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Senior citizens honored
at state fair on Friday

10 - The Dally Sentlnel, Mlddleport.Pomeroy, 0 .. Aug. 24, 1973

Tonight, Aug. 24
KANSAS CITY .
BOMBER
Raquel Welch
(Color)
l PG
· Plus
SKY JACKED
I Color I
Charlton Hes!on
YYette Mlmleu)C

(Color)
lPGI
SATURDAY
Aug.,2$
•
Double Feature
CHILDS PLAY
James Mason

Beau Bridges
Plus
FEAR IS THE
KEY

TUPPERS PJ.AINS
Teacher assignments . In U&gt;e
Eestern Local School District
lor the 1973-74school year were
announced
today
by
Superintendent John Riebel.
They are :
HlghS.bool
Charles Swogger, Principal ;
Nancy Arnold, Math ; Norman
Bahr, Social Sludies ; J oe
Bailey, English ; Lewis.
Berkhlmer, Coach, Biology ;
Donna Chadwell, Art; Judith
Dudukovlc, French ; Larry
Heines, Shop ; Tom Kelly,
Guidam:e; Clint Mullens,
Office Education ; Mary
Mullens, Office Education ;
Howard Parker, Science;
Nellie
Parker,
Latin,

I PG I

MEIGS THEATRE .

IPG l

(Color I

Tonioht. Sat .. Sun.
Au9. 24 ·25·26

Sun .. Mon .. Tues.
Aug. 26·27·28
I Doul•le Feature Program
'LADY SINGS
THE BLUES'

THE HEART
BREAK KID
ITechnicolorl
l PG I
Charles Grod in
Cybill Shepherd

Diana Ross

Is Billie Hol iday

Also

• (Color)
- PlusA SEPARATE
PEACE
(Color)

THE MAN
iTechnicolorl

I Rl

(PG )
Jam es Earl Jones

Marlin Balsam

Show Star1s 7 p.m .

lPG)·

If you ·d like to improve something around your house
ask aboul our budget-minded Home Improvement Lo;"J;n
You'll get low bank rates. Fast, co urteous serv•ce .
And some good advice 10 boot.

pam••oy
•utland

Ubrarlan ; Bill Phillips, Driver
Educati on, Social Studies :
RUehle,
Horne
Jani ce
Economics ; Aaron Sayre,
Vocational Agril'ulture; Carole
Swogger, English; Charles
Wills, Music.
Tuppen Plai1111
Elementary School
Beatrice Dougws, principal,
1st grade ; Archie Rose, 8th
grade: Robert Sanders, 7th
gradt ; Patricia Shr1vers, &amp;th
grade; Augusta Barnhart, 5th
grade; Goldie Story, 4th grade ;
l.avina Brannon, 3rd grade;
Helen Caldwell, 2nd grade.
Riverview Elementary

The SEOEMS squad made
live runs Wednesday and one
Thursday In Meigs CoWlty.
At 12:55 a.m. Wednesday Iva
Stewart, who had a back In·
jury, was taken to Holzer
Medical Center; at 6:II a.in.
Rosa E. Brady, Mason, .who
was involved in an auto ac·
cident.on SR 124, was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital with
a possible neck Injury; at 3
p.m. Orville Napper was
removed from Veterans
Memori~l
Hospital
to
University Hospital, Col.um·
bus; at 8:36 p.m. Barbara
Syrge, PorUand, was ·taken to
Holzer Medical Center, and at
8:45p.m. Joseph Wilson, State
St., Pomeroy, was taken lo
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Thursday at 9:26a.m. Onnle
France, Denville, was .brought
to
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital.
As of Thursday a total ol91
calls have been answered by
SEOEMS since the unit wen(
into service in June.

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharges: Ralph Wlllet,
Henderson; Mrs. Clarence
Hamilton, Kentucky; Mrs.
William Litchflld, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. William Barton
aildson, Syracuse; Mrs. WaUie
Hart,
daughter,
Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Emma Smith,
Southside; Mrs. John Vance,
Bidwell, 0 .: !Joy Nicholson,
Evans; Darwin Robbins,
Mason; Jackie VanMeter, New
Haven; Harry Spurlock, Point
Pleasant; Leroy Simpkins,
Mason; Darrell Miller, Point
Pleasant; Lorinda Samsel,
Mason; Steven and Teddy
Rainey, Gallipolis Ferry, and
Mrs. Patrick Foglesong,
Henderson.

pomeroy
the bank of

Marriage License
Gary Lee. Simpson, 22,
Pomeroy, Rt. 3, and Sue Ann
Grogan, 26, Middlepo~t.

the cenlury

established 1a12

FDIC

FLOWERS
. "Going one step further"

For All Occasions
We Wire Flower~

MAIN OFFICE

EYerYwhere

Mon ., Tues .• Wed .. Thurs. 9 a.m ..] p.m·.

Friday 9 a .m . to 7 p.m .
Saturday 9 a.m . to 12 Noon

RUTLAND BRANCH
Mon ., Tues ., Wed ., Sat., 9 a .m .·3 p.m.
Thursday 9 e .m. to 12 Noon
Friday 9 a .m. to 7 p.m .

992-2039
Pomeroy .Flower Shop
Mrs. Millard Van Meter
Ph. 992·2039
Ph. 992.5721

Grace Weber, principal, 8th
grade; David Chadwell, 6th &amp;
7th grade ; •·red Kessinger, 4th
&amp; 5th Kmde; Carolyn Fra~~.
3rd grade ; Pauline Myers, 2nd
Rrade: Doris WelJ..Isl nade.
Cbester Elementary
Duane Wolle, principal, 4th
grade; Carol Domigan, &amp;th
grade; Rlllitl Jonas, 7th grade ;
Miss Carolyn Smith, 6th grade ;
Belly Roush, 5th · grade ;
Thelma Orr, , 3rd grade;
Eleanor Knight, 3rd &amp; 4th
grade; Melanie Beegle, 2nd
grade; M•·s. Carolyn Smith, 1st
grade; Wilma Parker, Ktn.
dergarten.

The Middleport E·R squad
was called Thursday at 11:58
a.m. to the Jake Scott
residence, Pearl Sl., for NeWe
Scott, who had suffered a
possible hiart attack. Sbe was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At.4:41p.m. the Fire
Dept. was called to the Don
Stivers apartment, 499~
Fisher St., where the kltcheil
was on fire. There was minor
damage. It was not known as to
how the fire started. It was
contained in the kitchen ar,ea.
DRIVER SWITCHED
RACINE - Robert Ord,
superintendent of Southern
High School; announced today
that Bernice Levacy's bus
route will he taken over by
Earl Cross.
LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Friday at II a. m.
was 73 degrees under cloudy
skies.

Moothly food stamp benetlt.l
were red!it'ed or tem1inated lor
1108 Ohio hou!Mlholds during the
t&gt;erlod January·March, l973, as
a result of the enforcement of
work r e gistration
requirements of the Federal
Food Stamp Program.
According to A. S. StaWler,
Acting Rl!'glooal Administrator
of the U. S. Department of
Agriculture 's Food and
Nutrition Service In Chicago,
this resulted in a savings ol
more than too,ooo.
Under a 971 amend.
ment
of
the
Food
Stamp Act ol 1964, all
able bOdied members of a
partlclpatlng household aged
I~ (with certain exceptions)
must register for and accept
suitable employinnt.
Acceptance of employment
resulted in reduced benetlts for
40 households and termination

·

of beneflta lor H5 hoUieholds

lor savings .of more ~
$27,700. Failure to comply with
the
work
reglslratlon
reqUirement resulted In the
remov•I of 123 householdalrorn
rolls for a savings or more than
$8,500.
The savings reflect the value
of bonua coupona which would
have been Issued Food Stamp
Program partlclpanla had
their benefila not been reduced
or lenninated. The bonus value
of coupons represents USDA's
contribution to the program.

Pet skunk

found

Task force

-...

UNIFORMS WANTED
RUTLAND - All boys who
plilyed pony league and Uttie
league baseball in the Rutland
area are requested to turn In
their unlfonns by Tuesday to
Max Whitlatch or Gene Wise al
their homes on Salem Street.

t

POMEROY - Friday was senior
citizens day lor Meigs and Gallla Coun.
tlans and several other counties at the
Ohio State Fair.
·
Two chartered buses left Pomeroy at 7
a.m. Friday to transport the active Meigs
senior citizens to the fair for a busy day. A

ll,tUe after ,4 p.m. the two buses Jeft the ;:;:~:::::::=:::::?-:~-;:::;;:;:;:;:~;:;:;:~::::::~::::::;:::::::x::$::~;:::::-;;~:::::::

faltgrol!llds to return to P~mJroy.
C OF C DINNER NEAR
It :was a big day during which Mrs.
GALLIPOLIS - Members ot the
.Pearl Parker and Mrs. James Jividen took Chamber of Commerce are reminded to
parlin providing entertainment in one of make reservations lor the lint semi·
the large Ienis housing lair senior citizens annual Galllpells Chamber ·of Com·
activities. Mri. Eleanor Thomas , merce dinner featuring Jim Comstock
executive director for the Meigs Council on as speaker. Reservations should be
Aging, took an active role in seeing that made at the Gallipolis Chamber of
the day's program moved along.
Commerce office, 18 Stele St. The dloner
GalUa county had 75 senior citizens In Is Thunday, Sept. 6 at Rio Grande
two buses l!llder the leadership of Director College Cafeteria at 7:30p.m.
Jean Niday with Nurse Helen Spriegel in .::::::::::::::::w..~::;::;:::;::::::::::::~::;::::~:::::!:::::::~::~::::::::~:;x:;;:~::::::::

Holzer Medical Center
Discharged : Joseph R.
Baker, Patricia 8evlru! and
· daUShler, Katherine Boster,
Paul Davis, Hubert Dehart,
Thomas Fosler, Theresa
Gardner, Linda Hall, Bernard
Harper, Jack Hart, Mary
Hatfield, Carol Holsinger, Jean
Jones, Louis Mayse, Brisn
Mlller, Evelyn Myers, Mellasa
Nance, Ora Roberts, Luelva
Sinclair, Dorothy Stegar,
Katherine Stevenson, RuaseU
Stover, Geraldine Slover,
Sheila Timmons, ' Pamela
Whltlng
and Clarence
Wiseman.
Births: Mr. and Mrs. Luther
Harris, a son, Jackson; Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Haggy, a
daughter, Pomeroy.

~

··

co

,..,...,

The
Exciting
Sounds Of. .' •

GARY STEWART

fi/J
MEMBERSHIP:
fits everyone!
Master 517.50
As.soclate sa.oo

FOUR PIECE GROUP WITH VOCALIST .
Pick

MEIGS INN
Saturday Night

10:00
TIL2

PH. 992·3629
POMEROY

~P

p~ckage

In allracllve

gift

at your AAA office
or we will mall lor you.

AUTOMOBILE CLUB Of
SOUTHERN OHIO
Phont : Pomeroy 991·2190
33 Court St.
Galll~olls
Phone: 446·0690

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Vallev

FOUR SECTIONS
SUNDAY, AUGUST 26, 1973

Gallipolis.Polnt Pleasant

PRICE 20 CENTS

Pomeroy.Mlddleport
'

'

Violence at Sporn renewed
NEW HAVEN - Electric service to
New Haven was threatened again and
windows in several Central Operating
employees' homes were broken by rocks in
the latest incidents erupting from the
strike at the Philip Sporn Plant, Manager
E. H. Gloss said Saturday.
All communication cables to the plant
were severed Friday morning, Gloss said.
Sporn Plant has been under strike
since July I by members of the Utility
Workers of America, Local 426, but Union

I

Toughened stance
quite possible

President Carl Searls insisted none of his
men was responsible lor the acts of van.
dalism.
"I, myself, am getting harrassing
phone calls," Searls said today.
.
Searls said New Haven police have
observed unfamiliar cars in the Bend area
but haven't been able to check them out.
Gloss said the 12,000 volt distribution
circuit setving New Haven was in·
terrupted several times Thursday night,
each for a period of minute or less, as ·

-

·Levy put on ballot

...........

• ••

Wfre taken off

telephone poles
GA\LLIPOLIS - Gallia County
• aherlffla deputies wte Saturday afternoon
were .,.king
men sought in connecUon with the theft of wiring from Ohio
Bell Telephone lines.
CIM!rles Gatewood, Ohio Bell em·
ployee, said ~e men had been seen. on
Kokeen. Rd., near the hamlet of GalUa
culling telephone wires.
Deputies also investigated the theft of
four calves taken from the Steve Harris
farm on Nebo Rd ..Harris said the animaw
weigh4!d between 250 and 300 pounds. BOb
Neal of Woods Mill Rd., reported a tape
player and two lapea were taken !rom his
car parked at Tycoon Lake and Virginia
Gar II~. postmistress at Crown City,
repor~d vandala has struck Lawrence
Hineman's mall bllx.
One arrest recorded Saturday lflOrnlng
was J..arry Holcomb, 24, Ewlngton,
charged with aseaull a pollee olflcer,
(Depuiy James tylor) .

three

GLASSES FOUND
GALLIPO!JS - Apair of gold..framed .
eyegl.l!ues fol!lld near the high 'school
bulldlpg have been turned In to the
Ga1llpplla Pollee Department where they
may be clillmed,

FOOT BITI'EN OFF
BJUSBANE, Australia (UPI) - A 12- ·
foot J!!atk at licked a leenoflged.surlboard
rider near Brisbane Sllturday, tearing off
hll rlihl foqt, Sixteen-year-old Bruce
Law._r wu declared In 88tlsfactory
eondl~on after th• attllck, pollee said.

,.

•

equipment automatically restored the line
to service.
By mid·morning Friday, at least four
homes of employees who are working to
keep · the plant operating were reported
bombarded with rocks. Wind.ows in each of
them were broken, Gloss said. The homes
damaged by the · rocks were those of
· company personnel Karl Wile~. Harry
Hoffman, Wayne Carter, all of New Haven
and Charles Yeager of Mason.
Gloss deplored the cable cutting "and

· production wor~ In indU!I~ to the leader .
elf a.dance comlio. During the Korean War,
Mr. Meek served In Europe in the Or·
dinance Division. He holds membershl011
In the American Personnel and Guidance
Association, American School counselors
Association, Association of Counselor
Education and Supervision, and the
Association of College Admissions
Counselors.
Following the coWltywide teachers'
meeting, instructors will return to their
respective districts for meetings with their ·
local superintendents and building prin·
clpals. Students will report for classes.
Tuesday morning.

.Jt,,..... '
I
)

•

.

I'

~

'

... . '.

grotlp are, ieft to right, Mrs. E . William Monter, Cincinnati,
vice president, Waldschmidt House; Mrs. Don Brumley,
t"Jndlay, Northwest District director; Mrs. H, H. Haworth ,
Wilmington, state librarian; Mrs . Merritts: Huber, Betts·
ville, state vice regent; Mrs. Norman H. DeMent, Defiance,
State regent; Miss Lucille Smith, Chesler, regent of Return
Jonatlian Meigs Chapter ; Mrs. Rober! Hagen, HWltington,
W. Va., Southeast District director; Mrs. Ralph Donges,
Xenia, Southwest District director, and Mrs. Gray Hussey ,
Columbus, slate hl~torian.

HARRY MEEK

nvashin~on

TJnarker
to be rededicated
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
POMEROY - Standing on a ledge
about three miles east of Long Bottom Is a
bronze marker that says George
Washington and his party of men camped
there one night In late October six years
before the Declaration of Independence
was signed.
The marker was placed there In 1932
by the OhioHlslorlcal Society and the Ohio
Society Daughters 'of the American
Revolution as a [llirt of the commemoration of the 200th anniversary of the
birth of George Washington.
entennial observance, another celebration
will lake pwce there.
In 1967 for The Nation's bl·
centennial · observance ,
another
celebration will take nwce there.
Many Ohio sites and historical land·
marks were studied by the Ohio Commission of the U.S.A . Bi-Centennial
Celebration as possible projects for Ohio's
observance, aiJ!l the landing spols of
George Washington along the Ohio Rlver
was selected because of the Immediate
association of the Revolutionary War and
George Washington's name.
The Ohio Historical Society and the
Ohio Society DAR will join In rededication
ceremonies al the markers along the 250
miles of the upper Ohio Valley from East
Liverpool where Washington first stepped
on Ohio land, to . Long Bottom where
Washington joined the camp of Klashuta,
Indian Chieftain, and renewed their
acqualnlance or 1753.
This weak all of the markers un·
derwent on-flite lnspecilons by the state
officers of Ohio Society DAR. Th~rsday
morning they were joined at. the Long
Botlom marker by members ol Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter who will assist In
the rededication program.
Mrs. Norman H. DeMent of Defiance,
state regent of the Ohio Society, and eight
other DAR dignitaries were In the louring
group which reported on tentative plans
for the rededication to feature a pageant
such as was presen~d In 1932. 'rhey also
~

THE 1976 BI-CENTENNIAl, Observance lor Ohio,
currently being planned by the Bi-Centennial Commission,
the Ohio Historical Society, and the OHio Society of the
!laughters of the American Revolution, wiD feature the
restoration and rededication ol sites from East Uverpoel to
LOng Bottom marklns George WashiniJton'a landings along
the Ohio River. State DAR officials were Joined by members
or Return Jonathan Meigs Cllllpter members lor an on-1llte
Inspection of the Long Bottom marker Thursday In
preparation lor readying It for the 1976 celebration. In the

other acts of sabolage at the plant," and
added, "But I am especially dismayed at
the rocking lncldenls, which are a senseless harassment of fainllles of men who
are working long hours to keep Sporn
Plant operating to provice electric setvlce
to our customers."
. Searls said he appeared in Mason
CoWlty Circuit Court Friday to ·answer
company charges that the union waA In ·
vlowtion of a court injunction that barred
vandalism.

Guidance expert to
speaJ;; ·to teachers

DETROIT (UP!) - United Auto
•. Workers I'reo1deDI Leoaard WoodeO&lt;k
•
saturday "!tat.i !allure by the
M8~:~~~r~~ G81lla . Comity .hw~t~•s. depulles --..· '·"''·
, (lAI,.Lif(llJS - Hjlrry R. Meek,
ll'1
· posters on posts located near schoolS warning ~·~~·rlst:s
aulomaker. to win price hikes on 1974
Asslsianl
Director of the l:Jtvlslon of Gold·
session. A1J city and cowity schoola will begin the 1973-74 term
models could toughen their ·stance In
~.ce and Testing, State&gt;Department of
Tuesday. The
were ~ted by the Automobile Association of Southern Ohio.
auto contract talks.
Education, will .be the main §p.eaker
Deputy Jay Cremeans Is doing the bonbrs above.
AI Chrysler Corp., where company
and onion negollators held ·!heir first . Monday for a Gallia County Teachers'
workshop to begin at 9:30 a.m. at the
weekend bargaining session under a
Grace United Methodist Church.
Sept. 14 deadline, Woodcock said the
His presentation is entitled "The
aulomakers cuuld well afford to meet
Common Sense of Good Teaching."
union demands without raising prices,
Meek has administrativ·e respon·
But, he said, "given their desire to
sibillty for the guidance, coWlseling and
maloialn present profitability levels,
VINTON - A resolution was approved sessions.
development
services section and the
Mayor Stolllngs reported that a 200 their requests fall within the ·
to plilel! the local street light levy on the
general educational development iGED)
NoveDJI!er ballot by the Vlnloil Village foot guard rail.has been Installed on State guidelines.''
testing program. He received his M.A.
Council at a special meeting last week. Rt. 325 south and the basketball court has
Degree !rom Ohio State University. He
The levy Is lor a five-year period. Passage been resurfaced and backboards. will be
·also
attended Kendall Junior College in
BOMBING SPREADS
of the leyy will not increase taxes since it is erecied in a few &lt;days.
Mayor Stollings also reported that
LONDON (UP!) -A bombing wave Evanston , lll., the University of Maine and
a renewal and has been In effect the past
James Crace, a veteran policeman and an bwmed on the Irish Republican Army received his B.A. Degree from Muskingum
several years.
College,
The second reading of Ordinence 73-10 ex.Vinton mayor has been sworn in as a extended into the upper echelons of British
Before joining the State Department of
establishing a position for a court clerk part·lime deputy marshal. Crace, who is society Saturday. A bomb Injured three
Education, Mr . Meek held several
was read. The position will he a part..lime employed fuJJ.lime with the Gallia County persons at the Bank of Engwnd, another educational posts: guidance director and
job in which the employee wiD assist Sheriff's Department, resides near Vinton. · was found in a fashionable boutique and a high school supervisor in the Ross County
A contract with the American Legion bomb scare halted a cricket match, for·
Mayor J,udena Sto!Ungs In ber mayor's
Schools; director of guidance, Scioto
court l!Rd accept bonds between court Post No. 161 of Ewlngton.• was It earlier cing 28,000 persons to evacuate the Valley Schools; instructor, U. S. Federal
in the month. The council has agreed.to let grounds. Scotland Yard said the bombs
Reformatory and teacher in the Coshocton
the Legion have blngs games twice a were part of an IRA campaign to export City Schools. He has been a guest lecturer
month In the VInton iown hall, The games the violence ol Northern Ireland to at several Ohio colleges and Wliversi!ies.
are expected to be held the first and third Engwnd. Saturday was the seventh day of · His experience outside educational clr·
bombings in England.
Salurday nights.
des has covered the gamet from

')
'

Weddings
Anniversaries

Your Invitee/ Guest
Reachinu More
Than 12,000
Families

'

The United Slates and Thai·
land had agreed earlier to pull
out some of America's 45,000
servicemen and more than 500
warplanes at Thai ba~
because of the · Au~. 15

Birthdays

presented Mr. ~d Mrs. Patri~k Lochary, with their awiiJ'd as winners of the county's
promment semor mtlzens award.

tmts

VOL. 8, NO. 30

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
~ ..." ....

JOHN J. GILLIGAN

42 PAGES

FREE CUSTOMER PARKING ON SECOND STREET
AND AT OUR MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE

""""'""'"'

MRS.

+

Clear Sunday night with lows
In the 60s. Mostly sunny Sun·
day and Monday with highs In
the 80s and low 90s.

SALE PRICES ON JUNIOR DRESSES
MEN'S SOCKS· PANTY HOSE - BODYSHIRTS
GIRLS DRESSES - NO·IRO" SHEETS
BEDSPREADS - DESKS AND SHELVES
ALARM CLOCKS - TYPEWRITERS AND
ELECTRONIC CALCULATORS

·-

Linson H. Stebbins, Mr. and Mrs. Hoke
RObinson, Edwin T. Thomas, Mrs. Stanley
Evans, and Rio Grande college Prof.
James Porter.
·
Four Meigs County citizens were
honored with presenlatlons on Friday
afternoon having been selected to receive
the county awards by the local senior
citizens. The Daily Senti!&gt;el also was
honored receiving one of 11 state awards
which will be presented tq organizations,
businesses, and others for community
service to senior citizens over the 1lklay
lair run .
The accompanying photographs were
taken Friday afternoon as the awards
were presented at the Ohio State Fair.
Other senior citizen awards went to
the Portsmouth Old Timers Band and the
(Continued on Pge ~)

Weather

Asia."

A Gift For
All Seasons

the other bus.
Women outnumbered the men 10.1.
Former Chief or Pollee Chester Ulaper
and former Gallla County treasurer V.
Paul Niday were In lite group.
Among others were the Rev. and Mrs.

BACK-TO-SCHOOL SALE

YOUR ADMIRAL I)EAUI
·

DAUGIITER STRICKEN
Mr. and Mrs. David T.
Grueser, Pomeroy, Rt. 3,
learned this morning that their
daughter, Mrs. Charles Ell)ery
(Charlotte Grueser), suffered
a coronary attack Thursday
night at. her home in Penllsyl·
vania. Mrs. Emery Is a patient
in the intensive care unit at
Jamison Hospital, New Castle,
Pa., her condition is reported
to be serious. Mrs. Emery Is 35
years of age. A1J prayers would
be appreciated.

Ia spent tn practice and field
' maneuvers and then later with
divisions .
d th
Instruction Is un er 8
direction &lt;A Ger!ld Stmm~~
and Charles • eaao . wtil
aulalance from JlflllllY ~
a Weal VIrginia Tech I en
who Is majoring In mualc.
Mrs . Jame~ Hart, Mrs. Ja~:
Needs and Mrs. o:;\o
Bumgardner are on ha
serve u c!lllperones while Mn.
Oak Howard Jr., Mrs. Flore~Mt .
Finnicum and Mrs, Alva Per~y
have the task of preparl g
meala (or the campers.
Another big event (or the
White Falcon Bend wlll he
participation in Ashland, Ky.,
this fall when they go back as
Honor Band.

OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 9 PM
SHOP SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 PM

Cambodian bombing halt
The bases were built by the
United States during the 1960s
at a cost of more than $650
million.
Thailand has the largest
concentration of American air
pow~r outside the United
States. The kingdom's militarY
government guards a border of
1,000 miles witlt Cambodia and
Laos, separated from China by
only a narrow strip of Burma.
Military sources said the first
withdrawala likely would he
from Takhli, an Air Force F4
Phantom base about 100 miles
north of ~angkok, and Nam
Phong, a U.S. Harine Phantom
and A4 Skyhaw~ .~. 1mp 40 miles
northeast of the . ·a, •ital.

-ll&gt;'t!'

MASON - Waharna High
S.hool's White FalcCII\ Band,
comprised &lt;A 84 memhel'll Is
pres)arlng lor the neat football
season and currently are
engaged In hours &lt;A practice
and field maneunrs while
attending· a 1lklay summer
camp at Soulhaide
A concerlla to ~ preSented
Sunday at 1 p.m. on the
groundsat the Ma&amp;O!l county 4·
H Camp Ground where the
band has set up for the annual
event. A chicken barbecue
dinner will be served at a cost
of $2 'with parents and friends
Invited to attend. ·
Band members are "working
hard" in lull days that hegins
11 7 a. m: Most of the morning

•

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

troop pullout
By BERT OKULEY
BANGKOK, ThaUand (tJI'I)
-The United Slates annOWlced
plans today to pull 3,550 troops
and more than 100 warplanes
out of Thailand in the first
phase of an American pullout
from seven bases ·across the
counlry.
Maj. Gen. Thomas W. Mellen,
chief of the American Military
Assistance Command for Thai·
land (MAcrHAI), worked out
the withdrawal agreement ear·
lier in the day In talks with Lt.
Gen. Krlangsak Chamananaa,
deputy chief of staff of
Thailand's Supreme command.
A Joint statement, issu~
alter the meeting at the 'Thai
Foreign Ministry, said, "it was
agreed that the U.S. would take
immediate steps for an initial
withdrawal of 3,550 U.S. mill·
tary personne1 from ThaUand
and also a redu~tion of more
than 100 aircraft."
The stetement made no
specific mention of lfow long
the pullout would lake, but said
the two sides would meet again
in the first week of September
to consider "further gradual
reduction of the level of U.S.
fortes in Thailand.
The announcement said the
future withdrawala would in·
elude "strategic, tactical and
support aircraft" but would
take "into consideration securl·
ty requirements of Southeast

•
d
r ab1

PARKERSBURG, W. Va . (UP!)- A young Belpre, Ohio,
couple found o~t Thursday their
pet skunk, which had bitten
both of them, was rabid.
Dean and Susan McMahan, in
· (Continued !rom page 1)
their 20s, cai!J!ht the skunk a
economic devol opme nt few weeks ago at nearby Vlen.
analysis of the impact area wiD na. They had it descented and
be presented. The public will named him "Peppy."
have the opportunity to · Peppy bit the young woman
comment on the survey.
twice 10 days ago and nipped
Representative Miller said her on the foot three days ago.
that "the Task Force will be in The husband wa, bitten on the
Southeastern Ohio to let local . hand by the skunk a week ago.
people know what Is planned
The skunk didn 'I show the
for the area in the next few uaual signs of rabies until the
years. The Task Force is here p'ast couple or days, and he
to listen to what local people was taken to a veterinarian.
have to say."
The pet's head :was sent to
Charleston for examination and
CONTEST SET
word was received· Thursday
A small garden tractor that Peppy was rabid.
pulling .contest will be held
It was the first case of ra·
Saturday at Tuppers Plains bles reported in Wood CoWlty
west of the Catholic Church on this year.
Route 681. Weight classes are
S00.700pounds; 701·900 pounds ;
90J.l100, and 1100 and over.

U.S. agrees .to

IN HOSPITAL
Donald Gosney, Middleport,
is a patient at Veterans Ad·
ministratlon Hospital, Hun·
tington. His Room number Is 2
AP, where cards may he sent.

national .
bank

J

E·R Unit called

Five runs made

Falcon band preps

Food stamps reduced

Assignments to classes announced

spoke of the possibility of u!l'ng the Delta
Queen In the celebration which will also
include formal rededication ceremonies.
In addition to a dozen local DAR
members who were present for the on.fllte
inspection by the state officials, there was
in attendance Mrs. Leona Hensley of Long
Bottom who recalled vividly the pageant
which highlighted the 1932 dedication of
the marker.
Approximately 2,000 people were
present for the dedication, she reported,
dlspwying pictures of the rows and rows of
vehicles which were parked In a lot to the
rear of Hensley's store at Long Bottom.
She told of the participation ol the Red·
men's lodge In the pageant a.~d of their
arrival from boals.
Also present for the Thursday In·
spection was Don Pullins, whlllitl father
sold to the state the plot of land where the
marker stands. He now owns all of the land
surrounding the plot.
Mrs. Hensley provided Miss Lucllle
Smith with pictures taken of the 1932
dedication which were reproduced and
presented to those at the Inspection.
They show the sign on the high cllrf
background which read In bold
yellow letters, large enough to
be read by voyagers paaslni
on the winding Ohio River, "Wuh·
lngton and Klashuta camp Sltea."
The sign has long since washed away.
The large rocks and the numerals "1832"
in stone which were used on bank to the
front of the marker and at the sides of the
steps leading to It are preswnably atilt
there,. but now covered with ooll.
The steps leading to the platlorm drop
off In the middle ol the hill becauae the
road; Route 124, was lowe~ed eeve&gt;'al feet
when It was widened and paved by the
Staie In the yeats following the erection of
the monument.
Only a few members ol Return
Jonathan Melco Chlplet recaU evenll oi
the dedlcatiCIIl. Mra. Patrick Lochaty
remembolred that the glrltcGIIII o! Mtlcl
IConUnuf'd on P•1~ 11 1

�2- Tlws...d8yTIJnes,Sentlnei, Surolay, Aug. 26, 1&amp;73

Television. Log
.

