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ThoughlK

Weatlaer ·

tmts

Oliver Wendell Holmea llld,
"Lite Ia an elicl In ltlelf, and
tile only question aa to whether
It Ia worth living Ia whether
7011 have enou&amp;tt olll"

~

To 'IJae

G~r

Part1¥ el~ ~ .
IIIOitly elouel7 tlMwl. . . will

a chance It lholreraiiOdl .... ·
di.J. hllh• tn till so. and 80s. MGnda,y vplable clcJu6. , .
l t t t te ten; natlai• " '"

lne••·
c:hanee.

Middle Ohio Valley
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38 PAGES

"OUR SECTIONS

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~.. o. -.t Pleuant

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2 1969

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TEN CENTS

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Gallia
3 Lives in 24 Hours
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· ' "'t · · ~. F1TS - · v~ Wetllerholt, 5o •u&amp;hter of Attorney and lira. Gene Wetllerholt, flnda "~" Juat fits llao a
20~81Mlld hl8h ehalr glwn to Our House by Mrs. Olarlea
E. Holler. To her right Is a treaale table, made with wood

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pees. 'l1le table had knlle marks on Ita tlllek top where food

has been elL Tourists have c:q~led the pattern of the table.
The Windsor chairs were painted so they could be used outside or Inside.

3,!$00 Visited OUr House
B;y Pal Boucle

Many come in search of genealogy

still here?" (TileY are surprised when material about their families. All are
Mrs. Foster answers In the alflrmatlve, Interested In going Into the attic where
because they have already scanned the local Items are collected, but this area
phone book for French sounding names.' Is closed because the floor needs reSse mentions the names, Bush, Hall!~, pairing and the stairway Is weak.
Doepplng, Han1011 IIDd Thlvener, many
Sometimes tourists leave Interesting
changed throu&amp;lt marriage or Angllelza. atorles to add to Mrs. Fostsr's collection.
tlon. A recent story told about the only
"Tourists are unanimous In spealdngol member ol the French 500 to kill a bufthe beaut;y ol (lalllpolls," she &amp;aid, "and falo, one M. DuUel.
pralstng the charming park and the fact · The gay Frenchmen who needed no
there are no factories close In the town." excuse for a pe.rt;y, tllrew a big cele?.':"WW~·~~...
8U!ii bration In Dutiel's honor.
Dutlel Is the ancestor of Mrs. Paul
GALLIPOLIS - City Schools &amp;per.
intendent A. R. Durose announced Sat- Wagner.
~ that pupils IIDd teachers will be
How does a ~ ol caring for someone
dismissed from classes as follows Mon. else' a house go? Especially caring for a
~ to enable tllem to attend the tunerhouse 150 years old.
al ol Jan K. Davis, 20, daughter ol
"First there Is the dally chore of cleanGARS Principal and Mrs. James N.
lng spiders, wasps IIDd rues out of the
M. Davis. High school students will be
windows," Mrs. Foster &amp;ald.
dismissed at 11:20 a.m.; Green, Clay
"Then Ute feather ticks on the beds
and Rio elementary around 12:40, and must have a dally fiufflng. Chairs that
Washington elementary at 12 noon.
have been picked up and examined, then
The superintendent also announced
placed back haphazardly, have to be rethe school cafeteria will not serve an,y
eet exactly so."
meals on Monday.
On dark ~s. homemade£es are
Funeial services for Miss Davis are
llt In .the triangle sC0181ce .
antiq~e
scheduled 2:30 p.m., Monda,y at Grace
candlesticks around the roo · • Five foot
United Methodlst Church. Ml11 Davia
t lllchea tall, Mrs. Foster has to stretch
died early Saturday morning from Ina little to put them out In the evenings
)lrles received In an auto accident on
even with a candle anutrer.
Ocl 26.
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I!DIIU:bbdd I
Mll:711 RJ.\JJJ d&amp; UJ i J

Announce'Callia Election Workers
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GALLIPOLIS - Names ol workers
for Gali~ cbuaty'l 3t voUnc preclllcts
till ~· 15 towalhlpa were analiu1lced Satui'da.Y by th~ Gallla County
BQard ol Eleetton.:, · ·
Ulllllftclaii.Y, t~~ere are 10,200 registereii voter• In Gallla County,
Iiieluding new rqlatratlona and re.mstateIIIIIU the peat Ylll'. A Jell' 11'0. there
wre 10,717 r811atered .·votera but 517
flUid to re4aat.l tt wbe11 naWled by the
IIOard ol elll'etlon.
Last Yell' t11ere were 33 voting pre.
cladl; however, clle to a heavy vote,
. . preclact . wae cilvlded. Green Twp.
Jil!d· two preCIJa$, and, aoir hal three.

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'Twp. iJIMI "@G ~· l.aJI ~. Gnen
No. 1 hid to7. ?-'be ·'fotml!iiP ,..

2 having 337. '

ley (PJ), Janet Lucas, and Gladys Rothaeb; (DeDI) Mary Province I Margaret
Lawhon, and June Qlillen.
CHESHIRE TWP. - 11&gt; ••,,, Artlur Rupe
(PJ), Wendell Br~7'~ Gall Slsday t.bldiY.
1011; (DeDI) Hazel Elkins, Zeflte LoveAll vollng prectn.cts have six work. day, and Glenaa Stuler.
era, two Jud&amp;es anc1 one clerll for. each
C~E PCT. - (Rep) Hortle H.
political party. All $WISI.cUDc Judpa In ~~~~ (PJ), Harry~. Yeauaer, and Bette
tile 3t voting preclncti are Rep6Ucana. .A; Rolbaeb; ())em) VIrginia Buraer Lola
Here are tile workera, Replblleana •,... Llule, and Ec11Qr Gordon.
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ll~ first as (Rep,) wlthprealdlng~e
(:LAY. TWP, - (Rep) Delores Jeane
(PJ), then tile Democrata (Dim.). The, l'lliiw (PJ), Thelma
and w. Ceflrat two IIIJillld for. •ch party are ttte·· dl CottGn; (DeDI) Mary Emeatinl MoonJud&amp;ea, lilll' tiJe ~ ,th4t cle,ll, as ·fiJI- .,, Nllib'ed ~--. iad Shirl Saulldel'a.
Iowa:
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' CLAY PCT, - OleV&gt; Role James (PJ)
ADDISON TWP. - . (~ Vlrat.e RUe l..enlce Wlllib. and lrel)e Hlve!J; (Dem)
(PJ), NeUlt . :V.111 Slckl• and Florence JVl•..,
.~.~
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~ .WUUam1, Uicl Ed·
Golllard; ''@em) Evelyii' ~ .fit. 1111'
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Presiding .iullges ol all 3t preclncta
)licked up Instructions and voting supplies Saturday morning at the board of
election olftce, which will be eloaed all

eouoa,

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waa \IYI.dtct ·Wtll G,rten :~· liav~
312• ,:-ro~,
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· tie' ....,~ GIWI Jt4 No. ' . .\DDJSON .'fCT. - {Rep) JiiH •••
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GALLIPOLIS - Gallla Count;y recorded Its seventh, eighth and ninth traffic
fatalities of the year with the deaths
Friday evening of Mrs. Georgia Stiltner,
69, Eureka Star Rt., Saturday morning ol
Jan K. Davis, 20, Rt. 2 Crown City, and
Saturday afternoon of Freddie E. Kiser,
61, Rt. 2 Racine.
Mrs. Stiltner, widow of Henry StUt.
ner and mother of six children, was killed Instantly In a one-car crash at 6:50
p.m. Friday on Rt. 7, six miles south ol
Gallipolis.
Miss Davis, daughter of Mr. and Mra.
James N. M. Davis, principal of Gallla
Academy High School, died at 1:30 a.m.
Satu~ In· Rober Medical Center; Ff;;,;
· r-.&gt;
Ave., of severe head and chest l.n)lrlea
suffered ~. Oct. 26, on Rt. 7 at
the )lnctlon of Rl 218.
Mr. Kiser was killed In tbe colllsfoa
ol a car and a pickup truck on Rt. 7 jult
below the Addison bridge at 2:53 p.m.
Satu~.

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GALLIPOL$ - The piquant email of
111111es In tile formal dining room of
Our Hause State Memorial, and a fresh
dogwood branch In the pewter bowl In
tile ~ clllllng room are Martha Foster's CCIIItrlbutlon ol "something alive"
to the treasures In the old tavern.
Frl~, another tourist season closed
and Mrs. Foster's job ol having been host••• to 3,500 guests(JQplt8 states and Germany, England, Frinee IIDd Italy, Is over
tiltll next April 1.
Some years the number ol tourists has
lleen as hl&amp;lt as 5,000. For Ute last two
,..ra the figure has been leas, clle to Ute
loss ol the Silver Bridge.
The visitor coming tile greatest distance
ID visit Our House Ia 1969 was Miss
Tara DuPont, 21, ol $ydaey, Australia.
Miss DuPont ol the Australian branch ol
'\. tile famous DuPont family came to Amer~ to visit relatlveaiiDd "see America."
. ~~. making the trip, she read all
lbe cciUlcl.o( ~. S. history and economlca.
While enroute to San Francisco Mill
DuPont read about the Museum and"trled
to aet a plane to Gallfpolia." Ste had to
take a bus b)lltead, and spent the entire
time between buses, at the 150 Yell' old
tavern.
~ of town visitors, like Miss DuPont,
-..k many qul!lltlona. "Which are t h e
French homes?" "Are they open?" "Are
1QY ol the descendants ol Ute French 500 ,

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SATURDAY'S FATAL - Dllll W. Murra)o, 30, Rt. 2 Pomeroy, driver ol
this car, aufrered a cut on the head and an arm injury In a fatal colllalon at
2:53 p, m. Saturday on Rt. 7 at Addison. Freddie E. Kiser, 61, Rt. 2 Racine,
driver o1 the other vehicle, a pi~ truck, waa dead on arrival at Holzer
Medical Center, First Ave., Gallilolla.

Racine Man
Is Saturday
Fatality

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The state Hl&amp;ttway Patrol said Mra.
Stiltner was a passenger In a car driven
by Betty Mae stlltner, 18, Dlreka Star
Rt., wife of Lee Stiltner, grandson ol
the victim.
Mrs. stUtner, headed south on Rt. 7,
went off the rl&amp;ltt side of the hlghWII1,
lost control In the gravel and her car
shot back across the highway. The 1968
Plymouth went off the left side of the high.
way, through a cable guard rail and plung.
ed over an embankment. There was heavy damaae to the car. The accident Is
still under Investigation.
Betty Mae Stiltner sulfered a laceration on the bead. h was treated at
Holzer Medical Center and released.
The Stiltner fatallt;y was the first In
Ohio for the weekend which began at
6 p.m. F~ according to olftcers at
the Gallipolis Patrol FOal It was also
the first In Gallla Count;y since June
11 when Albert Dunn, 62, Rt. 1 Ewing.
ton, was killed In the collision of a
pickup truck and a station wagon on
Rt. 160, one and eight-tenths miles north
of Vinton.
Saturday afternoon's fatality occurred
when Kiser's pickup truck, headed south
on Rt. 7, collided with a northbound car
driven by Dana W. Murray, 30, Rt. 2
POmeroy.
The patrol &amp;aid Kiser apparently lost
control ol his truck on the bridge at Addison, went left of center and struck tbe
. Murray car. The Impact of the colllsl011
lmocked the Murray car onto the guard

M ay be

a Surprise Hug

jail.

Kiser was dead on arrival at Holzer
.Medical Center, First Ave. Murray waa
treated at tile hospital for a cut on tile
head IIDd an l.nlured arm, and released.
Dr. Donald R, Warehime, Gallla Coua.
ty Coroner, said Mrs. Stiltner died of a
skull fracture. Kiser's death was clle to
Internal Injuries, according to Ute coro.
ner.
(Continued on Page 20)
PAYMENTS REPORTED
POMEROY - State school foundation
IIUblld;y payments In Meigs County for
October totaled $1t5,378.5t. Amounts received by the three ~ dlstrlcta include
Eastern, $26,659. 75; Meigs Local, $83,38M9, and Southern, t31,723.9t. The
Meigs County Board ol Macatlon received $3.8119.35.
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MRS. JUDY CROOKS, IDatructor, right, at tile held of tile tallle, and lfn.
Jean Wood, left, aide, provide work book Instruction here for aii'OIII of~
aters at the Meigs Community Oass at tile Rutlanll ElemeN&amp;ry SchaaL

BY BOB HOEFLICH
POMEROY - I dare you.
Ill tact, I double clare you to visit
the Mella Cc1unty Communlt;y claaa at
the Rutland Elemlntary School. Theil, If
7011 Clll, turn down a tu: levy for tile
bineftt ol tile mentally retarded at nat

eram for the matall)' retarded.
Be asaurecl tllat 7011 110Uld be
most welcome lhaUkt 7011 ~llt tile
The 11 youngater1 mak!DI ~tile -'--'
wtll tell you Ulllr ...... ~&gt;Jl ....,~
JGDr hand and, ~ ,-,.~ ....
Ullllqi8Cted bug or twO.
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Thele 10""....1 tre ...,
, !Jtllera. .TileY eMil lildlrr"t!MJio
. 1dncbs*·l!lll1ldult IIIIPI'Wil. -,
· ..Actllally a daY ·· IJi tile
too different ·frOin • ·
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~RESI' MADE
GAI.LIPOLIS-, Tll•qaJI,IIICclunt;r!ller- ' Tllelldl,y'aeleetiOII.
F·~~~edWamerE.Cax,
~·the llft8ral climate fort!~~"*13, ~ll~!lf
a ~of beiDa . " 11&amp;1 ol tax levies Is not partlculat_ly
ablllllt ,~ leavefrilal ~Army. CoX '· &amp;Ood\tllesl!l ~a, tile cll,mate of tiMfcla·~·
!114 Weft A'f(~LfroalFortKaioli, Ky., since .room provld4!s plent;y ol food lor thouibt
.Jn tt, ~to ~ea. .
.lli ~q~na JGUI' aupport ot ~ pro. ,

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CORONER AT SCENE- Dr. Donald B. Warehbne,Gallla County Conlller,
surveys wreckage of car In which Georgia Stiltner, 69, Eureka star Rt., died
Frl~ evenirw. The accident occurred at 6:15 p. m. Fr~ on Rt. 7 about
six miles SOiah of Gallipolis. The driver, Betty Mae stntner, 18, wife of the
grsnlson of the victim, suffered a laceration of the head. It was one ol three
traffic fatalities In Gallla County In less than 24 hours.

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Sentinel, Sunday, Nove...,.; 2,

n:NEROY~=~~·::bi

Divorce.Suit
Filed
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~;;;;::::~111011Y=~and::~cu:ltodjo::ol:ft~v~e~chl~l-M!llli!LT"&gt;~&lt;!,.. ....,.KGKi&lt;ll: fren. They were marrlod Aug.

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Candidate For

TRUSTEE
SECOND TERM
Pd. Pol. Adv.

Your Support will be Appreciated

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Firemen Make

Three RunR

4, 1957,
Two divorce IC!Ioni have
---been dlomlued in common
GALLJPOr N _ r .. lllpollo
pleas court. The¥ were Irena vot.-r n~en made three
M. lil&lt;ogga, Rio Grande, vo. nre 111111 Frldo,y brinlrln.c the
James E. Slaigp, and-..., 7ear'a total to · 126 &amp;Ierma and
Casto, Kanaup, n. Larry E. the Octobei total to 16• All
Casto.
three runo wore gr181 orbruoh
Judge Ronald R. Calhoun hao ftrea.

CHARLES PYLES
Candidate For Member Of

Southern Local School Board
Election - November 4, 1969

OF YOnNG PLACES
Precincts belo111 111ill be voting in the follow·
illl places for the Nov. 4, i969, election.
Long Bottom Precinct - Robart Larkins'
Building.
Portland Precinct - Stiversville Community
Center (former Stiversville School)
Middleport Filth Ward - Former Walter Bunce
Garage on Powell St. (Ground Floor)

.Meigs County Board of Elections

NOV.. 4

!BOB)

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BY JOHN COOPER
Soil Conaervatlon Service
Maoon CooJnt;y
PT, PLEASANT - Thedltch-

Rous~

LOUKS

CANDIDATE FOR

Trustee Of SuHon Township
(2nd Term)

Your Voto ond Aid Will Bo Approcioted
Pd. Pol. Ad v.

Indo guests to the bottom of tho

MRS. VIRGINIA RAYBURN at

upstairs
bedrooms .

Aartcultural stabUlatlcot
and Cllnlenatlon Sentce tAJid
us lllat quota cards for ~
bw -cco would be maUod
out trGm her olllce on~
ber 7. !lie wont aboad to ..,
lllat ~e H~ tolllcc:o
Wtre~se would besln ICCflllo
tolllcco onNomnber !tend
the actuel ..UIJW would start
on NOWIIIber 24.
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ot a

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sycamore

trH, which "according to a
forester" was here when the

YOtlNOITI:Rs OF Till!: 11!!!!G8 0

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•r e11N lluato

create Juat aa children do IDIJIY olas..-. 11da dieploys llallow- flsurea which wore lllldo 11 a put ata.tr

tralniJw.

Surprise Hug
(continued

Cram !'.ge 1)

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lllllllter7 school cla&amp;III'OOIII, There ere
basic Jesaons to be learned - 911te
&amp;lowly. r1 course and there a r e
moments
tion.

at

creaUon, IIIII and

recrea-

Unfortunate17, the atete legislature has
pracUcall1 divor&lt;od education and trainat tile mentelly retarded from tile
retular operation of IChooll ill Oblo.
The Melp Coun1;y Raterdatlon
J!oerd, a Malp Count;y AIM&lt;Iatlon for
mentallY retardl!d children and 141lta,
and Ito audllal')' ynuth group, have tickled the problema ol proyldlng !Undo for
training and education 01 the retordod.
While a school district baa - .
&lt;1 porenta to rall7 In support ol tax
meaourea, the mentall,y retordedprogram
baa cnJ,y a comparative haadful &lt;1 fsllbIUI Wbo devote time end 8110J'II' to convince h pubUc lllat IIUJli&gt;Ort to - ,
and worthwhile.
Tueodl)''a tax mea......, Ia three IIW'·
tero &lt;1 ..,. miU . Puoaao ol tho levy
wUl proylde llnancoa for a llllllber ol
lmproyemeota, plus -siCOIIl tho pro.
gram to help tile mentaiJ.y retlrded.
Go on, visit tllo class - I dare 100.
Ing

Cited

Bv PoliCe

b

ee JO 8
Frtd'~~' Ava 'lable

News, Notes

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5-Year Probation Periods
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lighted by o big window in
which Is framed the gold and

Announce

Reedsville

ballroom
and
The stairs are

yellow leaves

Perklni, end Glenn Grate;

!Diml Chorltl Rlchords,
Jockoon T. Wolkor and Lloyd
Muogro.-.
POMEROY - Two defendFortelllnl boadl ol .-.aq
RACCOON TWP. - IRepl
Evens, and Laura Jean Craft. John Howord 1PJ 1, J"olo M. anto were placed oo probaUon •ch were FrD A. flellsp'
KANAUGA PCT. - !Rep) Richards, end Elizabeth for n.. yean, 10 were lined tl, oddreoo DOl . . - I, ,.,.,.
Dorlho Adoms IPJI. Juno Ramey;
(Dem)
Helen and Blx forfeited bonclo In tile inll over a yellow llna; 'l1lainu
Wellman, and Doro1hy Haner; Rlchords, Joyce Young, ond court ol Melp COIInt3' .hdie lllldll, Be)Jin, 11111 .,1; ....
Frank W, Porter Frldl)'.
daU L, lilber, r.olllpoll4, ·1 1
(Diml Pearl Boord, Vlrglnio Audrey Wickline.
CENTERVILLE PCT. Oplacad.., p-.n for !lYe Inc Clerenee Me~ ... BaniRoush, end Morgoret Smith.
GREEN TWP. - IRepl loll (Rep) John W. Evens, (PJI, yean each were John Brooks ett'a Creek, J(,y., r 11*nci
Layne (PJ) , Corolyn Coldwell , Kend(lck D. Rlchordo. end and Kemeth Pauley, both ol !lleron L)'ll See, Polllt " - ·
end Holen Burnette; !Deml Helen Connor; l!leml Ruth near AJbalu'. -.wascherg- ant, "-'1•1 ForfettlncoeaG
Jacqueline Graham , Bonnie Whitt, Hattie Sa•ton, and ed w1111 peUt larceD¥ and de- bond polled on charJOI &lt;1 dr!YCremeens, and Janet Pettus. Juanita Terry.
a!nlcUon ol PI ope1 t;y . Pauley lng WhUe IDioldcaled waa CllfGREEN PCT. NO.1 - !Rep)
SPRINGFIELD TWP . - wao charged with fraud, poUt ford Cox, Lon!! - ,
Mary Dorst IPJ), Bouloh Mills, !Ropl E. M. Denney IPJI, Joe larceny, destruction ol prop..
end Eleanor Gilliam ; l!leml Smith, end Ruth Ann Fuller; OtV and 1'8BIItlila erreaL Both
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Ruth Glll..plo, Dorothy Con· !Deml Rose Hoger, Goldie were ortlorecl to make reaUtu.
POMEROY - TlckeU lor
dee, and Patricia Johnson.
Swisher. and Allee Sprague.
tklt and were assesses costa. ~ amual turito,y dlmer to
GREEN PCT. NO. 2- (Rep)
BIDWELL PCT. - (Rep!
Flood In the court were James
be held m the Thurlldoy boo
Harry Pitchford (PJI, Ire M. Wolter Neol I PJ) , Ethel
S. Reea, Jr., Recine, $10 and fore Thaolloglv!Jw at the f1re
Sibley . and Carol Wilson; DeWIH, ond Ado Poyne; IDem I
expired driver' a license;
(Deml Dorothy Steger, Normo Dorothy Phillips. Nancy Bass, coato,
haU In Rutland will be 1014
E. Larkins, l..&lt;1ni BotDorset
Massie and Marjorie Sprlegel. and Judy Hamilton.
ln Pomeroy and "'+'' l£ 11 t
tom, $10 and c:ootl, apeedlng; Ma!day .
.
GREENFIELD TWP . WALNUT TWP. - I Rep)
(Repl Emmo J. Lewis IPJI. Ellis
Thornton
(PJ), Marion A. Par80118, Racine, $5
Member1 r1 the anyiUaey
Albert R. Pierson, and Alma Marguerite Carter, and Chloe and coati, oo muffler; ~lonny W. &lt;1 the RuUand Fire 11_.-t.
Evans; (Oem) Gladys Miller, Fellure; IDem) Gllldyo Hut- Gori&gt;J, Langsville, $10 and mont will spend the dl)' Ill
Goldie Yates, and Kathleen C. chinson, Shirley Miller, and coste, left ol center; Jerry J. town CCOI!Icting bualnell
lloll, Cbeshlre, $10 and cotta, hoosea. Per80118 dealr!QI
Miller .
Rose Bud Spurlock.
IRepl
CITY WARD 1·A - (Rep) Improper passlnll; Parthenia L, Uckets but not contacted can
GUYAN TWP . Crystal Copper (PJ), Ell""" Mary Willis IPJI. Ann NoHer, Vance, Pomeroy, $25andoosta, secure llcketl from a a 1
Montgomery, and Arvilla ond Verdon O'Dell; (Dem) permitting unlicensed driver to
member ol the &amp;llllllal')'.
Halley: (Dem) Nancy Thomp. Beatrice Evans, Jessie K. operate a motorvehlclei Brooka
son, John Ostergren , and Mullen
and
Geraldine &amp;unmer!leld, Reedavllle, $10
Emma lou Waugh .
Ellcessor .
and costa, failure to yield the
GUY AN PCT. - (Rep) Corrie
WARD 1·8 - !Repl Edwin right ol way; Paul H, Kent, Ad- LAVER NO. 1 FOR M&amp;R
Williams (PJ), Velda Louise Thomas
(PJ),
Barbara
$10 and coats, stop sign
NEW YORK IUPI)-Aultr•
Sims, and Lillian Armstrong ; N\organ, and Muriel Allison; violation; Gerald E. Lehew, New ilo's Rod Lever, the only '-1•
(Oem)
Eileen
Walker , (Dem) Leuro Nuckl ... Goldie Haven, $10 and coats, stop sign;
ployer to score grond
Elizabeth Evans, and Charlotte Gothard and Adele Cremeens. Franklin Johnoon, Maoon, $25 slams, has been named wlnMr
Rankin .
WARD 2· A- !Rep) Jomes T. and costs, concealed wea,pon. of the Martini &amp; Rossi temll
HARRISON TWP. - (Rep) Hamilton IPJi, Elsie M. Neol,
player of the year award for
Curtis Porter ( P J) , Grace and Vlvlon Rlchords; (Dem)
the second successive time. ·

wide stairway leading to the

1,.

Ceremony

(contiDuod fn&gt;m Pap I)
GALLIPOLIS TWP.- (Rtp)
lthol Brodbury (PJ), Down
Clark, end Elm• Oeder;
(Dtm) lnoz M. Betz. Gertrude

During • tour, Mn. Fotter

t~e

tavern was built In 1819 .
"If It's not the largest
sycamore In the state, It' s close
to 11," another visitor said.
"ladles didn't enter the
tavern,'' Mrs. Foster explained.
"They entered the middle door
and went directly to the ladles'
parlor wh lie the men entered a
separate door leading to the
taproom."
Guests have taught Mrs.
Foster many things. For In·
stance they said that old pewter
"dies" If It Isn' t used; that the
cur11es of the Windsor chairs
were bent when the wood was
green. and the little high chair's
arms were used on a selling
ship to hold sails.
They also tell her of many
other lnteresflng places. "I'm
going to 11lslt those places too,"
she said ,
As the seasons change, the
11isltors change too.
In early April, many school
children tour the house. Then
families come. After school
starts, the retired people coma,
In campers and trailers, with
lots of time to do what they've
always wanted.
One of the oldest things In the ·

.u....,

house is the bed slept in by
Louis Phllllpe In 1798.
When the Halters (Or.
Charles Holter Sr. and Mrs.
Holzer) restored Our House In
011E OF 11IE EVENING atORES - MrL Martha Footer extlqpdohoo tile Oar Rouse
1936, bills to wayfarers were
caOOlea after a busy seasoo. The Museum closed Friday.
dlsco11ered behind an attic wall .
Bills tor a traveler would be 25
cents tor the privilege of a space
one who has the care and
on the floor, Including lodging for Lafayet1e."
once In a day .
super11lslon of something . Care
and hay for his horse, and
Another
little
tyke
stood
in
1he
Children have played an
Webster defines as painbreakfast .
important pert In the pleasure hall before a clock taller than
staking
and watchful super This
memorial to the of Mrs. Foster's job. Some come his daddy, and heard a bird
lllslon;
a
job ably done for
fascinating history of Gallipolis In school groups, then return singing.
was made possible by non· with families; paren1s who
"Oh! Is tile bird In lhe another sei\son.
nat111es. the Holzers, who cared visited as children, return and clock?" he asked .
enough for their new hometown bring their children. They are
One of the pressing problems SAWICKI RITES SET
that they wanted to see Its fascinated by this quiet place at the museum Is parking . The
CLEVELANO IUPII - fu.
history live. They presented it with the feeling and fragrance historical society would like to neral services tor Joseph Sawhave a parking lot adjacent to icki, a former state legislator
eventually to the state I
of yesterday .
Todoy It Is funded by tile Ohio
Grade schoolers come with the house. They wish the stables and judge, are scheduled for
Historical Society lind cared for bright
eyes
and
many could be restored . The attic and Monday .
by l!llnother non-native, Mrs. questions.
stairs need work .
Sawicki. 88, died Thursday .
Martha Foster, whose delving
The historical society Is
Two young boys began
He served in the state legis Into the history of her adopted coming several summers ago supported by the state and lature 1905-1911 and was ap.
home led .fo her writing a and continue to visit once a private contributions and gifts. pointed to the Cleveland Munici children's book, "Red Corpet week, sometimes more than
Martha Foster Is a curator pal Court In 1919.

Porter, and Margaret Adkins ; Marie Sheets, Iris Miller, and
IDem) Alma Martin , Will VIolet Mendenhall .
Shoemaker, and Nina Myers.
WARD 2·8 - (Rep) Fern
HUNTINGTON TWP . - Evans (PJ), Grace Bradbury,
(Rep) Ernestine Pmsley (PJ), and Edna North ; (!lem) Maude
Velma Huntley, and Desta Niday , Maxine Roark, and
Paisley;
(Dem)
Euvallne Calvin Layne.
Ratliff, Mary Childers, and
WARD J.A - I Rep) Nloxlne

Rings you'll wear
with pride

-

BEAUTIFUL
DIAMONDS

Gardner (PJJ, John Plummer,
and Nancy Houck; ( Oem)
Wanda Parsons, Dorothy

Following Laver In the votlftQ
by an International panel of 1
sports writers were Australien
Tony Roche, Australian John ,
Newcombe and Arthur Ashe of

Sheets, and Geroldlne Croft.

tho

McDide.

WARD .. C -

!Rep) Forno

u.s.

Romito (PJ), Pribble Wilson,
Esto Deei.
HUNTINGTON PCT.
and Beverly WI loon ; I Deml
!Rep) Marion McCoriey (PJ), Opie Marcum. Elltabeth

Ann

Mary Ann McCarley and Verna Richards, and Gladys Am Chamberlain; (Dam) Reba sbary.
Long, Mary Jones, and Kathryn
WARD J.B- (Rep) Barbara

Boso

Rece.

ScoH !PJ), Holdoh Gordon, ond
MORGAN TWP. - I Rep I Marguerite Goode; (Oem)
Goldo M. Mitchell IPJI. Olin C. Margaret Armstrong, Chester
Russell, and Anise Greenlee ; M. Young and Lucille Casey.
(Oem) Mason S. Kennedy,
WARD O.A - · !Repl Lllllon
Donald Shupe, and Odella Martin (PJ), Thelmo Neol , ond
Taylor .
Joon Wood; (Deml Sylvia M.
OHIO TWP.
IRepl Fowler, Ella Candee, and
Margaret Johnson I P J I, Gail Georgia F. Burris.
Shaffer, and Dolores Fisher ;
WARD 0.8 - 1Rep I Lucille
( Dem I John W. Waugh , Juanita Skidmore (PJL Rosemary
Craig, and Le1lle Stapleton.
Skidmore, Gnd Freda Clark;
PERRY TWP . - !Rep) John (Oem) Leota M. Guinther,
Ma L
R. Morgan (PJ). Edward
Agnes M . Walker and

MEIGS ~HEATIE

Two Defendants Granted

Election Workers

(Continued 11-orn Pqe I)

on Cbeatlllt Rldp,

Bn dge

111e Sunday Tlmea • Sc.....,l, Sunday, November 2, 1969

,Our House

~~

:..:j.

