.
1, 30-9' 00 College Swim
Oct. 31-9:45 a.m.-2 p.m., Wellston City Schools Field Trip
..l;10-9,JO Open Recrealipn
7:30-9:00 Open Swim .
Nov . 1-7:30-9:30 College Rec.
7: 30-9:'00 College Swim
Nov. 2..:..Ciosed-Hannelord Circus
Closed-Circus
Nov. 3-7:30-9:30 Open Rec.
8-9: 30a.m. GSI Swim
7:30-9:00 Open Swim
Nov . ~-2· 4 p.m. Open Recreation
2-4 p.m. Open Swifl1
Nov. 5-2-4 p.m. Open Recreation
2-4 p.m. Open Swim
7·9 p.m. Coll~e Rec.
7'30-9:00 p.m.-Open·Swlm
Open Recrealton &amp; Open Swim - College and Community.
Gyn1 r..erved from 4-7:30 p.m. weekdays for athletic
practices only.
.
I

FRENCH ·CITY
BUILDERS
SUPPLY
75.0-lst Ave. Gallipolis, .Ohio

"Your Cash &amp; Carry Store"

�'
. o'

•

18- The SWlday Times -Sentinel; Sunday. Od. 29,1972

18- The &amp;nlayTimea-Sentlnel, Sunday, Oct. 29,1972

Missouri.
Commission, created by the
By LEE LEONARD
legislature, has been at work
UPI Statehouse Rtporter
. COLUMBVS (UPI) - State ror two years, recommeooing
lssue 1 is the "orphan" of the piece-meal changes in the
November ballo\ - few people state's basic charter.
A package of 14' changes was
want it aoo nobody's talking
for the primary
prepared
about it.
Everybody knows about ballot last May buT)was
Issue No.2. That's the question removed on a technicality four
cf repealing the state income days before the election by the
Ohio Supreme Court.
The package was not resub· Ohio politics
mitted for the November ballot
because of the automatic ap~x. and it took signatures from · pearance of the convention
'more than 300,000 voters to get question .
it on the ballot.
Hope For Defeat
Issue No. 1- calls for a state
Legislative leaders and
Constitutional Convention, and others are hoping the conit took nobody's signature to vention is rejected so the
get it on the ballot. Every 20 package, chopped into sections
years, Ohio voters are to satisfy the court, can go on
automatically asked if they next May's ball~t and the
want a convention. They commission can get on with
haven't said "yes" since 1912. proposing further amendThe Ohio Constitution has ments.
been cbanged 62 times since
Opponents of a convention
then, always by public votes on can offer plenty of anununition
separate amendments.
against one. The cost has been
A Constitutional Revision estimated at $1 million pr

.
· more, with no h~lArantee the
voters wvuld buy the recommended changes to the Constitutio'l.
New York spertt an
estimaled $10 million on a
c0&gt;1vention in 1967, and the
pt oposed amendn1ents went
down the drain by a vote of
better than two to one.
'

Michigan and Pennsylvania
held successful conventions in
the 1960's, but recommendations of conventions in
Maryland, Rhode lslaoo, New
Mexico, Arkansas and, this
year, North Dakota , were
rejected by the voters.
· Sen. Oliver Ocasek, the Senate Democratic whip from Akron, favors a convention although "I'm quite sure the
thing will be defeated."
"I'm generally satisfied with
the way the commission is
working," said Ocasek, a
member of the commission.,
"but I see no harm in having
some delegates sit down and

SAN t'RANCISCO ( UPJ 1
di:JCUSS amendments.
"It would cos: us some money," Ocasek; eonceded, "but
whenever we like so111ething
we don 't . care how much . it
costs. lf we don't like
something then we care. I don't
really care how much it would
cosl.lf it's worth it, it should be
done."
Cites Arguments
The chairman of the
Revision Commission, Richard
H: Carter of Fostoria,
professes neutrallty on the
question and offers arguments
for both sides.
''There are advantages to
both the commission approach
and the convention approach,"
Carter said. " It depends on the
time, but I believe 1972 is a
time that a commission is likely to produce more meaningful
results for the people of Ohio.
"I don't oppose a con·
vention,"Carter said. "I'm lor
constitutional reform,
whichever way it comes. If a

- f. leading dentist says

. conventi~n is approved by the
there's something you can do
voters, I would be happy to
if your child knocks out a
support it 100 per cent,"
Garter pointed out that con- . tooth - lind it fast.
·· Dr. Irving Posnick ,
ventlon reeommeurlations may
outgoing president of the
· be submitted direclly to the
American Society of Delis try
people, while his commission
for Children, said the tooth
mnst go through the legislature
can
be reimplanted.
with its suggestions.
"II you gel the child and
But he said the convention
the
tooth to the dentist within,
approach would place an entire
half an hour, there's good
Constitution on the ballot, paschance
it can be reimsibly confusing voters or hangplanted,", he told newsmen
ing ihem up on one controverat the society meeling.
sial issue in ari ali-&lt;Jr-nothing
choice.
The commission, he said
THEY CAME CLOSE
eliminates the time pressure
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs.
and political · lobbying of a Marauder 8th grade grid team
convention and presents voters pulled a near gigantic upset
with a limited number of Thursday night when they lost
constitutional questions.
a 14-12 heartbreaker to the
Voters are
normally Athens Junior High Team.
suspicious of tampering with a Coach Jon Arnott's Baby
Constitution unless there is a Marauders are now 0-5· on the
specific . reason. Ohio· voters year. The 7th grade team is 2-2.
rejected the convention apThe Ninth Graders, coached
proach by almost one million by Butch Meier, dropped a 14-0
votes in 1952, and probably will decision to the Athens Freshagain.
man also Thursday. The Meigs
Yearlings are now 2-3 on the
I
year.

ByUnltedPresslntematlonal
Three statewide organiza-•
lions
issued
position
the
papers
during
weekend - all against passage of state Issue No. 2 on next
week's ballot which would provide for a constitutional amendment repealing the present
graduated state income tax.
The Ohio Sehool Boards Association, through its executive
vice president David B. Martin,
warned the issue was not "just
' another tax issue, but ' rather
the very serious .question of
amending the Ohio Constitution."

4,

.,'

I

'

"Unless Issue No.2 is defeated, the resulting constitutional
amendment would seriously
handcuff future legislatures,
making .it very difficult at any
future time to levy an income
tax., no matter what the prevailing circumstances," said
Martin In the statement.
He obarged taxpayers were
not being informed of the real
consequences.He said the present income tax "constitutes the
most equitable approach to
funding state services."
Leonard Schnell, president of
!he Ohio Farm Bureau Federation, said 80 per cent of Ohio

Immigrant, 90, receives
present from ~r. Nixon
By JOHN SPETZ
ClEVELAND (UPI)- Mrs.
Cynthia Monger, a German
immigrant who fled her
homeland because of Hitler,
was 90 years old Sept. 19 and
.Saturday ·• she · received a
Iii ~111118'9 ~ pre~e ni~~&gt;lr orrt" the
Presldent•of the United States.
Mrs. Monger was In a crowd
of 3,000 to 4,000 who greeted
Prelident NiXon at Cleveland
Hopkins International Airport
as he began a l~ity, ll().mile
motorcade through northeastern Ohio in an attempt to
woo the ethnic vole In this
heavUy Industrialized area.
Nearly every ethnic group in
Cleveland was ·represented,
mOI!t by !l'etty girls dressed in
the costume of their native
land.
.
When Nixon and his wife
stepped off Air Force One and
began mingling with the
crowd, the President saw Mrs.
Monger ·aoo began talking to
her.
When ·she told him she had
reached her . 90th birthday,
Nixon reached into his pocket,
took out a gold fountain pen
and presented it to her.
"Here is a small present for

you Mrs. Monger," said Nixon.
"I hope that you have 90 more
years."
·
Tearfully, the woman accepted and told the President
he has her vote.

Th~ .P[~~e~t

aJW

~(ted

slivetil'slgliS'lleldily'a gro'1\P'b1
Russians that were written In
Russllm . They were translated
for him by Cleveland Mayor
Ralph J. Perk. One read
"President Nixon, Now More
Than Ever."
·
Also greeting the President
on a cloudy, misty, mild day
was Rep. William Minshall, ROhlo:
former
Nationa!
Republican Ghairman Ray
Bliss, and Ohio Sen. Robert
Taft Jr.
The S\lll broke through the
clouds as Nixon, dressed In a
tan trench coat, and his wife, .
emerged from the plane to begin the motorcade from here to
the Youngstown area.
About 50 protestors demonstrated outside. the terminal
and ~atched closely by police.
The demonstrators carried
signs which read "politicians
Oy while AsiansmDie" and
"Workers need jobs not

promises."

Gen. Ellis to retire

l

.

GALLIPOLIS - Air Force phase or flight instruction with
Brig. Gen. Richard N. Ellis, Tom McCauley as ground'
Civil Air Patrol's national school instructor. The group
commander, will retire at the will resume regular meetings
eoo of this month, according to each Monday evening at 7 at
2nd Lt. Ray Friend, com- the conclusion of the course.
mander cf Sqdn.1207, local unit
of the CAP.
Gen. Ellis, a veteran of more
than 30 years of military
DOCTORS CONFER
service, was recalled to active
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!)duty to co!llmand the Civil Air A group of Chinese doctors
Patrol. His tour of duty in this tou_ring American health
post ·began Nov : I , 1969 . f~ctlilie~ stopped at Kansas
Commander Friend noted that . ~1ty Fr1d~y to discuss mutual
no replacement for Gen. Ellis fields of mterests With U. s.
has been named by the speelahsts.- They p~nned to
Secretary cf the Air Force. lea~e for Sa~ Franc1sco today
CAP's national commander to fmlsh the~r American tour.
always is an Air Force officer The delegation of, 11 Chinese
the local C::AP commande; physicians talked o~er
pointed out.
anesthesiology, mcludmg
CAP is a volunteer, civilian acupuncture; and prenatal
. auxiliaryoftheU.S.AirForce. ~are, cancer · research ·and .
·As suclf, ifperfonqs a num]ler pharmacology. ·
of emergency · services . ·
nationwide.
BOWHUNTERs HIT
The local unit is In Its !Ina!
WASHINGTON (UPI)
President Nixon Saturday
signed a bill imposing an 11
pet. federal tax on the sale of
bows and arrows, with
ADDED TO ROSTER ·
revenues
earmarked for
CINCINNATI (UP[)
Pitehera WlU McEaney and wildlife restoration and hunter
programs ,
The '
Santo Alc,Ja, 1long · with safety
c1lcber Bob 81rton, were measure, one of the last passed
lidded lo IIIII Cincimutli Reds before Congress quit for the
year, will make archers share
,....... FIWa71'11e lllcla ualcned out- . equal responsibility with
'' dii • 'hd VNun• and AI firearm hunters for mainthe
Wildlife
Qwfad .. lhelr a.. """ taining
Restoration
Fund.
A
similar
.... t111D Indi~Upolll, .
lloh- lllllrl'tllllr to it, the tax is now collected on

q Jilt II all ud.

ftreannJ sal...

!amiles would pay more under
ult is quite evident~" he ada flat rate income tax than un· ded, "that the average worker
der the present income tax . .
and wage earner is the guy who
"Proponents of the flat rate would get burned with a flat
lax, which is the only kind of rate tax. ~'
income tax which would be al·
The Conservation Society of
lowed if Issue No. 2 passes, say Ohio also during the weekend
it is the fairest because every- urged il~ 3,200 members to vote
body would pay at the same against the issue.
rate, " said Schnell.
"Realizing that the clean- up
"This is just not rue," he said.
"The middle income families
are the ones which would pay
the highest rates and the most
money under the flat rate tax."
Schnell, in a report to the orga nization's board of trustees,
said it was easy to "proclaim
smooth, nice sQ.ll!lding phrases
about taxes, but when you' re •
faced with the real responsibiJi.
ty of fair taxation you need to
look a bit deeper into the pro·
clamation of the repeal · POMEROY - Winners in an
Americanism .essay contest
£orces.1'
held lor fourth, fifth and sixth
graders of Meigs County by the
Ladies Auxiliary of Drew
Webster Post 39, American .
Legion, were announced today
by Mrs. Edith Fox, chairman
of the project.
Grand prize winner ol a $10
cash prize was Randy Keller,
POMEROY - The Meigs sixth grader of the Chester
County Sheriff's Dept. in. Elementary School. Winners of
vcstigated two accidents, one $3 each for the best entries in
Friday and one early Saturday the1r grade level were Paige
morning.
Carr and Jay ne Hoeflich,
Friday at 4 p.m. on SR 248, fourth graders at the Pomeroy
near the old Chester Golf Elementary School, who tied
Course, Robert L. Price, 28, Rt. but will be awarded $3 each;
2, Maryville, Tenn ., was Todd Morrison , Bradbury, fifth
driving on 248 as was Carl ·R. and sixth grade school, fifth
Thomas 17, Rt. I, Long Bottom, grade, and Cynth.ia Sue Pitwhen their cars collided in a zeer, sixth grade, Chester
curve at a hill crest.
Elementary School.
Barbara Price, a passenger
Mrs . Fox, Americanism
in the Price car, and Thomas, chairman of the auxiliary,
complained of injuries but commented . that the contest
were not immediately treated. was tremendously successful
There was medium damage to with over 150 entries from the
both cars. There was no arrest. grade levels of the entire
Saturday at .J: 15 a.m. county. Judges had a difficult
Richard S. Williams, Parkers- time in final selections, she
burg, was traveling west on Rt. said. Judges were Mrs. W. P.
681 when a deer ran in fronl of Lochary, Kenneth Harris and
his car. Williams swerved to Robert Wingett.
miss the deer, but his car went
Winners will be presented
over an embankment, struck their prizes next week.
and oroke off a utility pole, and
tore down a fence owned by Bili
Robinson. The car stopped in a
Q-What determined the
state location of the Statue
field .
There were no arrests or of Liberty?
A- By a pact between
injuries. There was heavy
&lt;New York and New Jersey
damage to the car.
in 1833 it is in New York. ·

chance for victory wl\en Hill
missed a 22-yard attempt wifh
I :38 to play. But the Tigers got
the ball back with 52 seconds to
go and using all their timeout$,
moved 38 yards to the Colorado
17 with 11 seeonds remainin~ .
Hill's (ield goal signal!l&lt;f
Missouri's first Big Eight
Conference victory in two
years after nine straight
league losses.

of Ohio
environmental
problems - long overdue will take a great deal
of money on the · state
level and that the graduated in·
come tax is by far the most
equitable ... the Conservation
Society urges all voters to retain the state income tax," the
group said in a statement.

BANQUET DEC. 2
RACINE - The Southern
Tornado football banquet will
be held Dec. 2 at 6:30 p.m. at
the Southern Local High
School, Athletic Director Ralph
Wigal announced Saturday.
The banquet had previously
been scheduled for Dec. 18. Jim
Vennari, former Ohio Class A
football coach of the year and
presently scout for the Cincinnati Reds, will be the guest
spe,aker.

._ '-

MADISON, Wis. (UP!) - Third-ranked Ohio
. St_ate, with Greg Hare and Harold Henson running
With _aweso~e power, scored every time it got the
:' ball m the ftrst half and held off Wisconsin 28-20
i Saturday . .
' The Buckeyes got the ball only four times in the
~ .opening half, but took advantage of their chances on
~ a 37-yard touchdown pass from Hare to Richard
~ Galbos, two one-yard plunges by Henson and an
5eighty yard jaunt by Hare.
They were shut out In the
!&lt; second half by the stiffening
i- Wisconsin defense playing
~ before a record Badgerfootball
~ crowd of 78,713 at Camp
: Randall Stadium.
·l Hare finished with 118 yards
• on the grolllld and Henson, the
••'

JOHN E. HALLIDAY
For State Representative, 92ntl District

. Browns

JOE STEWART

:take on

TRESSA CREMEENS .
For Clerk of Courts

..',

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For Sheriff

:B roncos

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GEORGE McGOVERN
Pd. Pol. Adv.

-Here's What An Ohio Newspaper Thinks of Him!

_Collins' Strip Mine Fails
To File PollutiQn Reports
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the company to ignore the
Br PARKER BAUER ·I· }\erms, ·qf,, thel pe~nlits~u.;,~tJ 11 l'
Dispatch'r:lutdoor'writer ·
IN AN INTERVIEW, a top
A recent examination of health official told The
public records indicates that Dispatch that George Zeigler,
State Sen. Oakley C. Collins a department mine drainage
has failed for six years to engineer, "rides herd" on the
make required annual effluent reports, and that the
pollution reports . on his reports (rom Collins Mining
Lawrence County strip mine. were probably in Zeigler's
Files checked by The files. .
Dispatch at the Ohio
It turned out that Zeigler
Department of Health and the didn't have them. Who, if not
Water Pollution Control Board he, was responsible for Inshow that the Collins Mining suring that mine companies
Co. was issued a waste filed the reports? "I suppose
discharge permit early in 1965 the Water Pollution Control
for a coal stripping operation Board," said Zeigler. "I don't
several miles north of Ironton. know."
Under terms of the permit the
He thought the Collins
company submitted an initial reports were probably in the
six-month effluent report, but district · health office at
since then it has made none of Nelsonville.
the required reports.
They
weren't.
The
MEMBERS
OF
the Nelsonville district sanitary
Lawrence County Fish aoo
engineer Bald mine reports
Game Protective Association were not his responsibility. /&gt;is
say sediment draining from
for the coal washer reports, he
the mine has seriously said, Collins Mining was not
polluted a lake they own aoo
out of line. None of the coal
that Collins will not correct the
companies bothered to submit
problem . .
them.
The state records also In14
Anyway," he said, "you
dicate the Collins company
couldn't trust what they would
has not made regular pollution tell you. The only way Is to
r,eports - required monthly in inspect them."
this case - on a coal washing
THE MINE inspector is
plant near the mine. The plant . Zeigler,
whom
enhas a 10-year history, of vironmentalists have lfccused
citizens' complaints, stream of being too lenient with coal
pollution and repeated operalm's. In 1969 Zeigler
flooding of a state highway. authored a report whtctt the
Since the discharge permit Ohio
Reclamation
system is the key to state Association, a strip mine
pollution enforcement, the lobby, reprinted In press
obvious question Is why the releases to rebut con·
health department and the servationists' arguments that
pollution board are allowing stripping pollutes the state's

waters.
Zeigler told The DispatCh" •
that the health department
does not concern itself with
sediment pollution from strip
mines or, for that matter, with
acid drainage unless a
downstream domestic water
supply
is
threatened.
"Sedimentation/' he said, ~~is
a problem only In one region In
Southern Ohio."
SURELY LAWCO LAKE
and the Collins mine are in
that region. Clarke Haney of
Ironton, the 72-year-old
secretary of the lake
association , describes the
mining as a " disaster"
clogging the lake with mud.
He recalls that a dozen
fiShermen with shovels aoo
wheelbarrows built the Lawco
dam in the 1920's and that with
liiUe help he dismantled a 1.00year-&lt;Jld cabin near Ohio
Furnace, jeeped it log by log
over the hills to Lawco aoo
reassembled it as an angling
retreat.
Today, he says, the
association numbers some 600
Ironton families, but, due to
the mine, drainage, parts of
the lake "look like the
Mississippi Delta."
IN ASTAB at containing the
pollution, Co111ns built an
earthen dam across one
tributary, but a U.S. Soil
Conservation Service official
described the structure as
"totally inadequate." An SCS
study made at Haney's
request concluded that 1,800
tons of mine sediment would ·
reach the lake annually' aoo
that a satisfactory control

di!IP~,;~rtAIJd,nPr.9P!\I!IMJ '~i:J

$80,000 o~ rr;s.ot'e. ''
Although. Collins says
land reclamation work in
area is "very good," the SCS
said the three of seven soil
samples from the mine ou~-:1
slope would not support either•l
grass or trees and cited many
"dead or stuntep locust
that have already ho•·n'l
planted."
Several times Haney ap·
pealed to state reclamation
supervisor G. Orville Bates,
who said his department
mined land. Bates has since
been fired by the present state
administration, but Haney's
pleas remain unanswered.
Even if the pollution
stopped, Haney says the
stili must be drained aoo
dredged.
MOST OF THE Collins
mining in the Lawco drainage
was on land owned by the
Marquette Cement
32.6 acres was on U.S. Fm·••t
Service Property. Collins,
according to a USFS official,
bad been denied a permit
strip the federal area,
the mining might pollute
Lawco Lake.
Collins mined the
anyway, but. says it was a
"mistake." Damage to the
federal land has been
estimated at $657,000.

Columbus

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:· ·.· ::;:·::: .. ··.·: :..... ::. ,.·::". : ::;:·· .·::::.; :. :::::::: ...:.:::.; .:::·::/ ...:::::: ;:: ·:·~=·· ;:~~·.;::::

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ALL SAVINGS GUARANTEED IN FULL

2 Year, Savings \'
Certificates ·
$5,000

[

:~

:::

Ii

minimum

i

:~

Savings Certificates
$1,000 minimum
1 Year

!

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SOON

:~

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·eon't send "Specii!l .lnterests"' back to.the Ohio Legislature to
represent · you; b'ut vote for John E. Halliday, the Oemocra!lc
nominee who will represent you, not j.ust spec·iallnterests.

.

Where Kroger
Ge.ts It All Together
The largest store in the
area featu,.s expandecl
departments with more
brands, kinds and sizes to
choose from.
·
•

Plus Top Value Stomps

'

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Vote Your Way • Vote Halliday!
Pd. Pol. Adv., Sponsored By Republicans For Halliday
E. E. Null, Chairman.

Committee;·

,.,
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Passbook Savings Accounts
Save Any,Amount Any Time .

~~
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f

t
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f

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i.i

:~

tt
,.r
;~
!*~

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John E. Halliday is the best qualified candidate .... pest
· 'qualified by education. by experience, and by a fine record 'as a
public servant. No one will be looking over your shoulder when you
cast your ballot on November 7.

~;:

i;

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Halliday's record of public service is unblemlsh.id by sci!ndf!l,
and by charges in Ohio) newspapers of special interests.
,

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fi

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futerest paid quarterly on all certificates .
Deposit by the lOth of the month and earn from the first.
Interest a~ailable monthly on accounts of $1,000 or more

l)

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1.~

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i$

;:.,;

J~

GALLIPOUS, OHIO

1~::.

DAN THOMAS ..

..,~1

AND SON

•

q 11 Iii 11 'lit"'··:•t.1f.;._1(.~.&amp;~'-lii!Ii$iiiiil'l~··:~j#~lll~!JJ!III!~11#1~J~:JiilllliilillilliilliiH~Ii!!f:;.~·lii!lli~iltll'llll.li~IIJ:~W'-®:\l~JJ&gt;#c,,~ $

i:"
•;(II

•

PREPARE NOW!

Georgia tops
'Cats, 13-7 .
IIPLACIMINT

GUARANTEIJ

44q.o.c,tow con~ nou DOORs,
WillOWS, NICH IICLOSUIIS

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE

~-

..,,.,

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Hunters ages 10 through 15 In
Ohio may take advantage ol a speclal early upland game
season on Nov. f and 11, the Ohlo Wtldllle Division of the
state Department of Natural Resourcell announced
Saturday.
Officials said the special hunl wlll he lor rlnglleeked
pheasant, bobwhite quail and cottontail rabblll on
Delaware, Grand River, Resthaven, Spencer, Spring
Valley and Woodbury wtldUfe areas.
The young hunters will be required to have a safe
hunter cerilfleate from the division aad must be accompanied by a licensed non-ltuntlng allllll8 yean of age
orolder.Hunting hours will be from 9a.m. to5 p.m.

LYNE CENTER SCHEDULE
October 30. NovemberS, 1972

' :~:

"S.fl' SRt•in/(11 Sin•·e 1886 ··
.
'

MITCH Nease (16) grabs wet pigskin for a gain on a pass
play during Friday night's game against the Glouster
Tomcats. Southern won, 14--6. (See game details on page 20.
Photos by Leo Hill ).

LEXINGTON, Ky. IUPI ) - big play of the drive was a 35Georgia used two second-half yard pass play from Andy
field goals by Kim Braswell Johnson to Boh Burns.
NEW CONCORD , Ohio Saturday to spoil Kentucky's . Johnson was the workhorse
(UP!) - Tailback Jim Rock- homecoming 13-7 and remain lor Georgia, now 3,1 in the SEc·
well and fullback Dave Hayes in contention in the South· and 5-2 overall, as he hit seven
combined for 390 yards rushing eastern Conference.
or 17 passes for 125 yards and
and five touchdowns to lead
Georgia broke a 7-7 halftime carried'22 times for another 61
Muskingum to a 35-26 win over tie on a 33-yard field goal by yards.
·
·Denison here Saturday in an Braswell with 4:59 left in the
Poulos was Georgia's
Ohio Conference game.
third quarter, then stretched leading rusher with 94 yards in
Rockwell .Cored three touch· their margin on Braswell's 34- 20 carries, as the bulldogs got"
downs on runs of 36, 18 and o~e yard fourth quarter field goal. 240 yards on the ground. They
yard and picked up 155 yards in
Kentucky had scored the added another 125 passing for
22 carries .
second time it got the ball on a 365 total yards offense.
Hayes scored on a pair of one one-yard plunge by Gary
yard plw1ges and · gained 235 Knutson following a 2S:.yard
yards in 36 carries.
punt return by Steve Phillips
CURTIS SHINES
The Denison offense was led and runs of four and 11 yards
PITTSBURGH (UP!) - Bob
by Delaine Winningham who by Doug Kolar .
Curtis rushed for 100 yards In
scored three touchdowns on
Kentucky led 7-0 at the end of 19 carries . and scored two .
runs of four and ohe yard and a . the first quarter but Georgia touchdowns and Bryan Garlock
69 yard pass reception and tied it .with 3:33 left on~ 2-yard caught.a pass for another.t~lly·
· tailback Ed Exler who gained run by Jim Poulos and an extra Saturday· to lead - Carnegie· 94 yards in I~ ·carries. . point kick It)' Braswell.
Mellon to an 111-0 victory over
·. Muskingurn is 2-0 in the Ohio Georgia 's score carne just Case Western Reserve in a
Conference and 3-4 ovefall three plays after they got the Preslde,n ts' Athletic Con·
while Denison is 1-1·1 in the ball on the Kentucky 47. The ference game.
'
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conference and S.l·l.
~~=?."~!~~!:~;:~::::::::::::::~:::::-.::::::::&gt;,::::&gt;.:-;;&gt;,:~~~::::x:-;:::;~:;&gt;,:r.o;$.~.W.:$~8~:::-::;:::::::~::;::!~~:::::::::·

.u
:$;

and 'LOA·N COMPANY
OPPOSITE POST oma:

Rockwell shines
in Muskies win

t'

THE GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS

Trevino drops
out of classic

Penn St . 28 West Virginia 19

.·.

:S:

FOR 92nd DISTRICT,
. OHIO HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

By United Press International

Nq[!he~st~rn

t

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Oct 31, 1971

'I

again from four yards away
the third time Minnesota gave
up the football. The big junior
completed his line afternoon
with a one-yard score 56
seconds before the first hall
ended.
Michigan scored four of the
first five times it had the ball
and Shuttlesworth gained 84
yards in 18 carries before
retiring midway through the
third quarter.
The ball did not get into the
Wolverines' territory ,- excluding kickoffs, until early in
the second quarter.
Franklin showed continued
improvement in his play
selection and was posed with
his passing. The sophomore
completed five of eight for 94
yards and contributed 57 yards
on nine rushing attempts.
It was Michigan's third
shutout of the season. The
Wolverines' defense has
allowed only one touchdown in
its four conference games thus
far.

Saturday's results

Suit Your Needs

I

Silver Bridge Shopping Center

Gophers, 42-0
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP!)
- Ed Shuttlesworth rattled off
four touchdowns Saturday to
lead steadily-improving
Michigan to a methodical 42-0
destruction of Minnesota".
Dave Brown also went 68
yards with a pass interception
and quarterback Dennis
Franklin scored from one yard
out to help the fifth-ranked
Wolverines win their seventh
game without a loss, four of
them in the Big Ten. Minnesota
was won only one game in
seven tries.
· Minnesota never really had a
chance to win back the Little
Brown Jug it lost in 1966.
Gophers quarterback Bob
Morgan kept finding receivers,
but only three of his seven
passes were ·caught by Min·
nesota players.
Shuttlesworth scored from
one yard out the first time
Michigan. had the ballr went
over from four yards out the
second time the Wolverines
had possession and scored

TOLEDO,Ohio (UPI)- Tole- yards.
do quarterback Bruce Arthur
Toledo , 1&gt;-3 overall and 2-2 In
passed for 339 yar~s and two the MAC, jumped to a 22-t
toucttdowns Saturday to lead halftime lead over the sur·
the Rockets to a 35-21 home- prised Redskins, now 5-2
coming upset over Miami 1n a overall and 1-2 in the league.
Mid-American Conference The loss snapped a four-t~ame
game. ~_ Miami winning streak.
Arthur connected on 20 of 31
Miami tailback Bob Hit·
passes, Including a 26-yard TO chens, the nation's leading·
toss to Jeff Calabrese and a 3(). rusher with 937 yards In 217
yard scoring aerial to John carries going Into the game,
Ross.
was throttled by the Toledo
ToledOtailback Joe Sehwl!rb: defense.
scored t~J-ee tOuchdowns on
Hitchens managed only 80
runs of 18, one and one yards, yards in 22carries, scoring one
giving him 42 career TDs a touchdown on a three-yard run.
conference record.
'
Miami's other touchdown
Calabrese set two Toledo came on a 15-yard run by Joe
single game records by receiv- Booker and a 31}-ysrd pass play
ing 13 passes and collecting 203 from Steve Willlams to 'lbn
Williams .
George Keirn added · a U_yard field goal for the Rockelll.
Toledo, in addition to its 338
yards passing, rolled up 156 on
the ground for 495 total of·
fenslve yards. Miami had 120
yards rushing and 107 through
the air.
The Rockets lost the ball i!lx
times on fumbles but still kept
control of the game.
CINCINNATI (UPI)-Rookie
stan Walters, a ninth-round
' draft choice from the University of Syracuse, may start at
left tackle when the Cincinnati
Bengals meet Houston here
SUnday. And there may be other changes.
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI)"We might start out with
Defending
champion Lee
Walters and see how it goes,"
said Bengals head coach Paul Trevino quit the Saliara InBrown. "Walters' strength Is vitational in the third round
Saturday and without a word to
hls pass protection."
Walters would fill In for the PGA officials left the golf
course. ·
injured Rufus Mayes.
The 31-year-&lt;Jid star, who has
Brown reiterated he would
not announce his starting been out of sorts at this tourquarterback until game time. naf11ent . and complained
Ken Anderson suffered a Friday of slow playing pros,
neck injury and may be was in a threesome with Chuck
replaced by Virgil Carter who Courtney and Jack Ewing.
guided the Bengals to their They started on the loth tee in
only touchdown in the 15-12loss the third round and played nine
1Q Los Angeles.
holes to the 18th where 'I'revino ·
Carter will also do the hold- picked up his ball from the
ing for placekicker Horst green.
Without a word, he went to
Muhlmann instead of punter
Dave Lewis. ~Uhlmann the parking. lot of the Saha~a ;
missed three field ~oat. at- lj~vaM Qolf"Cii!A gotl®l, a
cab and went back to his hotel,
tempts las! week.
witriesses
said.
·
"VIrgll was so used to it over
On Saturday when he blasted
the years that we&lt;lectded to go
slow
players he said he almoal
back the other way," said
quit the tournament the day
Brown.
"I don't want it to sound Uke before.
It was Dave's fault, because it
"I haven 'I been pl~ying .
well," he said. "I've been ·
wasn't at all," said Brown.
I.Al.wis l.s lhe only meml!er of traveling to Japan and London
the team who has not signed his and then my famUy got sick
contract and he is playing out and I took them down to
his option.
Mexico. There was no golf
"He's the ·only one we've course there. My attitude Is
ever had do. it," said Brown. bad."

Rookie
may start
for Bengals

'

? New Hamp· Maryland St. 19 Delaware St. o
sh1re 7 ·
Georgia Tech 21 Tulane 7
Plattsburgh 21 Plymouth St. 6 Mississippi 31 Vanderbilt 7
Delaware 28 Temple 9
Michigan 42 Minnesota 0
Miami !Fla.) 28 Army 7
Noire Dame 21 TCUO '
Duke 17 Navy 16
Youngstown 47 Xavier {Ohio) 7
Central Conn. 68 Glassboro 6 Williams 42 Tufts 15
Maine 16 Lafayette 6
Rutgers 6 Columb ia J
St. Peter's 25 Western Conn. 6 Syracuse lO Pittsburgh 6
North Carolina St. 42 Sooth Trinity (Conn.) 28 Rochester 6
Carolina 24
Brockport 26 Bridgewater
Northwestern 23 Indiana 1.4
(Mass.) 21 '
Amherst 35 Wesleyan 12
Shepherd 14 Bridgewater IVa .l
Harvard 21 Dartmouth 21
7
Tennessee 34 Hawaii 2
Cornell 24 Yale 13
Mississippi
13
..,..,,,.,.,_.. ,...,,, ..,,,. ,,,.,,,.;"·.·.·,·: ·· ,_,,.,.....,, Fayelleville St.St.2715Houston
Eliza beth
·.:::·::··,~ :··:·:·: .:·
City St. 14
Western Maryland 14 Ran dolph-Macon 12
Missouri 20 Colorado 17
'~~
Michigan St. 6 Iowa 6
Purdue 20 Illinois 14
. , Louisville 38 Cincinnati 13
.,, Ohio St. 28 Wisconsin 20
.,, Auburn 27 Florida St. 14
;;; Nebraska 34 Oklahoma St . 0
•
Toledo 35 Miami {Ohio) 21
Shippensburg 14 Ed inboro 9

l.·•

night. The Tornadoes won th~ir. sixth game, !U. others In
photo are Mike Nease (32); Joe Olbers (62); steve Moore
(51) and Tony Trl!oce (65).

Michigan rips

~

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D~patch

VOTE FOR 'JOHN E. HALliDAY

HARD MAN TO BRING DOWN -Southern's Nick Ihle
(34) rambles for yardage against the winless Glouster
Tomcats in this action photo by Leo Hill at Glouster Friday

tNOW- •Three Savings Plans to

:;;;

OPENING •••

game's top rusher, had 122.
The unbeaten Ohioans, who
have won six in a row, spurted
ahead 21-0 before Wisconsin's
Rudy Steiner hit the first of his
two touchdown passes - a 12yard strike to tight end Jack
Novak.
·
On the first series of the third
period, Steiner guided the
Badgers on a 54-yard drive
which ended with a 15-yard
touc hdown pass to Novak ,
making the score 28-14.
1
Steiner Scored on a one-yard
plunge with 1:52 left in the
game after a 68-yard march .
An attempted two-point con·
version failed.
The Badgers, who are 3-4
overall, had little trouble
moving the ball against the
heavily favored Buckeyes and
blew a touchdown opportunity
in the first period when they
penetrated to the Ohio State
eight but lost the ball on a
fumble.
Steiner had his finest day of
the year, completing 16 of '!I
passes for 252 yards and two
touchdowns. Hare, besides a
fine day · running, completed
nine of 12 passes for 120 yards
and a touchdown.
By Quarters:
Ohio State
14 14 0 0-28
Wisconsin
0 7 7 6-20
OSU - Galbos 37 pass from
Hare (Conway kick:
OSU - Henson I run (Con·
way kick );
WIS - Novak 12 pass from
Steiner (Barrios kick);
OSU - Hare 8 run 1Conway
kick);
WIS - Novak 15 pass from
Steiner (Barrios kick);
WJS - Steiner I run (pass
failed l.
A - 78,713.

DENVER (UPI)-The Cleve·
land Browns' anemic rushing
game is going to get another
rough test )!ere Sunday.
The Browns, ,have averaged
only 99 yards a game on the
ground, and the Broncos are
second in the American Football Conference against the
rush.
Denver is cather weak
against the pass but the
Browns aren't exactly tearing
' up the league In that department either as Mike Phipps is
last In the AFC quarterback
ratings and the team is
averaging only 134 yards a
game through the air.
Physically the Browns are in
their best shape In weeks offensively and while Dale Lindsey is out at middle linebacker
because of a sore back, Bob
Briggs has returned to right
end. Jim Houston, backed by
Rick Kingrea, will handle
Lindsey's job.
0ne thing ,in the Browns favor is that they do better on the
,road than at home.
[ Cleveland has won It's last
.five straight games on the road
j.bile only 1-'1 at Cleveland this
!:year.
DUSANOBTAINED
!· The Broncos can run the ball
ST. LOUIS (UPI)-Minor
:,Sajnst just about anybody 'league catcher Gene Dusan,
)pith Floyd Little and Bob And- who hit .311 at Iowa City this ·
~son doing' the ball carrying · past season, was obtained iiy
~hind an aggressive offensive the St. Louis ~ardinals from
jjne.
the world champion Oakland
~ The Browns certainly aren't A's Friday.
going to underestimate Denver
Dusan was the player to be
Is they did last year. At tbat named later in the August
time the Broncos won '!1-0 to trade in which Dal Maxvlli was
I'
ltart the Browns on a four- sent from St. Louis to Oakland
lame losing streak, the longest and Joe Lindsey, a third
lit Cleveland history.
· baseman,
went to St. Louis.
.

For President

Back to the ·O hio Legislature

at hillcrest

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Representing Employees At Fede~al- ;
Mog.ul To Support the Followmg 1
Candidates:

Chester has

Cars collide

•

a

Don't Send "Mr. Special Interests"

essay

I

UNITED AUTO WORKERS

Keller of

h est

Wisconsin

LOCAL 1685

JAMES M. PRATT.

big surprise,
trip Redskins

.'

For County Commissioner

Big organizations oppose tax repeal
•

. l'ULUMillA, Mo. IUPI) Greg Hill kicked a 33-yard field
goal with six sl'&lt;'onds to play
Saturday, boOsbng giant-killer
Missouri to a 26-17 victory over
se venth -rank ed Colorado
before a stunned but jubilant
crowd of 55,:i00.
Missouri; w!tich knocked
Notre Dame from the undefeated ranks a week ago,
apparently had muffed its

Dat..-Gymnasium
Poot
Oct. 30-7:30.9: 30 College Rec.
1, 30-9' 00 College Swim
Oct. 31-9:45 a.m.-2 p.m., Wellston City Schools Field Trip
..l;10-9,JO Open Recrealipn
7:30-9:00 Open Swim .
Nov . 1-7:30-9:30 College Rec.
7: 30-9:'00 College Swim
Nov. 2..:..Ciosed-Hannelord Circus
Closed-Circus
Nov. 3-7:30-9:30 Open Rec.
8-9: 30a.m. GSI Swim
7:30-9:00 Open Swim
Nov . ~-2· 4 p.m. Open Recreation
2-4 p.m. Open Swifl1
Nov. 5-2-4 p.m. Open Recreation
2-4 p.m. Open Swim
7·9 p.m. Coll~e Rec.
7'30-9:00 p.m.-Open·Swlm
Open Recrealton &amp; Open Swim - College and Community.
Gyn1 r..erved from 4-7:30 p.m. weekdays for athletic
practices only.
.
I

FRENCH ·CITY
BUILDERS
SUPPLY
75.0-lst Ave. Gallipolis, .Ohio

"Your Cash &amp; Carry Store"

�.

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21- Tile SUnday Tim~ · Sentinel,Sunday, Ot.'l. 29, 19'12

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t•aiii, 13-6
.__......

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·. :Two
Marauder
fumbles,
.•.'
~penalty prove costly
~

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MARAUDER STADIUM- Two costly fumbl~.
:: both followed by Athens' touchdowns, and an offside
:: penalty.Jate.in the game sent the Meigs Marauders
;~ dowQ to def~t 13-6 h_ere Fri!lay night in a South~ ~stern Oh10 Athletu; League battle.' The lo5s
:;: marked only the second time, and first since 1!)68,
:; that the Marauders have lost back-to-back games.
.

:: Meigs fumbled the ball on ils situation. Wood carried it over
:; own 35 the second time it had two plays later with 11 :26
= the ball and the Bulldogs remaining in the second
~converted the mistake into a quarter. Steve Green booted
:· touchdown a few plays later. the extra point.
Again Meigs punted after
,; M1d-way m the fourth quarter,
:; Meigs was driving on the being held on downs. On
. ;; Athens 34 when again !hey lost Athens' third play, Wood was
:; ~ fumble, this also resulting rocked hard and fumbled the
~m an Athens score a few ball With Meigs' Bill Slack
:;plays later.
recovering at the Athens 46.
:: ,The Mara~ders c_ame back Slack p\ar.ed well at his
~.with a six-pomter wtth only 33 defensive
tackle
spot
::seconds remaining in the throughout the game.
:;game.
,
. Again the Marauders had to
.~ ~!hens, now 6-3 overall and 5- punt. Athens also punted after
';'I tn league play, played three running plays. For the
•brilliantly on defense, holding third straight time Randy
:':Meigs ll&gt; only two first downs Chafin put the toe to the ball on
nd 36 total yards in the first fourth down.
-~If. The Marauders fared a
Skinner, with time running
little better In the second half. short in the first half hit AI
Coach Charley Chancey's Olsen for 24 yards to th~ Meigs
Marauders are also 6-3 overall 2j and a play later hit Topping
but dropped to 3-3 m league lor 19 yards to the nine. With
_play. Meigs will have to lake third down at the nine
Gallipolis next week to avoid /llcKinney picked off Skinner'~
having the worst league record pass at the three. This ended
ever by a Meigs grid team. Tbe the first half.
worst on record was in 19611
SECOND HALF
when the Marauders were 3-3After Athens punted, ·Meigs
I. The Athens wm evened the started to move: After a first
six-year Athens-Meigs series to down on the ground, Vaughan
three games ~~ch.
threw to Chaney who made a
Athens was keying on Meigs' -spectacular one-handed overace running back Chuck Faulk ihe-head catch, but fumbled
as the senior gained but five the ball on the Athens 34 a
yards in the first half, but a moment later with the
couple of long ga~ners in the , Bulldogs recovering.
second half_ gave ~tm a total of
Nearly the same thing with
45 for the mght, hts lowest this the same result happened five
minutes later. Vaughan hit
year.
Athens quarterback Don Faulk, who zig-zagged down
Skinner, hitting on '!I of 41 the field 28 yards to the Athens
passes coming into the game, 34. A wet ball caused another
got four of seven, all in the first Meigs fumble, this time the
half, for 69 yards. He was in- BulldOKS laking over on their
tercepted once, the second own 39. Faulk committed the
lime .he has' turned the ball fumble, after laking a pitchout
over m the a1r lhts year.
from Vaughan·.
· The Bulldogs were paced by
Eleven running plays. and
' _ brui~ing. fullback Don Wood, Athen_!! l'I.I!S on t]]g .sco~board
l
who gam~ 6\l yards in 21 again. Les Champlin carried it
caiTies and scored one touch- over from the three with 5:30
down. The All-SEOAL Wooit left in the game. Green's first
was hit at the line of scrim- kick was good for the extra
mage many times, but point, but a 15-yard penalty
bulldozed over tmportant yard- caused him to miss his second
age neve~theless.
try. The Bulldogs would have
For !'fe1gs, Bill Chaney.was beeri forced to punt during the
exceptionalonboth_offenseand drive on the SO, but a Meigs'
defense as the_semor end had off-side penalty kept the drive
Sl' :•era! solo tackl,es and made alive.
three receptions on offense,
The Marauders, with their
John Lehew, a junior guard.
back
to th~ wall on their own
linebacker, played very well
again this week. Senior Lou 19, wouldn't say die. First
McKinney was also a standout Faulk sprinted 19 yards, then
Vaughan hit Melvin Cremeans
for the Marauders.
for 16 yards. Faulk gained 18,
.HOW IT WEN1'
After Meigs picked up one and Vaughan found Chaney
first down, then punting, lite open for eight to the 20. Faulk
Bulldogs drove on the ground ran II to the 13.
On the next play, Vaughan's'
to the Meigs· 23, but were held
on downs. On Meigs' fifth play pass was intercepted by Todd
after !hal, however, Andy Rol)lig In the end zone., but the
Vaughan dropped back to pass play was nullified for Athens'
and had the ball knocked from roughing the passer. With the
his grasp with middle guard ball on the seven, Vaughan
Charles Adkins recovering on went two, fullback Dallas
Weber, a defensive stalwart,
the Meigs 32.
Skinner hit end Alex Topping pounded four, and Faulk went
for 17yards to the 15on the first the final yard. McKinney's
play. A few plays later, Wood kick for the ex\ra point was
went one yard from the 6 wthe blocked.
An onside kick failed and
five on a fourth and one

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APARTMENT DWEllERS • • .
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After a four yard run by Tony
Grimm, .Mike Lewis proceeded
li&gt; skirt around left end for 22
yards and excell~nt field.
posilion. As if doing.ait, encore
Lewis ran around the right en.d
on the next play for another 33
yards giving .Wahama a first
and ten situation oA the
Spencer eleven_yard line . Tbe
.drive bogged down with a
fourth and three situation on
the SHS four yard line. Jeff
Haymaker split ·the upright
with a 21 yard field goal giving
the Falcon's a 3-0 edge.
Spencer returned the kickoff
to its own 28. On the second
play Mike Boston dropped the
quarterba~k for a loss forcing it
third and 14 situation. On the
next play Tom Samsell
recovered the first of the SHS
fumbles on Spencers'- 24 yard
line. It took the White Falcoos
only three plays to hit paydirt.
Mike Lewis· ran for eight

yards, and Tony Grimm added
three yards before Rob
Lambert ran the. quarterback
keeper ~hind Machir and
~msell for a 13 yard touchdown. Haymaker's kick was
blocked leaving the score a 9-0,
The ·first quarter ended with
Spencer having ball possession
on their own 37 with a third and
three situation.
'The second stanza was all
Spencer as the Jackets opened
the quarter with a 39 yard run
by )Uck Boley to the WHS 34
where Randy Grinstead made
a game saving tackle. The
Yellow Jackets, with the aid of
a 13 yard pass, drove to a
second down and goal situation
on the WHS lour. A brilliant
~land by the White Falcons
forced Spencer to a fourth and
. two situation. A one-yard . offsides ·penally against WHS
placed the ball on the one.
Chuck Hughes plunged in for
the score over left guard. .