~UN

DAY, AUG. 26,1f13

6: 00 - Travelogue "' ·

.
11

·

6: :10 - Thl• Wee!&lt; •: New•moker '73 IJ: lamp Unto My Feet 10.
7:00 - Communique 6; Old Time Gospel Hour 13: Time 101'
Ti mothy 4; Look Up &amp; live 10.
7:30 - Fo tth for Today 8; Revival Fires 6: Herald ot Truth 3:
camera Three 10; Film 4.

7: •s

- News •.

8:00 - Leonard Repass 8; Gospel Caravan 6; Church Strvlce

13; Billy James Hargis and his AII.Amerlcan Kid5 10; Mor·

m on Choir .3 i Day of Discovery 4.

R••

8:30- Oral Roberts 3; Your Health •: Day of Discovery 8;
Humbard 13 : Revival Fires 15: Kathryn Kuhlman 6; Get
Together 10.
·
c
8: ss - Black Cameo 4.
9: 00 - Sing ing Jubilee 3; Cadle Chapel 4; Oral Robert. 10; Rex
Humbard 6 IS; Old-Faohloned Meeting 8.
9: 30-Church by Side of the Road 4: Pebbles &amp; Bamm Bamm
8; Christ is the Answer 13; Friendly Junction 10.
10:00 - Church Services 4; Curiosity Shop 6, 13; This is the Life
3;, Faith for Today IS : To be announced 8.
10: IS - Ta lking Hands B.
10::10 - VIewpolni S: This Is The life IS : Coptoln Noah Jtl nslght
4; Movie "California Conquest" 10.
•
11 :00 - Poi nt of VIew6; Joy In living 13; TV Chapell; Focus. On
Columbuu ; Camera Three &amp;: Across the Fence IS.
11 :30 - This Is The Answer 3; Ma ke A Wish 6, 13 ; Insight II;
.
Face the Nation 8.
12:00 - AI Issue 3; Rex Humbard 8: llowling 6; Doctors on Call
4; Rev.· Ca lvin Eve ns 13; Sacred Heart 15; The ISsue. 10.
12: IS - Open Bible IS . .
12:30 - Revival Fires 13; Meet the Press 3, 4, IS.
1:00 - lower Lighthouse 13: Urban League 10: Man trom
U.N.C.L. E. 4; Saint II; To be announced 8: Perry Mason 3.
I:30 - Issues &amp; Answers 6, 13; Face lhe Nation 10.
.
2: GO-Car &amp; Tra ck 13: UF0 6: II Takes a Thief 3; Johnny Bench
I'
.tl ; Animal World 8; CBS Tennis Classic 10; To be announced
IS.
.
· 2: 15 - Baseball 4.
• 2: 30 - Wolf Ti ll Your Father G~ts Home IS : Ce l~ br lly Bowling
'. 4; NFL Action '73 8.
3:00 - Mancini Generation 6; CBS Sports Spectacular 10; CBS
Tennis Class ic 8; Farmer's Daughter 13; World University
Games 3; Four at the Fair 4.

3:30 - Pro-Celebrity Tennis 6, 13.
. 4:00 - Sesame Sl. 33; World University Games 3, 4; Golf
TournamentS 8.
4:30 - Gold Tournaments 10.

. S:OO - Keep America Singing 6; Western Theater,}S; Movies

· " Prince of Players" 13; " The Mysterious Lady 33.
· • 6:00 - CBS News Retrospective 8, 10: Car &amp; Track 15; News 4,
·

6; Country Carn ival 3.

• 6:30 - NBC News 3, 4 IS: Untamed World 6; Just Jazz 33.
· 7:00 - Safari to Adventure 3; Wall Till Your Father Gels Home
· 6: Zoom 20, 33 : Animal World 10; Lawrence Welk IS; UFO 8:
Wild Kingdom IS; This Is Your life 4.
7:30 - World of Disney 3, 4, IS; l ei's Make A Dea l 6: French
• Chef 20, 33; Dick Van Dyke 10. .
8:00 - FBI6, 13; MASH 8, 10; Evening al Pops 20, 33.
8:30 - Mannix 8, 10; Columbo 3. 4, IS.
· 9:00 - Masterpiece Theatre 10, 33 ; Pro Football6, 13.
· 9:30 - Barnaby Jones 8. 10.
' 10:00 - Firing line20, 33 ; Escape3, 4, 15.
·10: 30 - We Think You Should Know 3: High Road to Adventu re
10; Pollee Surgeon IS; Bobby Goldsboro 4; What's My line 8.
11 :00 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, IS.
.11 :15 - CBS News 8, 10.
.
11 :30 - Johnny Carson IS : News 6, 13; Come to the Fa ir 4;
Movies " The Cocoanu ts" 13 ; " Thf Lon ely Man" B; " !The

Rose Talloo" 10.

11 : 45 - .Johnny Carson 4.
News 6, 13.

· 12:00 ' 12: IS : 12:30 • 1: 00 -

News 6, 13.
Movie "About Mrs. l eslie" 13.
.Roller Derby 4.

2: 00 -

I?· SS - NBC News 3, IS.
.
,:oo - All My Children6, 13: Green Ac r"' 10; French Chef 33:
· Not for Women Only IS; New• J ; Jok er's Wild 8.
1&lt;10- 3 On A Match 3 •· 15: l et's Make A Deal 6, 13: As The
· World Turns 8. 10: Evening at Pops 33.
2:00 - Days of Our lives 3. 4, IS; Newlywed Game 6. 13;
Guiding Light 8, 10. •
1: 30 - Doctors 3, •· IS ; Edge of Night a, tO ; Off The Record 33:
Girl In My Life 6, 13.
3:00 - flnother WOI'h! 3, •· 15; General Hospilat 6, 13: Price Is
Right 8, 10 ; Oleanna Trail•33.
3:30 - Return to Pelton Pia eel, IS: One Life to li ve 6, 13: Phil
Donohue •: Secret Storm 10; Time lor Timoth y 33: Match
Game '13 8.
,
H k &amp; y 16
• · oo - Mr Cartoon J; Love, AmerlcanStylel3; uc
09 ;
· Somers~t 15; Se~ ret SIOI'm 8; Sesame St . 33: Movie " Kill the
Umpire" 10.

•· 30 - Petticoat Juncllon 3; F Troop 6; Abbott &amp; Costello 8: My
· Li ttle Marg ie 15; Daktar l 13: Four at The Fair •· •
•
5:00 - Bonanza 3; Hazel 8; Mr. Rogers 10. 33: Big Valley 6;
Wes tern Star Theater IS.
•
5:30 - Beverly Hillbillies 8: Electric Co. 33: Gomer .Pyle 13:
Hodgepodge Lodge20; Trails West IS; Dick Van Dyke4.
5· 55 - Earl Nightinga le IS.
6; 00 - Nws 3, 4, 8, 0. IS; ABC News 13; Sesame St. 20: Travelure
· JJ ; Truth or Consequences 6,

6:30 - ABC News 6; CBS News 8, 10; I Dream of Jeannie 13;
News 3, ~ . 15; How Do Your Children Grow? 33.

7:00 - Truth or Conseq. 3 ; Beat the Clock 4 ; News 6. W
: Circus
13; What's My Line 8; Elec. Co. 20; Dlocover Flying 33; Saint
IS : People, Places and Things I.
7: JO - To Tell the Truth 6: Holl ywood Squares 4 ; Traffic Court
10; Chan.ese Way 20 ; Episode Action 33; Bobby Goldsboro 3;
Beat the Clock 13: It's Your Bet a.
.
8·00 - Gunsmoke 8, 10; Baseball World ol Joe Garaglola 3, 4,
· 15: Rook ies6 ; Magic Circus 13: Tigers 20. 33.
,
8: IS - Baseba ll 3, 4, IS

9: 00 - Here's Lucy 8, 10; Movies " The Bliss of Mrs . Blossom 6,

13: Conversation with Sol Hurok 20, 33.
Doris Day 8, 10; Book Beat 33. 20.
10:00 - Pa ul Nuc hlms 33 ; Medical Center 8, 10: News 20.
10:15 - The Silent Years 20.
li :OO - News3, 4, 6, 8. 10. 13, 15.
S ,
11 : 3D-Johnny Ca rson 3, 15; Movies " The Old Man and the ea
9: 30 -

8; " War and Peace" 6, l J; Come to the Fair 4; Dan l mel
Tomorrow 10.
•

11 :35 - Movie "The Deep Blue Sea " 10.
11 : 45 .....:. Johnny Carson 4.

1:00 ~

From U.N.C. l.l;:.
2: 00 - Focus on Columbus 4,
3:00 - News 4 .
Man

PATR tOT - lloyd l . Myers,
acting local superintendent of
the · Southwestern School
District, Saturday released the
designated bus routes for all
bus drivers In the SW District.
They are:
Merrill Hivel y - Beginning
!'t Cadmus and

tr~vel l ng

up

San fork· Pen let Road, lu'rns

around and tra:vels

down

around and travels the Cadmus

Myers Hollow, turns around

and travels Route 775 to While
Hollow, travels While Hollow
Road to Mount Zion Road,
travels MI. Zion Road to
Mudsock-Fiao Sprlnos Road.
travels Mudsock-Fia9 Springs
Road turning onto the Wright
and Cemetery Roads, travels
Mudsoc.Fiag Springs Road to
Route 141, travels Route 141
turning onto Loucks Road,
turns around and travels to
Cadmus Elementary School .
Leonard Newberry
Beginning on the Hannan
Trace Road, travels up the
German Hollow Road, turns

Hannan Trace Road, turns

around and travels Route 775
turning onto Smokey Rood,·

turns around and travels Rou1e
115 to the Patrlot-Cadmus

.

ONLY

l2

1htEA.

Road, travels Palrloi-Codmus
Road turning onto the Price
and Grate Roads, turns around
and travels Patrlot-Cadmus
Road to Cadmus Elementary
School.
Bart Miller - Beginning on
State RoiJte 715 at Harley
Crouse residence, travel• 775 to
Dan Jones Road, travels Dan
Jones Road to Route w ,
travels 141 to Harrison•
residence , turns

~round

- ITEM

Road Into Centeroolnl, travels
Crider Road to Erpory Church.
tv.rQ~

_ar_ound &amp; travels Crider

res idence, turns arpund and

tra vels back to Cora Centerpoint Road , travels
Cora -Centerpoint Road to
Centerf.olnt,

travels

Cen -

Alfred
Social Notes
Sunday School attendance on
Aug. 19 was 44, the offering
$19.16. Worship services were
held at 11 o'clock, with the Rev.
Meece speaking from Rev.
3:20, "Behold, I Stand at the
Door and Knock". Attendance
at this service was 26, offering
$16.25, pledges $82.
Evangelistic Crusade began
Wednesday evening, Aug, 22,
for the Northeast Cluster, at
the Joppa U.M. Church
grounds, with the Rev. Robert
Meece, the evangelist. There is
a Cluster Choir, led by Mrs.
Burris of the North Bethel
Church with Lavina Brannon,
pianist. Special singing by a
new group each evening. Come
and bring someone. (The
meeting begins at 8 each
evening and runs through Sept.

SUBSC RIPTION RAT ES

CAROLINA LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY CO.
POINT Pl£ASANT
PHONE 675·1160

.

Tilt GllllPOIII Tr lbunt In
Oh io end W' tl t VIrginia ont
y11r li S, SIM m o nt t~ a II , lhr lt
mGtl tiiii.S, t i11Wh t nl l7 per
y11r, si x months Sf, ttlr tt
months SS 50.

Tht D1\1y Stn l!nei, one

~ll r

116.0G, I I;( mon ll't s 11.50,
lllrtt montht t 5,00.

Tht Unlltd Pre n In ·
ltrn11 1on 11 iJ t KC IVI IV ely
tnlltltd lo th e uu tor
pu~ Hc tt l on ot en otw s
d itpii C:htt C:rtdlttd IO lhla
nlw l ptptr end lito lf'lt lOCI I
newt publl ll'ltd h•rtJn .

District. Tha Marietta · b11sed
Agency was originally created
In 1968 end has served on a
continuing basis since lhat
lime as a mul li· purpose
planning and development arm
DOROTHY GRJFFJN ANNOUNCJ$
lor local governmenlll In nine
(9) coun ties In southeastern
NEW FALL DANCE CLASSES:
Ohio. Beasley did Indicate that
CREATiVE DANCE ,
the recent designation will
(4'1•-6 yr . olds)
·
have the ultimate eflect or
BAL LET-TAP-ACRO
broadening BH·!IVRDD's role
(7'/2- 10 yr . olds)
as overseer of all planning and
MOD ERN JAZZ
,
development prQgrams in the
(Teens)
'
Region.
Ball
e
t
:
.
Beginner
to
Adull
Belmont County, which is
Wom e n's Exe rcise
currently a part of the BH·
HVRDD organization, will
become a part of Region nine
446·4528
(9) to the North under the
13 Cou rt St.
terms of the designation. BH·
Gallipolis
HVRDD '#icials indicated that .__ _.;.::..,..;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _""". .

MISS LUCILLE SMITH, CHESTER due to a prior commitment in Rio
Grande, was unable to attend the state Fair to accept her award in Meigs County's
BenliJI' volunteer progrem. Receiving the award from Dr. Mei-Zwissler, chief of .
Ohio Bureau of drug abuse, for MIBB Smith was Mrs. Vilma Plkkoja, supervisor of
th~ bookmobile service In Meigs, Vinton and Jackson Counties.

-: _-i:c-;:-;;-;-;;;:;;;;;eo-;;;d:-T-;;;:;:;;;:;.;-J

literally eating us out of our house and home.
This is just one example of the socialist legislation Mr. Black
ljlu 110 werda IOiiJ (or be aub)eel lo red11cUoa by lhe
pra ised In his letter.
ljdller) ltld mul be llped wllb lbe alpee'a lddreu.
2. "President Nlxon 'sefforls to end the Vietnam War seems
I 1'!1111111 •Y be wllhbeld upoa publlealtea. However, OD
minute compared to the greater efforts of Congress and in· ·
I req..t, na•ea will be tllacloaed. Lelten lbould be 1D lood
dividuals, who sacrificed the personal popularity by attempting
I lim, addreaalatlluaes, nDI penDIIIIUU...
to negotiate with Hanoi."
Here Mr. Black ·has praised members .of Congress and
II :'
,~~6,
private citizens who actually gave aid and comfort to the enemy
I :
'MV~
while President Nixon was trying to bring an end to the war, If
this had happened during World War II there is no doubt in my
mind,that certain of these individuals would have been convicted
I :
_._
for
treason and they would have been shot. . ·
I .
l
3. "Perhaps the enemies of the President are the frienda of
'
the
people."
Four statements challenged
'
See how misleading and dishonest this statement is. Surely
Dear Editor :
Mr. Black knows that President Nixon was elected by one of th e
There are four statements made by Keith Owen Black in his
greatest landslides In the history of this Republic.
letter to the edior of the August 19 Sunday Times-Sentinel which I
The enemies that President Nixon has now are the same
must challenge.
enemies that he had last November , and they just don't possess
l. "Uberals and sociallsta have brought about many wanted enough old.fashioned Americanism to take a beating .
and needed reforms to this C()Untry."
As I said in my last letter the President's enemies are
In my opinion here Is a clear cut defense of socialism made Uberals, Socialists and Communists, who have ~s their goal the
by Mr . Black. I have always fOund that anyone who will defend
destruction of our American Constitutional Political system and
Socialism will defend Communism before he will defend our free · our free enterprise ecll!lomic system, and this they have just
enterprise system, which was Instituted by the foWidil)g Fathers. about done I am sorry to say.
The burden, responsible people are suffering under today ia
4. "No member (of the Senate) has or will directly attack the
due entirely to liberal • socialist legislation over the years. Go office of the President. "
.
Into any grocery store and see the able bodied, irresponsible
This is not true. This Is all that has been going on during the
moochers on welfare, carting out choice cuts of meat and other
investigation, and in the national news media by both Liberal
luxury foods and paying for them.with food stamps. Who pays for
Democrats and Uberal Republicans in the Senate. Senator
the food stamps? The respollllible taxpaying people who believe Ervin, chairman of the Senate Watergate Committee, stated that
It Is RIGHT TO WORK. Is It any wonder that the price of food is President Nixon is the most repressive President this nation has
so high? Why, these moochers along with theii' cats and dogs are everkno.wn . If this iSn 't an attack on the Presidency then what is
1t, Mr. Black? The motive behind the whole investigation is to
-~llllllllllllll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!l
. . . destroy President Nixon .
1
In closing I want to state that I believe in the politica) and
economic system instituted by our J:ounding Fathers at great
personal sacrifice. I am strlcUy AIIU-&amp;x:iaUst and Anti·
Communist, and have nothing but Clllltempt lor Liberalism. This
is where I stand.
Why not be honest and tell the Iell&lt;\1.11 public just where you
stand politically and economically, Mt . Black?
MIIIJha!l M. BUI'I\I!It, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, Ohio

t

I :•••

Kids will be
Kids ... HELP us
TO PROTECT THEM

BY DRIVING SAFELY!

•'

LEND AHAND •••

': ;9,

• tifitit:

••

· sPECIAL

GOOD FOR MONTH OF AUGUST ONLY

A snake cannot hear sounds
BIRDS GASSED
from the air. Its hearing is ~Y BRENTWOO!'), N. H. (UP! )
sensing ~ round '·Vibrations.
_; An estimated 12,000 game
farm pheasan Is exposed to
eastern equine encephalitis
wer.e ga:jSed to death Saturday
and buried in a !50-foot long,
six'rootdeep trench onthe Fish
and Game Deparlment farm
on orders of the state's acting
Health Director Dr . Hugh
Wilkerson.

ProfessioTUJl Dry Cleaning
. Seroice Done By Our
Attendant.
75
10 lb.

DRIVE CAREFUllY•••

'3

SPRING VALLEY CLOTHING
.CARE CENTRE .

DAN THOMAS

AND SON

The ra fflesja is th e world's
largest flower. It grows wild
in Malaya and Indonesia, with
no stems or leaves, and reac hes three reel in diameter.

The New

ANCHOR RESTURANT.
.

Will Be Open Monday For Business

'

HOURS:

"'

IT IS TIME TO MOVE
OUR DOUBLE WIDE DISPLAY
You need to see this home to ap.
preciate its quality!

14 900
'.

Quail Creek Mobile
Community·
&amp; Sales
RODNEY.aJRA ROAD ·

The policeman cares. So does
the crossing guard. And, of
course, so do you. But caring
has to be put into action. So
keep alert. Watch for signals.
Drive slowly, . very carefully.
And NEVER pass a school bus!
''THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEA$ 11

New

Hop~

BY ADA KEElS '
Mrs. Jo Ann Carter and
childre,n of Wilberforce spent
the weekend with her grandmother, Mrs. Daisy Ross.
llobbie Deen Gorden of
Gallipolis, who spent a week
visiting the Howard families,
return ed to his home in
Gallipolis.
Mrs. Murl Howard attended
the association in Middleport
recently and participated in
the program.
1
Mrs, Edna Long or Columbus
visited over the weekend with
her mother , Mrs. Daisy Ross,
where she met her sister, Mrs.
Silva Coleman, from Mont.
gomery, W. Va., who also
spent the weekend at home.
Donald
Bris kon
and
daughters of Akron is spending
a week wi th Mr. and Mrs. John
Gamble.
Mr. and Mrs . Donalson Keels
called on Daisy Ross recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Young of
Dayton is spending part of
their vacation wi.th her mother,
Mrs. Mary Howard and fa mily.
.Mrs. Carrie Patterson of
Coalton and son, t'rank,
daughter and husband or
Columbus visited Mrs. Daisy
Ross recently.
Mrs. Jenn Audrey McDarliel
and daugh ter, Mellsa, of
Porter visited Mrs. Ada Keels

• j

·

"

...

\,.

recently.
Deacon Robect C ooper. ,, ~~­
te nded the association at
Middleport Sunday afternoon.
Mrs·. Ada Keels received
word from her daughrer, Mrs.
Audrey Pryor, at Cincinnati
that her husband, Dr. Pryor, is
in the hsopital with viral
pneumonia.
Roger Gamble of California
spent his vacation with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
Gamble and sister. Mr .
Gamble, who has been ln
hos pital several weeks, is
recovering nicely.

fntH [ lL OHOIII l ORIIitU HS

Everything Is ·
Guaranteed
To Satisfy.
Or Money Back
Jane Parker

CORN CHIPS
Pkg .

39e

-----------Sliced Italian

BREAD
3 16Loaves
oz. $1

\Hg6mry.\ .·

'"'

PRETTY AND. EASY
TO WEAR
That's how to describe
thi s eye please r! Cabl e
stitched vest in all orion
plays a double roie over a
classic shi rt and wide
slac ks.

Col ors : Nav y, While,
Pink, Rust.

Olhers from ·17 to 113

Sunday-Monday
and .T uesday

WILL HOLD
YOUR CHOICE
IN OUR
LAY-AWAY
Plus

GroRsE

HaMiLTon

Petee ISlWFO~D
OUNIGa

BEIWVB

~GJJII,.

•JEri=

'

Tooi,ght, Mon., Tues.
Aug. 26-27-28

Diana Ross

Is Bil lie Holida y
!Color)
!RI

- PlusA SE PARAT E
PEACE
(Color)

HOT DOGS WITH SAUCE 25~
.

.•..................................••
•

lPG)

OPENING SPECIAL

Tonight Thr11.
Wedn esda y

.MEIGS THEATRE

l• WALT DISNEY'S !
••
GREATEST :
ACHIEVEMENT!

SWEATER

Tonight, Aug. 26

l ong cardigan 1hat goes everywh,re,
with everythi ng I Cable sti tch bulky
orion. Wit h V-neck or Hl.rlse neckline.
Colors: Red, wh ile, navy, pink.

TH E HEART
BR EAK KID
CTec hni.color )

Home Of Good Food At A Reasonable Price.

Bring The Whole Family Out, We Think
You Will Be Happy With The
'

.

NEW!
r ANNY

lPG)

Charles Grodi n
Cy bl ll Shepherd
.Also
THE MAN
I Techn lcolorl
James Earl Jones

I PGI

Mart in Bal sam
Show Starts I p,m,

. Mott . lhr u Thurs.
Aug. 3I · Sept. 1·2
NO T OPE N

~l uot C

M.L.

I.

I

•.

JUUI .
liCK
AIDIIWI • VAl DYKI
T EC H N I COLOR~

[liju

~~ rtltOI II 1! l i,W~l 111 11 Q•l1MV1101&lt; r.~ 1110:

O••'' P~tor! ,,_,,,,,

·

Cartoon

(

)

WEO

' LADY SINGS
THE BLU ES'

10 A.M. till 6 P.M.

~

NEW DEMAND
ROME (UPI ) - The self.
described kidnapers of J. Paul
Getty III have made a new
ransom demand of $5.1 million
and threatened to cut off one of
the boy's anns pr legs if his
family refuses to pay, a family
lawyer said !'&amp;turday.

-'9

Since 1859

Double F ~ature Prog ram

Sunday .

.

CHARLENE HOEFLICH, society editor, received from
Mrs. John J. Gilligan , a state award given to The Daily
Sentinel, one of 11 to he given in Ohio during the State Fair,
for the newspaper's commWJity service to senior citizens.

,'\ ( .ol 1,,,,1 N11,hlll

Friday and Saturday
6 A.M. till 11 P.M.

·,

FISHERIES IN DANGER
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UP!)
-Florida's natural resources
director warns that one of the
world's most productive
fisheries could be endangered
by the gran ting of offshore oil
drilling leases along the gulf
coas!s of Alabama, Florida and
Mississippi.

MASON DRIVE·IN

Monday thru Thursday
. 6 A.M. till 10.P.M.

• · Price • Food • · Surrounding's

NEWT JONES

COLA EXEC GONE
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina
(UPI) - Newspapers said
Saturday
a
Pepsi-Cola
executive had been kidnaped
and held lor a $1 million ransom, but officially, police and
corporate officials de nied
kn owledge of the kidnaping .
Police sources, however,
confirmed that Argentine
security agencies had been
informed of the Pepsico case.

1

/

Croydon Doublewide

ATfli:NDANCE DOWN
Attendance was estimated at IS4,M4
Friday, down about 3,000 from Ills! year's
second day. Fair ortlclals attributed the
lag In attendance to Frida y mi)rnlng's
threatening weather .
Senior ciUzens at the lair Saturday were
!rom Toledo, Bucyrus, Mansfield, Marion
LaRue, Mentor, .• Troy, Canton ~ d New
Lexington.
Free grandsta nd entertainment
featured Rare Earth at 4:30 p.m. and 8:30
p.m.
Saturday, Farm . City Pay, featured ;a
garden tractor pull, wine judging, a baton
twirling contest, the selection of the Ohio
Homemaker of the '{ear, a cupcake eating
contest, cooking demonstrations with food
from the West Indies, appearances ()! the
H. R. Pufnstur characters and the
Amateur Boxing championships.
SWiday, Clevela nd Day and Newspaper
. Boy's Day, fea tures a pony pull , a horse
pull, the H. R. Pulnstul characters and
free grandstand entertalnmnl by .Dlonne
Warwick and Doc Severinsen.
An All.Ohio Worship Service and a ·
Catholic Ma:jS will also be held.

'

In Downtow11 Point Pleasant

60x12 with 55x12,_Compan lon ·
1
Three bedrooms - 1 12 baths - Separate front
dining room, galley kitchen with washer · ·
dryer. Utility area .
·

(Continu ed from page 1)
!lev . Glen n Biddle ol Jackson, both lor
corrununlty service.
·
Some 60 cha rt.Jred buses brought the
senior citizens in from various paris of the
state. Many of them witnessed Gov. John
Gilliga n sign a bill to create a state
Commission on Agi0 g to replace the
present Division or Administration on
Aging in the Deparlment of Mental pealth
and Mental Retardation.
·
The UPI reported volunteer a war~s for
senior citizen work went to Lucille Smith,
Ches blr, Merry Furth, Ashland, Mrs ..
Elizabeth Good and Mrs. Eva Hicks, both
Ql' Canton.
Prominent senior citize n awards went to
Mrs . Dorothy Van Tilberg of Ashian&lt;!._
Mrs. Nellie Purtee of Portsmouth, Mr. and
Mrs. Bwton Dunfield of Granville and Mr.
and Mrs. H. Patrick t.ochary of Pomeroy.
Clarence Struble of Pomeroy, Henry
Robinson, Portsmouth, and Paul ·sonn.
l)alblr, Massillon, got Mr. Senior Citizen
Awards.

AS MEIGS COUNTY'S WINNER of the "M; . Senior Citizen" award, Clarence
J. Struble received an engraved plaque, made in the outline of an Ohio map, from
Mrs. Gene R. Abercrombie, wife of the Ohio Director or Agriculture.

.

Publllhtd every wuki dly

Stcortd Cl111 POIIIGt Paid
II Gelt/J)Oi ll , Oh io 4SU 1.

•
rnake.a smooth transition:Into
a meeting with local off icials in
the neighbQrlng region ' be·
Belmont County has been held
tween now and July 1, lrl4.
and lhat Belmont is expected to
'

- ·-

SPECIAL CLEARANCE PRICE

IYin lng UC ipt StttJrdelp' .

Senior Citizens

lerpoin ·Centerville Road and
picking up Everett Gibson
family, travels Centerrlnt·
Centerville Road to Coa Hill
Road, travels Coal Hill Road 1)
and turns around and travels
Mr. and Mrs. Clair WOilde
back
to
CenterpointCenterville Road , travels and Conn! Sue of CirCleville,
Centerpoint-Centerville Road 0. , were called home by the
to CenlervUie Elementary death of her aurit,~ Mary
School.
Frank Ruff - Same route as Schaefer of Pomeroy, 0 ., and
last year with the exception of spent the · weekend with
making a short run up Tick relatives here and at Keno, 0.
Ridge Road. ·
Several local families atGeorge Brewer - Same
tended the Meigs County Fair
route -as last yeelir ,
.
Jesse Chaoman - Same as last week. Many attended on
Hales route last year .
K. Miller - Same. as Senior Citizens Day and also
the evening_programs.
Chapmans route la st year .

Publl•hing Co .
GALL IPOL IS
DAILY TRIBUN E
125 T~lrd Avi ., Ge iUpotl, ,
Oh iO .SUI .