COMPLIMENTS

3-

11

Nine men and · - truck• or
of the
Wed-rn-~nue•
Soil Conoer-tlon
Distri-ct
to
c.a-_...
made a run at 10;35 a.m. Fri. ...
"'""' .....
fence ai'OUIId bla jJnkyard dl)' to properbl ownedi&gt;J James operate In Mason Connty.-Thlo
or relllO'Ie the .)mkyard, Henry lloi1tgwnery m MUt Creek Rd., week It baa been world,_ ontiu!
wao cited under 111e state JuD&lt;- near Worehlme Rd. Don ilal. farms of Gerald Rood and Son
Yerd law.
ley ,., burning lop and of White ClnD'ch communi~, C.
Judge Calhoun has also de- brush, with a burning permi~ B. and Robert Thomas of Leo
nled en - • !Dod 1&gt;1 Wayne for Mont&amp;omery.
tart, David Roulb of Letart and
E. Herriaon, against a declThat nre rekindled from a Vlrglnla He11 ol Thirteen Mile
lion ol the State Personnel blah wind Jato Fl'ldalr evening
J!oerd ol Review laatMa,rwhlch and 7:30 p.m. 15 men and two
Land
resulted In llarrloon'o removal lnicks returned to the scene.
AN ENGINEERING lnspecUon
rrom hlo Job aa AcUviUes Thor- Thla Ume the lire waa 011 prop.. Creek. The ochodule for draln- of some consenaUcmpradlces
apist I at the Gallipolis State erbl ownod ey Herry Wooda. age this fall totala eround ~.- In Maoon C4luiiiY was made 1&gt;1
..stitute.
A total ol o1x acres burned. 000 feet. We have been makiJW Theodore Burna of h CharleoTwo contempt ol court heerElaht men and threa lnicks addlt!OIIII planoandtlleaur\'O)'s ton SoU Cllnlervatlon Service
lngs have been Bel for Nov. made a nm at 12:10 p.m. Fri 1 on the RusseU Jones farm at omee.
17. One Is the caoe ol WU- dl)' to the residence ot.~·~ Pt. Pleaaant and the Clarence
Durl!w this tour weemmlned
llam R. Bulb vo. Naomi Bulb, as Master• on Liddy Hollow Adkins lllrm on Oldtown Creek. a farm pond on tile H. M. MoKinney farm on Red Mud Ridge,.
where the defeoclant has bem l Rd., to extingullb a grasa ftre
cited for !allure to obey a In the front yerd. Cause ol the
JOHNNY LOONEY, Sernce the John SebreU stream Job on
court order ol Feb. 27, 1967, Ore was chUdreo playlnll with Foreater of the West Virginia Little Sbteen Milo Creak, tho
ortlorlng both parties to con.. matcbos, according to f 1 r 0_ Department of Natural 114&gt;- Edward Hoa: illo dralnqe provey certain properbl to their men. The prq&gt;erbl """ OMied souces, told ua !hot he had been Ject '"' Turkey 1!u11, and &amp;IPrilv
children. The other Is the caoe by James E. Booworth, Patriot crulsinll some black wslnut on develq&gt;ment on the Cherleo
ol Barbara Ellen FHe vs, Dale Star Rt.
several landoWoors' farmL On Rice farm beyond Flatrock. Ho
~~~the~
the~~~~- found lllat oil theae practices
ant ~aa been cited for alleged
del Park he cruised 1300 board were well built aliJ W"ere perfeet which he graded aa veneer formiJW the Jobs for which they
failure to compl,y wl111 a lllppori order of Oct. 16, 1956.
quality, Thlawouldbafrom15to were intended.
The case was closed t h i a
20 Inches In diameter am clear
0
week on the case ol Mildred
materiaL He oald !hot two of U1
Louloe Maynard vs. Homer
the trees were about 20 Inches
W 0IDBD
Maynard, both now residents ol
In diameter and about one log
Florida. The defendant had been
hlg~ to ~e first limb. That
order ed to pay $20 a week
would be 16 feet.
That was back In 1966. A
Other landowners oowhl~ ha
J
check was returned on Aug. 5,
has cruised walrart tilniH:tr were
GALLIPOLIS - Cl~ police
1966, with a notaUcot that the
PI', PLEASANT _ Tkls De. Frederick Barkus ncar Trlbdied
l'lolline Booter, 52, Rl I
caoe was diamlasecl. Now the comber ISth bas o!llclally been ble, Mrs. Bryant o1 Henderson,
Crown
CO,, to C.elllpolls 1111..
fllea have been closed. Since annwnced as the ''target date" Fred Johnson estate near West
both parties are residents of for ceremonies to open the new Columbia, Mra, WOllam caato nlclpai Court Nov, 3cotuharae
Florida, PlneUaaCount;y,Gallla !llloRiver llrkigebetwoenllen on GunvUle Ridge and Deonls ol failure to obey an automatic
County Common Pleas Courtno de
w
•
trafllc slpai In an accldeolt.
longer has juriedlcUon.
o.'oon, • Va., and Kanaup, Th~
J:
l'llllce oafd tile accident oeCIIrred
at 9:23 a.m. Frlda;r at
The amouncement ., the ""Se,...d Ave. and IAlcult St.
t.tlve date ••• made
Involving cers drlveo 1&gt;J Mra:
., the State Road Commisolon
'
Boater and Vesta CaU, Sf, of
ol West Vlrgjnla 111rough Mrs.
245 Second Ave. Damaae waa
Belva Farley, managing direcPOMEROY - Due to recent
lmderate to both cara.
tor of the Point Pleasant.Ma.. !Undlng the Gallla..Melgs ComOne per..., was ill)lrod. A
son County Cbomber at Com. munlty AcUon Agency has three
Mr. and Mrs. Hoy ColeltWl
P&amp;Ren.ger, Etbel Staver, 78
merce and Mrs. Thelma EI- positions open,
0( Ravenna spent several days liott, managing director ol the
The agency Is In need ol an GaUipoHs, received a chelt
Jur7,
with Mr. and Mro. Claude Smith. G 111
Mrs. Clara Adamo o! Park- _, 4&gt;0lls C of c.
out - ol -school Nelghborooo&lt;f
PoHca lnveatlllllted a minor
Ro110r D. WOOd, director or Youth Corps director and two
accident
at 9:55 a.m. Frlda;r
ersburg, w. Va., spent Wednes- JMJblic relations f&lt;Jr the West part.tlme health aides.
on tho Kroger paridng lot, Third
: ' .;::.:;r sister, Mra. wu. Virginia SRC, Indicated numerAjipllcants for the director's
Ave, omcera oafd ~ere wao
oos dignitaries Mil be on hand poBIUon should have at least
C,B.C.'s met with Mr. and for
the om tal
minor damage When R. R,
Mrs, Ronald Oahorne for the
c opening lnchld. two years ol college. ~llled Roulb, 74, ol 19 NeD Avo
Octd&gt;er meeting. HosiDes
lng Goy, James A. Rhodes and experience may be subsUtuted backed Into a cer driven
• :,,!flo conducted 1&gt;1
West Virginia Gov. Arch A. to ~'!".t th~ ~equirementa, ~­ Elva, Mo . Filller;:, ~. ·\Bt' ·: .
dent Margaret Brown. Report&amp; Moore.
ary for th~ #osition Is $130 a Palrlot. No ..,. waa irUured
ot commJttees were given and Vftus Hartley, Jr., president week pluAta reasonable travel and no charge waa filed.
a new proJect discussed, Re. ol the Point Pleasant-Mason aHowance.
The health aides will work
!reshmenta were served to County C of C, hae been deslg.
tbese lunUle&amp; Denver Webers nated to sene as master ot on a three day a week basis at
Ernest WittU:heads
Waite; ceremonteo for the opening. an hourly rate of $1.70 plus
Browns, and Warre~ Pickens.
Mrs. Elliott and Mrs. Far- travel allowance. Applicants'
The next meeting will be at ley are currently coordlnatbig present famil,y Income status
SUNDAY, MONDAY
the Pickens home.
additional details In con.btc- Mil be taken Into consideration
AND TUISDAY
tion with the upcoming cere. for the positionsofhealthaJdes.
NOV. 2!.3-4
monies. Announcement of these Applicants tor all three poslSymboUam of Wingo
will be made as soon as they llms must be qualified drlv' ' STAR_.
ln bird symbolism , wings ere completed.
ers and have suitable transTochnlcolor
are given to angels, the flyportatlon.
Ju I i e Andrews
lng horse Pegasus, many
The so · c a II e d "Monkey
Richard Crenna
d~agons, Mercury and U.S. Law" forbids the teaching in
Ajipllcatlons may be securColorcartoon:
Air Force men, in each in· public schools of any theory ed at either the C.A.P. offices
Stucl•Up Wolfe
stance Indicating mastery of on the biological evolution of Ill Pomeroy or GaHipolls and
SHOW STARTS 7 p.M.
~*
~.
~be~by~~~.

$20

ROBERT

~

given
....._. ~-;.'ther'":~a
u-, "-···-,
until .;;:-;;

Ditcher Work:ng·
·s .,, :n 1.~~ason
r

Lay of the

SALISBURY TOWNSHIP

'

'

un

Department workers
LIPd
wore bu-r Setuniayreplaclng
GAL
1.11 K.
tho wooden ftmr of a steel Crawford, GaUipollo, ftlodapo.
bridge on the 11or Soout Rood UUon Fl'idalr In Gallla Ccunt;y
In Cbaater town &amp;hlp. 1 wao Common Pleas Court &amp;111oat
beUevod that llollo!reenoro Creliihtou G. Crawford, 543
poasibl,y set ftre to llle floor Jockoon Pike, for a divorce cot
ol the brici&amp;l&gt; Frlda;r nisht. llJ'&lt;)Wido ol III'Oss nel!leot &lt;1
An 8xl4 foot secUon ol the cllt;y.
ltoor was destroyed.
The Plalnlifr alao seeka alt.
way

l If-ELECT
_,
IX) BERNARD D GILlE.y
"

'

ry

Candidate for Member of

Southem Loe~l Boar• ol
E••c•tlon
d

1

d

P • Po . A v.

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Nixon&amp; Company Retooling for .Pollution Battle

·u

.,,
.'

Desecration of Flag--Protest Gone Too Far
In the space of a month, records in three draft board office• in northern Ohio have been destroyed by arsonists.
The burnings in the cities of Akron, Lorain and PalnesvUle followed a similar pattern. In each case, entry was
somehow gained at night and draft records were removed

from flle cabinets, plied on the floor and set aflame with an
inflammable liquid. American flags tn the offices were
smeared with red Ink.
It is possible that those who committed th~se. acts consider themselves to be obeyin~ a higher patnohsm in de·
fiance of a tyrannical and evil government, though they
have not yet had ~he courage t~ come forward and reveal
themselves . It is remotely possible that. come the r~volu­

lion, they will be officially acknowledged as poople s he-

..
'•

·.
..
'.

roes.
However while their clandestlne destruction of draft records, of wh'ich duplicates exist, may or may not c~st doubt
on their intelligence, the desecrat~on of the Am~r1can flag
certainly calls into question thmr understanding of the
meaning of patriotism.
The Dag is not the property of any one. political gr~up In
America. It does not belong to the party m power. It IS not
the exclusive possession of those w~~ may ":rap the.mse~ves
Jn it whUe preachlng hate and suspicion .9:g~tnst thetr netgh·
bora. But neither is it to be used as a wtpmg rag by those
wbo disagree with the policies of the natJon. Governments
come and go; the flag endures. It belongs to no one and to
everyone.
To desecrate the flag as a fonn of political pro~est is to

reveal the same kind of thinking which has

twlSte~

BY WQ.LIAM S. WHQ'E
the 1111!1"11 .., lhlo looue II porWASIIINGTON - t'rom t h o hlpa the moot olaniReont do.
While Houle down, the R....b- mtsUe political evolution to
Beans ore rotoollng the pllllt, dat. within the -.!niltrolloo.
ao to speak, to try to g o o r
Firat, It lo a bani plQf not
IhomselYOa Into ''lhe .......... to al..,., the liberal Demoerall
mental problem," boU1 for next to preempt • Reid or clearly
year'o Conirooalonal eleetlona DOedod roforma thlt are not
and for the pay~~![ preoldenllal and olmpl,y &lt;alUKII be II'Uly dlllruale ol 1972.
vlolvo 111110118 reasonable men.
''The environmental p r o bPra&lt;tleally I10boolf In hlo

.
~~ or all, they think lhlo
Is an lo- thai alfero ....,.
IIOftll(ne e'-e or ~...
their pooUion with t!&gt;e collOIIole and poot.collqlate :IOWII
- with oro endlo01ly ..Uad, with • moll appalling IIIII
OYI'I.W &lt;0111111, "tbO kldo. •
To a Republl&lt;011 White
Houae the lead In ao retem" lo,o!course, sodal-liUI'k- rllbt mind Is really In favor formlll an enterprise doea, to
~er1.

er and academic llnao {never ol making the very atmoaphere be lUre, olfer I~ lrollicalllde.
used 1 short word whan a poly. around uo and the watero under For It Is Pll'fodly·plain that
oyllable mouthful Ia at hanoi) uo lnlo a giant and pseouo uthe aovernmettt ..11 andlrufor the atlnklng mess or pol. eeaapool. Too, unlike. 81,)', the ly ellf!II&amp;O&gt;B "the eavlronmantol
luted rivers and lakea, potaon.. VIetnam war, there 11 here no problem," it must at the lllll8

ed sir, foul traneportalloo and
all the real of It In whleh 10
many American must now Uve.
The decision of the GOP, beginning with Praoldent Nixon
personally, to au all the "lOY to
Identify lllelf on the Side of

boUWn f!IIP be-n young and time and In the.-h'&lt;lntolhJ'
middle-Qed and old,
Ollf!ll8ll 11180)' or the 01111ers and
In the second place. there.. managers IIICI ltocldtoldera of
fore, the Rapoblleana see here the waote - spiUina pilnta and

an opportunlf¥ to preoent them- mills that are IIIIOIICthe chief the veq rich do noL"
oelves, again bellnnlna with ollendero In ..........., poiluAt oil eventa, - l e In the
the Prasldent, •• IMIIIders and tlon,
Admlnlotratlon beueve th•t the

"Mind If I Join You?"

BARBS

the

• • •

Take every chance, cut
every comer, and you'll get
home In time to wait lhiee

happened to be leading the country at any particular lime,
no matter how much in error that leadershilf mlght be. He

was 1aylng simply that, right or wrong, i was still our
COW!lry.

If those who vandalized three draft board offices In Ohio
are not serving our country. of which the Stars and Str1pes
11 the symbol, then whom or what are they servmg?

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
reeently affirmed, by unanimous vote, the decision of the
Federal Communicalions Commission to permit pay-TV to

operate ao a supplementary broadcast service, subject to
str!llgent regulations and only In cities which already have

The National Association of Theater Owners has annoiDICed It will appeal to the Supreme Court, although the
court In 1962 refused to consider a slmUar appeal involving
a decision against a group of Connecticut theater owners
who aoullht to block the original subscription television ex·
perimeni In Hartford.
Just In case the high court again refuses to hear the ap·
peal, opponents of pay-TV are mounting a last-ditch effort
Ia Cougress to overturn the FCC ruling.
That ruling, made last Dec. 12, followeoloalmoat 17 years

".

of research, development, consumer testing and running
battles with those wbose pocketbooks are likely to be af-

''
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,.''

'.
~
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'

•'

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~

I
...
:t
it

:;'·
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~
~
~

i::'

:;'·
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~:

&gt;'

•.

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:•

-

Thus says the Lord, who
l!ive• the ·81111 for light by
-uq and IM fU;ed onler ot
tM moon and the stars for
light by night1 who stirs up
tlie sea so tnat its waves
roar-th• Lord of hosts is
hiS name:---Jerem1ah 31:35.

.'

fected by the competition.
Congress has given the matter thorough stndy. It has
been subjected to no fewer than three hearings before the

• • •

House Commerce Committee, which Js now scheduling an-

other, and a two-part hearing before the Senate Commerce
Conunlttee.
Testimony from the hearings alone amounls to 2,000 fineprlat pages. The FCC has additionally taken 25,000 commenlll from interested parties.
U there Is any compelling reason why the public should
not have the opportunlty to try this service, it ought to have
become apparent by this lime.
Enough Is enough.

Palestinian Guerrillas
A Law unto Themselves

WASHINGTON-( N E A )-President Nixon's campaign
into New Jersey on pre-electloa Wednesday firmed
up when he saw a GOP-commissioned poll showing Rep.
William Cahill five points ahead of former Gov _ Robert
Meyner In the race for governor.
His visit nevertheless involved clear risk of his own
political capital, since the poll gives Cahill 44 per cent,
Meyner 39 and yet records a whupplnc 17 per cent un·
decided.
Furthermore, another r e s p e c t e d pollster who has
checked the state on a seleeted-county basis Is waverlag
between pulling a slight bet on Meyner or not calling the
~oray

COLUMBUS (UP I)

SP-4 CARL FINDUNG

REEDSVILLE '.

U, S.
•,

One aole God;
One aole ruler,-hia low;
One aole Interpreter of
that I a w-Humanity.-Giu·
seppll!olazzln~ Italian patriot.

BY JACK O'BRIAN
ol the dumber high school freshNEW YORK - Prlncen men ..... Brigitte Bardot, 101ng
Mel's lost love Capt, P e I e r s Paris mag for aa,ylng DB had
Townsend aaw the trashy UOIJ! r a c i a 1 wrinkles removed,

Factory dlscotewreck1 Bre try~
log to stave off Rnal annul .....
Doo Rickles' performing vul. tesque ~ck $2SO.
gari.Q' extends eYeo to a cable
Singer Colmlt!l Francis aeema
Calcutta" here and pronounced swears nothing ever was re- home to hia mother at the MJ_ to be just what N.J. Dr. Phillt .,anU-sex" .... It's simply a moved (oh, maybe an occalion- ami Beach Eden Roc he thought lp
ordol'ed .••• .,Marne"
sex fantasy as leered up by one al toweO .... H'wood'sDalsyand ,.s so brilliant hereIaased Ill andBrick
"Dolly" 10ag1mltb Jerry
contents; "Still taking credit
Herman told lidrliO' Baooey If
for my success, ma?'' .•.. The ahe'll star In 1 Bdw7. must.

RA.Y CROMLEY

charmless vituper sent a post-

card from Yugoslavia (Where cal, he'll write the lOftlS ....
Horman's the lad whose lllge
he'S ShoOting 8 nlm) to Lu
hi
Vegas gambling joint owner Lou but very fandllar aoundlng Ia
broug(lt him tho TID Pin AIIIO'
Miller: "Just send tanks and BrlU Bldg. lblv, "Jerey doesgun&amp;, we han the men,"' which n•t have to compose at the pl.~
got paat the trooCurtalntortur- 11110 _ be can use an old radio
era - that time ..•• Ex -Dead set.,.
End Kid Huntz Hall's In loMI
_ lnc:osnlto; must be afraid
TV quiz host Hal March Is
no..., wiU rec:ognlzo him.
reeuperallng from pneomonla

Disarmament Hopes Seen
In Soviet's Money Pinch

"If Meyner is showing bis age," says one GOP leader.

BERRY'S

= ': :,=•: : : ·

y.......

.,

In 'llialland. A

co, Calif.. 96386.

599, Youngstown 5326,083, Deyton S667 ,«W, canton 1267,863 and
Akron $646,395.
OEMS PlAN DINNER

State party chairman Eugene
P. O'Grady said state Sen .
Charles J , Cerney and Rep.
John C. Mcllooold, Democratic
leader In the legislature, would
chair tht dinner.

1

VISITORS TO OHIO
CQ~UMBUS tUPI) .r Thirty- '
two visitors from South Ameri ca, Africa, the Mideast and
Southeast Asia will be In the
1 tate Wednesday through Friday
tor a tour of northern Ohio.
The visitors will be shown
Ohio's Agricultural Research
and Development Center at
Wooster and a number of Ohio
farms .
The tour Is part or the Second
International Manpower ll'litl tute Seminar.

39, 149

ed states alooe. It has become

m terms ol c:asualtiea, the
Penta.io&gt;n gives theoe estl.
matea d troops k.Uled in ac.
Uon aa of Oct. 25:
Other Allleo- 3,416
North Vietnam and v I e t
Cong- 564,60'1
Russia &lt;mel China - none

Frultle11 Search
The early Spanish e~:plor ers searched for the Seven
Cities of Cibola because of

YOUNGSTERS CROWNED - Clinton A. Nipper, JOn of
Mr. aiiJ Mrs.. l«wrence Napper, am Sheryl Barnhart, daugh~
ter of Mr. ard Mrs. Erne at Barnhart, were crowned ~ and
queen or the annual Halloween carnl.val of the Bradbury Elementary School Thursday

nigh~

J. wnaon, son
Mrs. Joseph C,

their r e p u ted J y fabulous
wealth . The cities were supposed to be in the land of
the Zuni Indians in what is
now western New Mexico.

.

Ues.

The exhibition Is suwtJed by
Books on Exblbl.t, a

national
In Ita 19th

exhibiting enterprise
year. Prior to the dlapley at the

.._I
...
eel"-..

.......1-1 •••.,.....

r ..w'!t -

1oe

.....GBC...,.GRADUATES
...

..r,

tlira •• · •

GET THE BETTER
JOBSr

(NnQunrlrfis
Decrlllwll)
WriM or coli for • ..."ooollof.-tlon.

GALLIPOliS
IUSINESS
COllEGE

DAN
AND SON
••S.,.,Ing you tine• 1936"
Golll,.tlt, Ohio

Galllpellt

They were pres•nted gitta,

Prince am princess of the event staged by the school's PTA
were Gene Hawley a:ld Gina Thompson.

Adult School Begins Monday
ALBANY - An Adult Basic
Education Program Is being
started at Alexander High
School, one mile East of here on
U.S. 50 designed for out of
school adults, age 16 and over,
who are performing below the
eighth grade level In either
reading or mathematics.
Enrollment In the Program Is
free to anyone who is within
driving distance of Alexander
High School, and scores lower
the~ the eighth grade level on
either the mathematics or
reading entrance tests.
Child care service Is provided
for ctllldren or students who are
enrolled In the program, and a
small amount of money Is
available to assist students with
special
transportation
problems. Diagnostic service Is
available for students wlttl
special vision or hearing
problems.
Various programmed lear.
nlng materials are being pur chased so that each student
may work at his or her own
learning speed with the

guidance and assistance of the
teacher . Tests will be used to
start the student at his or her
proper learning level.
Although the first class
meeting will be held Tuesday,
NovembeJ· .t, at 6:30 p.m. ,
students may loin or withdraw
from ttle class at any later
meetings. Classes will be held
from 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. on
Tuesday
and
Ttlursday
evenings. except for Christmas
vacation. etc. The last class
meeting will be May 22, 1970.
Attendance at every class
meeting is not essential.
although It Is desirable.
Students who desire to enroll
In this course should notify Mrs.
Doris H. Mflce, recruiter,
R.F.D. NO. 1, Albany, Ohio
!Phone698-3513); or, Miss Joan
Burson, secretary, at .th West
State Stret!'t, Athena. Ohio

All THESE APPLIANCES
CAllY MURPHYS
1 YEAR REPLAClMENT
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WARING BLENDER
8 pushbutton blender
Solid State
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Insulated, automatic· nylcm
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green enamel. Over-thecounter replacement g1.1ar.
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'.·'liliES SLEft»WEAR

Darnbroug 's
Dept. Store

Procter Toaster

LeGrande Bll'd., Gllllj&gt;olls,
has been promoted to lance

BABY. ..

corporal. WUson enlisted tn
Marine Corps last March 1,
and COI!l)leted his belle
train!"" at Parris Island, S.
C. and advanced Infantry
training at Camll Gyger,
North Carolina. He Is presently staUoned at GaiiiP Lejeune, N. C., wlth the 2DI Ma·
rlna Division, Fleet Marina
Forces. His addrees Is: L •
Cpl. Frederick J. Wilson
2522293, SuJiply CoJ111)any,
2nd Service Battalion, 2nd
Marino Dlvloton, F,M.F.,
camp Lejeune, N, C., 28542,

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1 year 9uorantee
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son, 219

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Every Month If You
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Murphy's

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Moothlr
CMd

5o¥ing•
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'
college, u., colle&lt;il!ol
-· 01hlblu.d In the .,...11&lt; •&lt;hOololn
.
the Akron area, and botheCiorlon, Ps., .rea. The dltp!Q ia
apen to the public without

find something InterestIng_ The collection ha• 800 ti- eharge.

MAN-OF-THE-YEAR AWARD
DAYTON (UPIJ - Paul A.
Harlamert of Toledo was named
" Water Mlln of the Year" FrJ.
day by the American Water
Works Association.
Presentation of the award
came et the annuel Ohio con ference here attended by some
1,000 persons who design, build,
operate and supply water utili ·
ties and sewage treatment fa .
cllltles.

Mr. ani

YUII Savini$

In ....,be

- 96,299

lars.

United Stales South VIetnam

G through 20

the Jeanette 1\Jblez Davis u.
brary. The display Is sponsor.
ed by the Rio Grande (;olle..,
chapter ol the Student F41cat1on AssoeiaUon.
Merrill A. Grodin, asdatant
professor or edu&lt;allon, said every year thereareatleastl,600
.., titles publlshe41n the Unit-

FREDERICK J, WILSON
PROMOTED -l:edorlck

GLASS
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LID

COOKER FRYER

ELECTRIC SKILLET

u.ooo •.••...... $25.00

Automatic heat control. Sig·

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S1u~ODO ••• • ••••• $.ti,U

GALLIPoliS
SAVINGS
. ... .
AN~ LOAN,

"":=··"',..•:..":,.;,:c.;:_

,_.,,.a ........ ;;:
=.":.=-.;••,_,.,, ••-. '
,.r
""'nl*
........ -.. ................. . .

Army

1968 gradualeofEasteralllah

,..M...,..,,_
r.....,. '*"

coeo,

Carl

Slate

School, he enlisted lofarch 27
COLUMBUS iUPII - Ohio
of thia year. lHs address 18 Democrats will get thtlr 1970
~ Carl Findling, RA 117campaign drive underwey here
14217, H, &amp; S. Co., Box 19, Jan. 13 with a fund -raising din·
7th RRFS, APO san Francis- ner.

"we don't exaclly have Clark Gable, either."
One -~u somi! · t~ea··of hq.w)l~aey As. pbbed by !Ill
govemorslitp· baltle1 when you 'I!UI' ~Htbl! ·cl~ Is
nibre Interested Ia the dollla of New York Clty'o two professional football teams-tbO Jets and the Glant.o. Earlier
on, It was Mels I, Meyner-Cablll 0.
So many "conmct of Interest" cllarges have been flung
by both candidates that the voters are left In near-total
confusion. A little of Ibis mud may stick and there Is
always the chance that a real bombshell may be thrown
in a try at breaking open a close race.
The two nominees have had at least a dozeu debates
televlzed from New York and Pblladelphia stations (Jersey
has no blc ouUet of Its own) and there Is a getleral feeling
that Cablii, the scrambling Irishman, comes off a bit
quicker than Meyner, the Impassive German.
A1lde from saying the Meyaer profile Is crumbling, .
Cahill's most telling stroke Is bla charge that the former
governor now offers himself as lbe Ideal aolver of problems-money ah~&amp;•· racial atrlfe, educational deflcien·
cleo--which be helped spawn In his prior rule.
Cahill's difficulty Is being untinown, not being a charmer
when he is known and battling to stir voters who feel slight
identity with their own state, who act aa If they were li":J
In dormitories belonging esaenlially to New York City
Pblladelphia.
II&lt;! needs big votes in Republlean bedroom counties like
Bergen and Morris, where Nixon chose to campaign to
urge out the faithful, and In the Cahill home territory
embracing uoually Democratic Camden. He alao needs .
fulfillment on the public push by angry anli-Meyner Dem· ,
ocrats In Hudson C01mty (Jersey City) to slice up their old
enemy. A mere 20,000 Meyner edge would hurt blm.
Meyner's hope Is for big votes Ia Essex (wbere an un·
certain turnout of Newark's blacks makes forecasblshaky),
In swinging Union (Elizabeth), and other Democratic for.
tressesllkelbe Trenton area.
The whole thing could pivot on tbe size of the Jersey City
"undercut" of Meyner, and on what Nixon does for Cablll
both on his visit and In his election-eve major address on ·
the Vietnam war.

Trqlc as it Is that the prime victim should be Lebanon,
tbe ome country In the Arab Mideast that bad made a good
ahow of keeping its head while aU around otbers had long
lr RAY CROMLEY
IInce lost theirs, there Is sliU some poetic justice to be
NEA
Woshington
Correspondent
found In the rampage of the Palestinian guerrillas.
Jackie o•s liglrtened her hair after aerlouo lung ourgery In
For the Arab governments--and not just Lebanon alone
WASIHNGTON
(NEA)
Ru sian ·•-- N-•---w ll'wood'olll Slnalllooplta! ....
-are close to being hoist on the petard of their own han·
The staff of President Nil&lt;on's National Security Council "" 1
......,. ·-·~
- The old vaudeville admonition
dllng of a problem dating back :ID years to the first Arab- · is not heav,v with men who trust the Soviet Union. The schltz (reeentl,y • naw Israeli "Change your act or ao back to
J...,.h war. That conflict displaced more than a million
Pentagon hillh ecbelona have made no secret of their sus- dtlzen and ,_ touring the U. the woodwork" llll1'e 1001 for
Arabs lrom their homes In those portions of Palestine that plclons of llfoscow's Intentions.
S. under Colda Melr'o palrob- Mort" Sahl·i-muTu-:-teJOviobeeame Israel. The 1956 and 1961 wars have added many
Yet there is considerable, though restrained, optimism In liP) 8loiiPed In Bonwlrs to bo1 ed bl ~ d ~....... bl
more to the total.
- - t bet
both
these sbops as Wasbin~ readleo Ior dlaarm ament a while blouoo aa a b-'-·-llome
·~..
(Me" ......,...
Gr1f11n - ·
alred
But rather than being resettled elsewhere In the Arab
's men.
gift - da.Y• later abe dlseov. tired 118111l11t loot) w h 1 c h
world, for which latemalional assistance would be avall- talks Nov. 17 with the Kre
No reappraisal has been made hen of Soviet Intentions. end It bore tho Ia&amp; •Made In Ofllllt• lnlllledual 1 h r u 18
able, the greater part of this mass of human misery has
The belief Is that MoscowJ..'\' In the paat, will supply aid lorael" , , - . . , llaDpr.
.
---•
been allowed to remaln in refugee camps, subsisting
.... Lola
or
folka~...atn
largely on United Nations aid but building nothing for the to Castro in Cuha, to Ho c;ru Mlnb's succeosors In Haiiednol field' • been taJkln g for 7""'s th
to Soviet-hacked Communist groups within France,
about OWIIIDI hi 1 01111 N
e too - early eonunerelallfuture other than hatred for Israel.
China, Latin America, Africa, the Middle East and when' Y' zatlon or Chrlotmu bot one
The camps have kept the Palestinian cause alive-and
ever
and
that
Brezhnev's
men
will
foment
underground
In·
oiaiR&lt;I..,
and
oow
thet he does Lon8 loland awlm pool nrm
tbe dilplaced do have a cause-while providing the bases
surgencles wherever practical.
be pta four hours sleep a (at llunUniton near lha Jeriand the manpower for the guerrilla grou1 • that have proThe cautious hope, rather, lies In the latest of a serleo nil!frt: Rod, whan ""' p t - cbo ~) switched !rom
liferated In recent years. But as these have grown stronger
and more active, and with their blows at Israel gained of unpublished reports now ctrculatinC In high omclal clr- ~want - It oervea Y0 u poolo to Yule trees-omsmenta,
Comedian.
_. Ca•ett will etc.- Ia ._._....._rl
wldenlag support of the Arab public, the governments cles on the growing inability of the Russian government to
01~
_...
wbleh encouraged their development have found them in· foot lllllntemal "billa."
It Is becoming apparent (at least from the statistical estl· Interview Cbartle Chaplin for
One of tbe Rnest charlllea
creaslngly dllficult to control.
mates) that the Soviet Union must now:
Esquire during his Ellropean InN. Y. or 1111Wbore, the Mar7
Lebanon, economically Important but politically fragile
and mllltarlly of no consequence, has understandably had
• Cut back oa coOMmer preductloa to a level that would trip (1110, It belpa make It a
areateat dllllculty In policing its militant guests. But Jor· cause serious internal dlasent, or
bulliDesa expense) .... On read·
-·
at vork "
bedan alao has had run-Ins and even Egypt feels the Pales• CUt back oa heavy .,_, military and related spend· Ina that Do&amp;~y o and J dde new ~co
•·
•e.
tlnian pressure, as would more moderate regimes in Syrla
lng, or
apent ~0,000,000, their aftrat tw... 7111 and ?2nd St. Nov.
and Iraq If such ever came to power.
• Go olow oa b11lldlac the lnduotrlal base that wiD deter· married 1ear and remember. 6 "" The CarmeUte 1111111 porIll short, Palealinlan militancy has become something mlne how strong the Soviet Union will be 10 years or 20 1ng the llPNDd-U!Illofary Bar- form Ill splendldl,y aolleltouo
lite a Frankenstein's monster for the Ai'ab governments
years from now.
em Gollaiiher'• nall1jo lnokte lashlon ror folko too old to do
that fostered it.
The ligures Indicate that the Soviet Union has recenlly trlvle &amp;boot tho uoprlvote 10&lt;- It ollthemselveo.
111-famUy squabbling among its enemies may give Israel
...;-;;.·;;;;;;~
robbed from Its Investment In future growth In on1er to rewra Whltellouse)'OIII'owlth ·,..~~;...--..;·..;.;
IIGIIle ahort·term satllfaclion, but It only complicates long- meet Ita mllitary and space build-upo.
Jackie, TV'• Joan Klvoro alkterm Mldeaslem prtllpeCis. The stronger tbe guerrillas
SUNDAY
For
men
who
like
to
thlnt
In
decadeo,
Ibis
Is
not
a
good
ed
ua, "Imagine all the trodlq
become, the greater lhetr ability to block any move of the solution.
TIMES-SENTINEL
Arab covemments toward an eventual settlement.
Therefore, the reaaoninc here II, that Brezbnev and bla stampo llhe hai'l"
.,.._ , _ , - .,.,....,_
Dlreet damage lnftlcted by the Palestinians on Israel
associates must lind aome wav to cut co.11 In atrate""'
The departed Jouraai-Amerl- ,..,..,,.""
#
..,_..
can hal been ...-...
G-.u.JI'OU&amp; DAILY TllBUNE
al1o II more than likely to continue on the rise. Recent
defense and space now so that they wm not in their arms
....-.. :reara
.. ,..........,Cili.,..,Ohlo. . . '-••
ldttory llhows that luertilla movements, once sufficiently
build-up today destroy the lndUitrlalbjose end lnaure their bot Ita blab.prfze J, A.'s llan'o •-....,- - - - ·
Ired up and organized for a long-term strug11e are more
military Inferiority In the late lfiUI end· !lie UIOI.
Bowllnl Clo1ol&lt; IIIII rbllo on :;:: ""' • ollea than not succeosfulln forcing their enemies onto the
(And seeondlv,
-•···
N.. Y. l'l1rt ·AulllortV
· n.. """ ,.._..
defenolve, If not eventually toppling them. Tbe Jewillh ex., the Rusman r
- do not call for lle:;t at the
.u-Ill - - . . . . , _
two
maJor
enemies
oo
two
lroilto
olmultaneously.
118
a.u-......
AndtheftiiDI!IIlat
.
•
,.
- - - - - -·
Jierie- Itself In the closing !fays of the British mandate
talks tum
out,with
the Kremlin
Ito helm- the areatoldJ. A. -............
.......ow.....,ome..
· - · • · ,-. •
less of liow the Moocow·Pe:.'f.
Ia Palestine Is evidence, as is Algeria.
.
T
Cblna
,
_
_._
win be wary oof a Mao .se- ung·rWI
nuc....oport,o
editor
111ax
llaoo
who
,._
"
"'"'.,""' ·
The United States hal every reason to desire that Lebwoapon1.
Molcow,
tile
reaaonlng
mull
ota~
rela·
ortg!Mted
It
26
y0ara
..,..
·ll
"
_,.,
IIJIOII survive Its- present trial. But with U.S. Influence vir·
Ilona a Uttle with til« ,United!statn· so loaC u the Chlaele •·• ••• 000 In pr1 · ·
~
·
.',!';!".,.:..:_.,
1118111 nil throughout the Arab world, there Is little that can threat eontlnues.) ,. ·
..... ..,...,
hlil .... - - .
v.,...; • ·
be clone ucept, possibly, urging caution on Israel and hopWith all thll said, 1..0' ollklallhll reporter has !liked to _.theBrlelkasefubdolmthe
lq for the best, as Imperfect ao that may be.
expects qulekle neg~tion1. At beit, they ~lll be J~a. ~~~r:r:e..·~~~~·ary
. • T~ . .,...-n;'...~':':.:.': ttz: a11r
All In aU, the MldeaRI preRento an increasingly dismal
involved and tlre'sOme. with ha.l&amp;llnl over -every point.'
,. \.1111......... .._....._. 111 ......
. 1~~ure. United Nations Secretary-General tJ Than! warns Even If the Rusfiu1 wore not lilveterale . ilqlllel'l, !be lty (he lnlo\'VIel&lt;ed hockey ator ·. ,..., ......, . "" ..
".a
:t .the rcJ{Ion may be In the process of spawning a new complexity of nuelear-mlsstte
arms sub1
ect ~Judea anv Gordle Howe for the new and. -·••et.tca....... rathl, ...._... . .
.
'I
ltundrcd Vf•a r); War. Actually, it already seems that long.
settlement within the near future.
· 808IIY sports mqj paid the gro. ·~-----.;.;;;;.;;;;;,;;.~.....-.J.·---...,.-------,-"'"'-...---"";...;.~

~

M. Findling, soo of Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Findling, Sr.,
Route 1, is serving with the

-

school aid dlstrlbufions July
through October totflled more
than 1151.1 million, which was
S11 .2mllllonhlgher than the four
month payment In 1968.
The October ~yment to the
639 school districts In the state
amounted to $37,630,293.
Topping the October dlstrlbu·
tlon to city schoot dlstrlds was
SU million to Cleveland. Co·
lumbus received 11.38 million,
Cincinnati 1967,929, Toledo 1728,.

Grande Nov.

Chlneoe .... trlbotiOI!. !! 'l/1;.
knolm, althouBh II probably
totals several blllloo dol-

Roush . ~

Games were enloyed during .
the evening and prizes awarded
each lucky winner of a game.
Announcement of the regLJiar
monthly meeting to be held
Monday, November 3 at 1 p.m.
In the Appalachian auditorium.
Serving as chapter president Is
Jack Woodruff and his wife,
Barbara.
Some thirty -five membert
and guests attended ttlls first
party. Registering were Mr.
and Mrs . Woodruff and
children; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Whittington and children; Mr.
and Mrs. Qakley Faudree, Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth L. Roustl, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Whittington and
children; Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Hensley, Nr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Holmes and Miss Michele
Holmes, Mr. and INs. Glen
logan, Mrs. Carl Cook, Mrs.
Arnett Roush, Mrs . Oavld
Winkler and children, Nw . and
Mrt. Dale Roush, Mr . and Mrs.
Raymond Stewart and children.
the latter of Gallipolis, and Mrs .
Jordan and Mrs. Thompson.

RIO Glto\NDE - A compre - alnwst hnpol'l8lblc for a poraon
hensive oollecdoo ol new cur- Wyim.: books to sunoy all that
riculum - rel11tcd bookB ot Ulls is D'f'tdlablc. The exhibit gives
year will bo oo diiPl., at lllo people a chance to broJJ&amp;e and

the Vietnam War b)l nor:tJuly
J, the Peritagun eltlmatea.
The Soviet and Commanlat

WhiHington, Oakley FaudrH,
Robert ,.IVJ&gt;IHinglon, and O.lo

SCHOOlS RECEIVE MONEY

..

four commercial channels.

·'•'

NEA Washington Cornspondont

extra minutes untU the wife
drives In with the house contest at all.
keys.
Most of Jersey's seat-of•the-pants appraisers say the
• • •
battle is closo and could go either way, depending on r~la·
The only J&gt;Tudent time
live party vote turnout, liey county margins and whether
to tell the boss where to
hostile Jersey City Demoorals undercut Meyner.
get off is when he falls
The two nominees have done their ulmost to keep the
IJ8ieep on lhe bus.
outcome In doubt by pouring out their energies In support
of a fast-growing traclllion that New Jersey mounlll just
about the dullest campaigns for governor of any populOus
state.
As for the rich in this
Meyner's sculptured ruggedness still looks as If It had
world, charge them not ro b.e been chiseled loose lrom Mt. Rushmore, but many voters
haUQhty, nor to set thel1 may agree with Republican campaigners wbo say It needs
hopes on uncertain nchu a fresh sandblasting.
bui 011 Gnd who richlv furThis is the man who could empty a governors' conference
nishes us with eveflllhmg to
green
baize table with his droning talk and who killed blm·
enjoy.-1 Timothu 11:17. .
Self as a 111110 presidential prospect with a single Incredibly
-.
That man I• prudent who Inept National Presa Club speech ("All I know about
neither hopes nor fears any- foreign policy Is what I read In the New York Times").
As for Cahill, even some of his own party people thlnt of
thing from the uncertain
events of the future.-Ana· blm as unhanasome, as flushing too red wben bls anger
.
tole France, French novellsl. bolls up.

Pay-TV Deserves a Try-out

'

lr BRUCE IIOSSAT

• • •

may she always be in the right ; but our country, nght or

::,..

N.J. Election May Pivot on
Nixon, Jersey City Vote

Settling down Is ealler
than aettHng up after a buyIng spree_
Getting up with o
grouch lead&amp; fll4ny o wife
ro contemplate dftlorct.

PT. PlEASANT - The Oh Kan Wanderers Cl'lapter of the
National Campers and Hikers
Association held their flrt1
costume Halloween Party
Tuesday night In the Krodel
Park Clubhouse. Halloween
decorations were used In the
building.
Co-chairmen for ttle affair
were Mrs. Howard Jordan and
Mrs. Don Thomp~n . Refreshments were served consisting of
donuts, elder, hot chocolate and
candles to members and their
guests. Treats were given to the
children concluding the party.
Prizes were awarded for
various costumes and gifts
presented to Abbie Woodruff
tthe youngest member at .
tending); Chuckle Gaskins,
Wesley
Woodruff,
Gayle

,,

Display of r.ew Books Announced

WASIIINGI'ON (UPQ- The
United States will have spent
an elllmated $lOG biUioo oo

ByOh-Kan Wanderers

BRUCE BIDSBAT

lr PHIL PASTOIEI'

meaning of stephen Decatur's famous and much-criticized
toast:
"Our country! ln her intercourse with foreign n.ations,

Costume Party Held

Folklore hal It that It Ia ~ llellubllcana &lt;IDpr&lt;lllllllly mine eonvlneed from much QldottriY• ·
••b . _.. and manopro and t h e .m,..,....tal question. oUn1 and opetldna about t h t
otookholdero who form t h e ThiO' believe aloo thet ....,._ &lt;0U111r7 that "tht lddo" really
bani core or the RtplbUoon thlna llmpiJ mull be done do underotend lhlo luue and
JIAIV; and lolklore II portly about 'lt, In 1111'Collf, .,
will reopond llfato!Ully to Ill
rJijd. SliD, - 1 II not aonThey 111181011 that lha GOP· ...,llru&lt;tlve uploltoUOII.
erllly re&lt;OIIIIzod Is that lhlo . lo a&lt;fllo!cy more clllable than His view, - · Ia·that noportleular Retllbllean Admin. the Denx&gt;erata or dolnalt And t1ona1 pollution Ia bolllnninlto
lllratloa, and ljiOdlleally the !hay bolleve, al"IO'IIIl'aotedthe have a deepar bite IIIIOIIC the
Julllao Doportmont In the area creat ..,... forlunt of aome 110r- than even civil rfllttl,
or lllllltnoto&lt;tivlt,y, lofartrom ly settlement of Vlotnom, thet Some detached obHrvero, lnaull)molleally pro.blc boolness, deanlng up t h e nallonal at- elUding this one, loan to lilt
~ as Ita held, Richard Nix. moajlhere will beln....,.,.ably ume opinion. l!oneeanoaJy pt
on. haa -•r been bla; boat. the b~ll nallonal Issue by awq from Vlelnam for ablellneas' bero.
1972, if not before.
ed few minutes -and tld.•l•'t
To the contrary, Mr. Ntxon•a
For llluatratJ.on. Herbert eaay when one iaanunrePefrtant
ltalua lo nlher like what the Klein, ollletally Praddent Nix- hawk- ooeeanhoara ..... deol
loat Sen, Robert 1'11101100 de- Oil'S dtreelor or eommunlca- afvery IOnllble talkamonaeoJIttibed to this .eolumnlot ao tiona and aetuall,y llao one of leglans aboot lmprovlni tho ba.
hlo own. ''The pret1;y rich DillY hla principal lnteUipnce olfl- ole conditions under which we
like me," Aid Taft Wl'111, ''llut cera In dome~Uc poiiUca, ia live,

wrong."
Decatur wu not saying we should blindly foll~w wh~ver

.·.

'

'

(O~P.NYe

a,,..,..,
,..,,
pho.. jj6•3JI2·

GollipOII,, Ohl•

.

.

P"NT Fl,ANNJ~ .

SH~Y

·

PRINT FLANNEL

•uiNY IC»w~s

PAJAMAS ..

Blac~1 · whlto print

top
with ·rul(lo loco tri.m

'Rwm•,

•'

Cord

.

.,,.,flclat4

ablo, Slu• $.M.L. Col••

matchinG _. ·panti••· ·

,'

!Uiacha~lo

twHt .,. •I•••"• full)' W••'whitt print.

Sizes S, M,,·L· ·

~~ALL SA o· i1~ti~U~LtA.AA~'J'"E~D .
'

jQc~·., Qlm."
·

Bl~:~d/

.'
'

con1rol.

s1144

L.

an~

offl~.

..

peratu~

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'

l

·'~

�............. ·-:·

&amp; _ The SU'*Y 11me" .. Sool.incl, Surda)', November 2, 1969

Addison Ladies Aid

Gallia Churches to Observe
World Community Day Nov. 7 Signs Protest Letters
GALLIPOLIS- GalUa Coun~
cy Council d. Clm-ch Women
United will observe World Commwd(J' D,.y FrldoY, November
1, at stmpSOD Chapel Methodist

ADDISON - Addison Free
Others who wiD take part are Will Bapfllf Ladlea Aid algned
in this way. These certificates
will be available at the church. ~s. Mary Lewis, Mrs. Robert letters to defeet the effort of
Three Rio Grande College Gfeen, Mrs. Merrill E.Tana, athiest Madelyn Murray In her
ctudents will participate In the Mrs. Cl,yde Evans and M r 1. attempt to censure the
astronauts for their 8ible
program. They arc Miss Vickie Stanley Folden.

Church In Rio Grande at 1:30 Burnett. vocaliBtj Miss &amp;!san
p.m.
Winters, organist, and Miss
As a speelal project, women Linda Garst, daughter~ Methotrom ~e vulous churches have dist misslonaries in India.
been mal&lt;lng clothing lor children in South Am&amp;rlcan and African eountrtea. These articles
will be collected and eshlblted.
Some garments will be modeled
by Timothy Bush and Nancy and
Sarah Evans.
In addlticm tu the clothing,
blankets are needed in poverty
and disaster areas. Thrwgh
GALLIPOLIS- Joe Walters,
the gift certltlcate plan, new
a
student teacher from Chilliblankets can be purchased at a
special price ~ three dollars. cothe, was the speaker at the
Groups or individuals who recent Tri-Hi-Y meeting. Intro-have been unable to take part duced by Betty Jo Johnson, this
In the sewing project may help man who describes himself as
'4part-time preacher, part-time

The ladies of Simpson ChaPel will serve refreshments at
the close oC the meeting.

Joe Walters Speaker

I

Eureka WSCS
'

•

Meets at
Irion Home

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Frank
Irion was hostelS for the
Eureka WSCS Sunday. Thirteen
members and Nw's. Saunderson
mittees.
were present.
The club was also told to be
Mrs. Lee Burcham presented
the program . Opening song, thinking ci what It would preBreak Thou tne Br&amp;ad of Life fer to do for a Christmas proand prayer by Mrs. Goldie ject. Ideas discussed includGolhord.
ed visiting the children's home
The quiet day w•s observed by and visiting the chUdren at GSL
the reading of, She Shall Be
FinaL business Included the
C.lled Woman, by Mrs. L&amp;e election of two delegates to repBurcham; What Woman am I,
by Nrs. Olarlft Jeffers; What
Woman May I Become, by Mrs. A pleu•nt shopping ••J•mes Saunden; lntegrety, by perlence, Strawberry Hill, Rio
Mrs. Goldie Gothard; Lets be Grande, 9a.m. to 7 p.m. daily.
Pd.od.
Friends, by Mrs. Virginia
Ftlher; Wh•1 the Bible
The Alaska Highway beIs, by Mrs. Charles Watson;
gins
at Dawson Creek, BritSince Ann Got Religion, by Mrs.

Forrest Fisher;

~.

by

Mrs. Charles Jeffers; Sayings,
by Mrs. James Saunders and
Bible questions by Mrs. Charles

ish Columbia, and extends
1,523 miles to Fairbanks.

Mrs. Forrest Fisher presided
during the business meeting.

·;·. carets were sent to shut-Ins ot

pumpkin pie, Cool Whip and
coffee were enjoyed by oil.
Mr1. JamH Morrison will be
hostess fc.-fho Nov. 20 maeflng.

d•lly. Strawberry Hill, Rio
Grande. 9 1.m. to 1 p.m. dilly.

resent the GAllS Trl-IU-Y Club
at the Model Legislature. Chosen as delegates were Penny
Kemper and Cece Wetherholt.

Sara Winters presided at the
meeting and Mrs. Thomas is
club advisor.

1

•
members and guests by ed:f:o~M:c~C:o:y~:·n~d:~H~a:1:o:l
lnga assllfed by Neva
•••~·~Ja:hn~·~:R:ef:r:es;h~m=en~fs~w:e:r:e~se:rv
i:Jo~n~•.•·

'

the opttnlng 1011g was, Give Me

Your Hand, followed by opening
prayer by Audrey Sheets.
Two members were present.
Five gat-well cards were sent
and two visits made. Two
guests, Neva Vanslclde and
Mr$. D. Rothgeb, Sr.. were
welcomed.
Meeting date• fc.- tho months
of November and December
were moved two weeks earlier
due to the holiday season.
Secret sisters names were
revealed end new names were
drawn for the coming year.
Mrs. Walter Patterson,
director. presented a program.
A Bible quiz was conducted with ·

Charles Vanco, Gallipolis. are
announcing the birth of their
first child, a son. born October
2-4, 1969, l:.oll a.m . at Holzer
Medical Center, First Ave. Hilt
weighed 7 pounds, 1 ounce and
has been named Marc Alan.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Taylor,
Rodney. Paternal grandparents
ere Mr. and Mrs. Joe Van co, Rt.
1 Bidwell.
Maternal great . grand·
parents are . Mr. and Mrs.
GALLIPOLIS - A spook Granville Farley •nd Mrs.
party was held at the home of George Taylor. West Virginia.
Robbie, Steven and Tommy
Waugh Thursday evening.
}oim Glee Club
Costume ludge was Jimmy
Day. Winning costume prizes
GALLIPOLIS - Mike E. Cor.
were, prettiest, AnneHe Sisson; bin, of llOS Ohio Ave., Galliugliest, Theresa Johnson; polis, has been selected to sing
funniest, Robbie Waugh.
In the Miami (Ohio) Unlver slSeveral games were played ey•s Men's Glee Club.
and refreshments of cupcakes,
Corbin is in the Bass I see ..
doughnuts. elder, and Kooi -Aid
t1on of the 68..man .choir. He is
were served.
a sq,homore.
Attending were Robin and
Teresa Hammond, Sandy and
Kelly Van Sickle. Shawn
Swisher; Annette Sisson, Mark
and Junior Brown, Theresa and
Sheila Johnson, Tim and Terry
Barr, Jimmy Day, Mrs. Dale
Van Sickle, Mrs. Carlos
Swisher, Mrs. Richard Sisson,
and the Waugh family .

•

OLIN RUSSELL OF VINTON brightened the morning Wedaolday by senll!w us two &amp;~~Pie bioesoms. He &amp;Bid this might not
1M unusual, but It was tD him, ani he absred it with us. Russell
pulled the plak biOOIIIJ oo Oct. 27, Weill guess o tree can't check
the calenllar for when it's IICIPOsed to dress for the big occa ..
lion.

e

Held at

Waugh Home

The World Almanac says
that W a i k i k i Beach, the
shore resort area in Hono-

lulu, owes much of its appeal to Its natural protection by a submerged coral

reef. The reef, approximate J y lh -mile offshore, .
provides smootb swimming

COOliES
.ANIE (WJEHl"CHAnERBOX" WILL • BIOADCASTM
FROM 10 A.M. TO 11 A.M. FRIDAY.
O,.n10 A.M. TO I P.M,. DAILY
.
.
EXCEPT SUNDAY -10 A.M. T0.6 P.M.

SMELTZER ~~~CENTER

conditions within its confines, wbile stUI permlltiDg
large, breaking waves only
800 yards away for surfing
on boards and in outrigger

WISEMAN, DAUGHTER ollke and Katherine Wise..., .• man TAMMY
ls an animal lover. So much so, that when she discovered
:: a nel&amp;httor-a do&amp; at the too1blll game, where he sl'louldn't be, she
picked "' the llttlo feUow ani carried him to his 010ner. That was
;~ a nice thlrw to do.
Guess whoa.e dog It was?
•

Ohio

..
::

canoes.

awry place yw'vo been'/
I would be , lllte~atf4J -Ia •bt&amp;ri!MI. about fllllr hobbles.

;;;~~

.
DRILLING ·'
. COLUMBUS CUPil - Slate
.Natural Rtlourc&amp;s Director
Fred E. Mtxr uld he opposes
oil and
drilling In lake ~r­
ledetpltean International study
commission's report It would
not cause • mator pollution

oa•

i4nppr

''THAT OLD fASHIONIP C:.OODNIW'

pate many requeats from the
oil Md g'n lndultry for permls·
slon to drill In the Ohio section

......

SAVINGS CERTIFICATES
OF DEPOSil NOW EARN

'

thraef.
Morr ,.ld ha did not anflcl·

lfllNDAY
DAB MEETING 2 p.m. at the
of llrs. Everetie Gltlo,
- · · · Mrs.Gtml!eglhaw.
llrs. lfal P, Slmm 11111 be tho

of the lake.

BAND BOOSTERS Executive
mootiJog 7:30 bend

ON DtrrY IN VIETNAM
LANGSVU.LE - U. S. A I r
Forea Airman First Class Terry L, FellY, ..., of Mr. and
Mrs. Harold w. Fett,y Is on
eu;, at BIJIII T1&gt;Q1 AB, VIetnam. He Ia a fUel opeelallot In
the 632nd Combat ~
Group, The alrmaa Ia a 1967
i1"8duate d. Rutiand H I g h

room.

'

Rolrllh....m.~--· ­
fho d - of ""' ....""'.
lttutifwl slllrt11, awMtan,
pants, ....,, ~..... , . . ....

colloctlon ot SlreWWry IIIII.
Rio orondo, ' o.IIL to J fi.M.

delly,
Pd.

od.

YN/2 and Mrs. ltobert L. Fridd
WED IN ENGLAND - Announeement is be!rv made
of the weddlrw ol Robert L. {Butch) Fridd, YN2, to Patricia BoUeu of London, Ell!land, on Oct. 4. Frldd graduated !rom Gallla Academy High School ani has been In
the navy for three years. His new wife is an mM ~r·
to brill! his bride lo the states.
- - - - - - - - - -- - - -- - - - - - - - -

Junior Garden Club
Meet at Coones
GALLIPOLIS - The Green

plants will be used to beautify a
small hill where the Sander's
Hill water tank Is located.
Randy Breech, president,
called the meeting to order and
welcomed all present. The
Club's Pledge was repeated In
unison, after which all sang,
America lhe Beautiful. Cathy
Breech, secretary, read the
minutes of the last meeting. Tne
treasurer's report was given by
Nancy Fraley.

GALliPOLIS, OHIO

NOW YOUR HEADQUARTERS
FOR CRAIG Fl E QUALITY
RADIOS, TELEVISION •••.

Party Held
GALLIPOLIS- Recently the
First Church of God Youth
Fellowship held a combined
Halloween and Destination
Unknown
party .
The
Destination Unknown took
members to an old deserted
house, which wasn't very
deserted. There were several
adivlties going on In the old
house such as spooky ghost
stories, ghosts, and all kinds of
pecUliar saunds! Following the
destination unknown the group
returned to the church for other
games and refreshments .
Those who attended the party
were as follows : Debbie Houck.
Jeff Rhodes, Diana Haner,
Jerry Wallis , Kathy Wall,
Debbie Carhart, Sherry Evans,
louAnn Whitley, Claudette
Daniels, Denise Long, Debbie
Gay. Sue Adkins, Edith long,
Mike Bush. Roger Dalley. Steve
Wallis, Butch Carol1, Bobby
Wallis, Edith and Leroy Adkins,
Connie and Derry Hemphill.
Mary Lee McDade. Penney
Haner, Mary Wallis, the Cook
Family and the Rev . and Mrs.
Paul Jones.

EXTRA MONEY FOR CHRISTMAS?

.

: Personal AM Broadca1t fbdio. Miniature in both
: size and price, you'll ~njoy this handy radio every. where you go. A carrymg strap snaps to the stylish
case providins easy portability. Earphone is in. eluded. Comes in black, beige and avocado. Model
. . 1105 $9.95
Personel
today's

AM/FM

Top Aberdeen Angus

THE

Show, Sole Planned

:•

.

...

.'

COLUMBUS- Mondoy; Nov.
3, Aberdettn Angus breeden
from eight states will bring
some of the best Angus seed
stock In the country here to
participate In the Auckeye
National Show and Sale cosponsored by the Ohio Angus
Association and tne Ohio
Department of agriculture.
The show opens at 9a .m. in the
Cooper Arena at the Ohio Exposition Center, where the Ohio
State Fair is held. There will be
Sll,BOO offered In premium
awards.

HAS SEVERAL OPENINGS
FOR PART AND fULL TIME
EXPERIENCED

Portoble AM/FM llroodcoot Radio. lntqrated cir-

cuitry, AFC, continuous tone control, earphone, AC
adapter jack, and a telescopic antenna all add ur, to
big sound pleasure In a uniquely styled radio. Back
or beige. Model 1201 $35.95

SALES LADIES
APPLY MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY
9:00 A.M. TO 12 MOON

.,
Solid-State AM Clock Radio. A perfect school mate.
Compact, handy and accurate . This fine AM clock
radio incl udes alarm and sleep switch, li1htad
clock. Ideal for a student back-to-school sift. It's
student styled and student priced. Madel 1101
$23.95

;:

Made for

PEMBROKE CLUB, I p.m. at
lhollomeoiMrs. Eldon Wvorcn.

each

other.

W!DNESDAY
WAYSIDE GARilEN ·Club 11111
111111 lira. Clareaee. ~

Doluu AM/FM Dllltol C1odl Radio. Full Crola AM/
FM radio ranp. lnte1ratod circuitry, AFC, clock
lllht, alarm dlallilht, and modom controls for both
radio tunln11nd c~ usaae moka tnls clock rodlo
rna ultimate In modern llvlna. Modtil 1101 $6oUS

I

\

wtn beu~
by llrs. Edward i'l'elloa, 7:311
- · Prapam

:

\

p.m,

'

THURS~Y

.
EXECUTIVE Commlttoo .
-tlng ol tho Womon'o
-latloo of !lit Presbyterian

DEIECIIVE
I

j

•CERTIFICATES ISSUED FOR 90 DAYS
eAUTOMAncALL Y RENEWABLE
•INTEREST CHECI MAILED EVERY 90 DAYS
.CERTIFICATES ISSUED FOt $1,000 OR MORE
efYEIY DEPOSITOR INSURED TO $15,000

OHIO VALLEY BANK
420 THIRD AVENUE

GALLIPOLIS

Member of the Annoyance Call
Bureau - Ohio Bell's crack ACB team.
She's a specialist and investigator,
trained to find and help stop the
malicious tel•phone caller.
Victims of llatasSing, obscene or
threatening phone calla call on her for
help. She listen~. She asks questions.

She can set into motion five different
kinds of electronic detection equipment
to j!11ther evidence as irrefutable as
fingerprints.
This detective charges no retainer.
She and the Annoyance Call Bureau
are just pan of Ohio Bell's IICCUriry
system thor protectS you, your family

Church, 3 p.m.

FRIDAY
WORLD CdMMUNtTY O.y
oervl-. Stmpooo Chapol ol Rio
• - · 1:30 p.m.
IMOIAGE SALE-.IbY
Circle 8 otGraee United~
4ldbl Clloreh. COGI11101 thnJowh

and everyone who uses the telephone.
She's among the 26,000 Ohio Bell
pc'&lt;&gt;ple who make good relepho~
service "' easy to take for granted.

@ONoBel ,

.......

lr
... ,

·~

.

. -~·

... ~.• •·.;,1··
'·

..

~

•

.
•

Dlot.MOND

lltiNQ8

.

..

of Codom.
•
1 two tones ol ~oot
AUDITiONS' sty es

\
.

and bulton

, C:n"af,.,M• with: high 1/~m, ~ t ol tke "~polS"

.,.
ildlv rernm sc:en
chjtai\\ng, m
ble pump is betler
look. But this l!'fiP~c\71/e\y pace. CORFAM
adapted to today s the function you wont.
gives sho,e fo~~:FAM. 9119n lights and
e-.,ory c,olcr..o trash looking with .
neulfols, s.taYI
. ,
wipeandweorease .
.
't

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.

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Cnllllodc oncl White Portoblo ,---.,. The Ideal :~.,...;:. 'T..;i;' li Iii;(
•

With Craigs "stand-by picture" you get an 'imniadlaw 'PICiure:...-ilnd •
cryslal clear. ll's the latest in fl(lftable black lltKI 'Whlle -lsian
·
...;

PA11L DAYIII

.._1!

full controls and fine tunin'g provide an unsurpessed-.pieture ~';Jii)ill

IN .I life. .Featured

·~. JEWl~EIS .·" ·

wllh Craig's contamfl91'i!l..,itii!!W _.,, · ~, lfr)ot

.:~t ~~~t contrast screen

• -In ""' illop '
c~tra~" Hill", In Rio
Wllllll.

~--------------------------~·

oAdCa.r,vep. .

l.adlie:

'

Theres more to Ohio Bel than meets the ea:

Allditions' rend•tton

l

TO. SERVE DII!NER
·CHESHIRE - Kyger ,Ledin
~II'""'- oloctlon dey at
K,...
11111 .. @olanll. !'Ill
' lnct... ~ ~doll~ ,pl• oncl

,

The new smooth.~•·

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" .

GALLI

MONDAY, NOV. 3, Gallla
SHARP ASSIGNED
Cciuncll O.ughfers of Amerlao,
GALLIPOLIS - Arm.r Prl7:30.
vote Flrot Clau Kenneth E,
AAUW 7:30 p.m. at home of lilarp, 20, 100 d. Mr. and Mrs.
FrM Thomu, Willow Dr. Guosl l!ldwln F. lilarp, Route 2, ThurIPI•ker
will
be Carof man, was assigned Oct. 9 to
Cremeens.
the 2ilth lnlontry Dlvlelon In
TVESDAY
VIetnam a1 ID aircraft maiDteENGLISH CLUB, 7 p, m. with eanee spoclellat.
llrs. Beolrlc:e Clark, R I o
GnniO.

INTEREST

Pl&gt;well pr-foci 11&gt;1 - -

In dialogue form w"tttt cllc:WI..,.
trom otl)er merriben.
· "7

'

MERCERVU.LE GRANGE, 7:30
p.m.
AMERICAN RED CROSS G1'11
Lodlos YoliOIIeer luncheon, al
the Holzer Madlcal Center &lt;af·
- . 12:30 p.m.
GRACE GUILD wiD meet at
dlurcb dining IGOm lor cllmar
8:15p.m.
School.

'

48 STATE ST.

Halloween

Thumbs and Busy Fingers
Junior Garden Club met
WISH SOMEONE WOULD teU :,Yivla llay (Mrs. Clyde) how to recently at the home of Mrs.
George Coones. who taught
make aflhan,s. She crochets hers on those big crochet needles
them how to propagate
and !hay aren't OIIJ' good at all when lt comes tD keeplll! out the
geraniums by cuttings.
cold air at a lootbsll game. They are pretty, though.
Mrs. Coones demonstr~ted
how to prepare the soil for
I KICKED OFF THE HEEL lsi&gt; of a shoe recenlly. Went Into potting cuttings, by mixing 1
the ohne sh"' carryl!w the &amp;hoaln one hand ani the heelcap In the part soli, 1 part sand and 1 part
other. Hqo Pierotti said when he saw me, "1bat' s not too bad, peatmoss. She then cut the slips
Just u lone as you don't loose your soul"
of geraniums, dipped them In a
Beautl!lall
rooting medium and each child
planted the plant in a small pot
I'VE BEEN COLLECTING OWLS for a lriend. But the cer- which he will care for In his
am1c owl Sarah Moahler made was enough to make me start col .. home.
loetbw them lor Pat I dcm't collect anything but Ill did, I think