Tomcats scare Southern
before bowing, 14 to 6
GLOUSTER- The Southern
Tornadoes held Glouster
Tomcats inside the Southern 10
yard line three limes to survive
a big upset and post a 14-6 win
over ttie fired 'Up Tomcats here
Friday night in a non-league
tilt.
The Tomcats, o-8, had five
passes intercepted, and lost
two fumbles during the rain-

Athens ran out the clock.
Friday Meigs hosts the
Gallipolis Blue Devils while the
Bulldogs, coached by Gerald
Inbody, host Logan.
'

c

MEIGS-ATHENS
GRID STATtSTICS
M

A

First Downs
11
14
by rushing ·
6
10
by passing
4
3
by penally
1
1
Yards Rushing
96 147
Yards Passing
80 69
Total Yards
176 216
Passes All .
13
7
Passes Completed
6
4
Passes had lnlcpt.
0
I
Fumbles
3
1
Fumbles Lo;l
3
1
Punting
5-l 4-118
32. 29.5
Penalties
7-&lt; · 4'19
Plays lrom Scrim.
4
56
INDIVIDUAL RUSH . ,G
Meigs .
TC YG Avg.
Faulk
10 45 4.5
Vaughan
IS 31 2.1
7 23- 3.3
Weber
Ash
1 -l -1.0
TOTALS
33 96 2.9
Athens
Wood
21 66 3.2
Hawk
12 38 3.2
Champlin
8· 37 4.6
Handley
4 12 3.0
Poston
· 2 -3 , 1.5
Skinner
2 .J :u
TOTALS
49 147 3.0
INDIVIDUAL RECEIVING:
Meigs, Chaney. 3-371 Faulk, 227. and Cremeans, 1-16. Athens,
Topping, 2-36; Olsen, 1-24 and"
Champlin, 1-9.
INDIVIDUAL PUNTING:
, Meigs, Chafin, 5-162. 32 .4.
Athens, Green, 4-118, 29.5.
INDIVIDUAL PASSING :
Meigs, Vaughan, 6-13, 80 yards,
no Int. Athens. Skinner, 4-7, 69
yards, one lnl. ·
KICKOFF RETURNS :
Meigs, Faulk, 1-26, and Couch,
1-15. Athens. Handley, 1-15.
PUNT RETURNS: · Meigs,
Faulk, . 1-(-5).
Athens,
ChampJin, 1-8, and Handley, 1-

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.year for Reds

Southern's 175 lb. senior
halfback Nick Ihle scored the .
first Southern touchdown In the
second quarter on a five yard
run. Ihie also ran in the extras
to ·give Southern an 8-0 lead at
the half.
lhle gained 93 yards In 25
carries in the game.

lift .lim staatsor

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Jot Giles
!Jpper Rt. 7 Next .Door to Auto Auction ·
f'llollt •
Gallipolis, Ohio

l.OGAN ~ The Logan Iron tun clinc'ed a tie for the
Five minutes later John pcri&lt;xl Kevin Berry rammed the se.:ond period ·and did not picked up 80 yards in 13 tries,
Chieftains parlayed a crushing lea~ue cr;&gt;wn Friday night by Cui·by bul\cd :l6 yHrds for over lrom the one yard line play the remainder . of the
John Watters topped the
.,
ground game and a tine 't,lasling Gallipolis 46=f4 while """ther Logan TD to make it wilh Ke mper adding the contest.
Tiger ball carriers with 61
By VITO STELLINO
defense
into
a
42-12
trouncing
the
Athens
Bulldogs
cla 1· n 1 ~t 14-0 after he ran the two point conversion on a run to make it
However
,
the
210
pound
yarcts in 13 trips.
bul on the Giants in the past of the w 1 ·
"'
UPI Sporll Writer
two.geyears.
'
avery Tige_rs Frid_ay S&lt;cund place with a 13-6 victory
conversion:
30-0.
block-buster carried the ball
Logan's awesome running
It's Sonny Jurge·nsen vs.
In the other 11 games Sun- mght .and mqved Into th~rd over Meigs .
On the first play of. the
Logan pickeg off a Waverly nine limes lor 91 yards and one game piled up 322 yards and •
Norm Snead again today but
place in the SEOAL standings. .
' .
second quarter quarterback pass on the next series and touchdown before retiring for the Chiefs hit on five of 11
Los
Angeles
is
at
Oakland
w·
th
day,
only the names and one of the Kan
. .
•
. t just . Friday's league
At Hilltop Stadium in LOgan Jim Kemper hit . Dave Krebs score!! again when Kemper the -evening .
passes for an additional 48
uniforms are the same.
Mi.:s ~?t ~~t San Diego, contest _re.m~mmg with Athens Friday night Fullback Ken. with a 16 yard touchdown pass went over from "the one on a
Waverly carne out throwing yards.
The two veteran quarter• nesota at G tim~re, Min- the Chteltatns sport• a 3-2-1 Culbertson raced 55 yards for a with this same duo clicking on ~neak to make it 36-0 with 3:'!1 in the second hall and scored
Waverly finished the night
bac~, who were traded for Fr
.
. . reen ay, San league record behind un- touchdown on the second play the conversion to widen the remaini ~
.
on a 22 yard pass from with 130 yards rushing and
each other back in I964 in a E a'!._etsro, IS at Atlanta, Ne"'---defeated-Irontorrnnd-runnerup orth-e·game-IU1J111 LOgan&lt;ln top .Core -ro 22r
~------·Tne
v1s1hng
Tlgers
got
on
the
--slioemakerTollill
Ma!OyWltn ·
·
.
ng nd 18. at New York Jets, · Alhe_ns.
&amp;-0 with 11·02 left
· Wit~ 5:49 left in the second scoreboard with just 50 seconds :l:!l6 left in the thi rd period to 71 yards .
tc-ade that Philadelphia fans
Cl
·
·
loathed and Washington fans · eveli!nd ts at Denver, Pittsleft in the half when Jo~n reduce the margin to 36-12.
Logan led in first downs 17-10
. loved, will be playmg_against burgh is at Buffalo, Houston
Shoemaker passed eight yards
John Corby tallied his second and each team had one psss
each other again when the New is at Cinclnitati, Philadelphia: is
to
Jed
Dailey
lor
a
TD,
but
a
TD
lor LHS to put the game out intercepted.
York Giants host the Redsklni!. at New Orleans and Chicago is
conversion pass failed and the of reach with 8:59 left in the
The enUre game was played
There's a differ~nt touch to at St. Louis.
score
stood
at
31H!
when
the
fourth
period
when
he
scored
in
a steady drizzle of rain ·
In the Monday night TV
their meeting this yell!' since
teams went to the locker room from the six yard line.
which blanketed the entire
RAVENSWOOD - Point punt by Sieve Seagraves set up tries; and Joe Jelick bolted for
Jurgensen, one of the best special, Detroit is at Dallas.
at halftime.
.
Corby finished as the top SEOAL area Friday night.
Miami, the only unbeaten Pleasant's Big Blacks held a I5-yard T11 scamper by 17 in three bolls.
throwers in the game, is now a
Culbertson
,
the
league's
ground
gainer with 93 yards in
The score by quarters :
Bobby Martin cracked for 43
bali.:Cont'rol ·q uarterback team in pro ball with a &amp;-0 powerful Ravenswood at baY sophomore Alan Hall. A minute
leading rusher, sustained a 12 carri e~ while Culbertson's Waverly
0 6 6 ll--12
stressing liis running game and record, Is favored to down a for nearly 43 minutes here later, a fumble recovery by in · 12 cracks; Steve Evans possible cracked rib early in repl acement, Roger Shaw, Logan
14
22 0 6---42
&amp;lead, who was practically stumbling Baltimore team. Friday night before falling 28-0 Don Smith set the stage for a picked up 15 In two tries; and
booed out of Philadelphia and Cincinnati and Pittsburgh, tied . to the No.I West Virginia Class 31-yard scoring strike from Joe Jim Otandler had 7in two. But
Fox to Rob FooSP.. Tom AdkinS much yardage had to be
flopped ln. Minnesota, is No. 1 for the AFC Central Division AA Red Devils.
lead
with
4-2
recorda,
are
both
Ravenswood
broke
loose
for
kicked for the conversion all su~tracted when the blocking
in the NFL quarterback standfavored over Houston and three touchdoW!IS in the last . three Scores.
broke down and QB Randy
ings . .
Buffalo.
three
minutes
of
the
game.
Tbe
Ravenswood
had
scored
lis
Warner
had to eat the ball five
The Redskins are still a
The Western Division leader Red Devils recorded their initial touchdown on a three or six times.
·
touchdown · favorite .to beat
Ch~k
••
In
each
conference,
Oakland
eighth
win
in
a
row
while
_
yard
1"\ID
by
flillback
Gary
Nearest
the
Big
Blacks
got to
New Y'ork and a Giant team
the Ravenswood goal line was
has never beaten a George and Los Angeles, will meet in sending the Big Blacks to their Roark in the second period.
an
tough
test
at
Oakland;
It
will
s~h
defeat
of
the
season.
Although
the
Big
BlackS
the 29. They did lt~in the first
Alleqcoached team. But the
• OFFERS A COMPLETE LINE OF
Giants are calling it their be the first regular season Pomt Pleasant, now 1-6-lon the defenders came through with period and were held. And they
meeting
'l,etween
the
two
clubs.
year
travels
to
Parkersburg
·l!Ome
rugged
tackling
in
sputs/
got
there
in
the
third
but
lost
Qiggest game since the final
CORRUGATED PLASTIC TUBING AND FITTINGS
Minnesota, which was the BigRedscolDitryFridaynight. they could not contain the the hall on a fumble .
game of 1970 when they faced
Parkersburg, top dog in bardhitting offensive thrusts of
STATISTICS
the Jtalllll with a playoff game pre-aeason favorite for the
LIGHT WEIGHT AND EASE OF INSTALLATION REDUCES LABOR/
&amp;!per Bowl but has lost four of Class AAA ranks, was upset by four _Red Devil backs who Dept.
pp Rav.
at stake.
6 17
U It's an omen, the Rams- its six games, must beat Green Stonewall Jackson, 14-13 combmed to amass a total of First Downs
332 yards on the turf made . Net Yds. Rush.
42 332
coached by Allen-won thai Bay, tied with Detroit for the Friday night.
NFC
Central
Division
crown
An
electrifying
·
70-yard
slippery
by
a
constant
drizl!le.
Passes
3-10
4-5
one, 31,3. Last year the RedDennis Miller ripped off 154 Intercepted by
1 o
skins won both games, 30-3 and with a 4-2 mark, or face virtual scoring dash by junior half...
elimination
from
the
race.
back
Dennis
Miller
started
the
yards
in
16
rips;
Gary
Roark
Yards
Passing
63
53
23-7. That gives Allen an 84-13
big fourth period uprising for slanuned for 97 in 15 slams; Scrim. Yards
105 385
Ravenswood. Then a blocked Alan Hall raced for SO in nine Return Yardage
72 17
Fumbles
5 0
A.D.I. il'l.ii'OitlTID
TUIIHQ lor drtlntQI
Fumbles Lost
2 0
...0 .• , NOit.flli\'0.
1\. . 1h1H fOWl Ol lnll.f.TID TUIINO
Punts,
Yds
.Ave.
8-33
3-38.3
t lolt 11'0" •part
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
Springfield North 7 Cen101 ctrl)'i"9 WI•
lot wt lt&lt; lnltl,
FOQT_BAL_L JCORES
Penalties, Yds.
161'. 70
terville 6
A.D.t. IND
,d rtln•g•
"""'" It
JllUGI l AID
•alrmont West 28 Fairborn
United Pross lnlematlonal
Offensive Plays
SO 60
nor Otlltt d .
ln l l dt ot
Baker 7
tubing, to 111110
Cleve. Colllm.food 34 Cleve.
By Quarterw:
th• ...c~ ot •
Brookville
37 Northridge 12
John Hay 0
.
Big Blacks
000 ll--0
Tipp City 42 Oakwood 0
• .0 .1. IH•il' I!HO
Cleve. JFK 6 Cleve. John
West Milton 12 Vandalia
r c••• sntp &lt;&gt;•••
Ravenswood
Adams 6 ltte)
0 7 0 21-28 .
rubl no to ct~ oil
A.D.I . liACH liD TUBING
Butler
8
Cleve. St. ignatius 14 Cleve.
Scoring:
Jcf M DII( \Sfl ltl litld UMI
Dixie 22 Preble Shawnee 0
II I tltM I:!UI'I Mil_~
'"'
South 8
periorAl~ Wlltl 112
RHS - Roark 3 run (Adkins
Eaton 20 Twin Valley North 0
Berea 35 Mentor 0
kl :1!"" 111'111111
kick).
Twin
Valley12 South 14
Bay VIllage 20 Fairview
Valleyvlew
.CINCINNATI - The Cin- new major league record for
Park 12
RHS - Miller 70 run (Adkins
Dayton
Jefferson
62
cmnali Reds fell two runs short saves, recording 37. He also
Cleve. Lutheran East 20
kick).
A.D.I . ll'l.lf IND
Bellbrook o
of winning the World Series hecame the first relief pitcher
Fairport Harbor 8
OA"
IIIIo
RHS - Hall 15 run (Adkins
tub lttf eonullti!Qnt
Dayton
Chaminade
7 Carroll
but 1972will
be remembered as' to be se1ected to th e All-Star
Ashtabula
Harbor 21
6
.
of
l tlcl CIP of! trld
Ashtabula Edgewood 8
kick).
A.O.I. MIAYT M'l MOM-1"1 11·
1/tntlr.
Lemon
Monroe
8
Miamisone
the
most
successful
and
team
two
straight
years.
1'0Ri\T1D Tl)lllfQ ~11 ..-.
Midv.iew 14 Am~erst o
RHS
..:..
Foose
31
pass
from
tii!AIIo!l C. I , ftHI ,
burg 6
exciting years in the 104-year
~fthander Tom Hall fanned
Barllerton 34 Lorain SouthFox (Adkins kick) .
Piqua 54 Sidney 7
history of baseball's oldest
t.. 1. 1. JIIUT cnUP\.IMII
view 1
Covington 29 Tecumseh o
f . 1
more than one batter per inIIH:~ Into lllblf'\0 ~tl\l\,'ltlo!lt
.t .D.I . INAI'
Fairfield 7 Hamilton Garfor poftl\lf, QOftntet*' wlllft
ADAI'TIIIS llliP 011
Shawnee
21
pro
esswna
learn
.
ning
en
route
to
a
1().1
record.
Springfield
llfltllln m•r 1M _.till.
field 3
l~t tu ~ I"G 1nd
141P I it lo 1moo1n
Northeastern
Manager Sparky Anderson He finished the year with nine
New Boston 30 Portsmoulh
p ipt o r trle
Cedarville 20 Northeastern 3
guided his club to 95 victories
,.. ./:1
East 12
Springboro
26
Bla~chester
d
.
consecutive
victories.
16
Lima Senior 19 Portsmouth
Troy 36 Fair111ont East 33 (3
a~ .. 11s sec?nd Western
Ross Grimsley and Jack
SVAC STANDINGS
High 0
1
overtlmesl
D
vtswn
championship
in
three
Billingham
were
post-season
ALL GAMES
oi.O.I . lft.IT
Wap(lk_oneta ]9 l&lt;enton 7
'oiD&amp;ItTllll
lh\lian Hitl -28 Milford 0
years.
pitching heroes . Grimsley ·l"at'::. n
W L T P DP
Rld_trrroHt 13 Waynesfi-eld 6
lU.I . Ptt. No.
!)lljj
S,41t ,HM ·ldiPI
a~: ~~:~~~ ~~nd'l:~·~~~~e~ ·'"" ~Xf?~l"l"h"t~ "i.r~ndible stf,rt€11': 111~ season ' atinlir- 1•:1K0fger Creek ~ ~- ~ ~~ ··· ·"' .."
Ol~'tf 6 G~f~?
• i"' J.:rl.tiL-fufiW)!-::1!"
,, '-= ---'-ll.l... ..... ~~-U
llltl llll IG 111100111
Bacon
8
come
ac.tl'l
e
Lnamplonship
dianapolis,
came
up
in
early
Eastern
4
4 o 137 74
Zanesville - 28 . Upper
plpllllf tlli.
oi.D.I . IIIDUC:INQ
Loveland 7 Mariemont 0
Series, the Reds winning the May and won i4 games. It was North Gall Ia 4 4 0 116 125
A.O.I . UDDLI
.,
Arlington 21
COUI'LINQI.
U .l . 1111
ttU •nu O&gt;' tl •
A.D.I . 8LIND
Co;w!e ( l two tlt u 111
Cots. J:astmoor 24 Cln. Taft o
pennant with two outs in the h" 1 h.
.
.
Symmes Valley 1 7 o 72 222
hll.... two .....
New Lexington 20 West
I!DI I CUI I" lhl
THIIII¥1 0111
IUblrrQ or 1 1111 11 1
w!IICIIIIIIII Ulllf
Pnnceton 13 Middletown 0
.
. .
.
ts wo- tiler agamst Ptlls- Southwestern 1 7 o 72 200
Musklngum 6·
CIOM&lt;I tnd 111d
'"' '" llu tor 1
tO I llf!ll
l ht
onto IM 11101"1 wi!IIOIA
Madlera
20
Deer
Park
6
~tnth
mnmg
of
the
!1Ith
and
burgh
in
the
fourth
game
of
the
Hannan
Trace
0
7
0
6
198
qurd . pOtrll¥4
,,.
w
..O
whlln
1
couDII~. lilt 1M .... it.
Youngs. Chaney '23 Youngs.
t • nltl&lt; lin• i a oll"l Ml
COMI CIIIJII In lhl
lhlfP 10' lllrfl It
IIIII 1111 I•O lrl!tf 10011 II*
Cln. St. Sa vier 31 Cln .
fmal game.
· Championship Series that kept
SVAC ONLY
CiiNVfl- kl llllfiiiM1 """
North 10
trend!.
0..1,...
A.O,I . coupllfllt.
II di!IIIMII lltyiiiOIII.
Struthers. 26 Boardman 11
aa~"ff!1'Jsa~g ~orwood 12
It was . a big year for the the Reds alive.
~~~~ern
W L T P OP
Farrell (Pa.) 6 Brookfield 6
Archbold 22 Montpelier o
Reds. Club records were set.
Billingham was the Reds Kyger Creek
~ ~ 1:~
(tiel
Fairview 20 Hilltop 0
New National League marks pitching ace in the World Ea.stern
3 1 o 111 33
East Liverpool 26 -Salem 20
Toledo St. Francis 14 Toledo
were established Several Se . H
d d. 1
North Gallla 3 2 0 102 62
Massillon 7 Warren Harding
Rogers 0
. d" .
.
rtes . esurren ere JUS one Symmes Valley 1 4 0 53 132
0
Toledo
Whitmer
20
Bedford
m
IVIdual
performances
led
unearned
run and six hils in Southwestern 1 4 o 54 156
Sandusky 27 Mansfield
(Mich.)
20
(tiel
the
~eague.
13.2
innings
.
Hannan Trace o 5 o 6 144
Senior 0
.
Lake
20
Defiance
0
Johnny
Bench
Joe
Morgan
Totals
17 17 1 561 561
Ontario 30 Fredericktown 0
Marietta
33
Chillicothe
20
d
p
'
Friday's
Games
:
TYPICAL USES
Gallon 18 Shet by 13
Genoa 36 Oak Harbor 6
an ete Rose were the team
Eastern at North Gallla
C..nton
McKinley
29
Elyria 26 Findlay 2
leaders. Bench and Morgan are
Hannan Trace at Symmes
OF 111 1111'' ' I •
Steubenville 7
•
Norwalk
13
Bucyrus
7
among
the
prime
candidates
Mount
Gilead
42
Buckeye
Valley
River Local 41 Mingo 0
Wl ttard 28 Upper Sandusky
for the Most Valuable Player Northmoor
Volley 7 0 Cardington 0 Southwestern
Kyger Creek at
CORRUGATED PLASTIC .
Linsley (W. Va.) 28 Toronlo
at Fairland
Southern
14
26
lUliNG
AND FiniNG&amp;
Bellvue 21 Tiffin Columbian
award.
(tiel
Wintersville 28 Bellaire 0
.FOR HOME CONSTRUCTION
3.
Bench led the majors in
..Wellsville 38 tndtan Valley
Patrick Henry 15 Delta 0
h
South 13
Hicksville ~7 Wayne Trace o
. orne runs (40) and runs batted
1. A.D,S. PERFORATED TUBING Ia used un·
Beaver Local 29 Southern
Fremont
Ross
46
Marion
m
(125).
He
also
drew
100
bases
der
the basement floor for Pfolection against
Local 7
a wet basement.
·
Hard lng 7
on balls, nearly twice as many
Tlmken 21 Marllngton 12
2. A.D.S. PERFORATED TUBING Is used ex•
Lorain Admiral King 22
as he e.ver collected 'in one
Louisville 24 Perry 22
tenslvely lor e~tarior found11tion drainage ·
Lorain Senior 8
Minerva 42 Sebring 12
ar&lt;;&gt;und new homes. schools and Industrial
Pleasant
16
Riverdale
7
season.
.
butldlnos.
Trtwoy 22 Tu•law 17
River Valley 26 Elgin 6
Morgan captured the fans'
'l
Dayton Col. White 32 Dayton
3. A.D.8. NON-PERFORATED TUBING lo
Rid!iedale
18
Wynford
7
"th
h"
"fl
f
used to carry downspout run-olf away from
Stivers 18
r
Norlh· Union 34 Big Walnut o
eye~~ IS swt eet, uncanny
patios. terraces. sidewalks and exteri or walls
Fairview 27 Kalur 0
battmg eye and sure hands. He
It Is Idee I for use near shrubs and trees. · ·
4.
stole 58 bases: He led the
LEACH BED TUBING has 112" to 314" di·
I
Ul APPROVED
ameter holes lor water outflow. Meets spec!·
)
league in runs scored (122) and
·
llcatlons C.B. 228·81.
Underwril er~ LabQratory
set a new club record for walks
I
NOTE:
s
..
F.H.A,
M8lerllll
Reltnl No.
\
619-A
for
lnstallation
$peclficallons
in
abcwe
(115, tops in the league). He
Ul88.
made only eight errors, on~
1
•
going 60 consecutive games
1
without a miscue.
"World'~t L.1rgt!.~t Mnnufacturer Of
By
'
Rose was the Reds' only .300
TUBING DOES A BmEA JOI THAN OLD-..A.HIONID .
hitter. Pete batted .307, the
I •
DRAINAGE TILES AND OTI:IER PLASTIC PIPES HEAE'I WHY
eighth
consecittive
year
he
has
.It hardly warrants ·changing your
hit .300 or better.
THE ONLY }{ ~MES APPROVED BYUl
driving direction, but your car uses
It 'Wasn't solely because of
more fuel when bucking a strong
this trio, however, that the
Reds won the pennant. It was a
headwind, clrld far less when there's a
team effort.
lively tailwind.
'1Mtm"
"We couldn't have won it
Automotive engineers are exwitholit all 25 of them," An·
perimenting with plastic- wheels.
derson acknowledged. "This
was a )e4rit effort, All season
Cheap safety insurance: change your
.ICI\111
"long there was alwars someone
UAI
illiiiii!SmtCIEIIIII
rr
1llll
it'll!
windshield wl~rs often. Their blades
to ·pick up the next guy."
IMTIIIWI
IIT!Itllllt.lll
A colt of 1" o\ 0 S IUDIIIO
OvraPit "- D S ruc•na r!l orCII "" Uti !Ubll'll •• •
UL insures you of Trouble Free Service. These
~rform best when the rubber Is young
250 J. . r lung "'' lgh• ont r
won't "''"f' loi 1 111t1 Itt IMI wolh lilt
Bobby Tolan and 'Tony Perez
A() I I~IM f 11 ~~" Cui
A D I -Tulllnq It' "'" '
, 0 POIIIIdl ' On1 mt n nn
corru&lt;;t t tt-d con11ruci•On 11· ""''"' &lt;;~ruftr llo"' can• ·
lro111 pol ylllhy itnt 111e1 It
In ~ry tnl rd "•"IJI 11
Fiome'
s
must
pass
rigid
inspections.
Coly1n&lt;1 ilt•er 1 chtn~ • ti!•
11, (;om ll"l rhl l W1I M
tlllt omPMI II IOidt t nd
were two· more offensive
and flexible.
·
•
l tld·
•paced pornla to•
I 'blll*l'IYI
limollr
ol 1111
rouvlt lrnlmllll
dur inQ
Jt
lilr; tllfll 1011 tOn dl·
"'lltr
Tht l ll'91.
heroes. They both batted .283.
d it On 1t111 WIIQht n.. I!V
~tn&lt;llrn ll tn ~ etC ~ '''''"G
tlo~a II
un•ll ectell b'y
IWi ft ly dot tolbYIICI
..... lclnl
If you're a hard, fast driver, have your
t nd
t rtl t liOWI
drtl f'lTolan came .back from two
bl "'~ ,~ fttrtl ftG
tQt *'"' IUS r.ft~J~C ~ Ill
car serviced every 4,000 miles rather
ll'•lhOYI
dilhcufly
clov
.
Achilles tendon operalions and
or , "'~'" cr e•at ~.&gt;na
stole 42 bases. He and Morgan
than at the 6,000-mlle intervals'
give the .Reds baseball's best
recommended In most new car
••
••
one-two pWtch on the bases .
manuals.
.
.
FTnroRMA~~cr '
' '' ·· . .. .. .
.
' ~ ... · · · · ·· · A .··
, Perez, the Cuban . Comet,
•"
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.for mos.t of us, the ai.ttomotii le is the . knocked in 90 runs; the sixth
Sf'f Cl f ICA fiONS · '
· ·· ·
II"''
·straight year he has. reached
most expensive single investment.
this plateau.
·
Only houses are costlier than cars, and
Defensively, the Reds led the'more people own automobiles than
league with the fewest errors,
110.
Denis Menke was a
houses . .
welcome addition at third,
We'll help you Invest wisely -and
IOiidlfying the infield. When
economically In a beautiful car at
Caar Geronimo wu in right
Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.
fteld, the oppoaitioo learned not
to 1"\ID on his rifte"arm.
Open Evenings Till 1 p.m. &amp; sat. fill· s p.m.
The Reds pitching slaff was
leag~·s third bell With a
collective earned run averase
of 3.21. Gary Nolan had the
'
'
11411c!t
Monday Thru Friday -7 A.M. to 5_P.M.
leaaue'a best wilu!lnj perSaturday-7 A.M. to 4 P.M. -·
centage, .750, with a 15-6
PHONE 446-4905 " .
reconl. His ERA of 1.99 just
misled as the lellgue's bal.
17 OLIVE. ST.
GAI,.LIPOLIS, OHIO
Clay Carrot! eatablllhed a

FridJJy's grid scores

)

Sophomore great Mitch
Nease scored Southern's final
six-pointer in the third period
on a 14 yard run, The run for
the extras was slopped short.
Nease was the game's leading
ball carrier with 130 yards in 20
ca'rrles. His brother, senior
Mike Nease; had 65 yards on
the ground.
·
. Glouster scored Its only·
touchdown on a 15 yard interception re_turn by Wayne
Kolbe with ·three and a hair
minutes l~flln the gaine. ·
Glouster head mentor
Bokovitz said after the game, ·
"We should have won. Once
again our mlslakes beat us.
We're_a young team ..- they
start seven· sophomores - · so
mistakes can be .expected."
Greg Dunning, a 150 lb.
freshman linebacker, and son
of a former pro.fpotbali player

'.

Our Prices First'.

oHers complete

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~

Logan in third after 42~12&gt;victo:fy

oo

bathroom sinks, kitchen
sinks, stoves and work
counter also lit quite nicely
and attractively Into
corners, saving Space for
other items, and providing
eye catching appeal.
All the luxurious leatu.-.s
for modern living Is
displayed ln.our grand line
ot wonderful mobile
homes. A mobile home

7

'

Red Devils blank Point

decorative cabinets, but

SKYLINE LANES

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MQBILE HOME SALES .

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College .Cafeteria-

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from New Mexico, led Southern's defense' with 10 lackles.
"F01 -rhat ·P.ersOIJol &amp; l'roleuiong/ T011ch."
Assistant coach Ralph Wigal
feels Dunning is "gonna be one
FEATURING
heckuava football player." Jay
• 24 New AMF lanes
Hill, a 150 lb. senior, added nine
lackles for the Tornadoes.
• Snack Bar and
Friday, Southern is at home
against Southwestern. If the ·.
Captains Lounge
\J
Tornadoes, win they will be
Coach Bill · Jewell 's Tor- undisputed SVAC champions.
Specializing in AMF &amp;
nadoes are now the winningest Glouster is at Berne Union .
Columbia
BowlingSouthern team in history as
By Quarters:
Balls.
/
they upped their overall record Southern
0 8 6 0-14
to &amp;-1-1. The Tornadoes lead in Glouster
0006-6
raolfsstOHAL IALL FlmHG,
the Southern Valley Con- Dept.
s ri
DIIIWHG, &amp; INSTRUCTION AVAIU.ILE
PHONE
terence with a 4-o-1 slate. Most First Downs
14 11
• Sr!CIAL KATIS TO:
previous Southern wins in one Yards Rushing
283 91
CHURCH GltOIM, rAlTIES.
446-3362
STUDIHn,
r
·.
.J
,
year was five in the mid- Yards Passing
0 112 '
, o bbO[j\ .dl.i I \Jo
s~tieS. 1,, , ' ? ~~, i,;.' TO,talY~rds-, rp.;;Ut.~ 283 20a 1" .,_ 'J tl\'iJntu,.-ftril ~IU'IO•• .illlf~
-. At. neU? Alr.t.l' .nqurpment· ~ "' ' · '·
. 2 33
.. ·Glouster, cllached by Joe Pailses Attempted
Bokovitz, came out passing. ·PassesCompleted
0 14
Upper Rt. ·7 Kanauga, Ohio
They passed on their first il fntercepted by
I 5
plays from scrimmage and put Fumbles Lost
7-4 3-2
the ball in the air a tolal of 33
times, completing 14 for 112
yards. The Tomcats' quarterback Stewart Palton, a 145
lb. sophomore, "can really fire
that apple," said his coach.
Bokovitz added "He's really
gonna be a good one."

'

today and see the 12x60 Front Den, .
Parquet flooring, bay window ·Total
Electric.
· ·

._.fMO

'

STATISTICS
A· two point pass play one minute arid four seconds
ws
Dept.
narrowed the · ·-score to 9-8 after WHS had lost the lead.
226 194
following ~n &amp;;! yard Spencer
Haymaker's kick placed the Rushing
20 43
drive. ·
·
Falcons out in front to stay Passing
246 237
After the Wbite Falcons · With a 16-H ,lead at halftime. Net' Yards
II 6
)'lahama received the second First Downs
received the kickoff · they
1-5 4-5
proceeded to march to the half kickoff and were forced to Passes, Com-Att.
I 0
Spericer- 20 '!'here they were punt from the-Spencer 40. After Interceptions
3-03-0
Fumbles
faced with a fourth and six a Yellow Jacket first down.
135
situation. Haymaker came in Vernon Roush recovered a Penalties
45
35
Offensive
Plays
toattemptafield goal with Roh fumble on the SHS 28 yard line.
Lambert holding. The snap Rob Lambert's third down · Score by Quarters:
9 7 0 7-23
was . high forcing Lambert to · eight yard r.uq gave WHS a Wahama
0 14 0 ll--14
scramble, his pass attempt for first down on · Ute Spencer 14. Spencer
Haymaker was intercepted Unable fo move the bail any
with Lambert making the farther the White Falcons were
tackle on the Spencer 30.
forced to attempt a field goal.
On. the Yellow Jackets first Haymaker's 26 yard atteinpl
play Boley swept lefl end for a was wide to the left.
brilliant 70 yard touchdown · Spencer look over on downs
spritil. The extra point pass setting up David Roush's key
attempt was broken up fumble recovery. Rob Lambeautifully by Randy Grin- bert's touchdown plunge
stead leaving Spencer with a. followed by H~ymaker 's extra
By
sudden 14-9 lead.
point upped the score to a 23-14
TERRY
On the ensuing kickoff once WHS lead. Wahama's defense
again Wahama sustained a held Spencer from starling any
drive toward the Spencer goal kind of drive. Jeff Haymaker's
'·
line. TomSamseil's 25yardrun tackle after a Spencer pass
The ·use of corner spect,
on a third down situation gave gave the White Falcons ball
adopted during ' lht
eighteenth century, "ythen
WHS a first down on Spencer's possession on' 'Spencer's 39
corner cupboards became
20. One play later Terry Smith yard line .
stylish,
is an accepted and
found Rick Hesson open in the
WHS proceeded to run out
widely
used feature ot
end zone lor a beautifully the clock preserving a hard
modern decor in many
executed touchdown play only ~ought 23-14 victory.
mobile homes. Not only do
{
modern decorators utlllre
this rectangular space lor

soaked game. Both Southern
touchdowns, one in the second
·quarter and one in the third
pe'lod, came aft~r intercepted
Tomcat passes. The Tomcats
had the ball once with a firSt
and goal on the one _yard line,
but fumbled with Southern
recovering.

Enjoy Your
.. S1Jnd~y . Dinner
.
At Rio ·Grande

.

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•

INDIVIDUAL SCORING:
· Meigs, Faulk, · one TO, six
polnls. Athens, Wood, ooe TO,
six point» Champlin, one TO.
six points, and Green, one EP,
one point.
By Quarters:
Athens ·
0706-13
0006-6
. M,elgs

·your own : ·•• and you can pay for it in a few
years just like rent. Choice of floor plans and
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'

.

SPENCER - Rob Lambert
plvnged over the goal line from
two yards out late in the fourth
quarter sealing the Wahama
While Falcon's fifth season
vicl.ory, 23-14 over Speneer
Friday night.
Spencer received Jeff
Haymaker's opening kickoff
returning the ball to the 31 yard
line where Mike Lewis was
credited with the tackle. On
their first play from scrimmage Mark Mitchell and Don
Machir combined to dump the
ball carrier for a six yard loss.
The Yellow..Jackels managed
to march to the WHS 45 where
Mike Lewis and Jeff
Haymaker stopped a reverse
forcingapuntingsituation. Tbe
punt sailed out of bounds on the
WHS 19 where the Wahama
offense took control.
The first play from scrimmage was an 8 yard burst by
Lambert with Samsell gaining
the first down on the next play.

l.

enjoy carefree living &amp; pnvacy in a

Giants·--host
'Skins today .

l

ite Falcons dump Spencer, .23-14,
•

By KEITH WISECUP

...

••

- '

20-The Sunday Times-Senlinei,Sunday,&lt;kt. 29, 1972

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21- Tile SUnday Tim~ · Sentinel,Sunday, Ot.'l. 29, 19'12

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t•aiii, 13-6
.__......

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·. :Two
Marauder
fumbles,
.•.'
~penalty prove costly
~

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MARAUDER STADIUM- Two costly fumbl~.
:: both followed by Athens' touchdowns, and an offside
:: penalty.Jate.in the game sent the Meigs Marauders
;~ dowQ to def~t 13-6 h_ere Fri!lay night in a South~ ~stern Oh10 Athletu; League battle.' The lo5s
:;: marked only the second time, and first since 1!)68,
:; that the Marauders have lost back-to-back games.
.

:: Meigs fumbled the ball on ils situation. Wood carried it over
:; own 35 the second time it had two plays later with 11 :26
= the ball and the Bulldogs remaining in the second
~converted the mistake into a quarter. Steve Green booted
:· touchdown a few plays later. the extra point.
Again Meigs punted after
,; M1d-way m the fourth quarter,
:; Meigs was driving on the being held on downs. On
. ;; Athens 34 when again !hey lost Athens' third play, Wood was
:; ~ fumble, this also resulting rocked hard and fumbled the
~m an Athens score a few ball With Meigs' Bill Slack
:;plays later.
recovering at the Athens 46.
:: ,The Mara~ders c_ame back Slack p\ar.ed well at his
~.with a six-pomter wtth only 33 defensive
tackle
spot
::seconds remaining in the throughout the game.
:;game.
,
. Again the Marauders had to
.~ ~!hens, now 6-3 overall and 5- punt. Athens also punted after
';'I tn league play, played three running plays. For the
•brilliantly on defense, holding third straight time Randy
:':Meigs ll&gt; only two first downs Chafin put the toe to the ball on
nd 36 total yards in the first fourth down.
-~If. The Marauders fared a
Skinner, with time running
little better In the second half. short in the first half hit AI
Coach Charley Chancey's Olsen for 24 yards to th~ Meigs
Marauders are also 6-3 overall 2j and a play later hit Topping
but dropped to 3-3 m league lor 19 yards to the nine. With
_play. Meigs will have to lake third down at the nine
Gallipolis next week to avoid /llcKinney picked off Skinner'~
having the worst league record pass at the three. This ended
ever by a Meigs grid team. Tbe the first half.
worst on record was in 19611
SECOND HALF
when the Marauders were 3-3After Athens punted, ·Meigs
I. The Athens wm evened the started to move: After a first
six-year Athens-Meigs series to down on the ground, Vaughan
three games ~~ch.
threw to Chaney who made a
Athens was keying on Meigs' -spectacular one-handed overace running back Chuck Faulk ihe-head catch, but fumbled
as the senior gained but five the ball on the Athens 34 a
yards in the first half, but a moment later with the
couple of long ga~ners in the , Bulldogs recovering.
second half_ gave ~tm a total of
Nearly the same thing with
45 for the mght, hts lowest this the same result happened five
minutes later. Vaughan hit
year.
Athens quarterback Don Faulk, who zig-zagged down
Skinner, hitting on '!I of 41 the field 28 yards to the Athens
passes coming into the game, 34. A wet ball caused another
got four of seven, all in the first Meigs fumble, this time the
half, for 69 yards. He was in- BulldOKS laking over on their
tercepted once, the second own 39. Faulk committed the
lime .he has' turned the ball fumble, after laking a pitchout
over m the a1r lhts year.
from Vaughan·.
· The Bulldogs were paced by
Eleven running plays. and
' _ brui~ing. fullback Don Wood, Athen_!! l'I.I!S on t]]g .sco~board
l
who gam~ 6\l yards in 21 again. Les Champlin carried it
caiTies and scored one touch- over from the three with 5:30
down. The All-SEOAL Wooit left in the game. Green's first
was hit at the line of scrim- kick was good for the extra
mage many times, but point, but a 15-yard penalty
bulldozed over tmportant yard- caused him to miss his second
age neve~theless.
try. The Bulldogs would have
For !'fe1gs, Bill Chaney.was beeri forced to punt during the
exceptionalonboth_offenseand drive on the SO, but a Meigs'
defense as the_semor end had off-side penalty kept the drive
Sl' :•era! solo tackl,es and made alive.
three receptions on offense,
The Marauders, with their
John Lehew, a junior guard.
back
to th~ wall on their own
linebacker, played very well
again this week. Senior Lou 19, wouldn't say die. First
McKinney was also a standout Faulk sprinted 19 yards, then
Vaughan hit Melvin Cremeans
for the Marauders.
for 16 yards. Faulk gained 18,
.HOW IT WEN1'
After Meigs picked up one and Vaughan found Chaney
first down, then punting, lite open for eight to the 20. Faulk
Bulldogs drove on the ground ran II to the 13.
On the next play, Vaughan's'
to the Meigs· 23, but were held
on downs. On Meigs' fifth play pass was intercepted by Todd
after !hal, however, Andy Rol)lig In the end zone., but the
Vaughan dropped back to pass play was nullified for Athens'
and had the ball knocked from roughing the passer. With the
his grasp with middle guard ball on the seven, Vaughan
Charles Adkins recovering on went two, fullback Dallas
Weber, a defensive stalwart,
the Meigs 32.
Skinner hit end Alex Topping pounded four, and Faulk went
for 17yards to the 15on the first the final yard. McKinney's
play. A few plays later, Wood kick for the ex\ra point was
went one yard from the 6 wthe blocked.
An onside kick failed and
five on a fourth and one

NEWLYWEDS. ••• RETIREES .••
APARTMENT DWEllERS • • .
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. . A small dOwn ·p~ym~nt

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will get you Ill home of ,.

· Stop

After a four yard run by Tony
Grimm, .Mike Lewis proceeded
li&gt; skirt around left end for 22
yards and excell~nt field.
posilion. As if doing.ait, encore
Lewis ran around the right en.d
on the next play for another 33
yards giving .Wahama a first
and ten situation oA the
Spencer eleven_yard line . Tbe
.drive bogged down with a
fourth and three situation on
the SHS four yard line. Jeff
Haymaker split ·the upright
with a 21 yard field goal giving
the Falcon's a 3-0 edge.
Spencer returned the kickoff
to its own 28. On the second
play Mike Boston dropped the
quarterba~k for a loss forcing it
third and 14 situation. On the
next play Tom Samsell
recovered the first of the SHS
fumbles on Spencers'- 24 yard
line. It took the White Falcoos
only three plays to hit paydirt.
Mike Lewis· ran for eight

yards, and Tony Grimm added
three yards before Rob
Lambert ran the. quarterback
keeper ~hind Machir and
~msell for a 13 yard touchdown. Haymaker's kick was
blocked leaving the score a 9-0,
The ·first quarter ended with
Spencer having ball possession
on their own 37 with a third and
three situation.
'The second stanza was all
Spencer as the Jackets opened
the quarter with a 39 yard run
by )Uck Boley to the WHS 34
where Randy Grinstead made
a game saving tackle. The
Yellow Jackets, with the aid of
a 13 yard pass, drove to a
second down and goal situation
on the WHS lour. A brilliant
~land by the White Falcons
forced Spencer to a fourth and
. two situation. A one-yard . offsides ·penally against WHS
placed the ball on the one.
Chuck Hughes plunged in for
the score over left guard. .

Tomcats scare Southern
before bowing, 14 to 6
GLOUSTER- The Southern
Tornadoes held Glouster
Tomcats inside the Southern 10
yard line three limes to survive
a big upset and post a 14-6 win
over ttie fired 'Up Tomcats here
Friday night in a non-league
tilt.
The Tomcats, o-8, had five
passes intercepted, and lost
two fumbles during the rain-

Athens ran out the clock.
Friday Meigs hosts the
Gallipolis Blue Devils while the
Bulldogs, coached by Gerald
Inbody, host Logan.
'

c

MEIGS-ATHENS
GRID STATtSTICS
M

A

First Downs
11
14
by rushing ·
6
10
by passing
4
3
by penally
1
1
Yards Rushing
96 147
Yards Passing
80 69
Total Yards
176 216
Passes All .
13
7
Passes Completed
6
4
Passes had lnlcpt.
0
I
Fumbles
3
1
Fumbles Lo;l
3
1
Punting
5-l 4-118
32. 29.5
Penalties
7-&lt; · 4'19
Plays lrom Scrim.
4
56
INDIVIDUAL RUSH . ,G
Meigs .
TC YG Avg.
Faulk
10 45 4.5
Vaughan
IS 31 2.1
7 23- 3.3
Weber
Ash
1 -l -1.0
TOTALS
33 96 2.9
Athens
Wood
21 66 3.2
Hawk
12 38 3.2
Champlin
8· 37 4.6
Handley
4 12 3.0
Poston
· 2 -3 , 1.5
Skinner
2 .J :u
TOTALS
49 147 3.0
INDIVIDUAL RECEIVING:
Meigs, Chaney. 3-371 Faulk, 227. and Cremeans, 1-16. Athens,
Topping, 2-36; Olsen, 1-24 and"
Champlin, 1-9.
INDIVIDUAL PUNTING:
, Meigs, Chafin, 5-162. 32 .4.
Athens, Green, 4-118, 29.5.
INDIVIDUAL PASSING :
Meigs, Vaughan, 6-13, 80 yards,
no Int. Athens. Skinner, 4-7, 69
yards, one lnl. ·
KICKOFF RETURNS :
Meigs, Faulk, 1-26, and Couch,
1-15. Athens. Handley, 1-15.
PUNT RETURNS: · Meigs,
Faulk, . 1-(-5).
Athens,
ChampJin, 1-8, and Handley, 1-

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.

~~/

*

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.year for Reds

Southern's 175 lb. senior
halfback Nick Ihle scored the .
first Southern touchdown In the
second quarter on a five yard
run. Ihie also ran in the extras
to ·give Southern an 8-0 lead at
the half.
lhle gained 93 yards In 25
carries in the game.

lift .lim staatsor

•••••••••••••••••

t

1~

.

Jot Giles
!Jpper Rt. 7 Next .Door to Auto Auction ·
f'llollt •
Gallipolis, Ohio

l.OGAN ~ The Logan Iron tun clinc'ed a tie for the
Five minutes later John pcri&lt;xl Kevin Berry rammed the se.:ond period ·and did not picked up 80 yards in 13 tries,
Chieftains parlayed a crushing lea~ue cr;&gt;wn Friday night by Cui·by bul\cd :l6 yHrds for over lrom the one yard line play the remainder . of the
John Watters topped the
.,
ground game and a tine 't,lasling Gallipolis 46=f4 while """ther Logan TD to make it wilh Ke mper adding the contest.
Tiger ball carriers with 61
By VITO STELLINO
defense
into
a
42-12
trouncing
the
Athens
Bulldogs
cla 1· n 1 ~t 14-0 after he ran the two point conversion on a run to make it
However
,
the
210
pound
yarcts in 13 trips.
bul on the Giants in the past of the w 1 ·
"'
UPI Sporll Writer
two.geyears.
'
avery Tige_rs Frid_ay S&lt;cund place with a 13-6 victory
conversion:
30-0.
block-buster carried the ball
Logan's awesome running
It's Sonny Jurge·nsen vs.
In the other 11 games Sun- mght .and mqved Into th~rd over Meigs .
On the first play of. the
Logan pickeg off a Waverly nine limes lor 91 yards and one game piled up 322 yards and •
Norm Snead again today but
place in the SEOAL standings. .
' .
second quarter quarterback pass on the next series and touchdown before retiring for the Chiefs hit on five of 11
Los
Angeles
is
at
Oakland
w·
th
day,
only the names and one of the Kan
. .
•
. t just . Friday's league
At Hilltop Stadium in LOgan Jim Kemper hit . Dave Krebs score!! again when Kemper the -evening .
passes for an additional 48
uniforms are the same.
Mi.:s ~?t ~~t San Diego, contest _re.m~mmg with Athens Friday night Fullback Ken. with a 16 yard touchdown pass went over from "the one on a
Waverly carne out throwing yards.
The two veteran quarter• nesota at G tim~re, Min- the Chteltatns sport• a 3-2-1 Culbertson raced 55 yards for a with this same duo clicking on ~neak to make it 36-0 with 3:'!1 in the second hall and scored
Waverly finished the night
bac~, who were traded for Fr
.
. . reen ay, San league record behind un- touchdown on the second play the conversion to widen the remaini ~
.
on a 22 yard pass from with 130 yards rushing and
each other back in I964 in a E a'!._etsro, IS at Atlanta, Ne"'---defeated-Irontorrnnd-runnerup orth-e·game-IU1J111 LOgan&lt;ln top .Core -ro 22r
~------·Tne
v1s1hng
Tlgers
got
on
the
--slioemakerTollill
Ma!OyWltn ·
·
.
ng nd 18. at New York Jets, · Alhe_ns.
&amp;-0 with 11·02 left
· Wit~ 5:49 left in the second scoreboard with just 50 seconds :l:!l6 left in the thi rd period to 71 yards .
tc-ade that Philadelphia fans
Cl
·
·
loathed and Washington fans · eveli!nd ts at Denver, Pittsleft in the half when Jo~n reduce the margin to 36-12.
Logan led in first downs 17-10
. loved, will be playmg_against burgh is at Buffalo, Houston
Shoemaker passed eight yards
John Corby tallied his second and each team had one psss
each other again when the New is at Cinclnitati, Philadelphia: is
to
Jed
Dailey
lor
a
TD,
but
a
TD
lor LHS to put the game out intercepted.
York Giants host the Redsklni!. at New Orleans and Chicago is
conversion pass failed and the of reach with 8:59 left in the
The enUre game was played
There's a differ~nt touch to at St. Louis.
score
stood
at
31H!
when
the
fourth
period
when
he
scored
in
a steady drizzle of rain ·
In the Monday night TV
their meeting this yell!' since
teams went to the locker room from the six yard line.
which blanketed the entire
RAVENSWOOD - Point punt by Sieve Seagraves set up tries; and Joe Jelick bolted for
Jurgensen, one of the best special, Detroit is at Dallas.
at halftime.
.
Corby finished as the top SEOAL area Friday night.
Miami, the only unbeaten Pleasant's Big Blacks held a I5-yard T11 scamper by 17 in three bolls.
throwers in the game, is now a
Culbertson
,
the
league's
ground
gainer with 93 yards in
The score by quarters :
Bobby Martin cracked for 43
bali.:Cont'rol ·q uarterback team in pro ball with a &amp;-0 powerful Ravenswood at baY sophomore Alan Hall. A minute
leading rusher, sustained a 12 carri e~ while Culbertson's Waverly
0 6 6 ll--12
stressing liis running game and record, Is favored to down a for nearly 43 minutes here later, a fumble recovery by in · 12 cracks; Steve Evans possible cracked rib early in repl acement, Roger Shaw, Logan
14
22 0 6---42
&amp;lead, who was practically stumbling Baltimore team. Friday night before falling 28-0 Don Smith set the stage for a picked up 15 In two tries; and
booed out of Philadelphia and Cincinnati and Pittsburgh, tied . to the No.I West Virginia Class 31-yard scoring strike from Joe Jim Otandler had 7in two. But
Fox to Rob FooSP.. Tom AdkinS much yardage had to be
flopped ln. Minnesota, is No. 1 for the AFC Central Division AA Red Devils.
lead
with
4-2
recorda,
are
both
Ravenswood
broke
loose
for
kicked for the conversion all su~tracted when the blocking
in the NFL quarterback standfavored over Houston and three touchdoW!IS in the last . three Scores.
broke down and QB Randy
ings . .
Buffalo.
three
minutes
of
the
game.
Tbe
Ravenswood
had
scored
lis
Warner
had to eat the ball five
The Redskins are still a
The Western Division leader Red Devils recorded their initial touchdown on a three or six times.
·
touchdown · favorite .to beat
Ch~k
••
In
each
conference,
Oakland
eighth
win
in
a
row
while
_
yard
1"\ID
by
flillback
Gary
Nearest
the
Big
Blacks
got to
New Y'ork and a Giant team
the Ravenswood goal line was
has never beaten a George and Los Angeles, will meet in sending the Big Blacks to their Roark in the second period.
an
tough
test
at
Oakland;
It
will
s~h
defeat
of
the
season.
Although
the
Big
BlackS
the 29. They did lt~in the first
Alleqcoached team. But the
• OFFERS A COMPLETE LINE OF
Giants are calling it their be the first regular season Pomt Pleasant, now 1-6-lon the defenders came through with period and were held. And they
meeting
'l,etween
the
two
clubs.
year
travels
to
Parkersburg
·l!Ome
rugged
tackling
in
sputs/
got
there
in
the
third
but
lost
Qiggest game since the final
CORRUGATED PLASTIC TUBING AND FITTINGS
Minnesota, which was the BigRedscolDitryFridaynight. they could not contain the the hall on a fumble .
game of 1970 when they faced
Parkersburg, top dog in bardhitting offensive thrusts of
STATISTICS
the Jtalllll with a playoff game pre-aeason favorite for the
LIGHT WEIGHT AND EASE OF INSTALLATION REDUCES LABOR/
&amp;!per Bowl but has lost four of Class AAA ranks, was upset by four _Red Devil backs who Dept.
pp Rav.
at stake.
6 17
U It's an omen, the Rams- its six games, must beat Green Stonewall Jackson, 14-13 combmed to amass a total of First Downs
332 yards on the turf made . Net Yds. Rush.
42 332
coached by Allen-won thai Bay, tied with Detroit for the Friday night.
NFC
Central
Division
crown
An
electrifying
·
70-yard
slippery
by
a
constant
drizl!le.
Passes
3-10
4-5
one, 31,3. Last year the RedDennis Miller ripped off 154 Intercepted by
1 o
skins won both games, 30-3 and with a 4-2 mark, or face virtual scoring dash by junior half...
elimination
from
the
race.
back
Dennis
Miller
started
the
yards
in
16
rips;
Gary
Roark
Yards
Passing
63
53
23-7. That gives Allen an 84-13
big fourth period uprising for slanuned for 97 in 15 slams; Scrim. Yards
105 385
Ravenswood. Then a blocked Alan Hall raced for SO in nine Return Yardage
72 17
Fumbles
5 0
A.D.I. il'l.ii'OitlTID
TUIIHQ lor drtlntQI
Fumbles Lost
2 0
...0 .• , NOit.flli\'0.
1\. . 1h1H fOWl Ol lnll.f.TID TUIINO
Punts,
Yds
.Ave.
8-33
3-38.3
t lolt 11'0" •part
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
Springfield North 7 Cen101 ctrl)'i"9 WI•
lot wt lt&lt; lnltl,
FOQT_BAL_L JCORES
Penalties, Yds.
161'. 70
terville 6
A.D.t. IND
,d rtln•g•
"""'" It
JllUGI l AID
•alrmont West 28 Fairborn
United Pross lnlematlonal
Offensive Plays
SO 60
nor Otlltt d .
ln l l dt ot
Baker 7
tubing, to 111110
Cleve. Colllm.food 34 Cleve.
By Quarterw:
th• ...c~ ot •
Brookville
37 Northridge 12
John Hay 0
.
Big Blacks
000 ll--0
Tipp City 42 Oakwood 0
• .0 .1. IH•il' I!HO
Cleve. JFK 6 Cleve. John
West Milton 12 Vandalia
r c••• sntp &lt;&gt;•••
Ravenswood
Adams 6 ltte)
0 7 0 21-28 .
rubl no to ct~ oil
A.D.I . liACH liD TUBING
Butler
8
Cleve. St. ignatius 14 Cleve.
Scoring:
Jcf M DII( \Sfl ltl litld UMI
Dixie 22 Preble Shawnee 0
II I tltM I:!UI'I Mil_~
'"'
South 8
periorAl~ Wlltl 112
RHS - Roark 3 run (Adkins
Eaton 20 Twin Valley North 0
Berea 35 Mentor 0
kl :1!"" 111'111111
kick).
Twin
Valley12 South 14
Bay VIllage 20 Fairview
Valleyvlew
.CINCINNATI - The Cin- new major league record for
Park 12
RHS - Miller 70 run (Adkins
Dayton
Jefferson
62
cmnali Reds fell two runs short saves, recording 37. He also
Cleve. Lutheran East 20
kick).
A.D.I . ll'l.lf IND
Bellbrook o
of winning the World Series hecame the first relief pitcher
Fairport Harbor 8
OA"
IIIIo
RHS - Hall 15 run (Adkins
tub lttf eonullti!Qnt
Dayton
Chaminade
7 Carroll
but 1972will
be remembered as' to be se1ected to th e All-Star
Ashtabula
Harbor 21
6
.
of
l tlcl CIP of! trld
Ashtabula Edgewood 8
kick).
A.O.I. MIAYT M'l MOM-1"1 11·
1/tntlr.
Lemon
Monroe
8
Miamisone
the
most
successful
and
team
two
straight
years.
1'0Ri\T1D Tl)lllfQ ~11 ..-.
Midv.iew 14 Am~erst o
RHS
..:..
Foose
31
pass
from
tii!AIIo!l C. I , ftHI ,
burg 6
exciting years in the 104-year
~fthander Tom Hall fanned
Barllerton 34 Lorain SouthFox (Adkins kick) .
Piqua 54 Sidney 7
history of baseball's oldest
t.. 1. 1. JIIUT cnUP\.IMII
view 1
Covington 29 Tecumseh o
f . 1
more than one batter per inIIH:~ Into lllblf'\0 ~tl\l\,'ltlo!lt
.t .D.I . INAI'
Fairfield 7 Hamilton Garfor poftl\lf, QOftntet*' wlllft
ADAI'TIIIS llliP 011
Shawnee
21
pro
esswna
learn
.
ning
en
route
to
a
1().1
record.
Springfield
llfltllln m•r 1M _.till.
field 3
l~t tu ~ I"G 1nd
141P I it lo 1moo1n
Northeastern
Manager Sparky Anderson He finished the year with nine
New Boston 30 Portsmoulh
p ipt o r trle
Cedarville 20 Northeastern 3
guided his club to 95 victories
,.. ./:1
East 12
Springboro
26
Bla~chester
d
.
consecutive
victories.
16
Lima Senior 19 Portsmouth
Troy 36 Fair111ont East 33 (3
a~ .. 11s sec?nd Western
Ross Grimsley and Jack
SVAC STANDINGS
High 0
1
overtlmesl
D
vtswn
championship
in
three
Billingham
were
post-season
ALL GAMES
oi.O.I . lft.IT
Wap(lk_oneta ]9 l&lt;enton 7
'oiD&amp;ItTllll
lh\lian Hitl -28 Milford 0
years.
pitching heroes . Grimsley ·l"at'::. n
W L T P DP
Rld_trrroHt 13 Waynesfi-eld 6
lU.I . Ptt. No.
!)lljj
S,41t ,HM ·ldiPI
a~: ~~:~~~ ~~nd'l:~·~~~~e~ ·'"" ~Xf?~l"l"h"t~ "i.r~ndible stf,rt€11': 111~ season ' atinlir- 1•:1K0fger Creek ~ ~- ~ ~~ ··· ·"' .."
Ol~'tf 6 G~f~?
• i"' J.:rl.tiL-fufiW)!-::1!"
,, '-= ---'-ll.l... ..... ~~-U
llltl llll IG 111100111
Bacon
8
come
ac.tl'l
e
Lnamplonship
dianapolis,
came
up
in
early
Eastern
4
4 o 137 74
Zanesville - 28 . Upper
plpllllf tlli.
oi.D.I . IIIDUC:INQ
Loveland 7 Mariemont 0
Series, the Reds winning the May and won i4 games. It was North Gall Ia 4 4 0 116 125
A.O.I . UDDLI
.,
Arlington 21
COUI'LINQI.
U .l . 1111
ttU •nu O&gt;' tl •
A.D.I . 8LIND
Co;w!e ( l two tlt u 111
Cots. J:astmoor 24 Cln. Taft o
pennant with two outs in the h" 1 h.
.
.
Symmes Valley 1 7 o 72 222
hll.... two .....
New Lexington 20 West
I!DI I CUI I" lhl
THIIII¥1 0111
IUblrrQ or 1 1111 11 1
w!IICIIIIIIII Ulllf
Pnnceton 13 Middletown 0
.
. .
.
ts wo- tiler agamst Ptlls- Southwestern 1 7 o 72 200
Musklngum 6·
CIOM&lt;I tnd 111d
'"' '" llu tor 1
tO I llf!ll
l ht
onto IM 11101"1 wi!IIOIA
Madlera
20
Deer
Park
6
~tnth
mnmg
of
the
!1Ith
and
burgh
in
the
fourth
game
of
the
Hannan
Trace
0
7
0
6
198
qurd . pOtrll¥4
,,.
w
..O
whlln
1
couDII~. lilt 1M .... it.
Youngs. Chaney '23 Youngs.
t • nltl&lt; lin• i a oll"l Ml
COMI CIIIJII In lhl
lhlfP 10' lllrfl It
IIIII 1111 I•O lrl!tf 10011 II*
Cln. St. Sa vier 31 Cln .
fmal game.
· Championship Series that kept
SVAC ONLY
CiiNVfl- kl llllfiiiM1 """
North 10
trend!.
0..1,...
A.O,I . coupllfllt.
II di!IIIMII lltyiiiOIII.
Struthers. 26 Boardman 11
aa~"ff!1'Jsa~g ~orwood 12
It was . a big year for the the Reds alive.
~~~~ern
W L T P OP
Farrell (Pa.) 6 Brookfield 6
Archbold 22 Montpelier o
Reds. Club records were set.
Billingham was the Reds Kyger Creek
~ ~ 1:~
(tiel
Fairview 20 Hilltop 0
New National League marks pitching ace in the World Ea.stern
3 1 o 111 33
East Liverpool 26 -Salem 20
Toledo St. Francis 14 Toledo
were established Several Se . H
d d. 1
North Gallla 3 2 0 102 62
Massillon 7 Warren Harding
Rogers 0
. d" .
.
rtes . esurren ere JUS one Symmes Valley 1 4 0 53 132
0
Toledo
Whitmer
20
Bedford
m
IVIdual
performances
led
unearned
run and six hils in Southwestern 1 4 o 54 156
Sandusky 27 Mansfield
(Mich.)
20
(tiel
the
~eague.
13.2
innings
.
Hannan Trace o 5 o 6 144
Senior 0
.
Lake
20
Defiance
0
Johnny
Bench
Joe
Morgan
Totals
17 17 1 561 561
Ontario 30 Fredericktown 0
Marietta
33
Chillicothe
20
d
p
'
Friday's
Games
:
TYPICAL USES
Gallon 18 Shet by 13
Genoa 36 Oak Harbor 6
an ete Rose were the team
Eastern at North Gallla
C..nton
McKinley
29
Elyria 26 Findlay 2
leaders. Bench and Morgan are
Hannan Trace at Symmes
OF 111 1111'' ' I •
Steubenville 7
•
Norwalk
13
Bucyrus
7
among
the
prime
candidates
Mount
Gilead
42
Buckeye
Valley
River Local 41 Mingo 0
Wl ttard 28 Upper Sandusky
for the Most Valuable Player Northmoor
Volley 7 0 Cardington 0 Southwestern
Kyger Creek at
CORRUGATED PLASTIC .
Linsley (W. Va.) 28 Toronlo
at Fairland
Southern
14
26
lUliNG
AND FiniNG&amp;
Bellvue 21 Tiffin Columbian
award.
(tiel
Wintersville 28 Bellaire 0
.FOR HOME CONSTRUCTION
3.
Bench led the majors in
..Wellsville 38 tndtan Valley
Patrick Henry 15 Delta 0
h
South 13
Hicksville ~7 Wayne Trace o
. orne runs (40) and runs batted
1. A.D,S. PERFORATED TUBING Ia used un·
Beaver Local 29 Southern
Fremont
Ross
46
Marion
m
(125).
He
also
drew
100
bases
der
the basement floor for Pfolection against
Local 7
a wet basement.
·
Hard lng 7
on balls, nearly twice as many
Tlmken 21 Marllngton 12
2. A.D.S. PERFORATED TUBING Is used ex•
Lorain Admiral King 22
as he e.ver collected 'in one
Louisville 24 Perry 22
tenslvely lor e~tarior found11tion drainage ·
Lorain Senior 8
Minerva 42 Sebring 12
ar&lt;;&gt;und new homes. schools and Industrial
Pleasant
16
Riverdale
7
season.
.
butldlnos.
Trtwoy 22 Tu•law 17
River Valley 26 Elgin 6
Morgan captured the fans'
'l
Dayton Col. White 32 Dayton
3. A.D.8. NON-PERFORATED TUBING lo
Rid!iedale
18
Wynford
7
"th
h"
"fl
f
used to carry downspout run-olf away from
Stivers 18
r
Norlh· Union 34 Big Walnut o
eye~~ IS swt eet, uncanny
patios. terraces. sidewalks and exteri or walls
Fairview 27 Kalur 0
battmg eye and sure hands. He
It Is Idee I for use near shrubs and trees. · ·
4.
stole 58 bases: He led the
LEACH BED TUBING has 112" to 314" di·
I
Ul APPROVED
ameter holes lor water outflow. Meets spec!·
)
league in runs scored (122) and
·
llcatlons C.B. 228·81.
Underwril er~ LabQratory
set a new club record for walks
I
NOTE:
s
..
F.H.A,
M8lerllll
Reltnl No.
\
619-A
for
lnstallation
$peclficallons
in
abcwe
(115, tops in the league). He
Ul88.
made only eight errors, on~
1
•
going 60 consecutive games
1
without a miscue.
"World'~t L.1rgt!.~t Mnnufacturer Of
By
'
Rose was the Reds' only .300
TUBING DOES A BmEA JOI THAN OLD-..A.HIONID .
hitter. Pete batted .307, the
I •
DRAINAGE TILES AND OTI:IER PLASTIC PIPES HEAE'I WHY
eighth
consecittive
year
he
has
.It hardly warrants ·changing your
hit .300 or better.
THE ONLY }{ ~MES APPROVED BYUl
driving direction, but your car uses
It 'Wasn't solely because of
more fuel when bucking a strong
this trio, however, that the
Reds won the pennant. It was a
headwind, clrld far less when there's a
team effort.
lively tailwind.
'1Mtm"
"We couldn't have won it
Automotive engineers are exwitholit all 25 of them," An·
perimenting with plastic- wheels.
derson acknowledged. "This
was a )e4rit effort, All season
Cheap safety insurance: change your
.ICI\111
"long there was alwars someone
UAI
illiiiii!SmtCIEIIIII
rr
1llll
it'll!
windshield wl~rs often. Their blades
to ·pick up the next guy."
IMTIIIWI
IIT!Itllllt.lll
A colt of 1" o\ 0 S IUDIIIO
OvraPit "- D S ruc•na r!l orCII "" Uti !Ubll'll •• •
UL insures you of Trouble Free Service. These
~rform best when the rubber Is young
250 J. . r lung "'' lgh• ont r
won't "''"f' loi 1 111t1 Itt IMI wolh lilt
Bobby Tolan and 'Tony Perez
A() I I~IM f 11 ~~" Cui
A D I -Tulllnq It' "'" '
, 0 POIIIIdl ' On1 mt n nn
corru&lt;;t t tt-d con11ruci•On 11· ""''"' &lt;;~ruftr llo"' can• ·
lro111 pol ylllhy itnt 111e1 It
In ~ry tnl rd "•"IJI 11
Fiome'
s
must
pass
rigid
inspections.
Coly1n&lt;1 ilt•er 1 chtn~ • ti!•
11, (;om ll"l rhl l W1I M
tlllt omPMI II IOidt t nd
were two· more offensive
and flexible.
·
•
l tld·
•paced pornla to•
I 'blll*l'IYI
limollr
ol 1111
rouvlt lrnlmllll
dur inQ
Jt
lilr; tllfll 1011 tOn dl·
"'lltr
Tht l ll'91.
heroes. They both batted .283.
d it On 1t111 WIIQht n.. I!V
~tn&lt;llrn ll tn ~ etC ~ '''''"G
tlo~a II
un•ll ectell b'y
IWi ft ly dot tolbYIICI
..... lclnl
If you're a hard, fast driver, have your
t nd
t rtl t liOWI
drtl f'lTolan came .back from two
bl "'~ ,~ fttrtl ftG
tQt *'"' IUS r.ft~J~C ~ Ill
car serviced every 4,000 miles rather
ll'•lhOYI
dilhcufly
clov
.
Achilles tendon operalions and
or , "'~'" cr e•at ~.&gt;na
stole 42 bases. He and Morgan
than at the 6,000-mlle intervals'
give the .Reds baseball's best
recommended In most new car
••
••
one-two pWtch on the bases .
manuals.
.
.
FTnroRMA~~cr '
' '' ·· . .. .. .
.
' ~ ... · · · · ·· · A .··
, Perez, the Cuban . Comet,
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.for mos.t of us, the ai.ttomotii le is the . knocked in 90 runs; the sixth
Sf'f Cl f ICA fiONS · '
· ·· ·
II"''
·straight year he has. reached
most expensive single investment.
this plateau.
·
Only houses are costlier than cars, and
Defensively, the Reds led the'more people own automobiles than
league with the fewest errors,
110.
Denis Menke was a
houses . .
welcome addition at third,
We'll help you Invest wisely -and
IOiidlfying the infield. When
economically In a beautiful car at
Caar Geronimo wu in right
Smith Nelson Motors, Inc.
fteld, the oppoaitioo learned not
to 1"\ID on his rifte"arm.
Open Evenings Till 1 p.m. &amp; sat. fill· s p.m.
The Reds pitching slaff was
leag~·s third bell With a
collective earned run averase
of 3.21. Gary Nolan had the
'
'
11411c!t
Monday Thru Friday -7 A.M. to 5_P.M.
leaaue'a best wilu!lnj perSaturday-7 A.M. to 4 P.M. -·
centage, .750, with a 15-6
PHONE 446-4905 " .
reconl. His ERA of 1.99 just
misled as the lellgue's bal.
17 OLIVE. ST.
GAI,.LIPOLIS, OHIO
Clay Carrot! eatablllhed a

FridJJy's grid scores

)

Sophomore great Mitch
Nease scored Southern's final
six-pointer in the third period
on a 14 yard run, The run for
the extras was slopped short.
Nease was the game's leading
ball carrier with 130 yards in 20
ca'rrles. His brother, senior
Mike Nease; had 65 yards on
the ground.
·
. Glouster scored Its only·
touchdown on a 15 yard interception re_turn by Wayne
Kolbe with ·three and a hair
minutes l~flln the gaine. ·
Glouster head mentor
Bokovitz said after the game, ·
"We should have won. Once
again our mlslakes beat us.
We're_a young team ..- they
start seven· sophomores - · so
mistakes can be .expected."
Greg Dunning, a 150 lb.
freshman linebacker, and son
of a former pro.fpotbali player

'.