Oh io Post Olllct .
Dr cerr ltr · dt Hy e nd
Sundn , 55c ptr wu ki .
MAI L

,I

and travels Gall/a-Centerpoint

REG. RETAIL PRICE ·'16,400 ,

THE D.t.ll.. Y SENT INE L.
111 Cour t St ., Pomeroy , 0 .
A.Hit. Publ ll hl d t vt ry wtt k·
dl~p~ tvtt!lna except Sl tur .
da~p~ . ! 11ttrl d u ltc:ond c: lllt
me ll ln; matter at Pomeroy,

312 &amp;TH ST.

traveling back to Nebo Road,
travels Nebo Road and turning
onto Davis Road, turns around
and travels back to Nebo Road,
travels Nebo Road to Charles
Evans Road, travels ~vans
Road over to Gallla -

SundiY
Ve llt y

PUb ll,hti:f 'eve ry
by
The
Oh io

SALE

, Road and turning around and

and

travels 715 turning onto Mud
Creek Road, turns around and
travels back to 141, travels
. Route 1'41 lo Patr iot-Gage
Road, travels Patriot-Gage
Road , turning around at
Patriot and traveling back to
Route 141, travels Route ,.,
turning onto the Vernon Woods
Road, turns around and travels
Route 141 lo Cadmus
Elementary School.
E. Spencer - Beginning on
Route 325 at Ronald Trouts
residence, travels Route 325 to
Nebo Road turning onto

SUNDAY
TJMES-SENTINEL

ANY

Nebo Road. travels Nebo Road
to Roush Road, travels Roush

Road back to Centerpoint,
Road, turns around and travels ·travels Cherry Ridge Road to
Cadmus Cross Roads roaQ. to Johnson ' s residence, turns
the Flag Springs Road, travels around and travels to CenFlag Springs Road turning &lt;into terville Elementary School. ·
Herman Wood - BI!Qinnlng
the Ashworth and Miller
Roads, turns around and al Cora Beaver Road and
travels Flag Springs Road to traveling to Cora -Rodn ey
Route 141, travels Route 141 Road, travels Cora · Rodney
turning onto the Saunders and Road and turning onto the Cook
Wiseman Roads, travels Rt. Road, turn ing around and
141 to German Hollow Road, traveling back to Cora-Rodney
goes up German Hollow Road Road, travels Cora -Rodney
lo German Ridge Road, travels Road to Brushy Point Road
German Ridge Road to Cad. around to Cora-Beaver Road,
then to Tom Woods · Road,
mus Elementary School.
Ray Galyen - Beginning on travels Tom Woods Road to
the Mudsock -Fiag Springs Route 325, travels Route 325 lo
Road and traveling to State Cora -Centerpoint R,oad ,
Route 115, travels doy;n 775 In travels Cora,Centerpolnt to
Allison Road , turns around and Tyn Rhos Road, travels Tyn
travels Route 77S .to Peters Rhos Road to Kelsle Gobels
Cave Road, travels Peters residence, turns around and
Cave Road over to Route 190, travels back to . Cora travels Route 790 to Route 115, Centerpoint Road , travels
travels !louie 775 turning onto Cora-Centeroolnt to Willis Cox

travels Route 775 to Hannan
Trace Road, turns onto the

Odds and ends, broken lots- all must gol If we
have the style you want in sufficient quantity to
handle the size of your room, you 've found a real
bargain. Hurry in for best selection
.
.

Symmes Creek Road, tu rns
around and travels ba ck to

MARIETTA - The Buckeye
Hill.; · Hocking Valley Regional
Development District (BHHVRDD) has received word
lhal It has been formally
designated as the Regional
Land Organization (RLO ) for
planning end developme.nt
purposes In an eight (8) county
area
In
Sou theast·
ern
Ohio .
Coun ties
Included In the planning region
are Athens, Hocking, Perry,
Morgan, Monroe, Noble, Meigs
and Washington.
The desig nation came
through a recent letter to BH·
HVRDD Presidenl Richard H.
Holl from Governor John J.
Gilligan. Twelve (12) other
planning agencies throughout
the Sta te received similar
designations along with BH·
HvR DD. The designations
came as a direct result of a
State executive order i:jSued In
April . The executive order
delineated a set of fifteen . (15 )
planning regions in Ohio and
called for the designation of an
umbrella multl·purpose
planning agency In each of the
·regions.
The State of Ohio In Implementing a system of
uniform pillnning r~gions is,
according to Bfi -HVRDD
Executive Director John H.
Beasley, basically passing
addi tiona! planning respon·
sibility down .to the regional
and local level. More tlutn forty
( 40 ) other states, including
both Pennsylvania and West
Virginia, have already taken
similar actions In an effort to
simplify and make planning
more effective at the multi·
county level.
According to Beasley, the
designation of BH-HVRDD as a
Regional Lead Organization
will not substantially alter the
natwe or functions of the

Crooo Roads to the Miller

around and travels Hannan
Trace Road to Route 775,

bring your room measurements
and save money on
Armstrong ceilings

·

Sandfork-Peniel
Road
to
Cadmus·Cross Roads, travels Centerpoint Road , tr avels
the Cadmus-Cross Roads turn- Gall la-Cenlerpo lnt Road to
Ing up the Wiseman Road, Bonlee residence. turns around

Cadmus-Cross R.oads, turning
up the Evans Road, turns

MONDAY, AUG. 27, 1913
6:00 - Sunrise Seminar 4: Sacred Heart 10. ·
6: IS- School Scene 10.
6:20 - Farm Report 13.
6:25- Paul Harvey 13.
·
6: 30 - Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Good News 13:
School Scene 10.
1:00 - Today 3, 4, IS; News, we..lher, Sports 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Flinlstones 13.
7:30 - Romper Room 6; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle 13.
8:00 - Copt. Kangaroo 8. 10; Lassie 6; Sesame St. 33:. New Zoo
f!evue 13.
.
8:30 - New zoo Revue6: Jack La La nne 13.
8: ss - News 13.
9:oo-Paul Dixon 4( Phll Donohue S; Frlendlv Junction 10; A.M.
3; Mr. Rogers33 ; Peyton Place 13; Brady Bunch 6: Movie 8.
9:30 - To Tell the Truth 3; Peyton Place 13; Electric Co. JJ ;
• Wild, Wild West 6.
· 9:55 - Chuck White Report 10.
.
: 10:00 - Dick Van Dyke 13; Dinah Shore 3, 15; Joker's Wild 4, 10;.
• Maggie &amp; The Beautiful Machine 33.
: 10: 30 - St&gt;JJI Second 13; Baffle 3, 4, S: SIO,OOO Pyram id 8, 10:
• · Mike Douglass 6; From the Hills 33 .
• 11:00 - Password 13; Gambit 8, 10: Wizard of Odds 3, 4, IS;
'
Muslcol Encounter 33.
• 11 : 30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4, IS ; Love of life B, IQ; Brady
Bunch 13; Bowling 6; Milestones of Progress 33.
11 : 55 - News 8; Don lmel's World 10.
: 12:00 - PasswOI'd 6; Bob Braun's SO-SO Club 4; Jeopardy 3, IS :
News 8, 10, 13; Sesame 51. 33.
: 12: 30 - Spill Second 6; 3 W's 3, IS; Search tor Tomorrow 8. 10.

News 13.

School bus routes
are designated

turns argund and .travelS the

News 4.

4:

Planning agency set in SE Ohio

.

.'

I

•

"The Stort with More"
Gattlpolls

$14

•.

�2- Tlws...d8yTIJnes,Sentlnei, Surolay, Aug. 26, 1&amp;73

Television. Log
.

~UN

DAY, AUG. 26,1f13

6: 00 - Travelogue "' ·

.
11

·

6: :10 - Thl• Wee!&lt; •: New•moker '73 IJ: lamp Unto My Feet 10.
7:00 - Communique 6; Old Time Gospel Hour 13: Time 101'
Ti mothy 4; Look Up &amp; live 10.
7:30 - Fo tth for Today 8; Revival Fires 6: Herald ot Truth 3:
camera Three 10; Film 4.

7: •s

- News •.

8:00 - Leonard Repass 8; Gospel Caravan 6; Church Strvlce

13; Billy James Hargis and his AII.Amerlcan Kid5 10; Mor·

m on Choir .3 i Day of Discovery 4.

R••

8:30- Oral Roberts 3; Your Health •: Day of Discovery 8;
Humbard 13 : Revival Fires 15: Kathryn Kuhlman 6; Get
Together 10.
·
c
8: ss - Black Cameo 4.
9: 00 - Sing ing Jubilee 3; Cadle Chapel 4; Oral Robert. 10; Rex
Humbard 6 IS; Old-Faohloned Meeting 8.
9: 30-Church by Side of the Road 4: Pebbles &amp; Bamm Bamm
8; Christ is the Answer 13; Friendly Junction 10.
10:00 - Church Services 4; Curiosity Shop 6, 13; This is the Life
3;, Faith for Today IS : To be announced 8.
10: IS - Ta lking Hands B.
10::10 - VIewpolni S: This Is The life IS : Coptoln Noah Jtl nslght
4; Movie "California Conquest" 10.
•
11 :00 - Poi nt of VIew6; Joy In living 13; TV Chapell; Focus. On
Columbuu ; Camera Three &amp;: Across the Fence IS.
11 :30 - This Is The Answer 3; Ma ke A Wish 6, 13 ; Insight II;
.
Face the Nation 8.
12:00 - AI Issue 3; Rex Humbard 8: llowling 6; Doctors on Call
4; Rev.· Ca lvin Eve ns 13; Sacred Heart 15; The ISsue. 10.
12: IS - Open Bible IS . .
12:30 - Revival Fires 13; Meet the Press 3, 4, IS.
1:00 - lower Lighthouse 13: Urban League 10: Man trom
U.N.C.L. E. 4; Saint II; To be announced 8: Perry Mason 3.
I:30 - Issues &amp; Answers 6, 13; Face lhe Nation 10.
.
2: GO-Car &amp; Tra ck 13: UF0 6: II Takes a Thief 3; Johnny Bench
I'
.tl ; Animal World 8; CBS Tennis Classic 10; To be announced
IS.
.
· 2: 15 - Baseball 4.
• 2: 30 - Wolf Ti ll Your Father G~ts Home IS : Ce l~ br lly Bowling
'. 4; NFL Action '73 8.
3:00 - Mancini Generation 6; CBS Sports Spectacular 10; CBS
Tennis Class ic 8; Farmer's Daughter 13; World University
Games 3; Four at the Fair 4.

3:30 - Pro-Celebrity Tennis 6, 13.
. 4:00 - Sesame Sl. 33; World University Games 3, 4; Golf
TournamentS 8.
4:30 - Gold Tournaments 10.

. S:OO - Keep America Singing 6; Western Theater,}S; Movies

· " Prince of Players" 13; " The Mysterious Lady 33.
· • 6:00 - CBS News Retrospective 8, 10: Car &amp; Track 15; News 4,
·

6; Country Carn ival 3.

• 6:30 - NBC News 3, 4 IS: Untamed World 6; Just Jazz 33.
· 7:00 - Safari to Adventure 3; Wall Till Your Father Gels Home
· 6: Zoom 20, 33 : Animal World 10; Lawrence Welk IS; UFO 8:
Wild Kingdom IS; This Is Your life 4.
7:30 - World of Disney 3, 4, IS; l ei's Make A Dea l 6: French
• Chef 20, 33; Dick Van Dyke 10. .
8:00 - FBI6, 13; MASH 8, 10; Evening al Pops 20, 33.
8:30 - Mannix 8, 10; Columbo 3. 4, IS.
· 9:00 - Masterpiece Theatre 10, 33 ; Pro Football6, 13.
· 9:30 - Barnaby Jones 8. 10.
' 10:00 - Firing line20, 33 ; Escape3, 4, 15.
·10: 30 - We Think You Should Know 3: High Road to Adventu re
10; Pollee Surgeon IS; Bobby Goldsboro 4; What's My line 8.
11 :00 - News 3, 4, 8, 10, IS.
.11 :15 - CBS News 8, 10.
.
11 :30 - Johnny Carson IS : News 6, 13; Come to the Fa ir 4;
Movies " The Cocoanu ts" 13 ; " Thf Lon ely Man" B; " !The

Rose Talloo" 10.

11 : 45 - .Johnny Carson 4.
News 6, 13.

· 12:00 ' 12: IS : 12:30 • 1: 00 -

News 6, 13.
Movie "About Mrs. l eslie" 13.
.Roller Derby 4.

2: 00 -

I?· SS - NBC News 3, IS.
.
,:oo - All My Children6, 13: Green Ac r"' 10; French Chef 33:
· Not for Women Only IS; New• J ; Jok er's Wild 8.
1&lt;10- 3 On A Match 3 •· 15: l et's Make A Deal 6, 13: As The
· World Turns 8. 10: Evening at Pops 33.
2:00 - Days of Our lives 3. 4, IS; Newlywed Game 6. 13;
Guiding Light 8, 10. •
1: 30 - Doctors 3, •· IS ; Edge of Night a, tO ; Off The Record 33:
Girl In My Life 6, 13.
3:00 - flnother WOI'h! 3, •· 15; General Hospilat 6, 13: Price Is
Right 8, 10 ; Oleanna Trail•33.
3:30 - Return to Pelton Pia eel, IS: One Life to li ve 6, 13: Phil
Donohue •: Secret Storm 10; Time lor Timoth y 33: Match
Game '13 8.
,
H k &amp; y 16
• · oo - Mr Cartoon J; Love, AmerlcanStylel3; uc
09 ;
· Somers~t 15; Se~ ret SIOI'm 8; Sesame St . 33: Movie " Kill the
Umpire" 10.

•· 30 - Petticoat Juncllon 3; F Troop 6; Abbott &amp; Costello 8: My
· Li ttle Marg ie 15; Daktar l 13: Four at The Fair •· •
•
5:00 - Bonanza 3; Hazel 8; Mr. Rogers 10. 33: Big Valley 6;
Wes tern Star Theater IS.
•
5:30 - Beverly Hillbillies 8: Electric Co. 33: Gomer .Pyle 13:
Hodgepodge Lodge20; Trails West IS; Dick Van Dyke4.
5· 55 - Earl Nightinga le IS.
6; 00 - Nws 3, 4, 8, 0. IS; ABC News 13; Sesame St. 20: Travelure
· JJ ; Truth or Consequences 6,

6:30 - ABC News 6; CBS News 8, 10; I Dream of Jeannie 13;
News 3, ~ . 15; How Do Your Children Grow? 33.

7:00 - Truth or Conseq. 3 ; Beat the Clock 4 ; News 6. W
: Circus
13; What's My Line 8; Elec. Co. 20; Dlocover Flying 33; Saint
IS : People, Places and Things I.
7: JO - To Tell the Truth 6: Holl ywood Squares 4 ; Traffic Court
10; Chan.ese Way 20 ; Episode Action 33; Bobby Goldsboro 3;
Beat the Clock 13: It's Your Bet a.
.
8·00 - Gunsmoke 8, 10; Baseball World ol Joe Garaglola 3, 4,
· 15: Rook ies6 ; Magic Circus 13: Tigers 20. 33.
,
8: IS - Baseba ll 3, 4, IS

9: 00 - Here's Lucy 8, 10; Movies " The Bliss of Mrs . Blossom 6,

13: Conversation with Sol Hurok 20, 33.
Doris Day 8, 10; Book Beat 33. 20.
10:00 - Pa ul Nuc hlms 33 ; Medical Center 8, 10: News 20.
10:15 - The Silent Years 20.
li :OO - News3, 4, 6, 8. 10. 13, 15.
S ,
11 : 3D-Johnny Ca rson 3, 15; Movies " The Old Man and the ea
9: 30 -

8; " War and Peace" 6, l J; Come to the Fair 4; Dan l mel
Tomorrow 10.
•

11 :35 - Movie "The Deep Blue Sea " 10.
11 : 45 .....:. Johnny Carson 4.

1:00 ~

From U.N.C. l.l;:.
2: 00 - Focus on Columbus 4,
3:00 - News 4 .
Man

PATR tOT - lloyd l . Myers,
acting local superintendent of
the · Southwestern School
District, Saturday released the
designated bus routes for all
bus drivers In the SW District.
They are:
Merrill Hivel y - Beginning
!'t Cadmus and

tr~vel l ng

up

San fork· Pen let Road, lu'rns

around and tra:vels

down

around and travels the Cadmus

Myers Hollow, turns around

and travels Route 775 to While
Hollow, travels While Hollow
Road to Mount Zion Road,
travels MI. Zion Road to
Mudsock-Fiao Sprlnos Road.
travels Mudsock-Fia9 Springs
Road turning onto the Wright
and Cemetery Roads, travels
Mudsoc.Fiag Springs Road to
Route 141, travels Route 141
turning onto Loucks Road,
turns around and travels to
Cadmus Elementary School .
Leonard Newberry
Beginning on the Hannan
Trace Road, travels up the
German Hollow Road, turns

Hannan Trace Road, turns

around and travels Route 775
turning onto Smokey Rood,·

turns around and travels Rou1e
115 to the Patrlot-Cadmus

.

ONLY

l2

1htEA.

Road, travels Palrloi-Codmus
Road turning onto the Price
and Grate Roads, turns around
and travels Patrlot-Cadmus
Road to Cadmus Elementary
School.
Bart Miller - Beginning on
State RoiJte 715 at Harley
Crouse residence, travel• 775 to
Dan Jones Road, travels Dan
Jones Road to Route w ,
travels 141 to Harrison•
residence , turns

~round

- ITEM

Road Into Centeroolnl, travels
Crider Road to Erpory Church.
tv.rQ~

_ar_ound &amp; travels Crider

res idence, turns arpund and

tra vels back to Cora Centerpoint Road , travels
Cora -Centerpoint Road to
Centerf.olnt,

travels

Cen -

Alfred
Social Notes
Sunday School attendance on
Aug. 19 was 44, the offering
$19.16. Worship services were
held at 11 o'clock, with the Rev.
Meece speaking from Rev.
3:20, "Behold, I Stand at the
Door and Knock". Attendance
at this service was 26, offering
$16.25, pledges $82.
Evangelistic Crusade began
Wednesday evening, Aug, 22,
for the Northeast Cluster, at
the Joppa U.M. Church
grounds, with the Rev. Robert
Meece, the evangelist. There is
a Cluster Choir, led by Mrs.
Burris of the North Bethel
Church with Lavina Brannon,
pianist. Special singing by a
new group each evening. Come
and bring someone. (The
meeting begins at 8 each
evening and runs through Sept.

SUBSC RIPTION RAT ES

CAROLINA LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY CO.
POINT Pl£ASANT
PHONE 675·1160

.

Tilt GllllPOIII Tr lbunt In
Oh io end W' tl t VIrginia ont
y11r li S, SIM m o nt t~ a II , lhr lt
mGtl tiiii.S, t i11Wh t nl l7 per
y11r, si x months Sf, ttlr tt
months SS 50.

Tht D1\1y Stn l!nei, one

~ll r

116.0G, I I;( mon ll't s 11.50,
lllrtt montht t 5,00.

Tht Unlltd Pre n In ·
ltrn11 1on 11 iJ t KC IVI IV ely
tnlltltd lo th e uu tor
pu~ Hc tt l on ot en otw s
d itpii C:htt C:rtdlttd IO lhla
nlw l ptptr end lito lf'lt lOCI I
newt publl ll'ltd h•rtJn .

District. Tha Marietta · b11sed
Agency was originally created
In 1968 end has served on a
continuing basis since lhat
lime as a mul li· purpose
planning and development arm
DOROTHY GRJFFJN ANNOUNCJ$
lor local governmenlll In nine
(9) coun ties In southeastern
NEW FALL DANCE CLASSES:
Ohio. Beasley did Indicate that
CREATiVE DANCE ,
the recent designation will
(4'1•-6 yr . olds)
·
have the ultimate eflect or
BAL LET-TAP-ACRO
broadening BH·!IVRDD's role
(7'/2- 10 yr . olds)
as overseer of all planning and
MOD ERN JAZZ
,
development prQgrams in the
(Teens)
'
Region.
Ball
e
t
:
.
Beginner
to
Adull
Belmont County, which is
Wom e n's Exe rcise
currently a part of the BH·
HVRDD organization, will
become a part of Region nine
446·4528
(9) to the North under the
13 Cou rt St.
terms of the designation. BH·
Gallipolis
HVRDD '#icials indicated that .__ _.;.::..,..;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _""". .

MISS LUCILLE SMITH, CHESTER due to a prior commitment in Rio
Grande, was unable to attend the state Fair to accept her award in Meigs County's
BenliJI' volunteer progrem. Receiving the award from Dr. Mei-Zwissler, chief of .
Ohio Bureau of drug abuse, for MIBB Smith was Mrs. Vilma Plkkoja, supervisor of
th~ bookmobile service In Meigs, Vinton and Jackson Counties.

-: _-i:c-;:-;;-;-;;;:;;;;;eo-;;;d:-T-;;;:;:;;;:;.;-J

literally eating us out of our house and home.
This is just one example of the socialist legislation Mr. Black
ljlu 110 werda IOiiJ (or be aub)eel lo red11cUoa by lhe
pra ised In his letter.
ljdller) ltld mul be llped wllb lbe alpee'a lddreu.
2. "President Nlxon 'sefforls to end the Vietnam War seems
I 1'!1111111 •Y be wllhbeld upoa publlealtea. However, OD
minute compared to the greater efforts of Congress and in· ·
I req..t, na•ea will be tllacloaed. Lelten lbould be 1D lood
dividuals, who sacrificed the personal popularity by attempting
I lim, addreaalatlluaes, nDI penDIIIIUU...
to negotiate with Hanoi."
Here Mr. Black ·has praised members .of Congress and
II :'
,~~6,
private citizens who actually gave aid and comfort to the enemy
I :
'MV~
while President Nixon was trying to bring an end to the war, If
this had happened during World War II there is no doubt in my
mind,that certain of these individuals would have been convicted
I :
_._
for
treason and they would have been shot. . ·
I .
l
3. "Perhaps the enemies of the President are the frienda of
'
the
people."
Four statements challenged
'
See how misleading and dishonest this statement is. Surely
Dear Editor :
Mr. Black knows that President Nixon was elected by one of th e
There are four statements made by Keith Owen Black in his
greatest landslides In the history of this Republic.
letter to the edior of the August 19 Sunday Times-Sentinel which I
The enemies that President Nixon has now are the same
must challenge.
enemies that he had last November , and they just don't possess
l. "Uberals and sociallsta have brought about many wanted enough old.fashioned Americanism to take a beating .
and needed reforms to this C()Untry."
As I said in my last letter the President's enemies are
In my opinion here Is a clear cut defense of socialism made Uberals, Socialists and Communists, who have ~s their goal the
by Mr . Black. I have always fOund that anyone who will defend
destruction of our American Constitutional Political system and
Socialism will defend Communism before he will defend our free · our free enterprise ecll!lomic system, and this they have just
enterprise system, which was Instituted by the foWidil)g Fathers. about done I am sorry to say.
The burden, responsible people are suffering under today ia
4. "No member (of the Senate) has or will directly attack the
due entirely to liberal • socialist legislation over the years. Go office of the President. "
.
Into any grocery store and see the able bodied, irresponsible
This is not true. This Is all that has been going on during the
moochers on welfare, carting out choice cuts of meat and other
investigation, and in the national news media by both Liberal
luxury foods and paying for them.with food stamps. Who pays for
Democrats and Uberal Republicans in the Senate. Senator
the food stamps? The respollllible taxpaying people who believe Ervin, chairman of the Senate Watergate Committee, stated that
It Is RIGHT TO WORK. Is It any wonder that the price of food is President Nixon is the most repressive President this nation has
so high? Why, these moochers along with theii' cats and dogs are everkno.wn . If this iSn 't an attack on the Presidency then what is
1t, Mr. Black? The motive behind the whole investigation is to
-~llllllllllllll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!lll!l
. . . destroy President Nixon .
1
In closing I want to state that I believe in the politica) and
economic system instituted by our J:ounding Fathers at great
personal sacrifice. I am strlcUy AIIU-&amp;x:iaUst and Anti·
Communist, and have nothing but Clllltempt lor Liberalism. This
is where I stand.
Why not be honest and tell the Iell&lt;\1.11 public just where you
stand politically and economically, Mt . Black?
MIIIJha!l M. BUI'I\I!It, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, Ohio

t

I :•••

Kids will be
Kids ... HELP us
TO PROTECT THEM

BY DRIVING SAFELY!

•'

LEND AHAND •••

': ;9,

• tifitit:

••

· sPECIAL

GOOD FOR MONTH OF AUGUST ONLY

A snake cannot hear sounds
BIRDS GASSED
from the air. Its hearing is ~Y BRENTWOO!'), N. H. (UP! )
sensing ~ round '·Vibrations.
_; An estimated 12,000 game
farm pheasan Is exposed to
eastern equine encephalitis
wer.e ga:jSed to death Saturday
and buried in a !50-foot long,
six'rootdeep trench onthe Fish
and Game Deparlment farm
on orders of the state's acting
Health Director Dr . Hugh
Wilkerson.

ProfessioTUJl Dry Cleaning
. Seroice Done By Our
Attendant.
75
10 lb.

DRIVE CAREFUllY•••

'3

SPRING VALLEY CLOTHING
.CARE CENTRE .

DAN THOMAS

AND SON

The ra fflesja is th e world's
largest flower. It grows wild
in Malaya and Indonesia, with
no stems or leaves, and reac hes three reel in diameter.

The New

ANCHOR RESTURANT.
.

Will Be Open Monday For Business

'

HOURS:

"'

IT IS TIME TO MOVE
OUR DOUBLE WIDE DISPLAY
You need to see this home to ap.
preciate its quality!

14 900
'.

Quail Creek Mobile
Community·
&amp; Sales
RODNEY.aJRA ROAD ·

The policeman cares. So does
the crossing guard. And, of
course, so do you. But caring
has to be put into action. So
keep alert. Watch for signals.
Drive slowly, . very carefully.
And NEVER pass a school bus!
''THE OLD BANK WITH NEW IDEA$ 11

New

Hop~

BY ADA KEElS '
Mrs. Jo Ann Carter and
childre,n of Wilberforce spent
the weekend with her grandmother, Mrs. Daisy Ross.
llobbie Deen Gorden of
Gallipolis, who spent a week
visiting the Howard families,
return ed to his home in
Gallipolis.
Mrs. Murl Howard attended
the association in Middleport
recently and participated in
the program.
1
Mrs, Edna Long or Columbus
visited over the weekend with
her mother , Mrs. Daisy Ross,
where she met her sister, Mrs.
Silva Coleman, from Mont.
gomery, W. Va., who also
spent the weekend at home.
Donald
Bris kon
and
daughters of Akron is spending
a week wi th Mr. and Mrs. John
Gamble.
Mr. and Mrs . Donalson Keels
called on Daisy Ross recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Young of
Dayton is spending part of
their vacation wi.th her mother,
Mrs. Mary Howard and fa mily.
.Mrs. Carrie Patterson of
Coalton and son, t'rank,
daughter and husband or
Columbus visited Mrs. Daisy
Ross recently.
Mrs. Jenn Audrey McDarliel
and daugh ter, Mellsa, of
Porter visited Mrs. Ada Keels

• j

·

"

...

\,.

recently.
Deacon Robect C ooper. ,, ~~­
te nded the association at
Middleport Sunday afternoon.
Mrs·. Ada Keels received
word from her daughrer, Mrs.
Audrey Pryor, at Cincinnati
that her husband, Dr. Pryor, is
in the hsopital with viral
pneumonia.
Roger Gamble of California
spent his vacation with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
Gamble and sister. Mr .
Gamble, who has been ln
hos pital several weeks, is
recovering nicely.

fntH [ lL OHOIII l ORIIitU HS

Everything Is ·
Guaranteed
To Satisfy.
Or Money Back
Jane Parker

CORN CHIPS
Pkg .

39e

-----------Sliced Italian

BREAD
3 16Loaves
oz. $1

\Hg6mry.\ .·

'"'

PRETTY AND. EASY
TO WEAR
That's how to describe
thi s eye please r! Cabl e
stitched vest in all orion
plays a double roie over a
classic shi rt and wide
slac ks.

Col ors : Nav y, While,
Pink, Rust.

Olhers from ·17 to 113

Sunday-Monday
and .T uesday

WILL HOLD
YOUR CHOICE
IN OUR
LAY-AWAY
Plus

GroRsE

HaMiLTon

Petee ISlWFO~D
OUNIGa

BEIWVB

~GJJII,.

•JEri=

'

Tooi,ght, Mon., Tues.
Aug. 26-27-28

Diana Ross

Is Bil lie Holida y
!Color)
!RI

- PlusA SE PARAT E
PEACE
(Color)

HOT DOGS WITH SAUCE 25~
.

.•..................................••
•

lPG)

OPENING SPECIAL

Tonight Thr11.
Wedn esda y

.MEIGS THEATRE

l• WALT DISNEY'S !
••
GREATEST :
ACHIEVEMENT!

SWEATER

Tonight, Aug. 26

l ong cardigan 1hat goes everywh,re,
with everythi ng I Cable sti tch bulky
orion. Wit h V-neck or Hl.rlse neckline.
Colors: Red, wh ile, navy, pink.

TH E HEART
BR EAK KID
CTec hni.color )

Home Of Good Food At A Reasonable Price.

Bring The Whole Family Out, We Think
You Will Be Happy With The
'

.

NEW!
r ANNY

lPG)

Charles Grodi n
Cy bl ll Shepherd
.Also
THE MAN
I Techn lcolorl
James Earl Jones

I PGI

Mart in Bal sam
Show Starts I p,m,

. Mott . lhr u Thurs.
Aug. 3I · Sept. 1·2
NO T OPE N

~l uot C

M.L.

I.

I

•.

JUUI .
liCK
AIDIIWI • VAl DYKI
T EC H N I COLOR~

[liju

~~ rtltOI II 1! l i,W~l 111 11 Q•l1MV1101&lt; r.~ 1110:

O••'' P~tor! ,,_,,,,,

·

Cartoon

(

)

WEO

' LADY SINGS
THE BLU ES'

10 A.M. till 6 P.M.

~

NEW DEMAND
ROME (UPI ) - The self.
described kidnapers of J. Paul
Getty III have made a new
ransom demand of $5.1 million
and threatened to cut off one of
the boy's anns pr legs if his
family refuses to pay, a family
lawyer said !'&amp;turday.