The plant should have roots In
eight
weeks. In the spring these
It would be searves. Wouldn't It be tun to have scarves trom

Willi That
Homemade
Sauce

t~akf

A special offering was taken
help buy equipment tor
dwrch and community workers
Mid help Improve property In
community centers In the
United StBtes and to help rurBI
life training ministries ov&amp;r ·
uas.
Mrs. Glenn Powell gave an
Interesting program on the
meaning of Reconclll•tlon. This
Is B financial plan to help pay

ator. When he completes his tour oC duty Mr. Fridd plans

I HAD FORGOTTN HOW smart a 4-yaor-old can be. Jennifer WUooo, clollj)llta' of Mr and Mrs. L. D. (Buck) Wilson, does•: n't laft to take 1 t.ek1eattoanyone. She can sit at a recept~Mo
lot' a duk and make appointments as good as an adult, maybe
better,

•,I

to

BECAUSE SINGER TOM JONES Is ouch a hit, I look a seconlinok when I paosed that IBme In the phone book. I called Mrs.
Tom Jonea, Evana Helghta, aid asked what it. had meant to haw
tht -.me of a siC)er star. ul've taken some kiddl.tw, In fun, ol
eourae [rom friends," she said. ''My only coqlalnt is my Tom
doesn't make the tnoney the other one does."

DOOR
• PillE$

FREE
COFFEE

seven pound 3 ounce daughter Route 2, Bidwell and maternal.
et Holzer Medical Center.
grandparents are Mr. •nd N.rs.
The baby, born October 1,, Ben Arrowood, 146 Andover
has been named Amy Carol. Sl}e Road, W-fleld,
Is
wel~ed
a slste'F,

,./.

lroublod world.

In the maU this week. U wUlask lor blographlcallnlormatlon I
hcp~ to use as material for a "~lghting Women" or perhapl
"Protllea ••• by Pat" feature.
The question forms are going Jnto Mr. Caldwell's quartefl
II ~id)y 11 time permits. I hope all of you cooperate b)l complethw aid returniJV them so we can get started "meetire our
nolchboro" (which also might be a good title).
Note: You don't have to tell your age, but If you do, I won't
apUI II, II you ask that It not be.

SHOP
FRIDAY, SATURDAY &amp; SUNDA
NOVEMBER
7... 8th, 9th '

_..;-=

Spook Party

The call to prayer and self·
dania! program was observed.
This is a call to all United
Methodllt women In October to
foln In prayer, study, and
Mcrlflclal giving for the
fulfillment of God's plan In a

Business women, women with ftalr for homemaking, new..
comers, cl~ leaders (an:t theJr hard workers) and interestlrw
proteaalorBI women of Gallla Cowty wlll receive a questionnaire

...---'··-···
_•· __.!
r
•·•
·-

~

to Assist Yule Project

Hatchers Announce Birth of Daughter

.

AT THE

•

WSC~

GALLIPOLIS - Folrlleld for programs of reconciliation groups ..
WSCS at their recant meeting, emong melorlty and minority
Mrs. Dale Smith and Mrs.
wtted to make cookln and
candy for tho Yule Proloct for
tho boya In Vlatnam. Mrs.
ROONEY - Mr. and Mrs. Jennifer, 3.
Lnter Plym1le was hostess and
William E. Hatcher. Rodney,
Paternal grandparents are
t~ve the deyotlons ~ rules for
are
announcing the birth of 1 Mr . ..,d Mrs. Howard Hatcher,
tho art of happlneos.

HOUSE

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

GALLIPOLIS-Mr. and Mrs.

Fairfield

TO .

Vancos Announce
Birth of Son

I

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TRY OUR
FOOtERS

Marlin.

:-· the community. Secret sisters
will be revealed at the
November meeting. Thirty-tour
sick calls were made.
Meeting closed with the
Lord's Prayer said In unison
and Mrs. Otarles Martin saying
grace.
During the social hour

Hellday merchllndise 1rrlvlng

· Pd. od.

For GAHS Tri-Hi- Y

teacher. part-time hippie, run ..
time musician" gave his testi ..
many and told how he became
"turned on for God.''
At the business meeting held
before the program, the club
decided upon visiting the Old
Folks Home for tbeir amual
Thanksglving project.
Committees for entertainment, food, and transportation
were formed with Kay Woodward, Betty Jo Johnson, and
Staryl Elsnaugle appointed as
chairmen to the respective com-

reading while In space flight.
The letters were signed at the
meeting Wedneadey at the
church.
Mary Barcus, presided end

Cl!op. _., . . .
queatl••

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daylt~ .tewtna, 11r~, ~: 1~\)1~.~·

Ullli21nch Diagonal Black and While Tel..lslon. $109.95
, 1 f ~·, ,. ,.a.91nch DiagonaiBiacl&lt;and White Tole•lslon. $94.!111' ·, • ,,

... i ,·

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for

~

~

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..

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) ! ,''

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I - 'lllo lluiiiiQ

Tag Day Made$1,100

_., ... __

--*

wu

For the ftrll waa named·~ Gar·
of Reclon 11." - r
member, Mra. Cberlea Lew!J,
AW111'11 baa been made Ill Re- lmm- poll prealdent, has
11 b7 U.e Ohio ""--a- been chairman of the Melp
U.o ofGardon Cluba.
Couolb- Fair fi01ror - • for
Alii tho winner Is - Ueltr• the poll NVOralJeara. as well
Wlndlntr TroD Gordon as chairman for the amua1
Chriatmaa n.,.. - · a ! the
outllanciiJII reconl of Molp CcluniJ Association of

I IIP»ID eevorol yeara, a Vlotor
Ootatandlna ~ CIOO

liE~:!~

In all Jhaaea of Gordon Clubo, and U.o Christclub aeUvltlea wer a mu home beauWlcatlm con.
year period Ia the re- tell a! the Pomeroy Chani&gt;er
t~dnm11d for recolvfna the a! Commerce.
Vlctur Rlea award.
Members have aam.ted wltlo
•&lt;'

SYRACU!lE - Mr. ani Mrs. Carroll R. Norris, Syracuse, are announe~JV the engagement and approachlqt
marriage of their daughter, Brebla Kay, to Mr. Jerome
Anthony ~In, son of Mr. ani Mrs. Herbert Coughlin,

ro Wed

;f

CCIIIVentlon.

LETART, W. VA. - Mr. ani Mrs. Kenneth 0. Hullins of Letart are announcingthee~mentoftheir daugh~
ter, Sharon, to Michael L. Rodgers. Michael is the son of
Mrs. Goldie Smith of Mason, W, Va.Silaronis a 1968 graduate of Wahama High School ard is now a sophomore at
Marshall University. Michael is a 1968 graduate of Point
Pleasant High School and is now in the United states
Marine Corps. Wedding plans are incomplete,

Dayton. Miss Norris, a graduate

ot Southern High School,

LETART FALl.'; - Mr. and Mro. 1laro1d Bnden
of Letart Falls are announcbw the erwagement and QproachbV marrlare of U.Oir daughter, Lynda Darlene, to
Mr. Nlles Michael Yoww, son or Mr. l..eo Young and Mra.
1-ols y~ of Maaoo, W. Va. The open church weddiiV
wiD be an evelt a! Saturdt,J, Nov. 8 at 7o'clock 1J1 tho
oY&lt;Jnlrw at the Asbury United Methodist Church Ill Sfracuse. A receptioo wW be hold lmmedlote1y folloJrlrw the
weddlre in the church soclal room.

is preseatly a junior at Ohio University where she is
majorh~ in elementary educaUon.
Mr. Cooghlln, a graduate of Chamlnade High School,
graduated with honors from Ohio University in June. He
was a member of Beta Alpha Psi, National Accounting HorPorary, and is entJloyed by Touche, Ross, Baileyao:l Smart
Certitied Public Accountants, Dayton. An open chw-ehweddlng will be an event ofNov.lSat the Asbury UrUted ~
od.ist Church, Syracuse.

Church Women Announce Program
POMEROY _ uAm 1 My
8 th 's Keeper " a missions
pl:.le~ will be' a feature of
the program at the W o r I d

Community

presented by a choir compos- will be conducted by Mrs. Catbcd of members from several erlne Welsh of the Sacred Heart
churches.
Church,
For the litany, Mrs. Donald Making upllie cholrwhlchwlll
Mora of the Chester Methodist sing for the service will be
COOrch will be the leader and Mrs. Grace Colwell and Mrs.
Mrs. Nan Moore of Heath Meth~ C. 0, Chapman, RuUand Methoodist, Middleport, will give the dlst; Mrs. Hattie Smith, Mrs.
scripture. There wlll be are- C. M. Hemesy, and Mrs. MD
spm.sive reading led by Mrs. Donahue, Middl~rt Methodist;
Louis Reibel of Trinity United Mrs. GeorgeSki.Mer, Mrs. FosChurch of Christ, a prayer by ter, Mrs. T. T. Shelton, and
Mrs . Con Young oC Mol.mt Mo.. Mrs. Ellen Couch, Pomeroy
riah, and the offertory prayer Baptist.
by Mrs, Paul Smart.
'Mrs. Ama Blackwood, Mrs.
Ushers will be Mrs. Richard Paul Cascl, Mrs. David OhOwen, Middleport BapUst; Mrs. linger '-nd Mrs. Welsh, Sacred
Mary Nease, Forest Run Unit-. Heart_;_ Mr~. WUllam .t\lnon.,
ed Methodist; Mrs. EddleBurk- Enterprrse lJnJted Methodi~;
ett, Middleport Presbyterian; Mrs. Ann Watson and Mr ·
and Mrs. William Grueser, Edith Sisson, Forest Run
Rock Springs Methodist.
Methodist; Pat Dumas, Mrs.
In reading parts as voices Lavina Simpson, Mrs.
Edfrom the congregation will be win
Cozart,
and
M r a.
Mrs . Campbell Harper, Mount Mattie Circle, Mrs. Ronald SalMoriah; Mrs. J. Edward Fos- ser, Racine churches; M r s.
ter, Pomeroy Baptist; M r s. Genevieve Sctmeider and Mrs.
George White, Rutland MeUlo- Beatrice Blake, Syracuse; Mrs.
dist. A special service of ac- Harvey VanVranken, Mrs. Ev-

:'un~~~ri:~:d ~;;~~~.~
Michael of the Pomeroy Bapt:Lst.
411 Christians in International
Development" is the theme of
the service which will begin
following a 12,30 p.m. • a c k
lunch . Dessert and coaee will
be provided by the host church.

Circle Plans Meetings
meeting. A luncheon was served
to those named and Mrs. Norma Russell , Mrs. Nora Cambron, Mrs. Eleanor Hoover,
Mrs. Berna H,ysell, Mrs. Eula
Evans, Victor Painter, Mrs.
James Reed, and Mrs. Tressie Hendrickb.

the organ prelude and the inMrs. LUUan Stief{ will play
vocation will be given by the
Rev. Fr. Bernard Krajcovic
of
Sacred Heart Cathollc
Church. Mrs. James Criswell
of Heath Methodist will serve
as a leaderandthehymn, ••once

PATIENT CONVALESCING
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs, Sue
Ellis is convalescing followi~
maior surgery at Veteraas
Memorial Hospllal at 365 Grant
Be
s~ Mr. ani Mrs. GloM Wert•
of Clevelanl ani Mrs. Evelyn
MASON - Mr. and Mrs. Ad- Hill of Buffalo, N. Y. have~
Iai Ueving of Mason, W. Va. turned home after visiting here
will celebrate their golden an- with their mother, Mrs, Ellis.
niversary on Nov. 9 with open
house from 2 to 4 p.m.
Lake Baikal in the Soviet
Hosting the receptioo Cor the Union is the world's deepest
i,~;t;;.~-,.;; lake. Its greatest
co~le will be Mrs. Louise Roo1
is more than 5,400 feet.
or Manhattan, Kansas, and ~
ert Lievlng of Huntington, W.
Va., cHildren or the couple, and
the sisters of Mr. and Mrs.
Lleving. Mrs. Lievlng was the

the award
~· made Soturdajl b,r M r a.

.Rim Raeoe, 1le8lon 11 dlrae.tor, llorlng the fall reldonal

erett Thoma&amp;, ~ Mra. Gerald WUdermuUI, United Mothodlll, l'omeroy; llld Mrs. Young
and Mrs. Campbell Harper,
Mount Moriah Baptist
A pracd~ sesslon tor participants hasbeensetfor'l'hur ...
dt,J at 1:30 p.m. at the Presbyterian Church.

-Ilea

meetlq held at Lake hope_ In
tu U.e Bela award the
c!OO aloo recet.._. rq1ona1
awards for n.,.. and
. ~- Mra. - r t Lewis
, of l'omeroJo-,
a1 Windlba Trail, was at tile 1'011..,_
II meot1n1 tu accept the awards
for iloe club.
1 lfembera a! u.e club are ac.
· t!Te In IIIDIOrous community
I '-'1111~ and dY1o p r o-

i

I have boon treaourar of tloe
VIllage of Pomeroy for 1M
past 12 years and have beM
affllloted wllll t11e vlllago Ill
Dlhe!' capacities for belllr
than 10 yoaro prior to that. I
am a grlduato of PomHigh School one! own 111111
operate my own business Ill
Pomaroy. So willie votl,..
Vote for o well quollfiOII
candidate who knows •II
pha~e~ of village government.

pre-

l

Jecta aa weD

I Jlt*r

11 - - . ,

a

the ata110 decorallolla for the
M111 SouiiiOJD Ohio prellmlDBI7 ot the 110.. A.mortca Pig.
for tile pall two yeara.
In addition U.er have malntaln_. planlbqs at the --...e
ct the Beech Grove Cemetu17
and beve asaleted tbo )mlor
club wiUl flower boxes Whlcll
mark the 111trance IIJ U.o !'omoroy Elementoey School.
Gord111 IIIII oature II&gt;Ura, orwork,._, demonatratlons an&lt;l talk am &amp;ll'donlrw
have been Included m U.o club' I
.,.00.. The club boo aloo sup.
pJrted tile Leadln8 Creek Conaorvaney Dlllrlot with a strip
mine planting.
The sPt'IDI reilonal meetings
Ill 1N7 IIIII INS ware heated

j Eddy's Schedule

EllA S. RUSSELL

I IsPOMEROY
Announced
Ecld1

YOUR WOMAN CANDIDATE
FOR COUNCIL

RUTL D FU ITURE
Is Your Headquar"!!~S

E~~ ~· ~"";~~e:~p.

BiOwn wUl serve as
I triOII,.... far the clam. Mem-

plan to atletld a mee11na
tlle COiumbua IIMI Southern

Eloclrlc Compony at Midfcll.epoJrt, Nov. 19. This will be
CbrlatmasliShllniiiMI!aod.
clam will maet tile third
•::::~ a1 oaeb monu.. The
me8tina will be at
bomo of Mro. Claremont
l fl-Jrls. Refres-. """'
ll&lt;lrved tu Mrs, Hu-rla, Mra.
WUaan, Mra. WarreD PickMro. R, L, Larkins, Mra.
Walter Brown, Mrs. R. E. WllIIIII Mra. L. Blldor11011.

11

Education for another term if I am elected. This is
not true. If I am elected I will serve the District
as honestly and as fairly as I have in the past.

Re-Elect

HOWARD R. ERVIN
Far Southern Local Board of Education

Iuama

~;;;;;;;;;;.;;·; . : ; ; ; ; : : : : : : : : p : d : ,·:·:··:·:':'·:~
Your Support Will Be Appreciated

Clarence Lawrence

ceaood.

The

c()lCJle were married on Nov.
12, 1919 at Clifton, W.Va. They
have seven grandchildreTL
President John Quincy
Adams later became a member or the House of Representatives.

BOARDO EDUCATION
'•

If elected

I will worlc ,_, the benefit of our
children• s education.

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT,
DHIO

CITIZENS
And I D•serve A Goocl Education,
My Hame hn't on the Ballot, But a Vote •..

VOTE
NATHAN E. (NATE) VANAMAN
FOR
Rutland Township Trustee
TUES., NOV. 4th, 1969
YOUR VOTE WILL BE APPRECIATED
Pd. Po~ Adv.

FOR THE RENEWAL LEVY
(X) IS A VOTE FOR ME
THIS IS A RENEWAL
NO INCREASE IN YOUR TAX ' RATE

Poid Polllieol Aclv.,titemttnt by tho LoYy Ronowol C~~~r~lidtt. . , Ho•oN N•lon, Clw,

/

buck and Co., sponsors ol a

Jist three 7ears a member d
tbe club, either Mrs. Charles

beautification contest; regional
awards for the club's Cower
shows during the past three
years, an honorable mention
in the region on the Ganlen
Club publlciiJ book for 1967,
a secmd place regional award
for yearbook in 1966.
And now, the Victor Rles
Outltanc:ung Garden C l u b
Award!

rangement s.

Find the one
that's opprOo.
priate for you

to give, here.

Mi ddloport•Golllpollo
Serving Meigs, Galli•
and Mason County
446-1777 or 992·5560

contributing hosteHs,

prizes
won byPerry
Mrs. James
Jividenbeing
alii Mrs.
Mitch. . .- - - - - · - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
Mrs. Vernon Weber assisted
her mother in servirw refresfl.

OFF1CERS OF 111E W'INDING TRAIL Garden Club, recipient or the VIctor Rles Outatandlrw Garden Clam Award given bJtheOhloAasoclatlon of Garden Clubs, are Mra. - r t Lewia/prealdelt, left. and Mra. Charles IAwie, vicepre11i~ seatedi and Mrs. Robert Tho~
son. secretary, standing left, am Mrs. Walter Bentz, treasurer. other members of the club
active In winnbw the award, baaed on overall aetlvlties during a three year period, were
Mra. Jolm TerreU, Mrs. Lotta ~er, Mra. ADard Pratt, Mrs. Uoyd Moore, Mrs. Leo
Kennedy, Mro. Clarence Heaton and Mra. Charles Hayes.

b7 Winding Trail, an&lt;l for U.e

t••

VOTE FOR

ments. Mrs. Mae Weber was a

GUY A. RUSSELL

guest.. Members there besides
those named were Mrs. WUlls
Grueser, Mra. E. L. Hughes,

CANDIDATE

••

Reynolds, Mrs. BUl Robson,
Mrs. Orin Smith, Mrs. Betty
Cline an&lt;l Mrs. Alma Miller.

Circle to Serve
Election Dinner

FOR

Mrs. Odessa Roush

RUTLAND - An election day
dinner will be held by the AIternoon Circle or United Meth-

odist Church of Rutland at the
American Legion Hall.
Servi~ will begin at 10:30 a.
m. and continue until 7 p.m.
Homemade vegetable an:l bean
soup, ple, cole slaw, aD:! sand~
wtches will be served. Carry~
out orders for 80141 are to be
placed with Mrs. Russell Lit.
tie or Mrs. C. 0 · Chapman.

•

Hostess of Ladies
POMEROY _

r.,

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Mrs. Odessa

marked the entrance to the Pomeroy Elementary ~hool were
amorw U.e U.lrwa damaged over Halloween. Too bad. Keeping
bloomlrwlloweraiJI theplanterahaabeentheproject olthe apeclal education ehlldren who are the junior members of the WindIng TraU Garden Club.

OF

SA~LISBURY

~·

"1" ..:·':..-· . '

~~,

Check, O.r Prl4•
742·4311

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-.(s.• a,t~ Y11 Jiy

Rutland~ ,furniture
ARNOLD eun

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!1, ·(..!

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·, .. _,. ·,,.•, M\\'i.-1.-

Pd. Pol ;

Here is Jarman's

NEWEST LOOK IN SHOES

CHRISTMAS WILL COME a lltUo early thla year lor Loretta Taylor - a holiday reunion with her husbond, Clptaln Ruland
'l'ayltll', statlonod at Cui Nhon, VIetnam.
The two will be reunited on NlW. 21 at iloiiOlulu, Bewail
after a &amp;8POl'lllon or six months. A week together ani U.en Cai&gt;taln Taylor will return to Vletmm to complete his tour of dut;y,
lie eQOcta to be heme with blo ~ In May.
WhUo Mro. Taylor llllltes a trip to llawaD, U.e e&lt;q~le'a
dalllhtero, Hobin and Rhonda, wW vlalt their gra""'""'Jts, Mr
and Mrs. Fred Durham, HarrlaonvDlo, IIIII Mr. and Mrs. Elbert
TIQ' lor of Darwin.

NOW LOOK AT YOUR SH.'O•S ••• All.
I
THEY A LITTL. OUT OP STYL•?
Footwear fashions are changing, as SQ man,y other things. And where

the new Jarman styJea shown here are con.cemed, it's a change Cor the
better! Trim. distinctive, modem, lighter. in weJsht and more Oexible
for ea.aier walking. So to be right in style, just examine your current
shoe wardrob8, then come •in and lt;!t us help you select the new

,)4. 95 ft

jarmans you need.

MIDDLE
OF UPPER
ILOCK
POMEROY

..:...~

• - f/illl!li!' ' ..

.•·

r

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1

1)

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Aclv:'t

L--------------..;._;.;..;;,;.~

DREW WEl!STEII UNIT 39, Am0rl01n Leglm Auxiliary,

In keepiq with our policJ to oerve :rGu with ODIJ the flnHt qualltJ
produeta, we are proud to announce our appointment u a new So!Pr
Horne Heatar dealer. The new Sle1ler five you the unu!q eomfort
of warm floor heatinr-nd on!¥ Slealer hu the patented Inner Hl&amp;t
Tuboa and built·fn blower ayatam that llopl the wuta of heat 011 the
ceillq and out the chimney. Drop in and let ua prow hoW Shllot eaa
rive you Super Floor Heatiq .comfort u It PQI for ltaelt with the
fuel It oavu.

TOWNSHIP

LAY AWAY
HIS JARMANS NOWI

THERE'S NO DOUBT about U.e popularlt,y of Pennee Wil·
llama wiU. her fourth grade students at Rutland.
Dn her birthday tile students o_u rprlaed herwlthaparty. She
was given a gift of ;Jewelry IIIII a large cake inscribed "llajlpy
Birthday, Miss WWinma." A gl'1q&gt; of Pennee's students lll'om
last year even came by to sbV to her.
This 1e PenniJo'o seconl year or teaching - she's 22,

Dlatrlct, presldalt, next lSunolay 11rom 2 IIJ 4 p. m. at the Pomeroy E l - . , . SchooL
A IJal!'ltllic JII'OIIl'llll In oboenanc:o or the 5oth annlveraacy
of tile auxiliary Is plannod for 2:30 and will Include the newly
.,....Uod ~6-moatbe!' drW 111m ol Junltll' auxUiary membero
and vocal aeloctlcno b,r a choral groq&gt; under the dlrectloo of
MoJsa lllll8lc lllchor, J1ra. Paul Neall.
,·
Members of all 30 un1ta ol the Eighth Dlotrlot alOIW w!U.
llrlendt and relltlveo of Mra. Neutz11ne not members of an auxUiary are lnYIIod to the ope~on.

TRUSTEE

Mr. Russell has lived in the Bradbury area
lor over 30 years. He worked lor the Slate Department of Highways lor eight years. He
would like to serve the people of Salisbury
Township. He pledges to do all he ~n possibly do if he is elected.

Ia hollbV a reception honortrw Mra. Ben NeutzliJV, new Eighth

Of Southern local School Dlstrld

I am your child!

or a brterbusiness meet..

lng. Games were played with

Remember y041f deported
loved ones with flowers, the tim..honor~
way of paying tribute.
Special thought
into each of our floral ar•

PAULEY ANN KINCAID BEAVER Ia now Uvlrw at Mlddl&amp;town. !ille IIXI her husband, Jdm. Beaver. both associated with
Pool. Central RaUrood, moved U.ere just a few weeks ago lll'om
tho Charloaton area. lnr-lly, Jo Ann, Ia """ alll'eahman
at Marshall Unlvarslty.

CANDIDATE FOR MEMBER OF

CAST YOUR VOTE FOR MEl

charge

Mr, RyaeU Ia a redrecl car
1-ciiJr. He waa -loyed
MISS MARCIA KARR IS a dedicated Sundt,J school teacher
with the NewYorkceatraiReU- aad her el!orts are rewarded occasi018lly.
rood lll8lll' yean
She had a birthday laat week ani In amaerYlUICe of the occasloo the Eagloa Class ol the Asbury United MeU.odlat Church
gave her a beautiful purple dresa. Our belated congratulations
to IIlia gracious lady.
Before her retirement, Mlao Karr taught lll8lll' years In U.e
Meiss Count,y schools.

iii;;;;;.;;;,___;;,;;.:.;;.;.;;;,;;.

former Callie GillUand.

Mrs. George Hackett was in Mrs. Margaret J"ones was a

0bserverJ ··.. · :~s~ ·, ~ ·

Mr, IIIII Mra. RyseU wore
married Oct. 311, 1909, ot 111&amp;or In Ga1lla CounQ&gt;. They are
both members or U.ORyaeURun
Free Methodist Church. Mr.
lf1aeU Is 80 IIMI his wive will
be 79 NlW. 16.
The lllaeUs have ...,_ oon,
DaDa, ofCOiumbua;thnegranlchUdren, IIIII 10 great • gran!children. Another son Is de-

•-rhe

ture from Jeremta·h 15, gave

Anniversary

home in Rutlawl

MUm., a fortn.er resident 1~Mid­

an evening prayer and concluded with the Lord~s Prayer.
Readings includecl E:dgar A.

Housh was hostess for the recent meetq of the Hysell Run
Free Methodist Woman's Mis~
10o45 a.m.
sionary
Soclety. Group prayer
Rut1ond Scllool, 11 - 2 p.m.
and singing led by Mrs. Pauline
Ruolon Rail Ucme, 3 • tp.111.
Tillis opened t h e meeting.
THUIISDAY
There was a solo by Mrs. Joyce
Cothollc Church, 10 ·10:30
Vance and a story, .. The Man
a.m.
Who
Died for Me" by Mrs, Au1AMw Bottom, 11 - 1:15 p.m.
drey Patterson.
Portland, 1:35 • 2:15 p.m.
MR. AND llfRS. HYSELL
The brief business meeting
Great - · 2:30 • 3 p.m.
LODGE TO MEET
was
corductedby Mrs. Bea May ..
. o\pple Grove, 3:15- 3:45p.m. . ~Oih
· MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Refreshments were served to
ltPIJ, t- t::JO;p..._"· ~ m~ '· ., ,
. .. Bli'thday bait wishes to Mra. Emma lionel
Masonic l.OOge 303, F &amp; AM. 11 members and three pes~
44
Thuradt,J Mra. llovle wW be 91 yeirs old. In observance of will meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday
'~'~~·~~&lt; ·.
.,
.
'
.
llon lhe' l.o the gui{at'~ayofher daughter, Mra. ·llbdney to elect oltlcers. AU Master The Nov. 18 meetirw will be
tho Oc.._
,H
,CUJB "MEETS ... '·
held at the home of Mrs. Rose
Dowrili\g, Mlddleport, for a ~party. other guests are Mr. Masons ar~ invited
Patterson.
'\, B~mlle • Long 11o1RUTLAND - Mr. IIIII Mra. and Mrs. Fred llovlo, Columbus, doWn for U.e woekenl with his
tum hmakora Club met at Emmerson Rl'sell quietly ob- mother.
W:. WUUama-Baldoroon home served their 60th wedding anTuolldi; ottemoon. Mrs. Wal- nlvoraaJ7 Thursday at U.elr
THOSE ATTRACTIVE concrete flower planters which

Pd. Pol. Ad..

sary a! Mrs. 1lutll Moore·..UJ be ...- - - - - ·
celebrated Monda,y llld aho will
lean later in the weiBlf:. for
Arizona to spend l1le " Inter
there w!U. her son. "'•••bers
were reminded ol the oce~uton.
Read a.t 111~ IDeet:inJ werc1com.
nnmieatlona from Mrs. l rtctor
McC&amp;rley, 94, MlmetljiOIIa,

Guest's October by Mrs. Emest Lallancei October 'g Bright
MIDDLEPORT - A Hallo- B1ue Weather, by Mr11. R e Yween theme was carried oot in nolds, and a prayeJ~ i md medithe decoraticms tor the Jolly
tation b¥ Helen Stelne r Rice by
Buneb Sewing Clam meeting ro- Mrs. Roosh.
cently at the home oC Mra. Law..
Mrs. Bishop and MJ·s. YvOMe
renee Mllhoa.n.
Moore served rufr,eshmcnts.

Lewis or Mrs. Walter Bentz,
bas served as contact chatrIIUUI for U.O Molga Cwnty Aa.,.latloo of Gorden Club&amp;,
Numerous awards have come
tu the club. To mention a few
- twc citations In recoanltlon
of civic development an&lt;l Improvement from Sears, Roe~

Mr.
Edl&gt;cator'o schodule for tho weell
of Nov. 3 - S In Molgo County:
MONDAY
Sallabury and vicinity, 9 •

There is a rumor spreading throughout the District
that 1 om not interested in serving on the Boord of

Golden Wedding to
Celebrated

R,ousb were taken !Cro m

Party Motiff

School.

ELECT

Dec. 12.

Halloween is

.I ,I

'

dleport, and Mra. Clar a Dll.
gard a! Cleveland.
Reported lll were liiJ ·s. Da.
Yid Farmer, Mrs. Mlnen',aChiJ.
ders, Mrs. Lena Wolfe~ M r a.
Grace Pratt, Mrs. Blanl,he GOkey, Mr. and Mrs.DallasUShtfoot and Edgar Wolfo.
Devotions by Mr&amp;. Oscar

Mrs. Nora Mills, Mrs. WUliam

-- il1987, M r a . - Tbomp.
. "'!"· ono a! U.e club ~a,

'

MIDDLEPORT - A. rug making work se11lm 11111 aet
for Wedneadt,J at 9:311 a.m.
When l1le Loyal W'omen'o Clus
of the Ml&lt;tileport · Church a!
Chrl•t met Thur adt,J nlllht at
l1le home a! Mrl. Joe Blohclp.
Members will sew rags tn
lll'OI1III'IIIonf&lt;&gt;&lt; ~U.e 1'1181
which are &amp;Old as a fund...rat•lng proJect a! tile claaa. Thor
are to take a sack lunch since
the wort&lt; wUI eonUnue IIIIo the
afternoon.
Mrs. W'UUam Re,ynolda had
charge a! the meetlna cUrlntl
whleh time plans were made
for the amnaal Chrlsbnas party an&lt;l program to he h-Id on

The 9llf. blrthda.y aml.ver- DaUy Guide." .!'ile J"e&amp;d scrip~

....,..,.nt

tllol'IPJ' club «&gt;mpoaad
"' opeclal ..Ucatloa cldldnlo
of the l'omero,y D - . , .

TO THE VOTERS OF
SOUTHERN LOCAL SCHOOL DISTRICT

Polish representatives. 1n the
role of Indian representatives

MIDDLEPORT - Mr, ani Mrs. Jack Phillips ol Middleport are announcing the erpgement of their daughter,
Brenda McGuire, to Mr. David Jividen, son or Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Jividen, Cheshire. Miss McGuire is a se•
lor at Mel.gs High School where she is an active member
of the 'V8I'slty cheerleading squad. David ls a graduate of
Kyger Creek High School am ls a sophomore at More..
head State University. Weddi~ plans are inC'OfDi)lete.

Emph11sis
- the newly organized Helping
Hand Missionary Circle of the
Bradl'ord Church of Christ will
be on assisting needy families
ol the community and visitaUCII to the slck and shut.Jns
u well as the unchurched.
Tbe organizational meeting
~ tile circle was held Wednesday at the church and the day
was spent working on quilts.
Olfteers elected were Mrs. Paul
Sluon, prealdent; Mrs. Wal .
ter Morris, vice presidenti
Mrs. Eslie Mossman, treasurer; Mrs. Ralph Painter, secretary, and Mrs. Denver H.y .
lell, news reporter .
Meetings were scheduled
each Wednesday. The circle
will make quilts, household lin••, and gift item s to be given
to needy families along with
those whose home s have been
ltruck by fire. Visitation will
al10 be part of the group's
project and a regular program
ol lending a hand wherever It
Ia needed wlll be started.
Families in t h e BradCord
Church area in need of quilts
, or household linens are asked
to contact Mrs. Sisson. Devotlona and prayer opened the

observance

Ft'lday at the Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church.
The observance is sponsored
by Church Women United of
Meigs County, or which Mrs.
Ben Neut:zUng Is president.
Characters in the playlet are
Mrs Don Hurmel of the Enterpri~ United Methodist Church,
cast as Laura, a teenage girl;
Mrs James Will also of the
En~rprise Church, as Jim, her
teenage friend, and Mrs. Karl
Owen of the host church in the
role oC the mother.
Mrs. NeutzHng speaks as the
"voice of the world ." The Af_
rfcan representatives in the
playlet are Mrs, Allen HamPton of the Naomi Baptist Church
and Mrs. Joseph Cook or the
Pomeroy Baptist; with M r s.
Karl Grueser ot the Minersvllle Methodist and Mrs. T. A.
Hemesy, Sr. ol the sacred
Heart Catholic Church as the

Miss Brenda McGuire Engaged

MIDDLEPORT -

oa y

to Every Man a Nation" will be tlve dedication andconunltment

1'&gt;9-- a!

EllA S. RUSSELL

Lynda Darlene Braden Engaged

Amounc:emoat Ulot tile WindClam wua winner of
the COYeted award was made
durlns this fall'• OAGC IIIIa

.l ~ne Trail

For hones!, effiCient, econ0111icGigovem111ent
in the Village of Pomeroy, ELECT ...

Rol~ns

Plan Rug Session

.

'

Sharon

•

POMEROY -

--

Brenda Kay Norris Betrothed

·\

Solllii.J, Solllay, llovQ!bor 2, 11161

Victor Ries
ward Made

POMEROY - OVer $1,100 . ."' tho . . . . .i Ill
... callocted ... Ill dt,J ac- tile dlllrl&lt;t . . . .
tlvl~l of
Soualem Local ..id ._...,: morebioio
Bad--llera.
l'lanl -.dla......Sfllr,_••
'1'1111 ... l1le """""' 111'1.
,Dale W'amer, Ill dt,J chalr- chullll_ ...... ......, ••
111111, at I IIIOIIInl (J( for Ull bJ' ....., IIIII_._ lfra. Corl Mania,tbe - - · · A vot. ot ep. aldlq ot t i l e -.........
PLAN DINNER
will be nLETART FALLS- The WSCS tile doml&amp;ecl ol the 1AW-t -..nat Church poln&lt;l b1 tile ................
will terve a hamdlnneroneleeTho f--mlll ....-1 1RJ
tlm dt,J bqlnniJW at 11:30 a.m.
at the communll,y hall. Sam- for tile Soualem Loca1 Scbool
wlches IIIII ...., will be aYOU· Dlllrlot ... - - b1 tile
-llera. 1'11111 ware able alsO.
cod for tile boad tu march In
REviVAL IN PROGRESS
tbo Cbrlatmu poradoa ., Altll.
HARTFORD - Revival aeron Nov. ll5 and In Mldlle.tces are be~JV held at t h e PII'I
on Dec. L
Church ot Christ Ill Christian
The treaaunr "''IIO'tedallalUnion at 7:30 eachownlrwlll'cm IIICO ot ,1,596, bua drl..ra ·,
tbla eveq throutJII Nov. 16.
were pold, IIIII tile nat - .
The Rav. O'Dall Mlnle71a evan- Ina ... 111110U11ced for Nov. 25
J81lll and there wW be apocla1 at 7:30p.m.
-.1 numbero each eventrw.

a..

TiD»~ •

23.95

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10 -

The SUrda)&gt; Times • Sentinel, Sonlla,y, N...-r 2, U69

vld Houaa .....~ lollellul,
. J llllnl; foorlll ........ Lori Qda..
IIIIUIN
Iller, Tereu Ferrell, ......S.
I,MIACVSE - Winners at a Connie Pltter"'"' IIDdMikoNorpoa te~ eonteat held In the !b'rl· ton. third.
cu..•F.Jementary School t o - · LIQUOR PRICES
mot.• pas- at a four mIll
COLUMBUS IUPII - Molt
O&lt;hool IO¥Y renewal baYe-. it-ands of liquor will cost ..,.
anDOIIII'leed.
or two cents more Monday •
Wb'llterl are, sixth grade, the result or an lncr•• tacked
Debbie• Rouab, llrot; Elaine on by tho aloto Deportment ol
Fbher, Rose Marie Leading. Liquor Control.
ham, second, and Steve Nease
Thodeportmontsoldthohlkoo
and J).emaris Aab, third; ftflh were port of tho quartoriy ad.
lll'ade. Bobble Chapman, ftrot; .1uatmonl. . ll...., dlsllllon.

Two BooiG Donated •f'wler Con.liell
MIDDlEPORT- Mrs. Mary J1!71
. .._
Elizabeth llartiniiOr Thomas ot
Belmont, Mass., hu dmaled
two books to the Middleport
PUblic Library In memory at
the Oct. 3 birthday at her
mother, the late Ell&gt;sbeth ear.
penter Hardnger,
'Ibey ue 'fftobert Browning
And Ilia World: The Private
Face" and ''Robert Browning
And IUs world: Two Robert
Brownings," both by Malole
Ward.

.-...noune-

PlayJraanll

Club l.adies

F1md wben

l'rl•ndly Nolchbor• Club
reelltll' at the homo of

or.... Wall, lllllltlborl ,..,...._. ;
a d - · .... O!rl~~ :
Plana ror a halldiJ dl,~ ,..-.:
cy wtll b e - at ~ ·f!OWitlo :

the

''met

Mro.

KennothRCIIII-.

· t •
AD liiQIIYIIIOIIo lift of mCI'I07 ber meed~~~o
Mr1. WDJard lllnol.Uiam- :'
ed aeerelary to roi&gt;IJO. 1111''- ·
1

leo-.

11011111 'ICINHOWER
Hamer

Fort.

IIIMI, who baa been eonlllled
to the holpltol for tbo palt
_......., wlllobMnehl•
sou. llirlbdaY Tueoday. Tho..
wlahin&amp; to l8nd canla 1110)'
adclri!11 them to him ati!Gom
128, Veterans Mamorlallloo.
pitol, Pomeroy, o.

....

t

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-.···

.--. ·.-.·. --· .-·-·-·-:-:·.··-,-:.·-·--.-:-. ·.

ALBANY
The ad·
mlnlotrotoro of tho Aloqnclor
Local School District are
aueulng adult lnt.,..t In at-

tending night school high
courses which lead to the

grontlng of tho high achool
diploma. Upon sufficient adult
request, thole hlgli ICIIoel nigh!
courses will be opereted on e
tuition boslo.
To Indicate your lnternt In
this program, sond o poatcard

or letter with your name, addrfll, end grade tho! you
completed to: Tho Secondary
SuperviiOI''S Olflce, 4'12 Wool
Stole Stroot, Athens, Ohio 45701
or telephone 5'12·12811 (Athens).
·- : .· -·.. : :.-. ·.·.;·-· .. · .·. - .·

Ohio Trea.urer

To Speak at Rio

Vroman, co.Jtostess.

Service Held

TOIII Werrr wboroa~ a-·
•• were .Pial'ed·wltl\ ;r!ilao .,..
low won by Mro. Wall, Ill:•
wood' Bollora, an6 ¥1'1. Worry, Tho
p~-.1"'11
b,y Ml"o. !Unoa, an6 Mro. lift·
POMEROY - A call to pray. era reeehed the 4&lt;!Jr pda.
or and selt-4ontol 11ntee ,.. Mr1. IIIII' Smith wllht b...
Soclellea at Ollllllln tosa ror the NoYemborm~....
Servlee of the Cheater a n d
l'omsroy Untied MetbodiJt
Clurehoa waa bold Thurlday
allerDoon at the Pomeroy
Chorcb.
Theme at the aerrtee wao
on mlaelona, both here a n d
,. -·
abroad, !llu Lydia illersbach
of the Po1110roy ·Cburch IIMI
POMEROY - Two divOreO
Mrl. IMI1ard Erwin at t h • aelloos, both cbariblll jpOU
Cheater Qlareh were
1K08lecl at MY and oidreiiiO
111111 for the llll'Yiee, An ofter• cruel\!', ......, lllod FridiJ tn
lngwaatakeD.
the Molp CclunV Commm
l'lrtlclpotlng were Mra. Er· Plea• CoolrL
win, Mro. Purley Karr, Mro,
l!etQ' J. ~. Raelne, II
Robert Bailey, Mro. Mildred ........ a divOreO frOIII l!abbl'
Frank, Mrl. Robert C a r d, Joe Adamo, llaofne, IIIII ,FOJe
Mrs. J010 Womer, Mra. EvClllrord, !b'rlcull, frolll ~·
erett Thomu, and M111 ilJera. Clllrord, olao of~. Tho
bech,
plalntllr In the laltar .......
euatod1 of one minor child.

a..

By Societies

ant attorney

general of the State
at Ohio before boeomlng treasurer lD 1962, has spoken at a
101mber at schools on tax &amp;barIng and the proposedle8falatlcln
that woold lead to tax benellta
for eclueallonal lnstitullons.
Following the speech thoro wtll
be a fl,lesUon and answer ses-

of the Saigon ~lme that II Is
the communists, not the South
VIetnam government, who are
EDISON HOBSTETTER, proeldent of the Pamoroy
Netlooel - . left, oo behalf of the bonk preaenta o $100
ebeek to illnJid Norton, chief of the Pomeroy Emergenc:y
Squad. The contribution wW be usod to help pay for the
aquad'a new truck which Is ordered. and Is e31P8cted to be
reedy for uoe about Feb. I IKOlll yeer.

!IW-D

VOlE

1969
Pd. Pol.

WILL Ill

FOR
MEIGS
IOAID OF EDUCATIOI .

r:

ALSO

** WIJIBOI
UOPF
.
**IIUOITII
ltiLLCIEST
*·
SIIIFfltLD
• .Vlli.NI

THERE liE IIO.E CUSTOM FEATURES IN 0111 UAUIIFULLY
DECORATED .AND FURNISHED HOMES THAN YOU\l F.l Ill
MOST .NEW HOUSES.

.

S.utlllastern Ohle's tltw•t Wilt .._, let. Olli 01 ....
ltrpst .. s..tlltrn Ohio. .
-·

f1J HijtuJc eo...
,
•
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(

NEW YORK (UPI) - Tr1111
World Alrllnoa (TWA) aald Sot.
unlalo the 8,900-mlle ld.laddq
It Ita Jotllner from CoUfonlfa
to llomo COlt the alrUno ''lou
Of...,_ofdollaro."
i A TWA ..,.,....... llid a-

.

.,

LAII$1
.
'

..

1/

·

\.

'

Think

tncludod fuel, ilniiiDI
Jilot ll1lf fll'IIUIII oorvloo

Us

1

ro~
a:.:::.
or

Saturday called for more ~
for pullet, swifter .ilstiee In
the courto IIDd rehabilitative
ctntera for oonvlctl.
Tydings was here to aeeept
the Augull Vollmer Award,
named In honor of the late
pollee chief at Berkley, Calif.,
wbe fCXInded t11o American SocloQ' at CrtmiDology. Tydlnp
as an IIIII • erune
waa eruaadlr.
The Sociot;y eoneludol Ita
throe.dey maetinlf &amp;mdl¥.
''II we are to bave a tru1,y
llrecllve IQIIIetn at crimlnol
)lllloo, a groat deal romatnoto
be done.
"Our eourta 1111at1110keawlft
.illllee a reality, uota teyth.
Our oor:reet:1aa111 lnalltullona
mull be rebabUitatlve crmtera,
DOthoman llllrehouoes or grad.
uate - · f o r erlme," '1}11.

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~ltiona

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a~Coll•~~"
''l!!i l!l"l~,.
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;•-

""·•· ;.- ,- ....,_,___

/"

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't
.

Nixon took over with the

avowed Intention of liquidating
the conflict as soon as poulble.
He worked out peace proposals

President Dwight D. E loon.

which offered the Viet Cong

hower and hit secretary of
state, John Fotter Dulles,
would not subtcrlbe to the
Geneva agreement of 1954
because It clearly envisaged
eventual control of all VIetnam
by Ho Chi Minh, but when Ngo
Dlnh Diem auumed rule of
South VIetnam In 1955, they
hastened to provide substantial
military aid and support for the
newly formed republic.
Eisenhower's successor, John
F. Kennedy, sent the first
American soldiers into battle as
"advisers" to Vietnamese
troop$. When some of them
began to be killed, national

almost everything except a
forced coalition with Saigon.
The Paris peace talks have
remained deadlocked becaUII
Hanoi refuses ta negotiate on
substance until the United

Steteo egrees to pull out all Its
forces. Nevertheless. the tempo
of the war ·has gradually
slowed.

Nobody In Woshlnglon really
knows what the communllfa
have up their sleeves. For "'-t
reason, Nixon, while speaking

of the prospects of gtltlng

Jo-

loll over from llaU.......

of the war, mus1 leave himself
some escape hatch In case the
situation changes radically.

wby not'l' held, 'I don't knoW

Tho hi loci&lt;

began

Bangor, Maine, and Shannon,
Ireland. Thirty-nine passenger&amp;
and three stewardesses were
permitted to get off in Denver.It was the longest hijack on
record In both time and
distance.
Marine officers at Mlnlchlel~·s base at Camp Pendleton,
Calif., said he had been listed
as AWOL since 1 a.m . Friday
and was facing court martial
on 'arceny and hou&amp;ebrMk.lng

ctwgoo.
With Cook and Minichiello
when the plane landed at Rome
were stewardess Tracey Col•
man. 21, of Cincinnati; First
Officer Wenzel W. Williams, 26,
of Shallowater, Tex . ; and Flight
Engineer Lloyd v. Hollrah. 32,
of St. O.arles. Mo . Two others
boarding In New York were
Capts. Billy N. Williams and R.
H. Hastings.
Rome police said Minichiello
appeared confused and unable
to give a clear reason for the
hijacking. At one point, they
said he told them : "I did not
arrive here by air."
Minichiello had his escape
p4an carefully worked out as
the four-engine TWA Boeing 707
reached Rome. He kept It
circling over leonardo eta Vinci
Airport for a half hour while he
arranged by radio for a pollee
car to meet him and drive him
away.
Airport pollee director Pietro
Gull volunteered to be his
hostage. He went aboard the
jetliner unarmed, came down
the gangway and got In fhe
driver's seat as Minichiello slid
Into the back seat with his M1
carbine pointed at the officer.
The car sped eway, ond .,other potlce car came c'-'

Gull

feel 'IIMithat'

the

as,.... aa

"I 110111 her Ill to DIYielf."
aeld t h e - · "1'111 loll 181IIIII."
•'I can't 11nq1no 11111' g1r1 ..
bMdlful aa lho Ia Wilting to
lauch
that

an lllldDc t11o IIOJiibll11:1 It Jolnlna t11o l'llaco C...,..

baiW oouple bear?
"None," lold Colleen.

:1 ....

wllat ,..., ~

1., _._.~

~aaldhoan6bllbride

perbapawoR1111-.ICIIilt.-.,.

Pill!-'""'

scampered Into a nearby
vineyard about three miles
south of Rome's ancient
catacombs.
Pollee forces surroundid the
~area, but hours passed without

e troce of the VOUfh. Tho
tracl&lt;lng dogs led pollee lo a
deserted farmhouse wher•
Minichiello's CMblno and pls1111
were found along with • ·

knapsocl&lt; containing 250 c:&amp;r·
tridgoo, 10 dynomlte . _ a
hunting knife onc1 a quontlty 1111
tood end clgoreto.
_
A hell hour lofer, • prlost ot
tho sanctuory ot tho
o1 Divino Love, a porllh tho - c h areo, told pollee ho
had _ , • auoptc'-loolllnt
boluotr&amp;llllt ·in
front of lho church lnloftiiJ
watching ofll_i_ framplfil'

Frldoy

Ma...._

=~

~· ·"""
.,.,.

•,

·~~~'\o&lt;
•

::=:--::;.hljur;

with a
aidddodcmaWot"'...._- . "Hey,
-""'

=:.:.:=.~~·

\

(

.'

·'

th""'''htho-.
"-lllontl)at
(U"' ·..,. Ottl

-

man waa rally ......... IIIII

llll' eolild be 10
IIIII ,.._ meln
llam pr1cti&lt;t11
lllclcf ··aii , ID -ur.tllllt, ·~ , == illil' l'l'UIIes f&lt;&gt;r ,
. - .,._.,'-"-·""
IJ,
ill 1
• • lilnlod.

'1·

,_,_,,.,...,a

MANFATALLYCR';m....

ton In
Ot' balilln8 to :
cilloa-J!IIo"~-.,llt up a, ~ In AMea. blo
tlilued. "I daD'! IIMII lKM- VntU thltt,' lbo1 pi111 tore-

lu~

Mlnlchlolfo

dored Gull to stop.
The young man got out and

lorctd It to fly to RDme vlo
llo!&gt;s In Denver, York;

uLMER; S. c.

,.ld,

threatened to open fire with the
semi -8utomatlc weapon. But
the car moved away, and the
two men drove along together
until Minichiello suddenly or- ·

"We dig eoch other," replied It I have a ChtnanJan's Jinx. morning o - Colltornlo but can 1 have )'11111' permlsslm Minichiello, of Seottle, Wash.,
Sam.
to.._.,.
hor'l' He lllid, ' Yoo're common- tho plano and
And how many children wt11

~. pol"'!ft

out

U.S.'Wants
Hijacker

Sam's Third Wife a Real Doll

pathlc • . . - . . Who . _ .
"You always do lba~ and 1
the llatJJj yeora .I t trouble oro don't like I~" complained Colbebind blm for &amp;DOd.
._, 8fvtng her new hosband
ill_... llrved lOy-stn a llharp elbow to tho rlba.
prliOII on oonvletlon of t h e
illaylnc of hlo Drat wUe, """
•This Ia one of the reaaona
OOQII.tted tn 1886, llllfjuot 111o I love her," Sheppard aald.
..... . , waallnally ~- ,•illt !IOUD'I 110 • · all thlf
ed ~ I d a - iilro. ·
· pib11cliJ, Sbt locked hor~elf
:·Hot ,.. llllrrlioi Oct. 21 IIi tn lht tialhraom tn ~"
Mtxloo to Colloen, tllo douall·
pair talked abC11t tb t
of hla !'1010 frjlnd and'taa'
Coil- boa been
WilmwrollltncPll1Dtr,Giclrle fiiiWq it·tbo beaut,y lhop.
Strld&lt;ltnd, a veteran It t11o
"l'd like 'to 110 over tllore
pro clreuit.
. aod ..."
pouood over
"A!JI.'i abo a doll?" ullod . ~ br!IIIJ, .._ . . . , . ~·
......
Ul\. Yop

called peace talks In Perla.

PAGE II -

m.

•··~.F;~noncl1111~!11!~1~~'
"t:
-+.----,.._,,..
•• l

. SUNDAY NOVEMBER 2 1969

end Wolhlngton hed begun ..,.

ROME IUPI) - U.S. officials
Saturday asked unwilling Itallan authorities to surrender
world's record hijacker Raffaele Minichiello for trial on
charges carrying the death
penalty. Rome pollee Insisted
WASHINGTON (UPI)
the AWOL Marine be tried
Liberals are certain to demarw
here.
stiffer ta){ reforms and mon.
Minichiello, captured by Itagenerous tax cuts when the
llan pollee at the end of a
Senate debate begins on lox
gunpoint flight from California,
reform . The result could be •
was clapped Into prison . A
bruising baffle.
,..,.., on his ,... was _no)
AlllaliO~Iiiiel&amp;' ~•
expected tor several days as
are further cuts In the olf
authorities tried to unravel the
depletion allowance, a 11,1100
legal tangle.
personal exemption In place of
Minichiello's 26-hour, 6,700the current S600 for each
mile Halloween escapade
taxpayer and each of hll
•board a Trans World Airlines
dependents, end o $325 lox
let ended on his 20th birthday
credit to help parents pay for
on
a hillside near a country
their children's college educachurch . Rome policeman GloCOOK'S
GAP
RILL
ACCIDENT
Three
.........
,
two
of
1be111
probeble
·
Clll
tion.
vanni Palmlere felled the youth
tbe 196!1-70 Melga High Ylll'siey beskabell team, were InJured oerioosly - Saturday
Defeated on the antiballistic
with a flying tackle and slapped
at
1:30
p,
m.
11
the
foot
of
Cook's
Gap
Hill
on
Rt.
124.
The
hood
of
a
ear
driven
by
WWiam
mlsalle and accused by the
a pair of handcuffs on him.
CDoxle) Walters, 17, 11 0ew tV," blillliJW him, aM when brakes were awlied the car ditched
Republican White House of doThe Italian-born U.S. Marine
am: overturned. Wahers had lacerations of the hams. Tom Cooke, 14, Middleport, had lacernothlnglsm, liberal Democrats
lance corporal , who had three ati005
of
his
left
leg,
alii
Jeff
'l)o,
16,
or
Cheshire,
complained
of
a
knee
injury.None
was
may decide to make tax reform
tened to kill, was captured
hospitolized. The car was a totiJ loss, .
the Slate Highway PatrOI, which tnvestlgaled.
the Issue on which they will
shivering in his underwear as
make their records.
~:~:::;:;:@.: he tried to escape from ~
The liberals were disappointpolicemen aided by helicopters
ed when the Senate Finance
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A and trained dogs.
CommiHee watered down both
one-ear crasb on the city's
A spokesman at the U.S.
the tax reforms and the tax
eall
side eorl,y Satufda¥ took Embassy said Italy has been
By Unltod Prell tnternotlonol guerrilla raldera In several
cuts contained In the measure
tbe lives orrourpersooswhen asked to turn Minichiello over
lebanese army troops and months.
tho Houae possed In August.
Arab guerrillas battled with
Arab diplomats pressed ef- the car in which they were for flivht back to the United
But they were dellghtod to get
artillery, rockets and mortar forts to settle the deepen lng riding crashed into a rall. States as quickly as possible ~
any lox bill II oil so tho! they
fire along the Syrian frontier Lebanese crisis by negotiation, road bridge abutment.
ihat he can be brought to book.
could go to work on it.
The request came a few
Saturday. Lebanese official and Jordan's King Hussein
the
vic.
Pollee
identified
Conservatives, too, have their
sources reported Syria was called tor an Arab summit tlms as Gregory Booker, 18, hours after federal authorities
own Ideas. Sen. Paut J. Fannin,
concentrating troops on the meeting to discuss the emer- tbe driver of the car; Lonnie In New York issued a warrant
R-Arlz., vowed to light on the
border west of Damascus and gency. Hussein told parliament
Layne, 16; Robert Jones, 25; for Minichiello's arrest on
floor for an amendment to deny
had sealed oft the frontier to all " Arab blood must not be spilled and !lias loretta Polle, 19. charges of air piracy, kidnaping
unions their tax•xempt status
travelers.
In any Arab country," and all
All the victims were from and Interference In the operaII they UIO dues to support
In northern Lebanon, bomb Arab guns should concentrate
tlon of aircraft. The charges
Columbus.
political candidates. He was
blasta rocked a business area of on Israel.
carry a minimum penalty of 20
defeated In an 8-8 tie on that
·-·-···.··- : :-··.-.·: ... :-.-:-·-·-:· - .· ..··· ··.· years In prison and a maximum
Tripoli, second largest Lebaproposal Friday In the Finance
nese city, as the conflict
penalty of deeth .
Committee.
MITCHElL BANNED
PEN SI'RIKE OVEII
Italian officials said Minibetween lebanese government
BUDAPEST (UP!) - Hunga.-y
lUCASVILLE, Ohio (UP~ - chlello would be cherged under
forces and Arab guerrillas
has banned Margaret Mitchell's Arna Flack, bJsiness manag~ Italian law with kidnaping and
operating Inside the country
OILMAN RETIRES
novel, "Gone With tbe Wlnd" er d. Local 39 o1. the Brickma- armed assault, crimes which do
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Dr. appeared to be intensifying.
and
the famed movie version of eons Union, said Saturtt.y that not carry the death penalty.
On another Mideast sector,
James W, Osborn retired SatIt
miii'CIIhds
It "openly preach. 47 workers would return to " For us, he is a foreign
reported lh forces killed
urda.Y after 18 yeora service Israel
es
reactlmary
and raclat ideo!. their jobs Tuescl!Q' at the $25- citizen who has commiHed a
11 Arab giMlrrlllas in two
as medlool dlreotDrattheStand·
ogy,
tile
newspaper
Nepszava mDllon lucasville Ponltentl. crime," Pelmlerl said. The
clashes In the northern Jordan
ard 011 Co. at Oblo.
81')',
youth was locked up In Queen
valley In the biggest blow to reportod Saturday.
of Heaven Prison.
tapt. Donald Cook, the TWA
pilot who made the entire hair raising trip with Minichiello to
•
Rome, said the youth, who was
The SaeJ~parc:ta are living with born In Naples, "wanted to
COLUMBI}S, Ohio (UPI)- 1r room to pose for pictures and -lldn't Uke eome at the an.
the Strlddands 1emporar0y ..,. come here end light somoboclv
yoo are Dr. Sam illeppard'a visit with a newaman.
8Wers Pd give them."
thlnl wUe and ckl1't Uke to an.
IDdoed, Colleeols a doll, with Why doea Colleen IIBDI to W they lind a homo at their end die here."
&lt;~~•stlona, ..,. at t h e a face that puts one In mind at put up with the problema that own. strlddiDd ta also 4:5, but "He seemed to have strong
worat plaeea YCII """ work Is a Melnte Van Dor111.
110 with III01't'Yinr a man more the doctor IIlii a - for b Ia aulcldol tendoncles.'' the heo·
beaui;y &amp;hap.
uc•mere, Colleen,, said U1e thlp twice her age, eapeclally ~'1 hand In marriqe gard end unshaven Cook said.
"George and 1 W8l'O
"Ho Intended to !10 Into the
So Colleen ~~~~ "" 20, ..... bridegroom, rhyming her With the skelelolls lurking In
In
a
po.rk
one
dey
and
1
aald
until somebody came to
to going to quit _ , IIMI aet. name with Moline,
Sheppard's elooet?
to
bini:
'I
think
h,
felling
for
catch
him."
Tho youth's !other
tie down as a filii-lime help.
"Kill me, baby," he Bald,
''I'm atupld," llmlled Co 1Illite for the 45,yeor.old • - 1111zllng h$' on a """eh,
leea, munchlngeomecandyeom 10ur daulbter.' He oalcl, 'Well, llvoo noer Naploo.

Dr

._
KUHNER APPOINTED
bill!dl.e d
. COLUMBUS - GovtrnOI'
•
_,, Jam-. A. • - fodoy ..,.
dlroet OC ~ · ~ - nil!lhcad tho appointment of
tn..Mft!liCI'III!'
.H orry Kuhner, Jr .. Pwfamoulh,
_}O t~ Dhto i»'IOIOflm'ont .

'·
'

S e n.

lime ~ llif!op IIIOJ1,.
In clioUIIIi the lnp aald. ·
'*Ins ·0DC1 t11o - or -

• 1~

' EUAQ

•

When You Think Of

COLUMBUS (UP~ -

1WA Glum Tofi"8

·

Re"onns
II

JoSOJ&gt;h D. Tydlnla,D.Jiaryland,

•

\

*Uul
...•

\

,

. ',

to

setting withdrawal timetables
or making other commitments
which might well come back to
hai-W't him If things go badly In
Vietnam .
Nixon is understood to have
told South VIetnamese President Nguyen Van
Thleu
privately that tentative plans

bombing,., the North. Thls~Ht
almost six montha after Hanoi

Mideast Boiling

TYdiDg8 AskS

"light" ouch thinking of every
opfiOrtunlly.
Rhodoo 11ld 65 per cent of
lludtnls otlendlng Ohio high
'
IChoota ere being diKrlmlnatad
' IO"Inot.
"We hove been teochlng pon.
\ erel aducotlon courHS to our
\ high achool pupils which 1 to general unemployment,"

MANY IIAKES
AND IIODEU TO CHOOSE
FROII THE FOLLbiJNQ
IIANUFACTUJERS'"'--

YOU CAN PlY MORE -BUT YOU ClN1 ..y BmER.
NlTIONALL Y KNOWN iUND NAMES IN APPLIANGS.
FIXTURES, FLOOR COVERINGS, DRAPERIES AID
FURNISHINGS.
• EXPANDS
• DOUKE WilES
• TIPOUTS

Localerl liS Blcds Below The ,

Inflation and .promised

difficult to do without publicly

President Harry S Truman
gave France $3.5 bill~ In aid
In 1950 In an effort to persuade
her to ratify the European
defense community. But he
knew the money was going to
help the French try to put down
Ho 0.1 Minh's rebellion in
Indochina.

said

technical eduef!tlon, welfare, time we build a college-orentatunemployment compensatloni ed high ochoolln Ohio," he aold.
and employment services.
Rhodes also took to task the
Rhodel mode the proPOIII welfare system, caltlng It "antiduring an aHernoon address to quated, the educational system,
the Ohio United Prell Inter- terming It "obsolete" and said
national Editors Association the unemployed end those who
meeting at the Sheraton Cleve- eventually wind up In trouble
land Hotel here.
ara "vlctlma of the syatem and
U.S. Representative Robert have no choice."
Toft, R·Ohlo. was to eddress tho
Rhodes also suggested, In
editors' dinner meeting Sat- ordor to broaden the typn of
urday evening.
lob training programs available
Rhodel, speaking to about 70 the federal gover(lment-Specltpersons, said the centers would lcally the Defense Departbe financed by 50 per cent fad· ment - provide I ,1100 lobi In
eral funds, 25 per cent state each of his proposed vocational
funds and 25 per cent local - technical centers.

rDOl'
I

pOlicy and blunt the arguments
of thoae critics open to reason.
Nixon needs to be more specific
about his future plans. This Is

without endangering any remaining U.S. units.
All "honorable" withdrawal
means leaving artillery and air
support units In VIetnam until
It Is reasonably certain that
reinforced Saigon military forces can def&amp;nd themselvft
against any resurgent North
VIetnamese and VIet Cong
assault.
Administration officials believe the American public and
Congress wlll ·aupport retaining
llml~ artillery and air support
In VIetnam tor some time If
necessary when they consider
the alternative.
This alternative, It the
communists conquer the South,
is a "blood bath" of fantastic
proportions, In the view of
many officials here. All the
evidence gathered by U.S.
Intelligence authorities Indi cates that Hanoi has instructed

v -... ·

m

(UPI) - -Gov. Rhodel sold. "Since only :15 per
James A. Rhodes Saturday pro- cent of the total enrollment
posed e new concept ot ~lonol plans to attend a college or unl ·
centers to be located around versify, we discriminate against
Ohio dealing with vocational- 65 per cent of the students every

lng. Ho sold he diiOIII'Oft with
the theory that • IIHie unem·
ploymont Is a pood thing tor

U.S. troop• by Dec. 15.
To gain added aupport for his

u.s.

May Make
Tax Issue

Cleveland

money.
Tho govonnor sold the only
ens- to unemployment 11
proper education tor job train·

odronllln In Amerlco
flowing.
In ·early 1965 -= PI ttl ...
Lyndon B. Jolvlaon -,
frontad with 1 Clllloilc lffujoll/tn
In which the South
army woo dlolntogrotlng.•ln.,.
fact of North V l - ond
Vlot Cono oHocke ond tho
22.000 Amerlcono In tho ,._,
Communltts mounted any ma. withdraw more rapidly, giving were In dongor of being drl...,
lor military offensive&amp;.
Saigon less time to prepare to from the country.
The key to NIXon's withdra- take care of Itself . .
John10n made the t.tlful
wal plans lies In the phrase
Nixon, too, knowa, as do decision to start 1 mafor
"orderly and honorable."
ofhoro who hove followed the military buildup. In February,
All "orderly" withdrawal problem for ygrs, that every
1965, he alerted bombing North
means pulling U.S. troops out president since World War II
Vietnam
.
as fast as they can be replaced
has been Involved to some
On Nov. 1, l'HI, Johntan
by Saigon ' s combat forces degree In the ln~hlna affair. ordered a complete halt In 1M

Liberals

Concepts ofWelfare

·Many odels
• Lowest Prices

EN HILL

I(OL iV NO. 40

--

'I

political or diplomatic, In
meal\lngleu gestures.
His speech 11 expected to
represent a major effort to
unite the vast middle ground ot
American public opinion in
support of what he consider$ a
courae of orderly and honorable
withdrawal under conditions
which will leave South Vietnam
with a good chance of
maintaining its Independence.
He also undoubtedly will
recite the steps he has taken
during the past nine months to
try to Induce Hanoi to negotiate
in good faith, Including orders
for the withdrawal of 60,000

coil tor withdrawal ol onother VIol Cong leadon to prlfllrl
170,000 U.S. troops next yeer. llots ofaupportera of the Selgon
Added to those l1avlng thlt regime to be ....,.mlnoted onct
year, thet would tofol 230.000. tho South lalla Info oommunllt
Such a. figure .. extremely honda.
tentative. More men could be
Mony
offlctalo well
wlthdrawan If the combat versed In the ways of the
elfocllvonoos of South Vlofne. communlats believe thlt Hanoi,
mese forces improves. Fewer by tying low ot prooont, ' - "
might be oble to leeve If the to Induce the Unltod Stotn to

1rimts - ittttitttl

·~il.h'Odes ·W~,~ill Switch

HILL

G

Union's leading nuclear admlnlstrltofll: state atomic energy
commission chairmen Andronlk
M. Petrosyants.
In the Interview, Petrosyanb
their knowledge ot peaceful
applications of atomic energy said the Soviets have already
with the United Statea and given some Information to the
Unltad Stoles on their peaceful
other countries.
A special, 3,500-word layout teats, end he added :
on a full peoe of the newspaper "I want to stress that the
Komsomolskaya Pravda de- Soviet Union, In accordance
Ktlbed everything from the with the nuclear non-proliferalhope of the bomb to the shock tion treaty, Is ready to share its
of Its blast. The expJoslon was knowledge and experience In
detlgned to create underground the field of peaceful uses of
nuclear explosions for the good
oil reservoirs.
Never before have the Soviets of humanity."
publicly given so much detail
The underground blaat d•
on a nuclear explosion. Since scribed by the correspondents
the signing of the 1963 nuclear report did not specify when or
test ban treaty they never had where It took place, but
ovon publlohed the !oct of on apparentty It was one of two
underground blast even though such tests which Petrosyants
seismic studlea In the West said took place "several years
dotectod them . The trolly ago."
He sold other lell1 demon ·
banned nuclear tests In the
strafed that oil could be placed
atmosphere and In the 1811.
The report by Komaomol. In the reservoir as soon as It
lkaya Pravda, the newspaper cooled and the crust hardened,
of the Young Communist and could be removed without
league, Included a 13-day diary danger of radioactive contaminof a correspondent who wit- ation of objects touched by the
nessed an underground •:tePID· oil.

,.

J . William Fulbright end Mike

Mansfield-suddenly declared a
hand to extreme elements of moratorium on all further
opinion, the leftist minority who dluent until after Nixon's
would pull out all U.S. forcea at speech.
once, rtJ9Brdless of the conseThis led many observers to
quences, and the dwindling conclude thet the President hed
number of hardllners who want advised them of some break to stay and try for military through behind the scenes with
victory.
communist negotiators, a conNixon's main task Monday Is clusion that could not be
to deal
with the fears, confirmed by any of the usually
fruatratlons and worries of the reliable Washington sources on
vast malorlty of Americans }orelgn policy.
which wonts the United Stoles · The volume of unc~ked
out of the war but not under speculation has led nonetheless
conditions of dishonor and to great, If unfounded, expecta tions In many quarters about
disarray.
·
The President put hlmsetf on Nixon's speech.
Unless he has something
-the spot by announcing his
speech several weeks In &amp;d- dramatic to say, the Preavance. This provided time for ldent's speech Is almost certain
widespread speculation that he to be a big letdown for those
plan~ to disclose some major expecting major disclosures. It

testing programs and published
tor tht flrat time remarkable
details of an underground blast.
They also offered to ahara

T. A. Dorgan, a well·lalOWD
sports
cartoonist wbo signed