Our Prices First'.

oHers complete

/1\\\\\
~

Logan in third after 42~12&gt;victo:fy

oo

bathroom sinks, kitchen
sinks, stoves and work
counter also lit quite nicely
and attractively Into
corners, saving Space for
other items, and providing
eye catching appeal.
All the luxurious leatu.-.s
for modern living Is
displayed ln.our grand line
ot wonderful mobile
homes. A mobile home

7

'

Red Devils blank Point

decorative cabinets, but

SKYLINE LANES

~~

OPEN

MQBILE HOME SALES .

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and PRO-SHOP

College .Cafeteria-

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from New Mexico, led Southern's defense' with 10 lackles.
"F01 -rhat ·P.ersOIJol &amp; l'roleuiong/ T011ch."
Assistant coach Ralph Wigal
feels Dunning is "gonna be one
FEATURING
heckuava football player." Jay
• 24 New AMF lanes
Hill, a 150 lb. senior, added nine
lackles for the Tornadoes.
• Snack Bar and
Friday, Southern is at home
against Southwestern. If the ·.
Captains Lounge
\J
Tornadoes, win they will be
Coach Bill · Jewell 's Tor- undisputed SVAC champions.
Specializing in AMF &amp;
nadoes are now the winningest Glouster is at Berne Union .
Columbia
BowlingSouthern team in history as
By Quarters:
Balls.
/
they upped their overall record Southern
0 8 6 0-14
to &amp;-1-1. The Tornadoes lead in Glouster
0006-6
raolfsstOHAL IALL FlmHG,
the Southern Valley Con- Dept.
s ri
DIIIWHG, &amp; INSTRUCTION AVAIU.ILE
PHONE
terence with a 4-o-1 slate. Most First Downs
14 11
• Sr!CIAL KATIS TO:
previous Southern wins in one Yards Rushing
283 91
CHURCH GltOIM, rAlTIES.
446-3362
STUDIHn,
r
·.
.J
,
year was five in the mid- Yards Passing
0 112 '
, o bbO[j\ .dl.i I \Jo
s~tieS. 1,, , ' ? ~~, i,;.' TO,talY~rds-, rp.;;Ut.~ 283 20a 1" .,_ 'J tl\'iJntu,.-ftril ~IU'IO•• .illlf~
-. At. neU? Alr.t.l' .nqurpment· ~ "' ' · '·
. 2 33
.. ·Glouster, cllached by Joe Pailses Attempted
Bokovitz, came out passing. ·PassesCompleted
0 14
Upper Rt. ·7 Kanauga, Ohio
They passed on their first il fntercepted by
I 5
plays from scrimmage and put Fumbles Lost
7-4 3-2
the ball in the air a tolal of 33
times, completing 14 for 112
yards. The Tomcats' quarterback Stewart Palton, a 145
lb. sophomore, "can really fire
that apple," said his coach.
Bokovitz added "He's really
gonna be a good one."

'

today and see the 12x60 Front Den, .
Parquet flooring, bay window ·Total
Electric.
· ·

._.fMO

'

STATISTICS
A· two point pass play one minute arid four seconds
ws
Dept.
narrowed the · ·-score to 9-8 after WHS had lost the lead.
226 194
following ~n &amp;;! yard Spencer
Haymaker's kick placed the Rushing
20 43
drive. ·
·
Falcons out in front to stay Passing
246 237
After the Wbite Falcons · With a 16-H ,lead at halftime. Net' Yards
II 6
)'lahama received the second First Downs
received the kickoff · they
1-5 4-5
proceeded to march to the half kickoff and were forced to Passes, Com-Att.
I 0
Spericer- 20 '!'here they were punt from the-Spencer 40. After Interceptions
3-03-0
Fumbles
faced with a fourth and six a Yellow Jacket first down.
135
situation. Haymaker came in Vernon Roush recovered a Penalties
45
35
Offensive
Plays
toattemptafield goal with Roh fumble on the SHS 28 yard line.
Lambert holding. The snap Rob Lambert's third down · Score by Quarters:
9 7 0 7-23
was . high forcing Lambert to · eight yard r.uq gave WHS a Wahama
0 14 0 ll--14
scramble, his pass attempt for first down on · Ute Spencer 14. Spencer
Haymaker was intercepted Unable fo move the bail any
with Lambert making the farther the White Falcons were
tackle on the Spencer 30.
forced to attempt a field goal.
On. the Yellow Jackets first Haymaker's 26 yard atteinpl
play Boley swept lefl end for a was wide to the left.
brilliant 70 yard touchdown · Spencer look over on downs
spritil. The extra point pass setting up David Roush's key
attempt was broken up fumble recovery. Rob Lambeautifully by Randy Grin- bert's touchdown plunge
stead leaving Spencer with a. followed by H~ymaker 's extra
By
sudden 14-9 lead.
point upped the score to a 23-14
TERRY
On the ensuing kickoff once WHS lead. Wahama's defense
again Wahama sustained a held Spencer from starling any
drive toward the Spencer goal kind of drive. Jeff Haymaker's
'·
line. TomSamseil's 25yardrun tackle after a Spencer pass
The ·use of corner spect,
on a third down situation gave gave the White Falcons ball
adopted during ' lht
eighteenth century, "ythen
WHS a first down on Spencer's possession on' 'Spencer's 39
corner cupboards became
20. One play later Terry Smith yard line .
stylish,
is an accepted and
found Rick Hesson open in the
WHS proceeded to run out
widely
used feature ot
end zone lor a beautifully the clock preserving a hard
modern decor in many
executed touchdown play only ~ought 23-14 victory.
mobile homes. Not only do
{
modern decorators utlllre
this rectangular space lor

soaked game. Both Southern
touchdowns, one in the second
·quarter and one in the third
pe'lod, came aft~r intercepted
Tomcat passes. The Tomcats
had the ball once with a firSt
and goal on the one _yard line,
but fumbled with Southern
recovering.

Enjoy Your
.. S1Jnd~y . Dinner
.
At Rio ·Grande

.

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INDIVIDUAL SCORING:
· Meigs, Faulk, · one TO, six
polnls. Athens, Wood, ooe TO,
six point» Champlin, one TO.
six points, and Green, one EP,
one point.
By Quarters:
Athens ·
0706-13
0006-6
. M,elgs

·your own : ·•• and you can pay for it in a few
years just like rent. Choice of floor plans and
decors; completely furnished, ready to move
· . Into. Loads of built-in features.
'

.

SPENCER - Rob Lambert
plvnged over the goal line from
two yards out late in the fourth
quarter sealing the Wahama
While Falcon's fifth season
vicl.ory, 23-14 over Speneer
Friday night.
Spencer received Jeff
Haymaker's opening kickoff
returning the ball to the 31 yard
line where Mike Lewis was
credited with the tackle. On
their first play from scrimmage Mark Mitchell and Don
Machir combined to dump the
ball carrier for a six yard loss.
The Yellow..Jackels managed
to march to the WHS 45 where
Mike Lewis and Jeff
Haymaker stopped a reverse
forcingapuntingsituation. Tbe
punt sailed out of bounds on the
WHS 19 where the Wahama
offense took control.
The first play from scrimmage was an 8 yard burst by
Lambert with Samsell gaining
the first down on the next play.

l.

enjoy carefree living &amp; pnvacy in a

Giants·--host
'Skins today .

l

ite Falcons dump Spencer, .23-14,
•

By KEITH WISECUP

...

••

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20-The Sunday Times-Senlinei,Sunday,&lt;kt. 29, 1972

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23- TheSWldayTimei-Sr~lillO!I, Sunday,Oct. %9,1972

I

22- The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 29, 1972

Moldboard-plow on its way out

fronton has Pirates blank Hannan, 12·0
~~ title, share
h\}

•

(',l&lt;

GALLIPOLIS - Ironton gamed at least a shce
bn of the 1972 Southeastern Ohio League football
·•: championship here Friday night by rolling over
•" Coach C. L. (Johnny) Ecker's Gallipohs Blu e
Devils, 46-14.
~L~r_ _c:aa•ch~B.olJ.Lutzshowed mercy early as the.f1rst
•u:· year Tiger mentor benched his •·egulars wtth 7· 15
~ remaining in the third stanza. Ironton enjoyed a:
~·H comfortable 32-0 lead when the Cub reserves took
.'W over on rain-soaked Memorial Field.
1,

!'HA ZlE It S BOTTOM North Gallia scored touchd&lt;m ns m the second and third
fJCi lod here Friday mght to
defeat the Hannan Wildcats 120 m a non-league game .
Coach John Blake's Pirates
~'Ill end thetr !972 grod season

Friday agamst the Eastern
Ea~les . North Gallia ts 4-4
overall and 3-2 tn the Southern
Valley Ath!ettc Conference .
The IO&gt;S left Hannan with a 1·7
slate
The Ptrates scored thetr
mittal touchdown with ·1·44 l•fl

the second quarter. Semor
Phil Hollenbaugh plunged over
from the one yard stripe for the
TD A pass attempt for the
converston failed . The sbore
followed a 10 yard pass completion from semor quarterback Owen Garnes to semor
m

htl Roijmsun with two long
passes good for 23 and 17 yards ·
North Galha threatened in respechvely.
Hannan look over on the 15
the ftrst pertod after taking the
opemng ktckoff but JUSt could and qutckly1 marched mlo
not push 11 over. The Pirates North Gallia terrttory as
drove to the 15 yard line hehind fullback Larry Hill dashed 55
the passmg arm of Garnes. He yards. He was stopped on a
shoestring tackle by Jeff Hash.
The Ptrates pushed across
thetr !mal six~~r. in the
·---·---------:----:------,th;s':ir:;-d:!pe'=r:i"tod
~o~na 15-yard run by
Hollenbaugh. A pass for the
conversion failed. The score
came with 26 seconds left in the

Before the Parents Ntght
for the extras fail ed
·' crowd had settled m thetr
The victory left Ironton wtth
seats, Ironton was on top 6-0
a 6-0 loop mark A wm over
' :'! despite the fact IHS ktcked off Jackson Fnday wtll g1ve lHS
to the Blue Devt!s
Tommy Valentme fumbled tls ftrst undisputed SEOAL
crown Iron ton has now won 10
the openmg ktckoff alter
stratgh
t conference games
returmng 1t from hts own 15 to
swce lostng 22-19 to Logan on
the GAHS 27. Ken Green
Oct 8 last fall
recovered for the Tigers.
Gallipolis dropped to sixth
Fullback Terry Mowery, 170place in the conference with
pound junwr, camed for four ,
a
2-3-1 record. Overall,
16, four, then smashed over
GAHS is 2-S·l.
from the three wtth 10·2Jieft m
the penod and the Ftghtmg Mowery paced the Tigers
Ttgers were on thetr way to wtlh 126 yards m 23 tr1ps. He
vtctory number stx agamst two gamed 119 yards m 21 attempts
setbacks Rtck Massey's kick m the !trst half. Massey hit
three of etght aenals for 101
from placement was wtde
yards
Ironton had 368 yards
Second time IHS had the
pigskin In the first period, ruslu ng and passmg in 58 plays
the Tigers marched 54 yards fr om scnmmage The Tigers
in eight plays. Mowery chalked up 16 first downs,~\
Gallipolis ftmshed wtlli 10
smashed over from the two
ftrst
downs, 107 yards rushu,"
with 4:32left. Bob Nibert and
Leon Smith stopped Greg and 28 passingj(l35 total) m 50
plays from scnmmage. David
Spenee on the run for the Graham had 64 yards in 21
extra points.
Iron ton's Spence intercepted tnps for the Gallians
Mtke Berridge, outstanding
a Jim Niday aerial two plays
later. II took the Lawrence GAHS runner and delenstve
Countians only etght plays to back, saw action only one play
m the !mal penod. Berndge
make tnS-O.
- The score came on the !trst has a nb injury, and wtll
.,. play of the second pertod. It probably be sidelined the
was Mowery agam ~ thts time remainder of the season .
Gallipolis' next outing is
from the three ChriS Johnson's
run for the extras was short. Frtday, at Metgs.
The scoreboard clook showed
INDIVIDUAL NET
YARDS RUSHING
II :56 remaining m the half
(Gallipolis)
Fourth lime Ironton had the 'Player- Pas.
TCB YG Avg.
J ' ball in the ftrst hall, the Ttgers Walter, RH
2 9 45
21 64 3 1
. marched 64 yards in II plays, Graham, LH
FB
9 19 2 1
,.. but thiS tune, Spence fumbled Sheets.
Niday, QB
9 15 1 6
on the GAHS 28. Mike Wolfe TOTALS
41 107 2.6
(Ironton)
• recovered for GAllS.
Player
-Pos.
TCB YG Avg.
The third period was a Carter, HB
1 20 20.0
nightmare for the Eckermen, Johnson, HB
8 59 7 J
7 47 6.7
Ironton had the ball three Sp~nce. HB
Mowery,
F
B
23
126 54
senes and chalked up 20 poinls. Carter. HB
3 8 2.6
QB Rtck Massey htt Spence Roa ch, F B
2 5 25
J 2
6
with a 5.1-yard scoring strJke Massey, QB
Q"B
1
0
0
Fairchild,
\"tth 10:40 left in !he thtrd Mabry, HB
2 0
0
, p'eriod . Spence added two more TOTALS
50 267 5.3
INDIVIDUAL PASSING
:;; to make tl 26-0.
Spence , !50-pound senior Player IGalllpohs)
C-A I YG TD
wmgback, raced 28 yards with Niday
39 I 28 0
J -9 1 28 0
7:37 remaming to make ii32-0. TOTALS
(Ironton)
Spence was stopped on the run Player
C-A I YG TD
for extra pomts.
Massey
J a o 101 1
3-8 o 101 1
• After Jim Niday fumbled on TOTALS
TEAM
STATISTICS
the Gallians' 25, (recovered by Department
G I
Paul Wheeler) Lutz sent in hts First Downs
10 16
scrubs. SIX plays later, it was Yards Rushing
114 275
Lost
Rushing
7
8
1 38-0 as Chros Johnson punched
Net Rushmg
107 267
!!1 11 over from the one with 4:56 Passes Attempted
9 8
le[t in the pertod. Bob Netman Passes Completed
3 J
Intercepted
By
0 1
~ was smothered on the run for
Yards
Passing
28
101
' extra polnls.
Total Yards
135 368
Return Yards
126 57
•. Up to this point , the
Plays
50 58
1:' powerful Ironton defense Fumbles
2 1
bi had limited GAHS to one
Lost Fumbles
2 1
11' first down, nine yards
Penalties
o.o 7-64
Recovered Enemy Fumbles:
1ushlng, and 12 passing In 20
GAHSWolfe
; plays from scrimmage.
lronfon Green and
!;I Agai nst the Ttgers' second Wheeler.
Punts : GAHS - Walter. 4· 127
~defenstve unit, GAHS marched
(31 7) .
' 'ho yardS In 22 plays. FB Kev Ironton - Kriebel. 1 41
§hE!ets scored from the one (41 0)
Scoring: GAHS - Sheets, I
6.03 left in the game
yard
6 OJ fourth, N1day
passed to John Walter pass torun,
Walter . Sheets, J.yard
the extra points. It was the run. :18 fourth . pdss tall
Ironton - Mowery, J yard
pomts gtven up by IHS m
run,
10 21, firSt, kick fail.
'h quarters of play, datmg Mowery.
2-yard run, 4.32 tlrst,
to the Waverly game on run fail ; Mowery, 3 yard run,
11· 56 second, run fa 11 , Spence,
22
54-yard
pass from Massey,
lro.nk•n '• second anit came 10 10 th~rd
, Spence, ru 0 ,
back, marchmg 59 yards Spence, 28-yard run, 7 37 third,
eight plays. Johnson scored run fall ; Johnson. 1 yard run,
i!Wr'om trye 10 with 2 14 A 56 thtrd, run fa ll, Johnson,
10-yard run, 2 14 tourth.
:9-••malinirtg, then Robert Mabry Mabry, run
OFFICIALS - Clyde Jarvis.
the t'!'o-point converswn to
Roger
Thompson,
Jtm
II 46-8.
Lovenshelmer and Graham
The Blue Devils marched 54 Thompson , Chillicothe
tn etght plays to comchopter
Score By Quarters:
the game's scoring.
Gallipolis
0 0 0 14- 14
smashed over from the Ironton
6 20 8- 46
wtth 18 seconds left. A pass
NEXT GAHS
E: Nov 3,
at Meigs

stan~

Hannan almost! scored in the
fourth period but a last second
tackle by Jeff Hash saved the
dav GregHtll passed to hts end
Brumfield for . a 38 yard
completion but Brumfield was
fmally hauled down from
behtnd by Hash. The en~re
second half was played in a
heavy downpour m Hannan's
tem tory .

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Hollenbaugh was the top ball
carrter for North Gallia WI!!' 48
yards on l~e ground. Freshman Bruce Runyon gamed 37
yards while T J. Robinson
caught four passes good for 73
yards.
Hill topped all rushers wit!i
86 yards m a losing cause. Jeff,
Hash, Jeff Hollenbaugh,
Georg~ Garnes and Carl
DeWitt were all credited wiili
outs tandmg defensive performances
STATISTICS
NG H
DEPARTMENT
8 5
FtrstDowns
100 71
Yards Rushing
77 71
Yards Passing
Passes Attpt
16 22
Passes Completed
5 7
7
Fumbles
4
Fumbles Lost
3
3
Penalized
45 35
By Quarters ·
NG
0 6 6 0--12
H
0000--0

end T J, Robmson.

•••
-;~

BY C. E. BLAKESLEE
County Extension Agent,
Agriculture
POMEROY - Increased
emph;lsis today on controlling
pollution , lncludmg soil
sediment, suggests we need to
. take a new lqok at tilla~e
practices.
Metgs County farmers have
been leavmg more of the
hillsides m grass and trees, but

NEW in FARMING
this forces them to ,press for
htgher production from the
land they contmue to till.
Dr. Sam Bone, Extenston
Agronomist at tl•e Oh1o State
Umversity, in a recent report,
pomted out that the plow is
beginning to lose ground to notillage methods.
Just over two centurtes ago a
Frenchman, working in his
shop, molded the plow that
ever smce has furrowed the
face of farmmg. Pulled ftrst by
horses and oxen, now by
tractors, the moldboard plow
has overturned millions of
acres of soil, often leavmg it
exposed to the hazards of wind
and water erosion .
Today, a new era in man's
methods of tilling the sot! ts
begmning, says n'r Bone. New
equipment for planting crops
-called no-lillage plantmg -

Ready·to
peak,
.
Rio coach says
OHIO INDUCI'S EIGHT INTO HALL OF FAME - Ohio
University inducted eight former Bobcats great~ into the
university's Hall of Fame on Oct. 21. This brings the total to
56 honorees during the past eight years. Ptctures above, left
to right, are: Ralph "Gus" White, captain and second
baseman of two championship baseball teams here in 1918
and '19, now of Nelsonville; Milton J. Taylor, All-Ohto
football player who played in every varsity game of hts four
year (1947-'50) career, no"( an auto dealer in Lancaster; Dr.
James L. Shreffler, Ohio's first baseball All-American in
1949, now anesthesiologist at Scholtz Hospital in Waterloo,
Iowa; Robert "Fizz" Miller, All-Ohio high jwnp champion
and basketball star here in 1941, now a Dover, Ohio ac-

countant; Harley "Dutch" Littler, All-Ohio halfback in 1923
and now a Poland, Ohio, realtor and retired teacher-eoach
from Youngstown East High ; Russell W. Kepler, All-Ohio
and All-Buckeye football star in 1929-'31, a teacher at Marton
Steele High m Amherst, Ohto; Harry Houska, youngest ever
named, NCAA wrestling champion (191) and two-tune mat
All-America in 1963and 1964 who h~s brought the school three
Mid-American wrestling crowns in his four -year coaching
career here ; and Bunk Adams, fourth all-t,ime career scorer
here with 1,196points, earning All-MAC twice, playmg on two
MAC basketball title teams and hon. men. United Press AllAmerica in 1960 and '61, now teacher and basketball coach at
Toledo Scott.

JHS ends slump with 36--0 win
WELLSTON - Vtstting
Jackson spoiled Wellston's
annual homecomtng
ceremomes on a rain-soaked
field here Frtday mght by
blanktng the Golden Rockets
36-0

The vtctory not only snapped
Jackson's three-game losing
streak and put them m a tie

Dragons cop
7th victory
PROCTORVILLE
Fairland's surprtsmg 1Dragons
rema ined tied for first place m
the tough Ohio Valley Con.
ference standings followmg a
convincing 26-0 wm over Oak
Htll Friday night.
Semor halfback Brent Mayo
tallied on runs of 17, one, and 10
yards for the winners. Bill
Miller had the other Dragon
touchdown .
Fairland is 7-1 on the year,
and IS tied wtth Coal Grove and
South }'oint for first place m
the OVC.
South Pmnt upped tts season
mark to 5-2 Friday wtlh a 20-18
non-league win over McKell,
Ky. Coal Grove played at
Ironton St. Joe Saturday night.
SUIT FILED
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Gary Gresdal has ftled a suit
seeking $50,000 m damages
agamst the World Hockey
AssociatiOn and one of 1ts
teams, the Los Angeles Sharks
Gresda l claims he signed a
contract wtlh the WHJ\ team on
Sept. 27. Two days later he was
told he did not make fhe team.
Gresdal clatms the Sharks
vtolated the terms of the
contract by not offering him a
job with a minor league
afftliate.

with Metgs for fourth place in
the Southeastern Ohto League
standmgs, 11 also gave the
Ironmen a 35-18-4 advantage in
the lustortc series between the
two schools dating bac!&gt; to 1914.
' fourth
Too, Jt was Jackson's
strmght lriumph over Wellston
followmg a 28-6 loss to the
Rockels tn 1968.
Fnday 's tnumph left
Jackson wtth a 4-4 season
mark. Wellston dropped to 0-8
on the year The Golden
Rockets have now lost 17
stratghtgames over a two year
pertod. lnstde the SEOAL, the

Rockets have lost 13 in a row.
Jackson is 3-3 m corference
play, Wellston 0-8.
The visltmg Ironmen scored
once m the ftrst stanza, agam
~n .the ~~~onH, lwt,c.~~ in ,the th\rd
1
and once in lh~ final canto_
Kenny Valentme was the big
gun for JHS, scormg on runs of
13, 5, and 26 yards. He also had
four pomts on conversiOn
plays.
John Gtlltam tallieu once on
a 33-yard pass interception
Brad Thompson plowed
through the mud for a stxpomter from the one, and Tom
Stevenson had a two-pomt

conversiOn
Jackson totaled 374 yards.
Wellston was limtted to 79.
Valentme had 211 yards m 29
trips'. Thompson ftmshed wtlh
b~ ~ards in 22 trips.
The lro'mnen wlll attempt' to
snap Ironton's 10-game, twoyea r SEOAL wmning streak
this Friday at Jackson
Wellston plays at Waverly
Frtday where the Rockets need
a vtctory to esca pe undisputed
last place tn the conference for
the second consecuhve season.
By Quarters:
Jackson
8 6 14 8-36
Wellston
0 0 0 0-- 0

RIO GRANDE - "We're
ready to peak," proclaimed
Rto Grande cross country
coach Bruce Curtis Friday
following the Morris Harvey
lnvitallonal won by the Redmen
Etght Rio Grande runners
broke the old course record at
Morris Harvey as the Redmen
defeated Marshall, 23-38.
Concord was thtrd wtlh a score
of 90, followed by Morris
Harvey and West Vtrginia
Tech
Rto's Jack Fmch ran the
course m 25:30, three and onehall mmutes better than the old
mark of 29:00. Fmch was
followed by teammate Ken
Sanders m second place with a
lime of 25 .54. Chuck Marshall
and Steve Kern of Marshall
placed third and fourth
respecltvely. Ftfth place went
to Bruce Melton of Rio Grande
wtth a time of 26:44. Concord's
Les Borbely came in sixth.
Rio's Stacy Osborne and Mike
"l'Jross ~Iea'Jrd~ "seveift'li '\\llfflia
bme of 27:42. The Thundermg
Herd's Larry Palmet and Ed
Main completed the top ten
runners.
Rw Grande placed five men
m the top ten and Marshall had
four . Bill Canfield of Rio
Grande was eleventh with a
time of 28 · 02 and Eddie Sayre
recorded a time of 28:41 in 14th
place for the Redmen.

The Redmen have now won
three tnvttationals and
collected fl ve team trophies
this fall. In other invttalionals,
the Redmen have fimshed
second and fourth .
The top ter. mdivtduals were
all presented trophies_ For RIO
Grande, Jack Finch, Ken
Sanders, Bruce Melton, Stacy
Osborne, a~d Mike Gross
recetved awards
The Rto cross country team
wtll travel to Canton, Ohio
Tuesday for a dual meet with
Walch College prior to the MtdOhio Confere nce Meet at ,
Cedarvil le Saturday,
November 4.

We Tra1n Men to Work As

LIVESTOCK
BUYER$ ...
d

'/ "
"JU&gt; tolliVJ ~ ~ d lllui';!
t · you haYe some lvtstoc"'

expenence we will train you
to buy cat'tle, sheep and

hogs

For a local mterv•tw, wr1te
today w1th your bKk1round,
Include your complete ad ..
dress and phon&amp; numbtr.

CAmE BUYERS, INC.

-w

'

BIDWELL - Westvaco
CorporatiOn has won the
National Tree Planting Award
from the Alllencan Forestry
Associa(ton for a ' smalllandowner reforestalton
assistance program that has
125 million
dtstnbuted
seedlings m 10 states since
1966. West Virgmia Pulp and
Paper Co., Btdwell, IS a substdiary of Westvaco Corp.
The award Will be presented
in New Orleans October 25 to
David W_ Sowers, Jr., of
Hancock, Maryland, senior
forester of the pulp and paper
company's Timber lands
Diviswn. Sowers organized and
dtrected the campaign until hts
retirement tn August. The
presentation wtll be a feature
of the Amencan Forestry
Association's National Tree
·
1
1.1o •
PI
, ~~n !tqg \;~n ~~o nce ~ v.:\J.,h
wll gather concerned , Indivtduals and , organizallon
representativ es f rom
throughout the United Stales to
seek new commitments to
reforestation of idle and understocked lands.

The program emphastzes the federal age nctes con cerned
many values of well-managed with sml, water, forest and
woodlands which also produce wtldlile resource problems
much of the natton 's limber faced by small landow ners who
supplies. watershed tm· need extra encouragement and
provement, wtldlife habtlal mcentives to practice adequate
and recreatiOn opportumttes. management of their lands
Westvaco's program for State forestry dtvtstons, state
small landowners ' 'best ,.agricultural extensiOn serexemplifies the spmt of the
conference," accordmg to a
spokesman for the AFA, who
emphastzed that Westvaco
" has reached beyond tts own
responstbtlity lor company
forest management to try and
help others_"
Thecompanyofferstomatch
seedling purchases by small
PT. PLEAS~NT - Randy
landowners to reduce the costs Russell, Mason, was fined on
of reforestatiOn and encourage two
charges ,
hun tmg
better woodlands management mtgratory btrds with gun
m 230 counties of lhe states holdmg more than three shells,
\'I here westvacQ produces or $20 and costs, and klllmg two
' 1'
•
ranadi•n •eese m closed area
Rl\'iC~~~ ,111QO&lt;l,/qr , ~ts PAJl1lr n 1;,~,. ,..11&lt;, '"'' v •1 111n t' ·,,nf; h '
mills at Luke, Maryland; """ anc costs, m Jus tee o t e
Covington, Virginia; Wtckhffe, Peace Gat! Fatres court the
Kentucky and Char leston, pastweek .
South Carolina.
Twe~ty-mne. cases were
Westvaco credits much of the heard 10 .Justices of Peace
success of the program to the ~o~ts~Pomt Ple~san~ Mayor
0 n
cooperati on of state and
usgdraveth ear Mseven

Justice of Peace court

cases an

4410 M141'-

Kaouo City, Mo. 114tll

co.....,
C..ll&gt; ..J .t........ "-'
TENI' . CIERT NO Ot'UH

Jackson 36 Wellston 0

Nov 3 Games:
Gaillpolts at Me1gs
1ronton at Jackson
Logan at 'Athens
Wellston at Waverly

~

XL2

MAKES CUTTING
TWICE-AS-EASY

anew
As your new Siron Fronch1sed Bu1lder 1n the area
we re ready to g 1ve you total construction serv1ce.

But just what does that mean to you?
II mean.s fasl . el:onom, col construchon of nearly
any me or type of 1nduslno l, commercial or profesSional budd1ng
Wha t s more, we ore backed by Siron s 30-plus
years of manufoctunny, destgn
and eng1neenng

EXCLUSIVE TWIN-TRIGGERTM
DUAL CONTROL SYSTEM

expenence And lhe know-how of National Sleel
Corporalion, the nahan's fourlh largest steel maker.
Siron offers com puter-run cost estimates and
ordenng procedures whtch elimtnale expensive
waste of lime and materials .
If you're lliinkmg about bu1idmg, you're thinking
oboul value So, think about your new Stran
Builder. Us.
And give us a call.

REAR TRIGGER
For easier control in
close quarters and
tricky angles.

STARTING BERTH
HOUSTON (UPI)- Wtde recetver Jtm Betrne was named
to a startmg herth for the
Houston Oilers Friday for the ,
game Sunday against the
CincinnaiJ Bengals. Beirne will
replace Charley Joiner, who
was traded to Cmcinnati earlier
this week.

'

Makes faster work
of cutting firewood
or lumber.

Struc;tures of Southern Ohio, Inc. .
A

-

T~tol Servtce Str.l Franchised Builder

'

.,

'

&amp;arolina lunlber &amp;·Supply CO.
PII)NE 675-1160

POINT PLfASANT

Stran-Sieel has developed added to our existing capabilities, " Chflders said_. "we can handle pracllcally any
size structure or group of structures lor any type of enterprise. Stran structuras are widely UJied for a number
of purposes ranging from shopping centers to Junior·
colleges, from warehoualng to boat marinas, achoolis
and churches, In addition to the traditlon11 manufacturinq.tacllltles."
·
'
·
'Stran buildings aHord a customer speed of construction, llexlbUity ol design aod ma~e lutu141 expansion
easier," Chlldere Mid.
Stran, a subsidl•ry of National Steel Corporation, !)as
been manufacturing metal building ay1tems lor more
than 35 years. The company's building aystema are dlttrlbuted through an lntematlonal network ol more than
600 Franchised Bulldert.

ason

XL-2 chain

saw offers
2 triggers

Countains appeared m ~allia
County Judge Betz' court the
past week. ·
Russell paid both fines and
costs on the two charges and
the
two
geese
were
confiScated by officials of the
McClintock Wildlife Station.
Other cases in Faires' court
heard were: William R.
Williams, Middleport, and
Donald L. Rayburn, Point
Pleasant, speeding, $10 and
costs each; David Ray
Cheesebrew, Point Pleasant,
. worthless check, $11 and costs
and made check good, John R.
Savage, Syracuse, Ohio,left of
NHL League Standmgs
Pacihc Oivi ston
center, $10 and costs; Howard By Un1ted Press International
East
w. I pet. g.b.
0. Jeffers, Pomeroy, speeding,
6 3 667
w. I. I. pis gf ga Los Angeles
$10 and costs; David R. Montreal
6 0 J 15 35 15 Golden State 4 2 667 •;,
3 3 .500 l'h
Blankenship, Henderson, Buffalo
5 0 J JJ 32 13 Phoen l)(
Seallle
4
4 500 p;,
Detroit
6
I
0
12
32
13
defective exhaust, $10 and
1 7 .125 4'/i
N Y Rangers
5 J I 11 32 25 Portland
costs.
Friday's Results
Boston
3 5 1 7 34 JS
Justice Robert E. Peoples Vancouver
Boston 123 Cleveland 97
3 5 I 7 26 39
3 4 1 7 21 27 New York 92 Baltimore 88
handled these cases: Roger Toronto
Houston 130 Detro1t 118
N
Y
Islanders
I 5 0 2 13 23
Swisher, West Columbia, four
Golden 51 119 Los Angeles 91
West
worthless checks, and Susan
Chicago 118 Portland 95
w. I. I. pis gf ga
6 3 0 12 31 22 Seattle 120 Phoenix 115
Swisher ot ·west ·columbia, Ch1cago
Poltsburgh
5 4 0 10 35-28 1 !Only games scheduled)
three wortmess cnec~, ti:l\::11 Philadelphia
3 3 2 8 22 29
paid costs of each check and Los Angeles
ABA Standings
4 6 0 s 31 J6
By
Umted
Press International
Minnesota
J
4
I
7
23
22
each made restitution for each
East
Atlanta
3
6
1
l
18
36
check. J . G.
Parfitt,
w. I. pet. g.b.
St. LouiS
1 4 J 51728
Mcll!echen, W.Va., two counts, Calofornia
Carol
ina
6 J 607
2 6 I 5 24 JJ
New York
4 J 571 I
'*nt to defraud, forfeited
Fnday's Results
Kentucky
J
J 500 1'12
Cal1forn1a
6
P1ttsburgh
J
bond, and on worthless check
Virg 1n1a
45 .4442
IDn l ~ game scheduled I
charge, made check good and
f'lle mph1s
2 6 333 3'12
paid costs; John 0. Baker,
West
WHA Standings
w . I. pet. g.b.
Point Pleasant, worthless
By Unrted Press International San D1ego
5 2 714
check, $5 and costs and In
East
Utah
5 J .625 '12
w_ I. I. pts gf ga Den&lt;er
4 4 .500 1'/i
default of fine and costs, 10
Cleveland
7
2
0
14
38
21
Indiana
3
4 .429 2
days
in
jail;
Jenny
N
ew
England
5
3
0
10
33
25 Dallas
2
5 .286 3
Whittington, )l_u tla nd , Quebec
5 2 0 8 28 19
Friday's Results
intoxication, $10 and costs; ottawa
4 4 0 8 40 41
New York 117 Denver 112
4 4 0 8 35 32
Carol ina 114 Kentucky 112
Roy J. McDade, Pliny, New York
Ph1ladelph1a
1
7
0
2
19
40
Indiana 128 Memphis 102
intoxication, $10 and costs;
West
. Dallas 108 V~rginia 103
Vinton Smith, Hartford,
· w. I. I. pis gf go
Utah 123 San Diego 107
inU!xication, forfeited bond; Winn1peg
54 32 II 11.9 30
24 24
27
Wayne Mayes, Rl., Glenwood, Alberla
Houston
4 4 0 8 25 25 .
two counts, failure to control Los Angeles
J 4 o 6 27 24
vehicle, $5 and costa, and no M1nnesola
2 5 1 5 19 31
1 5 1 3 16 25
operator's license, $10 and Ch•cago '
Friday's
Results
costs; Teddy Flora, Sout!Wde,
Cleveland 6 Alberta 0
l•tterlng highway, $20 and
W•nn1peg 4 Chicago 2
LIVESTOCK
Phlladelp~ia 5 Los Ang 4
costs; Edekar Russell, Rt. 2
(Only games scheduled)
BUYERS
Leon, assault and battery, $10
and costs; Ralph H. Gibbs, Rt.
II yov hove some li•eotoc'k
I, Letart, failure to control
expenence we will trtin you
NBA St~ndings
to buy cattlo, ohoop and
vehicle, $5 and costs; Arl By United Press International
Eastern
Conference
hots.
Sherman ADen, Jr.; Rand,
'Atlantic DivJSion
For 1 loc•l mtervltW, wr•tt
W.Va., speeding, $15 and costs,
w. I. pel. g.b. today woth your back1round.
9 0 1.000
am! Wllliam J. Muwell, Boston
lnclu~ you&lt; complete adNew
York
7
1 .875 1'/2
drno lllld phone number.
Dayton, 0 ., ~. $10 and Buflalo
2 6 .250 6'12
costs.
Philadelphia 0 7 .000 a
CAmE BUYERS, lfK.
Ctnjrat Oivitlon
4420M.._
w. I. pet. g.b.
Mayor Musgrave reported
liM,_ CI!J, Me. M til
. 4 3 ,571
Houston
lbele caaea: Cheryle Watson, Baltirnore
4 4 .soo
1f2
~ c..,I...J .c--1 "-'
1~, Hende~son, detective Atlanta
4 4 .500
'12

Pro standings

POMEROY
o;..MM,.IIf.llllll'll•·

I

,•

been used 111 the mtd-West for a
fe w years and at the prese nt
tunc IS an approved dram p1pe
fur fa rm land It has been used
[01 ~cvc ral yea1s fo r dramage
around the house, foundalions
and se pt1c tank fte lds and to
our kno-v.ledge th1s demonstratt on Will be the ft rst use of
It for d.r ama~C O[ ag riCUltur al
land 111 Mason County. The
exact date is not kn own at this
lime beca use scheduling of the
dtlchlng rnachme IS mvolved
and un ttl 1t rea ches Mason
County, we will not be able to
defuutely dectde on a date for
the demonstratiOn
CARL A SEAGER, whose

fat m ts at Upland, has
reseeded 10 acres of meadow
land and four acres of pasture
land These fields were seeded
to ladmo· clover and Kentucky
fes&lt; ue Mr. Seager IS one .of
several farmers near Upland
who are promoters of the extended grazm g program for
beef cattle.
Thts Involves savmg s_ome
pasture or meadow ftelds from
grazmg or late cutting of hay so
that the standmg grass will be
avatlable to livestock durmg
th e wmter months. Sup•plemental feeding of hay IS
necessary along wtth thts
\'&gt;lllter grazmg

Mtddlc ton was County Ex- •••••••:••••••••1••••••••••••••••1
te nswn Agent 10 years m U1e
mtd 20s to the nud 30s. That
I,
was 111 the days before electttc
power and hm·d roads. He
recalled that he would take a
FARM EQUIPMENT
port11ble elec tnctty makmg
maclune wtth htm m hts old
F"orct em· and travel around
Uu ough the country showing
movies of new farm practices
As we passed the Baden
Presbytenan Church on Route
87, lie recalled that in that
church one of the first
mee lings was held m !he early
30s to promote soil con-

I
1
I

POMEROY - Reeogmzmg
the sharp increase m
populanty of inexpenstve ,
lightwet~ht chain saws among
s uburban homeown e rs,
Landmark has an nounced 1t se1vatwn work There was a
would feature the new Xlr2, CCC camp m Jackson County
the only cham saw wtlh two at that tnne and people from
tnggers destgned to provtde tha t camp were mterested m
extra ease in handhng The XL- helpmg Mason County farmers
2 has JUst been mtroduced who lived close to Jackson.
nattonally by Homelite ,
Mr Middleton recalled !with
Textron Dtviswn Weighmg a heat ty guffaw) that the
JUSI7 ' • pounds wtthout bar and mformat10n fell on deaf ears.
cham, the XL-2 IS being offered That was hard for us to believe
at Landmark here lor $119.95
smce people in that area at this
"I behave the,Homehte XL-2 t1me are most cooperalive
to be the tdeal saw for the flrst- towards conservation work and
tnne user, the man · who has e~re ca11·ymg out many good
wanted to add a cham saw to conservation practices
Ins power tool collection, but
A DRAINAGE project
has yet to get around to 1t," showmg the use of plaslic pipe
Ja ck Ca t sey , manager of lot farm dramage Will be held
Landmark, stated
on the farm of Wtlham Cullen
Carsey satd that the two and J ohn McDet•mttl near the
tn ggers designed mto the Xl.-2 last of November These two
make the Home li te product the farmers are cooperatmg on a
eastest-lo-handle gasoline saw jotnt dramage project whtch
on Jhe mal ket Front and rear wtll bcnefJt both farms. The
tn gge rs are combmed on one fatm qf John McDenmtt is the
handle to gtve the user both one whtch he bought from
easy &lt;O trol and maxtmum Vtrgtl Adkms about two years
cullin g leverage
when ago
requtred
Plastic dramage pipe has
The
manufacturer
'Hdmelite, ·has called the in: .. FtidA"fs Rd'lflts"
troduction of the XL-2 the
s Marion Frankl1n 26
"begmmng of a new era in ColCots
West a
chatn saw design " Unttl now, Cots Central18 Cots Waln ut
R•dge 1
the company satd, cham saws
Columbu
s
South
20
have had on ly one tngger
Columbus Mohawk o
Cots. Lmden 32 Cols No rth
19
Cot s Northland 40 Co ts
HISLE TO CARDS
Whetstone 0
LOS ANGELES (UP!) -Out- Worlh
mgton 27 Whdehal\ 0
fielder Larry Hisle was traded Mount Vernon 21 Co ls
Westland 12
from the Los Angeles Dodgers
Gahanna
l d s ~urg 6
to the St. Louis, Cardmals Grove City35 41Reyno
Hilliards
Fnday for two \ le!thanded Miffl in 24 Groveport 6
mmor league pitclrers-Rudy Cot s Ready 21 Cols. Hartley
Arroyo and Greg Millikan M6ar ysvolle 17 Oientangy 6
Htsie, a former maJOr leaguer, Lakewood 26 Brush 7
He ights
46
batted .325 with Albuquerque Gart •eld
Cleveland
He1ghts
21
thiS year
Euclid 6 East Cleveland
Shaw 6 (lie I
Parma Valley 28 Parma
Cleveland
I 8 111 4
Normandy 6
Western Conference
Midpark 14 Maple Heights 12
Midwest Division
Medina 36 Olm sted Falls J
w. I. pet g b. Br~cksvllle 15 Warrensville
Milwaukee
7 1 875
Heights 6
Ch ocago
5 J 625 2 Brooklyn 24 Strongsville. 12
KC Omaha
2 4 333 4 Independence 6 No rth
Oe tro1f
2 5 286 4112
Royalton o

APPLY NOW

•
TM Tre&lt;ttm•rtc of Homtlite, • division of Textron Inc.

Slructures of Southern Ohto, Inc. a Huntington, West
Vtrginla based general contractor, has been harned an
authortzed Stran-Sieel Franchise Builder.
Award of lhe franchise was announced by Ar~old
Andrews, Vice Prestdeni-Sales for Stran-Steel Corporation, a Houston, Texas based manufacturer of metal·
building systems and components.
'•
Robert Childers, president of Structures of Southern
Ohto, Inc., satd the awarding of the franchise will allow
his ftrm the design , construction, management' and
teasing services they now offer their customers.
Construction projects recently completed by Structures. Inc Included an addition to Ptlgrlm Glass In
Ceredo. West Virglma, an addition to JohnsOI'\ Plumbing
:n Huntington, West Virginia, and an addition to Dow
Chemicals production facilftles In Hanging Rock, Ohio.
" ,.Wtth the wide range olsteel buHdlng eysle1J18 w~lch

ree

exhaust, $5 and costs; Delores
Duff, 29, Point Pleasant, no
operator's license, $10 and
costs, David Lyle Darst, 29,
Point Pleasant, speeding, $10
and costs; Clarence L. Head,
~o1nt ~~e~sant,, fa\hire to yteld
nght-of-way, $5 ahd costs;
Mary Malissa Mowery, 17,
failure to control vehicle, $5
and costs; Harry Ray Frye, 40,
New Haven, failure to control
vehicle, $5 and costs ; Ernest
Grey, 22, Glendale, Calif.,
mtoxtcation, $25 and costs; and
James Allen Thornton, 18,
Pomt Pleasant, speeding, $10
and costs
Gallia Jud~e Betz handled
these cases: Raymond R.
Hyre, Pomt Pleasant, ran stop
s1gn, forfetted $18 bond; Davtd
Lee Henry, Gallipol!s Ferry,
DWI, forfetled bond of $308,
and Kenneth W. Fleming,
Point Pleasant, operating
traclor-tratler wtlhout tax
permit, $38.

Beginnings of conservation
in Mason County was in 30s

·Wf.ST I.A~"AYf.1"rE , Ind.
I UP! ) - Quarantmes remam
m effect In eastern lndtana,
By John Cooper
along the Ohto border.
PT PLf.ASANT __: ·' A , G
p10h1b1tmg movement of hogs Middleton , at the venerable
m the area m the wake of the age of 82, eli II has a keen sense
cholera wh•ch has htt th1s state uf humor and an alert mmd
. smr c August
We look Mr Middleton to the
Offtctals report 43 cases have rece nt awards dmner of tlie
been conftrrned smce Aug 5 W c ~ ler n Soil Conservation
The latest case mvolved 12 Dtstn ct al Cedar Lakes FFAfeeder hogs whtch were FHA Camp 111 Jackson County
destroyed 111 Delaware County As we wcrp tnwc hng out Route
Quarantines 1n effect In 2 """ Houte ~7 Mr Midoleto-n
eastern lndtana cover all of
Perry Township, parts of
lay of the land
Monroe and Ltherty townshtps
I
m Delaware County, and parts to ld us several anecdotes of hiS
of Greensfork, Stony Creek. work Wi th fat m people m
Momoe and Wayne townships Mason County
m Randolph, neat· the ·ohw
Ma ny older Mason County
border
fol k remembe r that Mr

ljlllll!ll!ll!•••••

P.. O. Box 8022 • Huntington, West Vtr,ginia 25705 • (304) 522-4891
"

vtces, U S Sml Conservation
Servtce and local SCS boards,
US Agncultural Stabthzatton
and Conservation Servtce, and
regtonal Resource ConservatiOn and Development
projects are key cooperators m
the reforestalion effort, satd
Westvaco

Hunter fm" ed tWJ"ce m·

SEO standings
ALL GAMES
Team
W L T POP
Ironton
6 2 0 185 47
Athens
5 J 0 153 89
Meigs
5 3 o 176 111
Logan
4 3 1 125 102
Ja ckson
4 4 u li2 106
Gallipolis
2 5 1 98 153
Waver:y
1 7 0 109 255
Wellston
0 8 0 6 288
SEOAL ONLY
Team
W L T POP
Ironton
6 0 0 178 28
Athens
5 1 0 134 41
Logan
3 2 1 97 40
Me1gs
J J 0 107 99
Jackson
J J 0 126 74
Ga llipoliS
2 J 1 78 109
Waverly
1 5 0 90 200
Wellston
0 6 0 6 225
TOTALS
23 23 2 816 816
Friday's Results:
Ironton 46 Ga llipolis 14
Athens 13 Meigs 6
Logan 42 Waverly 12

fannei·sshould evaluate tillage bcfurc Januory, Bone cxplams.
p1 actices lhts full fo•· the 1973 Yield respon' e for corn hos
production year. Many smls, he been ahout the same rm both
explatns, should nut be tilled "inl et and early spnn g
dm·mg the fall and wmter If pluw111g for these sotls m
Iiley arc plowed m the fall , the wes tern and southwes tern
restdue that could Improve Ohw
ct up ytelds and decrease , Where liliage can be done
sedtment loss wtll be plowed early enough m the fall , a
under, leavmg bare sml ex- seed1ng or small gratn
posed
Jo provid e surface covFor example, soils on whtch e1 ma y be demable
corn was grown m 1972, and The
gra 1n crop c,;n
which are not wet, should not he ktlll!!!_chcmtcilllY m the
- lie p owed Lli ts lii1f: the spnng, and planling can be
spec1ahst says Generally , done wtth little m· no li lla~e
there are sods light m color, prwr to the planlmg operat1on.
medium m soil texture and
Effect 1vely usmg water for
have adequate atr and watet· crop
productwn
while
movement m the sot! for good d e creastng s ed tm ent
crop growth These may also generalion on agricultural land
mclude sotls on which lile reqmres much flextbtlity m
dramage has been mstalled to equ 1pment and, management
1m prove atr and water Tillage should be planned to
relalionshtps,
g1ve htgh )'!eld response to
!(adequate residue can be bette1 water management and
maintained on the surface of more effeclivr control of
thesesoils durm gwl)lter, ttwtll sedunent loss on the enlire
permtt using lillage prac tices, f•eld ,, the spectuhst says.
next year, that wtll control Sometimes th ts may mean
sedtment loss durmg the different hllagc opera lions on
growmg season . It wtll also parts of the fteld already
help to improve yetlds by planted
Improved water management.
Bone believes that as !arThose sotls tn Ohto that ' e mers become aware of !he
slow internal drainage and are, advantages or more no-ltllage
dark m surface color will plantmg, they wtll give the
require som.e ltllage prtor to plow far less pnonty m the tr
planbng m 1973. Thts doesn't s01l management programs.
mean the ttllage should be done

Westvaco wins national award

APPLY NOW .