-'9

Since 1859

Double F ~ature Prog ram

Sunday .

.

CHARLENE HOEFLICH, society editor, received from
Mrs. John J. Gilligan , a state award given to The Daily
Sentinel, one of 11 to he given in Ohio during the State Fair,
for the newspaper's commWJity service to senior citizens.

,'\ ( .ol 1,,,,1 N11,hlll

Friday and Saturday
6 A.M. till 11 P.M.

·,

FISHERIES IN DANGER
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UP!)
-Florida's natural resources
director warns that one of the
world's most productive
fisheries could be endangered
by the gran ting of offshore oil
drilling leases along the gulf
coas!s of Alabama, Florida and
Mississippi.

MASON DRIVE·IN

Monday thru Thursday
. 6 A.M. till 10.P.M.

• · Price • Food • · Surrounding's

NEWT JONES

COLA EXEC GONE
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina
(UPI) - Newspapers said
Saturday
a
Pepsi-Cola
executive had been kidnaped
and held lor a $1 million ransom, but officially, police and
corporate officials de nied
kn owledge of the kidnaping .
Police sources, however,
confirmed that Argentine
security agencies had been
informed of the Pepsico case.

1

/

Croydon Doublewide

ATfli:NDANCE DOWN
Attendance was estimated at IS4,M4
Friday, down about 3,000 from Ills! year's
second day. Fair ortlclals attributed the
lag In attendance to Frida y mi)rnlng's
threatening weather .
Senior ciUzens at the lair Saturday were
!rom Toledo, Bucyrus, Mansfield, Marion
LaRue, Mentor, .• Troy, Canton ~ d New
Lexington.
Free grandsta nd entertainment
featured Rare Earth at 4:30 p.m. and 8:30
p.m.
Saturday, Farm . City Pay, featured ;a
garden tractor pull, wine judging, a baton
twirling contest, the selection of the Ohio
Homemaker of the '{ear, a cupcake eating
contest, cooking demonstrations with food
from the West Indies, appearances ()! the
H. R. Pufnstur characters and the
Amateur Boxing championships.
SWiday, Clevela nd Day and Newspaper
. Boy's Day, fea tures a pony pull , a horse
pull, the H. R. Pulnstul characters and
free grandstand entertalnmnl by .Dlonne
Warwick and Doc Severinsen.
An All.Ohio Worship Service and a ·
Catholic Ma:jS will also be held.

'

In Downtow11 Point Pleasant

60x12 with 55x12,_Compan lon ·
1
Three bedrooms - 1 12 baths - Separate front
dining room, galley kitchen with washer · ·
dryer. Utility area .
·

(Continu ed from page 1)
!lev . Glen n Biddle ol Jackson, both lor
corrununlty service.
·
Some 60 cha rt.Jred buses brought the
senior citizens in from various paris of the
state. Many of them witnessed Gov. John
Gilliga n sign a bill to create a state
Commission on Agi0 g to replace the
present Division or Administration on
Aging in the Deparlment of Mental pealth
and Mental Retardation.
·
The UPI reported volunteer a war~s for
senior citizen work went to Lucille Smith,
Ches blr, Merry Furth, Ashland, Mrs ..
Elizabeth Good and Mrs. Eva Hicks, both
Ql' Canton.
Prominent senior citize n awards went to
Mrs . Dorothy Van Tilberg of Ashian&lt;!._
Mrs. Nellie Purtee of Portsmouth, Mr. and
Mrs. Bwton Dunfield of Granville and Mr.
and Mrs. H. Patrick t.ochary of Pomeroy.
Clarence Struble of Pomeroy, Henry
Robinson, Portsmouth, and Paul ·sonn.
l)alblr, Massillon, got Mr. Senior Citizen
Awards.

AS MEIGS COUNTY'S WINNER of the "M; . Senior Citizen" award, Clarence
J. Struble received an engraved plaque, made in the outline of an Ohio map, from
Mrs. Gene R. Abercrombie, wife of the Ohio Director or Agriculture.

.

Publllhtd every wuki dly

Stcortd Cl111 POIIIGt Paid
II Gelt/J)Oi ll , Oh io 4SU 1.

•
rnake.a smooth transition:Into
a meeting with local off icials in
the neighbQrlng region ' be·
Belmont County has been held
tween now and July 1, lrl4.
and lhat Belmont is expected to
'

- ·-

SPECIAL CLEARANCE PRICE

IYin lng UC ipt StttJrdelp' .

Senior Citizens

lerpoin ·Centerville Road and
picking up Everett Gibson
family, travels Centerrlnt·
Centerville Road to Coa Hill
Road, travels Coal Hill Road 1)
and turns around and travels
Mr. and Mrs. Clair WOilde
back
to
CenterpointCenterville Road , travels and Conn! Sue of CirCleville,
Centerpoint-Centerville Road 0. , were called home by the
to CenlervUie Elementary death of her aurit,~ Mary
School.
Frank Ruff - Same route as Schaefer of Pomeroy, 0 ., and
last year with the exception of spent the · weekend with
making a short run up Tick relatives here and at Keno, 0.
Ridge Road. ·
Several local families atGeorge Brewer - Same
tended the Meigs County Fair
route -as last yeelir ,
.
Jesse Chaoman - Same as last week. Many attended on
Hales route last year .
K. Miller - Same. as Senior Citizens Day and also
the evening_programs.
Chapmans route la st year .

Publl•hing Co .
GALL IPOL IS
DAILY TRIBUN E
125 T~lrd Avi ., Ge iUpotl, ,
Oh iO .SUI .

Oh io Post Olllct .
Dr cerr ltr · dt Hy e nd
Sundn , 55c ptr wu ki .
MAI L

,I

and travels Gall/a-Centerpoint

REG. RETAIL PRICE ·'16,400 ,

THE D.t.ll.. Y SENT INE L.
111 Cour t St ., Pomeroy , 0 .
A.Hit. Publ ll hl d t vt ry wtt k·
dl~p~ tvtt!lna except Sl tur .
da~p~ . ! 11ttrl d u ltc:ond c: lllt
me ll ln; matter at Pomeroy,

312 &amp;TH ST.

traveling back to Nebo Road,
travels Nebo Road and turning
onto Davis Road, turns around
and travels back to Nebo Road,
travels Nebo Road to Charles
Evans Road, travels ~vans
Road over to Gallla -

SundiY
Ve llt y

PUb ll,hti:f 'eve ry
by
The
Oh io

SALE

, Road and turning around and

and

travels 715 turning onto Mud
Creek Road, turns around and
travels back to 141, travels
. Route 1'41 lo Patr iot-Gage
Road, travels Patriot-Gage
Road , turning around at
Patriot and traveling back to
Route 141, travels Route ,.,
turning onto the Vernon Woods
Road, turns around and travels
Route 141 lo Cadmus
Elementary School.
E. Spencer - Beginning on
Route 325 at Ronald Trouts
residence, travels Route 325 to
Nebo Road turning onto

SUNDAY
TJMES-SENTINEL

ANY

Nebo Road. travels Nebo Road
to Roush Road, travels Roush

Road back to Centerpoint,
Road, turns around and travels ·travels Cherry Ridge Road to
Cadmus Cross Roads roaQ. to Johnson ' s residence, turns
the Flag Springs Road, travels around and travels to CenFlag Springs Road turning &lt;into terville Elementary School. ·
Herman Wood - BI!Qinnlng
the Ashworth and Miller
Roads, turns around and al Cora Beaver Road and
travels Flag Springs Road to traveling to Cora -Rodn ey
Route 141, travels Route 141 Road, travels Cora · Rodney
turning onto the Saunders and Road and turning onto the Cook
Wiseman Roads, travels Rt. Road, turn ing around and
141 to German Hollow Road, traveling back to Cora-Rodney
goes up German Hollow Road Road, travels Cora -Rodney
lo German Ridge Road, travels Road to Brushy Point Road
German Ridge Road to Cad. around to Cora-Beaver Road,
then to Tom Woods · Road,
mus Elementary School.
Ray Galyen - Beginning on travels Tom Woods Road to
the Mudsock -Fiag Springs Route 325, travels Route 325 lo
Road and traveling to State Cora -Centerpoint R,oad ,
Route 115, travels doy;n 775 In travels Cora,Centerpolnt to
Allison Road , turns around and Tyn Rhos Road, travels Tyn
travels Route 77S .to Peters Rhos Road to Kelsle Gobels
Cave Road, travels Peters residence, turns around and
Cave Road over to Route 190, travels back to . Cora travels Route 790 to Route 115, Centerpoint Road , travels
travels !louie 775 turning onto Cora-Centeroolnt to Willis Cox

travels Route 775 to Hannan
Trace Road, turns onto the

Odds and ends, broken lots- all must gol If we
have the style you want in sufficient quantity to
handle the size of your room, you 've found a real
bargain. Hurry in for best selection
.
.

Symmes Creek Road, tu rns
around and travels ba ck to

MARIETTA - The Buckeye
Hill.; · Hocking Valley Regional
Development District (BHHVRDD) has received word
lhal It has been formally
designated as the Regional
Land Organization (RLO ) for
planning end developme.nt
purposes In an eight (8) county
area
In
Sou theast·
ern
Ohio .
Coun ties
Included In the planning region
are Athens, Hocking, Perry,
Morgan, Monroe, Noble, Meigs
and Washington.
The desig nation came
through a recent letter to BH·
HVRDD Presidenl Richard H.
Holl from Governor John J.
Gilligan. Twelve (12) other
planning agencies throughout
the Sta te received similar
designations along with BH·
HvR DD. The designations
came as a direct result of a
State executive order i:jSued In
April . The executive order
delineated a set of fifteen . (15 )
planning regions in Ohio and
called for the designation of an
umbrella multl·purpose
planning agency In each of the
·regions.
The State of Ohio In Implementing a system of
uniform pillnning r~gions is,
according to Bfi -HVRDD
Executive Director John H.
Beasley, basically passing
addi tiona! planning respon·
sibility down .to the regional
and local level. More tlutn forty
( 40 ) other states, including
both Pennsylvania and West
Virginia, have already taken
similar actions In an effort to
simplify and make planning
more effective at the multi·
county level.
According to Beasley, the
designation of BH-HVRDD as a
Regional Lead Organization
will not substantially alter the
natwe or functions of the

Crooo Roads to the Miller

around and travels Hannan
Trace Road to Route 775,

bring your room measurements
and save money on
Armstrong ceilings

·

Sandfork-Peniel
Road
to
Cadmus·Cross Roads, travels Centerpoint Road , tr avels
the Cadmus-Cross Roads turn- Gall la-Cenlerpo lnt Road to
Ing up the Wiseman Road, Bonlee residence. turns around

Cadmus-Cross R.oads, turning
up the Evans Road, turns

MONDAY, AUG. 27, 1913
6:00 - Sunrise Seminar 4: Sacred Heart 10. ·
6: IS- School Scene 10.
6:20 - Farm Report 13.
6:25- Paul Harvey 13.
·
6: 30 - Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8; Good News 13:
School Scene 10.
1:00 - Today 3, 4, IS; News, we..lher, Sports 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Flinlstones 13.
7:30 - Romper Room 6; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle 13.
8:00 - Copt. Kangaroo 8. 10; Lassie 6; Sesame St. 33:. New Zoo
f!evue 13.
.
8:30 - New zoo Revue6: Jack La La nne 13.
8: ss - News 13.
9:oo-Paul Dixon 4( Phll Donohue S; Frlendlv Junction 10; A.M.
3; Mr. Rogers33 ; Peyton Place 13; Brady Bunch 6: Movie 8.
9:30 - To Tell the Truth 3; Peyton Place 13; Electric Co. JJ ;
• Wild, Wild West 6.
· 9:55 - Chuck White Report 10.
.
: 10:00 - Dick Van Dyke 13; Dinah Shore 3, 15; Joker's Wild 4, 10;.
• Maggie &amp; The Beautiful Machine 33.
: 10: 30 - St&gt;JJI Second 13; Baffle 3, 4, S: SIO,OOO Pyram id 8, 10:
• · Mike Douglass 6; From the Hills 33 .
• 11:00 - Password 13; Gambit 8, 10: Wizard of Odds 3, 4, IS;
'
Muslcol Encounter 33.
• 11 : 30 - Hollywood Squares 3, 4, IS ; Love of life B, IQ; Brady
Bunch 13; Bowling 6; Milestones of Progress 33.
11 : 55 - News 8; Don lmel's World 10.
: 12:00 - PasswOI'd 6; Bob Braun's SO-SO Club 4; Jeopardy 3, IS :
News 8, 10, 13; Sesame 51. 33.
: 12: 30 - Spill Second 6; 3 W's 3, IS; Search tor Tomorrow 8. 10.

News 13.

School bus routes
are designated

turns argund and .travelS the

News 4.

4:

Planning agency set in SE Ohio

.

.'

I

•

"The Stort with More"
Gattlpolls

$14

•.

�'

Wedding vows exchanged·

Mr. aruiMrs. Tim Hemswort/J

~fan's

Side
f;y

'

Dorothy ]. Countryman

GALIJPOIJS - It's hard to imagine that summer is nearly
. . over and that school will be starting Tuesday, bull can believe
that for some of the mothers involved it's a joy, at least right
now.
My mother hated school when it was in session. She tells me
this is a typical reaction. It meant ironing four dresses every day
and finding four pairs of shoes, w!Iich were invariably beneath or
behind the largest and moot inaccessible piece of furniture in the

11ouse.
It also meant four different kinds of breakfasts, two different

band schedules, three different choir schedules, one drama
schedule and one art schedule for her to wade through.
School for my Mother has always been accepted with stacks
of books (mostly history, English and journalism) in her living
room floor ; artbt's pens and pencils, sketch pads and crayons,
on her dining room table; a trumpet and a baritone fighting for
recognition above the television, an off.J&lt;ey barbership rendition
of "Dear Old Mom" which we managed to do every lime she got
thoroughly flustered.
II carried with it a great deal of heartache- the night our
new band uniforms got covered with mud and had to he worn the
next day for official portraits ; the kid who couldn't learn her
lines for the spring pageant; the house manager of the class play
wbo really wanted to be in charge of lighting (Because I knew
something about lights).
'
There were also moments of lriwnph like·the day Beth won
the county spelling bee and I was chosen John Phillip Sousa Band
Award winner. There was the day Terri won her first blue ribbon
in an art show and the night Melissa presented her first dance in
a school program. Susan even did some great things - like
remembering her lines in the Christmas program even ihough
her halo was rapidly going the way of all fifth grade halos. And
Mom says that made it worthwhile. But if you ask my Mother this
week if she's ready for SChool to start she'll probably groan.
I'm here and Beth's going to Boston, that only leaves Mom in
charge of finding three pairs of shoes and ir.onlng two dresses Terri swears by the power of blue jeans and wears nothing else.
You'd think she would begin to recover from allthls confusion but no. I have a feeling she can hardly wait for Christmas. Beth
and I will be home and she can sleep in while we cook.
THE NEW Miss Ohio Teenager is Jean M(!(iowan of West
carrollton. Jean won the title at the Sheraton Dayton Hotel In
Dayton July 13-14. This week she will be participating in the Miss
National Teenager pageant in Atlanta, Ga. Theme for this year's
pageant is "What's Right About America" and the winner will
receive the Young American Eagle porcelain statue at the finsls
September I. Winner of the national pageant also receives a trip
to the Holy Lands. Even if Jean doesn't place nationally, and we
certainly hi&gt;pe she does, she's already won a scholarship to
Maasey Junior CoUege in Atlanta along with the week she is
spending in Atlanta as a guest of the pageant.
Plans have been made for next year's Miss Ohio Teenager
pageant already. It will be held July 12-13 at the Sheraton in
Cleveland. The pageant is open to all girls between the ages of 13
and 17 and more information and entry blanks may he had by
writing Miss Ohio Teenager Pageant, Box 406, Rockton, Dl.,
61072 and asking for an application.
HAVE a nice week.

·+ + +

There'• nothing wroag with
a lot of youngsters that
straightening out the parents
wouldn 't cure.

+ + +

GAWPOUS - Miss Ginger straw sunshine basket af
Annette Ellcessor, daughter o! daisies and baby's breath with
Deryl Elcessor, 42 Crape St. ribbon streamer$. Each basket
and Florence Ellcessor, 10 or daisies contained Rowers
Locust St., became the bride of tinted to match the P81Jiel color
Don Timothy Hemsworth, aon the bridesmaid was wearing.
of Mr. and Mrs. Don Helllllworth, 1813 Chestnut St. at 2:30
The maid of honor carried a
p.m., Sunday, June 24. Th~
basket conlalning all of
double ring ceremony was sitnilar
the rainbow colors or the
performed by Rev. Paul W. wedding. The Rower girl wore shower given by Miss CornHawks at the Grace United
well, Miss Bastian!, and Mrs.
.
a gown idenUcal to the brides· Paula Magnussen,
Methodist Church.
maids and a beret or blue
·
Ail half hour of nuptial music daisies and streamers. Her
The bride is a !969 graduate
was presented by Mrs. Merlyn basket was multi-colored of Gallla Academy and
Ross, organist, Joyce Askew, daisies and daisy petals which received her B.S. from Miami
soloist, and John Morgan, she scattered down the aisle. University in 1973. She was a
accompanist. The music inDave Durham served as tile member of Delta .Psi Kappa
cluded "Theme from . Romeo best man. The ushers Included honorary and Delta Gamma
and Juliet," ''Something in the Marc Ellcessor, brother of the sorority. She is presently
.Way She Moves Me," by John
employed as a lifeguard at the
bride,
Tom
Prose,
Tom
Gal!lpolis
Swlmmi~g Pool. She
Morgan, "Whiter Shade of Morgan, Bruce Wilson and
Pale," by John Morgan, and Jack Matthews. The ushers Is employed beginning in
"Colour My World" and "For were attired in charcoal Ed· September by the Finneytown
All We Know," both by Miss wardian tuxedos with charcoal Board of Educalion wnere she
Askew. During the ceremony
will teach physical education
and
gray
pin-striped
pants.
and
health in the high school in
Miss Allkew sang "The First
Each usher wore a pastel
Time Ever I Saw Your Face" colored rutned shirt and daisy Cincinnati.
and together they sang "You'll boutonniere In pastel matching The groom is a 1970 Gallia
Never Walk Alone."
a bridesmaid. Chris Ellcessor, Academy graduate. He is
The altar was decorated with broth.er of the bride, served as presently employed by Central
. matching vases of multiSoya and will be returning to
the
ringbearer.
He
was
attired
colored daisies, snapdragons ·in an identical tuxedo with a Miami University in the fall
and baby's breath. The family blue ruffled shirt. His pillow where he will be a senior
pews were marked by large was accented with blue daisies majoring in business adwhite bows trimmed with lily- and baby's breath .
ministration.
of-the-valley.
For her daughter's wedding; The couple will be at home
The bride was given in Mrs. Ellcessor chose a voile after September I, at 6!6 South
marriage by her father. She gown with an empire bodice. College St. No. 128, Oxford,
wiJre a gown of candlelight
The flowing skirt was pat- 45056 ·
ivory saxapeau with a victoian terned with . multi-colored Out-of-town guests included
n~kline . The pleated empire daisies. The victorian neckline Frank Roscue, Warren; Mr.
bodice was outlined in venise was accented with a ruffle of and Mrs. Ralph Hemsworlh
lace and the long bishop multi-color pastels accenting and family, Lancaster ; Mr .
sleeves will! French lace cuffs the pink bodice and riiiRed and Mrs. 0 . L. Hemsworth,
had covered buttons. The cuffs. She wore matching pink Logan; grandparents of the
bodice was a plea led style with accessories. Her corsage was a groom, Claudia Babcock,
· a group of tiny covered but- multi-colored arrangement of Brooklyn, N. Y. ; Mr. and Mrs.
daisies.
Randall Fisher, Marietta;
. tons.
The semi-lull A-line skit had
Mrs. Hemsworth wore an A- Mrs. Ethel Williamson,
appliqued moiifs extending
Pomeroy ; John Magnussen,
throughout it and the attached line blue knit gown with Indianapolis, Ind.; Mr. and
train. A lace camelot cap bracelet length fitted sleeves Mrs . Ronald Saunders,
accented at the neckllne with
secured her chapel length veil
white seed pearls. She wore Colwnbus; Bob Shaeffing and
of English silk illusion. She matching blue accessories. Unda Holdren, Wilmington;
carried a bouq\lfl of all white
Mr. and Mrs. James Houck,
Her
corsage
was
an
·
Circleville.
daisies and baby's breath . Her arrangement of white roses.
only jewelry was a pair of pearl
. A reception honoring the
earrings, gift of the groom.
couple immediately following
The attendants were attired
the ceremony was held in the
$150 DONATED
in rainbow pastels. The bride . church dining room, The
GALLIPOLIS
- The Gallia
chose as her maid of honor bride's table was decMiss Martha Cornwell, who orated with a white County Volunteer E-R Squad
wore ablue gown. Her brides- cloth and &lt;~~int gteen recently received a $100
maids were Miss Kim · candles. The table was donation from Harry Wheeler ·
Ellcessor, sister of the bride, highlighted with a three-tiered Qf the Colony Theatre and the
attired in peach, MisS' Tammy wedding cake with four Kanauga Drive-in, and a $50.
Hemsworth, sister of the rotating layers at the base. The donation from Dr . R. D.
grqom, atti~ed in lavender, cake was decorated with Thomas and ·Dr . Wm . B,
Thomas, both appreciated.
Miss Beth Bastiani, at- multi
colored daistired
in
mint
green ies and doves, topped
and Miss Pam Spain, sorority by a dove with wedding
sister of the bride from bands. Each of the bottom four
. Warren, attired in yellow . layers .held ·a dove with open
Paula Magnussen served as wings. The base of the cake
bridesmatron, attired in pink was decorated with daisies and
and Miss June Ellcessor, sister greenery.
of the bride, served as the
Miss
Joyce
Young
junior bridesmaid and was registered the guests. Serving
attired in pink and white. Miss the reception were Miss Janey
Gamble Babcock, Brooklyn, N. Mills and Mrs. Susan Russell.
Y., served as the flower girl.
Immediately following the
She was ·attired in blue.
reception , the immediate
The bridesmaids' gowns family and wedding party were
were dotted swiss with fitted entertained at the home of the
all
bodices accented at the waist bride's mother. A buffet style
CCI
with a sash. The v-neckling dinner was served on a table
was styled with an open ruffle decorated with pink and white
IT1
and the long fitted sleeves were daisies and pink candles.
ruffled at the cuff. The. skirts
Cll
CCI
For her wedding trip, to
flowed from the waist to finish Myrtle Beach, S. C., the new
the southern styled gowns. Mrs. Hemsworth changed into
Large natural straw southern a long halter dress of baby blue
hats with wide brims accented trimmed in lavender flowers
•
by a ribbon matching the and matching blue accessories.
rainbow color of their gowns. She wore a corsage of blue and
They carried a large natural white daisies.
Cl)

The Almanac
By United Prtll lntei'II8Uoul
Today is Sunday, Aug. 211, the
!38th day ot 1973 with 127 to
follow .
The moon Is between Ita last
quarter and new phaae.
The morning stars are
Metcury, Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Venus
and Jupiter.
Those born on th.ls day are

TEACHERS GO BACK
TO SCHOOL, TOO!

Miss Graham
celebrates
.

Miss Wetherho/t to be honored

'

GALUPOLIS - Kelly Ann
Graham, celebr&amp;ted her sidh
blrtbday with a party given by
her parent.o Saturday evening,

Kalhy Allen and !Wen
Waugh BA!lfted with the
relroshment.o.

Game. were played wllh
)lt'il!ea being won by Waverly
Wickline, Irvin Lee Saunders
and Lori Hamilton.
Cake, ice cream, drinks and
party ravou were served to
Usa Allen, Usa Blackburn,
Rhonda · Lynn Carter, Kevin
Hager, Loris Hamilton, Irvin
Lee Saunders, Angie Shelton,
Susan ' Michele Stanley
Waver!J. Wickline, Metod;
Wickline! Michael Wickline,
Hugh Gnaham lll, Mrs. Dori
Slanley, ~ Mrs . Ronald Carter
and
Junior Hal(er.

ENJOY TRIP
CHESTER - Mr. and Mrs,
Delmar Baum have returned
from a trip to the Hawaiian
Islands . They visited lhe
Islands of Oahu and Hawaii.
Some of the highlights of the
trip Include visits to lolani
Palace, Puncobowl Nalional
Memorial Cemetery of the
Pacific, Diamond Head Crater,
a luau at the Hilton Hawaiian
. Village, Pall Pass in the
Nunanu ~' Mountains , Pearl
Harbor, and orchid nursery
and volcano on Mt. Montaleu
on the Island of Hawaii .

A~uat II.

Mrs:

~,~·
GALIJPOUS - Mrs. Donna Conley, R.N., Director of
Nursing Education, announced that five employees of lhe
Gallipolis Stale Institute successfully completed an 80 hour
training course for Psychiatric Aide II'S, August 14. The
course is developed by the State Dept. of Mental Health
and Mental Retardation and is desiiOled to Improve
leadership and management skills. Instructors of the ·

I

'

NOW ON

REV'·
.ORGANS &amp;PIANOS
auditions®
PANTS HAVE A STRAPPED 'N' SUCKLED PARTNER. A
· classic autumn softie ·Ia go prancing where pants do .. . fashion•
ably and comfortably. SEM ILLE features a cushioned arch and a
sculptured sole and heel, neatly topped by a gently curving strap
and ant iqued brassy ,buckle. New in the fall Audtttons collectiOn.

arl'~

PMIILY $MOI$TOill

Wllere thelamllr shops toplh•
3211 Second Ave.
Gllllpolls, D. .

The Lowrey Genie

OPEN MON.
and FRI. TIL
9 P.M.

for people who want to make music, but can't.
"

Lowery Invented a new musica l Instrument that mak es
anyone sound great. It doesn 't matter If you've never

played a note before. ()lee you sit down and start playing
... beautiful music happens. Play the keys, and an in·
credible electronic organ fill s the room with music. Push
the quttons, and the Genie adds more of Its magic. Genie
'!"Ill even play the pedals tor you automatically . There's

•
""

-

no other organ in Its price class that can do what the Genie

does.

BRUNICARDI
HOUSE OF MUSIC
I

j4

State Sl t.

Ph. 446-0687

::a

Reunion
·held

Psychiatric Aide II Oa111 were Mrs. Sharon Birch, R.N. and
Mrs. Sandy Smith, R.N. Clasa members and GalllpotiJ .state
Institute persoMel are pictured, left to right, llrst row, Ar·
villa Halley, Mary Drummond, Nathan .aay, Nina Myers,
Ermel Wondyard; second row, Sandy Smith, R.N., class
instructor; John Mitch, hospital adm.inlstrator; Sharon
Birch, R.N., claas instructor.
·

:::a

w.

Has-

Puzzle Boards, Bridge

--- E.tC. ~

'

CASH~ CHAIIOI,

Dinner was served by the
Lodge to 86 persons including
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas Perry
(Ruth ), Mr. and Mrs. Brent
Perry , and Wesley Gray,
Athens; Minor Thorne, Jack
Thorne, Ted Thorne, Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Heltzel and son,
Lee Howard, Rev. and Mrs.
Charles. Evans and Margaret
Mae, Everett Thorne and son,
William, and wife, Millicent
and son, Jimmy, Burbank,
calif.; Mr. and Mrs. Merch
Thorn e, Vickie, Lorie and ·
Randall, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Thorn, and Mrs. Ruth Bender,
Akron ; Mrs. Ada Thorne Fox,
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Fox and
children, Gina, Michael,
Randolph and Sue , Mrs.
Agatha Phillips, Mr. and Mrs.
Delbert Davis, Karen and
Scott, Imogene Morbllzer ,
Mary Morbi~er, Dave B&amp;r,
Mr . and Mrs. William Willard
and Melissa, Mr. and Mrs.
Morgan Copley, Todd and
Mar)t, Colum.bus; Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Thorne, Captain and Mrs.
Kenneth (Beth) Jones, Teresa,
·Tracy and Wayne, Jupiter,
Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. George
Ropeter (Edna) and grandchildren, Kelly and Peggy
Coffee, Zanesville; Mr. and
Mrs. King Thorne, Mr. and
Mrs. David Thorne and Linda,
Mr. and Mrs. Bing Thorne and
Dana, Dale, Dirk, Darcie and
· Dray, Mr . and Mrs. George
Steiner and Aaron, Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Duffy, Carrie and
Natalie, Pennsylvania; Mr .
and Mrs. Philip Phillips and
sons, Mark, John, and Matthew, Louisville, Ky.; Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Davis (Goldie),
Rio Grande.

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Performance Unlimited

en
•

Ave1

RIO GRANDE - The second
family reunion of the late Mr.
and Mrs. A. W. Thorne was
held at Sali Fork Lake Lodge,
near Cambridge Sunday, Aug.

g;ee (jj)ee 9l5eJ. Fantcoats Promise

.::a

•

Second

Vlagnetic Chess,

·PATTERNS $2.77

--

SLATE REVIVAL
CENTERPOINT - 'fhere
will be a revival at the een.
l&lt;lrpoint Freewill Baptlat
Church with the Rev.
Lawrence Conger, Ravenswond, W. Va . , preaching
beginning this evenill8 at 7:30
and continuing through Sep!ember 2. William E, Curfman,
pastor, invites the public.