BuUt Baalneu
his work "Tad.'' colned the
Nahum Stetson waslage name uhot dog" for tbe
responsible lor tile
welDer.

Election, He...,ber 4,

peace talks.
He can give the back of his

MOSCOW IUPn-The Soviets slon and the preparatkHls for It.
Soturdey loosenod their strict
Tho nawspoper also published
policy of secrecy on nuclear an · lntervJew with the Soviet

sion.

M01ber Of
bsttrl littl ..... of E••cttlen

blocking progress at the Paris

Soviets Loosen
Nuclear Secrecy

TO SERVE IAJNCH
CHESTER- The WSCSofthe
Chester u n I t e d Methodist
Church will urvelunchoneleotlon day In the ChesiAor Me...,.
le T-Ie. Plate luncltea, IIOJd. ,
wlehes, a o up , coffee, soft
drinks, pte and eake wt1l be
..aUable bettnntnr at 9:30o.m.

Candidate For

tary Melvin R. Laird stronuly
opposed II. To meny
II
appeared that the administration was sending up trial
balloona for readlon
for
prealdentlal guidance.
Then some major Democratic
critics of VIetnam policyIncluding former Vice President
Hubert H. Humphrey and Sens.

He needa to persuade critics

...-.r.

ORIS L. SMITH

tho rote of U.S. troop wlthdre· many lmpondorobloo.
wals.
1'here Is no evtdenee that
Men high In the Pretldenl'l Nll&lt;Oil, with the hlatory of the
own offlclol family helped U.S. Involvement In VIetnam so
muddy the wotera. Sonote clearly In mind. Intends to
Republican Ieeder Hugh Scott indulge In any "gimmicks." He
declared he favored a unilateral heo made II clur thet he
cease-fire, while Defense Secre- believes there Is no mileage,

by doloutt.

Filed in Meitp

of the Bridgewater ( aas.)
Ironworks to one of tile larg·
est in New England In tile
1860s. The forgings for !be
original Monitor were made
there .

new dev1lopment or adkHI, Ia dllfleull to be dromotlc •
auch as dtclaratkm of a well •• responalblo, In cleellng
unilateral c:ease-~lre or doubling with a sltuatlon loaded with so

further reaaon to believe the
South will tall Into fhelr hands

tra..U..

w.....•.

~-------------------"1

ti.U.cit,

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Proo·
ldonl Nlxon'a apeoch to tho
notion on VIetnam
muat be one of tho moat
difficult diplomatic, political
and public relation• exercl~e~
tvtr oodtrtaken by a national
loedor.
The President muat convince
rttponslble critics of his policy
that he Ia pulling out of
Vle1nam as rapidly at po11lble
without giving the communists

an a~COlofholnemado~o•
waa added to the f!ll/101''1 llleethltl - - by..,.. Em- :

SUNDAY
SPECIAL SINGING b)' t h o
REEDSVILLE·
Tho
SOrnuta ~ at the MI. Riverview Gordon Oub enjoyed
HermcM Church &amp;mday at 7:30 o potluck IUPJIOI' II tho Flro
p.m.
House Thuriday evening.
MONDAY
followed by ·• lhort bulilnou
THEODORUS COUNCIL 17, meeting conducted by the
Daushters of Ameriea, 7:30 p. pretldont, Nn Lyle Baldoraon.
m. Monda,y at the IOOF hall. Membon are elkad to bring
Charter to be draped In mom. Christmas c:onlor ploall and
• 01'7 of Elele Hart; members to gills tor the Athena Manto!
Health Center to tho November
white.
mHtlng.
POMEROY Garden Club,
Community prolects were ,
· Monda)~, 1 p, m. at hoJDe or
dlaculled
end Mrl. Noll Wllaon,
Mrs. L. C. Karr; Mro. ROll·
Mrs.
Opel
Horrlo, end Mra.
ard Nolan asel•llfW hoateas.
Marlene Putnam were apSALEM CENTER l'l'A, Mon.
pointed to secure materiels for
do,y, 7:30 p.m., ThlnkqiYing
Thanksgiving favors for the
llldt by sixth grade; Ptl. James
Elmwood Root Home. Thooe
illeeta to apeak ..,, The lll&amp;b· will be made at the November
way Patrohn~n. Our Frlfl'nd, meeting when an auction sale
MIDDLEPORT Garden Uub, also will be held.
7:30 Monday nlabt. Columbus
Members voted to give the
a n d Southern Ohio Electric. Coolville Emerg1t1cy Squad 1
Hostesses: Mrs. WOllam MoJo.. money donation. The next
•I ria, Mrs. A. RHecox.lllllMlss meeting will be Nov. 11. et the
Lucllle 5mlth.
home of Mrs. Delores Frank
YOUNG ADULT Class, Brad- with Nn. Ell1 Osborne II co.
ford Church or Christ, 7:30 hosteu. Attending were Mro.
Monday nlgbt at the church. Margaret Grossnickle, Mrs.
REGULAR MEETING, Meigs Opel Harris, Mrs . Marlene
Chapter, DeMolay Advisory Putman, Mrs. Ella Osborne,
CooncU, Middleport Lodge, 7:30 Mrs. Mery Allee Blae, Mrs.
p.m. Morda)&gt;, All Master Ma· Mergorot Brown, Mrs. Nell
sons welcome. Petitions re- Wilson, Mrs. Ruth Anne
quested to be in by MoOOay, Balderson and David Brown.
TlJESDAY
ELECTION DAY DlMer, Forest Run Methodist Church, s&lt;qJ,
sardwiches, pie, ani homemade
lee cream. Servlrw to begin at
11 a.m.
ANNUAl ElECTION daydtn.
RIO GRANDE - John Herner and supper, annex of &amp;fra.
bert,
treasurer or the state of
euse Presbyterian Church; ser~
Ohio,
will deliver an address
vlng begins at 11:30 and 4:30
on
the
Rio Graode CoUege eam.
p.m.; price $1 per plate. Pie
1.\ cents extra. Spmeored by puo Nov. 3 on the relationship
Volunteer Firemen Ladies Aux~ between edleational institution a
and tax structure. The address,
Diary.
In Davis HaD at 7:30 p.m., Is
WEDNESDAY
LADIES AUXIUARY of the In connection wllhthemockpre.
Middleport Fire Dept., 7:30 p. sldentlal election being held
4 by a class in Political
m. Wednesday at 119m• o!Mrs. Nov.
Parties and Pressure Groups.
Everett Baclmer; Mrs. John
Herbert. who was the assist.

meetlrw, Pomeroy Lodge 164,
F &amp; AM, Wodnelday, 7:30 p,m,
at temple. Election or omcera,
refreahments follOIIifW meetIll. Master Masons invited.
THURSDAY
WORLD COMMUNITY Day
program praetlce session, 1:30
Thursday allel'llOOII, Mlddl..
,.-t FirM \Jnlted Proebytorlan

.

'

to the club waa olaop"'lni!&gt;tllt :
p~ IUnL DuriM tllo :

POMEROY - Procoodoll'clm

.By Riverview

wen
WORSHIPFUL
Curd announces
Masterregular
liaJ't,..

Nixon Speech Certain to Make Histo ··
-Y

Proceeds Go to Playground

Supper Held

lllmboriY GrueMr, 10cond, Do.

-···

:Y,::;:.,;;_..·Il

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...,..... ,. .i1 1,;

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12 - The

...-Times
..

Suncltt,y

Pro anijj'J ::em!ll88&amp;lllii,.IJ~ 3rd Annual Foreruiol Event
gr , Onoy,
GALLil'OLm - Jamoo s.
2f, Jackoon, Ia .._rt.
eel In 11dofoo1Dry ....Udoo
II llol•or Modlool C..., Is Nov. 7-8 at Rio Grarule
Flrlt Ave., where
waa
- - lam Thurscky ni&amp;tlt
RIO GRANDE - J\pproxl- ...ndtng ~or awanl wDI
With Grant wltll a ll"aoturod !ell log. 11o !DIIoly
20collopol!lldunlvorsl- pro80111od In debate. Also, a

- Sentinel,

.
I :

. .. ... ..

' ·· ·· · .. r·- · · · "
.

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.. ... .. .. -. , . ~ . .

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.

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settia plant 1&lt;1 tho United
States about 1835,
",

he

bo

•
••'

""" a pasaenpr.., 0 motor- des are -clod 1&lt;1 Plrddt&gt;ate
cycle I!WOivod In an aocl. Ia tile lhlnl annual Rio Grande
POMEROY - Tho U, S. or.
doni wltll 1 car In Jackam. CoUege Debate Tournament
. ft&lt;e ~Economic Opportllnlt;y
Nov. 71!11d 8, acconllngtDA.B.
has noUfled the otftce ol Con- ~~~*'~~!ll"!lln!lltz!li·~Mr=!li'"S!!IIU:IIO!~IIIJ•IIItlllillllllllllllllllt Schroeder, Instructor d. speech

"][)~ 1i.mmas

r
GALUPOLIS - Slim Elmore dOWn at the Fort Pitt Shoe
store was after me again to write about my trip to Atlanta aM
the World Series. "But I didn't go to Atlanta because there
was no World Series down there, Slim," I said.
"I know," he replied, "but tell us about the trip you dldn't

take.''
Now it's not my fault I didn't go to the World Series in Atlanta. I had a week's vacation comillt but Atlanta didn't have a
World Series.
lt's t\uuzy how guys'U bug you about somethiq;: like that.
They never let you rorget it.
Another Bugger is Bob Wingett, editor or the Pt. Pleasant
Register, a transplanted Pomeroy Sentinel reporter, who keeps
asking why I didn't write a column about my Little l..ea,gue team
thls past swnmer. Wonder it he was the one who sent me that
• "Big Shot" postcard when we won our third chalq)lonshtp a
; :zear ago last summer•
..,. 1 guess that card is what kept me from writing about the
=969 White Sox who finished inaftfthplace tie with Lew Dalley's
.,.ankees. I had a fine bunch of boys this year. But you can't wln
'em all.
But look out next swnmer! I have 10 boys returning, t.
e luding Billy Noe, Steve WaDis, Dave S9ence, Bob Condee, Ed..
die Smith, Darrell &amp;gg.,ss, Matt Saunders, Pat Cochran am
Johnny Frll.zier, am they 'll cause trrnble for somebody,
The Clr.derella team of the 1969 Little League season was
the champion Imians, managed by my son, John. At least we
kept it in the family, The Indians were 0-14 in last place in the
1968 season but last summer they finsihed 12-2 to take the
championship, That's a sequel to the New York Mets, if you
ask me.
When the 1969 major league baseball season started I picked
Pittsburgh and Atlanta in the National alii Chicago and Cleveland in the American. None of them made it.
Then after the Cincinnati Reds picked \II Ped,ros Ramos,
the 34-year-old Cuban. ex-Columbus Jet and ex-Pittsburgh Pirate, I rooted on the side of the Reds, except when they played
Pittsburgh ard Atlanta.
Like Dave Bristol, Pete Ramos wiQ be looking for another
job. The Reds gave Pete an unconditional release. Bristol got
the coaching job with Montreal ar.d Tommy Helms didn't like
that very well.
There was one real bright spot in ms 1969 Little League
season. I had catcher trouble all summer - urtil the last game,
that is. Steve Wallis started the season behiOO the plate. Then
he decided he didn't like to catch despite the fact he was a good
catcher, Bobby Condee was bothered by a bad thumb but he and
Wallis dividied catching duties. Mike Sickels, a lefty, wanted
to catch. Mike was a good player but we didn't have a lett-handed glove. So I didn't let Mike catch. He wasn't too ha,pJIY about

1-

Dr. Joel Poinsett ol South
Carolln,a ·l ntrqduced tho poln-

~-

tha~

It was the last game of the season against Lew DaUey• s
Yankees. They had beaten us 6-4 in the first meeting. I came
up without a catcher. WalUs didn't want the job. CorKlee still
had a sore thmnb. Then a little fella.v said, "'Mr. Thomas, I'll
catch!'
He was Darrell Boggess, kiOOa litUe, but mlgh~. He had
~JD playh~ secord base as a substitute, some times as a starte.;. I hesitated, but then decided I should give him a chance.
Bob WalJls was on the moun:! for lfle that eveniq;:, He's
Steve's brother. Bob was a good pitcher de~ite his 5-5 record,
Bob was fourth in strJkeouts Cor the season Jimrn.Y Niday was
second with 166 in 67 innings. Jimmy Perry was secord with
162 in 66 Crames aOO Jimm.Y Justice had 107 in 56 Jnnings. Bob
Wallis had 105 In 54 innings.
We took the Yankees that night 8-2 behind a two hitter by
Wallis. Boggess was behind the plate. You could hardly see him
in his equipment but he did a giant's job behind lhe plate.
"Early in the season. I nicknamed Darrell as "Peanuts."
l-Je didn't seem to rniiXI. He was a great morale builder to me
~the rest of the guys just to have him on the team.
As far as I'm concerned, Peanuts has the catchi~ job next
sUmmer, and as long as· he's in Little League.

gressman Clarence E. Miller
~ a grant ~ $52,369 ID tile
GaUla • Metgo Communii;y Ac.
doo Corporation In "'meroy,
The areas served are Gallla
and Mslgo Counties. Richard G.
So.Yro Ia tile pi'Ogl'!IJil dlrector.
Tho grant Ia to be used lor
progra~ admhdatraUon a n d
communit;y services project in
the two-COUnty area.
The grant hi e«ective Nov.
I, 1969. TbJs ls the l.nUialtundlng lor Gallla-Mslgo In tllelr
program year "D,., from Nov.
I, 1969 to Oct. 31, 1970. The
C.A.P. malnlatna offices In both
"'meroy and GelllpoU s.

j

l HOSPITAL NEWS J
Holzer Medical Center,First
Ave., Gallipolis. General visiting hours 2-.4 and 7..8 p.m.
onl,y. MaternH;y visiting hours
2,30 to 4,30 p. m. only, Parents only on Pediatrics Ward.
Admissions
Publication or admissions Is
prohibited until further notice.
Births
Mrs, Michael F. French, Rt.
3 Oak Hill, son, 1:45 p.m. Friday; Mrs. Jack L, Priddy, Pomeroy, daughter, 7:04p.m. Friday;- Mrs. Roger L. McGuire,
Rt. 2 Crown City, daughter,
10,30 p,m, Friday.
Discharges
Mrs. Remy Burton, Freda
Canter, Clarence Clay, Mrs.
Lucy Evans, Mrs. Chester H.
Harless, Mrs. Victor Knlgbt,
ll!rs. Cella Martin, Mrs, Hollis Mayo, Larry NoLan. Mrs.
Hazel Oiler, Mrs. Clinton L.
Sayre, Mrs. Elsie L. Spears,
Mr&amp;. Oscar M, Tennant, Mrs.
Ronald E. Topping, James w,
Warner, Mrs. Ernest E. Watts,
Mra, Bill R.
and Want
daughter, Mrs. James H, Holley
and Infant daughter, Mrs. Rob-

'

I

-~·· trqt1v wDI be preto tho achoola amaaa1ng tile larpotl!lld so&lt;OIIdlarg•

oat overall oeoro. Entries lor

dabate are llmtted to t .,-o
and director ol forenl!lles at the teams per school, although de-

eollop.
bolero may also enter tile InINJURED IN FALL
Events at the tournantent wt11 dl'fl&lt;ltal ovonte.
GALLil'OLm _ John Paul Include extemporaneoUs speili.
Byerly, 32, Rt. 2 Gallipolis, iR&amp; oratory, lntrepretaUve
wao 041mittod1Dtllehoaplla1Frl- reodlng ~poetry, and open deday morning wltll a fractured bate. Tho propoaldm ID be delett leg. He was ln.iured when bated will be this season's na-

I"'"

he feU ll"om a ladder. IUs con- Uoual lntercollOKiate t o p I c,
dlUoo ls reported 88 ROOd.
,.Resolved: That lb~ (ederal
government Should grant annaull,y a specific perctnta&amp;e of
its income tax revenue to the
state governments."
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Awards wiU be presented to
POMEROY - David Denver first and second place winners
Paraons, 2f, and Linda &amp;!san In the debate competidoo, and
Lovendar, 20, hotll o!8,yracuse. In each Individual event. AnOui. tary.

Turkeys

MIDDLEPORT -

Justice Is Ketchka, Mrs. Rose McDade,
en- Mrs. James Simpson, M r s.

Copyrlghl1969-1ho Kroger Co.

Wo roaorve tho rightto limit quanHHo1.
hem• and prlceo good thru Nov. B

ourn
car
•
r1ng
ember
and ou can
ski the
Decem er
menI

U.S. Govt, Inspected
Kroger Premium Quality
F,.lhlon.t.u

lb,

Ham Roast

Cat Up

U.S. Choke Center Cut

u.JS;

Roast
lb.

Domino Pure Cane

.

\

Minersville; Paul Lukens,
Parkersburg; Christine Johns.
Pomeroy; Robert Faulk, Jr.,
Urbana; Eltle Phillip$. Cam·
bridge;
Larry
Werry,
Pomeroy;
Ora
Halfhill,
Cheshire.
Discharged
Richard
Nvly•, Joseph Halfhill, Melissa
Tennant, Shearl Edler, Don
Weddle. George Elll$, Jan
Durst, Nettle Hemsley, Joe
Hood, Mary Darnell.

s-~·~;~ri~;G~ ~'" 51·•'

79;
RibRoiit &lt;·~~- 99;
a~c.;ndChuck ~~

Rolled and tied for easy preparation I

l·lb, ID·o~

'

s,rv

"

Con

" O~ed

don't let hrl. mas
shopping eep ou ••

79f.

u

Fmh lonel"'

4·1b. 49

Ham Roast

· Pi1lo Beans
···- ;
2DO·Ct. 26
;
Faalal Tissue
Compbell'•
No. I
f.
Tomato Soup
All.,u,..
24·••· 53
Crisco Oil
Plain lodl ..d
Kroger Salt 2~:''10;
Pa•kaj Soft
Hb.45f.
Pkg,
Margarine
lloocl\
Clorox

-··

•..

Con

0

RibSf~aki"' Short c"lb.

Roll Roast

lhorttnfno

Sugar

$1
"''
99;
pq,

florida Kay IHirond

. Choice Tenderay
· Boneless Boston

aon, Mrs. Stephen L, Wlnn and

Arms,

Whole Fryers

Cube Steaks

infant 101'1.

Brian

89;

Plump and juicy-ready lor cooking

Earl K. Lowder and inCant
daughter, Mre. William C. Martin and lnrant daughter, M r s.
George S. Rodgers and tnrant

Douglas Acree,

All (,yen ootd at
Kroger are U.S.
Government Inspected

lb.89;

'
Stokely

Pears

11

8!1,

.

All

;

Aooorted Flavon
Duncan Hlnas

Cake Mix

Perfect lor salad• and cooking!

20-oz.
Pie

18-oz.
Box

Fu11zlaked

101/,-...

D•n•erRalls

forcement officers punished Instead or the criminal - ae- -;
cording II&gt; Meli!, Couni;y•. top

Con

Crisco Oil

Pies

Gat.49;

Elizabeth lUbbs, and Miss Bess
Sanborn.

No.2%33f

All-Purpose

Varletieo Pot Ritz

&amp;

High Crime Rate Blamed On Courts
etten sidetracked and law

Tenderay Brand Beef• Everyday Low Prices • Top Value Stamps • .Weekly Sales

Kroger

Wishbone Brand

ert D. Kuhn and Infant eon, Mrs.

Admitted Middleport;

....

0

Goble

VETERANS MEMORIAL 1
HOSPITAL
,

0

0

ASK TO WED

GALLIPOLIS- Two eooplea
applied for marriage llcttnaes
Saturday In lhe oftlce of Gallla
County Probate Court. T h e 1
were: Carl E. Blrteher, 26, CoJumbua, monitor, llld Deana G.
Rutan, 20, GelllpoUs, at homo;
Rlcbard w~, Elliott, 18, Galllpoits, s1udont, Vicki L y n n
Calclwoll, 17, Gal~Uo, aecro-

Pko.

29f

15f.

jlrist.
JUdge John

c.

Bacon

~

tile

Ajax

~Wmmon

pleas court told tile
)lldtlleport • "'meroy Rotary
:Club Friday night at H e a t h ·
:Church crime Is up ln part be•-cause of recent ruUnga of the
:U. S, SUpreme Court limiting

•
• • from bu 1ng our
I
I
new car n • •

lopJ action against lndlvld.

~ Bacoo, president o!tllo

clW, laid primary blame ror
tile tdgb court's attl.bJ.de at the
door o! Justice WUIIam 0.
llouglas , lie quoted Douglas as
once saying, "'the BUI of
Rights makes it hard for the ,
government to do anything to
the individual ."
Earlier, Judge Bacon trac.
eel the development d. t h e
American system of jurispru.
dence !rom its English roots.
Tiekets for a pancake SUPper a,POnsored ~ the club at
Ita Heath ChW'ch next Friday,
)lib aentng !rom 5 to 7 p.m.
lftcedlng the Marauder-Coal

=.!~'game. were dis.

5-lb•
4-oL

IEADY-MADE

All Flavoro Kroger

Alka·Seltzer

88
2 f
25·Ct.
Itt

Ice

2

"THE OLD B.4NK WITH NEW IDEAS"

FOUR

TEASPOONS·

l1.79 .....
COIJI'ON
VAI,I.If

1129· Wo'"
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--~

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':;~·59;

2c.... 79;
'h·Gol.

c....,....
Or111a Juice

HeUman's

79
5,.,49;
v,,Go;.

lb.

;

This coupon worth 5()C ;;.~:­

. so·

and Virginia .

'

ili;'.ic•ena

•
'
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tucky, Massachusetts, Penn-

Slice 'om • - co-1 for a bnoaklal! lrOatl

2-Ct.

Kroft Atnericctll

T

GALLIPOliS, OHIO•

Pkp.

Krottr Corn 011

. "-of1ftoWql

5

s

S 1
3p···· $1
1·11.. 89
3····;
iiri;;,;;.i ••od'•· 5~
L

PI.Shells

Ratware

351 SECOND AVE .

,o.•

Pit Rib:

AmeriCIII Flair

"
" Four state~t of the Union
are officially designated as
tl ommonwealths - Ken-

$J,OO

Vagalablas

B1Hennilk

coupon below
and $5 Pun:haoe

Whh

Kroger Froun

Mersarlne

Golden-Ripe,
Mellow and Sweet

%-Gat
Ctns.

•..... c.,.....t

•.
•"

Box

69c Size

Flnt Nltl•al's new car financing Is MEANT to make It ~sler for Y•
to own the car you want. Choose y•r car from aiJ dealer, arnnte tlae
exact Insurance coverage you nttd with any Insurance ~c•pany .••t and Flnt National pays your car dealer atd the ltsuntct.
You repay The First National way with one ••k·rate 1101thly fiJII•t
that covers allout ev.-ythlntllut your gas, oil aid •arklng fttL

The event is open to the
publle, at $1 each. Tickets will
be available at the door.
Cash Bahr and Dick Owen head
the pancake committee.
One guest was John Tanne.
hill, introduced by his rather.
1;, L. Tannehill,
~ Ladies of Heath Church serv(ba a steak dinner were M r s.
James Criswell, Mrs. John

~&gt;'lvania

Great for all your washday needll

, COIJ!If.lfl.

2-QT. comm

SAIC£PAI
f4.79 ''!"
$1,(t() .

Mayonnaise

�,,,
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I

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.,

- ·,., ·~ Tlmoa - Sentinel, SU!Ida7, November 2, 1168

l~

it's Open Season

o, Quarferbocks

.•

·
EVANSTON, D1. (IJPI)- Ohio
Slate' a todbllll maehlna, lad
by seorirw alar lib Kem and
Jim otla and a IA!natloua
ftnlt, rolled to Ill 20111 .....
ooeuU.. Ylctory S.turda,y, - ·
o'"r Big Ten.rhal Northwest..

fllllback, lad the ocoriJVPirode
with tooc.-na, two 011
plqeo and 011 a PIOO.
Ktra, who 1'111 for 94 yards
and paaaed .... 117, did not
&lt;rOll tht gaol line htmaelf but
the Bucke,ye quarterback threw

orn.
The tql rated Buckeyes
aeortd at lent ..,. touc.-n
In each perlod,puntodonly once
and yielded NorthWootorn'e 01&gt;-

• - - P i l l to Stan Wblll The Wild' t could lind .....
and twice handad tho baU to olaU
th heldtht
Otla for ocoriJV PluJVe• after •
on ·~
If
he had amaoaed tho ble Yanl- Buekeyoa to only ae-polre:
1110 on . marchoa to tho gaol ~he nrat period. Tho Bucks

*' .

·
IIJ&gt;.
yard on every carry and he
lllled the ..,. with 127 yardo
rlllhlng.
Tho Ylctory P" Ohio ~~!'tea
6-0B·- ~~~~~~~":" ~
'6

,en,

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~QUil'lorblek
llllal a

=•=:.e:..,....._,
6

:-!:::. marr ..
:!i.

cats at :1..2 In tht eonfennce. 19

In~ ~et

ocorad tht l!ucke,yea'

ru.::"'"

Marshall Snaps Losing
Streak; OU Wins 22-17
IIIJNTINGTON, W. Va. (UP!)
- Marshall Univenlt;y upset
Mid-American Conference con~
leader BowUng Green 21 -16
here Saturday afternoon and the
Thanderlng Herd averted t;y.
ing a national colleglah• •vi nless
Slrl''lk record.
The vlctoey broke
, J•
shall's winless string of 27
games, longest In the nation

and was the first win since the
next-lo.Jall pme ol tho 1966
MOSOII. The trlumjilt also BIIIP·
peel a 14-camo losing streak
against Bowling Gnen dating
back to 1955, and broke a fourgame losing streak for home-

Michigan a 17 . D flrat half poydlrt In 11 playa.
The alert llubeots Intercepted
Ieod, then roared back behind

tailback Dove LeVeck Saturday flvo -tern - · Including
for a 22 . 17 come · from · be- two by Rick Hawkins.
hind vldory,
Mlchl9an broke
LeVeck, who Wal hold to 10 quickly, with lawson scoring on

-tern

yards rushing the first half, ex- a she yard run to cap a ••rard,
ploded for 98 yards after Inter- five play drive which was HI

mission and two touchdowns In up by Dove Halllnbrln's .Q-yord
the fino! period. He scorod on punt return.

runs of 1 and I yards as Ohio
evened Its season rKDrd to

PRO QUARTERBACKS tould a10 • olin pair of eyos
1e detod llllemea cemlq up from llelllad. Ia top piiiCo,
l'llllbarJII'• Torry Rurally Ia abnt to fool some pros"'" oa 111e
olde of 'hlo bead; Ia middle, Green
llay'a Bart Slalr IIDdo a milt oa bit faee J!l&amp;ot, aad oa
lleltom, Wllhlqtoa'o SoDDy Jargemea gell an uaexbear bq.

..,.I

,..led

Third-Ranked Vols

Trip GeorgiU;_17-3
'

'

.

•
. ATHENS, Ga. (UPI) - The
McLeary went across from
thiJ'd.nnked Tamassee Vola,. 0118 yard out With 4:38 loft In
lloJmlecl tor noarb' t half by the first half to climax a 56flmlblal and raiD, erupted for yard Tennessee March, then
two Ial-III In less than two Mike JOIIos retarntd a pass
m - . Stlurday to boat Gaor- lntoreep11on to the Georgia 27
11a 17.a and raek up their olath '"' tho first play after lhe on111r11a11t Yletory,
aulna ldckolf and Watson scoraap..,.,... fullback C u r t eel rrom three yards out with
Wataon, wbo p1noc1 a reeard 2:55 sUII remaining.
1.17 yards rulhlnl Ia CODUn- George HIDI~ who eorwerted
uau burlta 1:hroaab the por. atteJ· the two touchdowns, kick..
Gtoqia line, and junior ed a 31&lt;-yard field gua1 midway
taUbtek Dan McLeary who throulib the final period to Wind-:
.......,. 100, eaeb • .....;.. for up the scoring for the unbeattht Vola In the closing min- en Vola,
ot the llrll half aa TenThe lllh-ranked Bulldogs, unwlpod out a 3-ll defi- ahle to maintain a sustained
elL
drive all afternoon, got their
only points midway lhrougb the
llrst period on a 2l.yard field
gua1 by Jim MeCulloullb.
Temessee fumbles set up the
Georgia tally. The Bulldop aut
the ba11 at 1he Termesoee 29 on
Collep F~ ReiUlts
a fumble recovery by Steve
llJ United Prell tllemaUOIIIIl Chamberlain, loot It back at
Eall
the 10 011 a fumble and replnllartmouth 42 Yale 21
ed It on tho next play, also at
llland l4New8ampshfre the 10, on a recovery by Clalck

&lt; ....

l --

·~

~

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~
3
i

·~

.

·.
...
'.
''

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Sat---J
_ ,
uruay s

Grid Scores

:ar'

J101tQo"U,37- cCmeeUcut 21
l!o&amp;lo 33 Temple o
.,'
~lib 21 Syraeuae 20
1:arueil 10 Columbia 3
.-..clwiOito 48 Vermont 7
·lflryard 20 Pam 6
- . lit. 38 Coli.
~33Brown6

J.llr7 7

1• '-•not 17 Georgia 3
••

Gor,lqla Ttch 20 Duke 7
Plorida St. 34 Sau1lt Carolina
t
Wlllt VlrJ(ala 7 Kentucky 8
W!Mit Vlrllnla lit. 20 Glenville
tJI. 11
lllii•'""" 4li Citadel IB

•WliilliiiFiorltl-12

NIC
• ldaus'
Lead Is
Narrowed

Toledo In

=.:Ia:
•

:..."'!':: 8=~ ~=

, : : w n run In tha IIDa1

·

Center.Stage

run and Mowatt's kick.
However, the Bobcats dom-'

tneted the game In the second
half with LeVeck's slashes leadIng the way.

Jacobs, board chairmen of tho
Gardens.

been Installed at Cincinnati
The 1011t, which ccnlaln1
Gardens here and will be In op- nearly 9,000 lamps and can be
eration this weekend.
lowered or raised to any deThe all-aluminum, four-sided

sired position. was conatrudtd

board, which weighs 10.000
pounds, will ba used not mly

by tho General Indicator Corp.

for Cincinnati Royals basketball
games but also for Ice hockey,

of tho Royals. sold tho now
board was "lhe bast end moat
Informative basketball ICOI'•
board now in use In the United

boxing, wrestling, track and

Joe Axelson. general manager

States."
The new unit not only shows
tho Individual number of personal fouls and tum fouls In a
basketball gomo but will carry
the running totals for the top
three acorers and rebounders

for each loam lhroughout lhe

7~ard drivewhlchcubrtbated ~888~ii!il!8tlBI
In 1 1~ burll ·llll'tiQilb tho •1:,-~-er "--'a.M' xe
middle -'-' Franeollarrlaforthe .,....
~-..- VD
score.
MARIETTA, 01110 (UPl)In the tlnaJ. perlad Cbuck Marietta converted . Mt. UnBurkhart seorecl on a quarter. loa fUmbles Ia the llrat and
back sneak ondlJV an 811-yard laat quarteralatoiiJueholowna
drive, Onio&gt;tz aut a touchdown Saturday 1n an Ohio Conferon his punt nlarn and Franco once to win 20.12 and rack up
Herria chalked ICI hh third 111 llfth atrallllrt victory,
marker on a ni_.rd dash.
Marietta, ...,. 6-1 "'erall
State's other score came m and 5-1 In tho loop, look a
a 24-yard llold gaol '-' Mike declalve 13-lllead In thefirat
Reitz which pve theLtonoa3-0 half by scoring In each porlead. The Lions rolled up 398 loci. Raadr Reese OOIIVOrtyards on the ground to 162 fAll' td a fUmble recovery, wiiUe
Booton College. But the Eades Marletta'a o11tor taUy """ em
plektd ICI 110 of thoae yards Ia a IO.,yard pus from B o b
tha firll half aDd their runni!W Heuaer to Gaorp Stuer.
was at a mln!mmn In the !all
two quartoro.
The Llona dlaclalnod tho
NBA STANDINGS
passes 11 Burkhart hit 011 only By United Pnsa lnlematloml
one of thne atloqta In the
Eut
Drat half and had ooe toss InW. 1., Pet. GB
tereeptad. AI Dhembe picked New York.., .,9 I .900
oR the pass and Booton College Mllwaukoa •• , .6 3 .667 2\2
dro.. 49 yanlo for the tooci&gt;- , Phlladelphla ••• 4 2 ,667 3
down which save It the 6.1 adgo. Baltimore • , • ,t 4 ,500 4
Pem~ Slate aal'et)l Neal Smllb Detroit. , •••• 2 4 .333 5
Intercepted hla elahth paoo of BuatOD ••• , •• 2 t .~ 5
tho MBson and tbe 18th of hla ClnelmaU,, •• 2 6 .250 6
three - year ear- and alao
Well
ehortclreulted a Booton College
W. L. Pet. Gil
drive which had naehed t h e Los AJVeJeo, • 5 2 , n4
Penn Slate 11.
Chicago, • , , • 5 3 .625 'h
San Fran. • , •• 3 % .600 1
--w.:v~-m;m
~w~wg..y_.my;
Allonla ••••• 4 3 .5n 1
Phoenix
• • • , ,3 5 .375 2\2
DALLAS (IJPI) - Quarterboek James street' a btlfSon
Diogo
•••• 1 6 .143 4
ling execution of the triple "'Uon and the brutal secoad
Seattle ...••• l 6 ,143 t
half n111111JV or Jim Bertelsen, Steve Worster and Ernie
FrldQ'a ReouUa
Kay •l&lt;Pioded IOC&lt;llld-ra- Telaa past Soulltom Chicago 118 Baltimore 109
dlst 45-14 Saturday.
~ 118 Son 011110 113
The hJah _ pared L!qborao had to lbllka otr the
Milw,
120 Pblla. 125 (o.t.)
lbacklu ot a bad .... of llrll half l'alllbleltla and a atd&gt;Seattle
129 Cincinnati 121
born SMU dofanae, h&lt;Mo.or, to roll to Ita 15th........,...
(Only same• aehtdulod)
tlve victory With aU four Ttlllllo 11W11Jw bteka rcariJV
pall tho 10~~ mark.
Bertalaon, a IIGPhomore ~ tram Wlacoaaln,
bolted 7, 26, 3 and 12 JOrdo for - . - n s , Wonter dovo
Okla-. 37 St. 14
0110 yard far lllllllher and KQ)' ..,.._ tO yarda untGuehtd
Texaa Toeb 2t Rico lt
few 1 fifth while Happy Feller booted a 32-yud lleld auaL
!lou- 38 Miami (Flo.) 38
Artanaao 35 Texa1 A&amp;M 13

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.
(IJPI) _ Pem state' a erunei&gt;lng runni!W game, with thne
backs picking ICI more thonlOO
yards each, wore down L.VSet·
mlndad Boston College S.turday ao the Nlt1a11Y Llmoroarad
to a 38-16 wln.
PeM state had to come from
behind twice andltd'-'athlnl716 marlin entering the final
quarter. But the Ll0111 hammereel out throe final period touei&gt;downs, one produced as usual
by Its dof0118lvelelm on VeRilY
Onkotz'a 411-i'ard punt return.
Charlie Pltbnan and aoph&lt;&gt;mores LydaU MltehaU and
Franco Harris aU "ant o.or
the 101Jo.yard mark and Harris
scoced tlmea on runs of
four, nine and 19 yardo.
Both Bolton College touchdowno came on Pl•oeo. Frank
Harrlo threw eight yards to
John BontolaUI for tha aeono
which pve the Eades an earb'
6-3 lead and to Jim Catooe fAll'
13 yarda on the Olal play orthe
llrst half for a 13-10 lead.
Bolton College boosted Ita
lllll'lin to 16-10 earb' In tho
third quarter m Charlie Toe•ylewokl'o 27~rd fteld goal.
But Penn state got the lead fAll'
keeps five minutes later on a

-

tum to the Roee a...!.
1111111111 wao able to IIIOVO tha
baU freely aplnat Mlchlpn
Illata all . . . , . _ until It
IIOIJ'ad. tho !lutan gaol lint.
Time BDII apln, tht ~n
defealo 1111- Inside Ita own
30-yard 11at 1o atop fllllorw
drlwo. lodkna loot. throe filiiHla PorfOI'IIIIII&lt;e eraatd tht blea and thrie lutei'I:O(IIad
old mark ol742 yard I HI '-' PI I Me dur!Jw tht aem- or
TomNooratzkola1963.
llamaqtaofwlctorJwouldhaWI
Thollooolara,Whodonotplay bttnll'oater.
,
leacuo -IOidlrW Ohio Slate thlo
,., !lpal1ln otfenae waa a
year, ralaed their conference atudr In flrullraUClll 'lll...,.
mark .to$-1 tor.,..nlnaec- , _ Sl&amp;rdJw..,.......,.ckBUJ
ooc1 place lllhlllll ~ 111- Triplett
vinellllo Ohio,~ wllleh cannot r., alll,dldn't COiqllete Ill)' otthom

champion, with 28 aeeOIIds to
play In thellrll qiBrter.
Hal!back Jdm loenbtrger
eraaed lltolndW. -oonruobo
1111 mark duriJV tho afiorno011
ao he carried lila btU 25 Urnes
tor 152 yardt to
hlm 762
Yar&lt;!l for the -aontodate.

at••

.....;w1oPIIMI

baton balrw removadottht~~
same at .tht and
"""'
quarter, ,.,•ro-ve qiBrlerback Stew Plro llnatl,y compltted a :n.,ard 11011 to Dan
Hlahamlth In tht lburtli iluartar
tor tht llrlll ....,... ~
tloaofthoday,ij'!'"ndllllad
by a clltiPIIW perwily,
,., U..lera - ara W far
tho - - wllu. llldlllan
.s tato113.ffortlieJ. . aod·l4
In tho Bla Ton.
.
,
T h e - WaJpiayadbHire

ah~ 'erowdof77,133,
tho atz11t lu\lelllcrilwd In MJob.
lsao tile' a

hi_,..

33,
BY KEITH WISECUP
POMEROY - Tho haughty,
Ironton drove to the nine and
eonftdent lrorton Tigers came with 3:15 to go In the first half,
to Marauder StaciiiDII Friday on a fourth alii six, Boyldn was
llleht loacled with tho Southeast.. cracked hard tryl~W to go "Ide
ern Ohio Athletic League'• tqt by the Marauder defenae for
passer and best recelver, am a yard losa.
Its blgpll and toughesl runner.
The Marauders ran out the
They were ln&amp;eeOOOplace, with clock, drlvi~W to thalr '"'n 48.
Just ooe defeat, coming "' to At holftlme It was Melso 6 and
this final game with the Meigs lrontooO.
SECOND HALF
Marauders .who had been rele.
pled to a -. sixth place ftnioh
After taki~W the lr....,. ldeJo.
back In September,
off to start lhe • •·
___ •~M« t
The Tlprs and their coach, Metes marched
HE ~ - Jon Kloes, Marautler junior end, who usually hac. • Mlous honor ot
Fred Bruney, welt home after on 15 stralaht nmnlJV play a,
drawing
double coverage, tslntheirontonendzone waiU. tor an O'Brienpasll to C(lllle down.
their date here considerably through holes opened l&gt;y the
When
It
did, an Instant late , Hal !P!ar• (15) and another def-r elnae to Kloos were 011
lell haught;y,
Marauder offensive line, sent"'
o1
him
also golJV for u... &gt;a J. No. 30 Ia Rick Boykln and No. 33 &amp;b Bertley.
Because they knew they had iors Lynn Black, Jim Swatzel,
been beaten ey a better foot.. Mike Barr and stave Van Met..
er, and juniws Roger Abbott,
baU team.
Marauder Coach Charles Dave Boyd 8lKI Kloes. But oo
SEBO IN FINALS
Chancey, In the 48 minutes or fourth and goal, O'Brien rolled
POMEROY - Jom Sebo, a
hardnoaed fooCball, had faoh· out, couldn't spot an open reioned a classic performance by ceiver, put hls dead down, a...s aenlor al Melp IIIah School
blo club which took undloputecl bulltd to the three. Ironton will compote In the finals of
the 23rd Ohio lUatory, Govpossession of second place in took over.
The Marauder defense held ernment and Cltlzonshlp cml.
the SEOAL ftnlsh with o n e
league loas (to wirmer Jackson) their ground and foretd lroo- test at Ohio Univorslt;y N"'. 21
•-- It
8. '"-- and 22. He was selected aa the
GALLil'Ullii
lieorgla
and a 0.0 Ue (with l.opn),
ton
to
punt
uwn
s
""n
••~
result
ol
wlmlng
a
preUmlnary
"'lltner,
68,
Eureb
Star
Rootc,
GALLIPOU,S- JanKrenDaThe Marauders got breaks,
baU
bounced
back
to
punter
.,.
vls,
Rt. 2, Crown Clt;y, diad
made by their hard hitting, took Sternaman. He fumbled it, got examination. He is the son ci died ot injuries received in an In the20,Holzer
Medical Center on
a 12-0 lead, had It melt away It, started to run, waa hlt hard, Mr. and Mrs. Jolvl Sebo Sr., automobile accldert at 6:15 p. Fir A
t ,
"·t _
lid 142 Mulberry Ave.
to trail 13-12 In the fourth perFr'•--, -·
Rt. 7
• 1 ve., a 1•30 a.m., o3ll ur
fumbled. After a w
m.~
~.UAJ boonmu.merSep•
• day trom injuries received in
Iod, then came back with a bril- and
scramble, 'I1ny Williams re&lt;lne W'&amp;l
on
"'" 8,
liant strike thtt covered 73 covered on the Tiger 6.
1901, in Wayne Courty, W, Va., an automobile acddent on Sun104
130 daughter oflhe late Ele and day, Oct. 26.
Two
playo
later
..
nior
fullYds.
passing
'
·
'
yards to go ahead 2~13, and
284
She was born. June 11, 1949,
added Icing m their cake with back DaiUIY Abbott' plowed over pTotal yardo
Attp. ••.• 2n9
14 -u-ry Caldwell Fortner.
another TD to win going away, !rom the one with 0:21 left In passes ~--' • · ' 5
7
She was preceded in death hy at Oahu, Territory of Hawaii,
the third quarter. O'Brien aases '-All,..,.. ' ' '
her husbarxl, Henry Stiltner, in daughter of James N. M., alii
26-13,
Esther Paulson Davis.
Melia took advantaae of four rolled out ancl was stopped just Passes
p
Ill lntcp. • · .•654
400 1966
e.. es · • • • • · ·
·
.
Ml.ss Davis is survived by
pass interceptions and two t'uJn.. ahort of tho goal for the ox- Fum'les
2
2
The following ch1ldren surbroth
William A. lla .
"'
'
'
·
·
·
·
·
i
Walke
of
Blad
n;
Mr
one
er,
VIS,
ble recoveries. Big factors also traL '111eMaraudersled,12-0.
Fumbles lost, ••• 0
2 vve:
r,
e
s. Lambard 01 She spentmostof
were the nmnl~W ot junior IalfBefore those 21 seconds ex~
INDIVIDUAL RUSIUNG
Lucy Allen, Wayne, W. Va.; her Ufe ~ G~ia Count •
back Deunts
the passing plred, Iromoo had driven to the
MEIGS
Harvey, Chesapeake; Mrs. Ruth
Y
or aonior quarterback Pat 0'- · Me lea 2. (At lhls point, lrorton
TC YDS AVG Brooks and Mrs. Maxine Rice,
A brother • James N. M. DeBrien, the receiving of senior had learned over the PA sys2 81 4.1 Wayne, W, Va.; Henry, Jr., Eu- vlsob, UJr., walds ldllledGin an ~~In
0 65 4 1 reka -~-r Route. Sixteen grae ace ent n ermany
end John Rltehhart, the tre- tom lllat Jeekoon was behl nd Boggs
Abbott • • • • • • • • 16
- m
• • · ' ' ·' '
• children and two great- grand- Ja~. 1960•
mendous bloeld!W by the lola- Athens, 14-11, and this seemed
•••••••.• 1
5 5.0
hild
urvl
M155 Da.Yls was a member of
raw::ler oftenstw line, ard just lo put new life Into the Tigers.) Grate
A h
2 4 2o e
ren •
ve.
rc er. • • . • • • • •
•
t h e Grace United Methodist
as tremerdoua defensive play,
On the first play of the fourth O'Brien ••.•.•.• 5 12 2.4
Brothen SW"Vlvirw:are; E;ra Church, a junior stw::lent at the
Alter traUlJV 0.0 at lhe half quarter' Boykin plunged 2 yards
IRONTON
ett, Cohunbus; Thomas, ew Holzer School of Nurs~
ard 12-0 after three quarters, for the score. Jeft' Howard's
TC YDS AVG York, N. Y,; WaJker, Kenova,
Funeral services will beheld
Ironton generated a dormant kick for the ema point was Boyldn, , , , ••• 25 92 3,6 W. Va.; Jenks, Way.:U.Wi~a.; ,
2 30 p.m., MCIIIIay at Grace
olrenae led by backup quarter.
wide to the left and made It . ~~R • ···&lt;.• • • • 4 ·...1J . 3.3 J,oh~ l!&gt;j Raymond,
o un- United Metllodlst Church, with
baekHal~ea.
12-6.
Edl!yi!s •••••• 6 2;1 U · , . _ .,., ..... ,. ••· 'a'n · ~:.. •..;.,"!lev. · Patl Balide.-s aild Hev.
Tho Tlae•s. hqllng fora utto
The Marauderswere~ped ~s · ~ ··. jjt. • • • 6 11'!5 4.2
She resided lnG Ia ~..,James Morrison offlelaiiJV.
1hare with Jaehe011 (wbo Iced dead In their tracks after the Smith ••• , . • • , , 3 20 6.6 since 1959, cooUJV here from Burial will be In Mound Hill
the e......,IOIIIblp with a eom&amp;- kiekolr, and Floyd punted to the
RECEIVING
Boone Cowiy, W, Va.
Cemetery
from.!Jehlnl Ylctory
Ath- lroRon 43.
25
MEIGS - Kloes, 2 for 5i
She was married on Dec. • Frielll~ may call at the
ena, 15-14), took the lead at
1917•
lronton drove 57 yards In 8 Rltehhort, 3 for 99,
Waugh -Halley- Wood Funeral
13-12 With alx minutes remeln- plays, with Boyldntaklngltover
IRONTON- Akers, 3 lorS3i
Mrs. Stiltner was a member Home trom 7·9 p.m., Sunday,
lJVlnthepme.
from 9 yards out to tto· It ICI Henry, 2 for 40; Edwards, 2for oftheWhlte~kllaptlstChureh.
The bodY wiD lie In state at
But tha Maralllers struck
with 6:17 remaining lnthopme 37,
ldF";"rol ":J=-~ at':!!Mo~ the church ..., hour prior to
btck quickly, scoring on their at 12-12. Howard split the upPASSING
he
p.m.,,.........,
Monday's services.
next play from scrimmage.
rlahts for a 13-12 Ironton lead.
MEIGS _ O'Brien, 5 of 9. rls Furt&gt;ral Home, Wayne, W,
_
HOW IT WENT
But )lst as everythiJVlooked
IRONTON - Sternaman, 3 of Va.
George Arnott
The lolarauclers started off like roses fOl" the Tigers, it Si ~ra, 4 of Bi Boykin, o oft.
Burtal will be in the stlltner
on the right foot when &amp;qlh~ was thorns. On Meiss' first
INTERCEPTIONS
Cemetery, Wayne, W, Va.
RACINE - George Arnott.
more 'l'lny Williams booted the play, O'Brien threw deep to
MEIGS _ O'Brlen, 2i HoffThe body was taken by 83, Racine, died Saturday
opening ldeko&lt;lf! Into the Tiger Ritchhart, who ca•~&lt;~ht
it on the ner, 1; Arc he r, 1•
Waugh .. Halley- Wood Flmeral morning at Veterans Memorial
end zone.
PUNTING
Home to the Morris Funen1 Hospital
dead run at the Ironton 30 and
On the Drat play from scrim- outran the deferder lor a 73
MEIGS _ Floyd, 3 for 84. Home in Wayne on Saturday.
He Is survived by a daughter,
mage, IrottonquarterbackGI"Qg yard touchdorm. Boas earrted
IRONTON _ sternaman, 1
Corrine Greenburg. Azusa.
Sternaman dropped back and In the aU-iJq)ortart extras fAll' for 25,
ur&amp; Helen Ba,_
Calif.; a IM'other, Ott Arnott.
overthrew his btended receiv- a 20-13 Melealead.
PUNT RETURNS
J.Y••
-J
Racine Route 2; two grand·
er and Into tha waiting hands ot
'l'lny WWiama booted the
MEIGS - None.
G.MIDDLEPORTBatey, 63, Middleport,
died
Mrs. Helen
junior haUbtck Tom Hoffner kick-off aU the way to the end
IRONTON - Spears, 1 for 2; Saturday at Meigs General
on the Tiger 29, Hoffner re- zone again and the startled Tlg- Akers, 1 fAll' 9,
Hospllal.
turned It to the Tiger 10.
era put It In play at thtlr own
FUMBLES RECOVERED
She was a member of tho
On Molaa' llratplay, O'Brien 20. On second and elaht from
MEIGS - O'Brien 2; Rltci&gt;- Middleport Church of Christ
recovered hiJ own tumble, los- the 22, !P!ara, who had re- hart I; Tiny Williams 1.
and of the AuKlllory of lho
Ing 5 yards. O'Brien then threw placed Sternoman the entln
IRONTON - None.
Moose Lodge ot Buffalo, N. Y.
Incomplete to Junior end Jon second half, threw a strikeKICKOFF RETURNS
Surviving are three sons,
Kloos and aenlor wingback Pat to O'Brien oolite Ticer 35. He
MEIGS - D. Abbott, 1 for 17; George and Andy, both of
Arcfler was stq)ped for no ealn. returned It to the 21.
Grate, 1 fAll' 18.
Middleport and Benjamin. of
on fourth and 15, O'Brien•
Five plays later with 2:21
IRONTON - Edwards, 1 for Jackson; a sister, Mrs.
threw a perfect strike to Rite!&gt;- left, Boas scored the final 11; Henry, 1 for 26.
Margaret
Hamft
of
bart, orlde open In tho end zone, touchdown of tho same from
SCORE BY QUARTERS
Broazepolnt, N. Y.; 13 grand·
for the firll score. Only l'h throe yards out. Floyd's try Ironton , • , , , • 6 0 0 13-13 chl)dren, and olght great·
minute&amp; had elapsed In the first for the extras was siO()ped Meigs , , , • , , • 6 0 6 14-·26 grandchildren. Her husband,
quarler. Bqrgs attempted the short. And that did It, Meles
SCORING
Jamoa, dltd In 1937.
extras but was stopped ohort 26 and lrorton 13.
MEIGS - Rltehhart, 15 yard
Funeral services will ba hold
for a 6-0 Moles lood. Ironton,
As Ironton tried to score a- pass, 73 yard pan; ~,
·~ 1 at 2 p.m. Monday ot lht Ewing
stllliiiOd. waa certain It had quick six, Archer lrtercepttd yard run; Boggs, 3 yard run. Funeral Home where friends
wltneaaed a fluke.
and the Marauders ran out tho EP run.
may call anytime. Burial will be
Alter the Mole• Ide-. 200 clock.
.
IRONTON _ Boyldn, 2 yard In tho Rock Sprlnga Cemetery.
lb. sophomore ·aon..Uon Rick
The Melee defensl'" line, run, 9 yard nm; Howard, ldek
Boyldn carried thne eonsoe• which did an outatand(JV Job. EP,
tlve tlmeo fAll' only four yards waa Allen Williams, middle
MEIGS STARTING LINEUP
and sternaman was forced to suard,
SWatzel and Barr,
OFFENSE: Kloes and Black,
pun! (the Ttaera' only punt or tackles, Wayne Well and Boy ends; SlratzelanciBarJ", tackles;
the nJaht) to tho Ticer 43. Vaughan, ends, Reger Van lolater alii ~ (IUU'da;
The Marauder• drove to the and Tiny WUilama, lineback- Ropr Abbott, center; O'Brien,
Ironton 25 and 011 a fourth - n era, and Tom lloiiDian and Pal quarterback; Boas, tailback;
with 4:46 left In tho llrot quart.. Archer, eomorbllcko.
Danny Abbott, fullllaek; Hacker O'Brleo puaed Incomplete
Next weak tho Maralllere ett, wl!wobek.
to' Kloos on the gaol lint, wbo e....,lete their aeason In a 11011o
DEFENSE: WaUandVa......
• made a spectacular try tor leacuo encounter with C o a I . ends: SlfatltlandBarr, tacldea;
; tbo baiL
Gr"'" at Marauder StadiiDII.
AUen WWiame, middle auar\1;
!
Tho Tigers then cracked the
STATISTICS
Ro&amp;er Abbott and Tiny wuMaraudor line 9'atraliht times
MeJa• lromon llama, lineblleken; Holfnel'aql
on tho graoind, rallllv to tho Firat Downa • • • lt
16
.
._rback'l Ritch~
Melet 32. l!ul the ~rive wao Yda. ruahllw •• , 167
1~4

Jan Karen Davu

other events, according to Max

Hoosiers Get Bowl Fever
a.:~rnor,

26-13 Triumph In
Final Loop Outing

John l\olowett'a zo . yard field
goal gave WMU a 1D-0 leod. It
was 17 . o at halftime on quar·
ttrback Ttd Grignon's 10 · yard

contest.

NAP A, Calif. (UPO - lolaat..
ers cbam,plon George Archer
and Arnold Palmer both picked
up ground m the front nine In
the third rooni or the •tto,ooo
!lalaer lnternaUmal Open Sat..
urday to eloae the pp m looder Ja.ek Nicklaus.
Hoard.
Archer lllarted tho third
round at 138, six atrokos under
par, and birdied two ofthefirat
five holes to go olaht under and
trall Nlcklaul, who bad yet to
tee off, '-' llrokoL
Palmer, "ho shot a throe under 69 at Silverado In the oec:ond round and a1erted the day
psfour atrokes under .(Jar, made
:he turn In three ander 33 to
OXFORD. Ohio (UPIJ -To- close to wtulln four otNicklauo.
A crowd olabout3,000tralled
Iodo University clinched tho
Arnie
around the front nine,
Mid _ America Conferet1U! and
causi~W
lralllc lama and probo
1 bid to the Tangerine Bowl
lams
for
the marshala at evSaturday w~h a hard · ~ought
14 _ 10 victory over Miami of ery green. Arnie, baamiJV that
happy smile of Ida, reaetad to
Ohio.
Bolh teems did all their seor · his Army's pleadiJV and ran
d""n blr&lt;l)r putta on the first,
lng In · lhl lint half end then
eighth and nlrth holes.
settled down to a defonalvo bat·
tie on a rain · sooked field.
A 52 . yard PIIS from Otuck
Ealey to Don Fair with 10 mlnvtes left In the first helf provtd
to be the winning score for the
Rockets. who extended their unEAST
LANSING,
Mich.
defeetectskeln to seven games.
Miami jumped off to an early (UP!) _ Dan Warner kicked
7 . o lotd when Don Wade In· throe !loki goals for 1nc11ant Sot..
tOf'copltd an Ealey aorlalln tho urday tole 1 d tho Hooalero to
opening minutes of the geme a 1~ win over MlchJaan state
and k e 8 ~ them In tho lblck of
deep In _To _ _territory.
Clevolsnd Dickerson, lho the c....,ll to 11et to the Roee
game's leading ground-fll~
a aen1or end, bewith 100 yards. In 2t carries,
bamtlod over from tho 2 lust coma the llr1t playorlnlndlant
lhroa plays lttOf' and tha Rod· hiatory to kick fiold gaol a
tklns lookod to ba on lholr way taa -Heaconclmllleko
to an upoot.
o!38; 30 and flyardolnthe
BUt Tolodo also converted an oecond, third and fourth quartInterception Into a score. hold ers, reapeeUveb'.
Miami to a field goal and lhltl
lnd....'aiOUehdownCOIIIIClll
want ahead on Ealey's pou to a ~ .(111111 return by lArry
Fair.
HJahbaugh, the BJa Ten lilrlnl

ts14-10 Win,
MAC Cham

Air , ..... 13 Army 6
Loldlh It Colpte 14
Amherll 37 Tuns 6
Mldwell
lodlana 16 Michigan St. 0
IIQton 32 XaYier (Ohio) 14
Notre Dame 47 Navy 0
KlehlllM 35 Wlaeonsln 7
KMl !lL 35 Loulsvltle 6
North Teus 31 CJncimati 30
W- St. 33 Chleaao Circle 0
Nebraska 20 Colorado 7
Pub' 17 st. Proc:oplue 6
'· W~ t5 llleknoll 6
Eutoro Mlchlpn 56 Narthtast11'11 o
Y«mptown 20SouthoellerDLa,
7
CldD ace 35 Nortbweltern •
''. lfarllllaU 21 Bowling Gre.. It
Mimaeaota 35 bra 8
l'llrmo 48 Dllnoll 22
,, ~ 81 28 Ken
118 25
1. E¥ rille ltlluU 9
,
au•
South er
:. ClemiOII-10 Maryland 0
, Vfqlala Tech tB Wllllam "

!11

on a 39-,yard scoring paaa to
prt the Herd shead at haUIIme
ll-6.
The young Marshall elubadcleel another toochdown earb' In
tho foorth quarter followlna rooovery of another Bowling
Green fUmble.
Slioobrldge had 202 yards
passing with slllbt COIIIjlleUone
Ia 16 lrioo. Hurst ltd Marshall
rushera with 71 yardaln 13 car.
ri
os.
ATHENS, Ohio (UPII -&lt;Jhlo
University spotted Western

CINCINNATI (UPI) -A now
$200,000 ICGI'Iboard. fouttd ••
the "best In the country" has

Rally To Down
Boston College

7ards, then hit Jack Repasy

I

'Best In Country'

first touchdowns on a one-yard

sn- In tho lhlrd period to cap
a 60 - yard drive.
BowUng Green went to the
Linebacker Steve Robinson set
atr m the muoily field and euf.
up tho aacond Ohio U. wllh a
fered two cosUy lnlereopU011s poulnterceptlon at tho -tern
and lost live tumbles, Falcon
Michigan 14. Six plays later,
quarterback V e r n Wireman LeVeck scored from the one.
pasaed to &amp;b Zlmjter for a
Chet Nolan's recovery of a
25-yard touchdown on a drive R_.. Lawson fumblogove Ohio
from tho opening kickoff.
u. - i o n of the ball on Its
Junior Unebacker Jeff Slain- 38 yard line. From there, the
bock helped start MarehaU m Bobcats charged 62 yards to
Ita go.aheod touchdown drive
when he recovered a Bowling
Green !Umble on the Herd's 38.
-ridge set up MarshaU'a
next score alter a Bowling
Greer~ fUmble was recoveredon
the Herd's 15. The .L7rtcllurst.
N. J., naUve rolled out for 29

Marauders Score

New Scoreboard

3-3-1. WMU Is 3-5.
Qvarterbeck Steve Skiver, replacing Cleve Bryant who relnjured hlo knae In the aacond
period, scored the Bobcata•

coming games,

and 15 on a poos to Wl'J

firol 011 a 58 yard
march afiorteammateJimSIDInd a Northwest..
wqon
the Ohio state 43. plurwe, The driYO atarted011tho
Mike Hudaon aavo tho Wildern
m
With only 43 Ohio Slate 33and Kem wal re- call frml a ~ With ' 1~

~~=:~~~
tho lila! four ~~~. Wlldcata faUtd to keep : : r : l : l = ~v::.:rs :::..:.~~"::.. llr=~~
Olio, the Buekoyos' 214pound otla from plniJV at leallooe points.
after an earUor drl,.

\

z..·.\
I !no.
Leo ~ .... Ohio 51118
111 ldrwoat kllll:lllq!rn nmhe brakt 1ooot for 33 yardo
onr 1'1&amp;111 taeide In tht tlllrd
periad . and Ron Macl.,...old,
Exactly twomiNteaand- aullbiJV tor Kern In the fGurth (
18Condl laler the l!ueke,yel period, eellabonted on otlo' I
scored ap1n, thla dnie with third toochdown, a12oprd.(Jaoa
Otlo' aocond ,.. yard end 10110 to the Buekaya fullbtck.

on a bod llold gaol attenwt.
Ohio Slate bad to move from
Ita '"'n ae•en yard lint tor Ill
22 ot ~
1001 tor IOCond -.-nand Kern_.
~:"I:"' n ecu.::r the old· ptd otfthe drhe with a 21 yard
~· ~ otto Gralam In Pill to White In tht end .....
Abo,

PRO BASKETBAlL'S premier eealerl, Lew Aleladlr ol
111e Mllwalll&lt;ee Bueb lad Wilt t11amllerlllll ol lloe Llll
Aqele1 Latera look 11 U llley're dolq a mtdena " (Tile Freddie, maybe?l wWie boUIIOiaj baD ehldel liMII.

Michigan Wallops
.

"

Wisconsin, 35· 7
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPIJSopbomore BUJ Taylor Olll)]odad for too.-n run a o1 37 and
51 yards In the llrll quarter
Saturday to start 1 Mi....,..
laadolldo wllteh ended Ia a 35-7
victory OYer WIICOIII!n.
The young bull from Barbllrkin, Ohio, wbo taUied tou.-ns asainat 1\11-a.
1a1t week In his llrll startlog aaslinment, spr8111 lllraulll
a hole ......,.. by right tackle
Dan Dlerdor! and pllopocl untouched for hlollrllaoore, lhtn
aqtn ehar&amp;ad OYer Dlerdorf'a
1po1, broke three tackles and
51 yarc1o to score h 1 1
second too.-n,
Tbe W8athor wao drluiJ _
much the aemo a1 It waa for

Punlue
Bombs
Dlini
CHAMPAIGN, Dl, (UP!) Mike Phipps, tho

~ek

- · · total o~r.... loador
brdla two more Purdue pallIng raeords Saturday ao he
the Bollormakera to a
49.:!2 win .... llllnall.
Phipps had yeoman helpfrmt

"'"r

1a1t year's ..,., Ia wlllch a..
JobnBon aoorad a record 11ft
touehdCMoa. But Taylar&lt;lellaMad • homeeomiDc ......... ot 60,438 by carrying 15 Umu .,...
the new artlflelel piayJn&amp; - Ieee and sa1nb11 1t3 yardo, IGI
of them In lite llrat ~.
before nUrlng at halftime.
The
2.:1 Ia the Ill
Teo and 2..'l overaU ~
to tho Wolvarlnea 3-1 and 14
recorda, scored Wben reaerw
haUback Dan Crooks, a )udar
1rom Peoria, m., aeootad •
yards up tho middle forllte....,
...... of the ....... half.
Mlel!lgion fllllbaek "Ginie
Craw clove orer frml a yard
out with )Ill UDdar live IIIIo.
uteslo play In tht llrat half ad
leu 1ltaD two minutes W..
llai'ry Plar1011 llelded a Jllllll
m bla own 49 and ran 51 yardo
tooeore.
1'l8bt end Jim -do
.....,letad the U.polnt second
quarter wllon be look a 12yard aeorlnlpaaofrmiCJiarlerbaek Dan Moorbood with ....,
29 ........ to play.

BadiW•.

~

t!Dtld.iiowii

·--·---

I '

C''--'·u'ne lr7-.J·'-11

nru
WUCIUt!
MIDDLEPORT Mrs.
Christine A. Waddell, 92,
Mlddleporl. died Friday ot lho
Syracuse Nursing Home.
A member of the Sacred
Heart Church In Pomeroy, she
Is survived by a sister. Mrs.
Veronica Maurer, Columbus,
three step-daughters, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
conduded af 10 a.m . Tuesday at
JI()GQ; SCORES - Domla Jlotlga, lt8 lb. Jmlor taUthe Sacred Heart Church with
back, cracks over the Ironton goal trom 3 yards out for
the Rev . Father Bernard
tho Marauders' fourth and lelJV oo the cake TO In the
Krajcovlc officiating. Rotery
fourth quarter.
services will be at 7:30 p.m.
\_
..._
Monday a1 the Ewing Funeral
Home. Frtends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to .4 and
RIO GRANDE- Rio Grande at stake when Union College
from 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday and
College's golf teem finished Its and Cumberland meet In the
Monday. Burial will be In
tall season In fourth place In the last match of the fall season.
Sacred Heart Cemetery.
Kentucky Intercollegiate Berea finished third, Rio
Athletic Conference after Grande fourth, Oakland City
Griham Local 20 Tecumseh 8
winning one and losing two In a College fifth, Pikeville College
hwnee 49 Northwestern 0
match played at Berea College sixth, and Campbellsville
Versailles 16 Minster 0
October 28. Rio Grande seventh.
Mason 32 Blanchester 0
defeated
Campbellsv I lie
The golf team will be idle until
Ultle Miami 32 Waynesville 8 College 9112 to 21J2, but los1 to It begins practice for the spring
Southeastern 34 Cedarvllle 0 Cumberland College 12-0 and season In early April. The
Mechanicsburg 37 Greenview Berea ll'h to 1J2.
spring schedule opens In mld12
FirstplacelntheKIACwlll be April .
Sidney 42 Lima Catholic 16
Lakota 39 New Miami 20
Gabama 34 Westerville 24
London 40 Bexley 13
Westfall 28 Teays Vallay 24
Cola, DeSales 40 Cola, East 8
',

Rio Golfers Place Fourth

MANLY

R

omp

comlni crowd ot 51,229 watchad tha Dllnl IP) down to lbolr
atntaht lOBI of tho 111SOUTH BEND, Ind. (IJPI) 1011.
Notre Dame'o fooCball . . _
Aa f., Phipps, b e · - two amlhllated Navy satunt.,,
touc~ htmaelf em c1'1111Ch1JV out 5t'7yardal'IIOhbW
l'lllllandlltrow - P i l l - alli1'0111Pirw to a IChool recanl
ea oflltNo and 13 yardo to.... 6r 720 yan~o total Olfenso In a
Alllll)' Ball. Tbe - . ora1- 4Nl ahellacldrw.
ad tht Purdue aae1011 noon1 of
lrllll ccacb Ara Parllllhlan
15 paaaea aac1 tile th&lt;Meil hll , merciful qualltlol
aebool earttrreeordofie,lloth !~ ~ed ,!,~-~~
mark1 wera held '-' 1.-&gt; Daw- ...,. .1 _
.. --.. ·· -·,..
1011, of tht ~ ~ qllllitarbaek Jill ~mam, ·
Chlera.
with four mlilutea to ' JO In tht
ftllilpo hao.., - f o r ; Drat halt Parlfl(llan Ulad_h_lo .
17 toucl....,... 1hll and1. -ond, lhlrl&amp; fGurth and llllh
Sll!lllla ..,..t.
·
, ' team1 exclail-'7 ~ bod. Cif. ·
llllaalo)aliPidloi.·JUieoid · llt~aoddolenaalntheHCOIId ·
In tilt llrot OJiartR 19 IIY.. half.
1Vd nm by hoUbaek Iiob Boas
,., lrlih draiaad e5 Playero
and a ts.,yvd IUD 1lr ~ for tht.uid 59 of O..aot
btok ·T inlllcCan!p:,.,Jl._ IIIIo 1clloa, lncllllllrwiCI&amp;Ihotdaltal!l&lt;lellnei;uobyl'l)liiPI mora hollbaek J111 ~.
and raead - - to the tad .wbo Wlf. 1!111 eWIIIIilttd Gol .tlie
20110.
''
Irloh ,......andwllcihacltobt ·
Bell allo it:clrad. - . o r •14.,utlldto!McfW.Iot58,078
oil Ia 1CIII8..tard _pjq,. '· 1&gt;1 the Plllllc'tiliina• ..._:.
In tht .alii quarler,
er.
·

children, and three gmt •
grandchildren. His wife, Olive.
and an Infant daughter
preceded him in death.
Funeral services will be held
at 10 o.m. Monday at the Ewing
Funeral Home where friends
may call anytime. Officiating
will be the r(ev. Freeland
Norris. Burial will be In the
Letart, W. Va. cemetery.

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

Irish Set
Record In

:=::.=::=:: 47-0

1

Boa•.

O'BRIEN CARRIED OFF - Pat O'Brton'a bllberut frlendo carried hlm otf lite field
of oombtt afior O'Brien had sparked 111e 26-13 ~C~set '-' lhr&lt;Ming two tou.-n punea and
lntorcepiiJV two Ironton pasoeo at bls defensive haU!Joek polll.

AUTO

!

PARTS

•••

•

The Maraudior• woninble
to move, OJ!d unlor tailback
1M• l'lo.!d p8ad to ...
'lrG&amp;., .

., J
.. tOn sz; .
'

.On

••••lllil

~ck Randl' Ed- ··•··"""··• • •·

4oa:.:! ~:
:::...~;""
malnlrw In the llrll quarter.
halted -

J '·

Ticer'•

ftrll

~~ hit ORO· !~c·~M~O
.to -:·&lt;-·. ; ~--.

CARTER AND EVANS, INC,

87 on•• Stnet ·

GREAT SIDE KICK!

NEXT ·
TO OLD

SILYEI
.
·~'

Side buckled for Action. And up front, hand•
sewn seams for greAter flexibility And f'llllged
good looh. Brown L~~:!.:
Sig11a by &amp;fanly

The happiest hours a man spends are when
he's relaxinq, pjaylnq ,&lt;&gt;r workinq at his h!?hblea.
Here is the Pendjetonll jacket that fits beot Into
those off-duty hours. In pure virQin wool. NaiUrolly.

S-M-L-XL. $22.00.

.J

•

�I I

·•.

I; l

-

.

~

tl -

1'M SulldQ

Tmle~ - St·ntin&amp;~l, StuKiny. NtJ\'i.' mber 2, 1989

•
SID Stand rags
; TEAll

~:·::;:;.;;;::::.~;:*:::;:;..::~;»~:~-~

..

,~, ,.&lt;·•···•·•·"~"·•·.&gt;.l'~;._.....

.. ·

·

·

W L T P 01' i~;*W~:!~~~i~#~W.~!~t.~~~,w.::,-

Jacklon .. .. BO

0302 69
•ND!VIDUAI. NET
1'1&gt;11a, East • . 7 2 0 268 ItO
Y.\ RDS RUSHING
· 1fe1p .. .. .. 6 2 I 164 108
(C'.alllpolls)
. .... 83 0214104 PLAYEU
TCB YG AVG.
: Cool Grove ... f f I 172 132 J . North . . • • . . . 6 90 1S.O
: l.opa .. .. • f f I 138 107
Bush . ...• . , . . 2 23 U .S
; Ga1JijJolls .... t 5 0 226 123
P, Neal . • . . . . . 9 103 IU
; l"ortamouull .. . 35 I 96 216 ProBe . . . . . . . . ~ 49 9,8
Alltena •. . ,,, 3 6 0 116 ISO c. Neal . . . . . .. 16 124 7.7
Wollatcn .... 2 7 0 92 286
J . Davis . . . . . . . 3 15 5.0
3 3,0
Nela.York
;N:Y 66 337 Bostic . . . . • . . . I
Burnett . , .• , . . 2 4 2.0
Jottnoon . . . . . . . I 2 2.0
(Final)
TO'J'ALS . • , . . .. 45 413 9.1
[ TEAM
WLTPOP
(Nels-York)
' Jackaon ... .. 1::. 0 0 214 63 PLAYER
TCBYG AVG.
lllolp . ..... 5 1 I 124 66 Kllnebriel , . . . , . 3 l1 3. 6
~ lroaton ... .. 5 2 0 188 86 Weaver . . . ..... 16 47 2. 9
~ .. . .. . 3 3 I 98 72
Sullivan . . . . . . . 3 7 2.3
~ Galllpollo . .. 3 4 0 162 87 Mender . . , . . . • I 2 2,0
, A1hen1 .... . 3 4 o 116 92
Tignor ... . .... 6
1 .1
~ Wellatcn . ... I 6 0 56 256
(Team Loes) . .. •
.zl .27
t Nolo-York • • . o 7 0 54 290 TOTALS . . . . . 29 41 1.4
TOTALS .. 27 27 2 1012 1012
INDIVIDUAL PASSING
;
FRIDAY'S RESULTS:
(Gallipolis)
: GaDlpolls SO Nels-York 6
PLAYER
C.A I YG TD
: Molp 26 lrmton 13
Snowden . . .
2.4 0 14 1
: Lopn 38 Wellston lt
Bush . . . • . . 0.2 0 0 0
I Jac:kooo IS Athens 14
TOTALS . . . • 2-6 0 14 1
: Cheaapeake 14 Coal Grove 12
I PUrlamou1h 6 Washington CH 6 PLAYER (Nels-York)
C.A I YG TD
: Porta. East 48 Wheeleralurg &amp;llllvan . . .. 6..21 0 32 0
: ·- 20
TOTALS . . . 6.21 0 32 0
l NOV, 7 GAMES,
lNDIVIDUAL RECEPTIONS
; 1'1&gt;11a. East at Gallipolis
(Ga!Upolls)
: ctn. WUhrow at Portsmouth PLAYER
C.A YG TD
; Waverly at Jackson
Howard . . . . .
1~ 11
1
: Coal Grove at Meigs
P, Neal . . . . . . 1-1 3 0
I lronloo at Ashland
C. Neal .. . . . . 0.1 0 0
Ft. Frye at Nels.York
Burnett . . .. .. 0-1 0 0
.I Porto. N.D. at Wellstoo
TOTALS , . . . . 2-6 14 1
( Nels-York)
l
0100 IDGH SCHOOL
PLAYER
C.A YG TD
FOOTBALL SCORES
Weaver . .. ... . 5-12 27 0
Tignor . . . . . . .• I..S 5 0
By United Preas -rnatlonal
Wlnlermlle 58 Whoellng(W.
Warren . • . . . . . 0..2 0 0
S. Coffman .. , • . 0.2 0 0
Va.) Cootral 12
TOTALS . . . . .. 6..21 32 0
llllllJ&gt; 20 Adena 6
PASS INTERCEPTION
' Jetrenoo Union 35 stanton Lo.
:
eal 6
RUNBACKS
YorkviUe 36 Mt. Pleaunt 6
(Gallipolis)
Upper Arllngton 28 Marietta 0 PLAYER
PI YG m
l'ortlmouth 6 Washington C, H,
(None)
6 (lie)
TOTALS . . , . . 0 0 0
Purtamouth Ealll 48 Wheelers.
(Nels-York)
PLAYER
burg20
PI YG TD

l

t

'I

·

GAHS-N-Y Statistics

ALL GAllES

·

.·