.

r~ducing the need for
phm tn g the sml, yet sttli encuuragcs lugh crop ytelds
The new eqmpment offers
farmers greater llextbilily m
management. " For
soil
example, some planters wtll
plant m soil that has not been
plowed or tilled as well as m
soil that has been tilled - all
wtth Utile or no adjustment.
The search for hetler ltllage
methods became a national
concern in the 1930s when sml
exposetl
me Plow was
recogmzed as a l)laJOr hazard
to the natiOn's food and ftber
supply and to health At that
lime the U S Sml Conservatto n ServiCe
was
estabhshed Durmg the 1970s,
there is slill a concern about
sedtment loss related to
agncultural production.
Research in agncultural
technology has resulted m
advancements that may
replace the plow as a primary
lillage tool, Bone clatms These
advancements include
chemtcals to control vegetation
wtthout ttllage as well as
eqmpment to plant m s01! that
has not been plowed. The goal
ts to lind new ways to produce
crops, obtam mcreasmg yields
and slill decrease sod loss and
sediment production .
Stnce new methods are
ava tlable, Bone suggests
IS

Quarantine held
on Indiana line

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same Flext-Finger presser wheels on the big
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I

23- TheSWldayTimei-Sr~lillO!I, Sunday,Oct. %9,1972

I

22- The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 29, 1972

Moldboard-plow on its way out

fronton has Pirates blank Hannan, 12·0
~~ title, share
h\}

•

(',l&lt;

GALLIPOLIS - Ironton gamed at least a shce
bn of the 1972 Southeastern Ohio League football
·•: championship here Friday night by rolling over
•" Coach C. L. (Johnny) Ecker's Gallipohs Blu e
Devils, 46-14.
~L~r_ _c:aa•ch~B.olJ.Lutzshowed mercy early as the.f1rst
•u:· year Tiger mentor benched his •·egulars wtth 7· 15
~ remaining in the third stanza. Ironton enjoyed a:
~·H comfortable 32-0 lead when the Cub reserves took
.'W over on rain-soaked Memorial Field.
1,

!'HA ZlE It S BOTTOM North Gallia scored touchd&lt;m ns m the second and third
fJCi lod here Friday mght to
defeat the Hannan Wildcats 120 m a non-league game .
Coach John Blake's Pirates
~'Ill end thetr !972 grod season

Friday agamst the Eastern
Ea~les . North Gallia ts 4-4
overall and 3-2 tn the Southern
Valley Ath!ettc Conference .
The IO&gt;S left Hannan with a 1·7
slate
The Ptrates scored thetr
mittal touchdown with ·1·44 l•fl

the second quarter. Semor
Phil Hollenbaugh plunged over
from the one yard stripe for the
TD A pass attempt for the
converston failed . The sbore
followed a 10 yard pass completion from semor quarterback Owen Garnes to semor
m

htl Roijmsun with two long
passes good for 23 and 17 yards ·
North Galha threatened in respechvely.
Hannan look over on the 15
the ftrst pertod after taking the
opemng ktckoff but JUSt could and qutckly1 marched mlo
not push 11 over. The Pirates North Gallia terrttory as
drove to the 15 yard line hehind fullback Larry Hill dashed 55
the passmg arm of Garnes. He yards. He was stopped on a
shoestring tackle by Jeff Hash.
The Ptrates pushed across
thetr !mal six~~r. in the
·---·---------:----:------,th;s':ir:;-d:!pe'=r:i"tod
~o~na 15-yard run by
Hollenbaugh. A pass for the
conversion failed. The score
came with 26 seconds left in the

Before the Parents Ntght
for the extras fail ed
·' crowd had settled m thetr
The victory left Ironton wtth
seats, Ironton was on top 6-0
a 6-0 loop mark A wm over
' :'! despite the fact IHS ktcked off Jackson Fnday wtll g1ve lHS
to the Blue Devt!s
Tommy Valentme fumbled tls ftrst undisputed SEOAL
crown Iron ton has now won 10
the openmg ktckoff alter
stratgh
t conference games
returmng 1t from hts own 15 to
swce lostng 22-19 to Logan on
the GAHS 27. Ken Green
Oct 8 last fall
recovered for the Tigers.
Gallipolis dropped to sixth
Fullback Terry Mowery, 170place in the conference with
pound junwr, camed for four ,
a
2-3-1 record. Overall,
16, four, then smashed over
GAHS is 2-S·l.
from the three wtth 10·2Jieft m
the penod and the Ftghtmg Mowery paced the Tigers
Ttgers were on thetr way to wtlh 126 yards m 23 tr1ps. He
vtctory number stx agamst two gamed 119 yards m 21 attempts
setbacks Rtck Massey's kick m the !trst half. Massey hit
three of etght aenals for 101
from placement was wtde
yards
Ironton had 368 yards
Second time IHS had the
pigskin In the first period, ruslu ng and passmg in 58 plays
the Tigers marched 54 yards fr om scnmmage The Tigers
in eight plays. Mowery chalked up 16 first downs,~\
Gallipolis ftmshed wtlli 10
smashed over from the two
ftrst
downs, 107 yards rushu,"
with 4:32left. Bob Nibert and
Leon Smith stopped Greg and 28 passingj(l35 total) m 50
plays from scnmmage. David
Spenee on the run for the Graham had 64 yards in 21
extra points.
Iron ton's Spence intercepted tnps for the Gallians
Mtke Berridge, outstanding
a Jim Niday aerial two plays
later. II took the Lawrence GAHS runner and delenstve
Countians only etght plays to back, saw action only one play
m the !mal penod. Berndge
make tnS-O.
- The score came on the !trst has a nb injury, and wtll
.,. play of the second pertod. It probably be sidelined the
was Mowery agam ~ thts time remainder of the season .
Gallipolis' next outing is
from the three ChriS Johnson's
run for the extras was short. Frtday, at Metgs.
The scoreboard clook showed
INDIVIDUAL NET
YARDS RUSHING
II :56 remaining m the half
(Gallipolis)
Fourth lime Ironton had the 'Player- Pas.
TCB YG Avg.
J ' ball in the ftrst hall, the Ttgers Walter, RH
2 9 45
21 64 3 1
. marched 64 yards in II plays, Graham, LH
FB
9 19 2 1
,.. but thiS tune, Spence fumbled Sheets.
Niday, QB
9 15 1 6
on the GAHS 28. Mike Wolfe TOTALS
41 107 2.6
(Ironton)
• recovered for GAllS.
Player
-Pos.
TCB YG Avg.
The third period was a Carter, HB
1 20 20.0
nightmare for the Eckermen, Johnson, HB
8 59 7 J
7 47 6.7
Ironton had the ball three Sp~nce. HB
Mowery,
F
B
23
126 54
senes and chalked up 20 poinls. Carter. HB
3 8 2.6
QB Rtck Massey htt Spence Roa ch, F B
2 5 25
J 2
6
with a 5.1-yard scoring strJke Massey, QB
Q"B
1
0
0
Fairchild,
\"tth 10:40 left in !he thtrd Mabry, HB
2 0
0
, p'eriod . Spence added two more TOTALS
50 267 5.3
INDIVIDUAL PASSING
:;; to make tl 26-0.
Spence , !50-pound senior Player IGalllpohs)
C-A I YG TD
wmgback, raced 28 yards with Niday
39 I 28 0
J -9 1 28 0
7:37 remaming to make ii32-0. TOTALS
(Ironton)
Spence was stopped on the run Player
C-A I YG TD
for extra pomts.
Massey
J a o 101 1
3-8 o 101 1
• After Jim Niday fumbled on TOTALS
TEAM
STATISTICS
the Gallians' 25, (recovered by Department
G I
Paul Wheeler) Lutz sent in hts First Downs
10 16
scrubs. SIX plays later, it was Yards Rushing
114 275
Lost
Rushing
7
8
1 38-0 as Chros Johnson punched
Net Rushmg
107 267
!!1 11 over from the one with 4:56 Passes Attempted
9 8
le[t in the pertod. Bob Netman Passes Completed
3 J
Intercepted
By
0 1
~ was smothered on the run for
Yards
Passing
28
101
' extra polnls.
Total Yards
135 368
Return Yards
126 57
•. Up to this point , the
Plays
50 58
1:' powerful Ironton defense Fumbles
2 1
bi had limited GAHS to one
Lost Fumbles
2 1
11' first down, nine yards
Penalties
o.o 7-64
Recovered Enemy Fumbles:
1ushlng, and 12 passing In 20
GAHSWolfe
; plays from scrimmage.
lronfon Green and
!;I Agai nst the Ttgers' second Wheeler.
Punts : GAHS - Walter. 4· 127
~defenstve unit, GAHS marched
(31 7) .
' 'ho yardS In 22 plays. FB Kev Ironton - Kriebel. 1 41
§hE!ets scored from the one (41 0)
Scoring: GAHS - Sheets, I
6.03 left in the game
yard
6 OJ fourth, N1day
passed to John Walter pass torun,
Walter . Sheets, J.yard
the extra points. It was the run. :18 fourth . pdss tall
Ironton - Mowery, J yard
pomts gtven up by IHS m
run,
10 21, firSt, kick fail.
'h quarters of play, datmg Mowery.
2-yard run, 4.32 tlrst,
to the Waverly game on run fail ; Mowery, 3 yard run,
11· 56 second, run fa 11 , Spence,
22
54-yard
pass from Massey,
lro.nk•n '• second anit came 10 10 th~rd
, Spence, ru 0 ,
back, marchmg 59 yards Spence, 28-yard run, 7 37 third,
eight plays. Johnson scored run fall ; Johnson. 1 yard run,
i!Wr'om trye 10 with 2 14 A 56 thtrd, run fa ll, Johnson,
10-yard run, 2 14 tourth.
:9-••malinirtg, then Robert Mabry Mabry, run
OFFICIALS - Clyde Jarvis.
the t'!'o-point converswn to
Roger
Thompson,
Jtm
II 46-8.
Lovenshelmer and Graham
The Blue Devils marched 54 Thompson , Chillicothe
tn etght plays to comchopter
Score By Quarters:
the game's scoring.
Gallipolis
0 0 0 14- 14
smashed over from the Ironton
6 20 8- 46
wtth 18 seconds left. A pass
NEXT GAHS
E: Nov 3,
at Meigs

stan~

Hannan almost! scored in the
fourth period but a last second
tackle by Jeff Hash saved the
dav GregHtll passed to hts end
Brumfield for . a 38 yard
completion but Brumfield was
fmally hauled down from
behtnd by Hash. The en~re
second half was played in a
heavy downpour m Hannan's
tem tory .

1

I'

t
t

''

'

Hollenbaugh was the top ball
carrter for North Gallia WI!!' 48
yards on l~e ground. Freshman Bruce Runyon gamed 37
yards while T J. Robinson
caught four passes good for 73
yards.
Hill topped all rushers wit!i
86 yards m a losing cause. Jeff,
Hash, Jeff Hollenbaugh,
Georg~ Garnes and Carl
DeWitt were all credited wiili
outs tandmg defensive performances
STATISTICS
NG H
DEPARTMENT
8 5
FtrstDowns
100 71
Yards Rushing
77 71
Yards Passing
Passes Attpt
16 22
Passes Completed
5 7
7
Fumbles
4
Fumbles Lost
3
3
Penalized
45 35
By Quarters ·
NG
0 6 6 0--12
H
0000--0

end T J, Robmson.

•••
-;~

BY C. E. BLAKESLEE
County Extension Agent,
Agriculture
POMEROY - Increased
emph;lsis today on controlling
pollution , lncludmg soil
sediment, suggests we need to
. take a new lqok at tilla~e
practices.
Metgs County farmers have
been leavmg more of the
hillsides m grass and trees, but

NEW in FARMING
this forces them to ,press for
htgher production from the
land they contmue to till.
Dr. Sam Bone, Extenston
Agronomist at tl•e Oh1o State
Umversity, in a recent report,
pomted out that the plow is
beginning to lose ground to notillage methods.
Just over two centurtes ago a
Frenchman, working in his
shop, molded the plow that
ever smce has furrowed the
face of farmmg. Pulled ftrst by
horses and oxen, now by
tractors, the moldboard plow
has overturned millions of
acres of soil, often leavmg it
exposed to the hazards of wind
and water erosion .
Today, a new era in man's
methods of tilling the sot! ts
begmning, says n'r Bone. New
equipment for planting crops
-called no-lillage plantmg -

Ready·to
peak,
.
Rio coach says
OHIO INDUCI'S EIGHT INTO HALL OF FAME - Ohio
University inducted eight former Bobcats great~ into the
university's Hall of Fame on Oct. 21. This brings the total to
56 honorees during the past eight years. Ptctures above, left
to right, are: Ralph "Gus" White, captain and second
baseman of two championship baseball teams here in 1918
and '19, now of Nelsonville; Milton J. Taylor, All-Ohto
football player who played in every varsity game of hts four
year (1947-'50) career, no"( an auto dealer in Lancaster; Dr.
James L. Shreffler, Ohio's first baseball All-American in
1949, now anesthesiologist at Scholtz Hospital in Waterloo,
Iowa; Robert "Fizz" Miller, All-Ohio high jwnp champion
and basketball star here in 1941, now a Dover, Ohio ac-

countant; Harley "Dutch" Littler, All-Ohio halfback in 1923
and now a Poland, Ohio, realtor and retired teacher-eoach
from Youngstown East High ; Russell W. Kepler, All-Ohio
and All-Buckeye football star in 1929-'31, a teacher at Marton
Steele High m Amherst, Ohto; Harry Houska, youngest ever
named, NCAA wrestling champion (191) and two-tune mat
All-America in 1963and 1964 who h~s brought the school three
Mid-American wrestling crowns in his four -year coaching
career here ; and Bunk Adams, fourth all-t,ime career scorer
here with 1,196points, earning All-MAC twice, playmg on two
MAC basketball title teams and hon. men. United Press AllAmerica in 1960 and '61, now teacher and basketball coach at
Toledo Scott.

JHS ends slump with 36--0 win
WELLSTON - Vtstting
Jackson spoiled Wellston's
annual homecomtng
ceremomes on a rain-soaked
field here Frtday mght by
blanktng the Golden Rockets
36-0

The vtctory not only snapped
Jackson's three-game losing
streak and put them m a tie

Dragons cop
7th victory
PROCTORVILLE
Fairland's surprtsmg 1Dragons
rema ined tied for first place m
the tough Ohio Valley Con.
ference standings followmg a
convincing 26-0 wm over Oak
Htll Friday night.
Semor halfback Brent Mayo
tallied on runs of 17, one, and 10
yards for the winners. Bill
Miller had the other Dragon
touchdown .
Fairland is 7-1 on the year,
and IS tied wtth Coal Grove and
South }'oint for first place m
the OVC.
South Pmnt upped tts season
mark to 5-2 Friday wtlh a 20-18
non-league win over McKell,
Ky. Coal Grove played at
Ironton St. Joe Saturday night.
SUIT FILED
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Gary Gresdal has ftled a suit
seeking $50,000 m damages
agamst the World Hockey
AssociatiOn and one of 1ts
teams, the Los Angeles Sharks
Gresda l claims he signed a
contract wtlh the WHJ\ team on
Sept. 27. Two days later he was
told he did not make fhe team.
Gresdal clatms the Sharks
vtolated the terms of the
contract by not offering him a
job with a minor league
afftliate.

with Metgs for fourth place in
the Southeastern Ohto League
standmgs, 11 also gave the
Ironmen a 35-18-4 advantage in
the lustortc series between the
two schools dating bac!&gt; to 1914.
' fourth
Too, Jt was Jackson's
strmght lriumph over Wellston
followmg a 28-6 loss to the
Rockels tn 1968.
Fnday 's tnumph left
Jackson wtth a 4-4 season
mark. Wellston dropped to 0-8
on the year The Golden
Rockets have now lost 17
stratghtgames over a two year
pertod. lnstde the SEOAL, the

Rockets have lost 13 in a row.
Jackson is 3-3 m corference
play, Wellston 0-8.
The visltmg Ironmen scored
once m the ftrst stanza, agam
~n .the ~~~onH, lwt,c.~~ in ,the th\rd
1
and once in lh~ final canto_
Kenny Valentme was the big
gun for JHS, scormg on runs of
13, 5, and 26 yards. He also had
four pomts on conversiOn
plays.
John Gtlltam tallieu once on
a 33-yard pass interception
Brad Thompson plowed
through the mud for a stxpomter from the one, and Tom
Stevenson had a two-pomt

conversiOn
Jackson totaled 374 yards.
Wellston was limtted to 79.
Valentme had 211 yards m 29
trips'. Thompson ftmshed wtlh
b~ ~ards in 22 trips.
The lro'mnen wlll attempt' to
snap Ironton's 10-game, twoyea r SEOAL wmning streak
this Friday at Jackson
Wellston plays at Waverly
Frtday where the Rockets need
a vtctory to esca pe undisputed
last place tn the conference for
the second consecuhve season.
By Quarters:
Jackson
8 6 14 8-36
Wellston
0 0 0 0-- 0

RIO GRANDE - "We're
ready to peak," proclaimed
Rto Grande cross country
coach Bruce Curtis Friday
following the Morris Harvey
lnvitallonal won by the Redmen
Etght Rio Grande runners
broke the old course record at
Morris Harvey as the Redmen
defeated Marshall, 23-38.
Concord was thtrd wtlh a score
of 90, followed by Morris
Harvey and West Vtrginia
Tech
Rto's Jack Fmch ran the
course m 25:30, three and onehall mmutes better than the old
mark of 29:00. Fmch was
followed by teammate Ken
Sanders m second place with a
lime of 25 .54. Chuck Marshall
and Steve Kern of Marshall
placed third and fourth
respecltvely. Ftfth place went
to Bruce Melton of Rio Grande
wtth a time of 26:44. Concord's
Les Borbely came in sixth.
Rio's Stacy Osborne and Mike
"l'Jross ~Iea'Jrd~ "seveift'li '\\llfflia
bme of 27:42. The Thundermg
Herd's Larry Palmet and Ed
Main completed the top ten
runners.
Rw Grande placed five men
m the top ten and Marshall had
four . Bill Canfield of Rio
Grande was eleventh with a
time of 28 · 02 and Eddie Sayre
recorded a time of 28:41 in 14th
place for the Redmen.

The Redmen have now won
three tnvttationals and
collected fl ve team trophies
this fall. In other invttalionals,
the Redmen have fimshed
second and fourth .
The top ter. mdivtduals were
all presented trophies_ For RIO
Grande, Jack Finch, Ken
Sanders, Bruce Melton, Stacy
Osborne, a~d Mike Gross
recetved awards
The Rto cross country team
wtll travel to Canton, Ohio
Tuesday for a dual meet with
Walch College prior to the MtdOhio Confere nce Meet at ,
Cedarvil le Saturday,
November 4.

We Tra1n Men to Work As

LIVESTOCK
BUYER$ ...
d

'/ "
"JU&gt; tolliVJ ~ ~ d lllui';!
t · you haYe some lvtstoc"'

expenence we will train you
to buy cat'tle, sheep and

hogs

For a local mterv•tw, wr1te
today w1th your bKk1round,
Include your complete ad ..
dress and phon&amp; numbtr.

CAmE BUYERS, INC.

-w

'

BIDWELL - Westvaco
CorporatiOn has won the
National Tree Planting Award
from the Alllencan Forestry
Associa(ton for a ' smalllandowner reforestalton
assistance program that has
125 million
dtstnbuted
seedlings m 10 states since
1966. West Virgmia Pulp and
Paper Co., Btdwell, IS a substdiary of Westvaco Corp.
The award Will be presented
in New Orleans October 25 to
David W_ Sowers, Jr., of
Hancock, Maryland, senior
forester of the pulp and paper
company's Timber lands
Diviswn. Sowers organized and
dtrected the campaign until hts
retirement tn August. The
presentation wtll be a feature
of the Amencan Forestry
Association's National Tree
·
1
1.1o •
PI
, ~~n !tqg \;~n ~~o nce ~ v.:\J.,h
wll gather concerned , Indivtduals and , organizallon
representativ es f rom
throughout the United Stales to
seek new commitments to
reforestation of idle and understocked lands.

The program emphastzes the federal age nctes con cerned
many values of well-managed with sml, water, forest and
woodlands which also produce wtldlile resource problems
much of the natton 's limber faced by small landow ners who
supplies. watershed tm· need extra encouragement and
provement, wtldlife habtlal mcentives to practice adequate
and recreatiOn opportumttes. management of their lands
Westvaco's program for State forestry dtvtstons, state
small landowners ' 'best ,.agricultural extensiOn serexemplifies the spmt of the
conference," accordmg to a
spokesman for the AFA, who
emphastzed that Westvaco
" has reached beyond tts own
responstbtlity lor company
forest management to try and
help others_"
Thecompanyofferstomatch
seedling purchases by small
PT. PLEAS~NT - Randy
landowners to reduce the costs Russell, Mason, was fined on
of reforestatiOn and encourage two
charges ,
hun tmg
better woodlands management mtgratory btrds with gun
m 230 counties of lhe states holdmg more than three shells,
\'I here westvacQ produces or $20 and costs, and klllmg two
' 1'
•
ranadi•n •eese m closed area
Rl\'iC~~~ ,111QO&lt;l,/qr , ~ts PAJl1lr n 1;,~,. ,..11&lt;, '"'' v •1 111n t' ·,,nf; h '
mills at Luke, Maryland; """ anc costs, m Jus tee o t e
Covington, Virginia; Wtckhffe, Peace Gat! Fatres court the
Kentucky and Char leston, pastweek .
South Carolina.
Twe~ty-mne. cases were
Westvaco credits much of the heard 10 .Justices of Peace
success of the program to the ~o~ts~Pomt Ple~san~ Mayor
0 n
cooperati on of state and
usgdraveth ear Mseven

Justice of Peace court

cases an

4410 M141'-

Kaouo City, Mo. 114tll

co.....,
C..ll&gt; ..J .t........ "-'
TENI' . CIERT NO Ot'UH

Jackson 36 Wellston 0

Nov 3 Games:
Gaillpolts at Me1gs
1ronton at Jackson
Logan at 'Athens
Wellston at Waverly

~

XL2

MAKES CUTTING
TWICE-AS-EASY

anew
As your new Siron Fronch1sed Bu1lder 1n the area
we re ready to g 1ve you total construction serv1ce.

But just what does that mean to you?
II mean.s fasl . el:onom, col construchon of nearly
any me or type of 1nduslno l, commercial or profesSional budd1ng
Wha t s more, we ore backed by Siron s 30-plus
years of manufoctunny, destgn
and eng1neenng

EXCLUSIVE TWIN-TRIGGERTM
DUAL CONTROL SYSTEM

expenence And lhe know-how of National Sleel
Corporalion, the nahan's fourlh largest steel maker.
Siron offers com puter-run cost estimates and
ordenng procedures whtch elimtnale expensive
waste of lime and materials .
If you're lliinkmg about bu1idmg, you're thinking
oboul value So, think about your new Stran
Builder. Us.
And give us a call.

REAR TRIGGER
For easier control in
close quarters and
tricky angles.

STARTING BERTH
HOUSTON (UPI)- Wtde recetver Jtm Betrne was named
to a startmg herth for the
Houston Oilers Friday for the ,
game Sunday against the
CincinnaiJ Bengals. Beirne will
replace Charley Joiner, who
was traded to Cmcinnati earlier
this week.

'

Makes faster work
of cutting firewood
or lumber.

Struc;tures of Southern Ohio, Inc. .
A

-

T~tol Servtce Str.l Franchised Builder

'

.,

'

&amp;arolina lunlber &amp;·Supply CO.
PII)NE 675-1160

POINT PLfASANT

Stran-Sieel has developed added to our existing capabilities, " Chflders said_. "we can handle pracllcally any
size structure or group of structures lor any type of enterprise. Stran structuras are widely UJied for a number
of purposes ranging from shopping centers to Junior·
colleges, from warehoualng to boat marinas, achoolis
and churches, In addition to the traditlon11 manufacturinq.tacllltles."
·
'
·
'Stran buildings aHord a customer speed of construction, llexlbUity ol design aod ma~e lutu141 expansion
easier," Chlldere Mid.
Stran, a subsidl•ry of National Steel Corporation, !)as
been manufacturing metal building ay1tems lor more
than 35 years. The company's building aystema are dlttrlbuted through an lntematlonal network ol more than
600 Franchised Bulldert.

ason

XL-2 chain

saw offers
2 triggers

Countains appeared m ~allia
County Judge Betz' court the
past week. ·
Russell paid both fines and
costs on the two charges and
the
two
geese
were
confiScated by officials of the
McClintock Wildlife Station.
Other cases in Faires' court
heard were: William R.
Williams, Middleport, and
Donald L. Rayburn, Point
Pleasant, speeding, $10 and
costs each; David Ray
Cheesebrew, Point Pleasant,
. worthless check, $11 and costs
and made check good, John R.
Savage, Syracuse, Ohio,left of
NHL League Standmgs
Pacihc Oivi ston
center, $10 and costs; Howard By Un1ted Press International
East
w. I pet. g.b.
0. Jeffers, Pomeroy, speeding,
6 3 667
w. I. I. pis gf ga Los Angeles
$10 and costs; David R. Montreal
6 0 J 15 35 15 Golden State 4 2 667 •;,
3 3 .500 l'h
Blankenship, Henderson, Buffalo
5 0 J JJ 32 13 Phoen l)(
Seallle
4
4 500 p;,
Detroit
6
I
0
12
32
13
defective exhaust, $10 and
1 7 .125 4'/i
N Y Rangers
5 J I 11 32 25 Portland
costs.
Friday's Results
Boston
3 5 1 7 34 JS
Justice Robert E. Peoples Vancouver
Boston 123 Cleveland 97
3 5 I 7 26 39
3 4 1 7 21 27 New York 92 Baltimore 88
handled these cases: Roger Toronto
Houston 130 Detro1t 118
N
Y
Islanders
I 5 0 2 13 23
Swisher, West Columbia, four
Golden 51 119 Los Angeles 91
West
worthless checks, and Susan
Chicago 118 Portland 95
w. I. I. pis gf ga
6 3 0 12 31 22 Seattle 120 Phoenix 115
Swisher ot ·west ·columbia, Ch1cago
Poltsburgh
5 4 0 10 35-28 1 !Only games scheduled)
three wortmess cnec~, ti:l\::11 Philadelphia
3 3 2 8 22 29
paid costs of each check and Los Angeles
ABA Standings
4 6 0 s 31 J6
By
Umted
Press International
Minnesota
J
4
I
7
23
22
each made restitution for each
East
Atlanta
3
6
1
l
18
36
check. J . G.
Parfitt,
w. I. pet. g.b.
St. LouiS
1 4 J 51728
Mcll!echen, W.Va., two counts, Calofornia
Carol
ina
6 J 607
2 6 I 5 24 JJ
New York
4 J 571 I
'*nt to defraud, forfeited
Fnday's Results
Kentucky
J
J 500 1'12
Cal1forn1a
6
P1ttsburgh
J
bond, and on worthless check
Virg 1n1a
45 .4442
IDn l ~ game scheduled I
charge, made check good and
f'lle mph1s
2 6 333 3'12
paid costs; John 0. Baker,
West
WHA Standings
w . I. pet. g.b.
Point Pleasant, worthless
By Unrted Press International San D1ego
5 2 714
check, $5 and costs and In
East
Utah
5 J .625 '12
w_ I. I. pts gf ga Den&lt;er
4 4 .500 1'/i
default of fine and costs, 10
Cleveland
7
2
0
14
38
21
Indiana
3
4 .429 2
days
in
jail;
Jenny
N
ew
England
5
3
0
10
33
25 Dallas
2
5 .286 3
Whittington, )l_u tla nd , Quebec
5 2 0 8 28 19
Friday's Results
intoxication, $10 and costs; ottawa
4 4 0 8 40 41
New York 117 Denver 112
4 4 0 8 35 32
Carol ina 114 Kentucky 112
Roy J. McDade, Pliny, New York
Ph1ladelph1a
1
7
0
2
19
40
Indiana 128 Memphis 102
intoxication, $10 and costs;
West
. Dallas 108 V~rginia 103
Vinton Smith, Hartford,
· w. I. I. pis gf go
Utah 123 San Diego 107
inU!xication, forfeited bond; Winn1peg
54 32 II 11.9 30
24 24
27
Wayne Mayes, Rl., Glenwood, Alberla
Houston
4 4 0 8 25 25 .
two counts, failure to control Los Angeles
J 4 o 6 27 24
vehicle, $5 and costa, and no M1nnesola
2 5 1 5 19 31
1 5 1 3 16 25
operator's license, $10 and Ch•cago '
Friday's
Results
costs; Teddy Flora, Sout!Wde,
Cleveland 6 Alberta 0
l•tterlng highway, $20 and
W•nn1peg 4 Chicago 2
LIVESTOCK
Phlladelp~ia 5 Los Ang 4
costs; Edekar Russell, Rt. 2
(Only games scheduled)
BUYERS
Leon, assault and battery, $10
and costs; Ralph H. Gibbs, Rt.
II yov hove some li•eotoc'k
I, Letart, failure to control
expenence we will trtin you
NBA St~ndings
to buy cattlo, ohoop and
vehicle, $5 and costs; Arl By United Press International
Eastern
Conference
hots.
Sherman ADen, Jr.; Rand,
'Atlantic DivJSion
For 1 loc•l mtervltW, wr•tt
W.Va., speeding, $15 and costs,
w. I. pel. g.b. today woth your back1round.
9 0 1.000
am! Wllliam J. Muwell, Boston
lnclu~ you&lt; complete adNew
York
7
1 .875 1'/2
drno lllld phone number.
Dayton, 0 ., ~. $10 and Buflalo
2 6 .250 6'12
costs.
Philadelphia 0 7 .000 a
CAmE BUYERS, lfK.
Ctnjrat Oivitlon
4420M.._
w. I. pet. g.b.
Mayor Musgrave reported
liM,_ CI!J, Me. M til
. 4 3 ,571
Houston
lbele caaea: Cheryle Watson, Baltirnore
4 4 .soo
1f2
~ c..,I...J .c--1 "-'
1~, Hende~son, detective Atlanta
4 4 .500
'12

Pro standings

POMEROY
o;..MM,.IIf.llllll'll•·

I

,•

been used 111 the mtd-West for a
fe w years and at the prese nt
tunc IS an approved dram p1pe
fur fa rm land It has been used
[01 ~cvc ral yea1s fo r dramage
around the house, foundalions
and se pt1c tank fte lds and to
our kno-v.ledge th1s demonstratt on Will be the ft rst use of
It for d.r ama~C O[ ag riCUltur al
land 111 Mason County. The
exact date is not kn own at this
lime beca use scheduling of the
dtlchlng rnachme IS mvolved
and un ttl 1t rea ches Mason
County, we will not be able to
defuutely dectde on a date for
the demonstratiOn
CARL A SEAGER, whose

fat m ts at Upland, has
reseeded 10 acres of meadow
land and four acres of pasture
land These fields were seeded
to ladmo· clover and Kentucky
fes&lt; ue Mr. Seager IS one .of
several farmers near Upland
who are promoters of the extended grazm g program for
beef cattle.
Thts Involves savmg s_ome
pasture or meadow ftelds from
grazmg or late cutting of hay so
that the standmg grass will be
avatlable to livestock durmg
th e wmter months. Sup•plemental feeding of hay IS
necessary along wtth thts
\'&gt;lllter grazmg

Mtddlc ton was County Ex- •••••••:••••••••1••••••••••••••••1
te nswn Agent 10 years m U1e
mtd 20s to the nud 30s. That
I,
was 111 the days before electttc
power and hm·d roads. He
recalled that he would take a
FARM EQUIPMENT
port11ble elec tnctty makmg
maclune wtth htm m hts old
F"orct em· and travel around
Uu ough the country showing
movies of new farm practices
As we passed the Baden
Presbytenan Church on Route
87, lie recalled that in that
church one of the first
mee lings was held m !he early
30s to promote soil con-

I
1
I

POMEROY - Reeogmzmg
the sharp increase m
populanty of inexpenstve ,
lightwet~ht chain saws among
s uburban homeown e rs,
Landmark has an nounced 1t se1vatwn work There was a
would feature the new Xlr2, CCC camp m Jackson County
the only cham saw wtlh two at that tnne and people from
tnggers destgned to provtde tha t camp were mterested m
extra ease in handhng The XL- helpmg Mason County farmers
2 has JUst been mtroduced who lived close to Jackson.
nattonally by Homelite ,
Mr Middleton recalled !with
Textron Dtviswn Weighmg a heat ty guffaw) that the
JUSI7 ' • pounds wtthout bar and mformat10n fell on deaf ears.
cham, the XL-2 IS being offered That was hard for us to believe
at Landmark here lor $119.95
smce people in that area at this
"I behave the,Homehte XL-2 t1me are most cooperalive
to be the tdeal saw for the flrst- towards conservation work and
tnne user, the man · who has e~re ca11·ymg out many good
wanted to add a cham saw to conservation practices
Ins power tool collection, but
A DRAINAGE project
has yet to get around to 1t," showmg the use of plaslic pipe
Ja ck Ca t sey , manager of lot farm dramage Will be held
Landmark, stated
on the farm of Wtlham Cullen
Carsey satd that the two and J ohn McDet•mttl near the
tn ggers designed mto the Xl.-2 last of November These two
make the Home li te product the farmers are cooperatmg on a
eastest-lo-handle gasoline saw jotnt dramage project whtch
on Jhe mal ket Front and rear wtll bcnefJt both farms. The
tn gge rs are combmed on one fatm qf John McDenmtt is the
handle to gtve the user both one whtch he bought from
easy &lt;O trol and maxtmum Vtrgtl Adkms about two years
cullin g leverage
when ago
requtred
Plastic dramage pipe has
The
manufacturer
'Hdmelite, ·has called the in: .. FtidA"fs Rd'lflts"
troduction of the XL-2 the
s Marion Frankl1n 26
"begmmng of a new era in ColCots
West a
chatn saw design " Unttl now, Cots Central18 Cots Waln ut
R•dge 1
the company satd, cham saws
Columbu
s
South
20
have had on ly one tngger
Columbus Mohawk o
Cots. Lmden 32 Cols No rth
19
Cot s Northland 40 Co ts
HISLE TO CARDS
Whetstone 0
LOS ANGELES (UP!) -Out- Worlh
mgton 27 Whdehal\ 0
fielder Larry Hisle was traded Mount Vernon 21 Co ls
Westland 12
from the Los Angeles Dodgers
Gahanna
l d s ~urg 6
to the St. Louis, Cardmals Grove City35 41Reyno
Hilliards
Fnday for two \ le!thanded Miffl in 24 Groveport 6
mmor league pitclrers-Rudy Cot s Ready 21 Cols. Hartley
Arroyo and Greg Millikan M6ar ysvolle 17 Oientangy 6
Htsie, a former maJOr leaguer, Lakewood 26 Brush 7
He ights
46
batted .325 with Albuquerque Gart •eld
Cleveland
He1ghts
21
thiS year
Euclid 6 East Cleveland
Shaw 6 (lie I
Parma Valley 28 Parma
Cleveland
I 8 111 4
Normandy 6
Western Conference
Midpark 14 Maple Heights 12
Midwest Division
Medina 36 Olm sted Falls J
w. I. pet g b. Br~cksvllle 15 Warrensville
Milwaukee
7 1 875
Heights 6
Ch ocago
5 J 625 2 Brooklyn 24 Strongsville. 12
KC Omaha
2 4 333 4 Independence 6 No rth
Oe tro1f
2 5 286 4112
Royalton o

APPLY NOW

•
TM Tre&lt;ttm•rtc of Homtlite, • division of Textron Inc.

Slructures of Southern Ohto, Inc. a Huntington, West
Vtrginla based general contractor, has been harned an
authortzed Stran-Sieel Franchise Builder.
Award of lhe franchise was announced by Ar~old
Andrews, Vice Prestdeni-Sales for Stran-Steel Corporation, a Houston, Texas based manufacturer of metal·
building systems and components.
'•
Robert Childers, president of Structures of Southern
Ohto, Inc., satd the awarding of the franchise will allow
his ftrm the design , construction, management' and
teasing services they now offer their customers.
Construction projects recently completed by Structures. Inc Included an addition to Ptlgrlm Glass In
Ceredo. West Virglma, an addition to JohnsOI'\ Plumbing
:n Huntington, West Virginia, and an addition to Dow
Chemicals production facilftles In Hanging Rock, Ohio.
" ,.Wtth the wide range olsteel buHdlng eysle1J18 w~lch

ree

exhaust, $5 and costs; Delores
Duff, 29, Point Pleasant, no
operator's license, $10 and
costs, David Lyle Darst, 29,
Point Pleasant, speeding, $10
and costs; Clarence L. Head,
~o1nt ~~e~sant,, fa\hire to yteld
nght-of-way, $5 ahd costs;
Mary Malissa Mowery, 17,
failure to control vehicle, $5
and costs; Harry Ray Frye, 40,
New Haven, failure to control
vehicle, $5 and costs ; Ernest
Grey, 22, Glendale, Calif.,
mtoxtcation, $25 and costs; and
James Allen Thornton, 18,
Pomt Pleasant, speeding, $10
and costs
Gallia Jud~e Betz handled
these cases: Raymond R.
Hyre, Pomt Pleasant, ran stop
s1gn, forfetted $18 bond; Davtd
Lee Henry, Gallipol!s Ferry,
DWI, forfetled bond of $308,
and Kenneth W. Fleming,
Point Pleasant, operating
traclor-tratler wtlhout tax
permit, $38.

Beginnings of conservation
in Mason County was in 30s

·Wf.ST I.A~"AYf.1"rE , Ind.
I UP! ) - Quarantmes remam
m effect In eastern lndtana,
By John Cooper
along the Ohto border.
PT PLf.ASANT __: ·' A , G
p10h1b1tmg movement of hogs Middleton , at the venerable
m the area m the wake of the age of 82, eli II has a keen sense
cholera wh•ch has htt th1s state uf humor and an alert mmd
. smr c August
We look Mr Middleton to the
Offtctals report 43 cases have rece nt awards dmner of tlie
been conftrrned smce Aug 5 W c ~ ler n Soil Conservation
The latest case mvolved 12 Dtstn ct al Cedar Lakes FFAfeeder hogs whtch were FHA Camp 111 Jackson County
destroyed 111 Delaware County As we wcrp tnwc hng out Route
Quarantines 1n effect In 2 """ Houte ~7 Mr Midoleto-n
eastern lndtana cover all of
Perry Township, parts of
lay of the land
Monroe and Ltherty townshtps
I
m Delaware County, and parts to ld us several anecdotes of hiS
of Greensfork, Stony Creek. work Wi th fat m people m
Momoe and Wayne townships Mason County
m Randolph, neat· the ·ohw
Ma ny older Mason County
border
fol k remembe r that Mr

ljlllll!ll!ll!•••••

P.. O. Box 8022 • Huntington, West Vtr,ginia 25705 • (304) 522-4891
"

vtces, U S Sml Conservation
Servtce and local SCS boards,
US Agncultural Stabthzatton
and Conservation Servtce, and
regtonal Resource ConservatiOn and Development
projects are key cooperators m
the reforestalion effort, satd
Westvaco

Hunter fm" ed tWJ"ce m·

SEO standings
ALL GAMES
Team
W L T POP
Ironton
6 2 0 185 47
Athens
5 J 0 153 89
Meigs
5 3 o 176 111
Logan
4 3 1 125 102
Ja ckson
4 4 u li2 106
Gallipolis
2 5 1 98 153
Waver:y
1 7 0 109 255
Wellston
0 8 0 6 288
SEOAL ONLY
Team
W L T POP
Ironton
6 0 0 178 28
Athens
5 1 0 134 41
Logan
3 2 1 97 40
Me1gs
J J 0 107 99
Jackson
J J 0 126 74
Ga llipoliS
2 J 1 78 109
Waverly
1 5 0 90 200
Wellston
0 6 0 6 225
TOTALS
23 23 2 816 816
Friday's Results:
Ironton 46 Ga llipolis 14
Athens 13 Meigs 6
Logan 42 Waverly 12

fannei·sshould evaluate tillage bcfurc Januory, Bone cxplams.
p1 actices lhts full fo•· the 1973 Yield respon' e for corn hos
production year. Many smls, he been ahout the same rm both
explatns, should nut be tilled "inl et and early spnn g
dm·mg the fall and wmter If pluw111g for these sotls m
Iiley arc plowed m the fall , the wes tern and southwes tern
restdue that could Improve Ohw
ct up ytelds and decrease , Where liliage can be done
sedtment loss wtll be plowed early enough m the fall , a
under, leavmg bare sml ex- seed1ng or small gratn
posed
Jo provid e surface covFor example, soils on whtch e1 ma y be demable
corn was grown m 1972, and The
gra 1n crop c,;n
which are not wet, should not he ktlll!!!_chcmtcilllY m the
- lie p owed Lli ts lii1f: the spnng, and planling can be
spec1ahst says Generally , done wtth little m· no li lla~e
there are sods light m color, prwr to the planlmg operat1on.
medium m soil texture and
Effect 1vely usmg water for
have adequate atr and watet· crop
productwn
while
movement m the sot! for good d e creastng s ed tm ent
crop growth These may also generalion on agricultural land
mclude sotls on which lile reqmres much flextbtlity m
dramage has been mstalled to equ 1pment and, management
1m prove atr and water Tillage should be planned to
relalionshtps,
g1ve htgh )'!eld response to
!(adequate residue can be bette1 water management and
maintained on the surface of more effeclivr control of
thesesoils durm gwl)lter, ttwtll sedunent loss on the enlire
permtt using lillage prac tices, f•eld ,, the spectuhst says.
next year, that wtll control Sometimes th ts may mean
sedtment loss durmg the different hllagc opera lions on
growmg season . It wtll also parts of the fteld already
help to improve yetlds by planted
Improved water management.
Bone believes that as !arThose sotls tn Ohto that ' e mers become aware of !he
slow internal drainage and are, advantages or more no-ltllage
dark m surface color will plantmg, they wtll give the
require som.e ltllage prtor to plow far less pnonty m the tr
planbng m 1973. Thts doesn't s01l management programs.
mean the ttllage should be done

Westvaco wins national award

APPLY NOW .

.

r~ducing the need for
phm tn g the sml, yet sttli encuuragcs lugh crop ytelds
The new eqmpment offers
farmers greater llextbilily m
management. " For
soil
example, some planters wtll
plant m soil that has not been
plowed or tilled as well as m
soil that has been tilled - all
wtth Utile or no adjustment.
The search for hetler ltllage
methods became a national
concern in the 1930s when sml
exposetl
me Plow was
recogmzed as a l)laJOr hazard
to the natiOn's food and ftber
supply and to health At that
lime the U S Sml Conservatto n ServiCe
was
estabhshed Durmg the 1970s,
there is slill a concern about
sedtment loss related to
agncultural production.
Research in agncultural
technology has resulted m
advancements that may
replace the plow as a primary
lillage tool, Bone clatms These
advancements include
chemtcals to control vegetation
wtthout ttllage as well as
eqmpment to plant m s01! that
has not been plowed. The goal
ts to lind new ways to produce
crops, obtam mcreasmg yields
and slill decrease sod loss and
sediment production .
Stnce new methods are
ava tlable, Bone suggests
IS

Quarantine held
on Indiana line

AVCD? NEW IDEA
I
I
I
I Most popular 1-row
I
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1
I
1
I
1
I

Corn Machine
ever built.
1..row tnapper
has b1g capac1ty hopper eleva1or lor husks on·
harvesung

1

"-

I

1
I

I
I
I

I'Pull-type Su~rpiq,k~r~· ' ·....,·......

I The am~zlng 1-row Superpicker has capac1 lty that you JUSt can 't get with any other
make. It' s pure Superptckef-with the same
I ' great
appettte for corn that's made Super1 pickers the No 1 choice among corn farm1 ers-by far l Same spec tal snapptng rolls,
same Flext-Finger presser wheels on the big
I husktng
bed, same low-reachtng 'chains that
I lift the corn and prevent lteld loss in stprm1 damaged crops Slop tn and take 8J look at
the mosl popular 1-row corn machtne ever
I butlt
I

II Meigs Equipment Co.
PHONE 992-2176

I
I

POMEROY, OHIO

8" Waterer
Regular Price '56.50
NOW

'4795
SAVE '8.55

Fresh Water
All Year!
Thermostat Cootrolled Electric
,

He~ter

· One Ntlson Waterer Serves
40 Cattl' In Conflne91ent
25 Cattle on .Pasture
"Your' Farm Supply Supermarket"

CENTRAL SOYA
OF 0~10
Ph. 446-2463
Jrd &amp; ~vcamore Sts.

I
Gatlipolis, Ohio

�~·

I '

.

•

•.

•

24- TheSund~yTimes-Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 29,l972

. SundlJy _Times_-Sentinel Classifieds For Fast-R~sults Use
.WANT .. os.

.'
•

oNFORMATIO~

·' ,.

D~AD'I.INES

5 P,M ; Oay . ~efOre Publlc;atlol?."
Monday Deadline 9 a m
·.
Cancellation- CorreCtiOns

··n ;

Will be accepted untrl9-a .m . fat
· Day of P&amp;PIIcatlon

. REGULATIONS

Lost

'

Help Wanted

PART Basset and part Beag le 8 A By 5 1 T T E R
in Old Town Flats area ;
answers to nam~ of Boy :
ch ild's pef ; phone 949.27.46 .

10-27-61c

and

houscl;ecpcr wi th ·a 3 year old
g i rL l ive .iA i.f poss ible ;
dCI)CfldalJie and sing le persor1, ·

2.11 o 35 years old ; call Charles
King , 992·3184 be twfl'en 12 and

For Rent

3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and HOUSE, 3 rooms and bath,
unturnished

P.hone' 992-5434.

apart ments .

furni~hed ;

adult s

BLACK
Mid·
dleport Scottish
; · answersdogto inAmos;

~---.,.---

'c

one mile from Eastern High

secutlve Insertions .
2.5 Per C-ent Discount on ·pale!
-.ds and ads paid w i th in 10 days .

School on Route 7: call 985·
4134 .
l0-25-61p

CAR[! OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

$1 .50 for 50 word minimum
Each addition!'! word 2c
'
BLI~D

AOS

.
OFFICE HOU'II\ .
1:8•JO a.m,. t9 5:00. p.m. Dally,
1:30 a.m . to l~ : oo Noon

~

!II I WISH to thank my many
friends, relatives and neigh.

with their cards. gifts and
telephone calls on my 88th
birthday. Sunday, October
22nd. Mrs. Jennie Hansher
10-29-llc
UUR SINCERE thanks to
friends and neighbors for
their many kindnesses during
the. Ill ness and death bf our
' lovea one, Frank Fisher.
Special thanks to the Rev .
Owl~ht Zavllz, Dr . Roger
EwinQ

Notice

$27 cash or budget plan
available. Phone 992-5641.

l0-24-6tc

p.m . to 7· p.m.; novelties, toys,

1965 INTERNATIONA l &gt;cout,

clothing and furniture. Call
378-6249 or contacf at home.
10-27-Jtc

4·wheel drive ; needs front end w ork, $400 i ca ll 992-6064.

rifle shooting match; Sunday,
October 29, l p.m. at Rutland
, Gun Club. New.J..IIIIa Road.
9 10-29-llc
--:-:--::-:c::-:-::-:-c=
KOSCOT KOSMETIL~ . Our
latest Is "One Day "
fro~rance . Others Include
. "K' and The Lemon Grove.

Also new children's products.
Phone Helen Jane, 992-lll3.
We'd like to serve you .
'10-24-tfc

located across lrom grade

GUN SHOOT, Sunday, October
29, l p. m. Factory choked
guns on ly . Second place
shooters get tree shot In next
Ass orted

meats .

l0-26-3tc

CANING done ; also Splint rush
and reed work; R. L. Moore,

992-6046.

10-25-61p

'•HEll"
HEATING
&amp;
'
COO.LJNG
Window

·Air Conditioners
Hoi Wate~ Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

ARNOLD

'

~~-·BrOTHERS .
'1'~:.! -:t .. 'lti

Pomeroy, 0.

,

" L-----....;----~~
• PIANO and organ lessons by
graduate

of

Cons~rvatory

992-3825.

Cinci nnati

ot Music: phone
.
10-25-litc

REVIVAL ol Freedom Gospel
Ml ssl o n. , B~Id Knobs, starting
November 2nd, 7:30p.m . Rev .
L. R. Glusencalnp. Pastor;
Rev. GeorRe Hoschar, West
Columbia, W. Va ., Evan ..
gellst;
special
singing;
public Is Invited.
I0-25-6tc
HAYMAN 'S Auction - a good'
· place · to · go -each Friday
'· evening, · 7 p.m. at laurel
Cllff ·on old Rt. ·7, 1 mile west
of Rack Springs Fairground .
· 10-lO·tfc

Wa11ted

i

DRAFTSMAN

A local comp~ny h11 •n
IIPIIIIIIII for In txpetltneeCI'
I drlfbmln, excetltnt fringe
..,..,II 11111 opportunity for
IIIVIftetmtnl. · S.ltry.
, commtnsu·r•t• with
lllcltgNVIIII IIIII txPII'Itllce.
' 111111 llrlef NIVmt fo P.O.
In ftf-$, ·C-G Tile Ollly
s.tlntl. Poliltroy, Ohio

"""·
AI '141vll
•• ,l.,.r.

Oppertunlty

991-3374
end Dele Help Ytu
Mtlt Problems.

DISTRICT
DISTRIBUTOR

R1. 1 "at caution light"

. TUPPERS PLAINS
Clean Usld furniture

Guaranleed appllences
BIKES Huffy' 20",
Murray 10 speeds- discount
prices.

LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
Open to 1; Closed Mondays

For Sale

eEMORE e'100~0F
LIFE OUT fRoNT. ..
IN THE AUDIENCE ,

Sliver metallic fonosh, black vinyl top black lnl . f
power (lqulpment. T&amp; T wheel AM.'FM radio ere~~· ~· ·
Conlrol air conditioning. Less than IO.OOO mile~. oma e

'6500
-·
...
'·-

. SCi11.ver metCalllc finish, blue Interior, full power equipment
om a1e onlrol air conditioning AM-FM dl
•,
owner new Cadillac trade.

POMEROY
HOME .&amp; AUTO .

~ROOFING

eHEA'('lNG
·.
.

992-2094

•PtUMBING

•CARPENTRY
.•SPOUTING
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate
PHONE 992!2550
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
2966.

6-15-ttc

606 E. Main

Pomeroy

.

_

\ 2 Dr. Coupe, Slant Six, t-flite, 8,000 mile~. j ust lik e new,
warranty left.
.

Cycle. single cyl., 4'speed, 900 miles.

power equ1pment, Clima'te Control air conditioning .

1971 HORNET SST

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Stoll' In and See Our
Floor Display.

·-

EXPERIENCED
.

Ra~lato

Cadiflac. Oldsmobile

&gt;.

READY -MIX
CONCRETE From' the largest Truck or ·
delivered right to your · Bulldozer Radiator to lhe
projecl. Fast and easy. Free Small~st Heater Core.
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Nathan Biggs
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co .•
Radlowr Spec_falfst
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-tfc

1971 CHEVROLET 8' FLEETSIDE '2495

1968 ENGLISH FORD

2 Ton. l&lt;l-2" cab to' axle. 292 cu . ln . engine, 15.000 lbs. 2·
speed rear axle, 825x20, 10 ply tires, full depth loam seat.
heavy duty springs, solid cab. Ready to go to work.

Cortina 2 dr. sedan, 4 cyl. , 4 speed. 30 miles per gallon.

SEPTIC TA~KS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
~Pomeroy
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
OWner &amp; Opera tor.
5·12-lfc SEE US FOR: Awnings, slorm
doors and windows, carports,
C. BRADFORD, 'Auctioneer
marquees. aluminum sldln!lo
Complete Service
and railing. A. Jacob, sale~
Phone 949·3821
represenlative . For free
Racine, Ohio
estimates·, phone Charles
Crill Bradford \
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
S-l -Ife
Johnson and Son, Inc.
.
..,.-----~===~
3-2-lfc
O'DELL WHE-EL'allgnment
' - -AND
--located at Crossroads, Rt. 124. BACKHOE
DOZER
work .
Complete front end servl~e,
septic
tanks
Installed.
George
tune up and brake service.
&lt;Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
Wheels balanced elec·
4·25-lfc'
Ironically.
All
work .:=--oco=---- guaranteed .
Reasonable
rates. Phone 742-3232 or 992· DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and septic tanks, dit3213.
ching
service; top soli, fill
7-27-tfc
dirt, limestone ; B&amp;K Ex·
cavating. Phone 992-5367,
CEILING tile, wall paneling
Dick Karr, Jr.
installation, reasonable, for
9·1-tfc
estimate call 992-l47l after s
p.m .
,10-27-Jtp'

see lhe "Good Guys" at 'R. H. Rawlings Sons Co. Mill &amp;

·

Second, Middleport, for the deal of your choice on a late
model used car .