Games People Play

WU.L NOT MEET
of Pomeroy Chapter 188, lourth Tuesday of September
POMEROY - There wlll he O.E.S. this month. The next and will be a potluck at the
no meeting of the Past Matrons meeting will be held on the Maaontc Temple, 6:30pm.

8

=-=
en

National Honor Society, Ohio
Youth Choir and Buckeye Girls
State.

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

'

!

rn
-&lt;
rn

GALLIPOLIS
Miss
Patricia Ann Wethetholt,
da~hter ol Mr. and Mrs.
Manning Welherholt,
Gallipolis, has been notified
that her autobiography will be
published In the 1973 edition o1
"Who's Who Among American
High School Student.o".
, A senior at Gallia Academy
High School, Miss Wetherholt
laactiveintheGalllaAcademy
choir, madrigals, thespians,
Trl-Hi-Y, Galli a Script
buslness manager, the Gallian
editorial staff, debate club,

I

1

:::a
rn

5 - 'rheSundayTirnea.senun I, Sunday, Aug. 26, 1973

I The Seiko

~· 1
--:B:=::::A~R"'='B~S~ .

. By PHIL PASTORET
Keeping up with the Joneses
is no problem - it's the pay·
ing up that causes headaches.

The bride and groom were
honored with a rehearsal
dinner on the eve or wedding
given by Mr. and Mrs. Don
Hemsworth at Oscar's
Riverboat Room. The tables
were decorated with multicolored daisies and blue
candles. Other
parties
honoring the bride included a
surprise shower given by Miss
Spain, a shower by Evelyn
Fisher and Becky Jones, and a

In 11120, women were IIYtn
under the sign of VirGO.
Scottish statesman and novel· the right tQ vote u thl lith
lst JOhn Buchan was born AuH . Amendment to the U.S. COriiUtutlon went Into elfecl,
26, 187~.
on thta day In hiJtory :
In 1883, the volcano or tn 1948 Mildred Ellubeth
Krakatoa in the Netherlands Oillars, ~own aa "AJ:laSally,"
East lndhis began erupUng. was brought to the ' Uplted
Before it subsided·the followln8 States to laces chariiN ot
day, tw()-thirds or the island espionage and treaiOII for
had been laid waste and 36,000 broadcasUng for Ule Na~la in
World War 1!.
pel'$ons were dead .• ;

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ALUMINUMWARE
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300EXTRA

Pioneering. '73 : Having to
dig out and wind an alarm
clock when the battery model
goes on the fritz .

TOP VALUE STAMPS

(};J

+ + +

Why don 't they make catoup·flavored vegetables lor
kids - aDd ane all the mess
of keeping a large bottle of
the olull on the table? ·

A lllauiht lor the day : Scot
lllr John Buehan uld, "We can
tiiiiJ pay our debt to the pa.el by
puttilll the future In debt to
tlllniiYII,"
I

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YOUR

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•

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•

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I excluding itetns prohibited by law.)

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In 1964, President Lyndon
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Humpbrey were aelected to
head the [)emoCratlc ticket,
They wan the election In
November.

Sparf&lt;ilng aluminum with neat
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1 PM TIL .6 PM

SKEIN

.I

I

I

•

..,

•

�'

Wedding vows exchanged·

Mr. aruiMrs. Tim Hemswort/J

~fan's

Side
f;y

'

Dorothy ]. Countryman

GALIJPOIJS - It's hard to imagine that summer is nearly
. . over and that school will be starting Tuesday, bull can believe
that for some of the mothers involved it's a joy, at least right
now.
My mother hated school when it was in session. She tells me
this is a typical reaction. It meant ironing four dresses every day
and finding four pairs of shoes, w!Iich were invariably beneath or
behind the largest and moot inaccessible piece of furniture in the

11ouse.
It also meant four different kinds of breakfasts, two different

band schedules, three different choir schedules, one drama
schedule and one art schedule for her to wade through.
School for my Mother has always been accepted with stacks
of books (mostly history, English and journalism) in her living
room floor ; artbt's pens and pencils, sketch pads and crayons,
on her dining room table; a trumpet and a baritone fighting for
recognition above the television, an off.J&lt;ey barbership rendition
of "Dear Old Mom" which we managed to do every lime she got
thoroughly flustered.
II carried with it a great deal of heartache- the night our
new band uniforms got covered with mud and had to he worn the
next day for official portraits ; the kid who couldn't learn her
lines for the spring pageant; the house manager of the class play
wbo really wanted to be in charge of lighting (Because I knew
something about lights).
'
There were also moments of lriwnph like·the day Beth won
the county spelling bee and I was chosen John Phillip Sousa Band
Award winner. There was the day Terri won her first blue ribbon
in an art show and the night Melissa presented her first dance in
a school program. Susan even did some great things - like
remembering her lines in the Christmas program even ihough
her halo was rapidly going the way of all fifth grade halos. And
Mom says that made it worthwhile. But if you ask my Mother this
week if she's ready for SChool to start she'll probably groan.
I'm here and Beth's going to Boston, that only leaves Mom in
charge of finding three pairs of shoes and ir.onlng two dresses Terri swears by the power of blue jeans and wears nothing else.
You'd think she would begin to recover from allthls confusion but no. I have a feeling she can hardly wait for Christmas. Beth
and I will be home and she can sleep in while we cook.
THE NEW Miss Ohio Teenager is Jean M(!(iowan of West
carrollton. Jean won the title at the Sheraton Dayton Hotel In
Dayton July 13-14. This week she will be participating in the Miss
National Teenager pageant in Atlanta, Ga. Theme for this year's
pageant is "What's Right About America" and the winner will
receive the Young American Eagle porcelain statue at the finsls
September I. Winner of the national pageant also receives a trip
to the Holy Lands. Even if Jean doesn't place nationally, and we
certainly hi&gt;pe she does, she's already won a scholarship to
Maasey Junior CoUege in Atlanta along with the week she is
spending in Atlanta as a guest of the pageant.
Plans have been made for next year's Miss Ohio Teenager
pageant already. It will be held July 12-13 at the Sheraton in
Cleveland. The pageant is open to all girls between the ages of 13
and 17 and more information and entry blanks may he had by
writing Miss Ohio Teenager Pageant, Box 406, Rockton, Dl.,
61072 and asking for an application.
HAVE a nice week.

·+ + +

There'• nothing wroag with
a lot of youngsters that
straightening out the parents
wouldn 't cure.

+ + +

GAWPOUS - Miss Ginger straw sunshine basket af
Annette Ellcessor, daughter o! daisies and baby's breath with
Deryl Elcessor, 42 Crape St. ribbon streamer$. Each basket
and Florence Ellcessor, 10 or daisies contained Rowers
Locust St., became the bride of tinted to match the P81Jiel color
Don Timothy Hemsworth, aon the bridesmaid was wearing.
of Mr. and Mrs. Don Helllllworth, 1813 Chestnut St. at 2:30
The maid of honor carried a
p.m., Sunday, June 24. Th~
basket conlalning all of
double ring ceremony was sitnilar
the rainbow colors or the
performed by Rev. Paul W. wedding. The Rower girl wore shower given by Miss CornHawks at the Grace United
well, Miss Bastian!, and Mrs.
.
a gown idenUcal to the brides· Paula Magnussen,
Methodist Church.
maids and a beret or blue
·
Ail half hour of nuptial music daisies and streamers. Her
The bride is a !969 graduate
was presented by Mrs. Merlyn basket was multi-colored of Gallla Academy and
Ross, organist, Joyce Askew, daisies and daisy petals which received her B.S. from Miami
soloist, and John Morgan, she scattered down the aisle. University in 1973. She was a
accompanist. The music inDave Durham served as tile member of Delta .Psi Kappa
cluded "Theme from . Romeo best man. The ushers Included honorary and Delta Gamma
and Juliet," ''Something in the Marc Ellcessor, brother of the sorority. She is presently
.Way She Moves Me," by John
employed as a lifeguard at the
bride,
Tom
Prose,
Tom
Gal!lpolis
Swlmmi~g Pool. She
Morgan, "Whiter Shade of Morgan, Bruce Wilson and
Pale," by John Morgan, and Jack Matthews. The ushers Is employed beginning in
"Colour My World" and "For were attired in charcoal Ed· September by the Finneytown
All We Know," both by Miss wardian tuxedos with charcoal Board of Educalion wnere she
Askew. During the ceremony
will teach physical education
and
gray
pin-striped
pants.
and
health in the high school in
Miss Allkew sang "The First
Each usher wore a pastel
Time Ever I Saw Your Face" colored rutned shirt and daisy Cincinnati.
and together they sang "You'll boutonniere In pastel matching The groom is a 1970 Gallia
Never Walk Alone."
a bridesmaid. Chris Ellcessor, Academy graduate. He is
The altar was decorated with broth.er of the bride, served as presently employed by Central
. matching vases of multiSoya and will be returning to
the
ringbearer.
He
was
attired
colored daisies, snapdragons ·in an identical tuxedo with a Miami University in the fall
and baby's breath. The family blue ruffled shirt. His pillow where he will be a senior
pews were marked by large was accented with blue daisies majoring in business adwhite bows trimmed with lily- and baby's breath .
ministration.
of-the-valley.
For her daughter's wedding; The couple will be at home
The bride was given in Mrs. Ellcessor chose a voile after September I, at 6!6 South
marriage by her father. She gown with an empire bodice. College St. No. 128, Oxford,
wiJre a gown of candlelight
The flowing skirt was pat- 45056 ·
ivory saxapeau with a victoian terned with . multi-colored Out-of-town guests included
n~kline . The pleated empire daisies. The victorian neckline Frank Roscue, Warren; Mr.
bodice was outlined in venise was accented with a ruffle of and Mrs. Ralph Hemsworlh
lace and the long bishop multi-color pastels accenting and family, Lancaster ; Mr .
sleeves will! French lace cuffs the pink bodice and riiiRed and Mrs. 0 . L. Hemsworth,
had covered buttons. The cuffs. She wore matching pink Logan; grandparents of the
bodice was a plea led style with accessories. Her corsage was a groom, Claudia Babcock,
· a group of tiny covered but- multi-colored arrangement of Brooklyn, N. Y. ; Mr. and Mrs.
daisies.
Randall Fisher, Marietta;
. tons.
The semi-lull A-line skit had
Mrs. Hemsworth wore an A- Mrs. Ethel Williamson,
appliqued moiifs extending
Pomeroy ; John Magnussen,
throughout it and the attached line blue knit gown with Indianapolis, Ind.; Mr. and
train. A lace camelot cap bracelet length fitted sleeves Mrs . Ronald Saunders,
accented at the neckllne with
secured her chapel length veil
white seed pearls. She wore Colwnbus; Bob Shaeffing and
of English silk illusion. She matching blue accessories. Unda Holdren, Wilmington;
carried a bouq\lfl of all white
Mr. and Mrs. James Houck,
Her
corsage
was
an
·
Circleville.
daisies and baby's breath . Her arrangement of white roses.
only jewelry was a pair of pearl
. A reception honoring the
earrings, gift of the groom.
couple immediately following
The attendants were attired
the ceremony was held in the
$150 DONATED
in rainbow pastels. The bride . church dining room, The
GALLIPOLIS
- The Gallia
chose as her maid of honor bride's table was decMiss Martha Cornwell, who orated with a white County Volunteer E-R Squad
wore ablue gown. Her brides- cloth and &lt;~~int gteen recently received a $100
maids were Miss Kim · candles. The table was donation from Harry Wheeler ·
Ellcessor, sister of the bride, highlighted with a three-tiered Qf the Colony Theatre and the
attired in peach, MisS' Tammy wedding cake with four Kanauga Drive-in, and a $50.
Hemsworth, sister of the rotating layers at the base. The donation from Dr . R. D.
grqom, atti~ed in lavender, cake was decorated with Thomas and ·Dr . Wm . B,
Thomas, both appreciated.
Miss Beth Bastiani, at- multi
colored daistired
in
mint
green ies and doves, topped
and Miss Pam Spain, sorority by a dove with wedding
sister of the bride from bands. Each of the bottom four
. Warren, attired in yellow . layers .held ·a dove with open
Paula Magnussen served as wings. The base of the cake
bridesmatron, attired in pink was decorated with daisies and
and Miss June Ellcessor, sister greenery.
of the bride, served as the
Miss
Joyce
Young
junior bridesmaid and was registered the guests. Serving
attired in pink and white. Miss the reception were Miss Janey
Gamble Babcock, Brooklyn, N. Mills and Mrs. Susan Russell.
Y., served as the flower girl.
Immediately following the
She was ·attired in blue.
reception , the immediate
The bridesmaids' gowns family and wedding party were
were dotted swiss with fitted entertained at the home of the
all
bodices accented at the waist bride's mother. A buffet style
CCI
with a sash. The v-neckling dinner was served on a table
was styled with an open ruffle decorated with pink and white
IT1
and the long fitted sleeves were daisies and pink candles.
ruffled at the cuff. The. skirts
Cll
CCI
For her wedding trip, to
flowed from the waist to finish Myrtle Beach, S. C., the new
the southern styled gowns. Mrs. Hemsworth changed into
Large natural straw southern a long halter dress of baby blue
hats with wide brims accented trimmed in lavender flowers
•
by a ribbon matching the and matching blue accessories.
rainbow color of their gowns. She wore a corsage of blue and
They carried a large natural white daisies.
Cl)

The Almanac
By United Prtll lntei'II8Uoul
Today is Sunday, Aug. 211, the
!38th day ot 1973 with 127 to
follow .
The moon Is between Ita last
quarter and new phaae.
The morning stars are
Metcury, Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Venus
and Jupiter.
Those born on th.ls day are

TEACHERS GO BACK
TO SCHOOL, TOO!

Miss Graham
celebrates
.

Miss Wetherho/t to be honored

'

GALUPOLIS - Kelly Ann
Graham, celebr&amp;ted her sidh
blrtbday with a party given by
her parent.o Saturday evening,

Kalhy Allen and !Wen
Waugh BA!lfted with the
relroshment.o.

Game. were played wllh
)lt'il!ea being won by Waverly
Wickline, Irvin Lee Saunders
and Lori Hamilton.
Cake, ice cream, drinks and
party ravou were served to
Usa Allen, Usa Blackburn,
Rhonda · Lynn Carter, Kevin
Hager, Loris Hamilton, Irvin
Lee Saunders, Angie Shelton,
Susan ' Michele Stanley
Waver!J. Wickline, Metod;
Wickline! Michael Wickline,
Hugh Gnaham lll, Mrs. Dori
Slanley, ~ Mrs . Ronald Carter
and
Junior Hal(er.

ENJOY TRIP
CHESTER - Mr. and Mrs,
Delmar Baum have returned
from a trip to the Hawaiian
Islands . They visited lhe
Islands of Oahu and Hawaii.
Some of the highlights of the
trip Include visits to lolani
Palace, Puncobowl Nalional
Memorial Cemetery of the
Pacific, Diamond Head Crater,
a luau at the Hilton Hawaiian
. Village, Pall Pass in the
Nunanu ~' Mountains , Pearl
Harbor, and orchid nursery
and volcano on Mt. Montaleu
on the Island of Hawaii .

A~uat II.

Mrs:

~,~·
GALIJPOUS - Mrs. Donna Conley, R.N., Director of
Nursing Education, announced that five employees of lhe
Gallipolis Stale Institute successfully completed an 80 hour
training course for Psychiatric Aide II'S, August 14. The
course is developed by the State Dept. of Mental Health
and Mental Retardation and is desiiOled to Improve
leadership and management skills. Instructors of the ·

I

'

NOW ON

REV'·
.ORGANS &amp;PIANOS
auditions®
PANTS HAVE A STRAPPED 'N' SUCKLED PARTNER. A
· classic autumn softie ·Ia go prancing where pants do .. . fashion•
ably and comfortably. SEM ILLE features a cushioned arch and a
sculptured sole and heel, neatly topped by a gently curving strap
and ant iqued brassy ,buckle. New in the fall Audtttons collectiOn.

arl'~

PMIILY $MOI$TOill

Wllere thelamllr shops toplh•
3211 Second Ave.
Gllllpolls, D. .

The Lowrey Genie

OPEN MON.
and FRI. TIL
9 P.M.

for people who want to make music, but can't.
"

Lowery Invented a new musica l Instrument that mak es
anyone sound great. It doesn 't matter If you've never

played a note before. ()lee you sit down and start playing
... beautiful music happens. Play the keys, and an in·
credible electronic organ fill s the room with music. Push
the quttons, and the Genie adds more of Its magic. Genie
'!"Ill even play the pedals tor you automatically . There's

•
""

-

no other organ in Its price class that can do what the Genie

does.

BRUNICARDI
HOUSE OF MUSIC
I

j4

State Sl t.

Ph. 446-0687

::a

Reunion
·held

Psychiatric Aide II Oa111 were Mrs. Sharon Birch, R.N. and
Mrs. Sandy Smith, R.N. Clasa members and GalllpotiJ .state
Institute persoMel are pictured, left to right, llrst row, Ar·
villa Halley, Mary Drummond, Nathan .aay, Nina Myers,
Ermel Wondyard; second row, Sandy Smith, R.N., class
instructor; John Mitch, hospital adm.inlstrator; Sharon
Birch, R.N., claas instructor.
·

:::a

w.

Has-

Puzzle Boards, Bridge

--- E.tC. ~

'

CASH~ CHAIIOI,

Dinner was served by the
Lodge to 86 persons including
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas Perry
(Ruth ), Mr. and Mrs. Brent
Perry , and Wesley Gray,
Athens; Minor Thorne, Jack
Thorne, Ted Thorne, Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Heltzel and son,
Lee Howard, Rev. and Mrs.
Charles. Evans and Margaret
Mae, Everett Thorne and son,
William, and wife, Millicent
and son, Jimmy, Burbank,
calif.; Mr. and Mrs. Merch
Thorn e, Vickie, Lorie and ·
Randall, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Thorn, and Mrs. Ruth Bender,
Akron ; Mrs. Ada Thorne Fox,
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Fox and
children, Gina, Michael,
Randolph and Sue , Mrs.
Agatha Phillips, Mr. and Mrs.
Delbert Davis, Karen and
Scott, Imogene Morbllzer ,
Mary Morbi~er, Dave B&amp;r,
Mr . and Mrs. William Willard
and Melissa, Mr. and Mrs.
Morgan Copley, Todd and
Mar)t, Colum.bus; Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Thorne, Captain and Mrs.
Kenneth (Beth) Jones, Teresa,
·Tracy and Wayne, Jupiter,
Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. George
Ropeter (Edna) and grandchildren, Kelly and Peggy
Coffee, Zanesville; Mr. and
Mrs. King Thorne, Mr. and
Mrs. David Thorne and Linda,
Mr. and Mrs. Bing Thorne and
Dana, Dale, Dirk, Darcie and
· Dray, Mr . and Mrs. George
Steiner and Aaron, Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Duffy, Carrie and
Natalie, Pennsylvania; Mr .
and Mrs. Philip Phillips and
sons, Mark, John, and Matthew, Louisville, Ky.; Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Davis (Goldie),
Rio Grande.

LAY-AWAY
SHOP EARLY WHILE
QUANTITIES LAST

BIG NEW·
SHIPMENT!
POI.YESUR

KNIIS
SOLIDS AND PAITERNS
REG. $3.44 and $J.99

SOLID~

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RIOT
72 X90
'

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c••·

LAST WEEK TO

BLANKET

77

Fashion your wardrobe · orouncl
thoto Sb/ 60" wide machint wath·
able •nih of I 00% tnturizod polyester yarn. Chooto tlly•lo-sow
solid color woavts lnd Ioney joe.quords. N. t v o r noood ironin9.
Guoran+tod to rotain shopo and
&lt;olor, Porfeet lor dress and
uti loohions. Savo today!

Performance Unlimited

en
•

Ave1

RIO GRANDE - The second
family reunion of the late Mr.
and Mrs. A. W. Thorne was
held at Sali Fork Lake Lodge,
near Cambridge Sunday, Aug.

g;ee (jj)ee 9l5eJ. Fantcoats Promise

.::a

•

Second

Vlagnetic Chess,

·PATTERNS $2.77

--

SLATE REVIVAL
CENTERPOINT - 'fhere
will be a revival at the een.
l&lt;lrpoint Freewill Baptlat
Church with the Rev.
Lawrence Conger, Ravenswond, W. Va . , preaching
beginning this evenill8 at 7:30
and continuing through Sep!ember 2. William E, Curfman,
pastor, invites the public.

Games People Play

WU.L NOT MEET
of Pomeroy Chapter 188, lourth Tuesday of September
POMEROY - There wlll he O.E.S. this month. The next and will be a potluck at the
no meeting of the Past Matrons meeting will be held on the Maaontc Temple, 6:30pm.

8

=-=
en

National Honor Society, Ohio
Youth Choir and Buckeye Girls
State.

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

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rn
-&lt;
rn

GALLIPOLIS
Miss
Patricia Ann Wethetholt,
da~hter ol Mr. and Mrs.
Manning Welherholt,
Gallipolis, has been notified
that her autobiography will be
published In the 1973 edition o1
"Who's Who Among American
High School Student.o".
, A senior at Gallia Academy
High School, Miss Wetherholt
laactiveintheGalllaAcademy
choir, madrigals, thespians,
Trl-Hi-Y, Galli a Script
buslness manager, the Gallian
editorial staff, debate club,

I

1

:::a
rn

5 - 'rheSundayTirnea.senun I, Sunday, Aug. 26, 1973

I The Seiko

~· 1
--:B:=::::A~R"'='B~S~ .

. By PHIL PASTORET
Keeping up with the Joneses
is no problem - it's the pay·
ing up that causes headaches.

The bride and groom were
honored with a rehearsal
dinner on the eve or wedding
given by Mr. and Mrs. Don
Hemsworth at Oscar's
Riverboat Room. The tables
were decorated with multicolored daisies and blue
candles. Other
parties
honoring the bride included a
surprise shower given by Miss
Spain, a shower by Evelyn
Fisher and Becky Jones, and a

In 11120, women were IIYtn
under the sign of VirGO.
Scottish statesman and novel· the right tQ vote u thl lith
lst JOhn Buchan was born AuH . Amendment to the U.S. COriiUtutlon went Into elfecl,
26, 187~.
on thta day In hiJtory :
In 1883, the volcano or tn 1948 Mildred Ellubeth
Krakatoa in the Netherlands Oillars, ~own aa "AJ:laSally,"
East lndhis began erupUng. was brought to the ' Uplted
Before it subsided·the followln8 States to laces chariiN ot
day, tw()-thirds or the island espionage and treaiOII for
had been laid waste and 36,000 broadcasUng for Ule Na~la in
World War 1!.
pel'$ons were dead .• ;

50% ACRYLIC
100% NYLON BINDING
WASHABLE &amp; MOTH PROOF
SOLID COLORS

USE OUR

DXseries:

LAYAWAY COAT

)bupayonly

PLAN AND

.the timepiece.
Not the

SAVE 10% ON

time it took

REGULAR

/ o'

•1.98 TO $2.98

to make it.

ALUMINUMWARE
.
.

300EXTRA

Pioneering. '73 : Having to
dig out and wind an alarm
clock when the battery model
goes on the fritz .

TOP VALUE STAMPS

(};J

+ + +

Why don 't they make catoup·flavored vegetables lor
kids - aDd ane all the mess
of keeping a large bottle of
the olull on the table? ·

A lllauiht lor the day : Scot
lllr John Buehan uld, "We can
tiiiiJ pay our debt to the pa.el by
puttilll the future In debt to
tlllniiYII,"
I

,

YOUR

WITH THIS COUPON AND A
PURCHASE OF $5 OR MORE · i
Just right for casual or dress
wear; 4" collar, two button
cuff . . . by h.i.s.
·

No. 54145ht.l7J
Stalnlau atHI, ¥thlta dl.-1. S1S.OO

CLARK'S
JEWELRY ·
STORE

AND PRY FOR

Oood lhrough Saturday, Stpl. 1, 1973

OPEN
MONOAY
Till p.m.

\

VAN HEUSEN SHIRTS
...
. H.D. LEE

•

PER CUSlUMER

ORLON ACRYLIC YARN ·

8 O'CLOCK

412·414 Second Ave.

ALL MURPHY'S. STORES
OPEN SUNDAY

12 SKEINS

REGULAR $1.29 WINTUK

OPEN MONDAY TILL

l42 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

LIMIT

WEAR

•

FARAH SLACKS
DONMOOR BOYS,.SPORTSWEAR

CHOICE

MAafiNEWASH

I excluding itetns prohibited by law.)

Gentry

In 1964, President Lyndon
Jolwon and Senator Hubert
Humpbrey were aelected to
head the [)emoCratlc ticket,
They wan the election In
November.

Sparf&lt;ilng aluminum with neat
resistant handles . 3 pc. savce ·p•n
.ets, J and 4 qt. covered sauce
pots, .7 cup percolators and cake·
utility pans.

Fell fashion colors,
variegates
and
ombres. 4 ply, 3'h
and 4 ounce ready ·
to: knlt •kelns.

Gallipolis, Ohio

77¢

1 PM TIL .6 PM

SKEIN

.I

I

I

•

..,

•

�8- Tht SundayTimes -Sentlnei,SUIIday, Aug. 26, 1973

,·

.• -

.
•

•

GS/ plans senior center

Completes plans

GALUPOLIS - Mrs. Laura
E. Cornwell, R.N., Director of
Nursing at Gallipolis State
Institute announced plans
today for the establishment of
a Senior Citizens' Center to be
houaed in the building formerly
lmown as Cottage B.
Upon completion of the
cUrrent renovation project, the
new center will provide op·
timum living facilities lor both
male and female residents.
Plans call for more in·
dividualized living areas which
will allow for maximum of
privacy.
The center will provide
additional areas, such as a
sewing room and snack bar
where residents can prepare
snacks, entertain guests, and
vlsi\ with friends. This project
represents
a
major
achievement In the over-all

GAJ.LIPOLIS Miss
Barbllra Ann WIJ.on , daughter
of Mr. and Mre. Joaeph c.
WUAOII, 279 LeGrande Blvd.,
, llas completed plans for her
marriage tQ James F. Steinbeck, son of Mrs. Mary
,Steinbeck, !018 Secood Ave.,
'and the laie Jol)n Steinheck.
The ceremony will take place
~'rlday , August 31, at the
Church of the Nal'.llrene at 7:30
p.m . with Rev. Ralph Scott
Officiating.
Pre-nuptial music will hegin
at 7 p.m. with Mrs. Judy
Burdell as organist and Mrs.
Karen Moore, soloist.
Mia Wilson has chosen her
sister, Mrs. Paula Snyder, as
her matron of honor. Brides·
maids will be Miss Karen
Steinbeck, sister of the groom,
and Miss Michelle Buck.
Stacey Archer will serve as
flower girl.
Randy Scott will · be best
man . Ushers will he Frederick
Wilson and Brent McCreedy.
Michael Wickline will he ring·
hearer.
Mrs. Helen Null will register

goal of improving the quality of
Uving lor ali residentS of
Gallipolis State Institute,

SEEN AND HEARD
fl ALLJPOLIS - Mrs. Mary
Lou Adkins and children,
Gahanna, spent a few days
with her mother, Mrs. Glenn
Hinson, Gallipolis .
GALLIPOLIS - Kenneth
Watts, Edwards Air Force
Base, Calif., spent three weeks
with his mother, Gladys Watts,
Gallipolis. He. had suffered a
heart attack and was home on
sick leave. His mother took
him to the Columbus Airport
last Wednesday . He will stop .in
Studio City, Calif., to see his
brother, Harold, on his return
l:ip.

OHIO'S FABULOUS DISCOUNTERS!

1Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Cremeens .

Qbserve 50th anniversary

~

Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Ervin

Vollborn-Ervin vows read

-·••
Jo

•
l

-.•
•

••

.

1'

If the

of your eye

•

••

....
,·

..

Has become a

''••

.,
.' •

You can make

•

·'••

a
ofabuyon
.
••
••
.a new car right now.
.•.
·'~- :
.

•

'•

•

•••

•

•
_.

And OhioValley Bank

•

will lend you
the

to do it with.

And, at the lowest

possible.rates.

OhioVallev
·. Bank .,
Gallipolis, Ohio
Mernb•r: FD IC

II you've 11ot the boat ... we've 11ot the

banana~ I

RIO GRANDE - In a double
ring ceremony at the Calvary
Baptist Church, Rio Grande,
July 1, Miss Mary Kay
Vollborn, daughter of Mrs.
Harland Vollborn and the late
Mr. Vollborn, Rio Grande, and
Gregory Ervin, son of Mrs.
Gomer Ervin and the late Mr.
Ervin', Jackson, exchanged
wedding vows.
The Rev. Robert . Wilkins
officiated at the 2:30 p.m.
ceremony following a program
of music presented by Mrs.
Roher! Ewing: pianist, Rick
Litton,: organist and Mrs.
Robert Wilkins, soloist.
The front of the sanctuary
was decorated with an arch·
way of greenery, . pink
carnations and pink bows. the
setting was completed by two
seven-br.anch candelabra
trimmed with greenery and
two baskets of ferns and
mums.
During the ceremony the
couple lit the large center
candle of a triad arrangement
to symbolize their new life
toget~er . The arrangement
was completed with a
·white kneeling bench where the
couple knelt while Mrs. Wilkins
sang "The Wedding Prayer."
Given in marriage by her
twin brother, the bride wore an
empire A-line gown or silk
organza over taffeta. The skirt
featured an inlaid chapel train
and wide cluny lace flouoce at
the hem . Matching lace
trimmed her -bridal hat and
chapel-length veil. She carried
a bouquet of pink roses, whhe
carnations and an orchid.
Mrs. Sue Vollborn, Jackson,
served as matron of honor. The
other attendants were Mrs.
Ernestine Smith, Gallipolis,
Mrs . Patricia Fletcher ,
Columbus, and Mrs. Martha
Brown, Gallipolis. They wore
gowns of white and pink floral
sheer dotted swiss over silk
taffeta in green, blue, pink and
yellow. Large picture hats
matching their gowns accented
their costumes. All the attendants carried baskets of pastel
carnations and greenery.