~~~:

f

t

!

'

~.

I

l

(-o)

TOTALS , . . • 0 0 0
KICKOFF REruRNS
(Galllpollo)
PLAYER
KO YG TD
p, Neal • . . . , , I 21 0
C. Neal . • . . . .
I U 0
TOTALS , , , , . 2 36
0
(Nolo-York)
PLAYER
KO YG TD
Weaver . . . . • . 5 75
0
&amp;IIUvan . . . . . . I 15 0
Mender , . , .. , I
4 0
Blevins . . • • • . 1 1 0
TOTALS . . . . .. 8 95
0
PUNT RETURNS
(GalUpolls)
PLAYER
PR YG TD
E. Sounders , • 1 6 0
P. Neal • . . . . 1 2 0
wu..., , • . • . . I
1 0
J. Davia , . , . , I
1 0
TOTALS , . . . . 4 10 0
(Nola-York)
PLAYER
PR YG TD
Sullivan • • . . . I 13 0
Weaver . • • . .• I
4 0
TOTALS . , . . . 2 17
0
RECOVERED eneiJIY 1\un.
bles: NY - Weaver, returned
55 yards for touchdown; GARS
- Baxter, Bostic, J, Canaday.
PUNTS, GAHS - Bush, 3100 (33,3) ; NY - Kllnebrlel,
2..S7 (28 .5); Lee, 4.!12 (23,0) .
Note - Lee was back In punt
rormaUon when NY lost 27 yards
on bad pass rrom center.
SCORING, GAHS - Bush,
tumble recovery in endzone,
6oll left In llrst (P, Neal,
run); C, Neal, IO..yard ron,
9o40 left in aecood, (run fail);

c. Neal, s.yard run, 0:03 len
In se&lt;ODd (pass fall); Howard,
11-¥ard pass from Snowden, S:45 left In third, (Prose pass to
Wllson); Prose, 34..yard run,
4ol4 left In 1hlrd (C. Neal,
run); J . North, 63.yard nm,
11o50 left In fourth, (pass faiQ.
NY - Weaver, :;svrard re!urn or fumble recovery, OoiO
left in third, (pass fall) ,
TEAM STATISTICS
SCORE BY QUARTERS•
Gallipolis . •• 8 20 16 6 ·- 50
Nels-York , . . 0 0 6 0 - 6
FffiSTDOWNS
Gallipoli.
4 8 4 2 - 18
Nels.York . . . 2 2 2 I 7
YARDS GAINED RUSHING
Gallipolis , . 90136 85107- 418
Nels-York • . 30 21 28 8- 87
YARDS LOST RUSHING
Gallipolis . . 2 3 0 0 5
Nels.York , , 3 32 9 2- 46
NET YARDS RUSHING
GaiUpolls •. 88133 85107- 413
Nels-York . . 27.1119 6- 41
PASSES ATTEMPTED
6
Gslllpoll s • . 0 I 3 2Nels.York . . 3 4 4 10- 21
PASSES COMPLETED
Gallipolis . . 0 I I 0- 2
Nels-York . . l I I 3- 6
PASSES INTERCEPTED
Galllpoli s . . 0 0 0 0- 0
Nels.York . . 0 0 0 0- 0
YARDS GAINED PASSING
Gallipolis , . 0 3 11 0- 14
Nels. York . . 5 11 3 13- 32
TOTAL YARDS(Rush.Pass)
Gallipolis .. 88 136 96 107-427
Nels-York .• 32 o22 19- 73
RETURN YARDAGf:
Gallipolis . . 3 o 42 1- 46
Nel s.York • . 38 28 73 28-167
PLAYS FROM SCRIMMAGE
GalllpoUa . . 10 16 12 13- 51
Nels.York .. 13 12 11 14-50
FUMBLES
Gallipolis . • I 0 I 2- 4
Nels-York .. 1 2 I 0- 4
FUMBLES LOST
Gallipolis . . o 0 1 0- 1
Nola-York •. 0 2 1 0- 3
YARDS LOST PENALTIES
Gallipolis ( 10) 5 20 35 40- 100
Nola -York ( 4) o 24 o 5- 29
(LIN!o."UPS)
(Gallipolis)
ENDS- Elliott, Boward, wn.
son, Cremeans, Woodward,
Hamilton, Cole.
TACKLES - Wood, H e m s.
0

protect
r
credit
let us show ""' how to pey
orr those noglng blllowith lnt loan, tnt payment,
sized to fit your income. It's
1 pleasure to talk over mon.
er problems where you're
always No. 1--never a six~
figure computer number,

SEE US
FOR A DEBT
CONSOLIDATION

~

'!!!!.!!'lluun..

INC. U
WE MAKE :W MORTGAGE REAL ESTATE LOANS
c...., Socood &amp; Court Streot
Soc...~ Avenue
Golllpello
Vondo.,..l, Mgr.
Phone 446-4113

•

•

,"}:

A NEW ALL-ELECTRIC MOBILE HOME MEANS LOW COST MAIN·
TENANCE BOTH INSIDE AND OUT ... MAKES THE "EASY TO
CARE FOR" HOME A REALITY AND OFFERS THE UTMOST IN
COMFORT. STOP IN TODAY AND SEE HOW EASY IT IS TO GET
INTO AN ALL-ELECTRIC HOME.

SEE JOE GILES OR Jll STAATS

FRENCH CITY MOBILE HOME SALES

•

135 PINE ST.

PHONE 446·9340

NELSONVILLE- GalllpoUs the GAllS 23 to the Blue Dev.
ac:orecl In every quartA!r here ll 25.
~lne plays and 75 yards lat.
Frlda,y ntlhl as Coseh Johnny
F.eker'a Blue Devils walloped or It woo 6.jl, Tom Prose
111e NelooovUie-York Buckeyes carried to the one yard Une
50-6.
w1111 6:11 left, fumbled. The
11 was 1he final Southeaot. . ball rolled Into 1he endzone.
em Ohio League game for both Three Bucks wen reacb' to
q,ama. GAHS end A1hens tied pounce on the looae ball for liflll place in 1he 1969 eon. Lonnie Bush came out of noterence raee with Identical 3-4~ where to recover for a GARS
o recorda.
touchcmm. PetAl Neal ran the
The Buckeyes bowed out wl1h extra polnta. II was 8~. PetAl
an 0-7 ..0 mark. It was the last Neal's 34~yard scamper oo the
SEOAL football prno over for DeyUs first ploy from scrim.
Coaeh Dave Boatm'alads. The mage was the drive's lonprrt
Buckeyes will ploy In 1he new. piner .
Iy.formed Trl-Valley Confer.
(Second Period)
once next year, Plnrerful Wa. GalUpolis drove 80 yards in
vorly of the Southern 0 hI o olt!ht ploys to make It 14-4
Conference will replace Nel. with 9:40 left In the second
oonvllle.York In the SEOAL In period. Chllck Neal scored from
1970,
1he 10 after brother Pole oet
Coadl Ecker ployed 35 men It up wl1h a 38.yard scamper.
Friday, Seven wound up In 1he Chuck Neal wss slo!IPed on 1ho
scorers column. The Gallians extra point run.
scored once in the first perBob Baxter reCOYered steve
1od three times In the sec- Tignor•s tumble on the N-Y
twice In 1he 1hlrd, and 21 to sot up the Gallians third
once ln the fourth period.
touchdown. Four plays later.
The Blue Devils rushed for wi1h 6,53 left In 1ho hal~ Pate
413 yards 1n 4:5 attempts - an NeaJ jammed it over from the
average ot 9.1 yards per nine, then added the extra
carry. The Buckeyes were Urn- points to make lt 22JJ.
lted to 41 yards In 29 rushNelson Bostic pounced on a

ond,

ing trips.

high

Gallipolis completed 11ro of
six passes for 14 yards and
one touchdown, giving tho Gal.
Uans 427 total yards. Nelsonville-York connected on six or
21 aerials for 32 yards, giving
the Buckeyes 73 total yar ds
from scrhnmage.
Chuck Neal , senior B I u e
Devil fullback, paced the Blue
Devils wi1h 124 yards In 16
trips. The 190.pound blockbust.
er scored 14 pointl. Chuck' s
younger brother, PetAl, 154 •
pound sophomore tailback, rambled for 109 yards In n I n e
trljio - all In the llrst half
- and scored 10 markers for
the wt.Mers. (Chuck only car~
rled the ball four times In the
seoond half.)
John North, 150..pound .iuntor fullback, had the longest
nm Friday - he dashed 63
yards up the middle w i t h
ll·SO left In the game to make
th~ final score 50-6. North got
90 yards in six trips ,
David Weaver, 150 _ PJUnd
senior taUback, was the big
gun for Nelsonvtlle-York. Weaver picked up John Davis' fum.
ble late in 1he 1hlrd quar.
ter anl' returned it 55 ,Y ards
lor the Bucks only touchdown .
He also caught five passes for
27 yards, returned five GAllS
kickoffs for 75 yards , and returned one Blue Devil punt four
yards. Weaver collected 47

Bucks 32 to aet up 1he GalHan s fourth seore. It t o o k
GAHS five plays to JHIDCh It
over- Chuck Nealdidhlsthlng
wl1h Oo03 left, GAHS led 2U.
Larry Snowden's pass to Bruce
WUson on the PAT play was
knocked down.
(Third Period)
After an exehange of JRlnll,
QB Larry Snowdon hit fellow
sophomore Chick Howard wi1h
a 11-yard strike to make it
34~ wl1h 5;45 left In the third,
Prose passed to Wilson for the
twin.pointer.
WI1h 4:14 lef~ GAHS took
over on the Bucks 49. Lomie
Bush picked up 15. Tom Prose,
wl1h two key blocks by Bush
and Chuck Neal, scampered 34
yards. That made It 42..0. Chuck
Neal ran the extra points, 440.
After John North picked up
five to the N.Y 47, following
Jeff Canaday's fumble recovery, sophomore John Davis
picked up two, fumbled. Wea..
ver carne by , scooped it up,
and was long gone. That made
It 44~ with o,to left in 1he
period,
(Fourth ~r)
Chuck Neal returned
Mitchell's ensuing kickoff from
his own 22 to 1he GAHS 37,
ending the third period.
On the first play in t h e
fourth canto, North took a hand-

yards
rushing attemptrs
to leadinthe16 Buckeyes
in that off•• •
department.
Here's how It happened Friday ,
(Fir st Period)
Gallipolis held 1he Buckeyes
on downs. Pete Neal returned
Fred K.Unebriel's punt from

Cleland, G. Davis, Romaine,
Tope .
CENTERS- Sanders, Lewis,
A, Wedemeyer.
BACKS - &amp;lowden, B u s h,
Bostic, P. Neal, Burnett, E.
Saunders,
North,
C. Neal
Prose, J, Canaday, Johnson, L.
Wedemeyer , Day.
(Nels.York)
ENDS - Warren, S. Coff~
man, McClelland.
TACKLES - Hickman, Verba, Matheny, G. Rosser.
GUARDS- T. Rosser, Mit.
chell.
CENTERS - Blevins, Kel1h.
BACKS - Mender, Sullivan,
Tignor, Weaver, Lee, Klfneworth, M. Davis, Halley, Mil- briel .
NEXT GAHS GAME - Nov.
ler, Lease.
7,
Portsmouth East, home.
GUARDS - lluobolt, Baxter,

MOVE UP TO CAREFREE ALLELECTRIC LIVING IN A•••••
NEW KIT MANOR HOMEI

-

Devils Win, Tie MIS For Fifth.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

pass from center on the

strall!hl up . . IIi'* - 63
yards111111
11:50 left . . . . .. ~llolllc's pu8 •

to-. .....

ward

oo

Ill....._
a. ,_ -- ••

The remainder o1. the game
was marred by penalde.s, tumbiers and incomplete passes,
wl1h nel1her tsam 1hreatA!ning.
· Gallipolis Is 4..S.jl on the ,

TOP CARS FOR THE PARTICULAR BUYER

Station waaon. Standard 4 speed
trans., radio, whitewall tires,
20,000 miles, one owner, nice
family car.

'66 CHEVROLET
Caprice 4 Door Hardtop, automatic trans., PB, PS, radio,
vinyl lop, factory air conditio•
ed whitewall tires, one owner,
clean.
·'

.

SALE PRICE ...$1795 SALE PRICE . . $1895

'65 FORD

'67 OPEL

Fairlane '500' 4 Door, stand·
ard 3 speed trans., 6 cyl.,
radio, 31,000 miles: clean.

2 Dr. Kadette. Standard 4 speed
trans., radio, whitewall tires,

SALE

SALE

actualll,OOO miles, one owner

Friday's High

Sehool Seores

-6

Alhllbulo 26 Conneaut 0
-lkJ 35 Lorain Admiral

Klns6
Elyria U Fremont 0
Marion 21 Lorain 14
Cleve. 5I. Joseph 14 Younge.
town Urlllilne 12
~old South 44 Lima Sen.

'61 BUICK

LeSabre 4 Dr. Automatic, PS,

Electra '225' 2 Door Hardtop,

PB, radio, whitewall tires,

automatic, PS, PB, radio, whitewall tires, owned by local
Doctor, showroom clean.

one owner, car like new.

SALE PRICE-+$1795

~f~ro;m~~Sn;;;;;;owde;n~,. ; r ; a c o d ; . ; : : : : : : : : ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; . l l l l• • • • • • • • •llilllli••i.

The ove- evy,1970

Toledo Boltsher 39 Lima Shaw.

-a

Celina 18 Coldwater 12
Von Wert 28 Wopakooeta 0
Z1110avlllo 35 LaneaatA!r 6
lfiJeviUo 48 RoaovWe 0
Sheridan 23 CreokmUe 10
Philo 68 Morpn 28
Folrlleld Union 48 C&amp;rroll 6
Mllieroport 26 Berne Union 14
Amondo Clearcreek 40 Picker.
lngton 0
llonlfield Senior 20 Flndloy 14

._...,

..........-

'

..

' .

-...... . , . ...•.

.__

son Wins 13th Loop
Title, Trips AHS 15-14
A'rli!NS _ C&lt;Nich Ben Buck.
_. .Jackson 1ronmen are 1ho
1169 SEOAL foolballchamplons
as 1hey completell 1he seven •
prne loop achedule F r 1 day
nllhl edglnj!AIIIonll5.14for1he
league tJUe.
Jrarlcally, the championship
by Jacksm wss clinched on the
gridiron ol1he two .time defend.
inti champions of Athens,
Coach Illckles, In hla seeond

1he aeven.game laop sche&lt;llle
without a defeat and u!ll&gt;ed 111e
oeason record to 9~ as 1hey
prepare to face unheaton wa.
vercy Friday nlst&gt;t In the final
contest ol1he season.
It was not an easy victory for
Jackson 88 they were forced
to come from behind twice to
earn the cham]ionshlp win
The Bulldogs grabbed the!~
In 1he flrlll period following a

' • Junior
•
,.
Meigs

Followine a Jackson Plllt the
Bulldoss 111m shoved of! on a
46 yard drive In 10 ploys wl1h
Rutler apln pttlng 1he toueh.
down on alive yard blast.~IA!rback John Abdella ran 1he
two ~ point cmversion to give
Athens the lead at 14. 7 with
5o02 left in 1he third quarter.
The lldldoga OllODed 1he fl.
nat quarter of ploy PIJitlng Into
a stiff brseze end the pont

up all their tlme4111, and 1ho
contA!at ended will! the ball on
the Bulldos t6 yard stripe.
Jackson held 1he odie~
statistics as tho Ironmen
up 15 flrot clowus, 189 7ard1
rushlng, and completed two r:l
seven passes for 30 yards.
Athens showediOIIrllldowns,
139 yards on 1he ground, and
hit only me of 14 passes for
13 yards.

·-

~--' .'

22

~

1,. dlamplonshlp roslol 1ft .....1.,. llltlo ' "' •••
Jaekoon.
'·
ill oil - · "". M .• ...
11ae 1ronmen mual now ~ SE0.4-L, 1W ' . . PllilfaiW,
pare to f&amp;C"e" Waverly't ...,....._
Thooeonby~r

.t ...

en team Friday llllht lfld1e
Athena clooed out the INI

f00 . -11

1967

. . . _ ........ .

~~The~~t1~tlte~i~o~111Je~fli~rot~~~or~Ja~cl!..[!:l6:~-16;·-~·:-:at:•:•:•:•=:•·==G.=ft=lpel;:••::::::~~

men at
guided
his team
throu.01.
80I1Jllllt
which
Ule ball
In business.·
on the son since 1961
year
111e helm
of the
Iron. bad
pass In
from
center
on asalled
Jack. Jackson
traveled up
only
yards , setting

High Scores
Second Win

over .,.e ·p unter· 8 head and was
recovered by A1hens on 1he'
Jackson 16 yard line.
Four playa IatA!r Dick Rut..
IA!r boomed Into the end •one
from floe five yard line to pot
Athens on top 6~ w1111 6:34
!ell In the flrot period. A eon.
version run faUed.
The Jronmen took the ensulng kickoff and marched 79
yard s In 11 plays, cawed by
Darwin Valentine's 19 ~ yard
scamper for thetoochdown. Dan
Murphy kicked 1he extra point
to put Jackrson on top 7-6 with
0:5t left In the Clrst period.
This score stood throughout
1he second period and well Into
the third quarter as neither
team was able to manage a
successful threat.

and marks the
Athens 47 yard line·
13Ut lime In 44 years the grid.
Nine ployslalorMurphybang.
ed into the end zone from the
l1ro yard line to make the score
14-13.
Coadl Burkles elected to go
for the l1ro point conversion and
victory Instead of a kicl&lt; and
Darwin Valentine rewarded his
judgement by blasting in for the
aU important 11ro pointer that
put the lroomen on top 15-14
with 8:00 showing on t,he clock.
Athens took the kickoff and
moved to 1he Ironmen 20 yard
line, but a fourth down pass
was batted down by Dan Mur.
phy and Jaekson tot::fi over the
pigskin with 3:49 left In floe

00

eontest.
The lronmen then stayed on
the ground, making AllieD&amp; use

L__SP
_E_C_IA_L_j

65 Pontiac Catalina
4 Dr. Stat1on Wogon, radio and heater, out . trons.,
P. st e ering, P. brakes, foe . air cond., w/ s/ w tires,
original turquoi s e finish with matc hing interior,
one owner in ex c ellent cond .

$1295

1530
EASTERN
AVENUE

WOOD MOTOR SALES
EAST ERN AVE.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

look at any QAT8U . . ~0· 1~19 ·1
., &amp;discover all the extras
you get at no extra
•

New Car Trade Ins-On The
Overall length 160.2 inches.
Width 61.4 inches. Height
55.1 inches. Wheelbase 95.3
inches. Weight - Four Speed
Transmisston 2017 lbs Auto malic Transmiss•an 2041 lbs
ENGINE Overhead Cam.
Horsepower 96@ 5600 R.P _M_
Displacement 1595 cc . 4
cyli.nders. Compression ratio
8.5 to 1. Bore &amp; Stroke 3.3"
11. 2.9". Alu.minum Cylinder
Head .
TRANSMISSION : All synchromesh 4-speed. Gear rat:o :
1st 3 38, 2nd 2.01. 3rd 1.31.
4th 1.00, Reverse 3.36.
FULL ·RANGE AUTOMATIC
TRAN SMISSION: 3-speed,
Borg·Warner type (optional at
extra cost).

DIMENSIONS .
Overall length 160.2 •nches .
Width 61.4 inches . Height
55.1 inches. Wheelbase 95.3
mches. Weight - Four Speed
Transmission 2039 lbs.
ENGINE Overhead Cam.
Horsepower 96 @ 5600 R.P M.
Displacementl595 cc . 4
cylinders _Compression ratio
8.5 to 1. Bare &amp; Stroke 3.3"
x 2.9". Aluminum Cylinder
Head _
TRANSMISSION All synchro~
mesh 4-speed. Gear ratio
1st 3 . 3~ . 2nd 2 01. 3rd 1.31 ,
4th 1.00. Reverse 3.36 .

Friday's
Results

Same overall length,
wheelbase. width , and height

Madeira 18 Mariemont 8
Dublin 28 Clermont Northeast..
ern 24
MI. Gilead 38 Cardington 0
Jackson IS A1hens 14
Trl Valley 14 West Musktngum
8
Paint Valley 46 Logan Elm 6
Springfield Shawnee 49
Clark Northwestern 0
Cola; Central 22 Cols. North
10
Cola, Northland 14 Cola. Lin.
den 6
Cola, Mohawk 38 Cola. Walnut
Rldp18
PleaiiBill VIew 14 Reynoldsburg
6
Mt. Vernon 16 Worthinllon 6
Grove City 22 MUllin 6
Hllllard 29 Groveport 13
Newark 30 Chlllieothe 20
New Albany 34 East Knox 30
Cola. llarUey 26 Cola, Brook.
haven 0
Cola, Ready 12 Cola. Weal 6
Cola, WIIIIA!raon 24 Cola. Eaot.
moor 14

...

. .

POMEROY - The Melgs Ma~
rsudor Junior IDsf&gt; completed
Its aeaaon Thursday night by
beating the WahamaJ~mior High
12.11. The win raised the Baby
Marauders record to 2.4. 1.
Earlier 1n the season, the
Wahama Juniors took Melgs28.
8•
Scoring touchdowns for 1he
baby Marauder s were J, D.
Story on a five yard run and
Floyd lllmey on a 49 yard pass
from CJ.Iarterback Jay Warner.
Clearfork 13 Crestline 8
SCORE BY QUARTERS
Canton MeKlnlsy 60 Columbus
Wahama . . . . 0 0 0 0 0
Soutll 0
Meigs
.
.
.
.
.
0606-12
Berherton 35 Lincoln 6
Meoslllon 38 Colo, Marton
Franklin 8
Dover 32 Canton Timken 0
West Milton 15 Nortbmont 10
Canton South 15 Jackson 12 Tlpp City 40 Northridge 0
North Canton Hoover 36 Fair. Vandalia Butler 22 Oakwood 0
leas o
Well Carrollton 19 Trotwood
oakwood 19 Merllngton 14
Madison 0
Delaware 6 WhltA!hall 6 (tie) Wooster 26 Coshocton 12
Dayton Col . White 34 Dayton River View 13 Meadowbrook 6
Kaiser 0
Rldl!OWood 26 Indian Va lley
Dayton Roosevelt 26 Dayton
Sou1h 6
Newcomerstown 19 Caldwell 6
Dunbar 14
Beavercreek 30 CentervUle 6 Beallsville 36 Blshop,Jlonahue
(W.Va.) 0
Fairborn
Troy 20
Me1111olia (W, Va.) 20 Blair 0
Fairmont East 6
Woyne
Fairmont West 26 Dayton Sleb. New Mertlnsvllle 21 St. Joltns
(W.Va.) 0
bins 0
Xenia 24 Sprlnl!field North 12 Lemon Monroe 20 Lebanon 13
NortheastA!rn 16 Covington 14
Brookville 25 Eaton 6

22 22

.

Noo..._ I, 1•

LOGAN- With Chuck Lowe convenlon on a run to make •
ocorlng throo touchdown• the 16-0 at the holt.
Logan Chlollalna cl-out the
Lowe rac:ed 63 yords to ...,.
lf6t grid campaign Friday midWay In tho third quarter te
night with an Hly 31-1.4 victory Up the margin to 20-0.
over tho Wellaton Golden
On the lost play ot the third
Rockets.
period Wellston's Dennis
Tho vl&lt;lory lltlbled Logon to liftdley got I - lore 33·yard
grab fourth place In the final touchdown run end then added
leegue atlndlnga with o :1-:1-1 tho two point eon\'el'llon.
mark while Wtllaton flnlshlc:l
Roger Saltsman's 45 ·yard
lOop competition with a 1~ touchdown run with five
record.
mlnutH left In the contest cut
Mark Shaw opened the · ·t he score to 28-14, following 1
ocorlng wlth o four yard touch· lhrse·yard TD. bill! by Logan'•
'down run In the lim period with Rick Krebs lual one minute
Rick Krobo getting the fwo. earlier.
point conversion at the 7:04
Lowe wrapped up the victory
mark.
for Coach Did&lt; Mikos with a
In the MaJnd period Lowe """"" yard scoring run with
IC:Ored on a four·ylrd run with 3:22 left In the game, and then
Dana - Beougher adding · the added the two POint conversion .
Logan led In flrsi downs 17-9
tnd out gained Wellston on the
ground 327 fo 153. In palling the
Chlettalnt hit on their only
attempt for 2.4 yardl while
Cola. Wellrle 19 Cola. Whet.. Wellstonwaslhrooof nine for 14
llone 6
yards.
Franklin llelabla 46 ClrclevDie
Lowe tarried 17 times for 138
0
yards to pace bolh ' - s while
llomllton Twp, 33 Miami Trace Headley lopped the Wellston
8
attack with 18 yards In 19 trips.
Woot Jetrerson 18 Urbana 14
Tho score by quarterso
0 0 8 6-14
Newport (Ky.) Coth. 26 Cin. Me. Wellston
Nicholao 0
Logon
8 8 6 16-38
ClOYe. Holy Name 35 Clove.
Llneoln 12
Mt. Gilead 38 Cardington 6
South Euclid Bruah 23 LaJ&lt;e. Gallon 7 Bellevue 6

tor 7

'66 BUICK

Kondoy,

Logan Wallops
Wellston 38-14

'

powerful POrtsmouth Elil.t (7 ..
2.6) to finish the seaaoiL ytlth
a .500 mark. Nelsonvll~e~York
Is 0.9.jl , Friday, the Bucko
wlll ploy Fort Fry at r;el...,.