992-5342
GMAC Financing Available
Pomerot ,
Open Eves. Til 6-Til 5 P.M. Sat.
"You'll ~ike&lt;''" Qua lily Way of Ooing"Buslness"

Real Estate For Sale

~-. :The
.

992-2151

2nd Ave.

... 3

Both vulnerab1e

67-Witty remirk

1-l!l,vestha:atlon
6-Got UIJ'
11-Mortlfli:atlon
16-0inner course .

70-Studies
71-The sun
72-comparatlve
endinl

125-Portlon of
mad/cine
.126---Abate
128-Burma native
129-Turklsh flag
131-0ispatehed

21-luse aaaln
22-0odeeanase

74--Giver

132-Novelty

7~Pal(

86-Ciass of
vertebrates

133-Babylonlan
hero
13s-:-Mutlc: as
written
138---Proh!blt
139-Speck
140-Swin river
141-cravet
142-A state (abbr.)

88-Bruillan

143--Above .

69-Tranqullllty

Island

23-Caudal

n.:....EscaPed
78---Small valley

apoendaJe•
24-Ciimbinl plant

79-lnvents
82-lnterred

25-Simian

84-Sphero!ds

2&amp;-0pel'l· mouthed
28-Huvenly
bodies
30.:....Pivnoun
' 32-PnposltJon
33--Symbol for
tellurium
34-SIIkwonn
35--Eda:e
36-So~

37.:-unusual
38-Guido's hlah
note
40-lnclta to

action
42-Sud
eontalntr
43-Buffeted
44-PiiYins card
.45- Man'$
nickname
47-Stopped
49-Sudt
"'50-Period of time
51-Sell to

consumer
54-Eet.·.
55-Grate
5~Doa•

59-Collection of
facts
60--Communlsl
62-Piaces tor
pra'vlsions
64-Welklne ttlck

West

North
It

Ea•t
2...

South
2.

85--Pedal dla:ils

estut~ry

144-Baked clay

,

15-Hold In h.i lh
regard
16-Winter vehicle
17--Gotl
18-Note of scale
19-Positlve pole
20-Fop
27-&lt;&gt;btaln

29-Wtlked on
31-Cut

·

36--Strlke
31- AIJfi:rlan
set port

39-PIIatter
40-Mix
41-Girl's name
42-looked
Intently
43-Foremtn

89-ltallan seaport

145-Dwe/1

9D--Castar

147-Sovere!a:n
44-E~~:act
149-Underworld aod 46--Cooled la11a
15Q-Suraical thread 48-Break
1!52-Morw recenT'
suddenly
15-4--Prlest's
49-Joumey forth
11astment
5Q-.Vast aaes
1S~Falry in ''The
51-Wireless
Tempnf'
52-Go in
158--0mlt from
53-cltrut fruit
pronunciation
(pt.)
159-Score
55-Recover
160-Typlfled
56--Wol'itman
161-Undrested kid
57-Comical

92-Folds
94-Relevance
98-lnlets
99-Part of foot
100-Hal"i'est
a:oddess
102-chalrs
103-Be mistaken
104-EIIeryone
105-Tradad for
money
106--Piece of
dinnerware

lOB-Soak
109-World
oraanlzallon·
(I nit.)
llO-Brother of
Odin
111-Biemlsh
112-Nobillty
114-llmb
116-Cyprlnotd fish
117-Prepared for ·
print
119--Muslcal
lnttrumenl
12Q-Cash drawer

~Jli!!JI _
·- ~nl!ttJIIIhiiY
66-JDII!riUITI
124-Spread lor
• • 1 tremens (abbr.)
drylne ·

DOWN

92- ~nlmet's coat

Pass
Opening lead-• 8

4•

J'a~

1

H. T.,

fully

1971 lnternational ..s2495
Truck, 4 Ton,
mileage.

V·B engine,

low

'

1971 Plymouth ......s2495
2 Door H.T., factory air. tully
equipped. V-B engine, P .S.. vinyl
roof.

1972 Opel ............. s2295
Rally, 2 Dr ., H. T .• 4-speed, 4 cyl.,
9.000 easy miles. Nice car, real
clean.

1969 Opel Rally ........ ~ ...}1395

Two door, local 1 owner, low mileage, good tires, clean
interior , green finish. radio, 2.000 c.c. engine, 4 speed . ~

4 Speed, 4 cyl.. yellow with black top, good
condition.
·

1971 CHEVROLET .................'3095

1968 Cadillac Eldorado s2695

Malibu hardtop coupe , low mileage, new car title, sa ndalwood finish with brown vinyl roof, vinyl sadd le Interior .· 4-season air condlti tion ir,'lg, turbohydramatlc,
power steering, white-wall tires, rally wheels, front &amp; rear
guards, power brakes, radio .

Equipped with all extras. 1 local owner.

Good Selection '.67 Models
Priced Right

1968 CiEVELLE ................... '1795
Malibu Spt. Cpe, air condlfloned. 307 engine. power
sleerong &amp; brakes, red finish with black vinyl top &amp; blk.
vinyl Interior, radio, good w-w fires.

Don't Forget
We Service What We Sell

1968 CAMARO Conve~ible ·····'1795

Our Word Is Our Bond

Local 1-owner low mileage car, beautiful cream finish
with black top. bucket seats, with console, new white-wall

Open Evenings Til 7 p.m. &amp; Sat. Till 12 Noon.
for Service &amp; Sales s p.m.

ONE OF THE SCARCE ONES, AND AS NI CE AS THEY
COME .
'
·

.

~.! -~!! :~ ~~~SENGE~.•SARS

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

AT

992·2174

GREAT SAVINGS

'

93- Mast
95-Chlnese

Electra 225, 4 door
equipped.

1971 PINTO FORD ................. '1749,

tires, power steering and automatic transmission. Radio .

Pass
3 "'
Pass
' 'PaS\!' '''6 ¥ """ Pllls

' .
ACROSS

Middleport, 0.

28
NORTH (D)
and queen of clubs while you
.A 9
hold queen-five of spades and
.Q 9
one trump.
tAK7 52
East has to hold the king
... AQ72
of clubs and a high diamond. · WEST
EAST
He must chuck his 10 of .• J 8 7.6 4 2
• K 10
spades.
¥74
.A
Now you simply lead a t JB
t QI0943
... KJI095
spade to dummy's ace drop- 4864
ping East's king. That leaves
SOUTH
your last trump and spade
.Q S3
YKJ10 86532
queen good for the last two
tricks.
t6

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

r

plenty of luxury try this outstanding buy ,

ONLY '2849

R. H. Rawlings Sons Co.

.

ace of clubs and ace of diamonds, ruff a diamond and
lead a trump.
East is in with the ace
and leads a thir~ diamond.
You ruff this high and get
the bads news about that
·
suit.
Don't give up. If East
holds the king of ·spades he
belongs to you. You enter
dummy with the queen of
trumps; discard ·one spade
on the king of diamonds;
ruff a club and run off all
your trumps but one to leave
dummy with the a c e of
sp!!des, seven of diamonds

Sporlwagon. Beautiful coral finish with vinyl in·

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

Criss-Cross Squeeze

(

terior, factory air conditioned, luggage rack, radio.
350 V-8 engine, automatic trcms., power steering &amp;
brakes, li~e neww-w tires. If you want. a show piece
&amp;

1967 Dodge Dart 4 dr. sedan. Slant s ix. t .
flite, radio. runs like a new one ... this
week only
$795

By. OSWll]d &amp; James Jacoby
. We are indebted to Eric
Jet\nersten for this beautiful
.. play, which is t9st described
. as a three-suit, criss-cross
•squeeze.
.. You don't have to approve
of the bidding if you don't
.want to but you do find yourself in six hearts against a
club lead. You also remember that East put in a vulnerable overcall and it looks
,as if · he wiU hold all the
,J\Igh ~ards.
You have 11 easy tricks
and a 12th if diamonds break
43, so you take dummy's

1971 BUICK

4 Dr. sedan, V-8, 1-fl ite, sharp little '68 model.

WIN AT BRIDGE

SMtiH N.ti.SON
MOTORS. INC. ·
Ph. m-2174 ·

1972 ·Buick ...........s4995

Sportabout Wagon, six cyl. , automatic; roof ra r k . Sha rp-

KARR &amp;VAN ZANDT

.'

Real beauty .

.

1968 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE

Service

Sale! 3 Company Officials' Cars

monetary
unit
96--Crass
97-s .. na:les
99-Cowl
101-Declared
105-HLrrled
106-Ften ch priest
107-Stlleld
Ill-stalk
112-Mall
113--Qtherwlse

115-Rillar In
Arizona
116-Ea:yptlan
&amp;oddess
' 118--Roman road
119- Sharpen
121-Veeeteble
123- A continent
(abbr.)
125-Pawl
126-Hoii fat

The bidd ing has been :

West

North

F.ast

Prompt Delivery on
'73 Cars &amp; Light Trucks

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
You, South, hold:

Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio

Auto Sales

Wanted To Buy

DLD Furniture, oak tables, '63 CHEVROLET. Call 992-:1645.
10-26-Jtc
organs. dishes, clocks. brass
beds, Qr complete

.AK862 YA 2 t 5 4AK862
What do you do now?
A-Bid (our hearts. This will
be a strong invitatlon to your

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

partner to ,i,)id a club slam.
TODAY'S QUESTION

992 -2126

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. Til8

Your partner co ntinues to five
clubs. What d o you do n ow?

127-Seeured

129-Yilify
J3o-Part of jacket
131-The tun
132-Sprllt
134-Som · ·
58-Transattlons
136-Atttmpted
61- Spanlsh title
131-Pessaleway
63-Bespatter
139-Ponenlve
64-Female student
pronoun
68-Summed up
t4o--Son of Adam
70--Mortl lucid
1"4-Bushy clump
71-Selty
145-Shoemaker's
73-Ceremony
too!
74-,-Food proa:ram 146-Dine
75-Milll;l merry
147-Ttar
71-Conflaeratlons 148-Ethloplen

Pomeroy

hou~eholds .

Write M. D. Miller. Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271. Mobile Homes For Sale
6-28,1fc 1956 Paramount mobile home,
8x45, 2 bedrooms. $1495.
WANTED - Old upright Phone 992·3205,
pianos, grand pianos , old
l0·26·3tc

..

pump organs. Any condition.

Payin~ SlOeach. Write giving TWO bedroom mobile home, In
directions. Willen Plano Co .. good condlllon. $1,600.
Box 188, Sardis. Ohio, 43946. Zuspan 's Trailer Court.
l0-27-61p Velma G. Zuspan, Mason. W.
Va .
IO-l2·1Stp
For Sale

8 TRACK STEREO. freight CASH paid for all makes and
damaged, In beavliful walnut
models of mobile homes.
console. Will sell for S101.50 or
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
pay $1.50 per week . Phone 992·
·
of.lJ-tfc
lJ3.l ."
9·7-lfc

BY JACK O'BRIAN
Our eye is on the future and we're optimistic.
..
.
TIIROUGH
ROSE-COLORED
GLASSES
or
course
when you •ve been on Broadway since
3-Spanf•h cheer
• Air Conditioners
4-Exlst
NEW YORK (KFS) - We dropped into 1919, you feel that the rich nostalgic trend too is POODLE puppies. Si lver Toy.
Parkv
iew
Kennels,
Phone
9925--Greek letter
• Awnings
Roseland Ballroom recently and got a Jesson in something in your favor as wi!lless the huge
5443.
6-Vitla:oth kfnl
·· ·Underpinning .
8-l.l·llc
7- Comptelned
optimism from Lou Brecker, the owner-foWider. Phoenix House benefit, "The ·Fabulous 40s,"
8-Natlve metel
. The elder statesman of show business may be staged at Roseland recently. In one night such
Complete mQblle hQmo
'8-Challenee
tltlt
' 9-Conjunctlon
Auto Sales
overly optimistic, but when he talks about names as Bette Davis, Lana Turner, Ruby
SO-PrOceeds
149- Ellplrt
service ~ plus glganllt ,
to--worm
81-0cean
151-Note of tule
Broadway we listen respectfully :
Keeler (who danced in our shows as an unknown 1970 MODEL 442 Olds. ~SS cu. 'display of mobile home• .
11-Sedatt
83-knock
153- Babylonltn
·
In. 375 h.p., new t ires, mag ,always. avallable,ll ...
12-Damaie
As Gabriel Heatter used to say, Jack, years ago), · Patsy Kelly, Alexis Smith, Jane
84-Prohlblts
dtlty
wheels,
1
owner
.
,Excellent
j
13-Three·load
87-Pitfertd
155-Posstttlvt.
"'!Jlere's good news tonight." I'm referring to Russell, Myrna Loy, Joan. Bennett, Claudette
sloths - ··- condition, call 985-3J4l. ~~ - - -- MILLER
-·-.
89-Acdd...:' ~~~ - pronoun
New· YorKers and out.(J!-!Qw~riers shoiiJQCOIIiert, Cena Horne, Jane Withers, DiifDiiley,
what
14-1,050 (Roman
90-Lons for
· 1!57-Symbol for
10 27 31
.
. . c . • MOBILE HOMES·
number)
91- Yexad
' ruthenium
enjoy knowing about Broadway, the world's Truman Capote, Lady Nancy Keith, Kitty
1
970
PLYMOUTH
4
door
Fury
I,
l220 Wishing~ Blvd.
most exciUng S!feet. It is undergoing a Hawks, Sen. and Mrs. Jake Javits, Alan King ,
~~~~~ 9~:~~:;~' car. Sl400. 423-7521
BELPRE, Ci.
tremendous modernization '!fld clean-11p and this Renee Taylor and Joe Bologna, Bella Abzug ,
I0-26·3fc
.,-t--t-+-+-1 should mean moreandmore businessJilong .what etc., all danced and participated. Their pleasure
was once widely known as The Great White Way. in dancing drove home a point to me that in a
for quick sale, l96S
FOR SA LE. 1965 extra good .PRICED
51x
10
New
Moon Mobile
-:-f-1 Old buildings are coming down and rich struc- major city like New York, the elegant ballroom
Volkswaoen . Would like to
Home,
furnished
; call 992·
buy llat bed for one ton
tures of shining elegance are replacing them. has a tremendous future and that in this era of
2076.
truck. Call 9~9- lP73 .
The police are doing aline job around town and a people sitting and watching TV too much, it
10- ~-6tp
l0-29-61c
good percentage of'the offensive characters are would be healthierfocthem to get out and dance .
BY VEMCO being removed from the street. In short, there's
I've always maintained that if I were 211 1971 VOLKSWAGEN . Super ADO-A-ROOMS
ADD ROOMIS) TO YOUR
Bee tle, cheap, 24 ,000 miles. Aa rebirth of prosperity due and the setting is a years younger I'd open a baUroom in every
MOBI.LE
HOME
FOR
1
condition . Phone 992-6222
BDRM
..
DEN.
OFFICE.
16
-+-+-4~~1'1 safer, more orderly area, one people will find major city In the United States. Besides New
after 5 p.m.
STD.
PLANS.
SAVE
TIME
:comfortable and no longer frightening to tr~vel. York, 1 have had them In Philadelphia,
10-24-Sic
SSS . YOUNG'S MOBILE
::=-1-1 Call me the supreme optimist but that 's how I Brooklyn, Boston and Los Angeles. My wife and I
HOME SALES, ST. RT. 7 &amp; 3S
1970 TO RINO GT, 2 door hard· I B E L 0 W S I L V'E R
-~
~~n~~-m~-~~and
top, power steering and power
ME.MORIAL BRDG.),
Having been a showman since 1916, whe11l ..our big secret is that we dance regularly.ln fact,
disc brakes ; ~ new llres ; GALLIPOLIS.
phone 992-2339.
opened my first Roseland in Philadelphia, I see dancing has been the greatest single influence
10-29-ltc
l0·29-61c
all this as not only good for visiting crowds but on rny career since my college days at
1965 ATlAS' Mobile Home:·
't--t-:--J~-6~4---11-+-+--1 gre&amp;t for business. And at Roseland here in New .Unlver~ity of Pennsylvania.
.
50xl0, two bedroom, front
~-------~-----,
York, we. have added reaSQJl for optimiS!Il. · 1was tl)en d.ti!liig my wife, Poro.thy, and she_ 1 · • your phon• •J lJ Jlnll•l
kitchen, excellent conditiOn .
Phone 985-3555.
Business is fine. We'll welcome our 55,000,000th loved to go dancing. The IIO-C8lled dance spota in I" C"11h ruulu"• ·tDo. ·whenJ
l0·zf·6tp
·
,.
...
pJ•ce
an
utiotl
••ntl
patron · !lome time this · summer and Phi!ildelpllia were homely big rooms with no 1
Ad. rou. van .. tt furniture,
are investing some' $500,000· for music imagination, terribly lit by a single fixture in the )appJ hnct1, cloth•••• .do• I 1970, 12X60 TOTAL ohictrlc
mobile home. Pay oft ~.900.
and dance talent during the next. middle of the room. I felt that a well-decorated Jteru of other unu.td bUt I
Phone 98l-4207.
l'.lltful
H•••f
.
.
I
'
. . ....
12 months. We recently revived ''name" ballroom with charm and elegant lighting could
1Q·29-21c
=+--I bands as Friday night features and we'll resume be very PQPUiar. The result was the first . '-----------"!"'"--~
~1-+---t them come September. I've always believed in . Roseland. Today a plaque on the wall of our
the old-tiiOe proven name •orchestras and so current f4,000,000 52nd Street and Broadway
..-I--E~-+---1f---l some months ago, noting the wave of noltalgi!o, ballrqom llat8 over~ married ctliiPles who first
we signed headline orchestras for Friday illghts met at Roseland. ThO&amp;e couples would never ,
such as Count Basie, Harry James, Woody have wed, their Children never _existed If it
Heiman. the Glenn Miller and the Jinuny wasn't for Dorothy's love for dancing.
Dorsey Orchestras, tester Lanin's society band;
We have a capacity fill' 3,500 people and we
•'
-:=f-1 Tommy Mercer's, Ray McKinley's, Dick reach it Saturday• and &amp;mdays. We're alreatly
Jargens', Sy Oliver's;all of whom are box-office booking bands flw yean from now and when I
'1-''t--1 draws. They were buUt in ·an era when radio talk with producer1llke Hal Prince and ~thent,
-t-+--1 Wttes galOre w-ete al'lll!Able to make orchestras they too sound opllmlttic. Restaurateurs, nigbt.r
Into "oome'' banda. Thl,l is why 1 feel th.tt If big spot operators, theater ownere, 1111ny ~ whom
~+~-+-f city and network atations today woul.d glw bands have been ~rrting, seem to feel there s pros01 YOU~ DIAL
_ ...i.-J.....II..oi....J mote time, we'd be asSured of countless great f!erlty ahead. I'm the fil'llto_~grr;; As~e man
oome banda tomorrow.
asld, "There's sood news t~lgh&lt;.
1-Talk Idly
2-Repu!se

------

-:-:-=_,,......,...=.,
-+--J
-+-+--1

-+--J

GEORGES.HOBSTETTER

I

•

1969 CHEVROLET.................. '2295

Sharp-Sharp.

See the 73 Oldsmobile

tr~t k .

lruck. Beautiful wh . over blue finish . Book Value $2650.00.

and

FURNITURE,

350 V-B engine, auto. tran s. , P.S., P.B., Cheyenne equip ..
chrome·front bumper, rear s-tep bumper, radio, beautiful ,
black accented with white: This is an extremely low

307 V-8 engine, custom Deluxe cab, side mldgs., fu ll wh.
covers. r . step bumpers, radio. chrome W.C. mirrors,
chrome· frl . bumper, rear step bumper, local 1 owner

1972 HONDA CL 100

.··. 70 Cadillac Sedan DeViHe

TRUCK BUYS

mileage

1972 DODGE DEMON

ra o, one

'4000

·r--...,--..,----....,..,.--:-------'---;

WMP0/1390

NOI1ll'10S

',

I ,,
' I

. '

White with black vinyl top, turquoise Interior. full

800 X 16 .5 ATLAS truck RUSSELL ' S
Furnllure
pl ows; 2 good rabbit dogs;
Weather -guard tires , used
Upholstery; free pickup and
Nale Vanaman , phone 742lust3,000 miles ; 2 sets French , wdelivery ~ ·phone•9921-5~1(1"'
5322.
doors ; phone 992-7889 .
l0-27-301c
l0-27-21c
..
l0-26-3tp
WILL cut or trim trees.
NOW WRECKING the former 1967 PLYMOUTH318 motor and reasonable; also clean out
Epple 's Grocery Store · transmission, both in good
basemenls, allies
and
building in Parr.~ roy . All
cond ition, $100 each ; call 992· cellars ; phone949-3221.
kinds ol building .naterials 2927.
10·4-30tc
for sale on the iob. Call 992·
10-27-Jtc
5946 or 882-3219.
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
l0-26-12tc
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
110 Mechanic Sl.
Real Estate For Sale
CLEANED,' REPAIRED.
Pomeroy, Ohio ~5769
CDRN, $1.15 a bushel . Phone
MILLER SANITATION.
247-2852 , Andrew Cross, HOUSE in Long Bollom, phone. STEWART, OHIO: PHONE
Letart Falls, Ohio.
985-3l29.
662-3035.
NEW LISTING
_ _ _ ____l_o._26_61c
· _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _6_·
1l-lfc
10·4·-ttc · VILLAGE -,6 rooms, bath, 3
bedrooms, large living and
'lo CHAROLAIS bull, will be 2 RACINE - 10 room house, SEWING MACHINES. Repair
dining . Front porch and
years old lirst ot May . Call bath, basement, garage, fwo
service. all makes. 992-2284.
nearly an acre of land.
773-5559, .
lots . Phone 949·4313.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
Asking $10,500.00.
10-26-lfc
4-5-lfp Authorized Singer Sales and
MIDDLEPORT
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
-----~---------'
COME AND SEE. Have new BUILDING lots In Rock Sprlri!is
J BEDROOMS - Gas
shipment of flowers lor fall in registered sub-division; =-=--:-::---~~-=-3·:::.29·1fc.
healing, lots of paneling.
and Christmas; will make phone 992-2789.
Front porch. Level Jot. One
flower arrangements ; have
l0·25-61c Real Estate For Sale
floQr plan. ,Asking · only
. $15,000.00. .
over 1,000 gift Items, also
iewelry, Avon botiles, some COMFORTABLE two story
POMEROY
.
home. full basement, bath
antiques ; open 9 a.m. to 6
2
STORIES8
rooms,
bath,
and lf2, attached garage! and
p.m .,. except Friday, closed
furnace. full basement, 2
rcLELAN.D·
exira
lot. In a good location .
Friday; phone 985-3537;
..
porches. Nice level lot .near
Smalley's Gift Shop, Chester, Basic turnifure available .
REALTY
.
shopping.
Only $7500.00.
Phone 992-7384 or 992-7133 for
Ohio.
LOT5-LOT5-LOTS
:
608
E.
Mitn
l0-18-121c appointment.
FIVE POINTS - l1 acre
l0-25-6tc '·
,,;,.Pomeroy . ~
surveyed
lots. Rolling land
....
.
1966 STARCRAFT tent trailer. - - - - - - -- that's
well
drained. VIew of
sleeps 8; stove, sink, 4 ~OOMS and balh, 3 acres ot
Route
7.
Plan
your future
refrigerator. excellent con. land, two-th:rds basement,
$5,500.00 BUYS
home on one of these fine
dillon, $975 . Phone 367-7530. building 20' x 40'. plus barn,
plols.
10·24-6tc located In Long Bottom , city 2 bedrooms. Bath. NEW
ON HARD ROAD
water, partially remodeled; large garage 24x3l . Slorm
doors and windows; gas
8 ACRES - Good for
phone 985·3539.
l0-2l-lotp furnace. Lar,ge lot. Other
building several , hou!ts .
features.
Water tap already paid. AU
TRAILER SETUP
well drained. Asking Qlly
$4500.00.
10 ACRE S, Waler. septic.
patlo. f~ l!!i!l basementL
POSS.LB.tLIT'C
j300 tile block for .ba,ement.
5 ROOMS - Back porch,
Cabin. CA'LL ON THIS .
cellar and a nice sandy
garden
on State Route .
$3,700.00
.
IDEAL 5-ACR'E RAN'CI-j. Lake
Large
Jot.
Been asking
GRANDOLDER
HOME
Conchas, New Mexico. $2.975.
$5,000,00,
what
will you ofMIDDLEPORT,
Grant
St.
No down. No Interest. $25 mo.
REGISTERED male Beagie
fer?
·
.
Frontage
132x310,
9
rooms.
~
for 119 mos. Vacation
pup, ~ 11:! months old, sh,ots;
ORANGE TOWNSHIP
bedrooms, bath, 2 porches,
Paradise
:
Free
Brochure.
Donie McFarland, Mason, W.
97 ACRES- 30 In moa-.
Ranchos Lake Conchfts: Box cellar, garage apertment,
Va. 25260.
slorage
building,
2
olher
lois
Good a room farm home,
2001 OD, Alameda, California
10-27-Jtp
available. THIS YOU MUST
moilern .bath, coal furnace,
94501.
basement, barn and other
10-3-30tp SEE.
5 PC. ·BREAKFAST ·set, for·
buildings . All minerals.
mica top, modern, 60" long,
$19,500.00.
FARMLAND
tor
sale
by
owner;
Your
REALTOR
!san
expert
excellent condition : will
acres of level land. Meigs who sees. studies and sells
AN INV ESTMENT IN
sacrifice. phone 992-2961 after 82
County.
Ohio.
on
County
Road
PROPERTY NOW, WILL
mMY
homes
every
YOlO'
.
He
5 p.m. .
46, lix:aled 2 3·10 miles south ·can save you t)me and
SAVE
A ~EAOACHE
- 10·29-3tp of Tuppers Plains P.O. on
money ...
WHEN RENT GOES UP.
good hard surfaced road; also
HELEN L. TIAFORD,
WALNUT Sfereo -radlo com- on
CALL USTODAY
Tuppers Plains , water
' ASSOCIATE
bination, 4 speed Intermixed system;
HENRY E. CLELAND
farm house
NO
SUNDAY SHOWINGS
changer, 4 . SP!!aker sound In need ofIncludes
repair, lwo bams In
REALTOR
system, dual volume controls. good · condition.
992-3225
several
PHONE 992·2259
Balance S69.57. Use our outbuildings; land lays
well;
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
has beautiful mounlalnous
l0·29.0tc view fn all direction~; apJ1I'O&lt;Imately 25 ml!et from
B...EAVTIF~UL Colonial Maple . ·Athens, Ohio and Parkers·
stereo, AM.FM .radio, 4 burg, W. Vo., I~ ml!es North . .
speakers• .4 speed automatic of Pomeroy, Ohio. Ideal for 11
chanyer, . separate controls. nice llomtlsl . development,
Balance $79.70 . Use our etc. Sauthoastern Ohio Real
budget terms. C,.ll 992-7085.
REAL ESTATE BROKER ..
Estale Company, Broker;
10-29-61c
phone ·Btl pre, ~23-6293 ;
Parkersburg, 45-7539 or ol22·
H &amp; N DAY old or started
8905. Prlc» W,OOO; •terms,
Leghorn pulle!S. Both floor or
cash. Ask directions at
cage grown · available . Mlllhone's Servlc» Station at
•pOMEROY - Six room house and bath. 2 Pc;t""", ~A.
housing
&amp; Tupperi Plains. •
Poullry,
ground, some timber, 1 e-raoe. price SlW.Oo. .
automation. Modern Poullry,
10.22-91p
399 W. Main. Pomeroy, 992·
2164.
RACINE - Six r - &amp; bllh, 2 porches, large tot,
8 ROOM nouse and bath, nice
garage,
quiet neighborhood, $10,000.00.
10·29-lfc
large lol, natural gu, buill-In ·
cttilnels In kllchen. Oose to
NEASE SETTLEMENT- Six ·room houtt, ·"A. -land,
7 WEEK old pigs; phone 9o19., radio stftllon In Bradbury.
double
garage, good country llomt, $12,100.00.
·
Phone 992·2602.
2163.
10-29-l;ztc •
10.27-Jtp
RACINE - 80 A. farm, 5-room house.2 mi. out of Racine,
$23.000.00.
.
POMEROY ~ Hous4t, 6 rooms
,.
and
bath,
2
large
porches,
CALL
HILTON
WOLFE
~EAGLES puppies, 8 week'$
large
lot.
newly
palntld
r
RIAL
ESTATI!
SALESMAN
old ; phone 992,7387.
phone 992-33'14.
PH. Nt-3111
.
I0-27-3tp
' 10.29-Jtc

'.

Swlng.er 2 dr. H.T., V-8, I-llite, p-steer(ng, fac tory air.
vinyl · roof, . rallye wheels, -.ery nice.

Check ..These

1971 CHEV. 8' FLEETSIDE ....... '2895

1972 · DODGE DART

-

70 Cadillac Sedan DeVille ·

/1 '

I.C iT WfRE:&lt;]:!~Reb

72 ~iliac . Sedan DeVille

.'

Dozer &amp; End loader worll,
ponds. b.sitment, landscaping. Wt have 2 size
dozers, 2 siZJ folders. Work
done by hour or contrsd.
Free . EstlmatH. We also
haul fiil dirt, top 1011. Dump
!rucks and low•boy for hire.
see Bob or·ROQ.tr Jelltrs,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
after 7 p.m. or phont 9925232.
.

'4000

operator's license? Call 992-

An International D &amp; B listed
company
is seeking
a
responsible man .o r woman to
service estaclished retail
accounts in th is area . Our
prestige brand name products
are heavily advertised on T.v .
and In such publications ·as
CosmopOlitan and Playboy .
The in dividual who qualifies
for
this
exclusive
distributorship must be at:ile to
start immediately, and have
the reQuired minimum in ·
vestment of 52500 . For full
written information , send
vour name. address and phone
number to : The .Thomas
Company,
Consumer
Products Division, 1400 East
rouhy Avenue. Des Plaines ,
Illinois 60018, Or, if you prefer.
c:all 312 -298 -7880. Exchange of
eterences required .

BR11i MOVING

Let us be your one stop shopping center for
sharp late model used Ci!rs. We have our cars ·
in the showroom. out of the weather for your
shopping convenience . These cars have been
serviced, tuned. and winterized for the best
buy in the area. 30 units to choose from .

'

'

Virgii B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

school. Some classes still
open. Will also do sewing and
alleralions. Phone 985·3860 or
99.1 - ~344 alter 5 p. m.
I0-26-61p

Racine Gun Club .

DICK
VAUGHN

-::-:-:-:-:-----=-ONE SET of Ferguson 14"

SEWING CI!'ASSE 5'&lt;1ow being
• given by Betly Frede&lt;lck at
•• lhe newly opened N&amp;F
l Sewing Center, Chester. Ohio,

match .

DALE
LITTLE

COAL, Limestone, Excelsior
Salt Works. E. Main St .•
10·25-4lp
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
REGISTER ED Angus calves ; 2
4-12-lfc
bulls of breeding age: Erisco ~-=-----­
and Wye blood lines; Bill JUST TAKEN IN, Singer
Sewing Machine. Will sell for
Witte, Rock Springs, Ohio;
small balance of $36.21 or
phone 992-2789.
10-25·12tc
payments may be arranged.
Phone 992-l331 .
9-7-tfc
APPLES. Fi.tzpalrick Or chards, Stale Route 689, - - - - - - - - Phone Wilkesville 669-3785. Fl REWOOD; phone 992-2413.
l0-27-2tp
8-30-lfc

22 RIFLE and high-powered

i

Quarter

cleaning tools. Small pa int
damage in shipping. Will take

ELLEN'S Gift Shop. Reedsville,
will be open Fridays,
Saturdays and Sundays, l

f

registered

VACUUM cleaner. new 1972
model. Complete with all

Hilton Wolfe, owner.
10-27-Jtc

ROAD

.o.

Business Opportunities

stitch. Full cash price $38.50
or budget plan available.
Phone 992-5641.
I0-24-61c

out of season or on Sundays.

'

HORSE$-I yearling slud, 2--&lt;i
yr. old geldings. l- 2 yr. oi'il''
mare, l-6 yr. old mare, all

original cartons . No at tachments needed as our
controls are built-in . Sews
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buflonholes. sews on button's,
monograms and blind hem

NO HUNTING on my property

l

li I HAVE
. ToGo
Take Me To

"1·:1814

PAINT DAMAGED, 1972 zig·
zag sewing machines. Still In

PIANO luning at your service
now ; phone 992-2082.
l0·29-3tp

·•

OpenS Til 5
Monday thru Saturday ·
606 E: Main. Pomeroy, 0 .

"Custom Meat CuHing"
Quick and Courteous Service

Horses, phone 985-33.oll .
l0·27-3tc

Home
and ~ pall bearers.
Ernestine Fisher and the
Fisher Family.
10-29-llc
'·

.Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

1968 DODGE 1-ton truck. stalfe
body. Good condition. Phone
985-4190 or 985-4153.
l0-26-6tc

are

Funeral

5.55

On,Most American Cars
·-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

.

For Sale

bors who remembered me

Dan1els,

Kuhl's Bargain Center .

12 X 60 MOBILE home; adLIIs
only ; call 992-5443. ·
10.22-tfc

:i Card of Thanks ·

..'

Wheel Alignment

TRAILER . Brown's Trailer
Courl;
phone
992-3324.
10.22-tfc

~

Saturday.

•

EXPERT

DRIVE A LITTLE
-51\VE A LOTI

1

FURNISHED 2 bedroom
aparlment. adults only,
Middleport ; phone 992-3874.
10-22-tfc

Additional 2.5c Chaige · oer
Advertisement .
'

CADILLAC, .
Of, Course You C8n"

Business ·Services·

only .

Syracuse; phone 992-5462.
l0-29-31c
4-l2:tfc · ·

•i p .m. or s p.m. 11 11 u:
• JO p.m . APARTMENTS near new 2 BEDROOM mobile home,
.
Meigs High School ; C&lt;tll 773- Rnbcr1 Hill . Phone 949-3811
or 992·6641 after 7 p.m .
10-26-6tc
reward f5'o afe return ; phone ·
10·25 -6fc
5268 after 5 p.m.
992-2&lt;20.
10·29·12tp NEWLY remode led 4 ·roam
10
27
3
. ·
Wanted To Rent
•·
unfurn ished apartment · with
. ~RATES
CH ILD'S pel poodle, white; 1 BEDROOM · apartment in 3 ROOM 'i!Od bath furnished
bAih . Will be ready by
apartment ; must ' have a
tFor Wan\ Ad Serv ice
lost, stra yed or stolen ; an .
Nnven1ber fst'. Inquire at 304
Pom erov ·Middleporf
area ;
5 ~nts per Word one insertion
refe-rence ; also sleeping
swers to the name of F'uzz ie;
Spring Ave ., Pomeroy .
ca
ll
446-2732.
Gallipolis,
or
Mlnimum ·Charge 75c
r oo m s ;
Aline
Weaver ,
·
10-26-lfc
handsol)'le reward ; conta ct
w rite Danny Buckley , Rt . 1,
12 cents per w,S)rd three
Racine.
949-3584.
Carol
Mull
ins,
Portland,
0
.
Gallipolis.·
con5e,utlve lnstrtibns .
10- 27- 61~ TRAILER space alter Nov . I,
10.29-7tc
10-27-31p
. · 18 cents per ,word six con·
· The Publisher reserves the
riQ~t to edit or reject any ads
deemed
obj!ctionat . The
PUblisher Will not be responsible
for more than one Incorrect'
ln!l•r"tlon .
,. .

WE. CAN SAVE
YOU MONEY! .

""OWN A

For Rent

I,

''

l

�~·

I '

.

•

•.

•

24- TheSund~yTimes-Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 29,l972

. SundlJy _Times_-Sentinel Classifieds For Fast-R~sults Use
.WANT .. os.

.'
•

oNFORMATIO~

·' ,.

D~AD'I.INES

5 P,M ; Oay . ~efOre Publlc;atlol?."
Monday Deadline 9 a m
·.
Cancellation- CorreCtiOns

··n ;

Will be accepted untrl9-a .m . fat
· Day of P&amp;PIIcatlon

. REGULATIONS

Lost

'

Help Wanted

PART Basset and part Beag le 8 A By 5 1 T T E R
in Old Town Flats area ;
answers to nam~ of Boy :
ch ild's pef ; phone 949.27.46 .

10-27-61c

and

houscl;ecpcr wi th ·a 3 year old
g i rL l ive .iA i.f poss ible ;
dCI)CfldalJie and sing le persor1, ·

2.11 o 35 years old ; call Charles
King , 992·3184 be twfl'en 12 and

For Rent

3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and HOUSE, 3 rooms and bath,
unturnished

P.hone' 992-5434.

apart ments .

furni~hed ;

adult s

BLACK
Mid·
dleport Scottish
; · answersdogto inAmos;

~---.,.---

'c

one mile from Eastern High

secutlve Insertions .
2.5 Per C-ent Discount on ·pale!
-.ds and ads paid w i th in 10 days .

School on Route 7: call 985·
4134 .
l0-25-61p

CAR[! OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

$1 .50 for 50 word minimum
Each addition!'! word 2c
'
BLI~D

AOS

.
OFFICE HOU'II\ .
1:8•JO a.m,. t9 5:00. p.m. Dally,
1:30 a.m . to l~ : oo Noon

~

!II I WISH to thank my many
friends, relatives and neigh.

with their cards. gifts and
telephone calls on my 88th
birthday. Sunday, October
22nd. Mrs. Jennie Hansher
10-29-llc
UUR SINCERE thanks to
friends and neighbors for
their many kindnesses during
the. Ill ness and death bf our
' lovea one, Frank Fisher.
Special thanks to the Rev .
Owl~ht Zavllz, Dr . Roger
EwinQ

Notice

$27 cash or budget plan
available. Phone 992-5641.

l0-24-6tc

p.m . to 7· p.m.; novelties, toys,

1965 INTERNATIONA l &gt;cout,

clothing and furniture. Call
378-6249 or contacf at home.
10-27-Jtc

4·wheel drive ; needs front end w ork, $400 i ca ll 992-6064.

rifle shooting match; Sunday,
October 29, l p.m. at Rutland
, Gun Club. New.J..IIIIa Road.
9 10-29-llc
--:-:--::-:c::-:-::-:-c=
KOSCOT KOSMETIL~ . Our
latest Is "One Day "
fro~rance . Others Include
. "K' and The Lemon Grove.

Also new children's products.
Phone Helen Jane, 992-lll3.
We'd like to serve you .
'10-24-tfc

located across lrom grade

GUN SHOOT, Sunday, October
29, l p. m. Factory choked
guns on ly . Second place
shooters get tree shot In next
Ass orted

meats .

l0-26-3tc

CANING done ; also Splint rush
and reed work; R. L. Moore,

992-6046.

10-25-61p

'•HEll"
HEATING
&amp;
'
COO.LJNG
Window

·Air Conditioners
Hoi Wate~ Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

ARNOLD

'

~~-·BrOTHERS .
'1'~:.! -:t .. 'lti

Pomeroy, 0.

,

" L-----....;----~~
• PIANO and organ lessons by
graduate

of

Cons~rvatory

992-3825.

Cinci nnati

ot Music: phone
.
10-25-litc

REVIVAL ol Freedom Gospel
Ml ssl o n. , B~Id Knobs, starting
November 2nd, 7:30p.m . Rev .
L. R. Glusencalnp. Pastor;
Rev. GeorRe Hoschar, West
Columbia, W. Va ., Evan ..
gellst;
special
singing;
public Is Invited.
I0-25-6tc
HAYMAN 'S Auction - a good'
· place · to · go -each Friday
'· evening, · 7 p.m. at laurel
Cllff ·on old Rt. ·7, 1 mile west
of Rack Springs Fairground .
· 10-lO·tfc

Wa11ted

i

DRAFTSMAN

A local comp~ny h11 •n
IIPIIIIIIII for In txpetltneeCI'
I drlfbmln, excetltnt fringe
..,..,II 11111 opportunity for
IIIVIftetmtnl. · S.ltry.
, commtnsu·r•t• with
lllcltgNVIIII IIIII txPII'Itllce.
' 111111 llrlef NIVmt fo P.O.
In ftf-$, ·C-G Tile Ollly
s.tlntl. Poliltroy, Ohio

"""·
AI '141vll
•• ,l.,.r.

Oppertunlty

991-3374
end Dele Help Ytu
Mtlt Problems.

DISTRICT
DISTRIBUTOR

R1. 1 "at caution light"

. TUPPERS PLAINS
Clean Usld furniture

Guaranleed appllences
BIKES Huffy' 20",
Murray 10 speeds- discount
prices.

LAYAWAY FOR XMAS
Open to 1; Closed Mondays

For Sale

eEMORE e'100~0F
LIFE OUT fRoNT. ..
IN THE AUDIENCE ,

Sliver metallic fonosh, black vinyl top black lnl . f
power (lqulpment. T&amp; T wheel AM.'FM radio ere~~· ~· ·
Conlrol air conditioning. Less than IO.OOO mile~. oma e

'6500
-·
...
'·-

. SCi11.ver metCalllc finish, blue Interior, full power equipment
om a1e onlrol air conditioning AM-FM dl
•,
owner new Cadillac trade.

POMEROY
HOME .&amp; AUTO .

~ROOFING

eHEA'('lNG
·.
.

992-2094

•PtUMBING

•CARPENTRY
.•SPOUTING
•PAINTING
For Free Estimate
PHONE 992!2550
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
2966.

6-15-ttc

606 E. Main

Pomeroy

.

_

\ 2 Dr. Coupe, Slant Six, t-flite, 8,000 mile~. j ust lik e new,
warranty left.
.

Cycle. single cyl., 4'speed, 900 miles.

power equ1pment, Clima'te Control air conditioning .

1971 HORNET SST

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Stoll' In and See Our
Floor Display.

·-

EXPERIENCED
.

Ra~lato

Cadiflac. Oldsmobile

&gt;.

READY -MIX
CONCRETE From' the largest Truck or ·
delivered right to your · Bulldozer Radiator to lhe
projecl. Fast and easy. Free Small~st Heater Core.
estimates. Phone 992-3284.
Nathan Biggs
Goegleln Ready -Mix Co .•
Radlowr Spec_falfst
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-tfc

1971 CHEVROLET 8' FLEETSIDE '2495

1968 ENGLISH FORD

2 Ton. l&lt;l-2" cab to' axle. 292 cu . ln . engine, 15.000 lbs. 2·
speed rear axle, 825x20, 10 ply tires, full depth loam seat.
heavy duty springs, solid cab. Ready to go to work.

Cortina 2 dr. sedan, 4 cyl. , 4 speed. 30 miles per gallon.

SEPTIC TA~KS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446·
~Pomeroy
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
OWner &amp; Opera tor.
5·12-lfc SEE US FOR: Awnings, slorm
doors and windows, carports,
C. BRADFORD, 'Auctioneer
marquees. aluminum sldln!lo
Complete Service
and railing. A. Jacob, sale~
Phone 949·3821
represenlative . For free
Racine, Ohio
estimates·, phone Charles
Crill Bradford \
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
S-l -Ife
Johnson and Son, Inc.
.
..,.-----~===~
3-2-lfc
O'DELL WHE-EL'allgnment
' - -AND
--located at Crossroads, Rt. 124. BACKHOE
DOZER
work .
Complete front end servl~e,
septic
tanks
Installed.
George
tune up and brake service.
&lt;Bill) Pullins. Phone 992-2478.
Wheels balanced elec·
4·25-lfc'
Ironically.
All
work .:=--oco=---- guaranteed .
Reasonable
rates. Phone 742-3232 or 992· DOZER and back hoe work,
ponds and septic tanks, dit3213.
ching
service; top soli, fill
7-27-tfc
dirt, limestone ; B&amp;K Ex·
cavating. Phone 992-5367,
CEILING tile, wall paneling
Dick Karr, Jr.
installation, reasonable, for
9·1-tfc
estimate call 992-l47l after s
p.m .
,10-27-Jtp'

see lhe "Good Guys" at 'R. H. Rawlings Sons Co. Mill &amp;

·

Second, Middleport, for the deal of your choice on a late
model used car .

992-5342
GMAC Financing Available
Pomerot ,
Open Eves. Til 6-Til 5 P.M. Sat.
"You'll ~ike&lt;''" Qua lily Way of Ooing"Buslness"

Real Estate For Sale

~-. :The
.

992-2151

2nd Ave.

... 3

Both vulnerab1e

67-Witty remirk

1-l!l,vestha:atlon
6-Got UIJ'
11-Mortlfli:atlon
16-0inner course .

70-Studies
71-The sun
72-comparatlve
endinl

125-Portlon of
mad/cine
.126---Abate
128-Burma native
129-Turklsh flag
131-0ispatehed

21-luse aaaln
22-0odeeanase

74--Giver

132-Novelty

7~Pal(

86-Ciass of
vertebrates

133-Babylonlan
hero
13s-:-Mutlc: as
written
138---Proh!blt
139-Speck
140-Swin river
141-cravet
142-A state (abbr.)

88-Bruillan

143--Above .

69-Tranqullllty

Island

23-Caudal

n.:....EscaPed
78---Small valley

apoendaJe•
24-Ciimbinl plant

79-lnvents
82-lnterred

25-Simian

84-Sphero!ds

2&amp;-0pel'l· mouthed
28-Huvenly
bodies
30.:....Pivnoun
' 32-PnposltJon
33--Symbol for
tellurium
34-SIIkwonn
35--Eda:e
36-So~

37.:-unusual
38-Guido's hlah
note
40-lnclta to

action
42-Sud
eontalntr
43-Buffeted
44-PiiYins card
.45- Man'$
nickname
47-Stopped
49-Sudt
"'50-Period of time
51-Sell to

consumer
54-Eet.·.
55-Grate
5~Doa•

59-Collection of
facts
60--Communlsl
62-Piaces tor
pra'vlsions
64-Welklne ttlck

West

North
It

Ea•t
2...

South
2.

85--Pedal dla:ils

estut~ry

144-Baked clay

,

15-Hold In h.i lh
regard
16-Winter vehicle
17--Gotl
18-Note of scale
19-Positlve pole
20-Fop
27-&lt;&gt;btaln

29-Wtlked on
31-Cut

·

36--Strlke
31- AIJfi:rlan
set port

39-PIIatter
40-Mix
41-Girl's name
42-looked
Intently
43-Foremtn

89-ltallan seaport

145-Dwe/1

9D--Castar

147-Sovere!a:n
44-E~~:act
149-Underworld aod 46--Cooled la11a
15Q-Suraical thread 48-Break
1!52-Morw recenT'
suddenly
15-4--Prlest's
49-Joumey forth
11astment
5Q-.Vast aaes
1S~Falry in ''The
51-Wireless
Tempnf'
52-Go in
158--0mlt from
53-cltrut fruit
pronunciation
(pt.)
159-Score
55-Recover
160-Typlfled
56--Wol'itman
161-Undrested kid
57-Comical

92-Folds
94-Relevance
98-lnlets
99-Part of foot
100-Hal"i'est
a:oddess
102-chalrs
103-Be mistaken
104-EIIeryone
105-Tradad for
money
106--Piece of
dinnerware

lOB-Soak
109-World
oraanlzallon·
(I nit.)
llO-Brother of
Odin
111-Biemlsh
112-Nobillty
114-llmb
116-Cyprlnotd fish
117-Prepared for ·
print
119--Muslcal
lnttrumenl
12Q-Cash drawer

~Jli!!JI _
·- ~nl!ttJIIIhiiY
66-JDII!riUITI
124-Spread lor
• • 1 tremens (abbr.)
drylne ·

DOWN

92- ~nlmet's coat

Pass
Opening lead-• 8

4•

J'a~

1

H. T.,

fully

1971 lnternational ..s2495
Truck, 4 Ton,
mileage.

V·B engine,

low

'

1971 Plymouth ......s2495
2 Door H.T., factory air. tully
equipped. V-B engine, P .S.. vinyl
roof.

1972 Opel ............. s2295
Rally, 2 Dr ., H. T .• 4-speed, 4 cyl.,
9.000 easy miles. Nice car, real
clean.

1969 Opel Rally ........ ~ ...}1395

Two door, local 1 owner, low mileage, good tires, clean
interior , green finish. radio, 2.000 c.c. engine, 4 speed . ~

4 Speed, 4 cyl.. yellow with black top, good
condition.
·

1971 CHEVROLET .................'3095

1968 Cadillac Eldorado s2695

Malibu hardtop coupe , low mileage, new car title, sa ndalwood finish with brown vinyl roof, vinyl sadd le Interior .· 4-season air condlti tion ir,'lg, turbohydramatlc,
power steering, white-wall tires, rally wheels, front &amp; rear
guards, power brakes, radio .

Equipped with all extras. 1 local owner.

Good Selection '.67 Models
Priced Right

1968 CiEVELLE ................... '1795
Malibu Spt. Cpe, air condlfloned. 307 engine. power
sleerong &amp; brakes, red finish with black vinyl top &amp; blk.
vinyl Interior, radio, good w-w fires.

Don't Forget
We Service What We Sell

1968 CAMARO Conve~ible ·····'1795

Our Word Is Our Bond

Local 1-owner low mileage car, beautiful cream finish
with black top. bucket seats, with console, new white-wall

Open Evenings Til 7 p.m. &amp; Sat. Till 12 Noon.
for Service &amp; Sales s p.m.

ONE OF THE SCARCE ONES, AND AS NI CE AS THEY
COME .
'
·

.

~.! -~!! :~ ~~~SENGE~.•SARS

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

AT

992·2174

GREAT SAVINGS

'

93- Mast
95-Chlnese

Electra 225, 4 door
equipped.

1971 PINTO FORD ................. '1749,

tires, power steering and automatic transmission. Radio .

Pass
3 "'
Pass
' 'PaS\!' '''6 ¥ """ Pllls

' .
ACROSS

Middleport, 0.

28
NORTH (D)
and queen of clubs while you
.A 9
hold queen-five of spades and
.Q 9
one trump.
tAK7 52
East has to hold the king
... AQ72
of clubs and a high diamond. · WEST
EAST
He must chuck his 10 of .• J 8 7.6 4 2
• K 10
spades.
¥74
.A
Now you simply lead a t JB
t QI0943
... KJI095
spade to dummy's ace drop- 4864
ping East's king. That leaves
SOUTH
your last trump and spade
.Q S3
YKJ10 86532
queen good for the last two
tricks.
t6

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

r

plenty of luxury try this outstanding buy ,

ONLY '2849

R. H. Rawlings Sons Co.

.

ace of clubs and ace of diamonds, ruff a diamond and
lead a trump.
East is in with the ace
and leads a thir~ diamond.
You ruff this high and get
the bads news about that
·
suit.
Don't give up. If East
holds the king of ·spades he
belongs to you. You enter
dummy with the queen of
trumps; discard ·one spade
on the king of diamonds;
ruff a club and run off all
your trumps but one to leave
dummy with the a c e of
sp!!des, seven of diamonds

Sporlwagon. Beautiful coral finish with vinyl in·

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

Criss-Cross Squeeze

(

terior, factory air conditioned, luggage rack, radio.
350 V-8 engine, automatic trcms., power steering &amp;
brakes, li~e neww-w tires. If you want. a show piece
&amp;

1967 Dodge Dart 4 dr. sedan. Slant s ix. t .
flite, radio. runs like a new one ... this
week only
$795

By. OSWll]d &amp; James Jacoby
. We are indebted to Eric
Jet\nersten for this beautiful
.. play, which is t9st described
. as a three-suit, criss-cross
•squeeze.
.. You don't have to approve
of the bidding if you don't
.want to but you do find yourself in six hearts against a
club lead. You also remember that East put in a vulnerable overcall and it looks
,as if · he wiU hold all the
,J\Igh ~ards.
You have 11 easy tricks
and a 12th if diamonds break
43, so you take dummy's

1971 BUICK

4 Dr. sedan, V-8, 1-fl ite, sharp little '68 model.

WIN AT BRIDGE

SMtiH N.ti.SON
MOTORS. INC. ·
Ph. m-2174 ·

1972 ·Buick ...........s4995

Sportabout Wagon, six cyl. , automatic; roof ra r k . Sha rp-

KARR &amp;VAN ZANDT

.'

Real beauty .

.

1968 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE

Service

Sale! 3 Company Officials' Cars

monetary
unit
96--Crass
97-s .. na:les
99-Cowl
101-Declared
105-HLrrled
106-Ften ch priest
107-Stlleld
Ill-stalk
112-Mall
113--Qtherwlse

115-Rillar In
Arizona
116-Ea:yptlan
&amp;oddess
' 118--Roman road
119- Sharpen
121-Veeeteble
123- A continent
(abbr.)
125-Pawl
126-Hoii fat

The bidd ing has been :

West

North

F.ast

Prompt Delivery on
'73 Cars &amp; Light Trucks

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
You, South, hold:

Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio

Auto Sales

Wanted To Buy

DLD Furniture, oak tables, '63 CHEVROLET. Call 992-:1645.
10-26-Jtc
organs. dishes, clocks. brass
beds, Qr complete

.AK862 YA 2 t 5 4AK862
What do you do now?
A-Bid (our hearts. This will
be a strong invitatlon to your

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

partner to ,i,)id a club slam.
TODAY'S QUESTION

992 -2126

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. Til8

Your partner co ntinues to five
clubs. What d o you do n ow?

127-Seeured

129-Yilify
J3o-Part of jacket
131-The tun
132-Sprllt
134-Som · ·
58-Transattlons
136-Atttmpted
61- Spanlsh title
131-Pessaleway
63-Bespatter
139-Ponenlve
64-Female student
pronoun
68-Summed up
t4o--Son of Adam
70--Mortl lucid
1"4-Bushy clump
71-Selty
145-Shoemaker's
73-Ceremony
too!
74-,-Food proa:ram 146-Dine
75-Milll;l merry
147-Ttar
71-Conflaeratlons 148-Ethloplen

Pomeroy

hou~eholds .

Write M. D. Miller. Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271. Mobile Homes For Sale
6-28,1fc 1956 Paramount mobile home,
8x45, 2 bedrooms. $1495.
WANTED - Old upright Phone 992·3205,
pianos, grand pianos , old
l0·26·3tc

..

pump organs. Any condition.

Payin~ SlOeach. Write giving TWO bedroom mobile home, In
directions. Willen Plano Co .. good condlllon. $1,600.
Box 188, Sardis. Ohio, 43946. Zuspan 's Trailer Court.
l0-27-61p Velma G. Zuspan, Mason. W.
Va .
IO-l2·1Stp
For Sale

8 TRACK STEREO. freight CASH paid for all makes and
damaged, In beavliful walnut
models of mobile homes.
console. Will sell for S101.50 or
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
pay $1.50 per week . Phone 992·
·
of.lJ-tfc
lJ3.l ."
9·7-lfc

BY JACK O'BRIAN
Our eye is on the future and we're optimistic.
..
.
TIIROUGH
ROSE-COLORED
GLASSES
or
course
when you •ve been on Broadway since
3-Spanf•h cheer
• Air Conditioners
4-Exlst
NEW YORK (KFS) - We dropped into 1919, you feel that the rich nostalgic trend too is POODLE puppies. Si lver Toy.
Parkv
iew
Kennels,
Phone
9925--Greek letter
• Awnings
Roseland Ballroom recently and got a Jesson in something in your favor as wi!lless the huge
5443.
6-Vitla:oth kfnl
·· ·Underpinning .
8-l.l·llc
7- Comptelned
optimism from Lou Brecker, the owner-foWider. Phoenix House benefit, "The ·Fabulous 40s,"
8-Natlve metel
. The elder statesman of show business may be staged at Roseland recently. In one night such
Complete mQblle hQmo
'8-Challenee
tltlt
' 9-Conjunctlon
Auto Sales
overly optimistic, but when he talks about names as Bette Davis, Lana Turner, Ruby
SO-PrOceeds
149- Ellplrt
service ~ plus glganllt ,
to--worm
81-0cean
151-Note of tule
Broadway we listen respectfully :
Keeler (who danced in our shows as an unknown 1970 MODEL 442 Olds. ~SS cu. 'display of mobile home• .
11-Sedatt
83-knock
153- Babylonltn
·
In. 375 h.p., new t ires, mag ,always. avallable,ll ...
12-Damaie
As Gabriel Heatter used to say, Jack, years ago), · Patsy Kelly, Alexis Smith, Jane
84-Prohlblts
dtlty
wheels,
1
owner
.
,Excellent
j
13-Three·load
87-Pitfertd
155-Posstttlvt.
"'!Jlere's good news tonight." I'm referring to Russell, Myrna Loy, Joan. Bennett, Claudette
sloths - ··- condition, call 985-3J4l. ~~ - - -- MILLER
-·-.
89-Acdd...:' ~~~ - pronoun
New· YorKers and out.(J!-!Qw~riers shoiiJQCOIIiert, Cena Horne, Jane Withers, DiifDiiley,
what
14-1,050 (Roman
90-Lons for
· 1!57-Symbol for
10 27 31
.
. . c . • MOBILE HOMES·
number)
91- Yexad
' ruthenium
enjoy knowing about Broadway, the world's Truman Capote, Lady Nancy Keith, Kitty
1
970
PLYMOUTH
4
door
Fury
I,
l220 Wishing~ Blvd.
most exciUng S!feet. It is undergoing a Hawks, Sen. and Mrs. Jake Javits, Alan King ,
~~~~~ 9~:~~:;~' car. Sl400. 423-7521
BELPRE, Ci.
tremendous modernization '!fld clean-11p and this Renee Taylor and Joe Bologna, Bella Abzug ,
I0-26·3fc
.,-t--t-+-+-1 should mean moreandmore businessJilong .what etc., all danced and participated. Their pleasure
was once widely known as The Great White Way. in dancing drove home a point to me that in a
for quick sale, l96S
FOR SA LE. 1965 extra good .PRICED
51x
10
New
Moon Mobile
-:-f-1 Old buildings are coming down and rich struc- major city like New York, the elegant ballroom
Volkswaoen . Would like to
Home,
furnished
; call 992·
buy llat bed for one ton
tures of shining elegance are replacing them. has a tremendous future and that in this era of
2076.
truck. Call 9~9- lP73 .
The police are doing aline job around town and a people sitting and watching TV too much, it
10- ~-6tp
l0-29-61c
good percentage of'the offensive characters are would be healthierfocthem to get out and dance .
BY VEMCO being removed from the street. In short, there's
I've always maintained that if I were 211 1971 VOLKSWAGEN . Super ADO-A-ROOMS
ADD ROOMIS) TO YOUR
Bee tle, cheap, 24 ,000 miles. Aa rebirth of prosperity due and the setting is a years younger I'd open a baUroom in every
MOBI.LE
HOME
FOR
1
condition . Phone 992-6222
BDRM
..
DEN.
OFFICE.
16
-+-+-4~~1'1 safer, more orderly area, one people will find major city In the United States. Besides New
after 5 p.m.
STD.
PLANS.
SAVE
TIME
:comfortable and no longer frightening to tr~vel. York, 1 have had them In Philadelphia,
10-24-Sic
SSS . YOUNG'S MOBILE
::=-1-1 Call me the supreme optimist but that 's how I Brooklyn, Boston and Los Angeles. My wife and I
HOME SALES, ST. RT. 7 &amp; 3S
1970 TO RINO GT, 2 door hard· I B E L 0 W S I L V'E R
-~
~~n~~-m~-~~and
top, power steering and power
ME.MORIAL BRDG.),
Having been a showman since 1916, whe11l ..our big secret is that we dance regularly.ln fact,
disc brakes ; ~ new llres ; GALLIPOLIS.
phone 992-2339.
opened my first Roseland in Philadelphia, I see dancing has been the greatest single influence
10-29-ltc
l0·29-61c
all this as not only good for visiting crowds but on rny career since my college days at
1965 ATlAS' Mobile Home:·
't--t-:--J~-6~4---11-+-+--1 gre&amp;t for business. And at Roseland here in New .Unlver~ity of Pennsylvania.
.
50xl0, two bedroom, front
~-------~-----,
York, we. have added reaSQJl for optimiS!Il. · 1was tl)en d.ti!liig my wife, Poro.thy, and she_ 1 · • your phon• •J lJ Jlnll•l
kitchen, excellent conditiOn .
Phone 985-3555.
Business is fine. We'll welcome our 55,000,000th loved to go dancing. The IIO-C8lled dance spota in I" C"11h ruulu"• ·tDo. ·whenJ
l0·zf·6tp
·
,.
...
pJ•ce
an
utiotl
••ntl
patron · !lome time this · summer and Phi!ildelpllia were homely big rooms with no 1
Ad. rou. van .. tt furniture,
are investing some' $500,000· for music imagination, terribly lit by a single fixture in the )appJ hnct1, cloth•••• .do• I 1970, 12X60 TOTAL ohictrlc
mobile home. Pay oft ~.900.
and dance talent during the next. middle of the room. I felt that a well-decorated Jteru of other unu.td bUt I
Phone 98l-4207.
l'.lltful
H•••f
.
.
I
'
. . ....
12 months. We recently revived ''name" ballroom with charm and elegant lighting could
1Q·29-21c
=+--I bands as Friday night features and we'll resume be very PQPUiar. The result was the first . '-----------"!"'"--~
~1-+---t them come September. I've always believed in . Roseland. Today a plaque on the wall of our
the old-tiiOe proven name •orchestras and so current f4,000,000 52nd Street and Broadway
..-I--E~-+---1f---l some months ago, noting the wave of noltalgi!o, ballrqom llat8 over~ married ctliiPles who first
we signed headline orchestras for Friday illghts met at Roseland. ThO&amp;e couples would never ,
such as Count Basie, Harry James, Woody have wed, their Children never _existed If it
Heiman. the Glenn Miller and the Jinuny wasn't for Dorothy's love for dancing.
Dorsey Orchestras, tester Lanin's society band;
We have a capacity fill' 3,500 people and we
•'
-:=f-1 Tommy Mercer's, Ray McKinley's, Dick reach it Saturday• and &amp;mdays. We're alreatly
Jargens', Sy Oliver's;all of whom are box-office booking bands flw yean from now and when I
'1-''t--1 draws. They were buUt in ·an era when radio talk with producer1llke Hal Prince and ~thent,
-t-+--1 Wttes galOre w-ete al'lll!Able to make orchestras they too sound opllmlttic. Restaurateurs, nigbt.r
Into "oome'' banda. Thl,l is why 1 feel th.tt If big spot operators, theater ownere, 1111ny ~ whom
~+~-+-f city and network atations today woul.d glw bands have been ~rrting, seem to feel there s pros01 YOU~ DIAL
_ ...i.-J.....II..oi....J mote time, we'd be asSured of countless great f!erlty ahead. I'm the fil'llto_~grr;; As~e man
oome banda tomorrow.
asld, "There's sood news t~lgh&lt;.
1-Talk Idly
2-Repu!se