CHICKEN
IT'S THE FINEST!
2 Pes. CHICKEN
FRENCH FRIES
ROLL

SNACK BOX
DINNER BOX
9 PCS.
CHICKEN

Lawren ce Gingerich ,
McArthur, served as hest man.
Ushers were Michael Will,
Pomeroy, Fred Vollborn, Rio
Grande ·and Ed Vollborn,
Jackson .
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Voilborn wore a pink
gown accented by a white
orchid corsage. Mrs. Ervin
chose a yellow gown with a
white orchid corsage.
Miss Pa~ 1'01 gey, Rio
Grande, registered the guests
and Miss Dixie Martin,
Gallipolis, distributed packets
of rice to the guests.
The reception was held in the
church social room and was
prepared by the ladies of the
church. The bride's table was
covered with a white cloth
trimmed in lace. The five
tiered wedding cake was
klpped with a gold cross inserted in a floral bouquet of
pink carnations, pink roses and
~reenery . Each tier was
decorate\~ with pink roses . The
setting was completed with
candles in the bridal colors.
Presiding at the guest table
were Mrs. Diane Leith, Rio
Grande, Miss Diane Green,
Columbus, Miss Bev Rusk,
Gallipolis, Mrs . Judy Burdell,
Rio Grande and Mrs. Cheryl
Enyart, Gallipolis.
For a wedding trip to
Florida, the bride changed to a
mint green and white ·knit
dress with the orchid corsage
from her bouquet.
The new Mrs. Ervin is a
graduate of Gallia Academy
High School and Rio Grande
College. She is presently
employed as a teacher in the
North Gallia School District.
Ervin is a graduate of .Jackson
High School and Rio Grande
College. He is employed by the
Ohio Department of Health as
an administrative specialist.
Guests attending the wedding from outside the
Southeastern Ohio area were
Mr. and ·Mrs. Allan Zinn and
Connie, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
George, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Ireland and family, all of
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs .
Charles Hurr and family, St.
James, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs.
Wendell Westlake and family,
New Cumberland, Pa.; Mr.
and Mrs. Randall Allemang , Marysville; .
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Kenneth Crabtree arid family,
Circleville ; Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Tenney and family,
Bogota, Colombia; Mr : and
Mrs. Daniel Tutalo, Marlon;
Mrs. Paul George, Millord
Center;
-'Mr.
and
Mrs . Carl
Par·
sons, West Columbia, W.
Va.; Mrs. Alma Root, Mrs.
Georg!,il Sa uoders and Miss
Ellen Saunders, Margate, Fla.

15 PCS.
BUCKET
CHICKEN

CRISP,
SOLID

J

HEAD
t

•1ASTEE
LINKS"

''

¢

12.0Z.
PKG.

8 PACK

PKG.
"SYLVANIA"

"SNYDER'S"

LIGHT BULBS

POTATO CHIPS

.,

.

INSIDE FROST ·

REGUlAR 7'1

60-75-100 WATT

12.()Z.

BAG

"McCORMICK"

BLACK
PEPPER

"QUAKER STATE"

MO

·. 011

Gallipolis. Ohio

•

College News

\

150 COUNT
I

COMPOSITION·,,

THEME:.:
BOOK
'

'

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,I

3-SUBJECT

TAWNEY
.JEWELERS
471 Stcond Ave.

WHEATON 1 Ill . - Marsha
D. Jakob!, 38 Chllllcothe Rd.,
Gallipolis, ha• been accepted
at Wheaton College, Whealon,
lll ., for the fall term. She io the
daughter of Mrs . Loreda
Jakobi. Wheaton Is a
coeducational liberal arts
college .

One of our
umber numbers.
•

Miss Millie Kay Thomas
ANNOUNCEMENT ENGAGEMENT- Dr. and Mrs. A.
0. Thomas, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, are proud to announce the
engagement and appro~ching marrlage of the.ir daughter,
Millie Kay, to Billie Ray Tabor, son of Mr. and Mrs. Billie c.
Tabor, Galilp()lis. Miss Thomas is a student at Gallia
Academy. Tabor is a graduate of Kyger Creek and is employed at Tabor's Floor Covering. A fall wedding is being
planned.
·

Your feei deaerve all the du~b
fu~ they can eet. Give it to
them with aoft, comfortable
piaakin on·a aole of cuahy crepe.

Second Avenui
Asks Have you seen
The fir s! successful daily
penny newspaper in the Unit·
ed Stales was the New York
·•sun" founded by Benjamin
H. Day in September 183 3.
The Wor ld Almanac notes .
Day also founded " Brother
Jonathan" which became the
first illustrated weekly mag·

'

~

"JOHNMaY•n.

Hush

jor t.a/1?
Beautiful!

~•TTER

---

azi.ne in America ·in 1842.

FOOTWEAR FOR THE

FAMILY

IN. THE SilVER BRIDGE PWA

Copyr 1gljl , 1973
Newspaper

E r11e r pr~se

Assn

OUR ONLY WORD FOR THE NEW STORE

SILVER REPLATING
REDUCED 20%

tfARIETTA - Christine
Wether holt bas been appointed
to the Lollli Range Planning
C~mmiaslon ,at Marietta
COllege. The . comm~ion is
composed of representatives ·
from faculty, administration,
trustees, and two sludents. The
pql-poee of the comm~lon Is to
study and plan for the growth
and futute of Marietta College .
Mill Welherholt, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs . Manning
Wetherhol\, Ia i junior a\
Marietta CoUege, where she Is
maJorlnfl in economics and
bueineu. Sheil afllilated with
Sgnla Kappa Sorority.

-

BOWLING GREEN
Among the 180 1ludents being
award~ degreu aL Bowling
Green State UnlvenlLy'a
~~~~t~mer convnencement was
Janice Ruth Entlen, 90· Court
St., Gallipolis. She received I
"-ehelor of IClence In .
· educaUoo al the August 211
llmmoiiY .

SUPER

Quart

Glliipolll, O~lo

J

I

)

"Home of That Old Fashion Goodness"

Corner Second &amp; Olive

,,

BUNS

HOT DOGS

I •

'

•I

AMAN'S 7 DIA. CLUSTER
IN TODAY'S MOST
SOPHISTICATED STYLE

WORLD
ALMANAC
.
FACTS

Events

l Pes. CHICKEN
FRENCH FRIES
SLAW &amp; ROLL

Try Our Delicious Macaroni Salad, Potato Salad, Baked
Beans. - For Easy Pickup Phone 446-2682.

guests .. Asalstlng at the
reception will be Mr1. Null, Mr.
Jan t Wickline, Mrs. Lynn
Archer, Mia Eve Harris • n&lt;l
Miss Karen Snyder.
Parties given In honor ol the
bride-elect
included
•
miiiCelllmeous shower, July 14,
at the home or Mrs. Keith
Snyder with Mr~. Snyder, Mrs.
Paula Snyder, Karen Snyder
and Sandra Wilson a•
hostesses ; a miscellaneoua
shower given by th employees
or H o l~ er Medical Center
operating ro om, anesthesia
department and recovery
room, July 18; a miscellaneoua
shower given by Mrs. Ruth
Allison, Mrs. Judy Fellure, and
Mrs. Susan Hutchinson, at the
Nazarene Church social room,
August 14.
l'he rehearsal dinner will be
given Tuesday by the
bridegroom's mother.
The cu~tom of open church
will be observed at the wedding
with the reception to follow in
the church social room. All
friends and relatives are in·
vited .

~ Coming

PRICES GOOD SUNDAY ONLY!! .AUGUST 26th

21 PCS.
BARREL
CHICKEN

ATERLOO - Mr. andMrs .. Drummond. Mr. and Mrs.
Fl yd Cremeens Waterloo William Straight, Mr.. and,Mrs..
ce brated their .~th eddi ' J. D. Keller, Mrs. Elleen 'Hall
"" w ng and Julie , Mr. and Mrs.
an~iversary with an open
Warren Boyd. Mrs . Donna
howte recepUon July 29 The . Drummond and Lisa. Mr. and
••
h
·
Mrs. Dennis Drummond, Mr .
recepuon was osted by their and Mrs. Dave Painter. Mr.
children, Mr . and Mrs. and Mrs. Dan Drummond, all
_Melwood (MaybeU) Criswell of Columbus; Mr. and Mrs .
Ir •·
d Mr
· ' Tom Shepherd, Misses Connie, ~.«&lt;m®;; .• .n.: j::rg1
Onwn an . . and Mrs. Ray .Lois and Sandy Shepherd ,
Cremeens, Ironton, and the Randy Shepherd, Mr . and Mrs.
grandchildren, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Shepherd and family .
Les Cremeens Pedro Mr d Mr . and Mrs. Allen MIUer and
,
, . an
family, Mrs. Donald (Kay)
Mrs. Gary CrtsweU, Ironto~, .Herrell. all of Willow Wood ;
Mr. and Mrs. Russell (Shirley ) Mr. · and Mrs. Kenneth Me·
. d Cauley, Mr. and Mrs. Melwood
She
. Pherd , WillOW Wood , an
Criswell, Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Rick Cremeens, Ironton,
Criswell and Chris, Mr. and
The couple also has five Mrs. Charles Saunders and
t
d hlid
Tammy, Mr. and Mrs. Randy SUNDAY
grea • gran c ren, JiJl111lY Fllehman ·and Johnny, Ray .HOMCOMJNG at Poplar Rid•e
and Joey Shepherd, Mark and Cremeens and Rick , all of
o
Mike
Cremeens
and lrontor,; Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Freewill Baptist Church,
Christopher and Shawn Roach, Mrs. Dalton (Bessie) Suoday School at 10 a.m. with
.
Miller. Mr . and Mrs. Emil Rev. Miles Trout as morning
CrtSweU.
Roach, Mr. and Mrs. Jason
One son, James Carroll, is Straight, Jr .. Mrs. Rex (Doris) speaker. · Basket dinner at
deceased.
Harrell, Mrs. Gary tcaroll noon .
Miller and Faith , all of HENRY (Doc) and Angline
Cremeens is the son of the Waterloo .
Cards and gifts were Cremeens family reuoion at
late frank and l&lt;fargaret
Tipton Cremeen.i and is a received from Bill Diles, the Northup Baptist Church .
Athens; Mr . and Mrs . Wlll be moved to Centenary
retiredminerandfarmer.Mrs: Raymond Shepherd, Fort
Cremeens is the daughter of Wayne, Ind .; Mrs . Bernice Grange Hall in case of rain.
the late John William and Phillips. Canton ; Mrs. Mary CRAFT reunion at the Galli&amp;
.
Mlllspaw, Hebron : Mr. and Couoty J.unior Fairgrounds.
Octavia Delaney Straight. Mrs Frank Cremeens. Mr. and
They have lived in the .Mrs. Lando Cremeens, Mr. and REUNION lor the family of the
Wat~rloo community aU their Mrs. Larry Cremeens, all of 'late Fred and Mary Lewis
ll
Troy : Mr. and Mrs. Beryle Harrison at the Galiia County
ves.
Drummond. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Juot'or F ·
ds All frl ds
The reception table was Taylor. Mrs. Elva Lee Martin,
atrgroun ·
en
decorated with white bells and Mr. and Mrs. Glen Martin, all and family invited .
.
· ·
ot Florida : Mr. and Mrs. TRI ADVISORY
a two-tier weddiQg cake Wyman Roberts, Angola, Ind.;
•
Couocllpicnlc
decorated wlth yeUow roses Charlie Shepherd , Willow at the Woods Cabin 12:30 p.m.
and lgold leaves. The top tier Wood: Mr. and Mrs'. Harold Basket dinner.
,
Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Mart THE BARCUS f '1
·
he!!11
a miniature bridal setting Miller, Rev. and Mrs, Charles · .
amt Y reun10n
with' the gold 50 in . the Parker,. Mrs. Ethel Macrum, will be held at Fortification
background. small . gold all of Patriot: Mr . and Mrs. Hill. Ail friends and relatives
Dennis Slagle, Bowling Green: are Invited
Wedding bands Circled the Mr.
and Mrs. William Gtotf, GO
:
cake. A vase of red roses and a Cincinnati: Mrs. Ray (Ethel!
SPEL slug at the Cheshire
five branch candelabrum, Cremeens. Mrs. Lucrecia United Methodist Church at 2
ho.lding gold candles In a Cron, Rev . and Mrs. Ellis Hale, p.m. featuring the Crusaders
all of Ironton : Mr. and Mrs, Q
setting of yellow flowers and Clarence Cozzman, Mrs. Rosa
uartet. Everyone welcome.
greenery completed the ap· Davidson . Mrs .
Jessee MONDAY
Cremeens, Mr . and Mrs . GALLIA Chapter of OCSEA
Pointments.
Truman Owens, Mrs . Opal
·
, ,
Coffee, punch, nuts and Slagle. all of Waterloo ; Mrs. . regular meeting m the Grande '
mints were served with the Jane Miller, Columbus; Mr. Squares Club room at 7:30p.m.
and Mrs. George Gillmore,
· .
cake by the hostesses, ·Mrs. Kitts Hill ; Mr. and Mrs. Emery REVJV AL at the Centerpomt
Shirley Shepherd and Mrs. White, Scottown; Mr. and Mrs. Freewill Baptist Church
Reida Criswell.
Allan Wllllamso~ , Hu.nt~ngton : heginning tonight at 7.30 with
Mr.
and Mrs. M1chael Zabych,
·
·
Those att ending were Mr. Alexandria. va.
Rev. Lawrence Conger
and
Mrs.Elva
Gomer
Stewart,
St opp1rig bY 1ater with gifts brmgmg
· · th emessages. SpeciaJ
and Mrs
Straight,
Mr. Mr
and·.
Mrs . Edwin Baker, . Mrs . and signing the guest register singing.
were Cecil Ray R1ce and Mrs.
James !Wandel Hively, Ha~ry Charles Jewell
Parker,
Goodall, Dan Stewart, Mr. and Patriot.
Mrs. Joe Nwman
Stewart, and
Mrs.Debbie,
Grady ~, . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . . . . , .
{Wilda)
Mrs. Zelma Vermillion, Mr .
and Mrs. Ernest Baker, Mrs .
Charles (Dee) Massie, Mr. and
Mrs. Orlyn Goodall, Mrs Larry
(Teresa) Miller , Mrs . Tod
(Darlenel Grady; Mrs. Brian
(Lewanna) Bostic and family,
all of Patriot; Rev. and Mrs.
Les Cremeens and family,
Pedro : Mrs. James (Violet)
Angles, Mr. and Mrs. Garnett
Straight. Jackson : Mrs. Paul
IEIIadean) Mitchell , Mrs .
Waller 1Polly) Jenkins.
Chesapeake: Mrs. Effie
Saunders, Coal Grove ; Mr. and
Mrs. Troy Cash, Richmond
bale: Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Reiter, Mr . and Mrs. Don
Black, Huntington ; Allan
Drummond, Cleveland : Mrs.
Jim (Agnes.) Brumfield and
Todd. Mr. and Mrs. George
Corbin, Brian Cremeens,
Gallipolis; Rev . Damon
Stapleton, Rio Grande; Mr.
and Mrs. Glen Frazee,
Hamden ; Mr. and Mrs. James
W~lker and family , Troy ; Mr.
and Mrs. Chuck Weatherf.ord
a.nd Chris, Mrs. Opal Rice, Mr.
and Mrs. John Rice and family,
Mrs. Jesee Drummond, J. P,

College News

DAUGHTER BORN
POMEROY - Ml-. 11111 Mrs.
Ray Eblin , Troy, fOI'IIII!rly of
Pomeroy, announce tlle birth
of a daughter, Adr~ Diane,
&amp;tnday, Aug. 19, weighing ftve
pounds and two ouncea.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Charlea Ruuell
Troy; paternal grandper~~~:
Mr. and Mrs. WendeD Eblin,
Pomeroy, and a paternal
great-grandmother is Nellie
Eblin, Pomeroy

•

•

FORE!

The newest and most elegant ladies' fashion center
at the new downtown Lafliyette Mall

COME IN AND REGISTER FOR FREE GIFTS!
Each week for two weeks gift certificates will be given away to our customers.
(Dmwings will be beld eacb SatmrliJy, Sept. 1, and Sepi. 8 at 4:30p.m.)
F.acb Saturday we will give away

AFTER

1 sso GIFT CERTIFICATE
1 - s25 GIFT CERTIFICATE
5 - s10 GIFT CERTIFICATES

Every Item Replated at Sale Prices
Since lhe valuo of old silverplated
ltemi COf'lllnuts to soar . .. this is an

FOR INSTANCE
Ra1 .

Sale Price

$35.50

$2'-40

18.50

14.80

plecei are now more valuable than

Candleslick.
lper inch) 2.00

1.80

ever and make ·wonderful alfts . All

Sugar bowl 20.50

f8 . ~0

eKcellent time to t1k!!! advantaae of

Article

these low, low prices lo haYe your Teapot
worn silverware, antiques and family Creamer
· heirlooms feplated. like m:~w, These

wo1k QUADRUPLE SILVERPLATEO
•

by our 1MIIIed lilve,.mlths and Sale
prices apply to ALL places.

Trays (per
sq . 1n.l

.16

.128

NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN - NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

'

·BankAmericard or Master Charge Welcome/

OUR NEW REPAIR POLICY

•'•n DENT RIMOYAL and ltriiJhttnlnJ on all lttmt

wt tllurplatt.

UNlY 11.11 ,0~ ANI AND AllAODITIDNAl

no mlltor

~[,AI~S

htw

llttntln, an an; pltct wtt!lvtrplttt. ln~ludea &amp;OidttlnJ brtktri han dill,

ltJI, llnobl, ttc. IOnly uctptlont Itt for hHnlatiiMI new ptrtst

300 SECOND AVE.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

BALE ENDS AUGUST 31
BRING IN SILVER TODAY!

PAUL DAVIES JEWELERS
404 SECOND AVENUE.

GAlliPOLIS, OHIO
I
I'

�8- Tht SundayTimes -Sentlnei,SUIIday, Aug. 26, 1973

,·

.• -

.
•

•

GS/ plans senior center

Completes plans

GALUPOLIS - Mrs. Laura
E. Cornwell, R.N., Director of
Nursing at Gallipolis State
Institute announced plans
today for the establishment of
a Senior Citizens' Center to be
houaed in the building formerly
lmown as Cottage B.
Upon completion of the
cUrrent renovation project, the
new center will provide op·
timum living facilities lor both
male and female residents.
Plans call for more in·
dividualized living areas which
will allow for maximum of
privacy.
The center will provide
additional areas, such as a
sewing room and snack bar
where residents can prepare
snacks, entertain guests, and
vlsi\ with friends. This project
represents
a
major
achievement In the over-all

GAJ.LIPOLIS Miss
Barbllra Ann WIJ.on , daughter
of Mr. and Mre. Joaeph c.
WUAOII, 279 LeGrande Blvd.,
, llas completed plans for her
marriage tQ James F. Steinbeck, son of Mrs. Mary
,Steinbeck, !018 Secood Ave.,
'and the laie Jol)n Steinheck.
The ceremony will take place
~'rlday , August 31, at the
Church of the Nal'.llrene at 7:30
p.m . with Rev. Ralph Scott
Officiating.
Pre-nuptial music will hegin
at 7 p.m. with Mrs. Judy
Burdell as organist and Mrs.
Karen Moore, soloist.
Mia Wilson has chosen her
sister, Mrs. Paula Snyder, as
her matron of honor. Brides·
maids will be Miss Karen
Steinbeck, sister of the groom,
and Miss Michelle Buck.
Stacey Archer will serve as
flower girl.
Randy Scott will · be best
man . Ushers will he Frederick
Wilson and Brent McCreedy.
Michael Wickline will he ring·
hearer.
Mrs. Helen Null will register

goal of improving the quality of
Uving lor ali residentS of
Gallipolis State Institute,

SEEN AND HEARD
fl ALLJPOLIS - Mrs. Mary
Lou Adkins and children,
Gahanna, spent a few days
with her mother, Mrs. Glenn
Hinson, Gallipolis .
GALLIPOLIS - Kenneth
Watts, Edwards Air Force
Base, Calif., spent three weeks
with his mother, Gladys Watts,
Gallipolis. He. had suffered a
heart attack and was home on
sick leave. His mother took
him to the Columbus Airport
last Wednesday . He will stop .in
Studio City, Calif., to see his
brother, Harold, on his return
l:ip.

OHIO'S FABULOUS DISCOUNTERS!

1Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Cremeens .

Qbserve 50th anniversary

~

Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Ervin

Vollborn-Ervin vows read

-·••
Jo

•
l

-.•
•

••

.

1'

If the

of your eye

•

••

....
,·

..

Has become a

''••

.,
.' •

You can make

•

·'••

a
ofabuyon
.
••
••
.a new car right now.
.•.
·'~- :
.

•

'•

•

•••

•

•
_.

And OhioValley Bank

•

will lend you
the

to do it with.

And, at the lowest

possible.rates.

OhioVallev
·. Bank .,
Gallipolis, Ohio
Mernb•r: FD IC

II you've 11ot the boat ... we've 11ot the

banana~ I

RIO GRANDE - In a double
ring ceremony at the Calvary
Baptist Church, Rio Grande,
July 1, Miss Mary Kay
Vollborn, daughter of Mrs.
Harland Vollborn and the late
Mr. Vollborn, Rio Grande, and
Gregory Ervin, son of Mrs.
Gomer Ervin and the late Mr.
Ervin', Jackson, exchanged
wedding vows.
The Rev. Robert . Wilkins
officiated at the 2:30 p.m.
ceremony following a program
of music presented by Mrs.
Roher! Ewing: pianist, Rick
Litton,: organist and Mrs.
Robert Wilkins, soloist.
The front of the sanctuary
was decorated with an arch·
way of greenery, . pink
carnations and pink bows. the
setting was completed by two
seven-br.anch candelabra
trimmed with greenery and
two baskets of ferns and
mums.
During the ceremony the
couple lit the large center
candle of a triad arrangement
to symbolize their new life
toget~er . The arrangement
was completed with a
·white kneeling bench where the
couple knelt while Mrs. Wilkins
sang "The Wedding Prayer."
Given in marriage by her
twin brother, the bride wore an
empire A-line gown or silk
organza over taffeta. The skirt
featured an inlaid chapel train
and wide cluny lace flouoce at
the hem . Matching lace
trimmed her -bridal hat and
chapel-length veil. She carried
a bouquet of pink roses, whhe
carnations and an orchid.
Mrs. Sue Vollborn, Jackson,
served as matron of honor. The
other attendants were Mrs.
Ernestine Smith, Gallipolis,
Mrs . Patricia Fletcher ,
Columbus, and Mrs. Martha
Brown, Gallipolis. They wore
gowns of white and pink floral
sheer dotted swiss over silk
taffeta in green, blue, pink and
yellow. Large picture hats
matching their gowns accented
their costumes. All the attendants carried baskets of pastel
carnations and greenery.

CHICKEN
IT'S THE FINEST!
2 Pes. CHICKEN
FRENCH FRIES
ROLL

SNACK BOX
DINNER BOX
9 PCS.
CHICKEN

Lawren ce Gingerich ,
McArthur, served as hest man.
Ushers were Michael Will,
Pomeroy, Fred Vollborn, Rio
Grande ·and Ed Vollborn,
Jackson .
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Voilborn wore a pink
gown accented by a white
orchid corsage. Mrs. Ervin
chose a yellow gown with a
white orchid corsage.
Miss Pa~ 1'01 gey, Rio
Grande, registered the guests
and Miss Dixie Martin,
Gallipolis, distributed packets
of rice to the guests.
The reception was held in the
church social room and was
prepared by the ladies of the
church. The bride's table was
covered with a white cloth
trimmed in lace. The five
tiered wedding cake was
klpped with a gold cross inserted in a floral bouquet of
pink carnations, pink roses and
~reenery . Each tier was
decorate\~ with pink roses . The
setting was completed with
candles in the bridal colors.
Presiding at the guest table
were Mrs. Diane Leith, Rio
Grande, Miss Diane Green,
Columbus, Miss Bev Rusk,
Gallipolis, Mrs . Judy Burdell,
Rio Grande and Mrs. Cheryl
Enyart, Gallipolis.
For a wedding trip to
Florida, the bride changed to a
mint green and white ·knit
dress with the orchid corsage
from her bouquet.
The new Mrs. Ervin is a
graduate of Gallia Academy
High School and Rio Grande
College. She is presently
employed as a teacher in the
North Gallia School District.
Ervin is a graduate of .Jackson
High School and Rio Grande
College. He is employed by the
Ohio Department of Health as
an administrative specialist.
Guests attending the wedding from outside the
Southeastern Ohio area were
Mr. and ·Mrs. Allan Zinn and
Connie, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
George, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Ireland and family, all of
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs .
Charles Hurr and family, St.
James, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs.
Wendell Westlake and family,
New Cumberland, Pa.; Mr.
and Mrs. Randall Allemang , Marysville; .
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Kenneth Crabtree arid family,
Circleville ; Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Tenney and family,
Bogota, Colombia; Mr : and
Mrs. Daniel Tutalo, Marlon;
Mrs. Paul George, Millord
Center;
-'Mr.
and
Mrs . Carl
Par·
sons, West Columbia, W.
Va.; Mrs. Alma Root, Mrs.
Georg!,il Sa uoders and Miss
Ellen Saunders, Margate, Fla.

15 PCS.
BUCKET
CHICKEN

CRISP,
SOLID

J

HEAD
t

•1ASTEE
LINKS"

''

¢

12.0Z.
PKG.

8 PACK

PKG.
"SYLVANIA"

"SNYDER'S"

LIGHT BULBS

POTATO CHIPS

.,

.

INSIDE FROST ·

REGUlAR 7'1

60-75-100 WATT

12.()Z.

BAG

"McCORMICK"

BLACK
PEPPER

"QUAKER STATE"

MO

·. 011

Gallipolis. Ohio

•

College News

\

150 COUNT
I

COMPOSITION·,,

THEME:.:
BOOK
'

'

•

,I

3-SUBJECT

TAWNEY
.JEWELERS
471 Stcond Ave.

WHEATON 1 Ill . - Marsha
D. Jakob!, 38 Chllllcothe Rd.,
Gallipolis, ha• been accepted
at Wheaton College, Whealon,
lll ., for the fall term. She io the
daughter of Mrs . Loreda
Jakobi. Wheaton Is a
coeducational liberal arts
college .

One of our
umber numbers.
•

Miss Millie Kay Thomas
ANNOUNCEMENT ENGAGEMENT- Dr. and Mrs. A.
0. Thomas, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, are proud to announce the
engagement and appro~ching marrlage of the.ir daughter,
Millie Kay, to Billie Ray Tabor, son of Mr. and Mrs. Billie c.
Tabor, Galilp()lis. Miss Thomas is a student at Gallia
Academy. Tabor is a graduate of Kyger Creek and is employed at Tabor's Floor Covering. A fall wedding is being
planned.
·

Your feei deaerve all the du~b
fu~ they can eet. Give it to
them with aoft, comfortable
piaakin on·a aole of cuahy crepe.

Second Avenui
Asks Have you seen
The fir s! successful daily
penny newspaper in the Unit·
ed Stales was the New York
·•sun" founded by Benjamin
H. Day in September 183 3.
The Wor ld Almanac notes .
Day also founded " Brother
Jonathan" which became the
first illustrated weekly mag·

'

~

"JOHNMaY•n.

Hush

jor t.a/1?
Beautiful!

~•TTER

---

azi.ne in America ·in 1842.

FOOTWEAR FOR THE

FAMILY

IN. THE SilVER BRIDGE PWA

Copyr 1gljl , 1973
Newspaper

E r11e r pr~se

Assn

OUR ONLY WORD FOR THE NEW STORE

SILVER REPLATING
REDUCED 20%

tfARIETTA - Christine
Wether holt bas been appointed
to the Lollli Range Planning
C~mmiaslon ,at Marietta
COllege. The . comm~ion is
composed of representatives ·
from faculty, administration,
trustees, and two sludents. The
pql-poee of the comm~lon Is to
study and plan for the growth
and futute of Marietta College .
Mill Welherholt, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs . Manning
Wetherhol\, Ia i junior a\
Marietta CoUege, where she Is
maJorlnfl in economics and
bueineu. Sheil afllilated with
Sgnla Kappa Sorority.

-

BOWLING GREEN
Among the 180 1ludents being
award~ degreu aL Bowling
Green State UnlvenlLy'a
~~~~t~mer convnencement was
Janice Ruth Entlen, 90· Court
St., Gallipolis. She received I
"-ehelor of IClence In .
· educaUoo al the August 211
llmmoiiY .

SUPER

Quart

Glliipolll, O~lo

J

I

)

"Home of That Old Fashion Goodness"

Corner Second &amp; Olive

,,

BUNS

HOT DOGS

I •

'

•I

AMAN'S 7 DIA. CLUSTER
IN TODAY'S MOST
SOPHISTICATED STYLE

WORLD
ALMANAC
.
FACTS

Events

l Pes. CHICKEN
FRENCH FRIES
SLAW &amp; ROLL

Try Our Delicious Macaroni Salad, Potato Salad, Baked
Beans. - For Easy Pickup Phone 446-2682.

guests .. Asalstlng at the
reception will be Mr1. Null, Mr.
Jan t Wickline, Mrs. Lynn
Archer, Mia Eve Harris • n&lt;l
Miss Karen Snyder.
Parties given In honor ol the
bride-elect
included
•
miiiCelllmeous shower, July 14,
at the home or Mrs. Keith
Snyder with Mr~. Snyder, Mrs.
Paula Snyder, Karen Snyder
and Sandra Wilson a•
hostesses ; a miscellaneoua
shower given by th employees
or H o l~ er Medical Center
operating ro om, anesthesia
department and recovery
room, July 18; a miscellaneoua
shower given by Mrs. Ruth
Allison, Mrs. Judy Fellure, and
Mrs. Susan Hutchinson, at the
Nazarene Church social room,
August 14.
l'he rehearsal dinner will be
given Tuesday by the
bridegroom's mother.
The cu~tom of open church
will be observed at the wedding
with the reception to follow in
the church social room. All
friends and relatives are in·
vited .