YOU CAN RIDE IN STYLE
FOR ALONG WHILE WHEN
YOU BUY A BUICK!
.SEE THE NEW
1970 BUICK NOWI

'68 OPEL

11 - Thl llunilo)' TI!Mo • -.ne~,

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

I

as the 2000. weight 1984 lbs.
DIMENSIONS '
Overall length 155.7 inches.
Wheelbase 89.8 inches.
Width 58.9 inches. Height
51.6 Inches. Weight 2006 lbs.
ENGINE ' Overhead Cam. 4
cylinders. Dlaplacament1982
cc:. Bore 3.433". Stroke
3.28T. Compression 9.5 to 1.
Horoepower 135@ 6000R.P.M .
TRANSMISSION ' 5-apeed,
synchromesh.
DIFFERENTIAL: Hypold semi·
floatino axle. Ratio 3.700
standard.
STEERING ' Cam &amp;lever t•.&amp;·t
ratio. Turn circle 32ft
BRAKES:' Front Disc 11 .18
inches diameter. Rear...-.1-lin
drum 91nches leading &amp;
trailing lhoel.

ENGINE OHV in· line 4
cylinder . Displacement 1600
cc. Bore 3:433 ... Stroke 2.630".
Compression 9.0 to 1.
Horsepower 96@ 6000 R.P .M.
TRANSMISSION · 4 torward
gears. ~ reverse. All synchro·
mesh lloor mounted.
DIEFERENTIAl ' Hypoid semi-floating a•le.
Ratio 3 .889 :1
STEERING and BRAKES
same as the 2000.

Extras like a radio and tachometer in our sports cars,
whitewalls on all models, super efficient overhead
cam engines, disc brakes, full vinyl upholstery, deluxe
wheel covers, locking gas caps. undercoating and
many more. All included in our list price. Compare
the Datsun line to any other line. You won't find any·
thing like it. With Datsun. you'll discover you get
more Iuxury ... more extras, much more car for your
money! That's why we say, in 1970 .. .
Drive a Datsun. then decide.

DIMENSIONS
Length 170.3 inches. Height
60.8 inches. Width 62.0
inr.hes. Wheelbase 99.6
inches . Weight 2127 lbs.
ENGINE : Overhead Cam.
Horsepower 96@ 5600 A. P.M.
Displacement 1595 cc
4 Cylinders. Compression
8.5 to 1. Bore &amp; Stroke 3.3"
ratio x 2.9". Aluminum Cylinder
Head.
TRANSMISSION : Floor
mounted . 4 speeds forward ,
all-synchromesh_Gear
ratios : tst 3.657 . 2nd 2.177,
3rd 1.419, 4th 1.000, Reverse
3.638.

REAR AXLE : Hypoid bevel.
Semi· floating. Ratio 4.375.
BRAKES: Unlservo front.
Duo servo rear.

DIMENSIONS '
Overall Length 163.2 inches.
Width 61 .4 inches. Height
56.5 inches.Wheelbase 95.3
inches. Weight- Four Speed
Transmission 2083 lbs. Automatic Transmisslon 2138 lbt.
ENGINE : Overhead Cam.
Horsepower 96@ 5600 R.P.M.
Displacement 1595 cc
4 Cyllndert. Compression
8.5 to t. Bore &amp; Stroke U"
ratto x 2.9". Aluminum Cytinder
Head.
TRANSMISSION : All synchromesh 4-IPHd. Gear ratio :
tsl 3.38. 2nd 2.01 , 3rd 1.31 ,
4th 1.00. ReverM 3.38.
FULL·RANGE AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSION ' ~opood
Bora·warner type.
(optional at eldnl c::ott).

*Piull ~•• license, local frel,trt, O&amp;H (except Hawaii).
Prices and specificat ions tubJect to c:htnp withOUt notice.

THE SOUND MOVE

.

�'--:. - ~

-~

',._
·:.

'
·'

..

·• '

BY RICK HAND~EY
P'T. P~EASANT- The Point
P I - I Big Blacks oro un·
ololeolad ond unllod In regular
INIOII ploy for tho llrtl limo In

•

- ..:~ ,. ~-· : ~

£.a..

REGULAR SIZE

4

J

EK050

How -

'·

1~
---·-

PORTABLE VAC

.SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY • •

lo fills quaollon, Coach Wort

NOV. 2 AND3.
ONLY
I

though I'm 100kld."
Tho ployoro corrlod Coach
Ware off tho field end Into the
dressing room where practically ovoryono gollhorougllly

WHILE QUANTniiS LAST

Nld, "It fHfs

- y of lhe fans went lo tho
drHIIng rooms to watch the

•••••••

3

GILLinl

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7'1

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47c Each

100 OniF Per Store

NOUSIWA/11/JIPT.

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tir• I Ill "
colo&lt;o, a,.,,.,_ ~hot&lt;. G&lt;w.o.
Gold on4 lod.

$199

19'" ..roiQht

lvM, li•od pORII of
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letaH Valuo $7.00

IIO.SIWAIIIIJIPT.

RIJTII/IIf

leta II Value $4.00

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LAMPS
Wood groin vinyl covered base
in colors of White, Pumpkin and

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Boys' medium weight, crew
neck sweat shirts in Medium
Blue, Red and light Blue.
Sizes S, M, L.

Extra plump bed pillow
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BED PILLOWS

Avocado. 18" Toll.

66C

t.g.

liT AIL VALUE
32c Pkg.

SHREDDED FOAM

SHEER STRIPS

59-C

!a!alue
$1.91

leta I
Value

Retail Value $3.49

91c

IINSIWAII 11/11.

COLEMAN

ttaunt-r.

VITALIS

200A

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Instant light , .. stormproof . . . no
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RETAIL
VALUE
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IITAIL VALUE $1 .89

S/'NT$11'1.

BAN

70Z.

Wllbamo, tnllirw by a 111-G
end of the ftrat

morgln at the

Quarter,

sot

Ita

w~

lallJ

with one minute ani 49 seconds
remainiJW In the nme when
Gory Clark, a hlrd-ooaecllto.
lb. oenlcr pluqred over !rom
the one yard
to C8jl • 70
;yard, White Falcon drive.
The Mason Countlans begon
the nme - wlnnlllg 'I1J march
from their own 30 alter Mike
Burna, a senior tackle 1 recovered a WUdcat fwnblo with
three minutes left to Pia¥.
A key plaJ In tho ens....
march to .......
.. · .. ,"'
paaa from~~ ·
'
back Timmy IIOward,alSyoorold junior, to ~rk. .
Clark wasiiDallyhauloddown
It
the II by tho Wildcats ot
\
C01ch Blaine WUkeraon lUll
Wahama went the nat o1 the
\ route oo the ground.
The Wllbamo poasiJW attack,
In reality, 1fas the key to Ita
come - fran • behllll victory.
HOI!ard toaaeclaerlalofarthe
\ Falc..,,.• ftrat l1ro six-pointers
recordod 1 total ol 250
\ya,rds jiOssiJw Ia&lt; the evening
hilling oo 16 of 28 at-

nne

j Bili!Pia.

DEODORANT

sac

On llllrd down from tho 11,
Ravenswood's Ed Conners
punted to fhe 37 or fhe Dovlls.
Five playa later, Mike Stearns
sprinted over from the 20 yard
line and the Blacks were out In
front 6-0 with ::W rema!nlng In Randy Williamson rushed
the half. The conversion at- Conners hard and he defleded
fempf fall ad and the Blacks had the punt. The other defensive
a 6-0 lead going Into fhe dresalng end, Ed McDermiH, COUllhl the
rooms.
ball in mld·alr and ran 24 yards
During halftime ceremonies, to pay dirt. The run for the two
the Point Plaosenl High School ·bonus points failed and with
Marching Band, under the 8: 13 remaining In the third
direction of Michael Rowsey, quarter, Coach Dick Ware and
recognized their nine senior his boys were out In front, 12-0.
members. These were: Sue The Knights' kick-off went to
Casto, Joyce Putney, James the 22-yard line and three plays
Cash, Elizabeth Llevlng, Susan later, they were again forced to
Wise, Angle Roger, Gary punt. Conners' kick went to the
Monroe, Roy Elliot and Steve 47 of the Knights. On third down
Richmond.
and one from the .44 of the Red
Point Pleasant kicked off to Devils, Mike Stearns scored on
open the second half and the a fancy .u yard gaUop. Mike

son carried over the extra
polnta oo a run.
Aa Pia¥ ..ntnued, the hosts
bagon uslrlg their oltenaiV11
passlrlg attack with a.-horil)'
ani the result was o touchdown
midwa,y tllrou!!l1 the periOd.
A 12 yard PllSI from Howard
to JuniiB'Ilalliy Smith concluded
the Rrll Wllbamo drive to jJOJ•
dirt that covered a total or 70
yardo.
H010ard also kicked the eldra
point to cut the WUdcat laid to
1&amp;-7.
The next Wllbamo lallJ was
recorded by Clork, hia lint of
two lor the night, oo a 61 yard
paaa lllaJ rrun H010ard early
in the third quarter, HIMard'a
extra point kick attempt waa
blocked.
Tho touchdowns on pasfrom iloword oet the llaga .....
Falcon•a game ... winnlqj: six •
pointer late in tho contest. n.,._
ani than passed to Larry Cle-..
anger lor tho extra points atter lA'tfk~

CINCINNATI (UPI!- The re-

-

Key -NF[: Contest Today

250 for the Wlldcata. G Volley's chief rusher waa Fullback Jolmson who picked "' n
yard a In 12 carr leo. Senior Doroel Adkins led Wahamo with' 18
yards In live carries.
The loss dJ'OII1)ed the Wildcats ncord to 4-4 on the seaoon.
Falcon oenlors who were
playing in dlelr final hI 1 h
aciiiOI foolllall game w e r e
Clark, Dlckle Drd, Mike Burns
oni Mike Mlller, steve Hal·
stead, sldellned b,y a log illlury

the Uoo.
By Q•rters:
GL011D Volley marched JC1 G1111ln Volley ••• 16 0 0 0-16
gelling the breaks as U • Wahama • . •••• o 7 6 8- 21
at1ll alter obout three miJ&gt;o
of the ftrat period bad Ado

phqad over from tho I
tho opanlng '11J, Jlm llaw·
then hlt Allen Adkins with
~:jiO:s~o for the extra points at1ll
(
Valley came back 'Pleadlrlg 11-G.

liter,

IIRTHOAY OOWN UNOER
SYDNEY, Australia (UPIJTllouoandl threw confetti and
choorad fhe U.S. Apollo 11
astronauts today In 1 .-racte

despite lila thunder, lightning

the WUd.catJ and

rain

of

a

springtime

CLEVELAND (UPI! -The

PROUD - COach Dlck Ware had all the reason in the world to be proud Friday night as
his Big Blacki c0111Pleted an umeaten season with 10 straight football wins. He smlles with
pride here In the closing minutes whUe slanilrw with Quarterback Dwaine Greer (13) ani Ed
McDermitt (3!),

Cleveland St. Joe Cops Crown
COLUMBUS (UPIJ - Clove- Niles McKinley was third with he won his second straight ' AA'
lend 51. J - h High School. 192, followed by Stow 221, Day. championship. Steve Benson,
spearheaded by Jim Stanley, ton Northmont 222, Worthington Berea Midpark, was rur.nerup
Saturday won Its third straight
state Clan AA cross country

championship.
Stanley, who finished fifth In
9:53, lad tile live • man 51.
Joseph team which complied
no points. St. Joseph runners
also placed ninth, 21st, 23rd and
52nd over the wet and soggy

237, Berea 245, Cleveland
Heights 268 and Upper Arllng.
ton 245.
i
Les Nagy was timed In 9: 34.7
over the hilly, two. mile course
tor the fastest time In team
competition.
Georgetown captured the
Class A title with 127 points.
Defending champion Lakeview,
which won In 1967 and 1968, did

SHELL BELT

EXTRA STRENGTH PAIN RELIIVIR

Woven web shell belts made from sturdy webbing
with 24 elastic loops for shotgun shells. Adjustable
to fit most waist sizes.

60's

poasesaloo or the pipkin cloudburst.
tpln by Intercepting a
A crowd greeted aolronaul
....wu'CI aerial, and they once Michael Collins wllh hiPPY
bepn driving towardpo,y- birthday placlrda tl Colllno. Ohio Stale University golf
Edwin E. "Buzz" Aldrin and courae.
This drive woo cllmoxed bfa Noll A. ArmafrOII(I orrlvld
Clnclnnoll Elder, last year's nof qualify lor lhe slate finals. Mesner of Springfield, 10:33.
o.ne yard nm by llalllack .IIJ Frldly nfllht. II wos Collins' runnorup, ond Toledo DeVIl btu Kent Sfate High School was A crowd at 3,000 lined the
Hoke and Fullillack Gar)'
flod lor oeconcl wllll 175 polnll. second with 168 points. followed course despite the Inclement
blrthd.iy.

J"""'

RITAIL VALUE
$1.91

RnAIL YALUI$1.69

8Ft. Copper
Booster Cable

ON

. MICRIN

SALE

MOUTHWASH

NOV. 1

NOV.
15
•.
.
EX!P-4 STRENGTH PAIN R£li{V{I/

'

' ' '" . .. •1· •" -"

&gt;•''.

70PIRSTOII

RnAILVALUI
$2.79

IITAILVALUE $1.0'

IIA8WAIII-T.

ONLYII

camp

lobe

'' 10• .,. t... lnt for •
, t-liwilltle aHer. Uf AT •• •

finished 11111 In
10:41 to pace Geo&lt;gelown.
Crestline' a Bruce Melton led the
w•y al10: 1U.
In Individual compallllon. Bill

'

'

h

• , ' .".
I

.·,

•.'

J··

' ··I,

·J;

'

'

... en of llftoan tor 70 yardl.

"""""'"

STATISTICS
BB
F lrst downs
10
Yds rush .
2A6
Passes Attp.
Passes Comp.

R
6

"

6
0

15

7

2
0
246

lnfercpfd by

0

Yds pass .
70
Vds from scrim.
1.
Fumbles
1
Fumbies lost
1
1
Punts Avg.
+29
..22
Penalties
18
21
011 . Ploys
47
46
Score by quarters:
Pf. Pleasant
0 6 12 6-24
Ravenswood
0 0 0 o- D
Scoring:
Pt.
Pleasant :
Stearns, 2 (20 yd run, -" yd
run); McDermitt (24 yd run

'"'

with blocked punt) ; Cloyton (I
yd run) .

a little tougher. . and I think
this is a great credit to them ."
Dallas was averaging 30
points a game to 27 1-2 for
Cleveland. The Cowboys led the
league in 12 departments. Cleveland boasted the league's lead·
ing pass intercepter In safety
Mike Howell.

(20) .

Oakland will puf Its 6-0-1
record on the I lne with Fred
Biletnlkoff and Warren Wells at
the wide receiver spots and

Roger Hagbe.-g possibly subbing for fhe lnlurad Billy
Cannon at flg~t end. Pete
Banaszak and Charlie Smith
will open at running beck.
Cincinnati, which won Its first
three games and hat lost four
in a row, hopes Wyche can
break into the Oakland MCOftdery with wide receivers Speedy
Thomas and Eric Crabtree and
light end Bob Trumpy. Paul
Robinson and Jess Phillips will
head the ground game.
Greg Cook, who gave way to
Wyche after being Injured in
the Gengals' second game, may
be ready to go Sunday. The
rookie from the University of
Clncinnali led AF L passing
statistics briefly before hurting
his arm .
Cincinnati, reflecting the discipline of head coach . ~ul
Brown, has bWo 'the' 1
least penalized club so fir With
just 24 Infractions tor 22-i
vards. The unbeaten Raiders
have had to overcome a league
high in penalties with 53 tor 682
yards.
The Bengals are averaging
276 yards gained per game
while Oakland Is averaging 355.
A sellout crowd Is expected at
Nippert Stadium.

,.

SAVEl

ARMSTRONG

PRIME SIDING
12"x16'

$199

Super Hush(r) Model 8000. * One ef
the two be1t dlspo•en mode. The
only one bett.r is o...- lmpM'Iol
Hu1h.
FEATURES
• E11cluslve
~tented Hush Cu1hlon Mount, •
Thick Silicon Sound Sponge • Hord•
ene4 turblne-q_uolltr stoinleu ,,.. ,
swivel lmpellll'l onchorwd to o
dynomlcolly
t.olonced
turntot.l1
• Surglcol StMI undercutte~ blade
·cuta fibres short • llf.timo Gri"d

Clan M ond Clan A lilies.
...._tlvely.
~tv was tim~ In 9: ot5.2 as

ABA STANDINGS
By Uulted Press lnternotloral

Eut
W. L. Pet. GB
lnHana •••••. 5 1 .833
Kentucio' .. • .. 5 I •833

Dtlla•

0

0

0 0 0

I

2
2
4
5

.667 1
.667 I
.333 3
.286 3'h

L. Pet. GB
7 3 .700 ,

1.01 Aaploo • ; 5 f · ,5$$ l 1h

...3 5 ,37$3

.AfJ.'s

BUY
NOW

Beaty of LMcaster and Lakeview's Scott Snow captured the

• ,250 4
7 ... 125 6 li .

'

complollons. Rod lloYII - ·
ferback Glenn Smlfll _,e.fod

M.I.F.

Add beauty and value
to your lwme.

~lndsol

Clrollno •••• ,4
Plttsburl!h , , .. 4
New York. ....2
Miami .... .,,2
West
"'
W.

HOMI, 401ft !filii ihia '""'

l;'

'lll'me," he added.

by Ashland Crestview 213, Klrt- weathtf".
land 226, Berkshire 233. Grand
Valley 236, Heeth 251, Arcanum
267, River Valley 293 and Bethel

·THIU

77(

at 9:516, Canton Lehman ' s Steve
Gilmore was third In 9:58, Rick
Schwlttk.er of Perrysburg fourth
(10:00) and John Gulledge, N,e.
dina, fifth 110:00.5).
Snow led the way In Class A
at 10:03.8. Jerry Wenger, Logan
Hills, was runnerup at JO: 13,
followed by John Murtaugh of
Ashland Mapleton 10:28, Bluff.
ton's Mike Holty_10:32 and Bob

moment of truth arri•1ed tor the
Cleveland Browns 'Sunday as
they took the field ugainst the
Oellas Cowboys .
It was fhelr flrslr encounter
with an undefeatecl team this
aeason . Furthermore, the Cowboys were Intent on revenge for
the loss they suffjered against
the Browns In last year's divisional playoff .
Dallas had I!• reasonably
healthy Bob Hayt!S back in the
offensive lineup, Craig Morton
to throw him the ball , the
league's leading rusher In Cal vin Hill and veteran defensive
standout Bob Lilly on their
side.
Lilly Is conslclered to be one
of the toughe:Jt, If not the
toughest, tacklt:s In the National Football League. The Browns
planned to send John Oemarles,
24, against the· old pro. Oemarles, at 6-3 and 255, is two ln.
ches shorter and five pounds
llghfer than Lilly .
"The players are responsible
for what has happened," Dallas
coach Tom Landry said of the
Cowboys• 6-0 record.
"Coming out of the Cleveland
game we were very disappointed that
wouldn't be In the

Toto 309.

BOOSTER CABLES

Keating and Otas falter .
Oakland's defense. despite
injuries to the front four- and
secondar-y, has blitzed enemy
quarterbacks successfully 26
times and limited the opposition
to a 35 per cent pass
completion percentage.
Oakland's success against the
pass could be a major tactor In
Sunday's game since the
Bengals' attack Is being spearheaded by the AFL's leading
quarterback, Sam Wyche. The
former Furman star has passed
for a 51 per cent completion
r-ate and tops league quarterback staflstlcs.
But the Raiders' Daryle
Lamonica Is ahead of Wyche In
several categories, including
completion percentage (52),
completions
t 124). yar-dage
( 1,622) and touchdown passes

Browns Face Cowboys In

WIIIWJW.·/ijr-&amp;L
32 )'U'd8 ruohlng cl.i1&gt;arad to

~~·sf.~~:lsottheundei'WOJ.
laod as
/1

the night. which led to the
Tailback Mike Stearns led all
Knights' fine I to,Jchdown. rusMrs as he gained 105 yards
Vester Intercepted~ on the In ten carries and scored two
Ravenswood 29 ytlrct line and touchdowns. Two of his runs
returned It to the 216 bofore being were dazzling &amp;campers of 44
tripped up.
and 20 yards.
Then came Clayton with his
Claayton scored the final Big 101 yards, followed by Greer
Blacks touchdown fCJ·r 1969as he who had 23 yards on six carrlet,
scampered Into thu end zone and Northup, the Blacks'
from the 8 yard llr.e with 2: 35 blocking back, gaining 14 yards
left In the game. Clurk VIckers' In four carries.
kicking attempt for the extra
For the Red Devils, their
point was a shade tt'J the left and leadln'Q ball carrier was Steve
the score was 24.0 and that's the Buffington who gained 39 yards
way It ended.
In ten carries. Mike Winter
Ravenswood thr1eatened only picke-d up 12 yards In nine
once and were stopped on the carrlt!S.

aerves of the Oakland Raider
defense may be called upon
once again Sunday when the
Aalders visit the Cincinnati
Bengals In a Western Division
American Football league
game.
Starting lett linebacker Bi \1
Lasky and defensive tackle Dr1n
Birdwell, who has seen or1ly
spot play after off.sea!.on
surgery, has been having m.Jre
problems with his tender knee.
It Laskey cannot start, C:hlp
Oi'lver will get the call. Oliver
was the starter all last yee 1r as
Laskey sat out the season with
an Injured achilles tet1don.
Birdwell, one of pro football's
quicker defensive linemen, has
been playing behind starters
Tom Keating and Cl1rleton
Qats . AI Dotson and rootde Art
Thoms now will fill in If

Dan

EXCEDRIN

on the 35 and returned It to the third straight time, the run for travel next door next week as
20.
the conversion failed, but the they play the Ripley VIkings at
Ravenswood got the ball right Knights had Increased their Ripley In the Jackson County
back on a Point Pleuant lead to 18-0.
rival game .
miscue on the 22. The Devils
Midway through thl!' fourth
Coach Ware emptied his
could not move the ball and and final quarter. Yuater In- bench during the latter part of
Ravenswood's Ed Conners went tercepted another Sn"1lth pass the game and took 11 look at
back to punt. Defensive end for his second lnterC'tpllon of what he will have next year.

Beng·als Out To Halt
4-Game Losing Streak

COSIIITIC /JI'T.

SEAWAY

on the speed to score. For tl11e Devils, now 6-J on the year,

In the half.

The vl.sltors wasted no time earlier. was u.nable to see ao-

Seconds

-~

SJ28

letelll Value $1 5.95

I

wait:;!

JUMPERS

g•ijl- . .....

,..iflt IICift ·liolll 1M! aM "g•o.m. IMM• ..
:iileo 0.1-2-] _C alo r~, Aqo.oa I lluo

( 10 lOLLS)

llTAIL VALUI$1.00

70%.

WHITE
CLOUD

TOILET
TISSUE

c

FITS
ALLIN.IICTOR
RAZORS

SJOO

MASON - The Wlhama White
Falcons o1 COach Grant Bor- •
aotte alaged a brilliant com•
lack to score a 21-16 victory
over Glom Volley Friday night
ot Boohtel Field In Moson.
The • aorned victory by
the DOver • Ill' - quit White Faleons eniod their oeasoo oo a
oucceasful note ani also with
on lnlt&gt;ressive overall slate ol

1-3-1.

FOR

11;-t

Howard Shines
In Falcon Win
1

BOUNTY

great, even

*~nched.

••

Twin reciprocating scalloped edged,
stainien steel blades with the Sun-s
beam "tip that trims." Push-button
blade release, wfety lock, and 6 ft.
removable cord.

JUMBO
TOWELS

II faol lo have a

per-tact 10.0 record? In answer

ELECTRIC KNIFE
GENERAL ELECTRIC ,

Retail Value
4 for 29'
IIO.SIWA/111191.

..

SUNBEAM

BARS

21 ~

:i!EI\·~

.......

An Interference call against Ravenswaocf seven. A Greer - to Red Devils look over on tholr 31.
1111 Big Blacks IOcondary gave • Bloln pall In the ond . _ on On llie lhlrd play from scrim. look lhe handolf up file mlddl•e one fool line by • daformlnod
In tho -lng .,....,""""•
Big Blacks team.
quarftrback Dwolne Greer
tho Rod Devils on aulometlc f...,lh - · sloppod lllo drive mage, senior linebacker Alvin broke to hlo right, elu~
Coach Taylor and his RM threw lhC palMI W¥"11h ftO
first down and goal on the three. with about three mlnutn to go Yeater Intercepted a Smith pass lastposslbletackler,andturnfJd

Fullback Mlko Aklrs, o 19S.
Bleckt a'nd also tor the pound senior, plckod up two
graduating seniors who c l - yards and the bl!lll was on the
out tholr high school foofball one toot line. Akers then tried
car•ra.
for tho touch-• but tho
Nof lo be OVIr lookod by tho defense would not give ln.
tenlon wu lunlor tailback
Quarterback Smith tried a
Grog Clayton. Clayton went Into .,..k, but ogaln tho dafanoe
the game with an unofficial 915 held and Ravenswood called for
yards ruahlnt:J. In the lest a time out.
minute of the third quartor,
Coming In wllll • play from
Cloyton plckld up eight yordl Head Coach Fred Taylor,
on a handoff from Greer that Smith, for the second straight
put him up over the 1000 yard tlmt was halted by the great
mark. He gained 101 yards In 17 defense ol tile Knights wllh
carrln for the night.
Point Pleasen1 faking over on
The II rot quortor of action the one.
went acorelen but Ravenswood
When the defense was coming
was beginning to drive whontho off the field, the home crowd
quarter ondod wllll tile Rod stood on their feet and apDevils on tho Knights' 27 yard plauded for the tremendous
II no.
defensive stand.
Quarterback Glen Smith lhon
Thlsatand could be named as
went to the air and completed 1111 ball game.
lllrao passes, laking tho ball
The Blacks took over and
game down to the thl: yard line. sustained 92-yard drive to the

"'" high """'
do!MIIng
tho· ·
Ridhlllory
Dovllo
of
Ravens- UO hore Friday
night.
· Ploylng - . a lom.p~ckod
tlodlum of about 4,000, tho
Knlghll ourviYid o frantic llrtl
holf In whlcll lhoy managod
only one tou.-n and lhon
ocorod lhroo moro tlmft In tho
holf lo run their wiMing
llroak lo len .olf'alghl for lhe

• ··--

•

victory cellbr.tlono whoro oil
had to w.tch l»w cl- to tho
. - . thoy got or face 1111
-'blllty of tilling ooakod.
II WOI I great VIctory for tho

Sl11 Control.

.

-

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Rivet• • l~ller• • !ilnk C osure
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�----------~.,...------ --- ... -

·''

20 -

Tile ~ 11mes - SOitlnel, Slnday,--r
2, 1Mt
-

Fatalities

-

- The Sundly Times - Sentinel, Sunday, November 2, 1969

Meigs Coimmittee

Two peraons had minor InJuries In a two car oolllllion
· at 7:20 a.m. Slturda,y on the
Romey Rd., two and ono.tenlh
mlles well or Rt. 588 lnvolvtng vehicles driven by James
S. Beaver, 57, Rt. 2 Gallipolis.
and Mary Leonard, Sl, Rt. 2
Golllpolls.
The patrol said vehicles eolUded headon on a curve. Mrs.
Leonard, according 1o olflcers,
II&gt;Plled her brakes and sUd
left of center. There was moderate damage to both cars.
Mrs. lbllard was admitted
to Holzer MedlcalCenter,First
Ave. , with internal lniurles.
Not immediately treated were
Beaver and a passenger, Dwain
P. Beaver, 16, both o! whom
had minor injuries.

I

Asks

Vo~~rs

to

Approve Levies

James F . Barnette, 24, Rt. 5

Freemont City Schools 1Nill close this Nmember 14 and

Athens, headed west on Rt.
684, slowed to make a turn
onto Rt. 143 but his brakes
failed and his dump truck struck
the Sampson car.
Frances Sampson, 48, a passenger in the car driven by
her husband, suffered contusions.
The patrol cited Barnette to
Meigs County Court Nov. 7 on
a charge of failure to yield
the right of way at a stop sign.
RandaU Denney, 20, Rt. 1
Vinton, escaped injury ln a
one ear accident at 4:35 a.m.
Saturday on the Vinton - Eno
Rd., three and two tenths miles
east of Rt. 160. The patrol said
Detmey apparently fell asleep.
His car went off the right side
d. the road, up an embankment
and rolled over onto its top.
There was moderate damage to
the vehicle. No charge was filed.
Jerry R. Brammer, 26, Rt. 1
Bidwell, lost control ot his
pickup truck at 2:2&gt; p.m. saturday on the rain-slick highway at the junction of Rt. 160
and Kemper HoUow Rd. His
vehicle knoclted down a stop
sign at the intersection and
came to a stop in a hayfield
There was minor damage to the
truck, No one was injured and

not reopen unW Jan. 5, 19·70. This school sy:stem will have
school on 23 Satuntays to complete the l82 day school
term. state SchOOl Law In Ohio reCJJireS 182 dllys of school
be completed in a school dilstrict using state support mooe:y before the district may receive the state support mooey the following year .
Should this circumstance come to Meigs County lt will
be necessary to have more than 70 mills in force for
schools, or four times the 17% mills now in force. School
districts In Meigs Councy now provide $1 of osch four
needed for operation. The state support provides three
of each $4 needed.
It has been reported ooe school district ln Franklin
Count;y, Ohio, will have to dissolve. Masslllon CItY
Schools are asking voters for 2'7,8 mills in renewals
and increases.
The voters in Meigs Count;y are NOT asked for any increase, only RENEWALS -nonewtax,es.

·wlili but lew-libOi-era tO WOfk.

GALLIPOU8- AnnouacoD-ItbOtd.eG&amp;JIlpo!la- HudiJW!onJIIlckeltredewoul4once_...,
reaume alter...-))' two yeora wlthoutarlllllar
packet p-bly drew emhuolasm from sCIIIO and
skeptlclom !mn othero.
Tllere had been one ~ to put a .)lllckel
In lbe 10&lt;01 trade since the C. C. Bowyer was
sold and - w n from the Indo. ThatWJtathe
Johft Rosa ""ned by Captain E. P. Matthella of
Huntlagton, Bultho Ross quit after two or three
daya.
.
From the River News of the Galllpolla llal1)' Trlbone, here Is an account of OIUrllv the
new packet in the trade:

- BY HOWARD NOLAN
ChalrDUIJl, School Tox Levy Committee
POMEROY _ Meigs County taxpayers, along with ntai\Y
other oountl.es in Ohio, wtll be voting on operatJng school
levies on November 4.
An earcy check with the Ohio Secretary ol Slate's olflce
showed 491 school Issues to be voted on this Nov. t. Re ..
newals, Uke the three In Meigs Councy, 1otal 1o some 192.
The three renewals in Meigs Counb' are an absolute necessity for schools to remain open. The state school foun.dation support program re&lt;J~ires all districts receiving
state aid or support to have 17lf.! mills 01r operating levy
The patrol cited Mrs. Leon- 1n force before any state money ls available.
ard to Gallipolis Municipal
Each of the three school districts In Meigs Councy has
Court Nnv. 3 on a charge o! this re&lt;J~ired 17'h mlll.\ In force oow. Vcoters onb' need
left of center.
to renew the proposed le.·vies in their local dlstrlcte 1\les.
An accident occurred in day.
Meigs County at 11:45 a.m.
The renewals are, Mel~s Local, 3 mills; J~stern U:teal,
Friday on Rt. 143 at the june ~ 3 mills; Southern Local, 4 mills. These n;,newals mean
tion of Rt. 684, involving a car NO new taxes.
and a truck. There was mlnor
The state support to !ochools in Meigs Cumty provides
damage to both vehicles.
for 137 days o1 the requl ~red 182 day school turm. Tile 17'h
Officers said Carl L, Samp. mllls in force for operal'ing the schools in Meigs COUn1;)'
son, 49, Rt. 4 Pomeroy, hesded provides for 4&gt; days of tllO required 182 ~~ school term.
north on Rt. 143, slowed before Without the renewal ot Utese operating levieH, Meigs Coun.
making a left tum onto Rt. 684. cy schools CAN only operabJ 34 days.

STUDENT DRIVERS IM tbe feel ef lhe road wllhoul
JeaYlaJ tbe elamoom Wllh lhls driver lrafDIDC abnula·
tor. For demonotlrallon p~, tbe maeblnt Is ohown
ltere aDJTOIInded by llreellrdle- Sludenll Ia more lhan
IMlO U.S. ltJgb oeltools are ualag lhe devices, wltlcb tell
lltetr responses lo 61med lralfle sltullono.

Clptaln W.

!redo.

Captain w. D. Kimble, baa real&amp;oed hla..,.
altlon wllb the l.lberl7 Llnoand-tohlaot llunliJIItlln, He commanded the ~rat W...
while that .)lllCket Was In the PI!Uburgh - Cillo
cinnott trade.

--------------------------------~w~~

Captain Low TlllliOI', who owns tho Speed,
a very last beat, Informed Captain Greeno of his
lntertlon and Is looking lor a pilot lor the Speed.
The ~ haa 11 Inch cylinders and • six loot
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Young at Holzer llospltallnGalljpolls, four Inch stroke.. She wa1 built at Stillwater,
and Mr. and Mrs. Don Morrow spent a weekend with Mr. and Minn., In 1886 and was originally the Verne
ol Paden Clcy, W. Vo., and Mr. Mrs. Harold Newlun.
SWain. She Is 120. 7 lost tong, has a 21.8 loot
and Mrs. Garth Smith visited
Nellie stathem visited Mr. beam and a foor loot bold.
and Mrs. Emmett Stethem and
Nellie Stethem.
Mrs. Hank Holter and !ami))' Emma and Pearl PoweU.
OCT. 31, 1919- 1HE SPEED, Captain Low
and Mrs. David Smith and Dee
Vlslllng Mr. and Mrs. Larry Tarmer, arrived at Pt. PleaB8nt, Tuesd&amp;y and
Dee visited Mrs. Joe A. Bts- Curtis were Mr. and Mrs. Johu will enter lbe Gallipolis - Huntington tnde nert
seU at Mason, W. Vo.
Newell and !amllyofcotumbus, Monday morning making a round trip a daJ. The
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Nessel- Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Newell and Speed Is a very fast Jltllo boat, weU adopted lor
rood have returned from their family or Chester, and Mary a short dll,)'llght trade. She Is also a c&lt;q)etel)'
honeymoon to the northeastern Pierce. later ln the evenh1t, new beat, being onb' foor yeara old. Tile acbetlstates. They spent several days cake and ice cream were served ule which wUI give pessengers a good dee1 of
with Mr. and Mrs. Curt Caw- honoring the birthdays o!Shella lime In Huntington, has beeo decided oo. It calla
thorne aDd Allison, New York. ard lnzy Newell and Nary New- lor her lesvlrw here at 6 LDL alii arriving In
Mrs. Emerson Jdmson, Port ell.
Huntington at 10:30 LDL She wiU leave HuntinglaM, visited with her mother,
Spending a weekend with Mr. ton at 1:30 p.m. arx:l arrive back here at 6 p.m.
Mrs. Ethel Larkins.
and Mrs. Fred Larkins was Sl- Freight and passengers w!U both be cared lor
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hayman die Butcher of Parkersburg. In a pronq&gt;t and coorteoos manner.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Cowdand family of Columbus were
Tile Huntington Wharf and Storage Co., bas
visitlng Mr. aOO Mrs. Joe Bis- ery and Lucy Raolo)J)b, Wash- notUied tho Tribune that they wW uoo their best
seU and other relatives.
ington Court House, visited Mr. e!!urls through wharllnaster A. E. Martin, 1oset
Sandra Newlun, student nurse, ard Mrs. Wayne Prince.
buelness lor the Speed.
Wharflnaster Donally says be will uoe his
best otrorta to boost the Speed and Is now holdIng freight on the G&amp;Ulpo!la wharf 1o give the
oew pocket a good startonhermaldentrip In the
Gallipolis - Huntington trade.
other lntereotlng River News in tho Tribune
Included:

Long Bottom Social Notes

Rhodes &amp; TeamShowing Expertise

lump lnt.o the Senate race with cence. It Is all part of the po. Investigate?" replied an adBy LEE LEONARD
botll feet . He will have plenty lltlcal game, end they ore play- mlnlotriiii~IOUI'!S·'·TIIo FBll
UPI Slal-M R1110rter
The state attorney general? A
COLUMBUS !UPI) - Even of answer·s ready, and what he lng It tO the hilt.
"The governor won re - House and Senate committee?"
good scandals grow stale aHer does nof I1ave answers for, he
election by a landslide," said
The administration Is stickcan ignont
The vot~~s won't care. By one source. "and the Demo· lng to Its beUef that the Hlghthen, they will have had their crats are out to get him any way Patrol Is e professional
a certain length of time, and fill of the Licavoli case. Those way fhey can. He Is at the group most able to conduct an
no charge was fDed.
No reports were available ff1is Is apparently what will that were on the side of the pinnacle and they are throwing impartial Investigation. "Most
ropes. up to try and Pull him people have faith In the Highfrom the patrol at pres&amp;time happen to the monkey on Gov. governor and the Republicans
down . This Is one of thoae way Patrol,'' uld one source.
be-fore
the
L.lfe
article
are
still
on two other accidents. A deer James A. Rhodes' back - the
ropes. Some of them stick and
The Democrats have raised
there.
ThosE!
that
were
against
was k!Ued Friday In an acci- "Licavoli Affair."
some
don't,
but
this
Is
all
part
other
cries about the recent rehim
are
still
nipping
at
his
The Democrets licked their
dent In Malgs Councy. At 4 p.
of
the
game."
port
.
Why did It take so long?
m. Slturda.Y the patrol was In- chops when Life magazine heels.
The
latest
part
of
the
game
Perhaps
It provided a coolingNot T akino Hold
vestigating an accident on Big dropped Its bomb last May
was
the
retease
leaf
week
ot
off
period.
It gave the voters
AI one source close to the
Four Rd., In soolhem Gallla hinting that the governor, edmlnlstrafio11 put It: "I don't the Ohio Highway Patrol report time to forget and the Demoamong other ff1lngs, evaded inCol!ncy.
come tax payments, misused think the LiCIP&gt;/011 case Is taking on Its Investigation of the lncl- crats time to hang themselves
Kr. Kiser is survived by hls campa~n funds and had his hold with tht" people." This dent- an lnvestl9atlon ordered through constant harping on the
issue.
wife, Thelmai seven sons, Okey, palm greased to commute the source polnfe:d1 out that people by the governor.
"Whltewashl"clredthe
DemWhy did the report deal only
Racine Roote 2; Quu-los, Syra- sentence of Ohio Penitentiary vote on the t:~sls of what a
cuse; James and Harold, both lifer Thomas (Vonnie) Llca· candidate can do for them . ocra1s, complaining that having with the Licavoli matter and
Purely selfish, perhaps, but a the Highway Patrol Investigate not with Life's financial
~ Racine Route 2i Howard. of voll.
lot
simpler and closer to home the governor Is like appointing c:harges? Perhaps the governor
near Middleport, and Roy and Well, Dwight Eisenhower had
a clerk-typist to go felt the boss has some ammunition he wants
than
the Licavoli case.
David, at home; six daughters, his vicuna coat. Nelson Rockehe's
got bad breath.
to hold In reserve for release
The
admlnlsl·ratlon
has
re.
Mra. Marie Norris and Mrs. feller had his divorce and LynQulstkml
Raised
at
a strategic time In the
laxed
outlook
C41
the
situation
Pby!Us Randolpb, both of Ra- don Johnson had his Walter
do
they
want
him
'to
'hat
Is
the
I
of
innodne; Mattie, ol Nitro, W. Va. ; Jenkins, and pretty soon every·
Jean Kiser, Columbus; M r s. body forgot. just like they'll
Bmnle Varian, Cll!1on, W.Va., probably forget a~ut Vonnie
and Barbara, at home. Services Licavoli and the "Chappaquld·
w.lll be- amounced from Ewing dick Incident," although this
latest one may takt! a little
Funeral Home.

Mason Area
News, Notes
Several persons of the Bend
area attended the wedding of
Robert Grinstead to Margo ~
gram on Swxlayafterooonatthe
St. Mary's United Methodist
Church, He is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Grinstead,
New Haven. The bride is the
daughter of Mrs. Pauline Ingram of St. Mary's, W. Va.
Attendiq;:: were hisparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Grinstead,
New Haven; Mr. and Mrs. He~
ben Stewart, MaSOili Mrs. Mary
Aumiller. Hartford; Mrs. Fred
Roush, Mrs. Helen Knapp, Mr
and Mrs. Bill McFarland and
Raymond, Mr. and Mrs. WUliam Grinstead and Anna lAJu.
iae, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil~
can and Cecil, Jr. , Mrs. Cliff
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Grinstead of Canton, Mn. Donald Roush am Mrs, Phil Batey.
George P. Johnson of Woo:lland Rd., West Columbia, is a
patient at Holzer HospitaL He
waa taken there following a coroJBry attack,
Mrs. Roberta Young, Clilton,
Vi• Va., Mn. Evelyn Stewart,
Ma80tl, visited at Marion, Ohio
.wJth a former schoolmate Dlc•v
"'J
. ,(lJiver, now Mrs. Charlo nes.
They returned home on Thurs·
~.

Mr. and Mrs. John McDaniel
returned from Newark, Ohio,

I

them to death, breaking the silence with carefully timed tidbits of exoneration.
PradiCIII StretetiY
A guberna.torlal statement
here, an investigation report
there and before you know It,
James A. Rhodes could be In
the clear and running for the
u.s. Senate with nobody be·
tween him and the goalposts.
Whether or not the magazine
charges are true, the handling
of the case must be admired
from the cold vlewpoin't of
practical polltlci!ll strategy.
,
It Is evident that when the'
~~*~
~
attendedthewedding
of their daughter, Georgia. Mr.
and Mrs. McDaniel went to New
ClDDberlal'kl, W. Va.,fromNewark, where theyvisitedherparents, Mr. and Mrs. EmoryHudson.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Noble
and daughters of New Orleans,
La., visited his mother, Mrs.
Matilda Noble, sister and ramlly, Mr. and Mrs. stanley Hsr•
bour.
Mike Harbour, a sophomore
at Marshall University, visited
aver the weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mr.s. stanley Harbour.
Mr. Gary Green. WoUston,
Ohio, and Miss Pei'II\Y Parkirwton of Hurricane, W. Va.. vtalied recently with Mike Herbour tn Mason.

-

'

d

..

1M New in Forming
Ysaled the direction o! our
economy In the 70s.
Increased farm output per
IIWI continued upward with the
continued trend toward uee of
more fertilizer and machinery.
Purchased inputs accamt for
lllroe - fourths of total inputs
used In agrl culture today.
Record farm autput and a
&amp;lowing rate of population
ll'OWih along with Increased
world production of agrlooltural ·JII'Qducts continues 1o keep
pressure on both comlnodlty
prices and !arm Incomes.
Future polley directions by
the government will probably

OCT. 29, 1919 - NEW COMPOUNDchlnery Is being Installed by Captain W. E. Hal,
marager of the Louisville Uno, oo the Loucll!.
cia which hal boon rebullt at Clnctm.U. T b •
Louclndo wu rebulll at the Pt. Ploa- docltl
In 1910 Ott or the old Speedwell, later the H.._
M. Goold and originally the 1landy Ntl,
Till .
Gould ran for a time between Gallipollo tllll
Charleatoa In CCIIIIUIItld of Caplalno R. EmarGacbea and Ed Weat a doZorlor--.yearaDUII
when tach and Pusons owned the beal Till
late Captain Gus HounsheU ._,. the Spoedo. .
from Ironton to P..,..roy lor a abort t1ma ...._
Cltptaln Eqgane Guinn operatad the beat for a
few trlpo In the HuntlJW!on • Parkerabuq tratlt
with Captain Slm llamllton and Brose Damle.
aa pilots.
- -·
·

z.

growth,

- Farm programs will be
continued.
- Technological adoption by
farmers will be more rapid
than In tho early 1960's. Output per unit of Input will be
greater as shifts in resource
use occur.
- Training and retraining
J)l'ograms will enable farmers
to move more readily into nonfarm employment.
The outlook tOr farming within this economic environment
seems to be that:
1 - Domestic use of farm
products may increase 1.2 to
1.4 per cant per year. Population increaaes may average 1.2 per cent and lmprov-

OCT. 30, 1919 - THE GREENDALE wu
here sevarat hooro late last night and 1oda,y ,..
loading lor tho Clnclmall under dtrectlm of
Captain Gordon C. Greene.
OCT. 31, 1919 - WHARFMASTER llonl.lll
reports the Greefllale had her blaest fr~
trip out ol here Tllured&amp;y lor Clnclnnatl he IU
ever had em the local wharfboat lor a )ltiCioa&amp;
alnce he became wbu!master. llwaomostb',...
shipping.

1i

Two Cars Demolished
POMEROY- Two -aware
demolished, three persona ln.
)Ired and a driver cited 1o
court as the reault or an accident on County Road 16t near
Hamlock Grove at 2:21 p.m.
Slturda,y.
Tile deparbnent of Sherllr
Robert llartenbac:h Bald a car
driven by B. R. Martll-. 18,
Cedarhurll, N.Y., croasedover
the centerline and struck headon a car driven by Mra. Louise
Crislip, Long Bottom.
T b e Pomeroy emerpncy
IICJIII'l tran~ported Mrs. CrfoUp 1o POmeroy where she was
transferred , to an ambulance
and taken 1o the Holzer Modi..

include a land retirement pro.
gram (probably emphastzlng
whole farm) 1o bring a balance between agricultural production and food and f I b e r
needs.
The long - nm economic ellmate for agrh:ulture expectaa
tiona are that:
U. S. economic growth
wUl expend at an average rate
of 3-li per cent per year. Real
Income (purchasing power) will
increase 1.0-3.0 per cent per
year after correction for lnfla..
tlon of 2-3 per cent per year,
tax increases and population

NO SECRET.

Your feed lot is the key to profits. Here's where top quality
supplements priced for economical weight gains pay off.
Here's where Red Rose feeds win frisnds.

.

~

tR

f[

ELBERFELDS IN

Thus far, the Rhodes team
has dlspleyed considerable po.
lltlcal wisdom In handling the
rumors. He Is slowly Ignoring

ONE HUNDRED YEARS AGO - OCt. aft
186t - Tile ClnciDaU - Maynllle pocloet 111.·
James with tOO paaoengers on boonl itlr1tck 1
rock In the New RlchDMind bar In tha night ...
sank In ahoal water. Aholoover50!oet kq wa.a
torn In the bull of the st. JIDIOL '!;be IIU_18~
UDIWJtre of what hlltpened were awakenod ...
trlftlferred to the R. R. Hud11011.
The st. Jomea was lor aeverat years a , .
ular Bide....... .)lllCket In the PomtrOJ' tnll,
Captains Alex Halliday and Slm llunlar ,.,.
on the-st; James and many GIDq,Oiis.Piii!eriveled on this JlllCket In the earl!or ~ be1W
dais d boating.

NOV. 1, 1969 - A BIG RIVER Is OliiJOct.d
OCT, 27, 1919- THE GREENWOODarrlved Sunday from Clnclnratt oo a special trip with If the rslnlall has been genarat.
MaJor S. F. Neal reports 1.08 lnchea ofo ·
a big loocl of freight lor Charlellon. She
rainfall
In 24 hoora, .., to 7 LDL today,
wa 0 at the wharf aeven ~s putting o!! f r •

Ohio Politia

longer.

t. Guthrlt, fonnerlyofWaelo

IJ, II the new COIIIIIIIIlder of tho _ . . . ,
whlcb wttt nm In the Parkerlbura - Pllllburlll

OCT, 30,1919- The !astpacket~wlll
enter the Galljpolls -HuntiJWtonlnde-week,
according to lnlormallon received from Cll)laln
Gordon c, Greene, who was hare lr)'lng to ..._
,1teve the freight congesllon on the Golllpollo

Weatherin!r 'the Licavoli Affair'

BY C. E. BLAKESLEE
Ext. Agent, Alrlculture
Meigs Councy
POMEROY - Total OUtput
In the U. S. reached a new
high In 19611 on three million
farms and 301 million harvested acres. Tbla ootput was
20 ~r cent greater than the
1157..59 average. This produe..
Uon was accomplished wl.th an
au time low labor Input of 7
billion man hours.
Information presented at the
Outlook meeting at Jackson recently for Yo..ag teachers and
caunt;)o extension workers re-

.Rai·R-

I

.

' \

.-.

at IUf CAml IUWUMINT

This Is the supplement you w)il want to uta as a
mlxlns ration lor your home-grown grains or es a
proleln supplement to balance tho feeding of low
protein roughages.

cal Center. Mro. CrfeUp Ia lepoiled that a piclmp trucll
JII'08IIIIIII, the Bherlll's depart- - . . lv' Clara Jailers, 28,
mont reported.
Alllanl, overturned Ill Route 68t
D011U17 Slterllf Rlcbard Karr at f:22 a.m. So:lurda,y lllllliUI
transported Mr. Martllotta to and .,.. deatro,yed lv' fire. Till
Veterans Memorial llolpltal accident occurrect north ofllar.
where be waot...atedtorabump rlaonv!Ue Mrs. Jof!erl
..; the held and a bruised arm loot cmtro1 of the vehicle 11111 ·
ODd dlamlaoed. Marte Karl! - It Oferturned Into a clltcb,
1-. a &amp;later ol the driver, catcltlng fire. MI-a. Je&amp;ra . . ..
was taken to the aama hospital takon to Volarlua Mamor1al
by Hanry Werry ot the emar- Hoapltal where tlhe Is M!!flned
pnc,y unit. She was hoapllall"- with inJUries.
ed lacersllonl around the
arma, eyea and held.
Mortllolla waa cited 1o COWlcy court on charges ol ctrlvlng:
left of center.
Tile llherlll's~also

.,••.

SO IIIP CAnu la..UMINT

Mesh form. Nutrlenl fortifications are double tho
leyals of 32 Beef Cattle Supplement.

a..

Ar•H•tf• wltb or wllltout DMihfhlllb••ttol.

Book Your Cattle feeds For 6 Months

BIDWELL MILLING CO.

• • •

BIDWELL

EROY

PHONE 388-8283
OWNER: TIM BICKERS

YOUR JALOPY
WILL MAKE
~EEl MUSIC
AFTER YOU SEE US
FOR YOUR

WIX

OIL FILTERS

Toppin&amp;, Pruning,
Calli ing, Removin&amp;·

TRUCKS TOO
QUAKER STATE

MOTOR OIL

BYLER'S
TREE SERVICE
Jochon, Ohio 45640
Route 4 • Phone

A•C

SPARK PLUGS
LOW PRICES!

Rodney Supply Co.

286-5503

8 Mil•• Wnt Golllpoll1
Rollf• 3S, Aod~r. Ohio
2~5-5509

Insured• FrH Eatimate1

for ROUGH, TOUGH
HIGH-SPEED WORK

HEAT LAMPS

•
IH.

NOW I
GET READY FOR WINTER
FROSTED_ ______ ON!Y_89~ EACH

vAna.

you need a

-

370 DlSKAHARROW

Uneven llelda, hard ground. heavy
stalks, and high ·speeds are just what
the rugged, built-to-lasl 370 is made
for. Its torsion frame with built-in
"give" allows gangs to maintain uni form penetration in uneven soils . . .
gently ease them over hidden obstructions . Extra-husky spacing spools,
spring -steel arbor bolts, triple -sealed
self -aligning ball bearings, together

PlOOF________O~l! 2e 35 EACH
Your Farm
Supply
Service Center

CENTUl SOYA
.OF OHIO

with heavy guaaeted standard&amp; keep

tha field-proven 370 bH~ffil;-jollnil'
mener how hard you work it. Even.
behind your biggest tractor, the 370
will give you extra years of trouble free life. Come in today and see the
quick-aQjusting, wheel - Controlled 370.