------

-:-:-=_,,......,...=.,
-+--J
-+-+--1

-+--J

GEORGES.HOBSTETTER

I

•

1969 CHEVROLET.................. '2295

Sharp-Sharp.

See the 73 Oldsmobile

tr~t k .

lruck. Beautiful wh . over blue finish . Book Value $2650.00.

and

FURNITURE,

350 V-B engine, auto. tran s. , P.S., P.B., Cheyenne equip ..
chrome·front bumper, rear s-tep bumper, radio, beautiful ,
black accented with white: This is an extremely low

307 V-8 engine, custom Deluxe cab, side mldgs., fu ll wh.
covers. r . step bumpers, radio. chrome W.C. mirrors,
chrome· frl . bumper, rear step bumper, local 1 owner

1972 HONDA CL 100

.··. 70 Cadillac Sedan DeViHe

TRUCK BUYS

mileage

1972 DODGE DEMON

ra o, one

'4000

·r--...,--..,----....,..,.--:-------'---;

WMP0/1390

NOI1ll'10S

',

I ,,
' I

. '

White with black vinyl top, turquoise Interior. full

800 X 16 .5 ATLAS truck RUSSELL ' S
Furnllure
pl ows; 2 good rabbit dogs;
Weather -guard tires , used
Upholstery; free pickup and
Nale Vanaman , phone 742lust3,000 miles ; 2 sets French , wdelivery ~ ·phone•9921-5~1(1"'
5322.
doors ; phone 992-7889 .
l0-27-301c
l0-27-21c
..
l0-26-3tp
WILL cut or trim trees.
NOW WRECKING the former 1967 PLYMOUTH318 motor and reasonable; also clean out
Epple 's Grocery Store · transmission, both in good
basemenls, allies
and
building in Parr.~ roy . All
cond ition, $100 each ; call 992· cellars ; phone949-3221.
kinds ol building .naterials 2927.
10·4-30tc
for sale on the iob. Call 992·
10-27-Jtc
5946 or 882-3219.
SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
l0-26-12tc
SEWAGE SYSTEMS
110 Mechanic Sl.
Real Estate For Sale
CLEANED,' REPAIRED.
Pomeroy, Ohio ~5769
CDRN, $1.15 a bushel . Phone
MILLER SANITATION.
247-2852 , Andrew Cross, HOUSE in Long Bollom, phone. STEWART, OHIO: PHONE
Letart Falls, Ohio.
985-3l29.
662-3035.
NEW LISTING
_ _ _ ____l_o._26_61c
· _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _6_·
1l-lfc
10·4·-ttc · VILLAGE -,6 rooms, bath, 3
bedrooms, large living and
'lo CHAROLAIS bull, will be 2 RACINE - 10 room house, SEWING MACHINES. Repair
dining . Front porch and
years old lirst ot May . Call bath, basement, garage, fwo
service. all makes. 992-2284.
nearly an acre of land.
773-5559, .
lots . Phone 949·4313.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
Asking $10,500.00.
10-26-lfc
4-5-lfp Authorized Singer Sales and
MIDDLEPORT
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
-----~---------'
COME AND SEE. Have new BUILDING lots In Rock Sprlri!is
J BEDROOMS - Gas
shipment of flowers lor fall in registered sub-division; =-=--:-::---~~-=-3·:::.29·1fc.
healing, lots of paneling.
and Christmas; will make phone 992-2789.
Front porch. Level Jot. One
flower arrangements ; have
l0·25-61c Real Estate For Sale
floQr plan. ,Asking · only
. $15,000.00. .
over 1,000 gift Items, also
iewelry, Avon botiles, some COMFORTABLE two story
POMEROY
.
home. full basement, bath
antiques ; open 9 a.m. to 6
2
STORIES8
rooms,
bath,
and lf2, attached garage! and
p.m .,. except Friday, closed
furnace. full basement, 2
rcLELAN.D·
exira
lot. In a good location .
Friday; phone 985-3537;
..
porches. Nice level lot .near
Smalley's Gift Shop, Chester, Basic turnifure available .
REALTY
.
shopping.
Only $7500.00.
Phone 992-7384 or 992-7133 for
Ohio.
LOT5-LOT5-LOTS
:
608
E.
Mitn
l0-18-121c appointment.
FIVE POINTS - l1 acre
l0-25-6tc '·
,,;,.Pomeroy . ~
surveyed
lots. Rolling land
....
.
1966 STARCRAFT tent trailer. - - - - - - -- that's
well
drained. VIew of
sleeps 8; stove, sink, 4 ~OOMS and balh, 3 acres ot
Route
7.
Plan
your future
refrigerator. excellent con. land, two-th:rds basement,
$5,500.00 BUYS
home on one of these fine
dillon, $975 . Phone 367-7530. building 20' x 40'. plus barn,
plols.
10·24-6tc located In Long Bottom , city 2 bedrooms. Bath. NEW
ON HARD ROAD
water, partially remodeled; large garage 24x3l . Slorm
doors and windows; gas
8 ACRES - Good for
phone 985·3539.
l0-2l-lotp furnace. Lar,ge lot. Other
building several , hou!ts .
features.
Water tap already paid. AU
TRAILER SETUP
well drained. Asking Qlly
$4500.00.
10 ACRE S, Waler. septic.
patlo. f~ l!!i!l basementL
POSS.LB.tLIT'C
j300 tile block for .ba,ement.
5 ROOMS - Back porch,
Cabin. CA'LL ON THIS .
cellar and a nice sandy
garden
on State Route .
$3,700.00
.
IDEAL 5-ACR'E RAN'CI-j. Lake
Large
Jot.
Been asking
GRANDOLDER
HOME
Conchas, New Mexico. $2.975.
$5,000,00,
what
will you ofMIDDLEPORT,
Grant
St.
No down. No Interest. $25 mo.
REGISTERED male Beagie
fer?
·
.
Frontage
132x310,
9
rooms.
~
for 119 mos. Vacation
pup, ~ 11:! months old, sh,ots;
ORANGE TOWNSHIP
bedrooms, bath, 2 porches,
Paradise
:
Free
Brochure.
Donie McFarland, Mason, W.
97 ACRES- 30 In moa-.
Ranchos Lake Conchfts: Box cellar, garage apertment,
Va. 25260.
slorage
building,
2
olher
lois
Good a room farm home,
2001 OD, Alameda, California
10-27-Jtp
available. THIS YOU MUST
moilern .bath, coal furnace,
94501.
basement, barn and other
10-3-30tp SEE.
5 PC. ·BREAKFAST ·set, for·
buildings . All minerals.
mica top, modern, 60" long,
$19,500.00.
FARMLAND
tor
sale
by
owner;
Your
REALTOR
!san
expert
excellent condition : will
acres of level land. Meigs who sees. studies and sells
AN INV ESTMENT IN
sacrifice. phone 992-2961 after 82
County.
Ohio.
on
County
Road
PROPERTY NOW, WILL
mMY
homes
every
YOlO'
.
He
5 p.m. .
46, lix:aled 2 3·10 miles south ·can save you t)me and
SAVE
A ~EAOACHE
- 10·29-3tp of Tuppers Plains P.O. on
money ...
WHEN RENT GOES UP.
good hard surfaced road; also
HELEN L. TIAFORD,
WALNUT Sfereo -radlo com- on
CALL USTODAY
Tuppers Plains , water
' ASSOCIATE
bination, 4 speed Intermixed system;
HENRY E. CLELAND
farm house
NO
SUNDAY SHOWINGS
changer, 4 . SP!!aker sound In need ofIncludes
repair, lwo bams In
REALTOR
system, dual volume controls. good · condition.
992-3225
several
PHONE 992·2259
Balance S69.57. Use our outbuildings; land lays
well;
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
has beautiful mounlalnous
l0·29.0tc view fn all direction~; apJ1I'O&lt;Imately 25 ml!et from
B...EAVTIF~UL Colonial Maple . ·Athens, Ohio and Parkers·
stereo, AM.FM .radio, 4 burg, W. Vo., I~ ml!es North . .
speakers• .4 speed automatic of Pomeroy, Ohio. Ideal for 11
chanyer, . separate controls. nice llomtlsl . development,
Balance $79.70 . Use our etc. Sauthoastern Ohio Real
budget terms. C,.ll 992-7085.
REAL ESTATE BROKER ..
Estale Company, Broker;
10-29-61c
phone ·Btl pre, ~23-6293 ;
Parkersburg, 45-7539 or ol22·
H &amp; N DAY old or started
8905. Prlc» W,OOO; •terms,
Leghorn pulle!S. Both floor or
cash. Ask directions at
cage grown · available . Mlllhone's Servlc» Station at
•pOMEROY - Six room house and bath. 2 Pc;t""", ~A.
housing
&amp; Tupperi Plains. •
Poullry,
ground, some timber, 1 e-raoe. price SlW.Oo. .
automation. Modern Poullry,
10.22-91p
399 W. Main. Pomeroy, 992·
2164.
RACINE - Six r - &amp; bllh, 2 porches, large tot,
8 ROOM nouse and bath, nice
garage,
quiet neighborhood, $10,000.00.
10·29-lfc
large lol, natural gu, buill-In ·
cttilnels In kllchen. Oose to
NEASE SETTLEMENT- Six ·room houtt, ·"A. -land,
7 WEEK old pigs; phone 9o19., radio stftllon In Bradbury.
double
garage, good country llomt, $12,100.00.
·
Phone 992·2602.
2163.
10-29-l;ztc •
10.27-Jtp
RACINE - 80 A. farm, 5-room house.2 mi. out of Racine,
$23.000.00.
.
POMEROY ~ Hous4t, 6 rooms
,.
and
bath,
2
large
porches,
CALL
HILTON
WOLFE
~EAGLES puppies, 8 week'$
large
lot.
newly
palntld
r
RIAL
ESTATI!
SALESMAN
old ; phone 992,7387.
phone 992-33'14.
PH. Nt-3111
.
I0-27-3tp
' 10.29-Jtc

'.

Swlng.er 2 dr. H.T., V-8, I-llite, p-steer(ng, fac tory air.
vinyl · roof, . rallye wheels, -.ery nice.

Check ..These

1971 CHEV. 8' FLEETSIDE ....... '2895

1972 · DODGE DART

-

70 Cadillac Sedan DeVille ·

/1 '

I.C iT WfRE:&lt;]:!~Reb

72 ~iliac . Sedan DeVille

.'

Dozer &amp; End loader worll,
ponds. b.sitment, landscaping. Wt have 2 size
dozers, 2 siZJ folders. Work
done by hour or contrsd.
Free . EstlmatH. We also
haul fiil dirt, top 1011. Dump
!rucks and low•boy for hire.
see Bob or·ROQ.tr Jelltrs,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
after 7 p.m. or phont 9925232.
.

'4000

operator's license? Call 992-

An International D &amp; B listed
company
is seeking
a
responsible man .o r woman to
service estaclished retail
accounts in th is area . Our
prestige brand name products
are heavily advertised on T.v .
and In such publications ·as
CosmopOlitan and Playboy .
The in dividual who qualifies
for
this
exclusive
distributorship must be at:ile to
start immediately, and have
the reQuired minimum in ·
vestment of 52500 . For full
written information , send
vour name. address and phone
number to : The .Thomas
Company,
Consumer
Products Division, 1400 East
rouhy Avenue. Des Plaines ,
Illinois 60018, Or, if you prefer.
c:all 312 -298 -7880. Exchange of
eterences required .

BR11i MOVING

Let us be your one stop shopping center for
sharp late model used Ci!rs. We have our cars ·
in the showroom. out of the weather for your
shopping convenience . These cars have been
serviced, tuned. and winterized for the best
buy in the area. 30 units to choose from .

'

'

Virgii B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker

school. Some classes still
open. Will also do sewing and
alleralions. Phone 985·3860 or
99.1 - ~344 alter 5 p. m.
I0-26-61p

Racine Gun Club .

DICK
VAUGHN

-::-:-:-:-:-----=-ONE SET of Ferguson 14"

SEWING CI!'ASSE 5'&lt;1ow being
• given by Betly Frede&lt;lck at
•• lhe newly opened N&amp;F
l Sewing Center, Chester. Ohio,

match .

DALE
LITTLE

COAL, Limestone, Excelsior
Salt Works. E. Main St .•
10·25-4lp
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3891.
REGISTER ED Angus calves ; 2
4-12-lfc
bulls of breeding age: Erisco ~-=-----­
and Wye blood lines; Bill JUST TAKEN IN, Singer
Sewing Machine. Will sell for
Witte, Rock Springs, Ohio;
small balance of $36.21 or
phone 992-2789.
10-25·12tc
payments may be arranged.
Phone 992-l331 .
9-7-tfc
APPLES. Fi.tzpalrick Or chards, Stale Route 689, - - - - - - - - Phone Wilkesville 669-3785. Fl REWOOD; phone 992-2413.
l0-27-2tp
8-30-lfc

22 RIFLE and high-powered

i

Quarter

cleaning tools. Small pa int
damage in shipping. Will take

ELLEN'S Gift Shop. Reedsville,
will be open Fridays,
Saturdays and Sundays, l

f

registered

VACUUM cleaner. new 1972
model. Complete with all

Hilton Wolfe, owner.
10-27-Jtc

ROAD

.o.

Business Opportunities

stitch. Full cash price $38.50
or budget plan available.
Phone 992-5641.
I0-24-61c

out of season or on Sundays.

'

HORSE$-I yearling slud, 2--&lt;i
yr. old geldings. l- 2 yr. oi'il''
mare, l-6 yr. old mare, all

original cartons . No at tachments needed as our
controls are built-in . Sews
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buflonholes. sews on button's,
monograms and blind hem

NO HUNTING on my property

l

li I HAVE
. ToGo
Take Me To

"1·:1814

PAINT DAMAGED, 1972 zig·
zag sewing machines. Still In

PIANO luning at your service
now ; phone 992-2082.
l0·29-3tp

·•

OpenS Til 5
Monday thru Saturday ·
606 E: Main. Pomeroy, 0 .

"Custom Meat CuHing"
Quick and Courteous Service

Horses, phone 985-33.oll .
l0·27-3tc

Home
and ~ pall bearers.
Ernestine Fisher and the
Fisher Family.
10-29-llc
'·

.Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

1968 DODGE 1-ton truck. stalfe
body. Good condition. Phone
985-4190 or 985-4153.
l0-26-6tc

are

Funeral

5.55

On,Most American Cars
·-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

.

For Sale

bors who remembered me

Dan1els,

Kuhl's Bargain Center .

12 X 60 MOBILE home; adLIIs
only ; call 992-5443. ·
10.22-tfc

:i Card of Thanks ·

..'

Wheel Alignment

TRAILER . Brown's Trailer
Courl;
phone
992-3324.
10.22-tfc

~

Saturday.

•

EXPERT

DRIVE A LITTLE
-51\VE A LOTI

1

FURNISHED 2 bedroom
aparlment. adults only,
Middleport ; phone 992-3874.
10-22-tfc

Additional 2.5c Chaige · oer
Advertisement .
'

CADILLAC, .
Of, Course You C8n"

Business ·Services·

only .

Syracuse; phone 992-5462.
l0-29-31c
4-l2:tfc · ·

•i p .m. or s p.m. 11 11 u:
• JO p.m . APARTMENTS near new 2 BEDROOM mobile home,
.
Meigs High School ; C&lt;tll 773- Rnbcr1 Hill . Phone 949-3811
or 992·6641 after 7 p.m .
10-26-6tc
reward f5'o afe return ; phone ·
10·25 -6fc
5268 after 5 p.m.
992-2&lt;20.
10·29·12tp NEWLY remode led 4 ·roam
10
27
3
. ·
Wanted To Rent
•·
unfurn ished apartment · with
. ~RATES
CH ILD'S pel poodle, white; 1 BEDROOM · apartment in 3 ROOM 'i!Od bath furnished
bAih . Will be ready by
apartment ; must ' have a
tFor Wan\ Ad Serv ice
lost, stra yed or stolen ; an .
Nnven1ber fst'. Inquire at 304
Pom erov ·Middleporf
area ;
5 ~nts per Word one insertion
refe-rence ; also sleeping
swers to the name of F'uzz ie;
Spring Ave ., Pomeroy .
ca
ll
446-2732.
Gallipolis,
or
Mlnimum ·Charge 75c
r oo m s ;
Aline
Weaver ,
·
10-26-lfc
handsol)'le reward ; conta ct
w rite Danny Buckley , Rt . 1,
12 cents per w,S)rd three
Racine.
949-3584.
Carol
Mull
ins,
Portland,
0
.
Gallipolis.·
con5e,utlve lnstrtibns .
10- 27- 61~ TRAILER space alter Nov . I,
10.29-7tc
10-27-31p
. · 18 cents per ,word six con·
· The Publisher reserves the
riQ~t to edit or reject any ads
deemed
obj!ctionat . The
PUblisher Will not be responsible
for more than one Incorrect'
ln!l•r"tlon .
,. .

WE. CAN SAVE
YOU MONEY! .

""OWN A

For Rent

I,

''

l

�...

~

I .

'

26 - The Swtday T1111es -Sentinel, Sunday, Oct 29, 1972

S~nday

•

Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Card of Thanks
deepest gralltude the
. WITH
famtly of Benn le Stover
wishes lo thank all t he
'

1

relattves, friends, neighbor s,
pallbearers . and all who sent
food , flowers ~and ~ards , also

'

Notice
COMMU NilY Nur se ry School
S.lflll' L tccn scd Dildy at
Prl' ~ bytenrw Ch~1rch Ca ll
t16 1873 ~Iter ·1 P m

2536

Rev . Hueholf and Wa ugh
Halley, Wood funeral home

Your comfortmg expresstons GLASS for all' needs Home
serv~~_..and msurance datms
of sympathy w ill alwa ys b~.&gt;
Rus 's Glass Sennce, 704 Ptne
remembered
and
ap
St
, R10 Gran de, Otuo 245·
preciated, Ruby and Elmer
5048
Stover and famtl y

NOTICE
TWO WAY Ra d1 0s Sales &amp;
Ser'&lt;Ce New and used c~·s •
pol1cc mondors , antenn,as .
etc Sob' s Cdtzens Band