~ Coming

PRICES GOOD SUNDAY ONLY!! .AUGUST 26th

21 PCS.
BARREL
CHICKEN

ATERLOO - Mr. andMrs .. Drummond. Mr. and Mrs.
Fl yd Cremeens Waterloo William Straight, Mr.. and,Mrs..
ce brated their .~th eddi ' J. D. Keller, Mrs. Elleen 'Hall
"" w ng and Julie , Mr. and Mrs.
an~iversary with an open
Warren Boyd. Mrs . Donna
howte recepUon July 29 The . Drummond and Lisa. Mr. and
••
h
·
Mrs. Dennis Drummond, Mr .
recepuon was osted by their and Mrs. Dave Painter. Mr.
children, Mr . and Mrs. and Mrs. Dan Drummond, all
_Melwood (MaybeU) Criswell of Columbus; Mr. and Mrs .
Ir •·
d Mr
· ' Tom Shepherd, Misses Connie, ~.«&lt;m®;; .• .n.: j::rg1
Onwn an . . and Mrs. Ray .Lois and Sandy Shepherd ,
Cremeens, Ironton, and the Randy Shepherd, Mr . and Mrs.
grandchildren, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Shepherd and family .
Les Cremeens Pedro Mr d Mr . and Mrs. Allen MIUer and
,
, . an
family, Mrs. Donald (Kay)
Mrs. Gary CrtsweU, Ironto~, .Herrell. all of Willow Wood ;
Mr. and Mrs. Russell (Shirley ) Mr. · and Mrs. Kenneth Me·
. d Cauley, Mr. and Mrs. Melwood
She
. Pherd , WillOW Wood , an
Criswell, Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Rick Cremeens, Ironton,
Criswell and Chris, Mr. and
The couple also has five Mrs. Charles Saunders and
t
d hlid
Tammy, Mr. and Mrs. Randy SUNDAY
grea • gran c ren, JiJl111lY Fllehman ·and Johnny, Ray .HOMCOMJNG at Poplar Rid•e
and Joey Shepherd, Mark and Cremeens and Rick , all of
o
Mike
Cremeens
and lrontor,; Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Freewill Baptist Church,
Christopher and Shawn Roach, Mrs. Dalton (Bessie) Suoday School at 10 a.m. with
.
Miller. Mr . and Mrs. Emil Rev. Miles Trout as morning
CrtSweU.
Roach, Mr. and Mrs. Jason
One son, James Carroll, is Straight, Jr .. Mrs. Rex (Doris) speaker. · Basket dinner at
deceased.
Harrell, Mrs. Gary tcaroll noon .
Miller and Faith , all of HENRY (Doc) and Angline
Cremeens is the son of the Waterloo .
Cards and gifts were Cremeens family reuoion at
late frank and l&lt;fargaret
Tipton Cremeen.i and is a received from Bill Diles, the Northup Baptist Church .
Athens; Mr . and Mrs . Wlll be moved to Centenary
retiredminerandfarmer.Mrs: Raymond Shepherd, Fort
Cremeens is the daughter of Wayne, Ind .; Mrs . Bernice Grange Hall in case of rain.
the late John William and Phillips. Canton ; Mrs. Mary CRAFT reunion at the Galli&amp;
.
Mlllspaw, Hebron : Mr. and Couoty J.unior Fairgrounds.
Octavia Delaney Straight. Mrs Frank Cremeens. Mr. and
They have lived in the .Mrs. Lando Cremeens, Mr. and REUNION lor the family of the
Wat~rloo community aU their Mrs. Larry Cremeens, all of 'late Fred and Mary Lewis
ll
Troy : Mr. and Mrs. Beryle Harrison at the Galiia County
ves.
Drummond. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Juot'or F ·
ds All frl ds
The reception table was Taylor. Mrs. Elva Lee Martin,
atrgroun ·
en
decorated with white bells and Mr. and Mrs. Glen Martin, all and family invited .
.
· ·
ot Florida : Mr. and Mrs. TRI ADVISORY
a two-tier weddiQg cake Wyman Roberts, Angola, Ind.;
•
Couocllpicnlc
decorated wlth yeUow roses Charlie Shepherd , Willow at the Woods Cabin 12:30 p.m.
and lgold leaves. The top tier Wood: Mr. and Mrs'. Harold Basket dinner.
,
Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Mart THE BARCUS f '1
·
he!!11
a miniature bridal setting Miller, Rev. and Mrs, Charles · .
amt Y reun10n
with' the gold 50 in . the Parker,. Mrs. Ethel Macrum, will be held at Fortification
background. small . gold all of Patriot: Mr . and Mrs. Hill. Ail friends and relatives
Dennis Slagle, Bowling Green: are Invited
Wedding bands Circled the Mr.
and Mrs. William Gtotf, GO
:
cake. A vase of red roses and a Cincinnati: Mrs. Ray (Ethel!
SPEL slug at the Cheshire
five branch candelabrum, Cremeens. Mrs. Lucrecia United Methodist Church at 2
ho.lding gold candles In a Cron, Rev . and Mrs. Ellis Hale, p.m. featuring the Crusaders
all of Ironton : Mr. and Mrs, Q
setting of yellow flowers and Clarence Cozzman, Mrs. Rosa
uartet. Everyone welcome.
greenery completed the ap· Davidson . Mrs .
Jessee MONDAY
Cremeens, Mr . and Mrs . GALLIA Chapter of OCSEA
Pointments.
Truman Owens, Mrs . Opal
·
, ,
Coffee, punch, nuts and Slagle. all of Waterloo ; Mrs. . regular meeting m the Grande '
mints were served with the Jane Miller, Columbus; Mr. Squares Club room at 7:30p.m.
and Mrs. George Gillmore,
· .
cake by the hostesses, ·Mrs. Kitts Hill ; Mr. and Mrs. Emery REVJV AL at the Centerpomt
Shirley Shepherd and Mrs. White, Scottown; Mr. and Mrs. Freewill Baptist Church
Reida Criswell.
Allan Wllllamso~ , Hu.nt~ngton : heginning tonight at 7.30 with
Mr.
and Mrs. M1chael Zabych,
·
·
Those att ending were Mr. Alexandria. va.
Rev. Lawrence Conger
and
Mrs.Elva
Gomer
Stewart,
St opp1rig bY 1ater with gifts brmgmg
· · th emessages. SpeciaJ
and Mrs
Straight,
Mr. Mr
and·.
Mrs . Edwin Baker, . Mrs . and signing the guest register singing.
were Cecil Ray R1ce and Mrs.
James !Wandel Hively, Ha~ry Charles Jewell
Parker,
Goodall, Dan Stewart, Mr. and Patriot.
Mrs. Joe Nwman
Stewart, and
Mrs.Debbie,
Grady ~, . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . . . . , .
{Wilda)
Mrs. Zelma Vermillion, Mr .
and Mrs. Ernest Baker, Mrs .
Charles (Dee) Massie, Mr. and
Mrs. Orlyn Goodall, Mrs Larry
(Teresa) Miller , Mrs . Tod
(Darlenel Grady; Mrs. Brian
(Lewanna) Bostic and family,
all of Patriot; Rev. and Mrs.
Les Cremeens and family,
Pedro : Mrs. James (Violet)
Angles, Mr. and Mrs. Garnett
Straight. Jackson : Mrs. Paul
IEIIadean) Mitchell , Mrs .
Waller 1Polly) Jenkins.
Chesapeake: Mrs. Effie
Saunders, Coal Grove ; Mr. and
Mrs. Troy Cash, Richmond
bale: Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Reiter, Mr . and Mrs. Don
Black, Huntington ; Allan
Drummond, Cleveland : Mrs.
Jim (Agnes.) Brumfield and
Todd. Mr. and Mrs. George
Corbin, Brian Cremeens,
Gallipolis; Rev . Damon
Stapleton, Rio Grande; Mr.
and Mrs. Glen Frazee,
Hamden ; Mr. and Mrs. James
W~lker and family , Troy ; Mr.
and Mrs. Chuck Weatherf.ord
a.nd Chris, Mrs. Opal Rice, Mr.
and Mrs. John Rice and family,
Mrs. Jesee Drummond, J. P,

College News

DAUGHTER BORN
POMEROY - Ml-. 11111 Mrs.
Ray Eblin , Troy, fOI'IIII!rly of
Pomeroy, announce tlle birth
of a daughter, Adr~ Diane,
&amp;tnday, Aug. 19, weighing ftve
pounds and two ouncea.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Charlea Ruuell
Troy; paternal grandper~~~:
Mr. and Mrs. WendeD Eblin,
Pomeroy, and a paternal
great-grandmother is Nellie
Eblin, Pomeroy

•

•

FORE!

The newest and most elegant ladies' fashion center
at the new downtown Lafliyette Mall

COME IN AND REGISTER FOR FREE GIFTS!
Each week for two weeks gift certificates will be given away to our customers.
(Dmwings will be beld eacb SatmrliJy, Sept. 1, and Sepi. 8 at 4:30p.m.)
F.acb Saturday we will give away

AFTER

1 sso GIFT CERTIFICATE
1 - s25 GIFT CERTIFICATE
5 - s10 GIFT CERTIFICATES

Every Item Replated at Sale Prices
Since lhe valuo of old silverplated
ltemi COf'lllnuts to soar . .. this is an

FOR INSTANCE
Ra1 .

Sale Price

$35.50

$2'-40

18.50

14.80

plecei are now more valuable than

Candleslick.
lper inch) 2.00

1.80

ever and make ·wonderful alfts . All

Sugar bowl 20.50

f8 . ~0

eKcellent time to t1k!!! advantaae of

Article

these low, low prices lo haYe your Teapot
worn silverware, antiques and family Creamer
· heirlooms feplated. like m:~w, These

wo1k QUADRUPLE SILVERPLATEO
•

by our 1MIIIed lilve,.mlths and Sale
prices apply to ALL places.

Trays (per
sq . 1n.l

.16

.128

NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN - NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

'

·BankAmericard or Master Charge Welcome/

OUR NEW REPAIR POLICY

•'•n DENT RIMOYAL and ltriiJhttnlnJ on all lttmt

wt tllurplatt.

UNlY 11.11 ,0~ ANI AND AllAODITIDNAl

no mlltor

~[,AI~S

htw

llttntln, an an; pltct wtt!lvtrplttt. ln~ludea &amp;OidttlnJ brtktri han dill,

ltJI, llnobl, ttc. IOnly uctptlont Itt for hHnlatiiMI new ptrtst

300 SECOND AVE.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

BALE ENDS AUGUST 31
BRING IN SILVER TODAY!

PAUL DAVIES JEWELERS
404 SECOND AVENUE.

GAlliPOLIS, OHIO
I
I'

�· •-1'11e SundayTimee·Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 26,1973

I

Rambos to present area concert Wilcoxon reunion held
gospel music any sound
Imaginable. They feature a
sacred-country style that is
interspersed with Reba's own
brJnd of contemporary gospel.
Although she neither reads
nor writes musical notes,
Dottle Rambo Is one of
America's foremost gospe l
music writers. Dottie writes
almost all of the music the
Rambos perform and testifies
as she sing., of the iru]plration
God gives her . songwrlnting.
Most of Dottie's songs deal
with- her experiences. She has
~n writing songs since she
was nine years old.
Buck Rambo managed the
group and is president of
Rambo Music, Inc. and the
Rambo
Eva nge listi c
Association. Buck's illness last
year forced the Ramb&lt;Js·off the
road and threatened to mean
retirement for the group. But
he came back ,as did the group,
with new ideas about
costuming, performing and
spreading the gospel. The
Rambos conduct their concerts
as services of worship and
praise. Buck says th~t. ::i~­
novation through the sp1nt IS
tile key to a successful gospel
music group and he strives to
keep innovation in the spirit an
integral part of every concert.
Reba Rambo is gospel
music's butterfly girl. At 21
Reba is something of an
heroine to the "Jesus People"

who crowded to Explo '72
In
Houston
to
hear
her rendition of " Day
by
Day ,"
Like
her
mother Reb!: is a songwriter.
Her c~rent popul~r tune is
''Sing Me On Home" which is
arranged by her mother. Reba
was the youngest entertainer to
tour a war •one - 15 when she
traveled to VIetnam. She
always sings her gospel and
signs her name with the bt.Jef
that she has emerged from an
ugly worm into ,a butterfly
because of God.
The Rambos will present
their UtUe Hocking concert at
1:30 p.m. Sunday with an
admission of $3, children
under 12 free . Patrons are
asked to bring their own lawn
chairs ~s the concert will be
outSide. There will be shelter In
case of rain. The Double R
offers free camping for the
weekend in a Quiet coun_trv
setting. It is located _8 mile§
west Of Parkersburg on Rt, 555,
one mile off Rts. 7 and 50.
The concert will be preceded
by a poUuck picnic for mem:
hers of the Southeastern Ohio
Gospel Music Associatio~ and
their guests. Drinks w1ll be
furnished by the association
with the meal to begin at 11 :30

JltgWID~;IMI -.,.~IJ ..-~ ,_.

CHESHIRE - On Sunday,
August 19, the annual Burger
reunion was held at the Kyger
Creek employees clubhouse. At
the noon hour, Carole Kemper
gave grace.
During the afternoon games
were enjoyed with prizes going
to the winners. A business
meeting was held and new
officers elected. They are,
president, Mrs. Marie Sheets,
secretary-treasurer, Mrs.
Joyce Twy!ftan.
The reunion will be held at
the same place in 1974, the
second Sunday in September.

GALLIPOLIS
The
Sotjtlleuttrn Ohio Gospel
Jlllllllc Allociatlon will sponsor
• lftemoon wltb the Rambos,
~ z1t the Double R
lllltdl, Utile Hcking.
'l'bll wtU be the Rambos
HOOnd 1ppe1n nee this
llllilmer and they will end tbe
~ear
here with t~elr
' 'Chrlatmas Special "
,_nlatlonln mld-~mber .
Mualcal talent and a variety
It aound makea the flambos
poulbly one ol the best of
CQW~el music's groups. The
three lingers, Buck, Dottle and
dailahttr, Reba, are backed _by
1 fburi)lece band tbat can g1ve

Plans completed
GAWPOUS - Miss Joanne

Sllaoo, daughter of Mr. and

Ml'll. Herman Sisson, has
completed plans for her
lllln'lage to SUas Johnson, son
It Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Johnson.
J11e ceremony will take place
belay, September 2_at 2:'!0
p.m. at the Dickey Chapel
Church on Hannan Trace Rd.
Till gracious custom of open
church will be observed and a
~pllon will follow ·a t tbe
Hannan Trace High School for
relatives and friends.

UniCI'ambloth..e rour Jumble~
one letter to faeh square. to
form four ordinary words.

BALOT

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

,. ...J ...... t·~ ... ; -

I_' NACYJo'
'

I I

I I

J

I

I
I I

: f'E-OIED

I

1:

KIND OF
MONEY M I€&gt;1-{TCOME
FROM A SlONE .

a.m.

Mrs . Garland Lanier and
l~mlly, Mr. and M.-. Merrill
Wilco•on an&lt;! sons.
Out ol-lown guests were Mr.
and Mrs. l eli.'ln Wll co)lon and
lamll y. Ashville ; Mr. and Mrs.
Marv1n Wilcoxon and Karen,
Bellefontaine; Mr. ond Mrs.
Dick Amlin and family , Ur.
"""" ' Mr . and Mrs. Johnnie
Smllh and son, Wesl Liberty ;
David Smllh and daughter.
West Liberty : Mr . tlnd Mrs.
Raymond Wil coxon and
lam lly, Ironton ; Mr. and Mrs.

.

Ersel Wilcoxon, Coa l Grove;

Gibso n, C W. Burger, Blemma

V'

l )' e1trrd•y't
·

WHISK

ARMORY
~J

BROKEN

A.n"''""' What lo tceor lo uvout

:

blow• -A WINDBREAKER

Variety, quality and economy in
Polyester Knits is avai Iable to you at
our store. We have an enor_!Jlous
selection in Dacron 8, Triple Dacron,
100 per cent Polyester, Polyester and

daughlers. Mr. and Mrs. Rov

Crown Clly ; Jim Younkhi,

Saunders.

Circleville ; Sharon and Evelyn ·

family , · Mr.

a11d

Mrs. Roy Melford. Mr. and
Mrs. Willard Clagg, Mr. and

, wool.

•

Smith, Mr. and Mrs . Buddy

. FRENCH CITY FAB.RIC SHOP
58 COURT

SINGER APPROVED DEAlER
GAlliPOLIS, OHIO

Lan ier, Chillico th e; Dennis
Salisbury, Gallipolis; Merrill

Mr s. Richard Grove·s and ' Tr iplett.
Iron ton ;
family, Mr . and Mrs. Fa lrell Stevens, Columbus.
Shaler and f&lt;'lmily , Mr . and

Wren

!

·Clagg reunion held
GALLIPOLIS - The third
annual Clagg reunion was held
Aug . 19 at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Urban Baldwin and
daughter, Karen .
Next year's reunion will be
held at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Clayton Clagg, Orchard
Hill, the third Sunday in
August.
Those attending were Mrs.

Jessie

Cla~g ,"

Clayton Clagg, Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Clagg and Eddie, Mr . and
Mrs. Lewis Clagg and Jeffrey,
Therrell . Johnny and Cheryl
Ann. Mr . and Mrs. jack Clagg .
·and Robin. Melva, Jean, Amy
and Jon, Mr. and Mrs. David

Clagg , Henry Clagg and

Martha, Chuck1 Van Edward

and Henry Allen, Mr . ahd Mrs.

Gordon Massie and Bill. Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Evans and Cathy,
Mr . and Mrs. Paul Bonnell and

Bob, Tonv and Carol, Mr. and

Mrs. Roger 'Burnette, Mr. and
Shelby , Mr . M
rs . Ur ban Baldw i n and

252 THIRD AVENUE .
we rHerve tile rltht to limit QUJntltln OR all item a In lhll 1d. 'rlcet •Htctlve """$at.,·1••1· 1' ltU ' Nonuold to IIHI•rs·
·
1

ARMOUR* STAR -U.S. Govt. Inspected

FULLY COOKED
.

SHAIK PORTIOI

S

berly Sue, Mr. and Mrs. J. W.

Wetherholt, and Kelly Keen,
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Midkiff,
Klmi and Bobby , Mrs. Gertrude Midk iff. Mr. and Mrs.
Luther Burger, Bonnie, · Bar bara, Bill and Brenda, Mr. and

Harr.ison. Mr. ~nd Mrs. Homer
Porter, Mrs. Faye Harrison ,
Mr . and Mrs. Ed Har'rison. Mr.
and Mrs. Bert Harrison , Don
Harr ison , 'Brent and Randy.
Mr . and Mrs . Irw in Lear , Elma
Saunders, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Carter. Mr. and Mrs. , Dick

Counls.

Pa ~ty

Counts. Rick

•-----~~---------------------,

: THE slGN OF

SPECIAl
MESSADE mSCHOOl ..
HAND .-~-MEMBERS

'

Mrs. Erryest Sheets, Tom , Dan,

Dian(l and Randy, Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Burger and Kr is, Mr .
and Mrs. Ron Twyman and
Bra ndon , Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Kemper, Kim and Rocky, Hal
Burger and Jeff, Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Burger, Harry , Mark,
Rita ·and Tltfany, .Mrs. Annie
Burger, Mr. and Mrs. A.

ISIHI

10 SliP

Magarie llo. T. J. Magariello,
Mr . and Mrs. A. R. Thompson.

Harold C. Harnson, Mr. and
Mrs . Ronal d · Harrison , Missy,

Marc , and

Malt.

Roger

Harrison, Jane Kreher, Mr.
and Mrs. Daryl Shoemaker and

Bobby. Sam Lewis, Mr. and
Mrs . George Sheets and
Amber, Mr. and Mrs.

Bill
Harrison and family, Mr . and
Mrs. Roger Saunders, Roland
E. Har r ison, Marv Alice

Leaper. Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Br itton, Dan S.hifllet and

The refinement of a top
qual ity Conn band ins trume n t can ad ·d

u;s. 18. 1

AlL PURPOSE WHITE

Grade..!! .
At a

as a down payment.

Special
Low Price

Easy terms. too !

20-lb.

BAG

Utility action

Open Mon. &amp; Fri.
'Til9 P.M.

BRUNifARDI
HOUSE OF MUSIC
S4

iS criticized

STATE FARE

CLEVELAND (UPI)- Rep.
George Mastics, ])..Cleveland,
Friday labled as "unbelievable" action by the
Colmnbus' and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. in turning off
eleetriclty at a home which
was gutted by a fire the next
day in which two children were
killed.
The electric company turned
off the electricity on Wednesday at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Orvil Young in the
Columbus suburb of Hilliard
for non~yrnent of a S33.40
electric bill. A babysitter used
candles to '-light tbe house
which resulted in a fire, kUling
Shannon Young, 4, and hla
sister Heidi, 2.
"This is unvellevable," said'
Mastics. "This Is a public
utility charged to provide
service to consumers who have
no place to go.

WIENER AND SANDWICH

Slate St., 446-0681
Gallipolis. Ohio

Bruce , Li nda Harrison, Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Murray , Jusk

Headquarters for CONN

and
Jodi,
Marie Fenthi
Buchana.
Mr.
and Mr
s. Myron
e, Crys-

World's
Preferred
MusicalMost
Instruments

tal and Rhonda .

Debora)J Ann Rehl and Jeffery
Lynn I!e· both of Colwnbus.,
were uf!ted in marriage In St.
Luke'~· United Methodist
Church, Columbus, at 10:30,
August 4. ·
The bride Is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rehl,
Springfield, and Mr. and Mrs.
Jacob Lee. Racine, are the
bridegroom's parents.
The Rev·. Clifford Black

PKG. of 8

- - -

FAYGO

SAFE SAVINGS

REGULAR

BEVERA&amp;ES

GALLIPOLIS
SAVINGS
AID LOAN co.

KITCHEN CABINETS .

12-0z. Cans
DRUM

SALAD
STARD

ceremony. A program of
musi.c was pro.vided by Mrs.
Wanda Kelly, organist,
Cathy Ferrell, Columbus,
was the brid~'s honor at-·
tendant1 while Jerry Lee was
best man for his brother. Laird
Rehl, brother of the bride,
served as usber.
Hostesses for a reception In
the church social. rooms were
Mrs. Sally Lee, Mrs. Vicki
Heagren and Mrs. Connie Rehl.
Mrs. Debbie Jean Rehl attended the guest book.
Mrs. Lee is a graduate of
Shawnee High School, Clark
County and attends Franklin
University. She is employed by
Hameroff Advertising and
Public Relations Agency. Lee,
who
is
self-employed, ·
graduated from Southern
Local High School and An·
drews-Columbus ' Barber
School. He served in the U.S.
Army In Korea.
A rehearsal dinner was
hosted by the groom's parents
at Prescutti's, Columbus,
August 3.
Following a wedding trip to
Gatllnsburg, Tenn., tbe couple
is residing in Columbus.

COM~UNDED QUARTERLY -

MARRIAGE UCENSES
POMEROY Charles
William Frecker, 26, Minersville, and Marsha Neli__,Evans,
28, Minersville, Rt. 1; Thomaa
Earl Ewing, 'l:/, Mason, and
Heidi Denise Milhoan, 18,
Pomeroy, Rt. 3.

When In Need Of
AQuality Mobile Home

PI,

lottie

75·POOI
Roll

RETROACTIVE TO JULY 1, 1973

ASK US AIWT
THE HIGHEST YIElD

•CERAMIC TILE
eCONGOLEUM
•CARPET
•BUILDERS SUPPLIES

EQUALS ANNUAL
YIELD OF •.•

PAID ON SAVINGS
CUTIACATIS
IN THIS AREA

%

•

CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATES•
WE INSTALL

·THE GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS

GALLIPOLIS
FLOOR COVERINGS

and LOAN COMPANY
"So¥£ SAVINGS SINCE

•

,,
••

OHIO

SCOn TOWELS
c,VIhlt•e, · A110rted &amp; Decorated
100 ....., ~eu
2..olt 1"111,

49c
.

19(

See K &amp;K Mobile Homes.

LADY SCOn
BA'I'HROOM

TISSUE ,

,.•.

IOOih.
2..olt

31c

.

,..

• Awnlnp
• Skirting
• Utilltr Buildlnp

Our
All
Ellctllc
Meblll
llln't&amp;

.

Giant
Size
LIQUID
PLUMR

New Wagner's

LEMON LIME

3 ~t 100

64 oz.
SIZ£

119

IGA

$

GRAHAM

l-Ib.

CRACKERS

bxs.

Grand Opening
OLD FASHIONED

MILK PITCHER

IDOl

OLD FASHIONED

MOONSHINE

JUGS

OLD FASHIONED

COOKIE ·JARS
• 2..peec1 motor ... out•

mallcally ohllh Ia "hith"
with ottathmentt
• Instant rve o~vstment ..•
low plio to deep that

A cleamng tool lor all your

• Klng-siJe thr.w-away

GRANDMA,

REG. s4.95

W. C. FIELDS,
MILK CAN,

_bag

HEADliGHT
Brllllant lllumlr.atlon ror
cleaning In dimly Ill areas.

HI-POWER PORT ABLE
COMI'LITI WITH
TlliSCOI'IHO WAND

&amp;TOolS
AUOGIO ALl STHI.
CONSTtUCTION
I..AIIOIIASY TO atANOI
DtS!'OSAIUI lAO
IXTIA TOOlS
.:IIINSIDI

• central Air Conditioning

749 THIRD AVE., GALLIPOLIS, 446·1995

.

lao needle, a volcanic formation, Walklki Beach, the
Polynesian · Cultural Center,
Pearl Habor, Punch Bowl
National Cemetery, Don Ho
show and others.
Returning from Hawaii, they
visited in Concord , Calif.,
Reno, Nevada, Virginia City,
Lake Tahoe where they watched a supper show by Steve
Lawrence and . Edie Gorme,
and at Ross, Catif., visited with
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Douglas,
the former Nara Tracy,
Pomeroy, and her mother,
Mrs. Lena Trar"

MOBILE HOME SUPPLIES

•

•

MIDDLEPORT ~ Mr. and
Mrs. James Simpson have
returned from a vacation in the
West and Hawaii.
Vacationing with the Simpsons were his sisters, Mr, and
Mrs. Robert lhle, 'Keny, and
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Wolfe,
Ohnsted Falls and his brother,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hartenbach whom the group met in
Hawaii.
They visited the islands of
Hawaii, Maul and Oahu and
points of interest included an
orchid nursery Black .Sand
• .
Beach, a macadamia nutfarm,
prneapple and sugar fields, the

• Schult • Holly Park • Baron • Buddr

KEEBLER FEATURE
CLUB CRACKERS •••• ~~~: 51 c
CINNAMON CRISPS ~:;.-· 55c

.
.
. Strength IS born 10 the deep
s.1lence ·of long suffermg
hearts; not amid joy . - Felicia' Hemans, English novelist.

Return from vacation

TOOL SALE PRICED
AT JUST $'-93

CUT-RITE WIX PAPER,
l

a

·ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
Drake are announcing the engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Sharon Elizabeth, to Terry
Reiber, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reiber, Racine . Miss
Drake Is a 1972graduate of Southern High School and plans to
attend an airline school In Kansas, Mo. this fall. Her fiance is
a 1969 gradW!te of Southrn High and is stationed in the U. S.
Navy at Norfolk, Va. Wedding plans are incomplete.

needs.

KRAFT

ON PASSBOOK SAVINGS

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Gardner entertained
with party In observance of
the first birthday anniversary
of their son, Christopher Andrew Gardner, August 15.
Cake and ice cream were
served. Guests were Mr. and
Mrs. Andrew Fields, Mr. and
Mrs. l. W. Gibbs, Tim Fields,
Miss Lois Ann Gibbs, Lori and
Bobby Botin, Kelly Ann Garner. Sending gifts were Mrs.
Park McDaniel, and Mr. and
Mrs. Gary King and Matthew.

"IT BEATS, AS IT SWEEPS, AS IT CLEANS"

Jar

SANDWICH SPREAD

A LOWER PRICEI

Miss Sharon Elizabeth Drake

groom, will be flower girl.
Harris has chosen John
Osborne, Xenia, to serve as his
best man. Serving as ushers
will be Bill Beegle, Barry Hart
and Roy Ralph Smith. Kevin
Bruce, Westerville, cousin of
the groom, will be the ring
bearer.
Carol Holter, Columbus, and
Heidi Ashpey, .eouslna of the
bride, will regiSter the guests.
Pre-nuptial music .wiU begin
CLOTIIING OFFERED
at 2 p.m. with Lillian Hayman
CHESHIRE _ A free .
as pianist.
clothing day will be held at the
Serving at the reception will . Gallia-Meigs community
be Garcia Adams, Hawaii, Center, Cheshire, Friday, Aug.
LindaHammandSandySayre.
·
d•
31 between 8 a.m. an • p.m.
AU friends of the bride and sponsored by th-e Gallia-Meigs
groom are cordially Invited to C.A.P. for low Income families
~!tend,
living ·tn Meigs and Gallia
Counties.