Tough enough and versatile enough
to handle anv disking job you've got !

•igs E•uipment Co.

31'&lt;1 &amp; Sycamore Sts.
Ph. ~2463
, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ,

Delayed In Shz·n ment.

PHONE 992-2176

Re• Meigs General Hospital

POMEROY

They Finally Arrived

• • •

Ordered For Our Fall Sale... Now Ready For You ... Another Bargain Buy!

'

BIG23
cubic foot

KROEHLER

An-anse -

II your family is active and vital than a room lull of clelicattly o&amp;ylod,
fragile furniture is not lor them. They'll feel right at homo in this "'"""'ndboy-proof -oom. U• it. obuto itt You'll •ill have the joy of usy •••
maint.,.nce and lono lasting eyo •-1.

Chest or .Upright

for a Mlx·Aif

clemonatratlott and we'll grind

aitd mlx·a few tons of f.ecl Flilf
We make thl1 ofter becaUH we'N IUN )'GU'U 1Dre

Vi sit u 3rd
floor furniture
department and
s• the l•ae

lbe

MI•-All leo"""": (I) 116·\l!ln hammon lbol ad., .
not pouad . • :. .,-In andl'hay to uniform llw, Ill

r...._,

selection of bed

room Sllites a~d
open stock

.

Student-

bedroom fll'niture.

Doilc-

Trundle bed

variohfe .. . - drive~ the aurer
111 1wict •
many laamme11 -p&amp;r IIIQ.I.N foot of ..,.. .,.. .._
other mills; 14) .niRreci' conolructloa '""" hllcb 11&gt;
heppor •nil mill !II mlaer: (6) unloadi111 _ . . , . . elod IU•h on the l r - . .. 40 inches off tho ......,._
E•.... over llina. bunko or oel!-foedon.

But •.• 1.,. abou) illdllnr W.
for yuu nooll? Coli now tO o c b e o J : (
ulo'

~

Mlx-AI '

Bunk beds

--

-

·-

-

-·

ELBERFELDS IN

ftl!l!
/A
C#jl::·-...:.iilll-7'

0a-tioa

...rau• ..... -, . ... :

Modom, Spanish,
aod French
Provincial

up. lllcreaslng number• or marrled women In the labor Ioree
is another ractor In tmproved lamlly incomes.
In Industrial Ohio the average hourly lactery wage rose
In May to the new high ol
$3 61 compared 1o th United
!btes average of $3.:5 p e r
hour. This represents a 6.9
per cent gain In 1968 and lor
the average42hourweekresulted In $152 income compered L1
$129 lor the United states. Both
Ohio and the United !l&amp;tea
rates were up 5,8 per cent
over a yesr earlier The week
ly earnings lor ali non • rar.;
workers averaged $114 or almost $5 over a year ago.
Median family income rose
1o $8,200. According 1o the
United States Department of
Commerce the per person incomo In Ohio In 1968 was $3,.
487 and r&amp;Med 16th among
the states. The high state per
capital Income was $4,231 and
the low was $2,057 with the
United States average of $3,412 . This was a 54 per cent
increase over 1960 and In the

The family housing altuatlon has -rlorated during
the pall lear ond promloea1o
gel. worse belo.e It -gets better. The mmber f1 new hool(!s
started has decreased 20
cent since the Orll of theY=~
and DJaT be down 50
per cent
by winter. Most of the units
:;:: ~ are ~Ill - family
r
one dunily and in
the hlghsst price brack ets.
The prices of new houses
are high and going higher. Tile
shortage ol money has resulted In buDders paying 15.20
::cent~~ l08J.1S. Labor costs
slcyroc etlng and land prlces are Jumping_ Morigage ntas

·•1W~ite, l,fllpl,mtnt ·~o.

.UPP~RRT. 7 '

'

'..

SA $62----SA.YE $76
ON THE CHEST MODEL

. ON THE UPRIGHT
IIODEL
.
.

,

.

.

ON SALE WHI.E TIIY LASTI
Your pr.ference of chest or upright style in freezers would
depend on spoce ovallable aod personal taste, lor both
~f these models are the ultimate in efficiency, conven-•ence features, operotlne economy .and modern styling,
Either would grace any kitchen, both let you serve form•
fresh foods ·lo your family the year•oround.

,.• ., Wrltt rl C.e 11 T..ernwl
'

SIEGLERHEA 'rERS AN(I ···
·FUEL OIL FURt •'··
NACES IN STOC~ . :,

I

IJY

BY

Mediterranean,
Early Atnerlcan

ldenda and rental Income are

JUD&amp;E THE &amp;EHL IIX·ALL
ON YOUR FARMJ

; /';
.

or land located In areas of expenditures for the lood esten
urbanization will increase at home accounted ror aroued
mosl
16.5 per ee!ll o! Income alter
15 - Tile use of purchased loxes, compored 1o the 16.8
inl&gt;uts has reached 7S per cenl per cent spent 1n 19611.
or the total and will conlinue During 1969, estimates Into rise at about 2 per cent per dicate that eonaumers w i J 1
years as speclallzaUon a n d apend about 16.:; per cent of
mechanization occurs.
their dlsposable Income f 0 r
16 - Returns 1o capital In- food. Of this 16.5 per cent,
vested in farm firms after de- 3.6 per cent is for food awa,y
ducting for returns to labor, from home and 12.9 per cent
management and non-real es- for food at home. The percenttate capital will continue be- age spent for food away rrom
low that or returns to non - home has been remarkably contarm businesses and average stant for the past decade, while
In the 3-S per cent range. These the percentage or income spent
returns plus increased appre- for rood at home has been conelation may mean total returns aistentJy l.Q'tlrer. As cUsposable
oC 6 to 10 per cent.
Income has been increasing rap~
ADEQUATE FOOD
Idly the dollar. amounts spent
As far as food conswnpUon tor both food away from home
Is concerned lood supplies In and lood at home has been In1970 will generally be adequate. creasing.
Projecting these
Total food use is expected to trend&amp; through 1970, the pro..
Increase, but nwch less than portion of disposable income
last year's two per cent galn. spent for food at home will be
Domestic food use wUJ ln- about 12.5 per cent with the tocrease with PDJX~lation growth. taJ food expenditure atjustover
U. S. Department of Agrlool- 16 per cent.
lure direct donations and the
INCOME UP
Food Stamp Program both are
Family Income has increased
expanding significantly from during the past year and can
last year when they account- be expected to increase again
ed for II&gt; per cenl of alllood. In 1969.70. Government employ.
But exports demand is down , ees, federalandlocal,havebeen
Food consumption per per- awarded Increases; net farm
son in 1968 matched that at income Is up at the rate ol
1967. Food expenditures ex- '1 bfllton in 1969. Wage COlla
ceeded those of a year ago by tracts while not exceslive in
about 3 per cent, while dispos- number compared to some
able income Js around 6 per years, have raised income. Incent higher. For the year, toad terest, transfer payments, dlv, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,

With .•.

PRESENTS
'

ed Incomes will provide adellIlona! minor strength 1o total
demaed.
2 - Exports, In the absence
o! widespread world c r o p
!allure, will he dl!!lcult to
maintain above the $6 billion
level. Re'atrtctive trade poltcies and Increasing output In
both developed and less dove! oped countries contribute to
this situation.
3 - Output will need to lncrease aboot 1.2 to l.S per
oont per year, but our capactty 1o increase output exceeds
this level. Output of crops will
likely Increase more rapidly
than livestock.
4 - Prices farmers receive
for livestock will be favorable
relatlYe to crops, Excess capaclcy 1o produce crops and
foreign market conditions are
the major reasons for crop
price wealmess.
5 - Land will be retired as
a result of government .P r ograms, free marketorwlthbargaining approschos.
6 - Prices paid by farmers for production Items will
rise but wage rates will rise
even faster.
7 - Net aggregate U. S.
farm income will be ln the
$15-16 billion range.
8 - Net income per u. S.
farm will Increase about 3-4
per cent per year.
9 - Number of farms will
decline at 3--t per cent p e r
year .
10 - Nat Income per person
from farm and oon - farm
sources will continue to Increase at 4-5 per cent per year.
Per capita disposable Income
ot farm tamtues is about 75
per cent ol noo - farm people.
This gap will narrow and be
In the 75-80 per cent range
by 1975.
11 - Off farm employment
of U. S. farmers will continue near present levels. In the
U. S. 33 per cent, and In Ohio
40 per cent of the farmers
work off the farm 100 days or
more per year. Off-farm employment generalcy Is a step
to discontinuing farming.
12 - The range in income
between varlaQo IM!Il - • ·
tlons will contlaue to widen.
Sixteen per cent of the !armo
selling $20,000 or moreoffarm
prodlcts receive 68 per cent ot
the cash receipts.
13 -· Farms will continue
to increase in size. Capital requirements per farm for all
purpo&amp;es will likely jncrease
6-8 per cent per year.
14 - Farm rsal estate prlc.
ea will conUnue to jncrease
even though land prices a r e
weak In 1969. The Increase
DJaT be 4 1o 6 per cent per
year. High qualicy !arm land

• !

'

..me period prices lncrea88d are above 71&gt; per cent llod lilt
27 per cent.
lodcral suaranteea are~ ·.
The agp-egate porsmal In- ed 1o be Ill the 8 .Per cent
come In June waa at tile lllftlal nta IIDt'll.
•·
rate of f7f6.2 billion - - Tile j&gt;rloea of Qlllinllltlu...
ed 1o $672.2 In 1968. Tlllo lo are &amp;Oing up at the rate o f about an II per cent Increase. • por cenl a month In ! 0 m_$
There lo some feeling thlo rate
(Continued on Poet 30)
. ·
will deerease during the July,
• ·
1969 -June, 1970 period,
HOUSING IN TROUBLE

arm Outlook in Slowed Economy
uggests Moderate, Stable Progress

(Continued !rom Pqe 1)

'

"

,,

.

'

IE DELIVER - IE SERVICE - IE FINANCE
..

,.,

'·• '~
' ' .:11
''

'

1·•."

'

Gallla 1111 Mail a' '

I

I

l.
'.

�,,

,,
..

22 - 'l11e SUnday Times • Soltlnol, Sllndoy, Novulbot

z, 1988

Find Items You Need,

sen Items You Don't In The Tribune Cla.'!Sified.

CLASSIFIED RATES

o.. o.,.o ...... · • · • _,, u..

•r•
ISc liM
ct.,•~ ••·•16c
ltpe

Sl• cOfl••~-''"'•
Three un1ocutlwe

,. · """lftl1l"' .,.,.; f01 hNtul•
""*1'11Htlon1 will talrle the oM ~ ....

=&gt;-··

• All d• . . Natricted to their
~ cluslflcofiDM ancl to the
.,wtuler O.lly Trlllune strle ", of

Help Wanted

stari - ·
Write opore
Mn R.-t1 A. P!elter,
Rt. 2, Waverly, Ohio 45690.
2$8-3

)'0111'

ce, ,_.mlttH fer da ..lflod ad

tl••• th. od date .arnH.
C..dllrw: 4:30 P•"'· delly and 11
o.~n.

for Rent
llllADBIJRY llllcloaey

- . A61lto oab'- 121 See- An., r.. ntpn~t•

s.turdo,.

Notlci,
LOOK and !eel physically IlL
Go to Bob's Reducing Salon

~

201..tf
SLEEPING ROOMS, w o e k I y
ratel. Park Cealnl ~ -

In Polrt Pl•sanL located
76..tf
jOst be!CM K &amp; K MobUe
Homes, 3305 Jackeon Ave.
Exercise and use the ma- UNFURNISIIED opartment, 3
rms. and both, utUltles turchlnea tor $1.00, Phone 675nlahed. Ph. 446-0111.
2454 or 675-4020.
254-tf
258-12
FREE - MAY DU~retrlg­ 2 APARTMENI'S, Gollla Hotel,
U6~206.
1.59..tf
erators, roofing tin, uto bodies, any klnll or
I. Ph.
388-8'751.
258-3 Ful!NJSIIEIJ 4 rv0m JII*Tl·
ment. private bath, heat furnished, 845 Second Ave. Ph.
LET Evelyn's Saloo o! Beaut,y
44U215 or 44U324.
get yoo ready Cor the holiday
256-tr
season. ·Permanent sale $35 tor $17,50, $25 tor $12.50
$20 Cor $10. Ph. 446-9580 or BRAND NEW MOmLE homo In
Rio Grande. Ph. 446-4153.
446-0508. Wig sale,
258-3
258-6

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

THERE WILL be a meeting of MODERN 3 bedroom boose loall beauticians In Golllpolla
cated at 22 Gellla Ave. $90
at tho Olllo VaUeyBank, Jlloo.
per mo. Coil 446-2300.
day Nov. 3 at 7:30p.m.
258-3
256-3
APARTMENT, 1 bedrocm, sec...
REVIVAL MEETING at Chamond IIOCII', ort street parkirw.
bersburg United Methodist
400 block 1st Ave. $85 per
Church beglnolrw Nov, 2 tW
mo. with utllltles. Ph. 446?. ~eclal slnglrw each nisht,
0208.
2511-«
Ewngellst a..v. 1\lax Done·
hue, Pastor James Morris- FURNtSIIED apartment, 2 large
On.
255-10
rm1 and '-th, prhate, adult•
ria.ded- - - - - - - only. 517 4th. 44~~58-3

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

STEEL HAULERS · trucks to
-----------Ieese, complete rlgorwewtU SLEEPING ROOMS, week ty
soU you the 11-aller, Best twontea, Gollla - · ~20t.
w a Y haullrw -een 19
158..tf
states. Division hiring otnce ---· - - - - - - - - oo Mlddlelolon, 0, Ph. 513-442- DUPLEX 2 bedroom apartment
1147. Dispatch terminal Cor
unl, 126 1st Ave.., Ph. 446Huntingloo, Ashland, Ports· 1467 or 446-0287,
mooth and Wheelersburg, o.
257-3
257-2 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - NEW 12 wide mobile home, 2
Wanted To Do
bedrooms, turnished. Ph.
446-9'771.
257-3
ODD
JOBS
a
M
a·n
d
·
...-.
.
•·
·
S.turday tor high achool boy

la.Once________ _

44WU8.
257-6
.
--~------ -·---- FOR Al..t.JG~r'- aeeDMdl.
mONIMNGS IN my llomO. con.
_ . wllll , _ ~ q.
tact Mrs. Dorothy BraJmon
at lllo HM1 lu. AlaDe:r,
Rt. I, Bidwell, Olllo.
'
84 state 91. Aaontelor auto, ·
256-3
-------------WE SPECIALIZE In roofirw,

nr..

llihi
..........
111111-alllaNiftr, 14-U,

-----·---------

aluminum sic:Ung. carpentry, For Sale
home remodeling Inside and 1965 CHEVROLET - Belair.
OIL Home maintenance o! all
aood C&lt;llldltlon. WUI sell tor

!nJes, Byerly Construction
Co. 245-5826.

·-------------

INTERIOR decoratlnr and wall
- r nmOYIJW, Free o.U.:
~.. Ph. 256-6996.
225-11

$650. 446-0128.

257-3

1968 12 x 60 Kirkwood mobile
homo, 2 bedromla &amp; dlnirw
room. Coil U6-U07.
257-3

MOBILE HOME, 12' x 57 1, New
Moon, S bedroml, phone 446WILL CARE for elderl,y persoo
9702.
257~
In my hnme. Pb. U6-3927 ,
256-i
FUEL OIL l'umace, Lemox,
cc•mter flow, 105,000 BTU.
Ciydo B. Walker, Thurmon,
For Sale or Trade
Olllo, 245-6216.
257-3
12 Fr. LONm AR alumblm -------~- - - - -bolt, V bollllm, I HP Mc- GOOD CLEAN LUioiP and atoliar eool. CUI W-s: Rio
'"-""· motor.
' I ~~loch
~ to aell. I'll; t41..t999.
Grande. Zt$-lillS, 8-U
218..tf

~,

SPECIALS!
20 HOLSTEIN - · · Call Ken- 19¥11 CHEV, Impala Conv. V8
neth Sheeto, 361-1189,
auto., P.S., radio, gocdtlres, HOME
258-3
OM owner, extra clean and
FOR the doctor, ex.cutlve, atsharp. a a o • o o o o ,$1295
TAXUS Cuaplclata, Cll)lllatl,
loi'My or a tamlly, '1'-o {2)
Arder1011 ard Media. gn, 18" 1967 FORD Custom V8 auto,
story trame, IU Glen Cove
radio, PS, good Urea, cleah
and 24:'' nuneey inspected evAve.,
Oak HID, Ohio. Four
aod sharp..... , , .. $1095
ergreens, t' to 5 1 Phlster
(4) largo bedrooms, one (I)
Junipers, 10 tor $30 Band B. 1966 BUICK Electra 225, 4 dr,
Cull and IWo {2) halt boths,
hlp, air cond. , • , , ,$1295
Alao tnlck Beales for sale,
largo
corner loL Owner llv·
25 ton, $300. Ph. 446-1799. 1965 PLYMOUTH V8 stick, J'Ull8
lrw
In
Florida.
Low-LCMprlce
aod looks good. onJy ••• $495
258-3
at
$20,000.
1963 COMET Conv., 6 cyL
stand • , • • ••••• , • $350
TREAT RUGS right, they'll be
a delight It ci•ned with Blue 1963 FORD Fastbock , , , $300
Lustro. ll&lt;!rt electric sham- 1964 CHEV, Impala Conv••495
pooer $1, Cuntral SUpply Co. 1962 FORD Gal. 500 - New re- EXCELLENT LOCATION
buUt engine, gocdtlres•• $295
258-6
1960 OLDSMOmLE, runs good 4 BR's - Thla large tamUy
home is near town and on a
and clean • • ••••••• $249
EVERY MAKE electric carpet
large roUirw, weU cared for
TRUCKS
shampooer doas a better job
lawn, spacious LR with WB
with tamous Blue Lustre.. 1962 CHEV. plck~t~, wide bed,
fireplace, kitchen and eatiug
runs
extra good. No
LCMer G. C. Murph,y Store.
area,
all paneled with IJDI)Ie
rust , , , , , , , .... $795
258-6
cabi~t space, HW fioors, run
1965 FORD Pickup, blg bed,
basemeJt,
near new gas rurnruns good , , , . , , , $795
BOWLING boll and beg - Man's
ace,
storm
wiQdows aOO
mLL'S USED CARS
R. H. 161b., $10. Full choke
doors,
concrete
porches, 2
Upper Rt, 7 - Kanauga
borrol tor Browning auto.,
car
garage.
Make
a point to
Beside Gelllpolls Tractor
12 gauge, $40. Ph. 446-4566.
see
lhi
s
one
rwon.
CMassey-Fergusonl
258-3
5 ACRES
Phono 446-1044

-----------

THE· WISEMAN
AGENCY
'

SALLY'S IJlolaWs coming. She

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

didn't Ouster- cleaned the FARM!ffiS AND PART-TIME BEAU'l1FULcircledrlveleads
th
tothl
uaJ
8 unus
carpets with Blue Lustre.
FARMERS - We now have
e way
home
Rent electric shampooer$1.
Farmer's Hardware Co.

••

25o--u
- - - - -- - -----

agoodselectionofusedtrad·
ors in stock. (Better hurry0
AI
ld
1 h• f
SO, a lf e var e~ 0 new

lnthecouW'_yonastateroute.
Walk--in play room with all
tile floor aOO WB nreplace.

andusedequipment.

AlsoongroundOooryouwlll

SOLID STATE Walnut stereo REMEMBER!

Always check

console. 4 speed Intermixed

with us before you buy a new

()fft~ ~3643
Evenln@ ~II

F

changer. Dual volume control. 4 speaker sound system.
Balaneeduo$69,80.USEOUR

tractor. we can save you
money and sell you the besL
Massey-Ferguson.

TIME PAYMENT PLAN. caii

GALLIPOLIS TRACTOR

446-1028.

UPPERRT. 7-KANAUGA
GALLIPOIJS, OHIO

258-3
------- - - -- -

Phone

MAPLE STEREO.Radlo. 1969
I ovaly maple tlnishwith AM

446w1044

2511-1
----- - ------

&amp; FM radio, 4 speakers, dual GOOD USED stokermatlcstove.

volume control. Balance due
~6,30. USE OUR TIME PAY.
MENT PLAN. ce11 446. 102s,
258-3
--- --------AKC Tiny Toy Poodles- one
aUver male and 1 black male.
Deposit wW hold tor Christmas. Coloolal Hlll Kennel.

E •.

Very Deslreable Homi
Ideal Lo~lon

llnmmer Plwitblng ,

Extraordln•y.Value
Country Estate

YOU'Ll BE AMAZED AT

CHARMING

DECORATED

THE
BARGAIN
HE'S
TH~OUGHOUT . LOTS OF LEAVING
8 E HIND .
EXPENSIVE
CARPET, LARGE LIVING ROOM,
WOOD 8URNING FIRE PANELED DINING ROOM,
PLACE,
FINISHED LARGE
MASTER
FAMILY OR REC. ROOM, B E DR 0 0 M ,
WI TH
FULL BASEMENT AND 2 "DRESSING ROOM AND
PATIOS. KITCHEN IN - BATH, PANELED DEN
CLUDES DISH WASHER, AND CENTRAL HALL AND
RANGE AND OVEN. HUGE STAIRS. ALL WALL TO
DEEP LANDSCAPED LOT WALL CARPET. PLUS
WITH
WATER
FRON - KITCHEN
AND
..
TAGE . DON'T WAIT, WE BEDROOMS.
MODERN
SELOOMHAVETHISKIND HEAT,
NEWLY
IN·
OF PROPERTY, CALL IKE SULATED . 10 A. OF
WISEMAN RIGHT NOW. R 0 L LING
LAND .

PRESENT OWNER WILL

1 Acre

Ed11 of Town

AND ALL FOR l!S,900. IF
YOU WANT A CLEAN 3
BEDROOM HOME WITH A
COUNTRY ATMO.S PHERE
SEE THIS ONE. WALL TO
WALL
CARPET
IN
3

BEDROOMS
AND
li.
LARGE NEARLY NEW 2
CAR GARAGE. BETTER
BE AN EARLY BIRO ON
THIS ONE.

LEAVE RIDING ·HORSE
AND 2 PONIES . 15 MIN . ·
DRIVE FROM TOWN.

4

VR.

OLD

c-. Planto, ·a..-

288-U

CAIITER;

PLIJMsltm-

AND HEATING ~ ':· •
. 130 Fourtlr Aft, ' ,,,
""- t461111
.

:----+-.__,_ ______ .
lns~~ance
NATIONWIDE INSIJRAIICE
AUTO, ltre, lite, 45 State St.
Waldo

F,

Brown, W, R

Brown, t46-1980.

-

.

-·- "--·-·· ·

·-

.

•
24..tf

·--- --

Services Otfwed .·

S.HE DANCES WITH SWINGING STEPS

'

ALBERT EIIIIAII .
Walar Del1YIIl' ~~~~
IWzlal 8lar Rt., r..PIPl!Je
,l'lr. 311-JUI

ALKS BY HERSELF

"":"

1

BEDROOM BRICK RANCH
INCLUDES
A
LARGE
CARPET
ROOM
WITH W.ED
8. LIVING
FIRE PLACE,
Jlh BATHS, A VERY NICE
KITCHEN !RANGE, OVEN,"
DISHWASHER

DEAD STOCK
f5.00 Service CJW..p _
w;w removeyour-

No.lo63

horae• and COit'l

Coil JackiiOD 286-4531

I

19.95
VALUE

) LARGE 2

-~---------~~:T
Et:ts~~f.t~'f.o:
'--'-"'c:..:=.:_----~:..:!:~:!!:~~~~~..:J • Tmllllll'E PEST coimloL

GRAB IJI.

Pb. 245-5804.
256-3
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - IN TOWN - just right tor rert·
FREE ~ call t4f •
1968 MOBILE home, take over
at or retirement - 3 BRand
Real Estate For Sale
Uti Morrill O'Dall, ~
payments. Call 446-9409,
beth, large storage room,
1Gr lor l!llllrllllal Tt.mlla
254-6
new carpel In 2 rooms, all
0. D. PARSONS
Son!.., II Bal-Dr.
----- -- - -- new Door covering thr01J81&gt;REALTOR
·
·· ·
'261..tf
1958 CHEV. . 2 T. hay truck, 30
out, nice kitchen, tul1 base- Fann, Vlllogo, Cit, l'r-rt}o ·REAL ESTATE BROKER ~;;
Ferguson tractor, in go o d ment, gas furnace, redecorFirat &amp; Olive
TEL. ••"-1998
.
dono. Coil' Ull-8358,
cond. Ph. 367-7571,
254-5
ated. A reel bl\V.
' Phono 446-f219
....,..
233-U
5
APPEALING
FOR SALE OR TRADE
aultes and mattresses. Qn-. "APPEAUNGtothepocketbool DAIRY FARM
LOCATEDooSI.Rt.l60.61arge cml:\iO~l-ii-lllli Oftiil..;.
USED WOOp omce desk and
bln Furniture Co., 446-1171.
as well as to the eye" _ 3 120 ACRES, (ItO acrea craaa&gt;,
rooms ard bath, HW ftoors,
work. Phone Albworth, ..._
swivel chair. Empire Fur·
159-tr
BR, 1112 bath, ample cabinets
modern 8 room, IWo o!DQ
~~~~~turn.
~eat,plencybullt
1188.
. _ 1~
niture, Gallipolis, 0,
In kitchen, formal dlnirw
heme, equip, bldg.. 000 o!the I ... has 4., A. renced lot. - - - - - - - - - - - - - 258-3
room, large carpetedLRwlth
nicestclall}'bornalnlhecoun-' laPianty llltend. red water from WAIER DEUvERY SERViCE '
fireplace,
~
rge po
CALL Grover· ·,_,., 446-0811
IW
Uko tltlo ...._ ..
... .. . .,...:~
1
1966 ENGLISH ~RD. 4 clr...
MORE FOR S
::.,.~;::'; ·
i. 1 ;
"'• MAKE AN OfFER· ·-1~~~(4f.Alaea.
good conditlon,rellable,oco- ..,.. ON PAG6 28 ALES
2
In excellert taste.
BUSIN!iiS.
· NO ra~e otter refused't"': · 't/..Y'' · ·,,~'~'&gt; :
·· ~
nomlcaL Ph. 367-7496.
'
OF1 A
Wohavaa__,
thl"• nlce 5 rm. hoUse
. ·wttft
~· d ----.,.-,~------•• ..w, '"'·
· • ··
~w
ocatloo with a bid&amp;. 45 x 60. .both; loeatad In the clt,y on 0 LEE'S ~LUMJIING i REM~
FARM
Can be purchasad lor leu · nice ' lrhadod and tenced lot.
ELING, Crown Clt,y, Ob!D.
YOU SLAVED and slaved ror Real Estate For Sale
204 ACRES - 50 acres Rac::.:eplacementcoatofbldg. . AokiJW •D200.00.
~ ~~.....:_:_ ___~~.U...
wall to wall carpet. Keep It - - : : - - - - - - , - - - ,
coon bottom, woods land1 75
new with mue Lustre. Rent 1
F
·
acres tractor lard, larp 9
Ctatral ~ Condltlmlna
etectr!c s h a - $I. Sbej,..
or Sale or Trade
CENTRALLY LOCATED
room
home,
dug
aNI
drilled
NEIGHBORHOOD
RG.
pard, 862 lsi Ave.
Now 3 bedroo11 homo in
&amp; flrnH':IC.w
2 BLOCKS !rom Hol•er Hocpl~
2S8-6
city. modernistic desitn,
wen, two barns, crib, tool HALF MILE out. Nice 5 room
Free Olllbnateo
al, 7larKOrms., 2botlts,partcarport, utility room
house,
cellar ard eellar
frame heine wllll porch, In!ilewart'l 1lanlraro
lal boas.; garap and located
hardwood floors. cerami~
house,
This
farm
lo
Ideal
Cor
sulated.
OUIII!d&amp;Fruit.
City
VIDa, Cillo
PEKINGESE PUPS. Ph. 245- tilo bath, built:in kitchon a comer lat. Price r•
stock !arm.
water
"
echools.
Price
,....
I~
ducad to l12, 750,
5198 ofter 5 weekdays or
en, lots of closet space.
duced.
anytime m S.turday and Sun- Will trodo for mobilo IMPORTANT NOTICE
GILLENWATER'S SoPuc Tank
day,
258-3
homo or othor roal ••· TO HOME OWNERS
Service, .fit SmJIII Dr., KID37
ACRES
OR
1
ACRE
.
,
.5
A.
Tob.
boao
as
A.
toto. Ownor will holp
WHEN YOU DECIDE to use our
NEW IDEA corq&gt;lcker, I row finan&lt;O, ph, «6-0265
~· M&amp;-ati19,
20t.U
sellirw service, your home MODERN 6 rm, one fioor pliir, Bottom, 20 A. flat, 40 A_ roll·
_____
·.. :_ __
·..
pull type No. 7, Harold Flint
nicely
paneled,
botlt,
drll1ad
trw,
belanee
In
pasture.
Jt
1 ta 4 p.m. or 446-4n5
wlll be lnteU!gently priced,
446-3210.
well. stocked pon:l. coal rta. haa a 7 rm. modern houae, 1 BACJS. HOE or loldlr
258-5 anytime.
descriptively advertised 111111
..rY!ce. ~ aulu L,
Price reduced. Keystone lid. lam born, and 100 A. under•
- - - - - - - - - ___
persiatontly shownprospecta
· ·· laid with coal, Price$15 000 - -~·~30'illi.U
HOME SITE
MORE FARMS
' •
20
OR TRAILER SITE. 81f.r acrea. . 18 A. St. Rt. 141 ,11,000 ,TEIIKlTE &amp; PEST CONTROL
258-3 THIR
need listings lp aU locations.
Raccoon Twp, 01&gt; State Rt.
13 A. all tractor land
FAIN
IXtwt nd"tlon Co.•
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - . DAVE. &amp; STATE ST.
CaD the action number 446325. City sct..rla.
. ' 18 A. 1h A. Tob. bose, t8500
Whaelerabur~o Olllo. I'll. 574USI!Jl and rebuilt auto porta.
2674,
1112. '
232-U .
23 A. 'h A. Tob. base, $4500
NINE
ACRES
toBelrdold suBI'OI. ~-PartaPh. ~
PRICEC REDUC::D
. HOBART DILLON, Roalhll
Nl~t: bldg. •U.. UOOdiOILMilo - - - - - - - - - - - - - ver _.....,,
,.,.. ON TIDS 3 BR brick located 2
-446-2674
and halt rrcm_,
to80.
256-U mUea south ortownonalarge Luclllo Of Hewanl INnnon
NEW BRICK home just com.
-------------lotl'IIMlrwtromsR 2l8tothe
EV9nlngt-446-1226
.
pl-. 3 ~ •• 2 balll.
1
FIREWOOD,
_..., P n
Ohio River. This home has a
Joy stoo,.d, 446-G219
rooms, carpet 1n llvbra room
random alze, cut lo desired
Earl Winters, 446·3821
lengths. Call 388.&amp;$48.
Cull besement with roc. room, lAIRD REALTY CO.
and
hall. Nice largo kitchen
Woy~o Aotsbary, 446.0239
256 -3 dishwasher, garbage dispo- Oscar ..lnl, hlltor
and dlnlnB area, all paneled
.Don•or· K. Hltloy, 4-46-f~
sal, bullt~n stove and air corJ.
with birch cabinets. ForCOid
452
Soco~d
Avo.
dltloning. Also has a garage
air boa~ corner lot. l.Gcated
15 PVREBRED Hereford cows, and a large storage building. 25 ACRES OVERLOOKING-------.'----'-:-t mlloo from Galllpolla, 1111
bred to Charolalo bull, Pb.
Would ooaalder tradlrw for OHIO RIVER BOTIOM ·.
the
river. can finance. lb.
446-387t altar 6 p.m.
EXCELLENT building lite If
RUSSELL
256 -3 lowe•· priced praperiy.
quire Comln Furnllure 446you want privacy with a vi..,
1111, Iller 5 MU573.
;-5mc'i:ER-s0,ii0il;1-u-;lr.;.
LAND CONTRACT
or It yoo want to build your.
1000
250..tf
aelr a country estate. IWIIGp
latlng gas beaters $100eech WE HAVE two homes we can
excel. """"- 245 .siso.
' aeU on Land ContracL Prlc· cwerlook1 the Oblo River,
.·
REALTOR
···.&lt;·
~
ed at ~.350 and $4,500.
private rli!bl-&lt;llf-Wil1 to lAM.
2
er River Road, water Ja DOl
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - OFFICE I'HONE -446-1694
problem,
land Is a!DIOII aD
1962 NEW MOON trailer, 10 x
EVENING
cleared
and
dellg)ltrul lor
55, excellent conclldon. Ph. Charles M. Nool 446-1546
building.
ANOTHER SHIPMENT
446-3983
256..6 J, Michael Noel 446·1503
THE MAGICIAN who eewa a...,.,
·"
FOUR BEDROOMS CLOSE man ln. two lon't nearly u
-------------------~-------Education
NEW 3 bedroom home, Green TO CITY LIMITS
' clever u the !lloband Who
Acre a SUbdlv. Financing
·
keeps - !rom going lo pl
available. Call 446-1900 or ALL THE conveniences of clt,y
ec.
COMPU~~~
446~890.
6-3
living
wllhoot
city
taxes.
Clt.v
es.
25
water, aewer, naturalgaatur- IF YOU have to buy lop tall
-----------~ - LEARN at home - In yow
;::· b:"t!~.ln ~·-:.::- yOI(iJ find that even dlrtliDD
NEW 3 hedroom, all electric
.,.... tim.. Net specl•l .elY.
cation · MMed. lt'l 1fr~~pl1.
ranch home~ 1112 baths, cartwo
atory boos~ less than ~o
lonpr dirt cheep.
Jrtew HIY ln1t.,.t L••nlnt
peted, oppllances built In,
Metho4. Write ,_ frH lwochure.
years old. Extra lotpswlth OWNER moved out of llale _
~··
,..
garap, AddltlomlloiaavallC,C, T., liM II~.,
the
hooae.
neac1a
to
aeU
thla
3
bedracim
TH~EE Bf.DROOII, RAISED
D.• ••· •5-GU-10 1
2125 lllfO)'f'NI I v4;
, able. Ph. 448-3843.
hnme w1111 basement oo 255~ THREE BEDROOMS IN
CEILiiNG AND ROOFS
Mlo•l, fla. !3137 UJ•U
QUIET SUBDIVISION
acre lot 1D Galllpollo TolmREG. $5,99$.00
r----------~--------, BEAUTIFUL built-In kitchen lo lhl~, price $10,00G.OO.
trimmed In a~ !moly WE HAVE
ceramic tile bath, r.;,.cad atr home 00 "s.~ ";:"' brl:
furnace, three bedrooma, lois the 600 block
of clolet ·~ce. two car at.
chen, beat
n at ~
tachod garage, city water, ,
•
oor,
Now vinyl sldln1 for what you pay for alum•,·
f1illy Insulated, loll of living CLEAN IWO bedroom collqi
'
apace.
.
ant,
"
.. .
hllm. VlnJI Is riCOIIImended by Good Hollse* 8;~ R.-. F,lnoJICine :
* ~pll ~·
Pt-nt ,
-·,
now vac
on '7lll acre lit .
.
.
M
,
keeplna. It won't b•d, fade, crack or marr.
Offlco , ....
cloee tQ b)'oillsl. price
24 Hrs.
500,00.
VlnJI Is final. Also comes in colors. Call
Evenings
BYERLY CONSTRUCTION CO. 245-5826 for
Evonlngs:
Deug We4herflolt,
4 MILES WEST GALLIPOLIS- RT. 35
,
John 1.• Rlchonla 446-f280
Ph. 446-42«
fr., estimate.
.
P,
!
fONI!
~9T17
.
.:
·
:
Ronol4 k. Cano.. y 446o3636
Robort L. Bolnl, .
Ph. -446-2136

MASSI£

uon.;;, ..;;;;;.-

:'~ ~----_!~S: - ~-;_.-L~;;rt.;.-.;;,.;.;;;;;;

...........••.

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

{

__ __________ ---

Nearly New Brick
Excellent Location
THIS

\!

-8

;

'•

(

•

PROMPT
FRIENDLY

SPIROGRAPH
s

SERVICE

' "'

••••••••••••••

!._~ ·:....._

:::~4~~":7.

Neal Realty

' I

;cl • •

'

;

I

BE HERE WHEN

WE OPEN."" . .,.,

'~

~ I Jij

•,•o

JOIN THE CROWD
SHOP

~~~~~

=: :. ·

TOYLAND OPENS
MONDAY _AT 2 O'ClOCL
STORE Will BE CLOSED TIL
2 O'CLOCK TO -6ET READY
FOR THE GREATEST TOY
SALE IN THIS AREA. All
ITEMS.CAN BE PLACED .ON
LAY·A-WAY UNLESS
OTHERWISE MARKED.
WE HAVE THE LARGEST
SELECTION OF FAMOUS
DTOYS AT DISCOUNT
PRICES TO BE FOUND IN .
THIS AREA.