Rad1o Equ1p , Georges Cr~ek
Rd , Gallipolis, Ol110 446·4517
i

212 If

DAY CARE
SUN VALLEY Nursery School ,
l1censed by State of Ohto, l lf:z
m lies west of new hospital.
180 If
255 I
577 Sun Valley Dr. Ph 446
3657 Day care that says "we
care " Madge Hauldren ,
'
Owner Lored 1 t h &amp; John
Ha uldren, Operators
11411
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The chink "The dectston of whethVETERANS
president of the Institute of er to use the machines 1s never Cct real bcneftl from your
Society, Ethics and Life Sci- purely medtcal, " he said .
r;erv•cc If you've been
scpMaled
fron' I he serv iCe as
ences said here Thursday mght "Doctors make worth
an E 4 or abnve w.th1n the las t
that the nation's doctors have judgements about patients.
1 years you may be eltg lb le ,
"been literally able to get away
''One major medical center
1 r tn •n•edtatc achve duty In
lilCI the U S Navy has In
with murder."
doesn't even have one dtalysts
tr 11duced new regula iiQ nS
Dr. WillardGaylin, professor machine because the head docFor further detail s contact
of psychiatry and law at Co- tor there doesn't want to decide
Gene Peters, 593-3566 collect
lf cet I\ lull f rcc ' BOO 282 1288
lumbia Uruversity, satd m an who should be put on the ma253 3
address at Case Westert] Re- chine and who shouldn 't,"
serve University that the "phy- GayUn sa1d .
I WILL NOT be responSible for
,liclan in the United States is
any debts other than my own
"There is something about
as of thiS dat e, October 29,
somewhere between the priest the role of a doctoF (hat em1972
and ordinary man."
powers him with authority that
Stgned Bryant E Duncan
"They've been literally able should be questioned," satd
255 3
-----to get away wtth. murder," he Gaylln.
sa le Mon and
SQid, " We go to lawyers for
"If a person has a RUMMAGE
lues , Oct 30 and 31, 9· 30
'counsel' but we follow doctors pleasurable ptece of behavaor
~ m to 4 p m Clothes, dishes,
antiques
and other Items
'orders."'
and a mmister says tis a sin,
Cedar
Street
Market Carner ,
01 Gaylin noted that many doc- you change mm1sters," he
of Thtrd and Cedar
tors decisions are moral ones satd.' "But if your doctor says
255 2
and not medical ones.
it's unhealthy, you'll change
DOES your home need pamtmg,
1\S an example he ctted the that behavior."
std• ng , roofing , remodeling,
use of kidney dtalysts rnapaneling , cement work,
barbecue, palms, or garage,
~~~iiiSI':I~~Wi:l.~:~.x:::::::::".::::x::-&gt;.:....;-;:~~·:?J!.~».aa&lt; a: ..~,
carport, etc ? You name tt,
we'll do If Reasonable rates
Ca ll 446 1753
•
119 If

Doctor favored position

Real Estate For Sale '

Real Estate For Sale

flJ/l(JJUfJ11L

MASSIE

REALTY
25 Locust St.
Howard Brannon, Broker
Off 446-2674
Lucille Brannon
Eve 446-1226 or 446-2674
$42,500
96 ACRE FARM - All electric
brtck home, 6 roorr.s and bath,
larg e eat tn kitchen. w b
frreplace tn family room .
beautiM ca rpet throughout,
oversize brtck garage. two
barns, frutf trees, tobacco
base . stream. spnng and well
water, 80 . A ttmber. 6 A.
bottom on Sf Rt 7
$26,500
NEAR NEW BRI CK- 3 large
BR and bath, beautiful built
m kitchen and large dtntng
area, deep pile carpet
throughout, well landscaped
one acre lot, must be seen to
be apprec tated
$26,500
16 ACRES - All electric home.
19' x 24' LR w1lh f~rep lace,
beaut tfut k1tchen wtth range
and ref , t; , basement, storm
w &amp; D , large 30' x 60'
bu 1ldmg, well stocked pond
$24,500

Really, 32 State St
TeL 446-1998

For Fast Results Us.e
r

~

I
!

NOTICE

\l'e

ST RT 588 - Near Rodney - STATE ROUTE 160 - 2 1972
1972 Schultz Mobile home, 14'
nrobilc homes on a 100x150
x 68 ', all elec. cen a1r
fl at lot Co water , paftos,
Located on 89 A Prt ce dnveway, brand new, never
$14,900
ltved tn Ltve m one and rent
the other $13,900
ST RT 588 - 21 3A wooded lot
..,o[\ Rural Water Lme Price I UNITS IN CITY - 2 double
$31750
and 1 s.tngle house on Garfte ld
Ave $25,000 buys lhem all
BIDWELL - Modern, 6 b1g
rms , uf1hly and bath Carpet VINT ON - emplfy store
tn ltv rm , plenty cabtnets tn
buddi ng downstairs plus 2
kitchen, lots of paneling, new
apartmen ts up $15,000
storm doors and windows
Barn 40' x 60' Loca ted on 2 CHESHIRE .:._ Trailer Park,
big, fl at lot~ Pnced to sell
polenltal mcome of $17,000
'
per yr
MILL CREEK - 4 rm house,
fur hea t, garage and 1 A , Ml DOL EPOR T - 12 rm house
$8,000
nn N 2nd Av e Could be used
ar;; I 2 3 or 4 homes
MERCERVILLE Cheap
housing, real nrce . 3 bd rm , POMEROY - 2 family home,
large ltv rm , nice bath,
Cllrllple tely modern
co pper plumbing, all tile
ce ilin~ . otl fur , 2 can~arage.
FARMS
Large shaded lot. Walk to i46 A flat and gently rolling
school Only $12,500
lan d new fences, pond, creek
fr
ontage, stto, 2 good barns,
NEAR Clay School - E•lra
crtb, fronts on 2 rds, close to
n1ce, 3 bdrm ., new ca rpet tn
proposed new U S 35, 44 A
l1v. rm, din. area, and hall It
corn
base pays better than
has new Aerobtc Sepftc tank,
$1,000 per yr , 25 A corn goes
full base ; w1 th part1al
wilh sa le. 1352 lb lo b base,
fmlshed rec. rm , attached 111odern
ranch style frame
gar and located on lh A
home wtth full basement.
shaded lot Pnce redu ced for
Don' t mrss thr s on e t
qutck sale .
29 A vacant land on route 160
nnrlh of Vmton Good barn
DEER CR. RD - Near new 4 rncluded
rms and bath, fur heat, 2
rms , carpeted, plus 2 A. good 36 A Morga n Twp , land con
land Good Spnng water Only tract
$10,000
2 A flat lot on rout e 325 between
INVESTMENT - In clfy, good Vtnton an d Rto Grande.
bust ness location, plus 2 Aprt.
rentals Icould he 3) Business 111 ACRES -- 55 •cres bottom, 9
bldg 1ncludes grocery and rnr horre, good barn, creek
meat processrng equrpment
frontage, 1 2 mde frontage on
Potential mcome from Apt
stale rd , con1plele ltne of
rentals 1225 per mo. Price farn• mach1 nery In cluded tn
$21.500.
sale Owner wttl help fmance

GET

AmiiiiOII

Neal Realty

,_,=

OHIO RIVER
R~

II
(')

·n

I I lJ

,...,.,..

---·---

t

Gallia Co.'s Largest
Real Estate Sales Agency
Office 446-3643
Evenings.call
E. M, "Ike" Wiseman 446-3796
E. N. Wiseman 446-4500

SPR IN G VALLEY - Lookmg
f
for elegance. thiS.coutd be •he
World's Larges
one Bt leve l, 3 large bdrms
w1th deep and w1de closets, all ~HE LEADER SINCE 1900 IN
tactory kitchen w1th diSh- SERVIN(l THE NATION'S
washer and di sposal Large BUYERS &amp; SELLERS.
l1v rm, 2 baths, large car
Ph. 446·0008
peted rec rm wtth bar 2 car
gar wtth elec dr , cen air.
You name tf and th1s house
INVESTMENTS
has tf Prtce upper 30s
MIDDLEPORT -- Modern 6
rrr1 hnme whrc h mclvdes 3
CITY - 5 b1g rms w1th full
BR, LR wilh WB fir eplace,
base , new furna ce, cen a1r ,
butltm kttchen and vttlify rm.
llv rm 14' x 24' Plenty
PLUS a sepa rate l'rm &amp; bath
storage room Lt v rm , hall , ilpl PLUS 3 late model
bath and master bdrm Has nr 11bt le homes now being
carpet over H W Prtce
ren ted Ltve tn th e home and
$25,000
q~j tect S5S5 per mo rent

:vma'ge"

~'1::..,,..,,_

Sale

AGENCY

REALTY

WOOD
REALTOR
446-1066

I

For

.'

STROUT 'THE WISEMAN

RUSSELL

cUtYWID~IkJ ~=!::!

Real Estate

Real Estate For Sale

NEAR TOWN - 5 rooms and
ba th , deep pile carpet
throug hout , two car carport,
~ torage bulldmg, Situated on a
we ll landscaped :~;4 acre lot
$24,500
ONE THIRD ACRE LOT - 7
rooms, 3 BR, 2 baths, all built
m klfchen wtth doubl e oven,
carport. workshop, In Ad·
dtson Twp
$19,500
2 STORY HOME - 4 BR, 2
baths , famtly room, all
electnc k1tchen, paneled OR,
• WB firepla ce 1n LR, carport,
and gutter work .
laundry and large workshop,
By Helen and Sue Hottel
@ ROOFING
Wilham Mitchell . 388 8507.
copper plumbtng , qutck
67·11
THOSE PERENNIAL CHAIN LETTERS
possess ion
518,800
Dear Rap :
RALPH 'S Carpet &amp; Uph olstery 4 BR HOME - Large two story
What would you do if you got a cham letter like I got. I'm a
Cleantng Servtce
Fr ee
covered wtth alumtnum
est1mates Ph 446-0294. Ralph
~ Otristlan but I don 't like copying letters and I can't afford
stdmg and stone. spacious
ea t m ktfchen, formal OR,
Z stamps, so I ignored this, and now I'm awfully worried. The A Davts, owner
9·11
laundry room. porch and
~ letter goes:
garage Plenty shade trees.
ll:
"THINK A PRAYER (and then there's a kinda long written
Jl12lot Very qutck possessiOn
s15,000
, prayer you're,supposed to copy) ... This prayer has been sent to
We would like to thank the
I'/•
ACRE
4 BR and bath,
you for gOOd luck. The original came from the Holy land . Send
merchant' for contributions
carpe
l
In
5
rooms,
alum mum
and everyone thai worked to
five cwies to five frienda and m four days you will receive good
sld
rng,
new
roof,
garage,
make our Halloween Car, luck, These must leave your house within 96 holl\"S. Do not break
workshop and cellar house,
nival a success.
storage butldmg, frutf trees,
{: the chain! AU. S. officer received $U,OOO and lost it because he
Cheshire Kyger PTA
now vacant.
~ broke the chalit. A Philadelphia man lost his life SIX days after he
S15,500
~ threw away this letter. After he died, he received $15,000. Copy
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story, 10
rooms, 2 bath, 2 porches. eat
; all this and send it on I"
In
kttchen. for mal DR. 2 room
1 Will bad things happen, like God purushmg me, or
basement wlth gas forced atr
I something? - WONDERING
furnace , corner lot Vacant
'
$13,000
3
BEDROOM
- Spae~ous
Dear Wondering:
paneled and carpeted LR, RODNEY - 3 yr old, 6 rm : 91 A - Rollmg grassland,
By
order
of
Centerville
Prayers are good, but threats are bad - and this chain letter
home, all carpet, all Elec , 11
t1n1ber pond, we ll. coun ty
banquet size kitchen, con
Village Council there
wa ter ava ilable BT rd , large
Is no more than a ridiculous threat.
crete porch, alummum m o budget at $26 per mo
hnn1e l O' Iill f wm. tovyp
siding, 17' x 30' garage and Th iS property has a ~argo
' ' If you're still worried, douse your superstitions by telling
will
no Trick, or
garage and located on a Jt4 1
I I
lWO&lt;KShop,
·'f&amp;lit'alt 'lh'a1'1l\'€maH .llb"llied was pr6bablY 90 years old (and Treat in
of
acre fla t lot Priced for a 12 A nex t to ctly llm tfs, home
56.800
rncl udes 4 rms and bath Good
how could he "receive" $15,000 after he was dead?); and the guy
NOW VACANT - Owner moved qUi ck sale at $21.500
Centerville.
tnvestmen t for only $12,000
to Florida. 2 BR, living room ,
Utat lost the money was most likely a klutz -SUE
kitchen, bath and storage plus CENTENARY - Edra n1ce 3
+++
or 4 bdrm ranch , w1fh H.W
Eber Whealdon, f furniture 100' x 100' lot
HOMES
Dear Won:
fl oors and carpet 11 has a BEAUTIFUL PLEASANT
Plenty shade
large lt v rm ., sam ... paneling
Mayor
VALLEY ESTATES - 3 BR
Better yet, tell yourself it's all a bunch of hokum.
and a k1 lthen that would
bnck, w w carpe l, J1,2 baths, 2
Chain letters, threatening bad luck and offering money ...
please any woman On t tfy
car garage. cent a tr, ga r
handkerchiefs ... aprons ... pantyhose ... whatever ... are good for
water &amp; nat. gas. Pn ce
d•s p . d ts hwas her , lovely
$23,500
b1 rch ca bmels Owner betng
; only one thing : the wastepaper bas~et. Worry not. - HELEN
trans ferred
+++
ADAMSVILLE - Older home
Rap:
made new, 5 b1g rms all 3 Ml
OUT
QU ICK
carpe ted, new 2 car garage
POSSESSION -· Lovely 3 BR
The student who felt doomed t, a life of loneliness because he
and located on a b1g flat lot
brtck and frame wtfh full
sals he was homosexual (but could never go to bed with a ma le)
Cheap at $15,750
basement, garage, large
just might be the vactim of the stereotype of homosexuality ,
fafllily rm , dtntng rm , 2 WB
presented by our culture.
,
ltreplaces, large J,:t A lot
GREEN ACRES
P"ce
Many semltive young men become convinced by inajortty
HE Who Hes ttates ge ts bumped reduced on thiS beauty, 4 yr. ADD ISON -- Modem 6 rm
old ranch , H W fl oo rs,
Iron, behind
opinion that "feminmity in a male means homosexual. But what
home wtlh brtck fron t, level
beaut1ful k1lche n, 3 Bd rms.,
is masculine and femmme is really only relative to the intot wt th 120ft fr on t, cen t atr,
A GRAND PLACE TO LIVE, Ph baths Th is house rs l1ke
car
pod, owner anx1ous to
dividual's culture, and much of what is regarded as femlnm e ts
RIGHT DOWNTOWN WIT H new Only $22,500
se
ll
Low dow n paymen t
70 FEET FRONTAGE ON
related to inteltigence rather than sex preference.
SECOND AVENUE . FOUR
FARMS
Due to ignorance, a man recogmzing "femmme" qualittes m
- II Berger Ave , Lovely
LARGE BEDROOMS WITH 40 A NEAR RIO ~ All Elec 5 CITY
2
BR
home w1th full
himself may believe them to be signs of homosexuality and
CLOSETS KITCHEN AND rm modern home, wtth alum
Lots of s hade
basemen
t
therefore either suppress them or admtt to being somethmg he
THRE F LARGE ROOMS Si ding , alum porch with
tr
ees
CONNECTED WITH concre te floor, good barn,
isn't.
Business Opportunities
SLIDING
DOOR THAT CAN some fruit, berries and NEI GHBORHOOD RD - 3 BR
Also, it ts normalto feel attraction (but not 5!!XUal desire) for
BE
OPENED
TO USE AS grapes, 12 A cleared and
SERV ICE Stal1on for lease,
n~odul ar home 2 Y[S. old, air
people of both sexes, but men have learned to suppress such
ONE
LARGE
ROOM,
GOOD could be cultrvated Price
excell ent locahon, patd
cnnd , partly furnt shed, a
BASEMENT,
ONE
AND
ONE
feelings for other men. Since the only thing that dlstmguishes
$18,500'
' ba rga m at $14,500
tramlng Please call 446·1085
HALF BATH, ALSO TWO
homosexuals from others is a sexual desire for members of the
8 5 p.m . Evenings 446 9380
R E NT E D T R A I L E R 92.5 A 9 m1 fr om town , al l flat CLOSE TO NEW MINE - 1970
248. 12 SPACES
same sex, I wonder if the lonely student is really m this
FOR INCOME, AN and gentle slope ; 45 A
Schultz 12x65 wdh 4xl2 ftp out
category? I feel that many boys swing over because they think
EXCEPTIONAL WELL
ldlabl e, tob base, rural
rrl1 • completely furnt shed,
BUILT HOME . PRICED waler.6 rm house with bath ,
Real Estate For Sale
they have no choice. If homosexuality becomes accepted, even
cen t atr, pat1o, cellar, barn,
AWAY
BELOW
RE· s torm dr s and windows
ultl!ty bulld•ng, buy w1th 1 A
more people (who could go e1ther way ) will choose the less
RANCHO REAL TORS PLACEMENT COST, tM. Pnce reduced, $31 ,500
or
30
desirable route. I don't think homosexuals should he persecuted,
MEDIATE POSSESSION.
• Headquarters for Gallia County
A. LOCATED at Bidwell , all VINTON
but I'm not for Gay Liberation's all out encouragement etther.
Real Estate Listings needed. NEW 3 bedroom home, very 30 tillable
or develop, 8 rm
Even more disturbing was this boy's implication that love
TWO FOR ONE
ntce kdchen, bath, gas fur
modern
home, all carpet,
bui ll in ki
HOUSE NO 1 Custom built
~ mf!!ns sex, Jf]l~ gan!Qy~ \Q other men (and women too ) without
nace , full ba-Sement wtth mueh paneling, storm drs - rm -;-- CR wi
new - 3 BR home leaturmg
garage m baseme nt, concrete and wtndows, 011 fur Thts IS
expecting sex, he would not he so lonely, The Btble says we
ba se ment,·snadv
famJiy room. air cond , slid.
dri
ve
on
S
R
141
Shown
by
an
1deal
sef·UP
for
a
lar~e
should love one another, but that certainly does not mean to go to
gla5s door to patio and 2 car
appotntment S23.SOO
fam1ly wdh children m
Ranny Blackburn
ga ra ge
bed with everyone we love. - ONCE LONELY TOO
Pnce
upper
thirttes.
Branch Mtmagar
sc
hool
HOUSE NO 2. Very good 6 21 , ACRES w1lh all electm
room country home, part
home. large kitchen, new 49 A. GOOD 7 rm . house, plenty ~----=-Dear O.L.T.:
basemt, , porch and cellar
stove and refr tgerator, bath storage room, carp~t and
house Bolh homes for the
Thank you for your fme letter. W1th all the books, arltcles
and double car garage
paneling B19 barn, plenty
pnce of one
and conjecture, we still lqtow so very U!Ue about homosexuality.
Pnced $17,000
good water, near 12 A bottom
GREEN TOWNSHIP
land It has 1,5191b. fob base.
RIVER VIEW
But of this we're sure: tolerance and attempts at unLOTS and acreage for 2 ACRES more or less wlfh 8 Price of $19,000, includes near WE JUST
listed a beautiful 4
derstanding will help far more than condemnation - which can
resrdent!al or commercial on
room house, seve ral out
2 ton fob.. tractor and other
bedr
oom
home on Lower
Rt 35, nea r hosp1tar
make a confused young man feel there is no other choice. buildings, otl heal, 3 bedroom tools
R1ver Road. This house Is
and bath Priced 518,000
HELEN AND SUE
only 6 years old and was built
NEW 3 bedroom home, bath,
•63 A. 5 mi. from Cheshtre, on
by Ernes t Brown Special
ga rage, la rge lot, city water 2 BR home tn Cheshrre wtlh Ward Rd., ho bldgs , un
features
are the beaufl(ul
and schools
larQe ltv mg room. kr tchen and derta ld w1th coa l Price
vtew
of
the
Ohio Rtver, den
ADDISON TOW NSHIP
bath Priced $14,900
reduced to $19,500
·
with
woodburning
fireplace,
NEAR NEW 4 bedroom home,
formal
dining
room
a nd
bath and hall $22,000
ANY HR. 446.l998
Un~eramltle theae fwr lumbiH,
LOTS - 112' • 525', Pn ce
partial basement. Lot Is 114' •
$2,500 , 100' x 750', Pnce - - - - - - - - one letter to e..h ~quare, to
290' Call today for an ap3', ACRE lot, rura l water,
52,500, 80' x 150', Pnce $1,800
for111 four ordinary wordo.
pointment .
beautiful se ttmg.
NEW LISTING
FARM, 257 Acres. 2 barns and 8
9
ACRES
vacant land on Kellqn
39 ACRES, 3 bedroom story and
room house Pnce $38,000.
ORRMA Ci
Road
nea
r town Less than
hall home. garage, barn.
'
S300
an
acre.
$15,000.
FARM, 23 Acres, at Eureka,
.
I .•
~acant land
Pnced $5,000
LOT 67' x 112' located at 54
Office 446.t066 ·
Garfield Avenue'. $1,000.
Even1ngs Call Ron Canaday
452 Second Ave.
446·3636
NEW LISTING
446·3434 446-4775
Russett D. Wood, 446·4611
3
BEDROOM
home at 1809
DEVELOPER'S DREAM - 18
J~~n 1. ~~~hards, 446-0280
Ches tnut Street Just recenlly
acres of good land suitable for
painted Inside and out. Carpet
sever,al houses. County water
m lt vlng room and three
on st te Four miles from town.
Would make a
bedrooms
BY OWNER
COUI..P SEA
good mvestment.
IPRUM4K
3 bedroom brick ranch , FARM NEAR MINE - 44 aero
U6EL.E66 THIN6Office Phone 446·1"4
farm with four bedroom
flreploct,
1'1&gt; car aHoched
10 F IOHi OVER!
Jay Sheppard 446-0001
Evenings
house with bath , Priced for
gar.... Approx. 1400 fl. of
Denvtr K. Higley 446·0002
M. Ntal 446-1546
Chtrles
quick sale.
living space downstairs, and
Wanda S. Eaheneur 446·0003
J , MlcMtl NNI 446·1503
'fllct for 3 rooms · in ~n·
finished
upst11rs, lar,e acre OVERLOOK OHIO RIVER REAL Esta te tor sale by owner
Three bedroom house on S.R. -FOR SALE BY OWNER - 2
tot
wllll
mono
land ovaltabht,
4 bedroom house, 21' baths,
7
with beautiful view of river.
story brick house at 452 Flr~l
311·1722.
.
fann!y room , kitchen, liv ing
Ave 7 rooms, 2 baths, gas hot
room, screened pat1o, garage
LIST WITH .US - If you want
air
furnace.
Present
and large basement. Located
arrangement 2 apartments.
action, list with OIHo River ,
on 80'•130' lot w1lh1n wal~mg
Am be~ ia the hardest-resin calf 446·3434.
- - easily connrtfll to one
d1
sfanre
of
all
schools
511
known. It comes from the
(MoweN-"1)
family dwelling Asking
Evenings
Chandler Dr , Po1nt Pleasant fossils of extmct pine trees
Bali'd,
·446-4632
,
S30,00Q
shown by apOscar
' ~~ ' hJoooiUILT . .OUP P~OYII INOUGII
Ph nne 675·2303 or 675 13i2
D J. Weathtrholl, 446-4244
polntment. 4.46-020e.
'
\hat once grew on the sboree
251 6 of the Baltic Sea.
('
Aowuu .,..,,.. .........,~...,.&lt;a!IH-PUI'I
Sleven R, Bth, 446·f58.l
255-1
, ..

Generation Rap ·

'11- The Sunday Times·Sentinel,~, Oct. 2!, !972

-~.--_;_:

DOC

NEW 1973 BUICKS

SMITH
SAYS

ARRIVING DAILY!

1972 PONTIAC
'

1'172 DODGE, Monaco 2 dr. Hdtp ., air.
1972 DODGE, Dart 2 Dr . Hdtp.

$3895

1971

$2495
$1995

Nova

2 Dr .

1970 VOLKSWAGEN, 2 Dr.
1970 TOYOTA, 2 Dr.

Priced Right Near Cheshire Lovely Ranch
ON ROUSH RG. YOU'LL FIND THIS PRETIY RED·
WOOD RANCH WITH 3 BEDROOMS, NICE KITCHEN
(BUILT I~IS), BATH, FULL BASEMENT, WOOD BURN
FIREPLACE ' AND LARGE FLAT LOT. OWNER
MOVING OUT OF AREA AND HAS IT PRfl:t:I:JS"OIHE
FIRST ONE TO SEE IT WILL BUY HONEST, YOU
WON'T FIND ONE NEAR CHESHIRE PRICED LIKE
THIS OIIIF

'

Hdtp.

Sedan, air.

$1795

1969 DODGE, Monacll 4 Dr. Sedan, Air .

$2295

1969 CHRYSLER,

4 dr. sedan, air.

$2295

Sedan, air .

$2095
$1895

1969 BUICK,

La Sabre

1969 CHEVROLET,

4 Dr.

'

3995

Chevelle 9 Pass. Wagon.

'

'

50 State Sl &amp; Upper Rl 7

Camping Equipment

'3395

1971 BUICK

1969 CADILLAC

S_kylark, 2 dr. hdtp., air cond.,
white, black vinyl lop. Worth
more .

Eldorado, air cond., AM-FM
radio, rosewood with sandalwood top, power windows,
10wer seat.

'2995

Gallipolis, Ohio

'3495

1970 NOVA

For Sale

Wanted To Buy

1971 BUICK

'2795

'

'67 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE

'3M5
LeSabre, Custom, 2 dr. hdtp.,
air cond., 17,233 miles, 73
LeSabre trade. Like new.

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

U1W1GA. OHIO

LeSabre, Custom 4 dr' h'dtp.,
air cond., AM-FM radio, light
blue, black vinyl top. Nice .

Riviera, air cond., power windows , power seat, local mfg. co.
pres . lradein .

35 OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROM

SM IJH AUTO SALES

1972· BUICK

1969 BUICK

$1895

Hdtp.

Newport

Catalina Brough;tm , 4 dr .,
black wlfh black vinyl top,
c ustom black interior. air
cond ., a beautiful car, 7,900
miles. ,

$2695

DODGE, Dart 2 Dr. Hdtp.

1970 CHEVROLET,

New Listing 3 Bedrooms Full Basement
OWNER HAS THIS ONE PRICED WELL UNDER
MARKET OR APPRAISED VALUE THREE LARGE
BEDROOMS, DINING AREA, VERY NICE KITCHEN
WITH RANGE &amp; OVEN. FULL BASMENT, LARGE
FLAT LOT AND GARAGE. THIS WILL SELL FAST.

'

Countr'y Sorghum,
JUNK autos and scrap me tal REAL
Barr's
Supermarket.
Johnson
388 8776
an
d
Johnson
and
at
Leslte
245 78
McCm11bs 379 2166

1969 DODGE

1973 TRAILERS and campers In
stock. For service. quality
Tudor, auto. trans., radio. new
Pickup, 29,000 miles, 8 ft. bed,
and
price
vtstt
Camp
'
2 Dr. Hardtop, radio, automatic trans .• p .
Prem
tires,
power
steering,
custom cab. Weekend Special .
Conley Starcraft Sales, 62
steering, p. brakes, fac. air c:ond., w-s-w tires,
white, extra nice.
North of Pomt Pleasan t
beh1nd Red Carpet Inn
For Sale
turquoise finish with matching Interior.
230 If 1966 STAR CRAFT Tent C•mper J D 350 dozer, 67 model wiU,
blade and wrench 66 model
sle-e ps 8 Excellent condtlton
1600 senes International
S975 Phone 3671530
tru ck Both 1n A I condition
251 6
For Rent or Lease
Ca II 256·6689
215·lf
1972 KAWASAKI 500cc ex
FOR RENT AND LEASE
cellenl con d1110n 3 cy li nder 2
UNFURNISHED apartment, cycle. Phone 675 1320
three rooms and bath , up
25 1 It CORBIN &amp; SNYDER
' statrs {700' 2 Second) . newly
- FURNitURE
decorated . $85 per month HALF Dachsh und and Poodl e USE D Ph11co auto washer,
with uliltties· furm shed on pupp•es Mustcal equ1pmenl
good shape, Whrlpool ""
restncted bas1s Ideal for one Can be seen 11241 2 F.rst Ave
condt fioner 18,500 BTU, exadult. Last lady stayed 10 10 a m 3 p m
Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
cellent condition ; occasional
years. No pets References
251 5 chair; Temco floor lurnace,
requ~red
Phone 44/&gt;·3994, 9
70,000 BTU
a.tu. to S p.m.
NEW bath lub Never used Best NEW Chairs for your comfort.
249 If niter 446 2447
Recliners, rocke rs, Swivel
Help Wanted
251 6 rockers and love seats, and
-----For Rent
.
occas1onal chairs. A large
FURNISHED mob1le home In
1968 V W. Red w blue 1nlen or,
selection to ftf your need .
Gallipolis, 446·0338.
Open Fnday till 8, plenty of
good condrt•on, w1th extra a~r
Help Wanted
227-tf
A penon who ~n quickly
fr ee parking, 955 Second
s hocks and Chevy w hi
tnllt llle Aulotanl
AvenUe, 446-1111.
adaptors, $800 or bes t off er
'"s-L-E-E:-P::-1N:-:G:-r_oo_m
_s~f:-or-'-re.nt. develop
Man~ger of our office.
Also torquefltte transmlssi on
228·11 For Sale
Ser~lcas
For Sale
Prefer
solllt ·colttgt
Gall Ia Hotel, 446·9715.
wi th Chevy ad•plor Cheap.
.
•
181 ·11 training, Good salary and
GILLENWATER'S
Mp!lc tank
446·2416 or 256-6968
ANTIQUE purnp organ, all
VACUUM
Cleaner
new
1972
cltanlno
Md
r~PJ)r , atsa
outstanding emrloyao
25 5 I orlg1pal e.cept new bellows.
1, Mod~l. ' Complete , wilh all , house wre.ckiJIO. f!!t·•.~·9A9 .
P.tto•.Mr·
ari!J'n,
'
Over 80 years old " 1\\aijt •by
j stin.I~G" lwOMS~Tw~'l&lt;ly ' ~·
' clea~lng tools•. Small P."int 'Estalltlst:ted In l940.
•
a
2765.
1971 STARCRAFT cam per, Taylor and Fraleyor'gan Co ,
rates. Park Central Hotel.
damage In shipping, Wfll lake
169·1f
sleeps 6, retngera tor. fur
. 3Q8.tf
S27 cash or budget plan
Worcester, Mass One bellows
nace, stn k, J burner stove, type
Phone
992
3904,
avai lable. Phone 446 4312.
----KANAUGA1:oncrete Supply
. ..
over 52,000 new, sacrlft ce Syracuse, 0
&amp;
250 6
APARTMENT for construction
Company, Ready ml• Con
WOMEN
NEW
&amp;
USED
FURNITURE
$1,400 Phone 446 3963
410 Second AVIIIUI
rnen Ph 446·0756
DO
YOU
like
to
have
your
crel
e, 446.1142
854
Second,
446·9523
25
5·4
Gallipolis, Ohio
267·11
251 ·11
fr
iends
in?
Good!
Would
you
2
REGISTERED
Siamese
1965 PLYMOUTH Sports Fury,
"An equal opportunity
-----Klllens,
Chocolate
point,
1
like
to
earn
some
n1ce
thing
s
WHIRLPOOL
upnght
freez
er, bucket seats, good condtlton ,
FURNISHED Apt , utilities employer.''
ma le, I female, 1 registered TERMITE PEST CONTROL
for Christmas? Let me come brand new, holds 800 lbs. Sl 50
2566814
pa1d, free garage parking,
Siamese
Cat male, chocolate FREE Inspection. Call.u6-324S.
and show you ou~ n1 ce Ime of Cal l 388·8705
254 6
Adults only Libby Hotel
Merrill O' Dell,' Operator b~
poin
t
367
7«19,
,
toys,
and
gifts
Items
from
255
3
-WANTED
248 If
E•lermlnal Termite Sevlce,
251·6
Playhouse,
today
Why
not?
1969
FOR
D
plc~up,
e.cellent
EXPERIENCED
body
19
Bement Dr,
Call Barbara. 446·3411 for 8 HEAVYSPRIN GER Holstein condllion ,$1,500 Call446 0728
repairman Apply 1n person at
~7-tf
SLEEPING rooms ,
details
_
Gallipolis Motors
23311 he1fers Cal l 614 286 2496 255 2 after 5 P m
rates , free garage p~:::~~~
254 .3
254 3 BUY the brand name you know HOUSE by owner, 8 rooms; 2
baths, 446·0762.
Central Air C:ondltlonllll
Libby Hotel
and can trust Buy a Sealy
- -- - - - 241·11 ---~---__;
227·1f
&amp; HNifng
mattress
1961 VOLKSWAGE N Bus, new 3 YEAR OLD Beagle 446 4149.
Fret
Esllm1les
---,.----254-i
2543
engrnes , new l1res, good
Stewart's
Hardwlnt
FURNISHED trailer, r iver
m1leage, very good shape
DELUXE
Va
cuum
cleaner
VInton,
Oltlo
nvew 51 Garfield 446·2328.
JEEP, new mo tor, new tires. AKC toy poodle puppies, ·6 sales and service on all
Ca ll 446 3784
144-ff
2543
weeks
old,
1
t
hocolate
female,
255 I
new top, new transmtsslon,
makes Phone 256·6457
2
black
males.
675
2242.
388 9991 atler 4 p m
249·12 " HOT·SHOT" WASHMOBILE
FURNISHED Apt . parking,
239 If
254 3
28'
CRUISER
w1lh
trail
er.
sk1s,
Wash, wax and degreaolng
central heat, two adults only,
.-::c-c~--:--:-:-::--slee ps 4, com plete galley,
1970 CHEVY Bel Air 6 cylinder
with
mobile t.&lt;llt 446-4441
$140 per month Lease 446
1
F
YOU
are
building
a
new
e•~ellen t cond ition, real buy "BOSS" 302 Mustano A I
Automat1c
Drive
$1,495.
256
210 If
home
or
remodeling,
set:
us
0338
Call Luke Curry Colonial
condltton,
tape
deck We are builders. Distributor
6884
248·11
Very large national company will soon open
Motors, Huntmg ton, 529 3276 dmmg lights, must sell. 446
252·3
ALBERT EHMAN
for Holpolnt Appl iances ,
or
evenmg 522 9147
another
of
our
successful
stores
in
Gallipolis,
3931
'
Water
Delivery Service
ONE · bedro om apartment
Allison
Electric.
255 6
255 I
Ohio. We are seeking an individual wtlo will be
Patriot Star Rt., Gallipolis
range, dtshwasher, carpeted
154·11 16' WOOD hall fiberglass bot
tom boat, extra good trailer
Ph. 379·2133.
through out
located
1n
---~-responsible for tile complete operation of the
USED
,{~NO NEW
SEVEN
piece
din
ing
room
su1le
and
40 hp. Elgin motor Must
243·ff
SIGNS
&amp;
POSTERS,
Custom
downtown . $95 per month
USED: Full me bed, early
store
in.cludill9
tile
supervision
of
several
and
Maple
lwm
bed
Call
446sacrifice.
Call
446·1462
or
446·
made,
I
cbpy
or
In
quantity
Phone 446·3644
American T. V Black &amp; While
1407
4973 after 5 p m.
THOMAS FA,fN
251-lf
employees. We will train you In our methods.
Hand painted . Silk Screen .
Phll co, automa frc washer ,
255·3 . Instant signs. Please phone
252
4
EXTERMINATING
CO
If you enjoy customer contact and have
small refngerator, occastonal
Termlfe
&amp;
Pest
Control
GallipoliS
446
0706
TWO bedroom apartment,
chatr 3 p1ece maple end table YAMAHA 1971 model, like new
HAFFELT'S CARPETING
retailing background, preferably fabric or
Wheelersburg, Ohio_
range, dishwasher, carpeted
209 If
set Atr condittoner foot stool.
R
5
B
350
Lots
of
pep
Call
IF
YOU are build ing a new
throug hout $125 per month
software', we are interested! Please write
table lamp
home or need new carpet,
446 4973
Phone 446 3644.
today
to:
Mr.
Johns,
23550
Commerce
Park
255 _4 LOGS ior flr,place Ph. 256· phone J erry Haffelt, 446·1158
251·11
6574
NEW Tappan ranges, electric
for free esttmates
Road, Beachwood, Ohio 44122. A confidentia I
243 26
or gas, features suc h as ltft up 1969 DELTA 88 4 door low
sEc O~N
~
D-""
F1
,.-o-or -:,-u,...
r n::-;1-::shed
252 6
$5.00 Service Chlr9e ' .
interview will be arranged.
top, • ltft off oven door, cl ock
mileage, e•cellent condition,
apartment Call 446 1397.
AT SPECIAl
------ _..:.____
Wlllr~moveyourdead
with ttmer See through oven
w1 il sacrif1ce 446·4994 after
----~--------2~6 L______________________________ _ J
door , and many more
5 30 p.m.
·coRBIN .&amp; SNYDe.Ai
c.~~a':k~~~~31
selechon of colors to fit your
255·6
LOWER
PRICES
SERTA
&amp; Bemco Mattresses;
4 ROOMS and bath unturmshed A GROWING m""ufacfurlng ·wanted To Do·
ot her kttchen appltances ;;;;;:;;:;;
·;;;;;;~~:==:::=;
- . 1!1 EW &amp;.-USED ~
i!!SIJ!lll!!dAAWL~9f l $172'11. "B· J 55::.. !i::::;:::=:;;~~=?.=i:N:::K?-::-:-~
.·'
__apartmenl.A~02i:L. --~ -- plant has immedlal•opentngs
free parking. 995 s-eco nd 1
~ •
1 BE AMS, Channel, angle,
econ ve - ·
SEPTIC TA S
253·1f
for experience~ general CUT QUILT piec;s and do z1g
Aven ue, 446 1172
sheet end plate steel, rounds, - - - - - - - - Cleaned and Installed
· - - - - -- . - - ma'"lenance personnel.
zag quilting ' 446·0267
2~5-tf
197
l
Chevelle
SS
fla
ts,
relnlorclng
bars
and
JUST
received
a
truck'oad
of
If•
Russell's
Plumbing, 446 4782
2 BEDROOM trailer In
Industrial e•perlence in
254-7 - - - - - - - - - - . Automatic, excellent
mesh, rail, p1pe, culverls and
'" plywood paneling. Selling
.
297·ff
Cheshire, 367.732'1
machine repairs Is required.
equipment
Prompt
drilling,
at
bargain
prices.
6 various
255·11
Reasonable starting pay and
clea n M~ ~~~c~t'J,TG~~k ~~~d 1 1;:' conditaon, Pitchford &amp;
Neiman Co., Nel sonv ille , color• Can be seen at corner BOB
LANE ' S Complete
....,.~-::-----:--:,, liberal benefits Arply In WOULD like to
675 mo
Evans Select Auto
housetratlers for con~truction
Ohio, P 0 . Box 2'18, Ph . 753
of 1920 North Mai n 51. an d
Bookkeeping and Ta• Ser
BLUE Lustre not only rids person at Federa ·Mogul
workers in the Cheshire area
1554 Call collect
Poplar Sl, Point Pleasant or
vice, 4241f&gt; Fourth Ave.,
247 11 Sales, 388-9975.
carpets of soli but leaves pile Corporation, 2160 Eastern
181 If call 675 3762 after 8 p.m
Kanauga. Office hro 9 a.m.-1
Phor)e 367 7684.
soft and lofty. Rent Electric
Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio. An
S
~E
W
-I
~
N~
G
~
M~A~C~
H
~
IN
~
E~.~
z,g~Z
;ag
,
254-2
Everett
Rayburn,
Jr
p
m Ph 446·1049.
'shampooer S1. Central Supply equal opportunity employer.
dtal and sew Th1s machtne GOOD CLEA N LUMP and
MOBILE
HOMES
248
tf
85-if
-~---:-:255·1f
254-2
l Company .
dar.ns embrotders, makes
stoker coal Carl Winters, Rio
. , FOR SALE
-------- - - -- - - - : : : NEEDS L!'N or refired RN to
buttomhole!. Jusl dtal and
Grande Phone 245·5115
RECONDITIONED
PAINT DAMAGE - 1971 z,g.
HOLLEY BRO. CONST.
work In nursing home. Can
sew
Pay $41 50 or pay $5 10
6-tf
MOBILE HOMES
Zag Sewmg Machines. Sl1ll m COMPLETE water line lnCLEAN rugs, like new, so easy For Rent
live tn If desired Wrile Box
per month Call 446 O'l55
1968 Raycraft 12x51
ong1nal carlons . No at .
slallatlon, backhoe, bulldozer
to do with Blue Lustre. Rent
3t3 Ironton. Ohio, Rt. 1.
4
ROOM
house
on
Yellowtown
253 If 51 NGE R Sewing MaQ11ne Sales 1966 Shull 12•~
,
209·11
tachmenls needed as our
a~d boring machine servl9'!••
Electric shampooer $1 . G. C
Clay Chapel Road. 446·4647.
&amp; Serv1ce. All models in 1968 Elcona 12x50
controls are bu!IJ-m, Sews
J. P. Holley, 145-501tor D. R.
Murphy, Lower Store.
251
-6
STEREO
JUS
I
taken'"
Stereo
8
stqck Free deli very Service 1968 Elcona 12x60
255·1f
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
Holley, 245·5006.,
TOOL sharpening, saws,
tr ack console rn waln ut ftntsh
guaranteed Models priced 1973 Peerless 12x60
·--~button holes, sews on buttons.
I .tf
scluors, shears, home and
Will sell for balance due $98 80
from $69 95 . French City 1960 Whitney 10•46
monog rams, and blind hem
garden tools. Sharp Shop,
or pay so 20 per mon th Call
Fabric Shoppe, Singer ap.
B&amp;S MOBILE HOMES
stitch Full cash price $38.50 D P MARTI!Ij &amp; Son W&gt;ler
Atley rear 147 Second.
446 0255
eroved dealer, sa Court St
- 216·11
Second &amp; Viand St.
or budget plan ava ila ble.
Delivery Service. Your
25Jif
Ph 446 9255
Pl. Ptusant
Ph one 446 4312
patronage wil l be ap
308-11
1Next to Heck's)
2~ 6
preclated Ph. 446·0463.
REMOOELING, building new
ELECTiliCtTY
HEREFORD
cattle,
2
hogs.
and
242·11 --~-----7-tt
tooms, cement, rooting ,
12 pigS 388 8631
ALL TYPES of build ing
I ROU ND oak table, I secretary --~-----­
siding, furnace ins. J. H
, W• turollll Wtlor • low~ ; Gaw~i~l'"~.zi';'~
253 3 mat er~a ls , block. brlck, sewer
"'·-n &amp; .......
""", .4411·9271 . 6811 desk , oak , 1 folding.bed. oak ; Plumbing &amp; Heating
Park1111 , T)f AnltnM
L .
1oM ,
. ......
NewGMC
pipes. windoWs, Hn1els, etc
Dru;ults • Ra- • Rtlrfltrtlorl - Nor C. 1 ":. •
phone 388·82'13
252·3
GEN~ PLANTS ·a SONS
1964 FALCON A I cond1f1on
Truck Headquarters
Cla ude Wmters, Rio Grande,
....... Dio, ...... DltllwalllHIJu st paml~d Call 446·2911
1966
'''
ton
GMC
P1ckup
0. Phone 245-5121 after S,
- - ' - - -- - - ' - PLUMBING - Heal1ng &amp; Air
l'aftn. Swfllllllhlll'aill • Clttl t 11.
tz.l.tf )969 Olds 88
253-3
2 AKC regiStered lnsh setters 6 Condltionmg 300 Fourth Ave
1969 Dodge Station Wagon
Ph 446 1637.
months old - had all shots
Wanted
J ROOMS of furnitue See at 756
Need Another Bldg ?
1971 3 ton Chevrolet truck
48·11
Call
256
6690
after
5
p
m
MOBILE 'Home Space 64' &lt; 12' Second Avenue
SEE o~r alummum bldgs. 1967 Jeep Staflon W~gon
'
252·3
Wilham A Huff. Rout e 2, Bo•
253 6
CARTER'S PLUMBING
Heavy duty, with flooring, 1964 "'· T. GMC PU
150, Sanausky Road, South·
wired for electric Also West 1961 11&gt; T. Chev, Pickup
AND HEATING
AKC
registered
black
and
tan
Poi nt, Ollio,
1971 MERCURY Capn 1600 one
Virg1nla
chunk
coal,
drain
1967
'4 T Chev. PU
Cor
Fourth &amp; Pine
Dachshund.
Call
446·0754
Phone 446 3888 or 446·4477
tile. bell tile, cement and 1968 '1• T GMC PU
,_,__
--'-251 6 owne r 18,000 mtl es radtal
after 5 30
'
165-11
tire~. am and lm radto,
mortar Galf1 pofis Block &amp; 1968 ''' T GMC PU
252 3
GUITAR Students Children or Phone 446-47 36
'
Coal Co., 123'h Pme, 446 2783. New II ft. camper
adults Mrs. Fredelene Angel,
25)6
2Q7.tf 1966 ot.. T GMC
STANDARD
Services Offered
89 Taft Rd , Jackson, Ohio.
Plumbing &amp;Healing
-..,..---- - - - 1968 'I&gt; T GMC PU
Phone 286·3497.
REAL NICE r iding horse See
S
Sm lth ~ 1960 1 Ton Ford flat ,
21$ Third Ave., 446·3712
C&amp;S Electrical ervlce &amp;
253·3 Shern•an Basham at Brdwell T I PEWRITRE R f Ofl etti•1967'h T GMC Pickup
Repairs . House • w~r lng,
187-tf
Corona,
oya
'
v
'
'
1964
CO
1600
fnternaf1ona
l
388 8825
eleclr~~
heat.
motor
controls
Underwood, manual and
1 k
253-4
Free e•llmates Ph. 446·4561
RUSSELL'S
electric Simmons Prin ting 1967 ~u\ GMC PU
Wanted To Buy
'
or 675.3361
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING ,
and Off1ce Equipment.
.)
T.
GMC
PU
22·lf
~,1 Gallla Ave. 446-Ma
WANTED to buy, self 0!: trade, 5 ,CHAR\)LAIS feeder calves
235 ' 11 1966
1967
t.
GMC
f!ICkUP--Rea
l
ntce
446-4344
297·11
loy electric train, 446· 48&lt;13.
p,pe-s~.-::P-,p-s-.--:-G.BD,
e
1968 'r. T. GMC P1ckup
253 3 -P-IP-E-s-.BANKS TREE SERVICE
' 24Mf
Cheratan, BBB , Jobey, 1967 'J&gt; T. GMC PIGk up
FREE estimates, liability In· --,.D:-:E:::W~IT::T::::,S:::P:::L-:-U::-M:-::8::1N:::;-G
•
SOMMERS
G.M.C.
suranc~. Pruning, trimming
AND HEATING
~AMM Kl'UOI! with oi without
H1lson, and ofhers Tawney s
TRUCKS, INC.
CHEVELLE
307
and
ca41tY'
work,
tree
and
Route
160 at E-grttl1
house. eau 4.46-9535 Monday 1971
Pipe and Trophy Hou,., 422
133 Pine St.
l .c~ut omati c
Phone 44ll 1787
slump
removal.
Ph.
446-4953.'
Phont
446-1735
tltru Fri.
For lntormetton Can Sllirley • I Jftl »7-7250
Second Ave
146·2532
253
5
7~tl
111-1
:W.I
199.tf ·- - - · - - . . . , . . . - - - -·-----....-------,..~
-:-":'
:! ~---.,

'1695

'1895

------

'1195

WOOD MOTOR SALES ·

New listing 3 Bedroom Brick
WITH FULL DRY BASEMENT. IT'S IN BEAUTIFUL ·
CONDITION . VERY NICE KITCHEN WITH RANGE ,
ETC FLAT LOT IN EXCELLENT NEIGHBORHOOD
OWNER MOVING OUT OF STATE
We Need Listings

Agency

.

In Cheshire
Need An Investment
And A Good
Place To Live?
VERY ATTRACTIVE 2
STO RY
HOME
WITH
BATH, M00611N FUR ·
NACE , LOVELY KITC HEN
( BUILT IN CAB
AND
AP PLIAN CES),
BASEMENT ALL NEW
ALUMINUM SIDING , 2
CAR PORT ON 1 ACRE
WI TH J MODERN .MOBILE
HOME S, ALL WITH PATIO
S IDEW ALKS, ETC AND
ALL RENTED PRESENT
INCOM E $480 00 PER
MONTH
RENT
THE
HOUSE AND INCREASE
INCOME
TO
$650 00
YOU 'L L AGREE IT 'S
WELL
WORTH
THE
ASKING PRICE
Buil~ing Lots

2 ACRE LOT FL1AT EX ·
LOCATION
CELLE NT
WITH WATER $5,000 00
12 ACRE
FLA T TO
RO\.LING ST REAM AND
WOODS
EXCELLE NT
SPOT FOR YOUR NEW
HOME
The Home You
Dreamed of Owning
IS IN AN EXCELLENT
NEIGHBORHOOD
IN
TO WN HUGE OLD OAK S
SHA DE
THIS
WELL
1:-,II;N OSCA P E D"L OT - IT'S A
3 BEDROOM SPL11 Ll!VEL
WITR FIREPLACE IN
LIVING ROOM , NICE
DINING AREA , LARGE
SUN PORCH , 2 BATHS,
(;A RAGE ITIS I~ YRS , OLO
AND YOU'LL JUST LOVE
IT IT'S THE HOME YOU
MUST SEE

New Listing
5 Bedroom
Owner leaving Area
DON 'T BUY UNTIL YOU
SE E THiS ~,.N'E1,'R b~ · ~£W ·.,
BEAUTi f'.Ul: 4 OR 5
BEDROOM HOME VERY
NICE KITCH EN \\(ITH All
THE
BUILT IN
AP
PLIA'NCES ,
HUGE
FAMILY ROOM , CAR ·
PETEO
THRO UGHOUT ,
CE NTRAL AIR , GARAGE , 4
FRU IT TREES , FLAT LOT
NEAR NEW HOSPITAL
New Listing
4 Bedrooms
HERE ' S A REAL BUY FOR
SO ME LUCKY FAMILY
LARGE LIVING AND
DINING ROOMS , BUll T· IN
k'IT\HF.N /RANGE .

DI~H .

WASHER","' ETC . ),
2
CER AMIC BATHS , EN ·
TIRE HOUSE IS CAR
PETEO. GARAGE AND
LARGE FLAT LOT NEAR
NEW HOSPITAL CEN ·
TRAL
AIR
PRICE
$28,000 00
Don't Wait-Now's
The Time To Buy
AND HERE'S ONE THAT
MAY PLEASE YOU 3
BEDROOMS WITH FULL
BASEMENT ON LARGE
LOT (100x5751 WASHER ,
DRYER ,
RANGE
B.
REFRIG , CENTRAL AIR ,
GARAGE AND LOTS OF
SHRUBB&amp;RY COULD BE
USED FOR COMMERCIAL
PURPOSiS BECAUSE OF
ITS
EXCELLENT
LOCATION
Do You Need
A Large
tomfo.rtable i'lll.m.e? ,

I

,

ONE 5 MILE OUT ON A 5
ACRE LOT WITH A LARGE
STREAM AND WATER
FALLS IN YOUR FRONT
~ARD? HUGE
RUSTIC
LIVING AND DINING
ROOM, MODERN KIT ·
CHEN WITH ALL THE
BUILT · INS
2
BATHS ,
CENTRAL AIR , ALL KINDS
i,soo Down Payment OF BEDROOMS• IS THAT
WHAT YOU WANT? WE~L
30 Years to Pay
WE HAVE IT IT EVEN
$28,900 Total Price
HAS A BASEMENT 2
FIREPLACES AN'tt MANY
ATTRACTIVE
BEAUTIFUL NEW LARGE OTHER
FEATURES.
YOU ' RE
3 BEDROOM HOME WITH
RIGHT , THE PRICE IS IN
LARGE FA MILY ROOM , 2 THE
FORTIES,
BUT
BATHS, DINING AREA, YOU ' RE WRONG IF YOU ,
LOVELY KITCHEN WITH THINK YOU CAN MATCH
ALL THE BUILT INS
IT ~YWHERE ELSE .
CARPET THROUGHOUT
PlU S 2 CAR GARAG E.
Store Bldg.
YOU'LL LIKE IT HONEST .
WE HAVE OTHERS THAT
On 2nd Ave.
WILL PLEASE YOU IF
THIS ONE DOESEN'T
2 SPLIT LVELS - 3 BY
LEVELS AND MANY . 2' STORY 8R ICK Jllx6CI 0"
MANY RANCHES . MOST LARGE DEEP LOT WITH
CAN BE PURCHASED PARKING. EXCELLENT
WITH
SMALL •DOWN LOCATION - PRESENTLY&lt;
PAYMENT AND LOW ,,LOW RENTED FOR SI6S 00 PER
MO
MONTHLY
PAYMENTS

AUCIION
IIIVJCI

1111
"SEU Jlllt"'1IM

:WAY"

IIIME ·_SAYRE
IUCOOIE£1

ftL 111414.,

· ASSISTANT MANAGER

EOONOMY SAVINGS
LOAN CO.

Olfarad .

WAITRESS WANTED
CIRCLE'S CAFETERIA
&amp; RESTAURANT

Rice's

_____

FABRIC STORE MANAGER

-----..,--

CAN YOU MANAGE ARETAIL STORE?

- - - - -- -

------

PAY ONLY ONE UnLITY

liNt....,..- •

-

__

-

TARA

v:

_____

..,._

----'---

-----'

�...

~

I .

'

26 - The Swtday T1111es -Sentinel, Sunday, Oct 29, 1972

S~nday

•

Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Card of Thanks
deepest gralltude the
. WITH
famtly of Benn le Stover
wishes lo thank all t he
'

1

relattves, friends, neighbor s,
pallbearers . and all who sent
food , flowers ~and ~ards , also

'

Notice
COMMU NilY Nur se ry School
S.lflll' L tccn scd Dildy at
Prl' ~ bytenrw Ch~1rch Ca ll
t16 1873 ~Iter ·1 P m

2536

Rev . Hueholf and Wa ugh
Halley, Wood funeral home

Your comfortmg expresstons GLASS for all' needs Home
serv~~_..and msurance datms
of sympathy w ill alwa ys b~.&gt;
Rus 's Glass Sennce, 704 Ptne
remembered
and
ap
St
, R10 Gran de, Otuo 245·
preciated, Ruby and Elmer
5048
Stover and famtl y

NOTICE
TWO WAY Ra d1 0s Sales &amp;
Ser'&lt;Ce New and used c~·s •
pol1cc mondors , antenn,as .
etc Sob' s Cdtzens Band

Rad1o Equ1p , Georges Cr~ek
Rd , Gallipolis, Ol110 446·4517
i

212 If

DAY CARE
SUN VALLEY Nursery School ,
l1censed by State of Ohto, l lf:z
m lies west of new hospital.
180 If
255 I
577 Sun Valley Dr. Ph 446
3657 Day care that says "we
care " Madge Hauldren ,
'
Owner Lored 1 t h &amp; John
Ha uldren, Operators
11411
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The chink "The dectston of whethVETERANS
president of the Institute of er to use the machines 1s never Cct real bcneftl from your
Society, Ethics and Life Sci- purely medtcal, " he said .
r;erv•cc If you've been
scpMaled
fron' I he serv iCe as
ences said here Thursday mght "Doctors make worth
an E 4 or abnve w.th1n the las t
that the nation's doctors have judgements about patients.
1 years you may be eltg lb le ,
"been literally able to get away
''One major medical center
1 r tn •n•edtatc achve duty In
lilCI the U S Navy has In
with murder."
doesn't even have one dtalysts
tr 11duced new regula iiQ nS
Dr. WillardGaylin, professor machine because the head docFor further detail s contact
of psychiatry and law at Co- tor there doesn't want to decide
Gene Peters, 593-3566 collect
lf cet I\ lull f rcc ' BOO 282 1288
lumbia Uruversity, satd m an who should be put on the ma253 3
address at Case Westert] Re- chine and who shouldn 't,"
serve University that the "phy- GayUn sa1d .
I WILL NOT be responSible for
,liclan in the United States is
any debts other than my own
"There is something about
as of thiS dat e, October 29,
somewhere between the priest the role of a doctoF (hat em1972
and ordinary man."
powers him with authority that
Stgned Bryant E Duncan
"They've been literally able should be questioned," satd
255 3
-----to get away wtth. murder," he Gaylln.
sa le Mon and
SQid, " We go to lawyers for
"If a person has a RUMMAGE
lues , Oct 30 and 31, 9· 30
'counsel' but we follow doctors pleasurable ptece of behavaor
~ m to 4 p m Clothes, dishes,
antiques
and other Items
'orders."'
and a mmister says tis a sin,
Cedar
Street
Market Carner ,
01 Gaylin noted that many doc- you change mm1sters," he
of Thtrd and Cedar
tors decisions are moral ones satd.' "But if your doctor says
255 2
and not medical ones.
it's unhealthy, you'll change
DOES your home need pamtmg,
1\S an example he ctted the that behavior."
std• ng , roofing , remodeling,
use of kidney dtalysts rnapaneling , cement work,
barbecue, palms, or garage,
~~~iiiSI':I~~Wi:l.~:~.x:::::::::".::::x::-&gt;.:....;-;:~~·:?J!.~».aa&lt; a: ..~,
carport, etc ? You name tt,
we'll do If Reasonable rates
Ca ll 446 1753
•
119 If

Doctor favored position

Real Estate For Sale '

Real Estate For Sale

flJ/l(JJUfJ11L

MASSIE

REALTY
25 Locust St.
Howard Brannon, Broker
Off 446-2674
Lucille Brannon
Eve 446-1226 or 446-2674
$42,500
96 ACRE FARM - All electric
brtck home, 6 roorr.s and bath,
larg e eat tn kitchen. w b
frreplace tn family room .
beautiM ca rpet throughout,
oversize brtck garage. two
barns, frutf trees, tobacco
base . stream. spnng and well
water, 80 . A ttmber. 6 A.
bottom on Sf Rt 7
$26,500
NEAR NEW BRI CK- 3 large
BR and bath, beautiful built
m kitchen and large dtntng
area, deep pile carpet
throughout, well landscaped
one acre lot, must be seen to
be apprec tated
$26,500
16 ACRES - All electric home.
19' x 24' LR w1lh f~rep lace,
beaut tfut k1tchen wtth range
and ref , t; , basement, storm
w &amp; D , large 30' x 60'
bu 1ldmg, well stocked pond
$24,500

Really, 32 State St
TeL 446-1998

For Fast Results Us.e
r

~

I
!

NOTICE

\l'e

ST RT 588 - Near Rodney - STATE ROUTE 160 - 2 1972
1972 Schultz Mobile home, 14'
nrobilc homes on a 100x150
x 68 ', all elec. cen a1r
fl at lot Co water , paftos,
Located on 89 A Prt ce dnveway, brand new, never
$14,900
ltved tn Ltve m one and rent
the other $13,900
ST RT 588 - 21 3A wooded lot
..,o[\ Rural Water Lme Price I UNITS IN CITY - 2 double
$31750
and 1 s.tngle house on Garfte ld
Ave $25,000 buys lhem all
BIDWELL - Modern, 6 b1g
rms , uf1hly and bath Carpet VINT ON - emplfy store
tn ltv rm , plenty cabtnets tn
buddi ng downstairs plus 2
kitchen, lots of paneling, new
apartmen ts up $15,000
storm doors and windows
Barn 40' x 60' Loca ted on 2 CHESHIRE .:._ Trailer Park,
big, fl at lot~ Pnced to sell
polenltal mcome of $17,000
'
per yr
MILL CREEK - 4 rm house,
fur hea t, garage and 1 A , Ml DOL EPOR T - 12 rm house
$8,000
nn N 2nd Av e Could be used
ar;; I 2 3 or 4 homes
MERCERVILLE Cheap
housing, real nrce . 3 bd rm , POMEROY - 2 family home,
large ltv rm , nice bath,
Cllrllple tely modern
co pper plumbing, all tile
ce ilin~ . otl fur , 2 can~arage.
FARMS
Large shaded lot. Walk to i46 A flat and gently rolling
school Only $12,500
lan d new fences, pond, creek
fr
ontage, stto, 2 good barns,
NEAR Clay School - E•lra
crtb, fronts on 2 rds, close to
n1ce, 3 bdrm ., new ca rpet tn
proposed new U S 35, 44 A
l1v. rm, din. area, and hall It
corn
base pays better than
has new Aerobtc Sepftc tank,
$1,000 per yr , 25 A corn goes
full base ; w1 th part1al
wilh sa le. 1352 lb lo b base,
fmlshed rec. rm , attached 111odern
ranch style frame
gar and located on lh A
home wtth full basement.
shaded lot Pnce redu ced for
Don' t mrss thr s on e t
qutck sale .
29 A vacant land on route 160
nnrlh of Vmton Good barn
DEER CR. RD - Near new 4 rncluded
rms and bath, fur heat, 2
rms , carpeted, plus 2 A. good 36 A Morga n Twp , land con
land Good Spnng water Only tract
$10,000
2 A flat lot on rout e 325 between
INVESTMENT - In clfy, good Vtnton an d Rto Grande.
bust ness location, plus 2 Aprt.
rentals Icould he 3) Business 111 ACRES -- 55 •cres bottom, 9
bldg 1ncludes grocery and rnr horre, good barn, creek
meat processrng equrpment
frontage, 1 2 mde frontage on
Potential mcome from Apt
stale rd , con1plele ltne of
rentals 1225 per mo. Price farn• mach1 nery In cluded tn
$21.500.
sale Owner wttl help fmance

GET

AmiiiiOII

Neal Realty

,_,=

OHIO RIVER
R~

II
(')

·n

I I lJ

,...,.,..

---·---

t

Gallia Co.'s Largest
Real Estate Sales Agency
Office 446-3643
Evenings.call
E. M, "Ike" Wiseman 446-3796
E. N. Wiseman 446-4500

SPR IN G VALLEY - Lookmg
f
for elegance. thiS.coutd be •he
World's Larges
one Bt leve l, 3 large bdrms
w1th deep and w1de closets, all ~HE LEADER SINCE 1900 IN
tactory kitchen w1th diSh- SERVIN(l THE NATION'S
washer and di sposal Large BUYERS &amp; SELLERS.
l1v rm, 2 baths, large car
Ph. 446·0008
peted rec rm wtth bar 2 car
gar wtth elec dr , cen air.
You name tf and th1s house
INVESTMENTS
has tf Prtce upper 30s
MIDDLEPORT -- Modern 6
rrr1 hnme whrc h mclvdes 3
CITY - 5 b1g rms w1th full
BR, LR wilh WB fir eplace,
base , new furna ce, cen a1r ,
butltm kttchen and vttlify rm.
llv rm 14' x 24' Plenty
PLUS a sepa rate l'rm &amp; bath
storage room Lt v rm , hall , ilpl PLUS 3 late model
bath and master bdrm Has nr 11bt le homes now being
carpet over H W Prtce
ren ted Ltve tn th e home and
$25,000
q~j tect S5S5 per mo rent

:vma'ge"

~'1::..,,..,,_

Sale

AGENCY

REALTY

WOOD
REALTOR
446-1066

I

For

.'

STROUT 'THE WISEMAN

RUSSELL

cUtYWID~IkJ ~=!::!

Real Estate

Real Estate For Sale

NEAR TOWN - 5 rooms and
ba th , deep pile carpet
throug hout , two car carport,
~ torage bulldmg, Situated on a
we ll landscaped :~;4 acre lot
$24,500
ONE THIRD ACRE LOT - 7
rooms, 3 BR, 2 baths, all built
m klfchen wtth doubl e oven,
carport. workshop, In Ad·
dtson Twp
$19,500
2 STORY HOME - 4 BR, 2
baths , famtly room, all
electnc k1tchen, paneled OR,
• WB firepla ce 1n LR, carport,
and gutter work .
laundry and large workshop,
By Helen and Sue Hottel
@ ROOFING
Wilham Mitchell . 388 8507.
copper plumbtng , qutck
67·11
THOSE PERENNIAL CHAIN LETTERS
possess ion
518,800
Dear Rap :
RALPH 'S Carpet &amp; Uph olstery 4 BR HOME - Large two story
What would you do if you got a cham letter like I got. I'm a
Cleantng Servtce
Fr ee
covered wtth alumtnum
est1mates Ph 446-0294. Ralph
~ Otristlan but I don 't like copying letters and I can't afford
stdmg and stone. spacious
ea t m ktfchen, formal OR,
Z stamps, so I ignored this, and now I'm awfully worried. The A Davts, owner
9·11
laundry room. porch and
~ letter goes:
garage Plenty shade trees.
ll:
"THINK A PRAYER (and then there's a kinda long written
Jl12lot Very qutck possessiOn
s15,000
, prayer you're,supposed to copy) ... This prayer has been sent to
We would like to thank the
I'/•
ACRE
4 BR and bath,
you for gOOd luck. The original came from the Holy land . Send
merchant' for contributions
carpe
l
In
5
rooms,
alum mum
and everyone thai worked to
five cwies to five frienda and m four days you will receive good
sld
rng,
new
roof,
garage,
make our Halloween Car, luck, These must leave your house within 96 holl\"S. Do not break
workshop and cellar house,
nival a success.
storage butldmg, frutf trees,
{: the chain! AU. S. officer received $U,OOO and lost it because he
Cheshire Kyger PTA
now vacant.
~ broke the chalit. A Philadelphia man lost his life SIX days after he
S15,500
~ threw away this letter. After he died, he received $15,000. Copy
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story, 10
rooms, 2 bath, 2 porches. eat
; all this and send it on I"
In
kttchen. for mal DR. 2 room
1 Will bad things happen, like God purushmg me, or
basement wlth gas forced atr
I something? - WONDERING
furnace , corner lot Vacant
'
$13,000
3
BEDROOM
- Spae~ous
Dear Wondering:
paneled and carpeted LR, RODNEY - 3 yr old, 6 rm : 91 A - Rollmg grassland,
By
order
of
Centerville
Prayers are good, but threats are bad - and this chain letter
home, all carpet, all Elec , 11
t1n1ber pond, we ll. coun ty
banquet size kitchen, con
Village Council there
wa ter ava ilable BT rd , large
Is no more than a ridiculous threat.
crete porch, alummum m o budget at $26 per mo
hnn1e l O' Iill f wm. tovyp
siding, 17' x 30' garage and Th iS property has a ~argo
' ' If you're still worried, douse your superstitions by telling
will
no Trick, or
garage and located on a Jt4 1
I I
lWO&lt;KShop,
·'f&amp;lit'alt 'lh'a1'1l\'€maH .llb"llied was pr6bablY 90 years old (and Treat in
of
acre fla t lot Priced for a 12 A nex t to ctly llm tfs, home
56.800
rncl udes 4 rms and bath Good
how could he "receive" $15,000 after he was dead?); and the guy
NOW VACANT - Owner moved qUi ck sale at $21.500
Centerville.
tnvestmen t for only $12,000
to Florida. 2 BR, living room ,
Utat lost the money was most likely a klutz -SUE
kitchen, bath and storage plus CENTENARY - Edra n1ce 3
+++
or 4 bdrm ranch , w1fh H.W
Eber Whealdon, f furniture 100' x 100' lot
HOMES
Dear Won:
fl oors and carpet 11 has a BEAUTIFUL PLEASANT
Plenty shade
large lt v rm ., sam ... paneling
Mayor
VALLEY ESTATES - 3 BR
Better yet, tell yourself it's all a bunch of hokum.
and a k1 lthen that would
bnck, w w carpe l, J1,2 baths, 2
Chain letters, threatening bad luck and offering money ...
please any woman On t tfy
car garage. cent a tr, ga r
handkerchiefs ... aprons ... pantyhose ... whatever ... are good for
water &amp; nat. gas. Pn ce
d•s p . d ts hwas her , lovely
$23,500
b1 rch ca bmels Owner betng
; only one thing : the wastepaper bas~et. Worry not. - HELEN
trans ferred
+++
ADAMSVILLE - Older home
Rap:
made new, 5 b1g rms all 3 Ml
OUT
QU ICK
carpe ted, new 2 car garage
POSSESSION -· Lovely 3 BR
The student who felt doomed t, a life of loneliness because he
and located on a b1g flat lot
brtck and frame wtfh full
sals he was homosexual (but could never go to bed with a ma le)
Cheap at $15,750
basement, garage, large
just might be the vactim of the stereotype of homosexuality ,
fafllily rm , dtntng rm , 2 WB
presented by our culture.
,
ltreplaces, large J,:t A lot
GREEN ACRES
P"ce
Many semltive young men become convinced by inajortty
HE Who Hes ttates ge ts bumped reduced on thiS beauty, 4 yr. ADD ISON -- Modem 6 rm
old ranch , H W fl oo rs,
Iron, behind
opinion that "feminmity in a male means homosexual. But what
home wtlh brtck fron t, level
beaut1ful k1lche n, 3 Bd rms.,
is masculine and femmme is really only relative to the intot wt th 120ft fr on t, cen t atr,
A GRAND PLACE TO LIVE, Ph baths Th is house rs l1ke
car
pod, owner anx1ous to
dividual's culture, and much of what is regarded as femlnm e ts
RIGHT DOWNTOWN WIT H new Only $22,500
se
ll
Low dow n paymen t
70 FEET FRONTAGE ON
related to inteltigence rather than sex preference.
SECOND AVENUE . FOUR
FARMS
Due to ignorance, a man recogmzing "femmme" qualittes m
- II Berger Ave , Lovely
LARGE BEDROOMS WITH 40 A NEAR RIO ~ All Elec 5 CITY
2
BR
home w1th full
himself may believe them to be signs of homosexuality and
CLOSETS KITCHEN AND rm modern home, wtth alum
Lots of s hade
basemen
t
therefore either suppress them or admtt to being somethmg he
THRE F LARGE ROOMS Si ding , alum porch with
tr
ees
CONNECTED WITH concre te floor, good barn,
isn't.
Business Opportunities
SLIDING
DOOR THAT CAN some fruit, berries and NEI GHBORHOOD RD - 3 BR
Also, it ts normalto feel attraction (but not 5!!XUal desire) for
BE
OPENED
TO USE AS grapes, 12 A cleared and
SERV ICE Stal1on for lease,
n~odul ar home 2 Y[S. old, air
people of both sexes, but men have learned to suppress such
ONE
LARGE
ROOM,
GOOD could be cultrvated Price
excell ent locahon, patd
cnnd , partly furnt shed, a
BASEMENT,
ONE
AND
ONE
feelings for other men. Since the only thing that dlstmguishes
$18,500'
' ba rga m at $14,500
tramlng Please call 446·1085
HALF BATH, ALSO TWO
homosexuals from others is a sexual desire for members of the
8 5 p.m . Evenings 446 9380
R E NT E D T R A I L E R 92.5 A 9 m1 fr om town , al l flat CLOSE TO NEW MINE - 1970
248. 12 SPACES
same sex, I wonder if the lonely student is really m this
FOR INCOME, AN and gentle slope ; 45 A
Schultz 12x65 wdh 4xl2 ftp out
category? I feel that many boys swing over because they think
EXCEPTIONAL WELL
ldlabl e, tob base, rural
rrl1 • completely furnt shed,
BUILT HOME . PRICED waler.6 rm house with bath ,
Real Estate For Sale
they have no choice. If homosexuality becomes accepted, even
cen t atr, pat1o, cellar, barn,
AWAY
BELOW
RE· s torm dr s and windows
ultl!ty bulld•ng, buy w1th 1 A
more people (who could go e1ther way ) will choose the less
RANCHO REAL TORS PLACEMENT COST, tM. Pnce reduced, $31 ,500
or
30
desirable route. I don't think homosexuals should he persecuted,
MEDIATE POSSESSION.
• Headquarters for Gallia County
A. LOCATED at Bidwell , all VINTON
but I'm not for Gay Liberation's all out encouragement etther.
Real Estate Listings needed. NEW 3 bedroom home, very 30 tillable
or develop, 8 rm
Even more disturbing was this boy's implication that love
TWO FOR ONE
ntce kdchen, bath, gas fur
modern
home, all carpet,
bui ll in ki
HOUSE NO 1 Custom built
~ mf!!ns sex, Jf]l~ gan!Qy~ \Q other men (and women too ) without
nace , full ba-Sement wtth mueh paneling, storm drs - rm -;-- CR wi
new - 3 BR home leaturmg
garage m baseme nt, concrete and wtndows, 011 fur Thts IS
expecting sex, he would not he so lonely, The Btble says we
ba se ment,·snadv
famJiy room. air cond , slid.
dri
ve
on
S
R
141
Shown
by
an
1deal
sef·UP
for
a
lar~e
should love one another, but that certainly does not mean to go to
gla5s door to patio and 2 car
appotntment S23.SOO
fam1ly wdh children m
Ranny Blackburn
ga ra ge
bed with everyone we love. - ONCE LONELY TOO
Pnce
upper
thirttes.
Branch Mtmagar
sc
hool
HOUSE NO 2. Very good 6 21 , ACRES w1lh all electm
room country home, part
home. large kitchen, new 49 A. GOOD 7 rm . house, plenty ~----=-Dear O.L.T.:
basemt, , porch and cellar
stove and refr tgerator, bath storage room, carp~t and
house Bolh homes for the
Thank you for your fme letter. W1th all the books, arltcles
and double car garage
paneling B19 barn, plenty
pnce of one
and conjecture, we still lqtow so very U!Ue about homosexuality.
Pnced $17,000
good water, near 12 A bottom
GREEN TOWNSHIP
land It has 1,5191b. fob base.
RIVER VIEW
But of this we're sure: tolerance and attempts at unLOTS and acreage for 2 ACRES more or less wlfh 8 Price of $19,000, includes near WE JUST
listed a beautiful 4
derstanding will help far more than condemnation - which can
resrdent!al or commercial on
room house, seve ral out
2 ton fob.. tractor and other
bedr
oom
home on Lower
Rt 35, nea r hosp1tar
make a confused young man feel there is no other choice. buildings, otl heal, 3 bedroom tools
R1ver Road. This house Is
and bath Priced 518,000
HELEN AND SUE
only 6 years old and was built
NEW 3 bedroom home, bath,
•63 A. 5 mi. from Cheshtre, on
by Ernes t Brown Special
ga rage, la rge lot, city water 2 BR home tn Cheshrre wtlh Ward Rd., ho bldgs , un
features
are the beaufl(ul
and schools
larQe ltv mg room. kr tchen and derta ld w1th coa l Price
vtew
of
the
Ohio Rtver, den
ADDISON TOW NSHIP
bath Priced $14,900
reduced to $19,500
·
with
woodburning
fireplace,
NEAR NEW 4 bedroom home,
formal
dining
room
a nd
bath and hall $22,000
ANY HR. 446.l998
Un~eramltle theae fwr lumbiH,
LOTS - 112' • 525', Pn ce
partial basement. Lot Is 114' •
$2,500 , 100' x 750', Pnce - - - - - - - - one letter to e..h ~quare, to
290' Call today for an ap3', ACRE lot, rura l water,
52,500, 80' x 150', Pnce $1,800
for111 four ordinary wordo.
pointment .
beautiful se ttmg.
NEW LISTING
FARM, 257 Acres. 2 barns and 8
9
ACRES
vacant land on Kellqn
39 ACRES, 3 bedroom story and
room house Pnce $38,000.
ORRMA Ci
Road
nea
r town Less than
hall home. garage, barn.
'
S300
an
acre.
$15,000.
FARM, 23 Acres, at Eureka,
.
I .•
~acant land
Pnced $5,000
LOT 67' x 112' located at 54
Office 446.t066 ·
Garfield Avenue'. $1,000.
Even1ngs Call Ron Canaday
452 Second Ave.
446·3636
NEW LISTING
446·3434 446-4775
Russett D. Wood, 446·4611
3
BEDROOM
home at 1809
DEVELOPER'S DREAM - 18
J~~n 1. ~~~hards, 446-0280
Ches tnut Street Just recenlly
acres of good land suitable for
painted Inside and out. Carpet
sever,al houses. County water
m lt vlng room and three
on st te Four miles from town.
Would make a
bedrooms
BY OWNER
COUI..P SEA
good mvestment.
IPRUM4K
3 bedroom brick ranch , FARM NEAR MINE - 44 aero
U6EL.E66 THIN6Office Phone 446·1"4
farm with four bedroom
flreploct,
1'1&gt; car aHoched
10 F IOHi OVER!
Jay Sheppard 446-0001
Evenings
house with bath , Priced for
gar.... Approx. 1400 fl. of
Denvtr K. Higley 446·0002
M. Ntal 446-1546
Chtrles
quick sale.
living space downstairs, and
Wanda S. Eaheneur 446·0003
J , MlcMtl NNI 446·1503
'fllct for 3 rooms · in ~n·
finished
upst11rs, lar,e acre OVERLOOK OHIO RIVER REAL Esta te tor sale by owner
Three bedroom house on S.R. -FOR SALE BY OWNER - 2
tot
wllll
mono
land ovaltabht,
4 bedroom house, 21' baths,
7
with beautiful view of river.
story brick house at 452 Flr~l
311·1722.
.
fann!y room , kitchen, liv ing
Ave 7 rooms, 2 baths, gas hot
room, screened pat1o, garage
LIST WITH .US - If you want
air
furnace.
Present
and large basement. Located
arrangement 2 apartments.
action, list with OIHo River ,
on 80'•130' lot w1lh1n wal~mg
Am be~ ia the hardest-resin calf 446·3434.
- - easily connrtfll to one
d1
sfanre
of
all
schools
511
known. It comes from the
(MoweN-"1)
family dwelling Asking
Evenings
Chandler Dr , Po1nt Pleasant fossils of extmct pine trees
Bali'd,
·446-4632
,
S30,00Q
shown by apOscar
' ~~ ' hJoooiUILT . .OUP P~OYII INOUGII
Ph nne 675·2303 or 675 13i2
D J. Weathtrholl, 446-4244
polntment. 4.46-020e.
'
\hat once grew on the sboree
251 6 of the Baltic Sea.
('
Aowuu .,..,,.. .........,~...,.&lt;a!IH-PUI'I
Sleven R, Bth, 446·f58.l
255-1
, ..

Generation Rap ·

'11- The Sunday Times·Sentinel,~, Oct. 2!, !972

-~.--_;_:

DOC

NEW 1973 BUICKS

SMITH
SAYS

ARRIVING DAILY!

1972 PONTIAC
'

1'172 DODGE, Monaco 2 dr. Hdtp ., air.
1972 DODGE, Dart 2 Dr . Hdtp.

$3895

1971

$2495
$1995

Nova

2 Dr .

1970 VOLKSWAGEN, 2 Dr.
1970 TOYOTA, 2 Dr.

Priced Right Near Cheshire Lovely Ranch
ON ROUSH RG. YOU'LL FIND THIS PRETIY RED·
WOOD RANCH WITH 3 BEDROOMS, NICE KITCHEN
(BUILT I~IS), BATH, FULL BASEMENT, WOOD BURN
FIREPLACE ' AND LARGE FLAT LOT. OWNER
MOVING OUT OF AREA AND HAS IT PRfl:t:I:JS"OIHE
FIRST ONE TO SEE IT WILL BUY HONEST, YOU
WON'T FIND ONE NEAR CHESHIRE PRICED LIKE
THIS OIIIF

'

Hdtp.

Sedan, air.

$1795

1969 DODGE, Monacll 4 Dr. Sedan, Air .

$2295

1969 CHRYSLER,

4 dr. sedan, air.

$2295

Sedan, air .

$2095
$1895

1969 BUICK,

La Sabre

1969 CHEVROLET,

4 Dr.

'

3995

Chevelle 9 Pass. Wagon.

'

'

50 State Sl &amp; Upper Rl 7

Camping Equipment

'3395

1971 BUICK

1969 CADILLAC

S_kylark, 2 dr. hdtp., air cond.,
white, black vinyl lop. Worth
more .

Eldorado, air cond., AM-FM
radio, rosewood with sandalwood top, power windows,
10wer seat.

'2995

Gallipolis, Ohio

'3495

1970 NOVA

For Sale

Wanted To Buy

1971 BUICK

'2795

'

'67 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE

'3M5
LeSabre, Custom, 2 dr. hdtp.,
air cond., 17,233 miles, 73
LeSabre trade. Like new.

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

U1W1GA. OHIO

LeSabre, Custom 4 dr' h'dtp.,
air cond., AM-FM radio, light
blue, black vinyl top. Nice .

Riviera, air cond., power windows , power seat, local mfg. co.
pres . lradein .

35 OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROM

SM IJH AUTO SALES

1972· BUICK

1969 BUICK

$1895

Hdtp.

Newport

Catalina Brough;tm , 4 dr .,
black wlfh black vinyl top,
c ustom black interior. air
cond ., a beautiful car, 7,900
miles. ,

$2695

DODGE, Dart 2 Dr. Hdtp.

1970 CHEVROLET,

New Listing 3 Bedrooms Full Basement
OWNER HAS THIS ONE PRICED WELL UNDER
MARKET OR APPRAISED VALUE THREE LARGE
BEDROOMS, DINING AREA, VERY NICE KITCHEN
WITH RANGE &amp; OVEN. FULL BASMENT, LARGE
FLAT LOT AND GARAGE. THIS WILL SELL FAST.

'

Countr'y Sorghum,
JUNK autos and scrap me tal REAL
Barr's
Supermarket.
Johnson
388 8776
an
d
Johnson
and
at
Leslte
245 78
McCm11bs 379 2166

1969 DODGE

1973 TRAILERS and campers In
stock. For service. quality
Tudor, auto. trans., radio. new
Pickup, 29,000 miles, 8 ft. bed,
and
price
vtstt
Camp
'
2 Dr. Hardtop, radio, automatic trans .• p .
Prem
tires,
power
steering,
custom cab. Weekend Special .
Conley Starcraft Sales, 62
steering, p. brakes, fac. air c:ond., w-s-w tires,
white, extra nice.
North of Pomt Pleasan t
beh1nd Red Carpet Inn
For Sale
turquoise finish with matching Interior.
230 If 1966 STAR CRAFT Tent C•mper J D 350 dozer, 67 model wiU,
blade and wrench 66 model
sle-e ps 8 Excellent condtlton
1600 senes International
S975 Phone 3671530
tru ck Both 1n A I condition
251 6
For Rent or Lease
Ca II 256·6689
215·lf
1972 KAWASAKI 500cc ex
FOR RENT AND LEASE
cellenl con d1110n 3 cy li nder 2
UNFURNISHED apartment, cycle. Phone 675 1320
three rooms and bath , up
25 1 It CORBIN &amp; SNYDER
' statrs {700' 2 Second) . newly
- FURNitURE
decorated . $85 per month HALF Dachsh und and Poodl e USE D Ph11co auto washer,
with uliltties· furm shed on pupp•es Mustcal equ1pmenl
good shape, Whrlpool ""
restncted bas1s Ideal for one Can be seen 11241 2 F.rst Ave
condt fioner 18,500 BTU, exadult. Last lady stayed 10 10 a m 3 p m
Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
cellent condition ; occasional
years. No pets References
251 5 chair; Temco floor lurnace,
requ~red
Phone 44/&gt;·3994, 9
70,000 BTU
a.tu. to S p.m.
NEW bath lub Never used Best NEW Chairs for your comfort.
249 If niter 446 2447
Recliners, rocke rs, Swivel
Help Wanted
251 6 rockers and love seats, and
-----For Rent
.
occas1onal chairs. A large
FURNISHED mob1le home In
1968 V W. Red w blue 1nlen or,
selection to ftf your need .
Gallipolis, 446·0338.
Open Fnday till 8, plenty of
good condrt•on, w1th extra a~r
Help Wanted
227-tf
A penon who ~n quickly
fr ee parking, 955 Second
s hocks and Chevy w hi
tnllt llle Aulotanl
AvenUe, 446-1111.
adaptors, $800 or bes t off er
'"s-L-E-E:-P::-1N:-:G:-r_oo_m
_s~f:-or-'-re.nt. develop
Man~ger of our office.
Also torquefltte transmlssi on
228·11 For Sale
Ser~lcas
For Sale
Prefer
solllt ·colttgt
Gall Ia Hotel, 446·9715.
wi th Chevy ad•plor Cheap.
.
•
181 ·11 training, Good salary and
GILLENWATER'S
Mp!lc tank
446·2416 or 256-6968
ANTIQUE purnp organ, all
VACUUM
Cleaner
new
1972
cltanlno
Md
r~PJ)r , atsa
outstanding emrloyao
25 5 I orlg1pal e.cept new bellows.
1, Mod~l. ' Complete , wilh all , house wre.ckiJIO. f!!t·•.~·9A9 .
P.tto•.Mr·
ari!J'n,
'
Over 80 years old " 1\\aijt •by
j stin.I~G" lwOMS~Tw~'l&lt;ly ' ~·
' clea~lng tools•. Small P."int 'Estalltlst:ted In l940.
•
a
2765.
1971 STARCRAFT cam per, Taylor and Fraleyor'gan Co ,
rates. Park Central Hotel.
damage In shipping, Wfll lake
169·1f
sleeps 6, retngera tor. fur
. 3Q8.tf
S27 cash or budget plan
Worcester, Mass One bellows
nace, stn k, J burner stove, type
Phone
992
3904,
avai lable. Phone 446 4312.
----KANAUGA1:oncrete Supply
. ..
over 52,000 new, sacrlft ce Syracuse, 0
&amp;
250 6
APARTMENT for construction
Company, Ready ml• Con
WOMEN
NEW
&amp;
USED
FURNITURE
$1,400 Phone 446 3963
410 Second AVIIIUI
rnen Ph 446·0756
DO
YOU
like
to
have
your
crel
e, 446.1142
854
Second,
446·9523
25
5·4
Gallipolis, Ohio
267·11
251 ·11
fr
iends
in?
Good!
Would
you
2
REGISTERED
Siamese
1965 PLYMOUTH Sports Fury,
"An equal opportunity
-----Klllens,
Chocolate
point,
1
like
to
earn
some
n1ce
thing
s
WHIRLPOOL
upnght
freez
er, bucket seats, good condtlton ,
FURNISHED Apt , utilities employer.''
ma le, I female, 1 registered TERMITE PEST CONTROL
for Christmas? Let me come brand new, holds 800 lbs. Sl 50
2566814
pa1d, free garage parking,
Siamese
Cat male, chocolate FREE Inspection. Call.u6-324S.
and show you ou~ n1 ce Ime of Cal l 388·8705
254 6
Adults only Libby Hotel
Merrill O' Dell,' Operator b~
poin
t
367
7«19,
,
toys,
and
gifts
Items
from
255
3
-WANTED
248 If
E•lermlnal Termite Sevlce,
251·6
Playhouse,
today
Why
not?
1969
FOR
D
plc~up,
e.cellent
EXPERIENCED
body
19
Bement Dr,
Call Barbara. 446·3411 for 8 HEAVYSPRIN GER Holstein condllion ,$1,500 Call446 0728
repairman Apply 1n person at
~7-tf
SLEEPING rooms ,
details
_
Gallipolis Motors
23311 he1fers Cal l 614 286 2496 255 2 after 5 P m
rates , free garage p~:::~~~
254 .3
254 3 BUY the brand name you know HOUSE by owner, 8 rooms; 2
baths, 446·0762.
Central Air C:ondltlonllll
Libby Hotel
and can trust Buy a Sealy
- -- - - - 241·11 ---~---__;
227·1f
&amp; HNifng
mattress
1961 VOLKSWAGE N Bus, new 3 YEAR OLD Beagle 446 4149.
Fret
Esllm1les
---,.----254-i
2543
engrnes , new l1res, good
Stewart's
Hardwlnt
FURNISHED trailer, r iver
m1leage, very good shape
DELUXE
Va
cuum
cleaner
VInton,
Oltlo
nvew 51 Garfield 446·2328.
JEEP, new mo tor, new tires. AKC toy poodle puppies, ·6 sales and service on all
Ca ll 446 3784
144-ff
2543
weeks
old,
1
t
hocolate
female,
255 I
new top, new transmtsslon,
makes Phone 256·6457
2
black
males.
675
2242.
388 9991 atler 4 p m
249·12 " HOT·SHOT" WASHMOBILE
FURNISHED Apt . parking,
239 If
254 3
28'
CRUISER
w1lh
trail
er.
sk1s,
Wash, wax and degreaolng
central heat, two adults only,
.-::c-c~--:--:-:-::--slee ps 4, com plete galley,
1970 CHEVY Bel Air 6 cylinder
with
mobile t.&lt;llt 446-4441
$140 per month Lease 446
1
F
YOU
are
building
a
new
e•~ellen t cond ition, real buy "BOSS" 302 Mustano A I
Automat1c
Drive
$1,495.
256
210 If
home
or
remodeling,
set:
us
0338
Call Luke Curry Colonial
condltton,
tape
deck We are builders. Distributor
6884
248·11
Very large national company will soon open
Motors, Huntmg ton, 529 3276 dmmg lights, must sell. 446
252·3
ALBERT EHMAN
for Holpolnt Appl iances ,
or
evenmg 522 9147
another
of
our
successful
stores
in
Gallipolis,
3931
'
Water
Delivery Service
ONE · bedro om apartment
Allison
Electric.
255 6
255 I
Ohio. We are seeking an individual wtlo will be
Patriot Star Rt., Gallipolis
range, dtshwasher, carpeted
154·11 16' WOOD hall fiberglass bot
tom boat, extra good trailer
Ph. 379·2133.
through out
located
1n
---~-responsible for tile complete operation of the
USED
,{~NO NEW
SEVEN
piece
din
ing
room
su1le
and
40 hp. Elgin motor Must
243·ff
SIGNS
&amp;
POSTERS,
Custom
downtown . $95 per month
USED: Full me bed, early
store
in.cludill9
tile
supervision
of
several
and
Maple
lwm
bed
Call
446sacrifice.
Call
446·1462
or
446·
made,
I
cbpy
or
In
quantity
Phone 446·3644
American T. V Black &amp; While
1407
4973 after 5 p m.
THOMAS FA,fN
251-lf
employees. We will train you In our methods.
Hand painted . Silk Screen .
Phll co, automa frc washer ,
255·3 . Instant signs. Please phone
252
4
EXTERMINATING
CO
If you enjoy customer contact and have
small refngerator, occastonal
Termlfe
&amp;
Pest
Control
GallipoliS
446
0706
TWO bedroom apartment,
chatr 3 p1ece maple end table YAMAHA 1971 model, like new
HAFFELT'S CARPETING
retailing background, preferably fabric or
Wheelersburg, Ohio_
range, dishwasher, carpeted
209 If
set Atr condittoner foot stool.
R
5
B
350
Lots
of
pep
Call
IF
YOU are build ing a new
throug hout $125 per month
software', we are interested! Please write
table lamp
home or need new carpet,
446 4973
Phone 446 3644.
today
to:
Mr.
Johns,
23550
Commerce
Park
255 _4 LOGS ior flr,place Ph. 256· phone J erry Haffelt, 446·1158
251·11
6574
NEW Tappan ranges, electric
for free esttmates
Road, Beachwood, Ohio 44122. A confidentia I
243 26
or gas, features suc h as ltft up 1969 DELTA 88 4 door low
sEc O~N
~
D-""
F1
,.-o-or -:,-u,...
r n::-;1-::shed
252 6
$5.00 Service Chlr9e ' .
interview will be arranged.
top, • ltft off oven door, cl ock
mileage, e•cellent condition,
apartment Call 446 1397.
AT SPECIAl
------ _..:.____
Wlllr~moveyourdead
with ttmer See through oven
w1 il sacrif1ce 446·4994 after
----~--------2~6 L______________________________ _ J
door , and many more
5 30 p.m.
·coRBIN .&amp; SNYDe.Ai
c.~~a':k~~~~31
selechon of colors to fit your
255·6
LOWER
PRICES
SERTA
&amp; Bemco Mattresses;
4 ROOMS and bath unturmshed A GROWING m""ufacfurlng ·wanted To Do·
ot her kttchen appltances ;;;;;:;;:;;
·;;;;;;~~:==:::=;
- . 1!1 EW &amp;.-USED ~
i!!SIJ!lll!!dAAWL~9f l $172'11. "B· J 55::.. !i::::;:::=:;;~~=?.=i:N:::K?-::-:-~
.·'
__apartmenl.A~02i:L. --~ -- plant has immedlal•opentngs
free parking. 995 s-eco nd 1
~ •
1 BE AMS, Channel, angle,
econ ve - ·
SEPTIC TA S
253·1f
for experience~ general CUT QUILT piec;s and do z1g
Aven ue, 446 1172
sheet end plate steel, rounds, - - - - - - - - Cleaned and Installed
· - - - - -- . - - ma'"lenance personnel.
zag quilting ' 446·0267
2~5-tf
197
l
Chevelle
SS
fla
ts,
relnlorclng
bars
and
JUST
received
a
truck'oad
of
If•
Russell's
Plumbing, 446 4782
2 BEDROOM trailer In
Industrial e•perlence in
254-7 - - - - - - - - - - . Automatic, excellent
mesh, rail, p1pe, culverls and
'" plywood paneling. Selling
.
297·ff
Cheshire, 367.732'1
machine repairs Is required.
equipment
Prompt
drilling,
at
bargain
prices.
6 various
255·11
Reasonable starting pay and
clea n M~ ~~~c~t'J,TG~~k ~~~d 1 1;:' conditaon, Pitchford &amp;
Neiman Co., Nel sonv ille , color• Can be seen at corner BOB
LANE ' S Complete
....,.~-::-----:--:,, liberal benefits Arply In WOULD like to
675 mo
Evans Select Auto
housetratlers for con~truction
Ohio, P 0 . Box 2'18, Ph . 753
of 1920 North Mai n 51. an d
Bookkeeping and Ta• Ser
BLUE Lustre not only rids person at Federa ·Mogul
workers in the Cheshire area
1554 Call collect
Poplar Sl, Point Pleasant or
vice, 4241f&gt; Fourth Ave.,
247 11 Sales, 388-9975.
carpets of soli but leaves pile Corporation, 2160 Eastern
181 If call 675 3762 after 8 p.m
Kanauga. Office hro 9 a.m.-1
Phor)e 367 7684.
soft and lofty. Rent Electric
Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio. An
S
~E
W
-I
~
N~
G
~
M~A~C~
H
~
IN
~
E~.~
z,g~Z
;ag
,
254-2
Everett
Rayburn,
Jr
p
m Ph 446·1049.
'shampooer S1. Central Supply equal opportunity employer.
dtal and sew Th1s machtne GOOD CLEA N LUMP and
MOBILE
HOMES
248
tf
85-if
-~---:-:255·1f
254-2
l Company .
dar.ns embrotders, makes
stoker coal Carl Winters, Rio
. , FOR SALE
-------- - - -- - - - : : : NEEDS L!'N or refired RN to
buttomhole!. Jusl dtal and
Grande Phone 245·5115
RECONDITIONED
PAINT DAMAGE - 1971 z,g.
HOLLEY BRO. CONST.
work In nursing home. Can
sew
Pay $41 50 or pay $5 10
6-tf
MOBILE HOMES
Zag Sewmg Machines. Sl1ll m COMPLETE water line lnCLEAN rugs, like new, so easy For Rent
live tn If desired Wrile Box
per month Call 446 O'l55
1968 Raycraft 12x51
ong1nal carlons . No at .
slallatlon, backhoe, bulldozer
to do with Blue Lustre. Rent
3t3 Ironton. Ohio, Rt. 1.
4
ROOM
house
on
Yellowtown
253 If 51 NGE R Sewing MaQ11ne Sales 1966 Shull 12•~
,
209·11
tachmenls needed as our
a~d boring machine servl9'!••
Electric shampooer $1 . G. C
Clay Chapel Road. 446·4647.
&amp; Serv1ce. All models in 1968 Elcona 12x50
controls are bu!IJ-m, Sews
J. P. Holley, 145-501tor D. R.
Murphy, Lower Store.
251
-6
STEREO
JUS
I
taken'"
Stereo
8
stqck Free deli very Service 1968 Elcona 12x60
255·1f
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
Holley, 245·5006.,
TOOL sharpening, saws,
tr ack console rn waln ut ftntsh
guaranteed Models priced 1973 Peerless 12x60
·--~button holes, sews on buttons.
I .tf
scluors, shears, home and
Will sell for balance due $98 80
from $69 95 . French City 1960 Whitney 10•46
monog rams, and blind hem
garden tools. Sharp Shop,
or pay so 20 per mon th Call
Fabric Shoppe, Singer ap.
B&amp;S MOBILE HOMES
stitch Full cash price $38.50 D P MARTI!Ij &amp; Son W&gt;ler
Atley rear 147 Second.
446 0255
eroved dealer, sa Court St
- 216·11
Second &amp; Viand St.
or budget plan ava ila ble.
Delivery Service. Your
25Jif
Ph 446 9255
Pl. Ptusant
Ph one 446 4312
patronage wil l be ap
308-11
1Next to Heck's)
2~ 6
preclated Ph. 446·0463.
REMOOELING, building new
ELECTiliCtTY
HEREFORD
cattle,
2
hogs.
and
242·11 --~-----7-tt
tooms, cement, rooting ,
12 pigS 388 8631
ALL TYPES of build ing
I ROU ND oak table, I secretary --~-----­
siding, furnace ins. J. H
, W• turollll Wtlor • low~ ; Gaw~i~l'"~.zi';'~
253 3 mat er~a ls , block. brlck, sewer
"'·-n &amp; .......
""", .4411·9271 . 6811 desk , oak , 1 folding.bed. oak ; Plumbing &amp; Heating
Park1111 , T)f AnltnM
L .
1oM ,
. ......
NewGMC
pipes. windoWs, Hn1els, etc
Dru;ults • Ra- • Rtlrfltrtlorl - Nor C. 1 ":. •
phone 388·82'13
252·3
GEN~ PLANTS ·a SONS
1964 FALCON A I cond1f1on
Truck Headquarters
Cla ude Wmters, Rio Grande,
....... Dio, ...... DltllwalllHIJu st paml~d Call 446·2911
1966
'''
ton
GMC
P1ckup
0. Phone 245-5121 after S,
- - ' - - -- - - ' - PLUMBING - Heal1ng &amp; Air
l'aftn. Swfllllllhlll'aill • Clttl t 11.
tz.l.tf )969 Olds 88
253-3
2 AKC regiStered lnsh setters 6 Condltionmg 300 Fourth Ave
1969 Dodge Station Wagon
Ph 446 1637.
months old - had all shots
Wanted
J ROOMS of furnitue See at 756
Need Another Bldg ?
1971 3 ton Chevrolet truck
48·11
Call
256
6690
after
5
p
m
MOBILE 'Home Space 64' &lt; 12' Second Avenue
SEE o~r alummum bldgs. 1967 Jeep Staflon W~gon
'
252·3
Wilham A Huff. Rout e 2, Bo•
253 6
CARTER'S PLUMBING
Heavy duty, with flooring, 1964 "'· T. GMC PU
150, Sanausky Road, South·
wired for electric Also West 1961 11&gt; T. Chev, Pickup
AND HEATING
AKC
registered
black
and
tan
Poi nt, Ollio,
1971 MERCURY Capn 1600 one
Virg1nla
chunk
coal,
drain
1967
'4 T Chev. PU
Cor
Fourth &amp; Pine
Dachshund.
Call
446·0754
Phone 446 3888 or 446·4477
tile. bell tile, cement and 1968 '1• T GMC PU
,_,__
--'-251 6 owne r 18,000 mtl es radtal
after 5 30
'
165-11
tire~. am and lm radto,
mortar Galf1 pofis Block &amp; 1968 ''' T GMC PU
252 3
GUITAR Students Children or Phone 446-47 36
'
Coal Co., 123'h Pme, 446 2783. New II ft. camper
adults Mrs. Fredelene Angel,
25)6
2Q7.tf 1966 ot.. T GMC
STANDARD
Services Offered
89 Taft Rd , Jackson, Ohio.
Plumbing &amp;Healing
-..,..---- - - - 1968 'I&gt; T GMC PU
Phone 286·3497.
REAL NICE r iding horse See
S
Sm lth ~ 1960 1 Ton Ford flat ,
21$ Third Ave., 446·3712
C&amp;S Electrical ervlce &amp;
253·3 Shern•an Basham at Brdwell T I PEWRITRE R f Ofl etti•1967'h T GMC Pickup
Repairs . House • w~r lng,
187-tf
Corona,
oya
'
v
'
'
1964
CO
1600
fnternaf1ona
l
388 8825
eleclr~~
heat.
motor
controls
Underwood, manual and
1 k
253-4
Free e•llmates Ph. 446·4561
RUSSELL'S
electric Simmons Prin ting 1967 ~u\ GMC PU
Wanted To Buy
'
or 675.3361
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING ,
and Off1ce Equipment.
.)
T.
GMC
PU
22·lf
~,1 Gallla Ave. 446-Ma
WANTED to buy, self 0!: trade, 5 ,CHAR\)LAIS feeder calves
235 ' 11 1966
1967
t.
GMC
f!ICkUP--Rea
l
ntce
446-4344
297·11
loy electric train, 446· 48&lt;13.
p,pe-s~.-::P-,p-s-.--:-G.BD,
e
1968 'r. T. GMC P1ckup
253 3 -P-IP-E-s-.BANKS TREE SERVICE
' 24Mf
Cheratan, BBB , Jobey, 1967 'J&gt; T. GMC PIGk up
FREE estimates, liability In· --,.D:-:E:::W~IT::T::::,S:::P:::L-:-U::-M:-::8::1N:::;-G
•
SOMMERS
G.M.C.
suranc~. Pruning, trimming
AND HEATING
~AMM Kl'UOI! with oi without
H1lson, and ofhers Tawney s
TRUCKS, INC.
CHEVELLE
307
and
ca41tY'
work,
tree
and
Route
160 at E-grttl1
house. eau 4.46-9535 Monday 1971
Pipe and Trophy Hou,., 422
133 Pine St.
l .c~ut omati c
Phone 44ll 1787
slump
removal.
Ph.
446-4953.'
Phont
446-1735
tltru Fri.
For lntormetton Can Sllirley • I Jftl »7-7250
Second Ave
146·2532
253
5
7~tl
111-1
:W.I
199.tf ·- - - · - - . . . , . . . - - - -·-----....-------,..~
-:-":'
:! ~---.,

'1695

'1895

------

'1195

WOOD MOTOR SALES ·

New listing 3 Bedroom Brick
WITH FULL DRY BASEMENT. IT'S IN BEAUTIFUL ·
CONDITION . VERY NICE KITCHEN WITH RANGE ,
ETC FLAT LOT IN EXCELLENT NEIGHBORHOOD
OWNER MOVING OUT OF STATE
We Need Listings

Agency

.

In Cheshire
Need An Investment
And A Good
Place To Live?
VERY ATTRACTIVE 2
STO RY
HOME
WITH
BATH, M00611N FUR ·
NACE , LOVELY KITC HEN
( BUILT IN CAB
AND
AP PLIAN CES),
BASEMENT ALL NEW
ALUMINUM SIDING , 2
CAR PORT ON 1 ACRE
WI TH J MODERN .MOBILE
HOME S, ALL WITH PATIO
S IDEW ALKS, ETC AND
ALL RENTED PRESENT
INCOM E $480 00 PER
MONTH
RENT
THE
HOUSE AND INCREASE
INCOME
TO
$650 00
YOU 'L L AGREE IT 'S
WELL
WORTH
THE
ASKING PRICE
Buil~ing Lots

2 ACRE LOT FL1AT EX ·
LOCATION
CELLE NT
WITH WATER $5,000 00
12 ACRE
FLA T TO
RO\.LING ST REAM AND
WOODS
EXCELLE NT
SPOT FOR YOUR NEW
HOME
The Home You
Dreamed of Owning
IS IN AN EXCELLENT
NEIGHBORHOOD
IN
TO WN HUGE OLD OAK S
SHA DE
THIS
WELL
1:-,II;N OSCA P E D"L OT - IT'S A
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I

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2
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'

•-'l'htlunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, Oct. 29,197~ ·
'

.·

.

·•

'

cial Security boosts,
w,el are hikes delayed

'

By. tlJGENE V. RISHER
W~HINGTON (UP!.) 1'1-elidellt Nixon signed 44 bills
Sa~, "in'cluding the first
federal controls on noise
pollution,and hazardous household jroducts, but delayed
·IICtlon on a costly election-year
boolt In SOcial Security and
welfare j)eneflis.
· The , White, House gave · no
hint when Nixon would decide
to ·~ or veto the big $5.4
billion Social Securit,y Bill, one
of 62 measures he left behind
on hla desk for a one.(iay
campaign tour of northern
Qlio and Michigan.
Previously, the President
· had signed 18 b~s approved
just before CongreSs adjourned
for the year and vetoed nine
others as b1151ing his budget
and risking the need for higher

taxes.
Before his departure In late
morning, Nixon announctd he
had ~ed legislation cresting
an independent, five-member
regulatory 8!]ency to set and
enforce 5afety standards "designed to eliminate unressona·
ble risk of injury or death'' ·
from use of household consu·
mer products, which kill an
estimated 30,000 Americans
and injure another 2ttrnillion

each year.
Despite reservations about
the bill, Nixon said it was most
inlportant for "its recognition
that a defective iawnmower or
. electric heater can be just as
dangerous to theconsumer and
his family as contaminated
food or imprope~ly packaged
drugs."
The $178 million, three-year
meas1,1re authorizes the presidentially appointed com·
mission to issue · mandstory
.safety standards governing the
' use design labeling and
performance'of products not
already subject to federal
regqlation. These include
aircraft, motor vehicles, food,
drugs, cosmetics, pesticides
and firearms .
The commission will be
empowered to recall seize or
' order
ban hazardous products
refunds to consumers a~d seek
stiff fines or prison terms for
manyfacturers or distributors
who wilfully violate the law.
To combat the "invisible
pollution" of noise, the other
major bill signed Saturday
would give the Environmental
Protection Agency $24 million
over three years to set and
enforce acceptable noise levels
for a host of products; from

).etl'mer s to 1·ackh·ammers an d
dishwashers to dump trucks.
·
Th e ca tegones
covere d
wou ld embrace ne arIY every
noisemaking product , except
.
exemp t wns
expec t ed for
competitive·racing vehicles
and church bells and carillons.
Electric and . ' Electronic
hoilsehold appliances would be
labeled according to noise
emission levels.
A controversy ove~ aircraft
was
resolved
by
a
', co ~ g ressiona) compr~m i'se
g1vmg the Federal AVIation
Administ~ation, wh ich
presently has ~II jurisdiction
over plane nmse, power to
modify' accept. or reject
propose,d EPA no1se standards
in that area.
Among other bills signed
Saturday were provisions for :
- More n'gld contro1s over
dumping of wastes in the
oceans.
~Protection of whales, por·
poises, seats, polar bears,
walruses, sea otters, manatees

and other marine manunals to
prevent their depletion or
exth\ction .
·
- Federal assistance ·in
orderly planning of coastal
land areas where Nixon
estimated that. 75 per cent of
the U. S. population now lives.
- Making it a federa l offense
to harass, assault, kidnap or
mtirder a foreign official or
member of his family in the
United States, and strengthen
their protection by the government.
-Creating "gateway recr.eationalareas" of:W·,200 acresat
San Francisco Bay and 26,172
acres in the New York-New
Jersey metropolitan area to
serve an eStimatetl 35 million
· residents when completed.
- Ra isin g the temporar y
ceiling on the national debt
from $450 billion to $465 billion
until June 30. The measure
lacked the $250 billion Ceiling
on federal spending this year
which Nixon asked Congress to
approve.

.

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·Your Wayne National Forest
'By T. Allan Wolter ·
•
liavc been privileged to observe the .Jeer in
li{ONTON - lliave been planning for · n1any habitats in all seasons of til&lt;\ year.
some lime now to write an article about Healthy deer, sick deer, wobbley legged
bowhUIIting lor white-tailed deer. I have fawns only hours old, week-old fawns with
been postponing it with the hope of being their tiny white flag ~Pin alarm, starving,
able to give a first hand account of a staggering deer w.ith sunken eyes ·and
successliJI hun l. .
skeletons visible through their hide.
However, alter eight unsuccessful Coyotes, foxes and timber wolves' trac'ks
attempt.&lt;; since the Oct. l3th opening of bow following deer tracks usually result·. in
season, it is apparent that I had better not dead deer. All of this is part of the deer's
wail any longer, or the season will soon be natural life cycle and ~ome thing that he
over.
has contended with over millions of years.
I should know better than to get op· He has actually multiplied and expanded
limisli~ about my chances to bag a deer his range under these conditions.
with a bow and arrow. This fall marks my
The only significant change is that man,
18th year of tryiijg; only two have been throug h car,efully regulated hunting
successful. Before .this is interpreted as . seasons, has replaced the predators (such
complaining, let me hasten to add that, as wolf and cougar) in controlling the deer
while being extremely frustrated at times, populations .
the thousands of hours· I have spent in this
Perhaps the most disgusting thing I
pursuit are unforgettable and, like~ good have seen occurred 'iaot Thanksgiving
education , cannot be taken away.
·
morn ing. I was bow hunting fro m my
Over the years I have been outwitted stand near .J ohn's Creek. It has snowed
by Mr. Whitetail's uncanny - almost about 4 inches the night before; even the
su pernatural - senses so many times that smallest weed was supporting a large
it has becom~morous. Itremindsmeof
cotton ball of we t sticky snow . It was
Wiley E. Coyote and the Roadrun ner difficult to see and hear anything under
ca rtoons, on ly the Beep Beeps are snorts of those conditions.
alar m, and the cloud of dust is a large ... _ Suddenly, a huge buck flashed by with
while tail disappea ring into the brush.
his tongue hanging out and saliva dripping
One can have only the highest respect fromllis open mouth, his sides heaving
for this most magni(icant animal!
with the effort of running. It all happened
Being a forester and avid hun tel'&gt; I so quickly I didn't have time to raise my
bow. I silently berated myself for not being

8. Counted dead·in crash
J

more alert, but rationalized that' even l(f .
had the bow at full draw I couldn 'thave gOt
'.:
off a good shot.
A few minutes later II medium si£t(,
long yellow haired maTigy cur 'dog can)e
hopping along the deer track. WHile I was
cursing the dog and all, its ahcestor~; .
another dog, much smaller; and barel.i':
able ·to run in the snow, came aloi)8,
following in the same track. Two worthies$ ,
good-for-notliing dogs, whose own ~{
probably . through! they were sleeping
under the back porch, bad ruined mYhuQt'
and my day.
::
No one knows exactly what effect deer
running dogs have on the deer populattoo;
It's the injusti~e of this occurrln~ 365 days
a year that rankles me . .There should lie
some rest at some tinle during the year IQI'
this poble animal. He also deserves more
than.to be illegally shot and left to rot as
happening in some 'areas.
.·
Still, in the face Of this constant
harrassment, the deer herds appear to be
growing. Only time will tell if the dogs
have a limiting affect on populations. .;·
A successful hunt is not to be taken
lightly when one considers the hardships Q
deer . has to endure before fulfilling .a
sportsman's dream. The Indians had a
saying that fi ts the situation perfectly: ·
"Come, wild brother, do you not know
that it is an honor to be the food of Chiefs!''

ls

CHICAGO (UP!) - A northbound Dlinols Central Gulf
railroad commuter · train
crubed Into the
Of a .
aecond train during the morning ruah hour 'today, driving
about 25 ~rd.s into the rear
coach, and trapping dead and
injured inside. · . •
• Within . an hour Michael
Reese Hosjlltal, close . by the
27th Street stop where the
crash occurred, reported dt
least elght dead and about 9S
inj\11'00.
'
· This correspondent, on one of
the .trains, believed the dead
would go well beyond that

rear

figure.
The ICG, a heavily
patronized commuter service
for paSBellgers from Chicago's
South Side and Its suburils, is
electrified. Officials cut off the
power around th.e wreck area
to safeguard passengers, some
of them. dazed, 1 leaving the
wreckage. ~ tracka are at

ground level. .
way into the coaches to adTraffic on nearby highways minister to injured. ·
became jarruned as scores of
Passengers aboard the first
ambulances .Ought to reach train said it had stopped at the
the scene.
. 27th Street station, and began
Most a! the fatalities were In to !Jack up. They sai~ it had
the rear coach of the lead train gone about 70 feet when the
and the first coach of the collision came.
second. Bodies dangled in the
Some of the injured also were
wreckage of both, which were taken to Mercy Hospital.
knocked off the tracks by the
The site of the wreck was
impact, about 8:35 a.m. EST. approximately three miles
The first train was a south of Chicago's Loop and
Highlin~, a double-decke~ de·
signed primarily for corrunuter
service. Firemen put up fuelders to work at cutting into the
COUNCIL TO MEET
wreckage to free victims
MASON - The Mason City
trapped inside. '
.
Civic Council will meet at 6:30
"We don't know if they are p.m. Tuesday at the Mason
living or dead," one fireman Youth Center. Ele~;..Uon of Of.
panted. Some could be heard ficers· will be held and other
screaming for ald.
important business considered.
.· The 27th street platform was Each of the 10 ·organizations
taken over as a temporary making up the council are
morgue and treatment station. asked to have representatives
Medical personnel from present for the meeting said
nearby hospitals worked their President Ray (Red) Tucker.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

-

NORWALK, Ohio (UP!) Kenneth G. IQrk, 20, of New
London, ls a Democratic candi·
date for Huron County clerk of
courts--but he has penned a
Cllmpalgn letteJ nearly endors·
ing his opponent because Kirk
"never had' any great am·
bltion'1 to be clerk of courts.
"When they were making up
the ticket last spring, they already had somebody running
for county commission which is what I wanted," said
the 20-year-old political science
major at Adrian (Mich.)
College.
He said he agreed to run
against the
Incumbent
Republican , Clark Hunter ,
because no one else entered ·the
race in the northwestern Ohio
.county.
He ·said he wl-ote his campaign letter because he did not
want people voting for him on
the pretex he would serve as a
, clerk of court.
"U you want a candidate to
serve only as clerk of courts,
then I advise you to vote for
Clark Hunter," said Kirk in his
open letter. "He is a gentleman. He Is a family man and
diligently trying to do hls job as
clerk of courts. At present, Mr.

Snowden

· milling icta of vandalism are aotng to lind themselves In a
"DUly situation," Middleport Pollee Cblef J. J. Cremeans
warned today.
Younc people ar.e throwlog eggs at antomoblles and
bomes. Tbese bring abollt a dlleoloratlon of paint and
chroln finllh hlcb 11 da
th hi 1
e
w
maglng, e c e said. Wax 11
a1ao being n•ed to mark Blllomoblles, which IJ al.io
~---

~

)~;

;!;!
~~~i
:~
=~

.?i

~l
t~

The chief warned that parents are responsible far their
cblldreo's act and that they will be prosecuted to the full ij
extent al the law.
t=&lt;
·''We cannot tolerate tbiJ type of thing," the chid ad· ~~
Ylled. .
1 ~J

....

..·•·•·•·•·•·•·•·•·•·•·•••·•·•··

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, . • . ,.,.,.... .

•

By United Press IDternatlonal
FOUR FEET OF SNOW clogged the northern Rockies today
and heavy snow storms spun through the northern Plains as a
major pre-winter storm lumbered' over the area. Some porUons
Of the ncrtbern Rockies reported up to four feet Of snow by esrly
thla morning as tile storm continued to rage:
Heavy snow warnings, storm warnings, lravelers', lmnters'
and stockmen's advisories and winter storm watches were in
effect today from northwestern Minnesota to the north and
cenlral Rockies, northern Arizona and New Mexico and the
Texaa and Oldahoma panhandles as the snowstorm moved south
and east. Alta, Utah, a mountain ski resort east of Salt Lake City,
reported four feet of new snow at the 10,000-loot elevation. A few
skiers took to the slopes Sunday night, though ski resorts were
not open.

..

TEL AVIV -ISRAEL SAID ITS WARPLANES raided four
Arab guerrilla bases tn the northern suburbs of Damascus today
ln liB most concentrated strike around the Syrian capital since
the 19fT Middle East war. In an almost Immediate response to
guerrill8 hijackers winning the releue of three Arab. prisoners
from West Gennany, Israeli planes struck within 4¥.. miles of the
o.mascus city limits and, a military spokesman said', returned
home safely.
The four targets ranged from 4¥.. to eight miles from the
northern edge of DamaSCUJ and were described as guerrilla
ballell at or near the villages of Duma, Ain SUcltna, Harana and
Ain Sacheb. The attack came as the nation's newspapers and
lea~rs assailed West Ger!nany_lor llowJng to the )!lja~l!y
releulng the three survivors Of a guerrilla group that killed 11
Ilraell Olympic team. members in September.

CARPET

... )l8lllellger8

Sun King Colors: Gree.nfi nch, Circus Red, Ice Cap, Ocean Tide, Black Star, Galleo n
·. Gold, Lime 'Touch, Sung low, star Sapphi;e, Golden Fig, Olive Branc h,
Cqpper Glow, Solar Gold; Jade Crystal, Fireball Red, Toasted Wheat,
Siiversprings.

•
Ire .IS ex ecte

"there are a few matters to be Washington or Paris . The the United States does not sign
Vietnam
cease.fire
North Vietnam renewed its made crystal clear," and Communists said Saturday a
call today for early signing ofa presidential adviser Henry A. they thought he would fly into agreement, North Vietnam will
cease.fire agreement .ending Kissinger said last Thursday the French capital Tuesday for · continue to fight until lt wins
·the fighting in South Vietnam there must be another a signing ceremony with the the war·.
and questioned whether negotiating session.
North Vietnamese foreign
The editorial broadcast by
President Nixon might be
There was no report from the minister.
the Vietnam News Agency and
delaying the ceremony for White House today on Kissin- .Despite official silence, U.S. monitored in Tokyo also raised
political reasons. Diplomatic ger's activities and it ivas not military sources in Saigon the possibility that the Nixon
sources in Saigon said known whether he was· in disclosed another conciliatory adrilinistration was negotiating
President Nguyen Van Thieu Washington or had made gesture toward North Vietnam. the end of the war lor domestic
and Hanoi would agree on a another of his secret !rips to The sources said the U.S.7th politi cal purposes. The
truce simply because both Paris for further talks with Le Fleet had halted born· editorial said in part:
sides want the war to end.
Due Tho, a meinber of the bardments north of the 2oth
"They (the Nixon Ad·
'l'he North Vietnamese posi- Hanoi Politburo, and Xuan Parallel and the ' mining of ministration) spesk of dlf·
tionasstatedrepeatedlyisthat Thuy, the chief North Viet- North Vitnamese ports above flc ultles in Saigon, but
no further negotiations are namese negotiator.
that .parallel. Hanoi itself is everybody ·knows that their
necessary and that the agreeThe State Department said about 65 miles north 9f the 2oth puppets and lackeys cannot
ment should be s1"gned in Pans
" Secretary of State Willia
" m P. Parellel. Air strikes above the resist their decision. How can
on Tuesday1· Vic' .PresldenL .Rogers had .no appointments 20th halted last week.·
. ___ Jh.e. t.aiLwag, the head? Or do
Spiro T. Agnew said Sunday it today but there was no InThe official North VIet- they negotiate just to serve
could not' be that soon because dication whether he was In namese newspaper Nhan Dan their political ends lit home ?
"The U.S. has only these two
said today in an editorial that if
choices: to end ita ruthless
:•:•:•:;:::::::::::::;~:;:&gt;.•:•:;:•:•:•:,:;:,:;:,:;:~:::::::::::::::::::: aggression, withdraw all Its
troops and military personn.el
from South Vietnam, respect
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Vietnam's Independence, soveOhio Extended Outlook Wednesday through Friday · reignty, unity and territorial
Integrity and the right to self·
Wednesday cloudy with a
determination
of the South
chance of rain then clearing
Vietnamese people, or to
Thursday and partly cloudy
NEW YORK (UPI )-A poll none, and 14 would have been f riday. Daily high tern·
continue its unjust, costly and
taken in the l61largest states undecided, the poll said. For peratu res ln the mid to upper
issueless war.
before Henry Kissin ger an- election, a candidate needs 270 50s. Lows ln the early
UP! correspondent Arthur
nounced Vietnam peace "is at . electoral votes.
Higbee, reporting from Saigon,
morning in the upper 40s
jjAt the same time, the Wednesday cooling to the
hand" shows Sen. George
said diplomatic observers In
McGovern had narrowed the survey found tha t many voters mid 30s by Friday.
the South Vietnamese capital
gap between himself and · have no great liking for either
were convinced both North and
&amp;m:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:::::::•:::•:•:•:::::,:;
South
Vietnam would agree to
President Nixon but "could candidate and, oddly, that as
hardly hope to overtake" hinl. the ca mpai~n draws to a close,
a cease -fire and abide by lt
TWO
INJURED
The Yankelovich survey, con- public interest is declining,"
simply because both want the
'rwo cycle riders were taken war to end.
ducted for the New York Times The Times said.
to Vete rans Memorial Hospital
Higbee said that il either side
and Time magazine and relor
injuries
suffered
at
Sundid
not want peace then It
leased Sunday, said that if the
The conclusion of the poll ,
day
's
races
staged
by
election weFe held at the tinle Time magazine sa id , was that,
Mei gs
Motorcycle
the poll was taken--Oct. 15 to "George McGovern has main· the
Club
.
Taken
to
the hosOct. 2S-M per cent would have tained his forward momentum
IT'S TONIGHT
pital
by
the
Pomeroy
E·R
. voted for Nixon and 30 per cent during late October, but h~
Annual trick or treat night
for McGovern. At the beginning could hardly hope to overtake hospital by the Pomeroy E-R will be observed In Pomeroy
of this month, Nixon had 57 per Richard Nixon by election squad were Walter Kirschner, lhis evening from 6 to 6:30 p.m.
Orient, and Bob Sullivan. The siren will sound to begin
cent and McGovern 27. '
day." .
Furthermore, Nixon would
In the telephone poll, 3,010 Kirschner was hospitalized and and end the activities. Trick or.
have won 318 electoral votes In registered voters were inter- Sullivan was treated and treat is lor youngsters age 12
released .
thoae states and McGovern vlewed.
and under . .

Nixon landslide
apparently sure·

reboarded.

All carpet installed by our own
experienced carpet mechan!cs.

.

'

.

.

McGovern claims
his policy same
NEW HAVEN, Conn. to provide military ald to South
(UP!)Sen.
George Vietnam, but he would
McGovern entered the cam· "reserve the .right to
paign homestretch today, renegotiate" any peace treaty
claiming he and 'President containing that provision. ·
Nixon were at last In fun·
McGovern cllarged 'that the
dartlental agreement on U.ll. Nixon admlnistrai!oJ\'s failure
policy In VIetnam. He said- · lb p~tim's econO. ·
Nixon had even been begging my for peace In Vietnam would
for the end of the war.
produce more joblessness
The Democratic presl&lt;Jential throughout the Vnl!ed States.
nominee, In a telethon broad·
In remarks prepared foo
cast throughout the Con- delivery to a rally at Constltu·
nectleut ares Sunday, said "for tlon Plaza in Hartford today,
the last few weeks, Mr. McGovern said Connecticut in
Kissinger (White House bide particular would suaer
Henry A. Kissinger) and Mr. because Of Its concentration Ot
Nixon have literally been helicopter .4nd ordnance in.
begging for settlement of this dustrles.
war. And I'm glad they have.
"I think the ttme has come to
quit worrying about saving
face and to begin worrying
about those prisoners,of ours in
Hanoi and those young men
I •
who are dying In Vietnam."
McGovern has drawn heavy
criticism from administration
officials for his statement In
the primary campaign last
A buck deer was killed at
spring · advocating "begging
r·alher than bombing" to obtain 2:30a.m. today on SR 124 west
Of the Racine corp. line when it
the release of prisoners.
He said there was "not. a ran Into the path of car driven
fundamental difference" be- east by Bruce E. Smith, 30,
tween the nlnei&gt;olnt peace plan New Haven, W. Va.
The Meigs County Sheriff's
that the Nixon administration
and North Vietnam had negotl· Dept. also reported that at 3
ated and the • lQ.polnl plan a.m. today, on SR 7 In Chester ·
McGovern outlined months township, a car struck guard
rail arid mail boxes owned by
ago.
The only difference, he said, Larry Hines, Gary Wolfe and
was that he-would disoontlnue - Earl 'l'oung, The driver did no~
. military aid to the South stop. The incident is under
Vietnamese government after investigation. ·
the United States leaves,
Sunday at 3:45 p.m. on
whereas Nixon would continue county road "16 in Rutland
. il.
Township, Michael W. Hysell,
Appearing on NBC's "Meet 18, Middleport, Rt. 1, was
the Press" In Washington traveling south when, apearlier Sunday, he said he proaching a bridge, he tried to
would "honor" any agreement stop for an oncoming car but
the Nixon administration made struck the bridge Instead.
There was light damage to
Hysell's car, no injuries, and
no arrest.
·• ·- Sunday at 10:50 p.m. on
Eagle Ridge in Chester
township, Frank V. MU8Ser, 35,
RACINE-Students at Racine Rt. 2, Racine, driving east, lost
Elementary School, grades conlrol of his car In a downhill
four through six , recerilly- curve. Musser went of! the
,. ~mpeted in a poster contest road on the right Into a ditch,
urging renewal of the fiv~ · mlll baclr' onto tile highway, and
· levy lor Southern Local School roiled over In the middle Of the
.,
District to be voted on road.
Musser was · tak~n to
Tuesday, Nov. 7.
Veterans
Memorial Hospital
First, second, third and
fourth prize winners respec· by private car where he was
lively were, fourth grade, Eric admitted. He was cited for
Hill, Tammie Smith, Christa excessive speed.
Beegle, and Carl Morris; grade · Also under investigation by
five, Lonnie Mayes, Melissa the Sheriff's Dept. Is the theft
Ihle, Greg Dee!, and Tony two days ago of two guns from
Hudson ; g~·ade · slx, Ppm the ·ho111e of Ed Brim, Rt. 3,"
Spencer, Brian Grindstaff, Albany, reported Sunday. How
Penny Smith and Mike Proffitt. entry into .the h~ was made
Other pupils making a poster was not Immediately kno1!1i.
were given a cohsolatlori prize Missing was a · J. C. Higgins
said Robert Beegle, prlnClplil. · single-shot .22 . rifle with a
The posters have been ,placed leather sling, and four-power
in windows of local business scope, and· II Stevens double
barrelltJ.8auge shot&amp;un,
'places.
,.

4 Traffic

accidents

on weekend

are announced

OTI'AWA- CANADA'S QI.JJI:I' II'EDI!:RAL election campalcn II over and the vo1e1 pile Into ballot bar!!l today in • tell Ill
Prime MlJUter Pierre ElliOtt Trudeau's 4'11-)'ear-old Jl&lt;Mfllo

iDeaL

made no difference what any peace so badly after two
International supervisory com· decades of war that aclw!l
mission would do. The observ- makeup of . a supervisory
ers said bot~ sides wanted · (Continued on page 10)

Poster winners

.

·.

TEN CENTS

•

'ftle candlclalel Include Rep. Louis .Stolrea, D{)hio. The
progrlin will to be 111rec1 tonight o~ tbe CBS ne~ from 10:30
p.m. to 11 p.m. Stewart Mott, heir to the Ge~ Motors f&lt;rtune,
llid he Paid '100,0110 ftr lhe pr 1411 am.
·

..

co nstruction, a carpel with lots of bounce, sta mina, a nd body.

PHONE 992-2156

~er.

COME TO OUR CARPET DEPARTMENT• ...

And see · the large selection of Lees ·
Carpet samples. Take some home with
you. We'll · come to ·your home.
' measure your r ooms and give you a
complete installed price.

·H~silience unqerfoot is achieved through the thick , dense, compact

..

NEW YORK :.._ FIFI'Y·TWO CONGRESSIONAL candidalei
·frtm 38 ltates sponsored a prime tlnle teleVillon special !might
to eumlne lhe peace plan outlined by praldentlal adviler Henry

ON THE 3RD FLOOR

Two diff erent thic knesses. of yar ns give a text ured look that wi.li 'tast.

Cloudy with a chance of rain
tonight, low ln upper 30s and
40s. Tuesday cloudy with rain
likely an&lt;;! high in the upper 50s
and low 60s .

bo1111d TWA jet with 90 persons aboard at Pllrt Col!"'lbus Jn..
ternaUonal Airport here Sunday for 3~ hours.
Airport autborltles said an anonymOUJ female caller warned
'plutle&amp;bcml!was aboard the jet just minutes after It had taken
lift, ent'OI!Ie to Sart Francisco and LOs Angeles. The plane
returned and wu searched. No bomb was found and the

'

The plied yarns are heal set under high temperature and pressure, fOr
maximum texture retentio n.

ease

Weather

COLUMBUS- A BOMB THREAT DELAYED a California.

Bright, sparkling "Sun Colors'' in ~ rugged construction
.
that will keep its fresh good looks tor years of hard·use
tor these reasons:
The fiber is nylon-the toughest, most wear-resistant fiber ever used in carpet.

Devoted To The Interests QfTheMejgs-Mason Area
MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1972

By United Press l~ernatlonal
u•

ews•• zn Briefs•
,

HOLY CROSS TRIMPHS
WORCESTER, Mass. (UP! )
. - Defensive b~ck John
Provost scored on a Sl&gt;-yard
pass
Interception · and
linebacker Wayne Richards
pPunced o~ a bouncing ~ible- :
in the end zone· for another
defensive touchdown to lead
Holy Cross to a 2()..9 'victory
over Villanova Saturday. ..

}.~.

f.&gt;~

.......gtnc, be said. .

Parts of law
are voided

11

Re.sponsibility is. with parents

.z
.~
~ . Parents of children In Middleport convicted, of com· )~

Hunter is more qualified for
the office than I am." .
Kirk said, if elected, he
would spend hiS time as an
ombuds-man for residents of
Huron County to coimty and
state government officials.
"I will use my office to pressure the .uncaring politicians
and bureaucrats of Norwalk
and Columbus into action that
theciti ?.enswantand deserve,''
he said in his letter.
''I am not a party man/' the
letter said. "I do not vote a
straight ticket. I am fed up
with a rich, powerful, elite
holding office and ignoring the
concerns of those who are hard
working and believe in God."

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Por· ·
lions or Qhio 's financial
responsibility law have been
ruled unconstitutional by
Columbus U.S. District Court
Judge Carl B. Rubin.
The judge Friday ruled in. valid sections dealing with
fi nancial responsibility of
drivers involved in serious
accidents who are later ruled
That 'rust color
bankrupt and with liability
deposits for drivers without
really not rusty
insurance.
The action came in a suit
PT. PLEASANT - Motorists
and Point Pleasant area filed last year by citizens who
resid'ents who have ex pressed has asked the federal court \O
concern over the "rusty" rule the entire state law uncon·
lighting poles going up at the stitutional.
Rubin said the bankrupcy
Silver Memorial Bridge in·
terchange need not worry. section of the law was ruled invalid because it was in conflict'
According to the Department
with the .U.S. Bankruptcy Act
Of Highways, a rust color is the
which has supr.emacy over
- - desi~ed end result of thr state law.
weathering steel used for the
The section ruled invalid said
poles, which include the state's
drivers could not regain their
first lOO.foot tower lighting.
licenses even if their debts The hig~ ·strength steel,
includin g the accidental
which has been used for
damages - were discharged in
bridges in many states, is an an United States bankruptcy
alloy containing copper an.d court.
·
chromium. As the steel
The other portion of state law
Weathers, " iror'l pxide forms ruled unconstltuti.onat said il a
on its SJ!rlace, providing it with driver in an accident reported
a protective coating and a he did not have insurance, the
pleuing cordovan brown color sta te Bureau of Motor
that requires no main tenance. · Vehicles would set a deposit
sufficient to pay all damag- ·
ages if the driver was later
found guilty. Once a driver's li·
~nse was suspended for. fall. ure to post a deposit, he could
not..regain tbat license unli'SS
· he paid in full for audamages·
incurred in the accident..
Rubin ordered the state Bureau of Motor Vehicles to notify
within 90 days the estimated
: 80,1100 persons affected l?Y the
law that the two sections bad
been ruled unconstitutional.

Canlll K.

w.m:&gt;.;:;:;r•m»&gt;&gt;:•:·.:&lt;-&gt;.&gt;.:•
,.;..•.• "'""
~
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:O,•X•.•,•.•:O,•,•;,~

'

SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport E-R squad
was called at 11 :45 p.m•
Saturday for Walter King,
North Second Ave., who was
hemorrhaging. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
treated, and released.

•

•
ID
~.. ·

.

.

One Of the more than I ,500
known asteroids is named
Marlene after movie star
Marlene Dietrich.

VOL XXIV NO. 138

Elberfelds In Pomeroy.

about 500 yards west of Lake
Michigan,
·
The scene was 1rnmediiltely
filled with personnel from
Michael Reese Hospital, who
worked to help free the victims
from the wreckage and administer first aid to the injured,
who were lying on the graveled .
right-of-way.
·
The.site was the main line of
the Illinois Central commuter
line receiving traffic from
three branches. The line is
electrified but, fortunately,
none of the electric power lines
was downed by tbe impact.

Now You Know

'

·Opponent liked

DEFENSIVE ACTION ..:.. Leo Hill's camera caught thla.moment of blgh action in
Friday night's grid toniest ~tween" Southern High School and n~~eigue Gleal~r at
Glouster. Rick Stinson, lU lb. Tomcat senior, is abollllo reach for the bali coming to bbn
from hlgb at left. Defending is Southern's great Unebaclrer and 175 lb. senior ruilnlng back
Nick !hie (34). Camlng up to help-If needed IJ 6-3 Ronnie Hill, 235 lb. senior tackle (78).
Southern, gparanteed of a tie for the Soulhe"! VaUey Conference title, can lfln It au Friday
night at RaCine by defeating Southwestern: It Ia Soulhem's flrJt cbamptonslllp 1n football / .
·
·
.
·
Iince lbe ljHII"twu IIddeii to the athlelle Jnlnm In lilt

.

Tl'ullel!n'II.Jberalpartyheld H7aeata in the 21llmt Ho-of
Co•"•• when the electlm •• called, glvtng It majority
eontrollnd t-••" rnm dependence on the votn of lbe three
mijor CIPPIII!kln partia.
·
'1111 Prlllf r d.,. Conlll vaiiVII be1d '13 se~tl, the moderalel)'
~~ge~~nrt New DwriOCralk: party :11, and the Pupuiiit Social
Qwllt 1S. '

1

ELBERFELD$ IN
POMEROY.
.
SHOP WEEKDAYS 9:30 TO 5:00 -: OPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND SAl:tJRDAY 9:30 TO 9 P.M.

1

.

.
jiC TO MEETThe Melp County Chapter of

lbe AiDirlcan Rid Croll wW
iDeet at 7:10p.m. 'lbundly at
tbe cmlerla of Vtlerana

.

II '
I
Mf f t W~filA "

.

I ,

•

I

LOCAL TEMPS
In downtown

PitErERENTlAL TEA -The IIIIIUil Preferential Tea

Pw 01 Monday at 11 a.m.

Ill Oblo Eta Fill Olapter of Beta Sigma Pli Sorcrity wu held
Sanday nl&amp;hl at the home ol carol 'McCullough ," Mulberry
Ave., PwietO), liiJen elcht Del! lllll1lbell :were inducted .

Tempen~ture

.....

· wai 53 degl m,

UDder c~y

Seated; 1to r,are !~essie Sylvester, Barbara U&gt;gan, I&amp;bble
Buck and Sandra Sargent; standing, Karen Goins, Edle
Zirkle, Karen McGraw and Darla Hawley.

'

I

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