" - He-11131

THE

PARK.

~~~~~~a~

1110 Plltlltll A'fl,

THE OWNER OF THIS
COMPLETELY
REMODELED
LARGE
COUNTRY HOME WITH 10
OR 12 ACRE.$ MUST MOVE
OUT OF THE COUNTY.

an ~en stairs leads to the 5
rooms and bathonmalnOoor,
large carpeted LR,patloofi

k
1
wor or pay.

271-U

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

YOU OWE IT TO YOUR SELF TO LOOK AT THIS
NEARLY
NEW
3
BEDROOM HOME . IT'I IN
TOWN
ON
A
QUIET
STREET 3 BLOCKS FROM

I

storm doors and windows,
P l eut,y shade and shrubs, 2
car garage a nd storage rooms
torthemanwlththedeslreto

..

N. ·WI•an 446-4500 .

Quiet Shad• Location ''

ld.tchen, sun rocm, awnings,

--:--------- -----

11. "Ike" Wlsanan·4*-m&amp;

find alargebonquetsizeroom

with extra klchen equlpmeri:,

.

·REALTORS

SOLD

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

M&amp;I BARGAINLAND

'

1'

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

23 - The ·S.n*y Times • S.rtlnel, SUnday, November 2, 1969

11-.1 Estate For sa1e

Rea~ ~tate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

·,.FQI' Sale

For Sale

11VE your family a CHRIST·
• • to remember - earn
good 11101181' oelllag AVON
coemotlca and ,ut, .llema In

,,,.An._,............
.
chont• ..... In tho ....tlno

verilt .... ont will lie ch•pd th
rote of 25c lor eoch chont••
Ads •&lt;MNd fot thrw or 1111 time
ond . sto,.,od bot- expiration wll
"- chofvod f• only '"'"'"' o

........

'

' ].

TILL

~

-----------

:"!.: ~l\V~~!t~:~~

°•

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

FOUNDRY FOREMAN
3 years eJqlerlence In foundry plus required. Quality
cootrol work help!ul. PorisiRCMh, Olllo, location. Ex·
cellent startq salary and benefits plua uouaual ~por­
tunltles tor advancement In our grow"-! OJ'IIIIIzatlon.
CALL J. T. NELSON, COLLECT, (513) 461-3UO !DAYTON)
•r a~tnd "•""'• lol CORPORATE I!MPLOYMf"4T MANAG-ER
DAYTON STEEL FOUNDRY, 13-U MI-l cho,.o~l R..t
0•,....,. Oh J. .SAG 1

446-i066

JUST ARRIVED

OF

•

~r------------------------------------;

BOILER-FIREMAN
REQUIRED IMMEDIATELY BY

R. J.

REV·

MOLDS FOODS, INC.
THIS IS A PERMANENT FULL YEAR POSI·
liON WITH ADVANCEMENTOPPORTUNI·
TIES. NO SWING SHIFTS.

JACKSON, OHIO.

100 E.

PROGRAMMING

BROADWAY,

lodeiM..IIt Hen.ts ·'

1

FALL SPECIAL

APPLY IN PERSON TO MR. J. PEART,
PLANT ENGINEER, AT

NEW 1970

12160 ... .

or:

""""5

...,:.•uektl-'

*'··-''

SPECIAtPRICE

s•, ''s 0.1::~

&lt;_

F&amp;W MOillE· HOlE' ~ALES.

-

'

) ....~1 );;.-,'
' ,j ~· -,1'•1 ·

;-,

.

'

.
•••

:

r

;!.!'•,

.'

'

�Jl' - 111o Sunda,y Tlmeo • SOIIIIJWI, Sunda,y, No-. 2, !!let
' Sale
IIGI'
~
:..Yii:] ..JJ..;:r. .

1 :BLONDE 100 pereent human
:11a1r wig, will oen cllup. I'll.
'f4t.l)808.
256-3
_:_

'

________ ___ _ West's Overcall

Di:SKS, cholra, llllnil cobinotll,
ieuwUea, everythlftl tor the

Paid in Spades
NOB'111

-------- --- --·, viReo PUblic aoatlnil, etwn:h-

. 01 shcoOIII organiutlona,
' '
'
· chairs and tables. Simmon•

: fl&amp;, &amp; Olllce Equip., Co. 4461397.
252~

------ - --- ---ELECTROLUX SWEEPER -

Complete with attachments,
palm spray • conlwinder and
throw away t.gs. Full cash
price only $21.00, Terms
available. Phone 44&amp;-1634,

254-6

I

.QJ9
"~• 1053
.KJ92

•A•
tA92

.J

(D)

.KIOB
tKQJ
.AQ 108
vulnl!t'ab)~

Eoot South
lN.T .

3 N.T.

P8S111

Pus

Pus
Opening lead-• 10

1---------..J

1HI 1 T Chevrolet

West's two-spade overcaU

1985\l T GMC Pickup
1HZ 1J;2 T. GMC
1HZ noo Ford cUIIlp
ItA FeOO Ford truch
1HZ 12 T, Ford plclaip
1963 F 700 Ford
1966 1/o T. lnlematlonal

P:., Weill ... S...vlce
J CeMt ,., Wert! ifiHoltiN

Ml~l...;.. Cher. . 7Sc
12 uma ,., wer .. thrft c - u .
,tl•• lntllrlitN .
1
11 Uritt
tla QIIMC--Jve
}•ortlont .
25 ,., unt Diuo""' on ,.,,. Ht
•"-' t4t ,.hi within 10 ..., •.
CARD OF THANKS &amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 ,., 50 .......... _ _ £ • .
.. dlti..,.l woo4 2c .

'*' ......

.Q78

North

Dtr .f P~llc•-.,.
RfGUUTtONS
T h. P~lltlwf , • ..,.... tt. r .....
:te ...,,, or •tjtct •"r edt
' IHflo,..l. The ~llthet will ...

.......c,

•n SOUTH •a•
Weal

Will M .,..,_, .,,,ul t •·•· 1..

.......... ,.,. '• - · theft ...
illl~l.iff.-·· .

.76432
t8764

Both

s , .•. o., ..... Nu... ,_,
.._.., o-.411... ' ....
c.......,..,. 1 c..'"',....

is not recommended. If

"••-.. .

BLIND ADS
A.t4IIIOfMII ec Cheo,. ,.,- Aft.,.

OFFICE HOURS
1:30 a .111 . •e 5:00 •·•· Dailr
lr31(1 a.111. to 12100 . . _ ~--'r

.-;:;-_-.. :-.-.;.

....Ut

'lboae Whom we love go out ·ROOF IIEI'.AIR ut lilt~
o1 alglll,
'-tl;lloo IIIIIII•DIINI..Ul
But ....rout ol mind.
-.... . ~ -...
They are dlertshed 1n the Free -ie.. PIMa 992heorto
2808. Weao liii'WIIen..
01 lhote lho,y leo.. behind.
· 1tl-1-«c
Lov!Qr and kind in.U his
------------

WWAiw•••
•

-··

l.pricht and just t&lt;l the end 'vACANCY lor two oldorly plo. Prefer prt,.w paid .,.. ,
othts daya,
liento. Phono Muoo, 'I'IS- ·
SJneere and true in heart anll
5185.
lo.Mic
mind,
held~~=~~---------

RED STEW ART and 11lo Amba..
sadors, Cowtry alii Rock
Sodly mioaed by wile Mary Band. Coli 99U307 lor hire
and children, R&lt;lllert, J u d y New Year's E~ or Christ11J..31-2tp
an:l Joyce.
11·2-ltc mao.

Card of Thanlls

.... ftl-2143

-GUAIIAirEED-

WBCUI SEIYICf:

........i.,..-,.o.

F•TIIe Futat
S.Wice DAY Gf
•8111' ..• CALL·
RAILINGf SERVICE

,.•.,., ........
·PH·tiZ--

......-,,- R•l Estlfl FQr Sale

EXCELLEN'r LOT, 40'x125' ..
Mill 9trool, llldcll_.t. AIFar Rent
.. 2 11017 brick huiLH111•
TRAILER LOTS, Bob'i Mllblle • N. 2ad St., lllddl-"' Ph.
. Coort, Syracuse, CHilo. on~ 992-0251.
Slate Rt 124, Phcmt 99211..:Z..U.
2911L ·
&amp;-11-«c

I

$1895
Goloxie 500 4 dr. 8 cyl. Auto. trano. P.S. R&amp;H.
w/w tires. Sharp

.

66 PLYMOUTH

1795

VIP 2 dr. ·H.T. 8 cyl. Auto. trono. P.S. P.B.
R&amp;H. w/w tires. Sh... p

~

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

Fast Bock 2 dr. R&amp;H. w/w tires,
'

We Carry A

Complete Line Of

Door Sedan,

STEREO TAPE SYSTEMS
4 AND 8 TRACK. ALSO COMPLETE LINE
OF STEREO TAPES, 4 AND 8 TRACK.

I

SEMI • AUTOMATIC riDe, 22 POODLE PUPPIES. AXC 'FCW
10111 with '&amp;Cope. Phone 84~ mi.Uilrro, f/1 llll . . SiDtl
2476.
IIJ.-28-iotc
aorvlce 0111.....-1. . . . _
-----------99:1.6441.
11-c
CAMPERS lNI trawl trallen, - - - - - - - - - - - Bonner llll Continental. Low 7-11 CAFE lor lale. Beer,wine,
price,. 10 percent to 15 per- whiskey license. Phone 992.cent •v!Qrs. Ccme to Gtul'a 9957.
ltl-28-7t&lt;
TraDer Saleo. P - 965 •
- - ___ _
3832.. Two miles north d ~w GAS turra~e i;stalled,
Cheoter m Rt.. 7, Wat&lt;h lor $295, Terma available. Ph.
sign left on County Rood 36. 992-.'1352..
10-5-3otc
11}-10-«c.

Clean, Pre- Owned
NOIJ.fi'IOS

PUILIC SALE .

1968 Cadillac Coupe DeVIlle ......... $49110

. Aq~o !1Jitallic:.Jin,IU.~' wit~ motching Interior, lull
' ' power ·· equip~~~ &amp;vtae Control ...nd CUmote
. &gt;£ontrol air-&lt;!i lliOWing: ·
· ' a ' '"

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

1968 Cadillac Sldan DeVIlle :~ .......... $49110

Go_ld with matching interior, full power equipment,
AMIFM radio, tilt &amp; tele1cope StHring wheel,

rear window defogger, controlled differential, tint·
eel glass, w/s/w tires and Comfartron air-condi-

NEW HOMES
FOR SALE

ti~ing.

White with turquoiM Interior, full power equi_pment
radio, ,tintool glau, w/o/w tires, Climate Control
Air-Conditioning, r.oal. ohorp, only 18,000 IIi ln.

--------------·

2-i967 Cadillacs .............. choice $37110

LEE

. -----------~

--

c-

bar.

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

-11-.

m.mz.

1 Coupe DtVillo, I Seclon O.Villo, lull power
,equipment ond Climot. Control air&lt;onditloning.

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

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
Motor Sales
OPEN EVES. TIL '8

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

Work Is Progressing
On Tooth-Bonding Agent

Auto Sales

TIAIEIS &amp; CAIIPEIS

us

~&amp;:::..:np~.:!,e/of tooth. ;~ mAI.;~pab,ti;.-ca~

.....,._,

GAUL '5. TIAILEI SALES

iiooi.l

Left

36

_______ __::~~--------------------------...

TIMBER,FOR SALE

COMPUTER

PROGRAMMER

acre

lsbarr

s till

locllld

u•

llells C.UIQ.

ROlli, Sll·

POMEROY

992-5342

ea.-

.

~-j .

T A~: . . .. 1. .. : .....
Atross, ,.1:12 74~I'U!Oi'l

.'/.

1-Unsoll•d
6-Boundarles

Far Sale

1968 COUGAR, 302 ellline,' 3 on '
Door, wide oftlo,$1900.1931 FOUR ROOM house, &amp;OGd lfall,
Ford, ChtyY -end, 80 pv 16 acr••• 6 miles from Ra·
cent dOJW, $1000. Coli M&amp;: clno. Coli 1149-2723.
2681
aller
5 p.
m.
~~..
.
10.26·12tp
;_____________
_
-~::.·_________
COAL, e.-.taltoMnlnerun,Ja•
1959 PLYMOVTII, V-8, automa- cobo Coal Co. ·Ratla'ld Tipple. .
Ue, 45,000 mlleo. Ntlf paint
Phone 7U-49$2 • 99S4469..
lUld carpets. Phone 992-2227,
111-WOic
11-2-ttc _________ ..:.,
____ :.

to-29-3tt ·= -------;; ;.; ._-~..;_ -----:----::-----

.I .

·- - --

----~ ~ -- -

. uaun .,.....,., liluot be JORDAN'S USED elolhil1!, 111QAI RY "'"!'- . , ., ,.
, o'-.Kano RQad. NoW Olh1p..
oble to ...,_.. ,lllilld" mo- - o f -·i and chlidren's
chiJW. Hou141 ~ Ar- · ,,._. ·
'"
· . . • ·,'':"'-·
.;.;,_ MN83S.
·
'
~"'·
·~
Frida1•
SQ.
vD H.. .
llniiY l'ldllundoyatt..
U..wtc
' .
10-31-4tc

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

76--C~fedtrate

133-Mea.sllle
135-Piact

&amp;•n•ral

13~P'otsns

77-PIIImll~t

fruit

78-Lia.ttn to

ll-Brlllf
16-Wat•rway

79-Gioomim~u

21-Luso
22--Siantlna
23-Fiut• playtr
24--Got up
25-Graln

82- Fresh•ts
84-Eo uals

list

28--StOri.. .
30---b:PII
32~bt :

not

40-Roa.ttn
42-Pormlt

---

T

ll,___Musiul
instn.tmtnt
t4o-Music: ••
written
141- Number

20-Cit""s·fr\Jit
27-Time &amp;one by
29-ln Ud
31--Caolltchouc
1rtt
36--Liquld mtaa.ure
31-lmitat•d
39--L•n•

142-Note olse~lt

40--Ch•ck

premium
86--Siave
18-Ptoptt.t

10-Symbol for

41-Hi,lhle"d•r
42-Piant of pea
t.mily
43-Dock
44-Spokan
46--Parant (colloq .)
411--FIIem•nt
49-H•avanly body
50-la. mlsialceo
51-Hurritd

89-At:M=~t

wupon
~ve

103-Cheer

104--St• ...,.

105-Falsifier
106-U"d•raround
p1rt1 of plant
108--Man's nlclulame
ukl
109-M•Id•n loved
49--Gaomat:rlc ratio
br Zeus
50- B•fore
110-Thr••·totd
51-K•ep
sloth
5.4-Pertalnlnl to
111-Rost•r
tiM dawn
112-VIeld
55-Let it a.tand
114-Bo~te of body
56--Ciasslflta.
116-Everyo"•
~9-Retldue
117-Commomorttlvt
60-R•Iiliout
dis~s
dtvolst
U,___Rivtr itlt"da.
62-ln n1me only
126-Eft
64- Nobl•man

122-Yulpr

65-Sf'mbol for
tellurium
H-Corlt (abbr.)
67-Numbtrs (tbbr.)
69-hrt OISIIP
70-Emmeta
71--Dtflnlt• anlcle
72--LAimPNY

124--0n•. no matt•r
which
l2S-B•v•raa• &lt;pl .)

b-+--

~

85-bchanl•

11p
33-h'ICf•tlnl"
92-bncn
articlt
94-Colony
34-Lon&amp;, sl.nd•r
t....._Mua.lcal
fllh
ltlstn.tmtf1t
!5-llyiq mammal 99--Sharp
!It--Whimper
100-Brown ltlwl
37-Full
102-Vamllh
!-......Hit lllhtfy
l•rodlant

- - - - - - - - - - - - -.- COAL, WMP, .... II&gt;Dltor-: 1:::+1967 CHEVROLET ~Jq~eila 2 mint N\ Elnlolor Soli!
ttoor HT, new tires, good ea. Works, Eut lfli.ID SL. Pciadltloo, ntal baqain, f1495.
• ..,. Phone 991..2881.
Call 9ta.a!i77 der 5:30 P.l)l.
11-12-Ue

Help Wanted . ·:

u

43--Mettltuba
U-Unlock
45-Simi•n
47-fr~~raved with

'WOU'i.J,. LIKE !)UR QUALIIY WAY
OF DOING BUSINESS"

w..

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1969

~urr

1!168 Cadillac Calais H.T. Sedan ....... $47110

nav.

,. . ·;

·--------------

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

,.,....I

HOBSTETTER
REALTY .

\1-i •"line,
ste.tne
&amp; brok••• outo. tront., foe:•
tory olr .. eandltl-4, new
W.W. tlret, to41o,. - - n
flnhh,

1967 Ford ...... Sl895

Galoxlo 500 H T. Sa-do". L~l
1 _,_car. ihJte flnfah, illk.
vlnrl l~erlor, good tirea., rollllo
at•erl"' oncl Uolcea.
Automcrtlc Wont.

P-•
1966 Buick ... ,11695.
Wildcat HJ Cpa. White"iiftlth.
Blk. vlnr trim. Good ·u,.e.
AutDI'IIcrtic, power atHri'11•
Rodlo.

'

\.~.§ P~l~ctJ-3..!.~
c•.

Moroon flnlah,
tiNa., a_,to, ft'GMo,
power ttoll'lng &amp; btoba, ·
rodlo, b11clcet soot oncl cono
tole.
Local

(tGOd

-----------Truck Spetl•ls

. PHONE 992·2151

126-Middl•

128-lnqullt
129-Difficult
131-The tast wind
132-Turf

tantalum
144--Dtnla.h la.land
145--0eellr•
147-Tit.. of rnpact

149--Contain•r
150-WipeOIIt

152-R•pulal
tn.tnk

1-Southeast•m
Eu10911n
2-CIImblnl plant

3-Dine
4-Naar
!-Short slttp
6--Woon~

7-R•JMoat
8--Nothinc
9--Spanish article
10-PI&amp;pen

57 -Chemlul
compound

58-So61-Part of tpeech
63-Employt
64-Mtn'l nam•
68-More
praelpito11a
70-Put on one's

au•n:l

1964
Dodte •••• $795
8 ft. sw .. pi1da Pickup. VI

DOUBLE CHECKED USED CARS
AND
DEMONSTRATOR SALE

•ngine, n- HD tiree, Solid
cab, tr"n flnieh, Ma,..
. ,;

1960
Chevrolet ..$495
~ Tan Plck11p, 6 cyl. 6K: ft.
Fl .. tsldt, good tires, hoottr.

Save '110P3

Bon~villt 4 dr. Hotd Top. Ot.,.o. FoetOI')' air co~itloni ... Pawtr
at-•ng. Power brak .... Auto, tran1. Tilt st•erl11g wh••l, Posltivt
lTactlon. Low, low mlltoge, ¥inrl top. WSW libw glau tirtt. EZI
glau. AM-FM radio.

$EVERAL NEW

H Clr1ml•

97
Sa~e
'949·
Factory oir conditioning,

69 PONTIAC

ill availabl• at oreatly --

REDUCED

Catollno 2 dr. Hard Top . E~~:ecvtiv• ccw.
Power stetfing. Powe.- bra"'-•• · Auto . tront . Vinrl top. E7.1 glau,
Radio. Low, low mlltogt .

69 DATSUN

_
"'"

PRICESf

$1,795

-4 dr. Stdan. Spotl•u oil white fini•h. Only 15,689 tuy '"Ilea.. Rodlo
IIJI~elrd

92...-chatr
93-AMn
95-Former Rultien
rultr
96--Mttal flll•n•rs

i7-Wooden pin
99- Hit llchfly
101-Madl amendl
far

105-Fiower
106--WhMI treckl
107-Pttitio"td
111-AIIt:ht
112- Row
113--Smell bre"ch
ll~Vts"l

116--Woodtn vltstls
118-M•Ild with
52-Chemical
cotton
156-Spout farth
c:ompo11nd
II,___Tow.,d shelter
158-FawKt
159-Arr•nc• In folds S3-Permenent pap•ll21- lntractable
ambasudor
ptJ"IOns
160-Wab·footed birds
"55-Slumbers
123-Co"junction
161-Binds
56-0penina In
12S-Vield
f•nce
126--Protaeti&gt;~e
154-ICrtOt In tree

enstlnt,
automatic
trana.
Radio, custom cab, chro•
;rill•, F &amp; R b11111ptr, Wott
Cootl mirror, jet biGCk fin-lth, l•u thon 2S,OOO Milea
by local owner. s- ond
drlva this •xc•ptlanal tNck
todoy •

BLAETTNARS

.c::- -:=.---~- ::. ---:-:-

For Sale

AChoice Ust of lorth More ....

•

CONSTRUaiON

l9!1, ~h~~~~.
$1,~
p-••

FOLLOW THE CROWDS T&lt;'

for
trash, $2.50 each. Pomeroy
Junk Comp&amp;I\V.
10..22-12tc

55..GALLON drumrt, good

-r------- ------

~

Ww

8 ft. Sw.. pslda Pielc..,p, VI

For Sale

...

~

•IIINiw,

c011..1t

1967 Dodge ..... $1595

jars~ted,

grandps"-

R.S.

eloa" lrttwlar, gold fl"lth,
tood W.W, tlr.,, Foct_,. olr
eondltlontd. Autolnaflc fnna,
Poww •to•lflll, ra4ftJ.

P .S. Rodi~

MIDDLEPORT

Mat

tmr:lo 4 o-. 1 ....,.., erwl
on r 12,000 '"llot. Spotitlat

cyl.·, stand. trans., radio

MILL &amp; SECOND

and

41.e

H)'4rOMOtlr: •

1968 Chnrolet , $2595

"OHIO'S OlVESJ' DODGE DEALER"

....

atMrt,.,

Tlfto

•CWJ , r1

wkh blve vlr,yl ;;;1, fvlfy
oq.,lpp.d, a rt~ol bHuty. . ...
lllucocl to S3695.

I. H. Rawlings Sons Co.

- EDDIE FIF£ - CEWARD CALVERT- CLIFF PHILLIPS ~ CAN THOMPSON

'

.!!...

rltdlo

l.uc5cat

Very good

i-.

-·

OL/to. ·trans.

,._

W.k...-

66
GTO PONTIAC ---~~:~----5139
2 Door, HardTop, 4 speed
65
CHRYSLER
4
._
SED'N
$1
PoWer steering, Torque trans., 1 owner, low mil0a'i1~
Pl.Y6lOUTH VALIANT
RAMBLER AMERICAN
-Sidon, 6 cyl., standard trOns.
1950 WILLYS
PICKUP TRUCI _____$495
cOndition.

o

Cleland Realty ............ --. ...

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

4 Door sedan, Torque

sod:4 Dr. 8 cyl. Auto. R&amp;H. w/w tl,.,, Shorp

PUIUC SALE
.......

pl..,.,-·
....,

......

61 DODGE ·CHARGER------- $2395
66 Pl. YIOUTH FURY n____ $1695

66 VOLKSWAGEN
$1395

$1695

I..aure•
I a·ff

--

$2395

67

..,...,

News Notes

c•. New cor tltf•·

Power ste«ina. auto •.ti-G'n·s., c~sole, iadio.

Comet Super Sport, 4 sp., 8 cyl. Radio oncl hoot•
er, P.S. P.B. w/w tires. Like new.
·

. ',MIDDLIPOIT, 01110

l

---------

68 CHEV.

R.H . -ItftiiiiPS.

Auction
North had double:!, West
,
RUMMAGE SALE, Catholic Wowould have been held to sa I WOULD persorall.Y like to PUBUC SALE - Saturday Nov.
men' I Club, Sacred Heart
tricks and pai.d a 500-point
t h a n k all my Mighbors,
8 at 10:00 a. m. Home ol the
Parish, - · 3, 4 and 5 in
penalty. North chose to bid
friends, an:l relatives who so
late Mary Pulllno. Just oot or
ciurch auditorium, 9 a.m. to
~o,, ..... 5, 1969
- ----- three no-trump and West
graciously remembered me
Racine, Oido, - r B111h111.
3:30p.m. PIOft\Y otrieepark12t00 Naen
was punished even more
......... o~22
onmy b'M
uu.....,,
._ , 1969• Take State Rl. 124 through
lnil. Far rummaae picl&lt;"''lo FURNISHED llll tmfiD'DIIhed
1
' plclaip
Tilt · following poroonal
severe Y·
~ God bless each one of
Qa..-s. aoae to 1cbool. AIR' CONDI'i1oNitll, Borrt,or-,
Racine, turn on flrat pa-ved
call 992 • 2825, church ree.
196t \ol T, GMC pickup
pr~ will ba oald at. tt1o
He opened the 10 of
you. Mra. Jennie Hanaher,
99Utll.
'i&amp;:ia..tt~
rood (eowt,y Rd. 28) to left.
•aU111 ...t... Joek'IIWrl- rooldonct iocotod or 215
~ry .
19612 T GMC
spades. His partner covered
477 Sycamore St., MiddJ._
awolitl*o
Now lfo- , _ Union A111. In ~,
Watch
!Dr
sale
signa.
OR
I0-30-5tc
with the jack. When you hold
1965 \ol T. Chev. Plclaip
.
' a.lo. SLEEPING · room with funace
a singleton, you have to play
port, Ohio.
11-2-111&gt;
lor 1010 ligna.
Turn orr or Rt. 1 on Forest - - - - - - - - - - - - - 196SGMCSuburtan
heat. Coli 99:1.6440.
it.
Wolfe :
Run Rood and loll"" signa. OLD.¥ ASIIIONED J,.mn alnil.
1964 3 TGMC
Living
room
lull.
11..:Z..71c
If West had not overcalled
As we are leavh~ for Columa..
•
.vt.v
2
t
2
~ •....,.,
.
a
p.m.,
Rl.
c
llritr,
otullod
chiir,
"
1966 I!! T. Chev.
with two spades, South
bus, we willsellatpubllcaucFreedom Goape.l Mlsllon, It
dl-sot-~cllltlro.•pttoo .
would almost surely have
1968 \!! T. Int. piclaip
FURNISHED HOUSE. 3 rooms LOANS ..., tiO,OOQ. Ani par-I
bldloom tuft, 2 dtllUFI,
lion our entire collection ol
Bald Knob. Rev. L, R. Gluewon the trick with the queen.
.., .,.mmum, Cal1 ~
11155'10 T, Ford plclaip
IIIII
bath.
Onl
~1011 P~
niiJIIt
otonol, shoiMIIII 7
ar&amp;iques and
collector's
seneamp, pastor. Publle lnIn !act, he would have been
~55 1/o lloci&amp;e Utilil;y
!erred. Phone 992-6592 alter ·· u.,q ~ ... ~-.-·,
itema:
vlted.
10-30-3tc
happy to get that trick in.
3440, lllandlooter, Oido. Aaio"!ps•··
.. llnll'lr ...1'!11
!Jew 5 T Farm Wllj!IIIIO
5 p. m..
11-2-«e
As it was, South almost
Washstand,
e~nerocker,2old
ontsWIIII&amp;
mldllne,•·t&gt;ll._.tanc~~;.
$139.50 playe:l the queen. Then he
stands, eettee arxl chair, bar- CHUCK'S can ~aveycMu.. tol8lr'
pub • pinl.
111..27-8te
~ 2 T, International
stopped and thought lor
By BERTHA PARKER
oloclrlc hlllllete, Iron •rry
ber cabinet, old pletw-es,
on TV repairs U you briiW
1p64 3 T GMC, ' 18 n. Bed. some time. He lmew West
- .
pan, B •
w· drill,· tire ..
Sabhath School attendance at
top trunk, Victrola, old
them ln. Chucl&lt;'• TV, 152Bat- Real Estate For Sale
FOR KillE, -lrolicllor _ , &lt;NinO. ~
I ~t. Moline PDww pretty well. West Uked to bid the Free Methodist Church oo round
2 llltltin
pie oale (orighai Onlah),
ternut, P1111orQY. I'll..., 992but West wasn't an idiot. In
. . ., weodln we-I Nrrow,
j Unit
line,
OIOIPIIIdnllotto1\
5080.
ltl-1&amp;-tfc
West was a pretty good Oct. 26 was 127. Ortertn,g wa1 . wood bed, round oak table,
2 work 1 - . itod pot, 1tor,P.
J!ew 8.25 X 20, 10 ply 1\Vion fact,
bridge player. Would West $44.56, which was added to the
Mlic. oncl gardln _ ..
haU tree, 2 wicker rem '· - - - - - - - - - - - . !Ins f55. Inc. Federal 11x. have overcalled vulnerable bollding fund.
•• VL f " - TJ3..6711allero
otands,
drop-leal
table,
butBOB'S ~ REDUCING Soloa and
'
--Hty
· note:ol Tllore
1::10 ... MNtq. llacbta.
Is o I....
smell .
with only a five-card suit
GrOWMS-breaking for the new
Ollio Volley lmpl001ont Co.
terfbr table, 6 d~ room
Health .center ls now open} ROUTE 7 - BEAVTIFUL-..,Ill
headed by king-IO.nlne? church was held SunJay aftertoo11 ol tt1o lett ·Dolo
133 Pine St., Ph. U6-2532
chairo, I cane bolt'"" hoat
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. by llfiPOIJII,., room brick - . , 4 Wippel. They woro used In •
South didn't think so. In lad,
..,
rooms, wHh cloaeta, excell40.U it seemed pretty certain that noon with Rev. H. L. Jones. con.
chair, 6 cane bottom arm- ment, 5 p.m. to lOp.m. no~~
hll proftalon u Clrpenttr
lent
balh, kitchen with c:abi"' SEE NEIGLEII Buildl.. ........,.,~ ond repairman.
terence
slt&gt;f:rlntendent,
Zane~
chairs, odd chairs, 3 bridle
potntmert neceaAJ'Y, Loeat-.
West had a six-card suit,
ell and dloposal, toll ba•
far hnlldl• 10011' '"-,'(;U!
ville, the speaker.
plus both red acea.
l.ampa, oil lamps, copper ket- ed below K and K Moblle
Ruth Wippel, aurvlvtng 1'
mont with -klhop ,.,.,._
COMPLETE line o! two " a y
South then saw that, II he
Mro. Harmon Fox and grandtie (good), wooden churn.,
Homes, P o 1 n t PI•eant.
Ga7 Nolcior. - - · ~.
0.. . !, -~~ Dole Wippel.
radios, business and citizen had time to knock out both son, Leonard Lyons, who Ia on
t1on room,prageliiii&gt;Ho...
stone churn, butter molda, Phcmt 675-2454 or 675-4020.,
TERMS: Cash
'
aces,
he
would
score
two
b&amp;Dd. Walkie Talkie $9.95 a
way, llh acreaiJ'()WII, fruit
leave rrom Great Lakes Trainatone jars and lids, glass top
to-s..tfc '
~Auction Sorvleo ·
old bottle•, atone ______________ , trees, shrulitery, frontporch siWiN'G-MA~ --..;.~r· J. Ca...,._
Pair an::l t4). Bob's CB Radio hearts. two diamonds and ing Center, spent SWIIay with
D. Smith
lour
clubs.
Then
he
would
Ra&lt;lne,a.lo
Equip. 446-4517,
254-11 nee1 only one spade trick to Mr. and Mrs. Jctln Douglas and
aud
lna.v
other
!esturea.
crotks, iron pot, iron teaket· MEIGS LOCAL Parents, vote
service, oil p11keo. tt2..228t.
Not rosjlonslbie lor acfamily at Shade.
make his contract.
Ue, iron kettle, lron akll· for the school taK renewal. ONCE IN ewryono's li!otime,
111o Fabric libop, ,_rot, ~~ or. IIIII ol ..._,~.
p 4JNT DAMAGE 1969 ZIG·ZAG
~rtunil;y Pn&gt;oentsl18tlfSouth let East hold that
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Karr
lets, odd milk cans, lanterns, keep schools open. Don't vote
Atthorl* Silver Sileo 111111.
•ewine machines. Still in or- lirst trick. East couldn't re- of Millersport visited recently
Herela Yours. 2storylrame,
2 old scales. 2-wheel cart, against your kids by not
service.
•• Sllarpoa...Seta-r r--::::-::=::o:-::-::-:-:::--.
Iginal cartons. No attach- turn a spade and led a heart. with Mr. arKI Mrs. Charles
2 large bedrooms, bath,
old china. carnival glass,
voting or to economize et
h'tents needed, as our con- West was in with the ace Karr.
~----~~-..-~·
hardilainted glasa,lce cream their expense. It Is no tax
PIIJ'Cbes, baoemoot, leWIII.ot.
saw no point In playing
b-ois are built in. Sews with aand
chair,
corn
sheller,
sewing
increase.
Harold
Mau&amp;,
Rt.
2,
$500.
oo
doom,
bolance
like
Mr. and Mrs.llarryWeberol
second spade. He lrnew he
C. C BIWllORD, ~ Satv,.y. Nov. 8, .1969
•-ti
to
Albany. Harrisonville PTA
1 or 2 oeedlea, makes button-- was dead but aaw no reason Buckeye Lake ealled on :Mro..
real,
hi
11.00 A.M.
mae oe, ,.,. ng I- ve. gas member.
Ora..... Slnlctl
aewa oo b.atons, mon- to give South any more than Georgia Diehl, SWIIay.
ranp, bunk beds, stools,
lO.l9-l.ttp
PliD Mlll21 .
" Tho
~ o1
.
a, a'iil'blli!(1\eltl stitch. he hatl . lo,. .tt&lt;&gt;. West led a "'•JdlaStorJ QI.COI-o..-,. dre1aer, ·1 ·-lot·.of sboc:ked - - - ' - - - - . , - , . . - , - WE HAVE GREAT NEED FOR
t
.......
~~t.t.
&lt;
~
ill
·bo l!lld If ;
cash price, $38.50 or ~ heart hayk. South won and 8 weehtlld lfith ~Ja
HOMES TO SELL. CALL US
corn, hand tools, and miocel- ~ nted To Buv
ttlo ,old ,
n ,..lclotlm
1
IIIOIIIhly terms. Phooe 446- knocked out the ace ol dla- ents Mr and Mrs. Norman
TODAY.
·laclfo4 ail wp. Rd. . iS. IV,
laneous items too numerous
3
I
monds. Once more West got
•
·
mi. N.E. ol Wllklvlllo. a.1o
254-6 out
to mention.
CIUNA CABINETS, , _ !aby leading a diamond Schaefer.
or
~ mi. N.w. Of Sliom
HENRY
CLELAND,
Broker
TERMS CASH: NOT liEbits, old elockt, ot&lt;. Writa
back and eventually had the
Mrs. Cora Renshaw underREADY·IIIX CONCRETE doli¥'
- ~- ---------- - Cant.',
Olllo. w-.c:~~ lorO!llce 992-2259
SPONSIBLE FOR ACCJ. or eall M. D. . Mlllor, Rl. 4,
KIRBY VACUUM Cleaner, com- doubtful satisfaction of mak.- went eye surgery at University
tred rl&amp;bt to y- pro,Jtct. · slgno 1rarr1 Sllom Conlor,
11-2-.'ltc
DENTS. LUNCH SERVED.
P - , ~ 99W21l.
Cillo.
·
plete with cleonl111 tooia and inR his kin~ of spades and Hoapltal, COlumbus.
Foot IIIII - · V.... 0111·
holding South to his contract.
SignedMr.
and
Mrs.
P.
~
~
·
polisher. Runs like - · $59
(Hewspo,., ,,..,,_ A.sM.I
- . . I'll. 992-.'1214, Sunray 111
range,
o. Pulli...
- - - - - - - - - - - - - , r-~~.,.~~~~~~~~.,
c:11h or termi uallable.
lieln Rtsd1-llh&lt; CO., lllddl., · rtfrlgtr,tor, 2' brtekfalt
QUICK
QUIZ
Phone 446-1634.
254-6
Sale conducted by Adams Aue&gt;- lns~nnce
.
port,· Ohio.
6-10-Uc · Hfl, 3 kitchen c.lllnete,
1
------------ - - .
tioo
Service,
Rltland,
Ohio.
AlJI'OMOBILE
lnoo!nnce
dining _ , oull; 2 living
Q-Whot waa the lt1lgth
ioNi 'fUbti iiil tiLl; ba..... . . sulto. rnloc. lllllio. J
BI(:AUTit'UL AKC pug PUIIPieo,
ot the tall ot Ho!leu's Auctioneera: CoL Jim M- toot~ ...,..
, _ ... .... udolwool
FUll, Wllrdrabe, piMO,
ams,
phone
742-4461..
Col
lor'l
I
I
?
CaD
992-2966.
·
cornet?
al10 calm teniers, former..... --~001742- l
1
- · mloc. pots,
A-The
tall
of
Halley'o
Q-The biddinB hu been:
Bill Br-. New Marahllelcl,
&amp;-l5-t!Jo:
SOME R~ADY
ly 1raiand Rood Kennels. Dunt..ze.uc . pono. gu
• cllshH, Anti- or
comet,
at
the
time
of
Its
last
Nortlo
But Sooth
Ohio, phcmt 664-3504.
•·
FOR
lop' a, 312 John, Belpre, Oillo Weot
'
Collectl-loo, 2 spl~
appearance; wa1 about 100
?
whtell, llld1 oom ault,
Ph. 614-42$-7261.
u..:z..1tc
For
Rent
OCCUPANCY
aGAIIETtl!:
•udl;v
...
hln8,
·
million mUes long, longer
You, South, hold:
stand, ........ ,' plt ..,.,
253-6
11-6-ltc 1640 LINCOLN 1111., 4 rooma
Ul ......._ ABC Ealolprlo-i
.AKSU •Az tl .AK7U than the distance between
drop 1011 toblo, lovo - ·
auc1 both, 12 beaem...t ~
the earth and the sun.
.., Ill-. W, VL Pbaali chumo, truolto. llclo!o lon,
What is your openinl bidT
Pets For Sale
992 ..2 293 '
NEW FURNITURE: Big aav1111
7'IUMa.
U..U.· oncllrons, A-Bid one club. y..,. boad
lo..:~o.uc
- Ford
· Civil
Q-When
will
the
ne:tt
Wor uddlo, 11953
-6
BEAUTIFUL AKCpusp...pieo, --------~-~=---,pu llv!Qr reom auite $119,95 II 10 atroD1 tblt you wu.t to be
cyl
•
•
2clr.l
of
the
sun
be
seen
eclipse
aloo Cairn Terriers. For· FURNISHED - r list Chllcl
992-3454
,to *199.95, OUr prollt Ia leas sun to pt • liCODd. ltld but from Ntw YOTk?
ilEPTtc e~..illll.:1101or
EQUIPMENT
not atroq eaoacb for • two
merly
!roland
Rd.
Kennelo.
welcome.
Phcmt
992-7075.
1&gt;ut YOU still get the besL isopen~.,.
Sonltatioa.
-art,
Ohio.
I'll.
Ford
5' Rotary rnowor, 3
A-There
will
be
a
total
A dub _ , . , Ia loot
Dunlop's, 312 John St., Bel11-2-Gtc
)leo's New &amp; Uaed Furn., aevet plllled out b:r aD)'Oile.
812..2015.
:t-12-Ue' pt., J. D. 6' cloublo tltlk. I
eclipse of the sun wblch &lt;an
Row Cul)lvllot' • I pt., lw,aH Sec. 446-9523.
be seen from New York on
pre, qhlo 43714. Phcmt 614- - - - - - - - - - - - - - tlliur
5025~tf
423-726L
10-27-lltc
FURNISHED thnt ..... .,..i..
~N-F~~-- hlrrow,.....-.
Man usea In the neighbor· Aprll 8, 2024.
Mlc ,,..., chain uw,
hood of two pounds of oxygen
-mtnl, ..._.,
ment
auc1 ..~. Ev- mioc. ~atld tools. Other
Q-Jn BJI'Ilbol~, whol CAIRN terrier p..,pies. AKC
each
day. It comes, of
lttmJ t.. numerous to
.~ TYPES of llulldlninter·
ed, 507 Mill St., -Ioport.
erytJdng In llre IIIII llfolr
does the
leaf St{/fllfll?
..o~. eel. Phobe n~rt
·
course,
from
the
atmosphere.
Pbont
a..zz.tre, GEO. HOIST ETTER_, Stoker
llfJilpmoat. ll&gt;oelal .._... mention.
&amp;.1111.·· brick, -plpo,
A-Bay eaf Is suppoeed re...~r
· - •·
LowrtrQ CINtpman
to mean, ul change bUt in Rt. 2, Racine, Ohio. Phone - - - - - - - - - - - - - - TUPPERS PLAINS- 3 bed- prlceo Cltlolll;ypstllllltdHI Torma: Cosh
:1 - 0 . - . ote.
Arizolla has an area of death," and 1ymbollzea 247-2M1al!er5p.m.
" Willen, lifo Gnadt, o. I'lL
Luncll by Wllkavillo
TWO BEDROOM tano,' liv!Qg . rooms, one Door plan, bath,
of lin&gt; ~ I'IICitle·
glory.
ll..:Z..ltc
~ UUI21 5.
9!.u 113,909 square miles.
........ dlall1! ........ halloal'
cuport, uWII;y. Larae lot.
992-3821, Dwlcld .........
l!'ootorn - Aucllon
·
Sorvicl
- ~~;.,.;--- ..... --~----- - cupoWd, 764 RURAL- 6 romna frame, eel10..22-301e
J.Carnohan
' D.Smltll
YCIUR
DENTAL
HEALTH
-noll Aw.., llldtilopol'l..
iar, &amp;IJ'I&amp;I!,drilledweiL Ae&gt;- "'-~---~--..:----'
Notice
.. YOU on 'llullcllnK a """
llaclno, Olio
... nmodellng, ... us.
Ph.
99WN1
•
IN
Mill.
re.
$2450.
HAIIIIISOII'II
TV
AND~
. · Not .......,.lbio lor K·
WEEKEND REVIVAL at Church
~ Wo an bulldors. Dlotrlbulor
a..zt-uc · MIDDLEPORT - 6 .....,., ba111 NA SEIIVICI:, ..... 11ft " i ......,.. fir, lesl ol ~·
ol God, Cheoter, Ohio oo Sat- _________ - - - - ,.. llolpolnt Ai;lpll8nces, AliiPI lurnance, kitchen, 2$22,
..1o..cr. ;
urday and !llnday evenlnge
6
ROOMS,
bath.
Cioae
t&lt;&gt;
tOwn.
proge,
.12,000.
.
- Eloelrlc.
ISW
at 7:30 p.m. with Rev. Billy
Ph. 992-2049, 992-2431 a~ POMEROY - 8 room !rune,
Adamo o! Raceland, Ky. AI.
M&amp;\CLE Wiler SaiiDol'- 10ft.
5.
10-24-l!c bath, clooHn, $3,000.
so goapal ain8 oo &amp;mday at
By WILLIAM LAWRENCE, D.D.S.
· - Olld .....,.... ruot. Nor------------~RA:CINE- 3 ......._,., balh,
2 p.m. Everyone welcome.
polloor lunace. Lsrgepr· - - . r t , Vlnm, 388 · •
SEE
10-30 3tc 4 ROOM un!urnlsbed house,
deiL $6,000.
1177.
llW DEAR DR. LAWRENCE:
11 hold to1650 Lincoln Heillhla. l'llone LET ART - 5 room !rune,
TODAY!
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - Suzie, my 7-year-old daugh992-3874.
IO..zutc
•
.
hlth, Ooor tumac:e. f?,OOO.
EXCEUIIIIR Salt WOStll- t:&lt;lll ter, feU and broke her upper Research teamB are fever·
tor oalo, lump, ea. lelt front to, 'b. I immedl· ishly working on bonding pantry, ahil1!1i'1!, gutter --~----------- SYRACUSE- 4......._o, 11h
llu &amp; SMo
m1 m1ao nn E. MilD 111., ately brought her, with the agents. One such team 1s · clesni111, repairandi118talla·
FURNISHED progei!IOrimerL
baths,-· 21oto. $10,000
Avelloltlo
Phone 992-0435.
l'lltllero1 o I'll 992-3811L broken piece of tooth, to our even investigating the adbe- tlon. Free esttmates. All
I0-23-dc RACINE RURAL- 4 - s ,
""
'' '
'
IBO.U dentist, but he said he sive agent by which barna- work guannteed by e&gt;perl·
.
both, balemtrL Oil lunace.
~ :ouldn't cement it back. Incles so tenaciously attach enced men. can Olester985----- - -----f8,300.
u· to 19'
stead, he temporarily themaelves to surfaces of 4147 collect.
4
FURNISHED Apartment,
HELEN or VIRGIL TEAFORD' Moolelo
J. II. &amp;MILDRED GAUL
"capped" the exposed raw boats and other undersea
rooms, bath, tuU atze .._..,
.: Tho lao10-22-18tp
foreign
matter.
edge of tooth with medicated
ment, nice yard. Muon, w.ASSOCIATES
992·33251 &amp; Contl-1 2 IIIIa NGI'Ih of Chi* on Rt. 7
cement and sald he hoped . Discovery of such a bondFOR-2-!;.;;.-;; ;;.ue~;
Va. R&lt;llleri J. Roush. PhOJW
SYRACUSE
0• Dloploy
on c~ Ro~
the nerve wouldn't die. I'd mg agent would be a dra'
Muon, 773-6839.
like to know why the broken malic and giant discovery bedfast or ambulatory. SyraWATCH FOR SIGN
10-211-etp
piece couldn't be cemented that could basically change cuse Nurall1! Home. Phcmt
hack and, If not, why a per- dentistry as It's .now prae- 992-.'1707.
11-2-.'ltc
manent cap couldn 'I be ~ut tlced. For instance. it could----- - - - - - - - - o!: right away.-Mrs . Elame so tightly secure flllingsthat SHOOTING MATCH, SundaJ,
K.
further decay would be ellm- N 2 1
to 4
Ra
inated; it would eliminate
ov. ' p.m.
p.m., •
DEAR MRS. K.: You're a extensive drUiing, being nee- cine • Beahan Rood. Sponoor·.
LEARN AT HOME-SPARE TIME
good mother. Immediately essary only to remove decav ed by the Racine Emergency
taking Suzie to your dentist and fill teeth with tooth-col- Squad.
ltl-211o-tt&lt;
The ....
1111 Ill .the
on • 43
was the right thing to do. ored plaatlc: loose teeth-------------,.ell
~1111's Hill
Early treatment of trau· co u 1d be more e as II y r - - - - - - - - ,
matic dental injuries usuaUy spUnted; false teeth could be
To•nslllp,
results in more favorable simply "patted" onto re'"
. .\
A
Prime
Roast
Dinner
maining teeth witholrt extenprognosis.
NEW EASY~
will
be
held
at
the
A lront tooth at age 7 is alve preparation and cost;
"INSTANT
LEARNIN.
G METHOD'•
not lully grown-the roots broken teeth could be ce·
E'11es Ch~. Sunday,
not fully formed. Permll!l"nt meoted together.
Sontl For .... Ullol.....
tH...,.,.,
ftttetpri•
Att~t.J
. ' .
capping should be postponed
Non• 2, if:30 A.M.
COMPUTE
II
COLLEGE
OF
·TECHNOLOGY
until the tooth development
to 6:110 P.M.
is completed. Tooth prepara·
Pot.on oak and polaCitl ivy
Dlnnero toGo
lion for capping before lull can ·be distinguished from
ONI I'UIII..tC - · - 1104
g r ow t h could cause the VIrginia creeper by the leaf ·•
Prlco $1.25
C:l.lVILAND, DIIID &gt;14111
nerve to die.
(Wt will dollvorgrouping. Virginia creeper
At present, there lo no has ftve Iea~es extendlna
Coll 99 2..,976)
bonding agent _strong enough !rom the stem; the others
have three.
'----------'

1969
Chevelle ·~
'·
U. 316 H.T. e,..
lclo • -

• ONE Of THESE USED CAIS

DAYII2-2151
NIGHT 112-7324 ·

'

p-

••c•

RAWLINGS
salesman tor a ride.

'

:$5.55

•

-AT

Take a

· EIPIII ·

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

01 CAIS

Make your appointment NOW!

Busin~ss· · Servlces

,I WJLi. plll!'..,merchoadlaeanti ;
IN LOVING meiDDI'J of o u r · .CU. .. 1 ue~~ 011 , . ·a p v hua- and lothtr, Carl W, .,. 1u1o. 001 Jill Aduu
Kolllz, who Wls ldUed Nov,1, etl:ll-, ........ .... ,
1967:
HJ.44t..

BeautUul memories
behind.

..

r·~·--~--~--------~~~------~--~~~.~

Notice

In Memory

INFCMIMATIOit

•••Ill ...

EAST

• K109852

2.

NEW GMC TRUCK
HEADQUARTERS

'

I

.AU

war

WANT AD

DUOLIHII

ly O.wald &amp; J0111es Jacoby

:omee. SMunon• Ptg. &amp; EQilp.
.co. 4441-1397.
252-t!

Bargains An~ MoreBargai~- ~ Sentinel,. qassitieds

ditch
127- Sewinl

implement
129- Hosttlry
130--Co&amp;niunt of
131- VIntllat•
132- Vapld
134--Coli•etJon of

66 ·flfCTRA BUICK · . ... $2;395
Cutlom 2 dr. Ho.-d Tap. 1-octory oir condltiontd Beautiful
finish with cutfom black vinyl illterior. Qne careful ~wntr Ne
trade. full powar. E•tro 1 horp.
·
"'

66 CHRYSLER

"

POMIIIOW
MOTOR CO.

11

B ~....
IIIC

$2,195

N•w Ywhr 4 dr. S.don. Spotleu originol bloc!. finish. Air
tlontd. Fully equipped, E•c•ptionol in evtry wor.

65 PLYMOUTH

OPEN EVES. TIL 8
Pomeroy

co"dl·

992·2126

$1,295

~U!Y Ill Y8 4 dr. Sedan. Factory olr C!lnditloned. Sharp light beige
f•n•sh. Pow•r sfetrlng. Power
Auto. trol'u, EKfro cleart.

For Sale

63 FORD

SIEGLER GAS heater, 75,000

bra•••·

$795

BTU, thermostat, fan, uaed
one Winter, $125. See at 226
S, Third Ave., Middleport,

~8 Galallie 500 2 dr, Hard Top. W• Gfe raolly proud of thit one. 11
•• topt for the model. Power llterlne. Power bfakes. Cruiumotic.

anytime.

BLAIIINARI

-------------- .:

B'UICK

PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS
116 Yean of Continuous Business
PllllNE 992·2lol3
POMEROY. OHIO

Far Sale

console, 4-speed intermixed
changer, dual volume cantro.l,
4--&amp;peaker sound system. Balance due $69,80. Useourtlme

r-t--t _..:. _____ _ ____ _ _
'-r-t-f ELECTROLUX sweoper, coin'

piete wllh attachments, paint

apR)', contwilller, andthroW
alfay bags. Full cosh price

lovely

mapJe fl.nish, with AM

due $86.30. Uae our limt!IITment pian. Call 992-3352. •f•
10-30-0ie
1

t:srn FLOOR tonaace, pa,
75,000 BTU with all c:ontrolo.
Call alter 6 p.m. 992-311Zt,.

or see at 623 MDI st., Yld·~
1 or 2 needles, makes~
dleport.
10-30-3tt
holes, sews on buttons,~
grams, and blind hem stitch. NEW OIL FURNACE, inltollod,
Full cash price, $38.50, or
$495, Termo available. Ph.

E-Z monthly terms. Phone
992-2685.
l~c

$3L Terms awllable.
Phone ?92-2685.
10-26-«c

-- ---- -- - -- u...rambie theael'our Jumbles.
KIRBY VACUUMcl....r, com• Ont letter t&lt;l e..h oquore, to
plate with eleanlna: tools and form four or4lnary word1.
polisher. Rona Uke new, $59
Phone 992-2685.

'·
--------------·
MAPLE SI'EREO-IIADIO, 1111t

Far Sale

only

cash,or .terma available.

payment plan. Call 992-3352.
10.:10-ete •

and FM radio, 4 speaker1,
dual volume control. BaiaDee

AWNINGS, stonn doors alii
wllll09t's, carports.
mar- PAINT DAMAGE, 1969 zig zag
quees, blown &amp;Ill batt insulasewing machines, still in
tion. Elmer White, sales .,._
original cartons. No attachl!~rrtatl.ve. For tree eati·
ments needed, as our conmates, phone Olarlea U&amp;J.e.
trols are built--in. Sews with

S)Ticuae. V. V. Joh...., and
Son, Inc.
5-1.UC

';

SOLID SfATE walmt stereo

tacb

136--Russlen
71-Sa•saw
stockade
73-Siua;lsh
117-Shedlt
74-Dry
I 39---Pot:UI
11-EIItopGin
75--City in Gtrmanr
e11tr•miti•1
h•rrinlil
77-Beef animal
140--W•Ik
12-Ch.t•
144-S.H~ of burden
13--Harv•sl 10ddass 71--Post of
comm•nd
145--Rasort
14--Not• of IJCal•
._Matured
146--Urp on
15-Group of
81--Nahoorsh••P
147--Girt's "ame
enttrtlln•n
13-Roman bronz• 141--f:neount•red
16----Crttl
84--Palnt of hemmer 149-0rl"kinl vHt•l
17-SkUI
87-Mistekal.
Hil-Cooltd lava
18-Symbol far
89-MtdiCII
1!13-Teutanlc dtlty
nic~tl
Institution
155-Compaa pol"~
90-Cholce part
157-sun IOd

I0-30-3tp

992-3352.

.,

---- - ------·~---

,

�30- 'the Sunllay Time• • Senllnol, Sunday, Nowmber 2, IIHit

Now You Know

Blakeslee Report
again lhlo year be&lt;ause ~ 1111
areas. Down payments requir.. IIJ'e&amp;ler number of womea ~
ed in some places are up from clllld bearlnc age (those hav20.25 per cent to 30-40 per Ing been bora In tile Iaiit haU
cent. Apartment rents have of lhe 40a and earl¥ 50s.
also risen.
In Ohln tile IJOpllaUon was
In December, l967. the United states populaUm topped200,. 10.2 mlUion In 1965 and will
000,000. Since then, It has In- reach io.1 mUllon In 1970.
creased to 203 million. Dur- Then 10 years later ( 1980) it
ing 1968 the birth rate was Ia eaiimated the Ohio _...
11.1 per 1,000 and the death latlon will be 12.4mlllicn, whleh
rate was 9.6. This birth rate reflects this expected increase
is the lowest in the last 35 In births. Thla year there will
years . The highest rate was be 2.8 million 5 tD 17 year
26.5 in 1947. The greatest num. olds (tlloae ol public school
ber of babies born was 4,332,- age). By 1980 the number Is
000 in 1957.
expocted to be on!¥ allghUy
It is expected that the num- more, but l)JI 1985, up lo 3.3
ber oC births will start rising million.
(Continued ll"om Page 31)

.
'•'

All Papers Are Needed
GALLIPOLIS - Wool pro. ed tD raise the national OYerducers in Gallia County should age price received for shorn
bring all sales documents for wool by all proOJcers up to
shorn wool and unshorn lambs 69 cents per pound. The rnato the ASCS office to earn in- hair payment is determined in
centi•oe payments for the 1969 a similar marmer, with the na-

..

.. . .

Shorn wool payments to prOducers are equal to a percent.
age of his returns for sales.
This percentage is that requir-

More Plant Food
In Less Tonnage

TAKES WE WING COURSE
Irvin H. Brumfield, Patri«X
Star Route, Gallipolis, is enrollw
ed at Hobart Welding School,
Troy, tor a two week course in
pipe welding. Hobart Welding
School is the world's largest
educational institution exclusively serving the weldl~ industry, Since it was established in 1930 the school has trained more than 30,000 welders
ard technical persormel in the
welding industry.

COLUMBUS- Ohio farmers
are applying less fertilizer
1onnage but more actual plant
food according to the bi -annual
fertilizer report of the Ohio
Department of Agriculture.
Last year they used 2 per cent
less total tonn!lge but 1.8 per
cent more plant nutrients, and
1,280,910 Ions of fertilizer which,
with service costs, amounted to
more than S7S,OOO,OOO.
The five most popular grades
of mixed fertilizers are 6-24-24,
5-20-20,12-12-12, 8-32-16, and 1616-16. Sale of these totaled
494,431 tons and represented
38.6 per cent of all fertilizer for
farm use last year. Ohio farmers purchased fertilizer In
three forms; packages, 404,47
tons; dry bulk, 659,669 tons; and
liquid bulk, 216,754 tons.

Gallia County

GALLIPOLIS -

As a con-

sumer, you have a right to be
informed and a right to &lt;:boose.
But you also have a responsi-

bility to ask questions, tD be
sure you understand the information, and to shop selectively. This responsibility applles to shopping {or money
(credit) as well as for goods
and services.
Under the Federal Consumer
Credit Protection Act, strict
new regulations governing almost all credit transactions
between a business and tts customers became effective July
I.
Known as the 11 Truth in Lending Law,'' any business- merchant, professional man, or con.
tractor - must show the cost
ot credit as the true annual
rate. For example, department
stores charging 1% per cent
interest per month on revolv~
lng charge account plans will

INSTALUNG NEW TILE - Workers are shown In this
snapshot l)JI Gerald Tussing lnstalllrW part ol a 4,200 loot tile
drainsge system at the Gallia Count.Y Junior FallWOunds,

handle, especially since new
credit merchandising t e c hniques make it easier than ever

bolo,.. tD got intD dobt.
Consumers need to take part
d the responsibility for maintaining and improvingpractices
that make shopping more ast.
isfactory for all. What one consumer does may readily affect
another. 'The golden rule applies
to shopping as to any otllerday.
k&gt;.&lt;lay activity.

SCHULT
MOBILE
HOMES
SEE THE

12x65
SCHULT CUSTOM
with sldoltay windows
A4x12 tilt out living room with
a raised fr•t kitchen
ad •l•lng room.

K&amp;K MOBILE HOMES
SALES &amp; PARK
675·3000

I

PT. PLEASANT, W.VA.

.

~

.

'"•

,_. ··~ .

I.J. ,~li ~.,·r;

.

.

. 1.. ·-•.
.,

, . ,).,•.• ·

i'

..

:/· .;•
i• ··

.

..

:::'~ · .. "
' ,I .
\ ~~.---.(:
'

-.

.

-

•

r

•

, -

0

0

~·

t'

•"

• "

, .

•

•--

•

• •·

•·

..

"- 'u:·•~;,..,..:..

~~-

':·

\' lfJ-.;.:_~ ._.,.,

-l)j •• , , . - '

:.. .

',

:

·

:· '---t· ..

~~.....

'

wl1h gravel. This will allow the

system.
Water

has long been a
problem at the Fairgrounds. A
combination of a poorly drained
soli and high runoff from the
roof of the buildings has made
the area abnormally wet and
muddy after even modest rains .
This was especially a problem
when these r51ns occurred
before or during the fair.
In 1969, the Junior Fair Board
applied to the Gallia Soli and
Water Conservation District for
assistance in solving this
problem. The Soli Conservation
Service
Technicians,

water to get to the tile more
rapidly. Last veer 2,500 feet of
tile were Installed and this
month an additional 1632 feet
were Installed around the new
horse barn and near the
caretakers trailer, completing
the system.
Next year judges will still
have problems selecting winners in picking the many high
quality lovestock classes and

'l
teea

·.. ; .

lbo
r ...
ted.
ters

'
,

FORD L. T.D. 4 DR. HT
351 Yl ENGINE, WHEEL COYas

HIDE-AWAY LIGHTS

.

52766

'l)JII·

.....

lhiclt

o....

·-.,nr...

PLUS ftEIGIIT

m.ln

-·

Ilion-

~

pand
ort or

other exhibits. And finding a
parking space may still be a
But falrgoers may
leave their boots at home.

problem.

ware

othe
mbua
arvad
CQIJio

.ewis,
Helen

slsay-snea.k who hasn•t got the
to come out and tell a girl
It's qulta? - DROPPED AND

guts

SI'EAMIN'

Dear D and S:

GetUng even is always more
lun tD dream about than tD do.
When you "pay a sissy -sneak

back" you've sunk to HIS
el, and that makes

a nice

feel pretty low.
So concentrate on "siJOW:lng

him" you can do better.
him

see HOW lriUCh better -

and then forget blmi -

Dear Helen:
I think the new ratings

S24.9

GALAXIE 500
2 DR. HT

PlUS FREI6HT

movies are Cor the birds.

DON'T WANT IT.. HALLOWEEN
.. . SE51Di:S, I .HAVE'. ONE
/WN:&gt;WN TO GET RID OF...

f;/J/.1, ~ WOULDN'T. ~E INTE~ESTED .
IN A AAL~OWEEN PUMPKIN, WOULD
I(OU? HE'S A NEAT ONE ...

r coo&gt;Eleto tile

WELL,
WJ.IAT DO L/OLJ
DO WITfl A

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

HALLOWEEN
16 OVER?

ht

0}

PUMPKIN WHE~

ts

of tile best ftlms are restri••·
ed or banned lOr "juveniles,,
when the stories are about
and their problems. So we
n't supposed to say what
probabcy hear and talk
every day at school'?
I've seen a few .. family
type" movies that are Drt!ltY
blood-thirlltjo, but just bec1ouse
they don't have sex ln them,
they're passec:l.

I oma wlU

&gt;en to
, The
..,the
:c.m&amp;y

l•clt

lllq,
r girl

Actually us teens aren't

Interested In tile seumD\)' stuff,
and we wouldn't even be
ious about "'Yellow,"
sounds very dumb to me,
they can II)) ahead and mark
"M.'' or even ''X.'' But
think they should eltller
more GOOD (not llOUpJ)
tures for · kids, or else
them see more of the
"R" or .. M11 ones. After
14 and IS.year.olds know
facta ol life. How do otiJ,er•
feel about this'?- R. W.
Dear Readers:

ldlto
~

ageant
conIs are
&lt;&gt;rwill

a

MAVERICK

51995

ln with
&gt;meroy

coming
lire
rtants.

PLUS FlEIGHT

partie·

)h Wer-

Comments, anyooe? -

Dear Helen:
Week'~
My dad set the daUng
for me at 16-, and then
(:ALLIPOLIS - Tempera. I became 16, he changed
ture, precipitation, and ·weather to 17. Probably when rm 17,
conditions for each 24.bour per- he'll make It 18 - and
lod as recorded by Pete Mc- be married before 1 even
Cormick at the Falrlleld Wea. a elate!
He sa;rs all guys are
ther station.
Ill
sex, and If I went wltll
DoY
Hl&amp;h Low
in
a car, I couldn't control
&amp;mday • • .
. ..•• 59
48
41 him. He's raved so much
Monday . , . . ..•.. 55
ThesdoY . . . . . . . . 56 22 this that rm almost scared
Wednelclay , •..... 58
26 dale (If I ever get to). I'd
Thursday . . . . . . . , 64 25 ways think, ''What's he after."
Friday . . . . . . . . . . 72
33 and If he tried tD kiss
SaturdoY . . . . . . ... 58 54 Pd probably die of ll"lght.
Just ln ease my dad relents,
Average high temperature for
the week this year - 60.2 de- how do 1 get over thia fear,
grees, last year - 60.3 de- And how do I get 111M
II? Mom is on DIY side,
grees.
Average low temperature for sllenUy. Slle just lets him
the week thia year - 35.4, last on. - HOPEFUL SCfl•REDYCAT
year - 35-.6 degrees,
Total predpltaUon lor the Dear llopeful:
Unless yoor mother g e t
week th.ia year - none, last
busy
and changes your la~oar
year- 0.19 ol an Inch.
Total predpltaUon to date - and both work hard Wldolng
this year - 27.99 inches, last tile dalllage they have clone you'll have a lot o( trouble
year- 40.40 incheJ.
Normal average annual pre- IQadlng your lear .ops.
This I'll never Wl&lt;iler!Jialld:
dpltaUon- 40.10 inches.
llow can wife, """ knows
husblllld Is wrong, sUillet
gu rlgtrt ahead and cloud
child's life? Then, In 1 a t e
years, ten to one, she'H
all
the blame on him! Longfll Highway
This column is dedicated to
Longest federal highway In
the United States is U.S. lamlcy living, so If you're havRoute 6, which winds from Ing kid trouble or just plalil
Provincetown, Mass., at. the trouble, let Helen Help YOUI
outer tip of Cape Cod, to Slle will also welcome YOIU'own
near Long Beach In southern amusing experiences. Adclresa
California. It winds its way Helen Bottel In care o1 11&gt;11
through 14 states for 3.517 newspaper.

Weather

e
t

West

Moore
I t11tiY
~many.

naming

HOW WA~, HOW AFF~OW.1!:=1

HOW CoMFORll/.6 :YOU CCN'T
'THINK I'M OLD AND
U~L/3551 DO YOU?

ases as
~lotion.

oaaman

a drawtile t6
the coland die
f t h.
the one

FAIRLANE 500
2 D1. HT

I

WE STILL HAVE A FEW

1195-W

dat!OD'a

a

'---------------------·miles.
3300 JACKSON AVE.

.~. 11.t ..l.~tl ...~. ...

\. "

.~

By Ger1kl R. Tussing
cooperating with !he dlstrld,
Soil ConHrv•tion Service
designed a tile drainage system
GALLIPOLIS Golllo to remove excess rain water .
County Junior Fair will be
The tile was Installed

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT
awarded to those men who have
This colwnn is tor young
been directly eMangered by· people, their problems and
enemy fire or e&gt;,ploslves.
pleasures, their trwbles and
tun. As with the rest of Helen
Help Usl, It welcomes laughs
Theodore Roosevelt was but won't dodge a serious questhe only U. S. president who tion with a brush .oft.
Send your teenage q_~stions
did not use the personal pro·
09!-111 "I'' in his maugural ad-- to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
dress.
ol Helen Help Us!, this news.
paper,
BESf WAY TO GET EVEN
Dear Helen:
''Dropped and Hurtin' "really said it good! Why can't guys
be honest and teU you they're
tllroogh Instead of leaving you
hanging? After Pd been walt.
lng by the pllone lor two weeks,
have to Llst the credit charges
refusing dates even, because I
at the amual rate as well as still thought I was going around
the l1lQIIthly rate.
wltll Mike, I linalcy gutthe mes.
Truth In Lending Imposes no sage through a !riend. I was
restrictions on fees and charg- wmped - ru never know why.
es that may be Iovled. Instead,
Well, Pm oot watering doWn
the law says in essence that my Coke with tears, that's for
the seller can do what he wants sure. Prn just plain darn good
lxlt he must be specific in tell- and mad! Please, Helen, tell me
ing his customers what he is how I can get even with a little
task o( figuring credit costa
easier. But you will sUll have
to think through how much cred~
it yw wish and are able to

T

Sc:al.lend ohonro todll' IIIII
. .,...~ .~t 1q f11 ~ f'®'!!ltern :~&lt;

,..

Drain Fairgrouf!ds

AWARDED RIBBON
Marine Statf Sergeant Hiram
E. Miller, tmsbard of the tormer Miss Sharon Nibert ot 641
Filth Ave.. Gallipolis, w a s
awarded the Combat Action RilP
bon while serving with Headquarters Battalion, First Marine Reglment, First Marine
Division in Vietnam.
The Combat Action Ribbon is

doing.
The new law may make the

_ • • _•

Weather
,,,

'

Asking Questions, too
o'

~-.

LOWEST PRICES ON FORD PRODUCtS
IN THE AREAl

Truth in Lending Means
BY PAT GLASS
Ext. Agent, Home Economics

,lJll.~r}J t$£l!.t~ Elll'!!!!\.1.!1'•• ~

.

~~

'

marketing year,
tional incentive price set at bigger, better and drier then the sides of each of
ever thanks to the installation of buildings, each 18 Inches
J. Melvin GiJbert. chairman 77.4 cents per pound.
a 4,200 foot-tile drainage and In the trenches bo&lt;okflll..,
of the ASCSCommittee, said under the National Wool Act all
producers who market wool and
mohair in 1969 are eligible for
this incentive payment.

'F• .'•·,.· ·

AMi¥ Illustrated program on

•

l'

j

"'I

J. '

'. "

-~.;

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