~!r!a~f:ee v~s~~~c~:~~~~~~~g

I

Host party

Plans finalized

I

lOA CONN

greatly to your _progress. Stop in and test.
play a Conn, now. P1ck
from a wide range of
. mode ls Your pre sent
.
·
mstrument ca n be used

'

RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs. Christian l:&gt;iehl will observe
thefl: 50th wedding anniversary S'!IH~ay, Sept. 9; with an open
houM! at their Salem St. residence In Rutland. Mr. and Mrs.
Diehl have one BOn, Robert, Mllbury, one granddaughter, six
granclsons, and nve great-grandchildren. Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Dieh-l and famtly will host the open house observance
and friends and relatives of the couple are Invited to call
dutil}g the open house hours of 2to 4p.m.

RACINE - Miss Deborah M.
Cross, rlde~lect of Jeffrey c.
Harris, has completed plans
for her~eddlng which will take
place at the Racine First
!laptlst Church at 2:30 p.m.
Sundax, Sept. 2, with Rev.
Freeland Norris officiating.
'
The sraclous.
custom of open
ch-urch will be observed. The
reception wiU be held at the
Racine Legion Hall Immediately following the
ceremony.
Mias!Cross has chosen her
sister, plana Cross, Columbus,
to serve as her maid of honor.
Bridesh.lds ·will be Donna,
Denise: and Della Cross, also
sisters 1of the bride. Heather
Osborne,
Xenia, cousin of the
I

Bu rger , Sue,
Glenna
Karynn
Mr.Barringer
and Mrs. and
M. · - - - - - - - - 0 . Bush . Michael and Kim-

Tawney; Wayne and Lynn,
Mrs. John Hager and Sharon,
Mr. and Mrs. l onnie Burger,
Mr . and Mrs.
Limhille

.

Mr. and Mrs. Christilln Diehl

OPEN 9 TIL 9 DAILY .,. CLOSED SUNDAY

and Mrs. Bnsco Baldwm, Noah
Willia ms . Mr . and Mrs. Karen. Paul Sni der .

annual Hirrison reunion was Mrs. Francis Bell. Mr . and Mrs
held Sunday, August 19 at the John Burl ile; Jr. and Travis,
Delawar e Fairgrounds , Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence
Harrison , Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
Delaware.
Ward, Sherr! Ward, Tammi
. Grace was given by · Bill Stewart. Mr . . and Mrs. Bill
Harrison. During the afternoon Mangold and family,· Mr. and
Ed Slagle, · Chris, Mrs.
games were played with prizes Mrs.
Robert S tarli n~ and Jodi. Mr.
going
to Mrs.
Daryl and Mrs. Maman Porter. Mrs .
Shoemaker, Mrs BiUMangold, Mary Porter , Chester Leaper ,
Belly Rya l Lea per. Mr . and
Mrs. Clara Harrison and Mrs . . Mrs.
Roy Parsens and Gwen,
Lawrence Harrison.
Lucille Porter, tJ~r . and Mrs.
· Attend ing were Fred Leaper ,
Mr . and Mrs. Irwin Harrison
and son, Mr. and Mrs. Fred

SUNDA'k'
SWARTZ f1mlly reunion.
wlll be held In the Woode
Grove at Alfred. Everyone
welcome.
MONDAY
~ POMEROY .Chamber
of CO!nlnerce at noon at Meigs
Inn. All members urged to
attend.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT . Masonic
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM annual
father«~~~ banquet at 6:30p.m.
at lodge hall.
SPECIAL meeting . of
Eastem Board of Education at
8 p.m. at high school.
WEDNESDAY
WILDWOOD Garden Club
meeting 8 p.m. at home of Mrs.
Alfred Yeauger with Mrs.
Clifford Phillips as assisting
hostess.

Rona ld Wilcoxon and $Qn, Mr . '
Friends attending were Doug
arid Mrs. D&amp;wey Wll c;o~~:on , Mr . Smi l tl, Urbana ,· Mr . and Mrs.
i)nd Mrs . Clarence Wil coxon. Henry Hudson, Helen Akers,
lawr~nce
Wilcoxon and Gallipolis ; John Cardwell ,

Counts , Ruby Lewis, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Irwin, Tom Irwin,

(.\ni WUI ~onday )

\J•mbl•" DUNCI

AT

At lending were Mr. and Mrs . Mr. and Mrs. Rober! 0 ' Brien
Will is Wilcoxon. Mr. and Mrs . and famil y, Degraff.

reunion held
C~:JI'riii~..~~~~~IIISWII~~-~JI 'T XI XXJ" Harrison
DELAWARE - The fourth

· •.

Social
Calendar

·Burger reunion held recently

Present were Mrs. Edyth

Now arranre the circled letters
~ to form the aurpriH anawer, u
. . I&gt;, ;1 sunested by theabove cartoon,

GALLIPOLIS
The
Wilcoxon reunion was held
August 5 at the home of
Clarence and Hazel Wilcoxon .
The youngest member was
Nancy Sue Lanier, six montll
old daughter of Garland and
Susie Lanier.
Entertainment was provided
by Sheri Saunders ,- Joey
Wilcoxen and Steven Wilcoxen .

urge Assortment

PLANTERS

GLASSES
SET OF

11 OZ. SIZE

UOHTWIIOHT
&amp; COM,ACT

52911

EACH

FOR

COMPLETE

111IIIIIIIIV
...Iii'~ ~ · ~~ ·"' ' l• fl l ... .. ~111 1 6 ,, ...

FURNITURE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

_

"- • lechitll "-• loinl
In lrlllji
.
.....I".:.'"Vwou....T..h..,lt...Mn-.~ot~_•_..,..
J

'

'

�· •-1'11e SundayTimee·Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 26,1973

I

Rambos to present area concert Wilcoxon reunion held
gospel music any sound
Imaginable. They feature a
sacred-country style that is
interspersed with Reba's own
brJnd of contemporary gospel.
Although she neither reads
nor writes musical notes,
Dottle Rambo Is one of
America's foremost gospe l
music writers. Dottie writes
almost all of the music the
Rambos perform and testifies
as she sing., of the iru]plration
God gives her . songwrlnting.
Most of Dottie's songs deal
with- her experiences. She has
~n writing songs since she
was nine years old.
Buck Rambo managed the
group and is president of
Rambo Music, Inc. and the
Rambo
Eva nge listi c
Association. Buck's illness last
year forced the Ramb&lt;Js·off the
road and threatened to mean
retirement for the group. But
he came back ,as did the group,
with new ideas about
costuming, performing and
spreading the gospel. The
Rambos conduct their concerts
as services of worship and
praise. Buck says th~t. ::i~­
novation through the sp1nt IS
tile key to a successful gospel
music group and he strives to
keep innovation in the spirit an
integral part of every concert.
Reba Rambo is gospel
music's butterfly girl. At 21
Reba is something of an
heroine to the "Jesus People"

who crowded to Explo '72
In
Houston
to
hear
her rendition of " Day
by
Day ,"
Like
her
mother Reb!: is a songwriter.
Her c~rent popul~r tune is
''Sing Me On Home" which is
arranged by her mother. Reba
was the youngest entertainer to
tour a war •one - 15 when she
traveled to VIetnam. She
always sings her gospel and
signs her name with the bt.Jef
that she has emerged from an
ugly worm into ,a butterfly
because of God.
The Rambos will present
their UtUe Hocking concert at
1:30 p.m. Sunday with an
admission of $3, children
under 12 free . Patrons are
asked to bring their own lawn
chairs ~s the concert will be
outSide. There will be shelter In
case of rain. The Double R
offers free camping for the
weekend in a Quiet coun_trv
setting. It is located _8 mile§
west Of Parkersburg on Rt, 555,
one mile off Rts. 7 and 50.
The concert will be preceded
by a poUuck picnic for mem:
hers of the Southeastern Ohio
Gospel Music Associatio~ and
their guests. Drinks w1ll be
furnished by the association
with the meal to begin at 11 :30

JltgWID~;IMI -.,.~IJ ..-~ ,_.

CHESHIRE - On Sunday,
August 19, the annual Burger
reunion was held at the Kyger
Creek employees clubhouse. At
the noon hour, Carole Kemper
gave grace.
During the afternoon games
were enjoyed with prizes going
to the winners. A business
meeting was held and new
officers elected. They are,
president, Mrs. Marie Sheets,
secretary-treasurer, Mrs.
Joyce Twy!ftan.
The reunion will be held at
the same place in 1974, the
second Sunday in September.

GALLIPOLIS
The
Sotjtlleuttrn Ohio Gospel
Jlllllllc Allociatlon will sponsor
• lftemoon wltb the Rambos,
~ z1t the Double R
lllltdl, Utile Hcking.
'l'bll wtU be the Rambos
HOOnd 1ppe1n nee this
llllilmer and they will end tbe
~ear
here with t~elr
' 'Chrlatmas Special "
,_nlatlonln mld-~mber .
Mualcal talent and a variety
It aound makea the flambos
poulbly one ol the best of
CQW~el music's groups. The
three lingers, Buck, Dottle and
dailahttr, Reba, are backed _by
1 fburi)lece band tbat can g1ve

Plans completed
GAWPOUS - Miss Joanne

Sllaoo, daughter of Mr. and

Ml'll. Herman Sisson, has
completed plans for her
lllln'lage to SUas Johnson, son
It Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Johnson.
J11e ceremony will take place
belay, September 2_at 2:'!0
p.m. at the Dickey Chapel
Church on Hannan Trace Rd.
Till gracious custom of open
church will be observed and a
~pllon will follow ·a t tbe
Hannan Trace High School for
relatives and friends.

UniCI'ambloth..e rour Jumble~
one letter to faeh square. to
form four ordinary words.

BALOT

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

,. ...J ...... t·~ ... ; -

I_' NACYJo'
'

I I

I I

J

I

I
I I

: f'E-OIED

I

1:

KIND OF
MONEY M I€&gt;1-{TCOME
FROM A SlONE .

a.m.

Mrs . Garland Lanier and
l~mlly, Mr. and M.-. Merrill
Wilco•on an&lt;! sons.
Out ol-lown guests were Mr.
and Mrs. l eli.'ln Wll co)lon and
lamll y. Ashville ; Mr. and Mrs.
Marv1n Wilcoxon and Karen,
Bellefontaine; Mr. ond Mrs.
Dick Amlin and family , Ur.
"""" ' Mr . and Mrs. Johnnie
Smllh and son, Wesl Liberty ;
David Smllh and daughter.
West Liberty : Mr . tlnd Mrs.
Raymond Wil coxon and
lam lly, Ironton ; Mr. and Mrs.

.

Ersel Wilcoxon, Coa l Grove;

Gibso n, C W. Burger, Blemma

V'

l )' e1trrd•y't
·

WHISK

ARMORY
~J

BROKEN

A.n"''""' What lo tceor lo uvout

:

blow• -A WINDBREAKER

Variety, quality and economy in
Polyester Knits is avai Iable to you at
our store. We have an enor_!Jlous
selection in Dacron 8, Triple Dacron,
100 per cent Polyester, Polyester and

daughlers. Mr. and Mrs. Rov

Crown Clly ; Jim Younkhi,

Saunders.

Circleville ; Sharon and Evelyn ·

family , · Mr.

a11d

Mrs. Roy Melford. Mr. and
Mrs. Willard Clagg, Mr. and

, wool.

•

Smith, Mr. and Mrs . Buddy

. FRENCH CITY FAB.RIC SHOP
58 COURT

SINGER APPROVED DEAlER
GAlliPOLIS, OHIO

Lan ier, Chillico th e; Dennis
Salisbury, Gallipolis; Merrill

Mr s. Richard Grove·s and ' Tr iplett.
Iron ton ;
family, Mr . and Mrs. Fa lrell Stevens, Columbus.
Shaler and f&lt;'lmily , Mr . and

Wren

!

·Clagg reunion held
GALLIPOLIS - The third
annual Clagg reunion was held
Aug . 19 at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Urban Baldwin and
daughter, Karen .
Next year's reunion will be
held at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Clayton Clagg, Orchard
Hill, the third Sunday in
August.
Those attending were Mrs.

Jessie

Cla~g ,"

Clayton Clagg, Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Clagg and Eddie, Mr . and
Mrs. Lewis Clagg and Jeffrey,
Therrell . Johnny and Cheryl
Ann. Mr . and Mrs. jack Clagg .
·and Robin. Melva, Jean, Amy
and Jon, Mr. and Mrs. David

Clagg , Henry Clagg and

Martha, Chuck1 Van Edward

and Henry Allen, Mr . ahd Mrs.

Gordon Massie and Bill. Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Evans and Cathy,
Mr . and Mrs. Paul Bonnell and

Bob, Tonv and Carol, Mr. and

Mrs. Roger 'Burnette, Mr. and
Shelby , Mr . M
rs . Ur ban Baldw i n and

252 THIRD AVENUE .
we rHerve tile rltht to limit QUJntltln OR all item a In lhll 1d. 'rlcet •Htctlve """$at.,·1••1· 1' ltU ' Nonuold to IIHI•rs·
·
1

ARMOUR* STAR -U.S. Govt. Inspected

FULLY COOKED
.

SHAIK PORTIOI

S

berly Sue, Mr. and Mrs. J. W.

Wetherholt, and Kelly Keen,
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Midkiff,
Klmi and Bobby , Mrs. Gertrude Midk iff. Mr. and Mrs.
Luther Burger, Bonnie, · Bar bara, Bill and Brenda, Mr. and

Harr.ison. Mr. ~nd Mrs. Homer
Porter, Mrs. Faye Harrison ,
Mr . and Mrs. Ed Har'rison. Mr.
and Mrs. Bert Harrison , Don
Harr ison , 'Brent and Randy.
Mr . and Mrs . Irw in Lear , Elma
Saunders, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Carter. Mr. and Mrs. , Dick

Counls.

Pa ~ty

Counts. Rick

•-----~~---------------------,

: THE slGN OF

SPECIAl
MESSADE mSCHOOl ..
HAND .-~-MEMBERS

'

Mrs. Erryest Sheets, Tom , Dan,

Dian(l and Randy, Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Burger and Kr is, Mr .
and Mrs. Ron Twyman and
Bra ndon , Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Kemper, Kim and Rocky, Hal
Burger and Jeff, Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Burger, Harry , Mark,
Rita ·and Tltfany, .Mrs. Annie
Burger, Mr. and Mrs. A.

ISIHI

10 SliP

Magarie llo. T. J. Magariello,
Mr . and Mrs. A. R. Thompson.

Harold C. Harnson, Mr. and
Mrs . Ronal d · Harrison , Missy,

Marc , and

Malt.

Roger

Harrison, Jane Kreher, Mr.
and Mrs. Daryl Shoemaker and

Bobby. Sam Lewis, Mr. and
Mrs . George Sheets and
Amber, Mr. and Mrs.

Bill
Harrison and family, Mr . and
Mrs. Roger Saunders, Roland
E. Har r ison, Marv Alice

Leaper. Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Br itton, Dan S.hifllet and

The refinement of a top
qual ity Conn band ins trume n t can ad ·d

u;s. 18. 1

AlL PURPOSE WHITE

Grade..!! .
At a

as a down payment.

Special
Low Price

Easy terms. too !

20-lb.

BAG

Utility action

Open Mon. &amp; Fri.
'Til9 P.M.

BRUNifARDI
HOUSE OF MUSIC
S4

iS criticized

STATE FARE

CLEVELAND (UPI)- Rep.
George Mastics, ])..Cleveland,
Friday labled as "unbelievable" action by the
Colmnbus' and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. in turning off
eleetriclty at a home which
was gutted by a fire the next
day in which two children were
killed.
The electric company turned
off the electricity on Wednesday at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Orvil Young in the
Columbus suburb of Hilliard
for non~yrnent of a S33.40
electric bill. A babysitter used
candles to '-light tbe house
which resulted in a fire, kUling
Shannon Young, 4, and hla
sister Heidi, 2.
"This is unvellevable," said'
Mastics. "This Is a public
utility charged to provide
service to consumers who have
no place to go.

WIENER AND SANDWICH

Slate St., 446-0681
Gallipolis. Ohio

Bruce , Li nda Harrison, Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Murray , Jusk

Headquarters for CONN

and
Jodi,
Marie Fenthi
Buchana.
Mr.
and Mr
s. Myron
e, Crys-

World's
Preferred
MusicalMost
Instruments

tal and Rhonda .

Debora)J Ann Rehl and Jeffery
Lynn I!e· both of Colwnbus.,
were uf!ted in marriage In St.
Luke'~· United Methodist
Church, Columbus, at 10:30,
August 4. ·
The bride Is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rehl,
Springfield, and Mr. and Mrs.
Jacob Lee. Racine, are the
bridegroom's parents.
The Rev·. Clifford Black

PKG. of 8

- - -

FAYGO

SAFE SAVINGS

REGULAR

BEVERA&amp;ES

GALLIPOLIS
SAVINGS
AID LOAN co.

KITCHEN CABINETS .

12-0z. Cans
DRUM

SALAD
STARD

ceremony. A program of
musi.c was pro.vided by Mrs.
Wanda Kelly, organist,
Cathy Ferrell, Columbus,
was the brid~'s honor at-·
tendant1 while Jerry Lee was
best man for his brother. Laird
Rehl, brother of the bride,
served as usber.
Hostesses for a reception In
the church social. rooms were
Mrs. Sally Lee, Mrs. Vicki
Heagren and Mrs. Connie Rehl.
Mrs. Debbie Jean Rehl attended the guest book.
Mrs. Lee is a graduate of
Shawnee High School, Clark
County and attends Franklin
University. She is employed by
Hameroff Advertising and
Public Relations Agency. Lee,
who
is
self-employed, ·
graduated from Southern
Local High School and An·
drews-Columbus ' Barber
School. He served in the U.S.
Army In Korea.
A rehearsal dinner was
hosted by the groom's parents
at Prescutti's, Columbus,
August 3.
Following a wedding trip to
Gatllnsburg, Tenn., tbe couple
is residing in Columbus.

COM~UNDED QUARTERLY -

MARRIAGE UCENSES
POMEROY Charles
William Frecker, 26, Minersville, and Marsha Neli__,Evans,
28, Minersville, Rt. 1; Thomaa
Earl Ewing, 'l:/, Mason, and
Heidi Denise Milhoan, 18,
Pomeroy, Rt. 3.

When In Need Of
AQuality Mobile Home

PI,

lottie

75·POOI
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RETROACTIVE TO JULY 1, 1973

ASK US AIWT
THE HIGHEST YIElD

•CERAMIC TILE
eCONGOLEUM
•CARPET
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EQUALS ANNUAL
YIELD OF •.•

PAID ON SAVINGS
CUTIACATIS
IN THIS AREA

%

•

CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATES•
WE INSTALL

·THE GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS

GALLIPOLIS
FLOOR COVERINGS

and LOAN COMPANY
"So¥£ SAVINGS SINCE

•

,,
••

OHIO

SCOn TOWELS
c,VIhlt•e, · A110rted &amp; Decorated
100 ....., ~eu
2..olt 1"111,

49c
.

19(

See K &amp;K Mobile Homes.

LADY SCOn
BA'I'HROOM

TISSUE ,

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Our
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OLD FASHIONED

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IDOl

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OLD FASHIONED

COOKIE ·JARS
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mallcally ohllh Ia "hith"
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749 THIRD AVE., GALLIPOLIS, 446·1995

.

lao needle, a volcanic formation, Walklki Beach, the
Polynesian · Cultural Center,
Pearl Habor, Punch Bowl
National Cemetery, Don Ho
show and others.
Returning from Hawaii, they
visited in Concord , Calif.,
Reno, Nevada, Virginia City,
Lake Tahoe where they watched a supper show by Steve
Lawrence and . Edie Gorme,
and at Ross, Catif., visited with
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Douglas,
the former Nara Tracy,
Pomeroy, and her mother,
Mrs. Lena Trar"

MOBILE HOME SUPPLIES

•

•

MIDDLEPORT ~ Mr. and
Mrs. James Simpson have
returned from a vacation in the
West and Hawaii.
Vacationing with the Simpsons were his sisters, Mr, and
Mrs. Robert lhle, 'Keny, and
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Wolfe,
Ohnsted Falls and his brother,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hartenbach whom the group met in
Hawaii.
They visited the islands of
Hawaii, Maul and Oahu and
points of interest included an
orchid nursery Black .Sand
• .
Beach, a macadamia nutfarm,
prneapple and sugar fields, the

• Schult • Holly Park • Baron • Buddr

KEEBLER FEATURE
CLUB CRACKERS •••• ~~~: 51 c
CINNAMON CRISPS ~:;.-· 55c

.
.
. Strength IS born 10 the deep
s.1lence ·of long suffermg
hearts; not amid joy . - Felicia' Hemans, English novelist.

Return from vacation

TOOL SALE PRICED
AT JUST $'-93

CUT-RITE WIX PAPER,
l

a

·ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
Drake are announcing the engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Sharon Elizabeth, to Terry
Reiber, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reiber, Racine . Miss
Drake Is a 1972graduate of Southern High School and plans to
attend an airline school In Kansas, Mo. this fall. Her fiance is
a 1969 gradW!te of Southrn High and is stationed in the U. S.
Navy at Norfolk, Va. Wedding plans are incomplete.

needs.

KRAFT

ON PASSBOOK SAVINGS

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Gardner entertained
with party In observance of
the first birthday anniversary
of their son, Christopher Andrew Gardner, August 15.
Cake and ice cream were
served. Guests were Mr. and
Mrs. Andrew Fields, Mr. and
Mrs. l. W. Gibbs, Tim Fields,
Miss Lois Ann Gibbs, Lori and
Bobby Botin, Kelly Ann Garner. Sending gifts were Mrs.
Park McDaniel, and Mr. and
Mrs. Gary King and Matthew.

"IT BEATS, AS IT SWEEPS, AS IT CLEANS"

Jar

SANDWICH SPREAD

A LOWER PRICEI

Miss Sharon Elizabeth Drake

groom, will be flower girl.
Harris has chosen John
Osborne, Xenia, to serve as his
best man. Serving as ushers
will be Bill Beegle, Barry Hart
and Roy Ralph Smith. Kevin
Bruce, Westerville, cousin of
the groom, will be the ring
bearer.
Carol Holter, Columbus, and
Heidi Ashpey, .eouslna of the
bride, will regiSter the guests.
Pre-nuptial music .wiU begin
CLOTIIING OFFERED
at 2 p.m. with Lillian Hayman
CHESHIRE _ A free .
as pianist.
clothing day will be held at the
Serving at the reception will . Gallia-Meigs community
be Garcia Adams, Hawaii, Center, Cheshire, Friday, Aug.
LindaHammandSandySayre.
·
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31 between 8 a.m. an • p.m.
AU friends of the bride and sponsored by th-e Gallia-Meigs
groom are cordially Invited to C.A.P. for low Income families
~!tend,
living ·tn Meigs and Gallia
Counties.

~!r!a~f:ee v~s~~~c~:~~~~~~~g

I

Host party

Plans finalized

I

lOA CONN

greatly to your _progress. Stop in and test.
play a Conn, now. P1ck
from a wide range of
. mode ls Your pre sent
.
·
mstrument ca n be used

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RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs. Christian l:&gt;iehl will observe
thefl: 50th wedding anniversary S'!IH~ay, Sept. 9; with an open
houM! at their Salem St. residence In Rutland. Mr. and Mrs.
Diehl have one BOn, Robert, Mllbury, one granddaughter, six
granclsons, and nve great-grandchildren. Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Dieh-l and famtly will host the open house observance
and friends and relatives of the couple are Invited to call
dutil}g the open house hours of 2to 4p.m.

RACINE - Miss Deborah M.
Cross, rlde~lect of Jeffrey c.
Harris, has completed plans
for her~eddlng which will take
place at the Racine First
!laptlst Church at 2:30 p.m.
Sundax, Sept. 2, with Rev.
Freeland Norris officiating.
'
The sraclous.
custom of open
ch-urch will be observed. The
reception wiU be held at the
Racine Legion Hall Immediately following the
ceremony.
Mias!Cross has chosen her
sister, plana Cross, Columbus,
to serve as her maid of honor.
Bridesh.lds ·will be Donna,
Denise: and Della Cross, also
sisters 1of the bride. Heather
Osborne,
Xenia, cousin of the
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Bu rger , Sue,
Glenna
Karynn
Mr.Barringer
and Mrs. and
M. · - - - - - - - - 0 . Bush . Michael and Kim-

Tawney; Wayne and Lynn,
Mrs. John Hager and Sharon,
Mr. and Mrs. l onnie Burger,
Mr . and Mrs.
Limhille

.

Mr. and Mrs. Christilln Diehl

OPEN 9 TIL 9 DAILY .,. CLOSED SUNDAY

and Mrs. Bnsco Baldwm, Noah
Willia ms . Mr . and Mrs. Karen. Paul Sni der .

annual Hirrison reunion was Mrs. Francis Bell. Mr . and Mrs
held Sunday, August 19 at the John Burl ile; Jr. and Travis,
Delawar e Fairgrounds , Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence
Harrison , Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
Delaware.
Ward, Sherr! Ward, Tammi
. Grace was given by · Bill Stewart. Mr . . and Mrs. Bill
Harrison. During the afternoon Mangold and family,· Mr. and
Ed Slagle, · Chris, Mrs.
games were played with prizes Mrs.
Robert S tarli n~ and Jodi. Mr.
going
to Mrs.
Daryl and Mrs. Maman Porter. Mrs .
Shoemaker, Mrs BiUMangold, Mary Porter , Chester Leaper ,
Belly Rya l Lea per. Mr . and
Mrs. Clara Harrison and Mrs . . Mrs.
Roy Parsens and Gwen,
Lawrence Harrison.
Lucille Porter, tJ~r . and Mrs.
· Attend ing were Fred Leaper ,
Mr . and Mrs. Irwin Harrison
and son, Mr. and Mrs. Fred

SUNDA'k'
SWARTZ f1mlly reunion.
wlll be held In the Woode
Grove at Alfred. Everyone
welcome.
MONDAY
~ POMEROY .Chamber
of CO!nlnerce at noon at Meigs
Inn. All members urged to
attend.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT . Masonic
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM annual
father«~~~ banquet at 6:30p.m.
at lodge hall.
SPECIAL meeting . of
Eastem Board of Education at
8 p.m. at high school.
WEDNESDAY
WILDWOOD Garden Club
meeting 8 p.m. at home of Mrs.
Alfred Yeauger with Mrs.
Clifford Phillips as assisting
hostess.

Rona ld Wilcoxon and $Qn, Mr . '
Friends attending were Doug
arid Mrs. D&amp;wey Wll c;o~~:on , Mr . Smi l tl, Urbana ,· Mr . and Mrs.
i)nd Mrs . Clarence Wil coxon. Henry Hudson, Helen Akers,
lawr~nce
Wilcoxon and Gallipolis ; John Cardwell ,

Counts , Ruby Lewis, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Irwin, Tom Irwin,

(.\ni WUI ~onday )

\J•mbl•" DUNCI

AT

At lending were Mr. and Mrs . Mr. and Mrs. Rober! 0 ' Brien
Will is Wilcoxon. Mr. and Mrs . and famil y, Degraff.

reunion held
C~:JI'riii~..~~~~~IIISWII~~-~JI 'T XI XXJ" Harrison
DELAWARE - The fourth

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Social
Calendar

·Burger reunion held recently

Present were Mrs. Edyth

Now arranre the circled letters
~ to form the aurpriH anawer, u
. . I&gt;, ;1 sunested by theabove cartoon,

GALLIPOLIS
The
Wilcoxon reunion was held
August 5 at the home of
Clarence and Hazel Wilcoxon .
The youngest member was
Nancy Sue Lanier, six montll
old daughter of Garland and
Susie Lanier.
Entertainment was provided
by Sheri Saunders ,- Joey
Wilcoxen and Steven Wilcoxen .

urge Assortment

PLANTERS

GLASSES
SET OF

11 OZ. SIZE

UOHTWIIOHT
&amp; COM,ACT

52911

EACH

FOR

COMPLETE

111IIIIIIIIV
...Iii'~ ~ · ~~ ·"' ' l• fl l ... .. ~111 1 6 ,, ...

FURNITURE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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"- • lechitll "-• loinl
In lrlllji
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Members of the OleSter High Class of 1931 present for the recent class reunion Include

seated, left to right, Pauline Ridenour, Mildred Collins, l.Alnora Betzing and Clifford Hayes ;
standing, Henry Beaver (teacher), Irene Parker, Opal Wickham, Esther Gooch, Earl Knight
l!eacher), Betty Fell, John Bailey, Nellie Parker, Fred Smith and VirgU McElroy.

Chester High reunion held
CHESTER -

5tembers of
ths Chester High Class of 1931
held Their annual picnic Sunday, July 29 at the Chester Fire
HoWle with Mr. and Mrs. John
Wickham the hosts.

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A basket dinner was. enjoyed
at noon . Mrs. Raymond Gooch
asked the blessing. The group
read a thank-you note from the
family of Wilma Fenton for
flowers sent to her funeral.
Get-well cards were signed to
be sent to Mrs. Clifford Haye8,

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Mrs. Hallie Huloert and Mrs.
John Bailey . .The ·class was
happy to have two former
teachers present: Earl Knight ·
and Henry Beaver.
Others present were Mr. and
Mrs. Wilber Parker, NJrs.
Joseph Poole and Will, John
Bailey, Virgil McElroy, Mrs.
Mary Buck, Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Parker, Mr. and Mrs.
Buel Ridenour, Lenora Betzing, Clifford and Greg Hayes,
Mr. and Mrs. Fred B. Smith,
Henry B•~ver, Jean Sum-

merfield, Earl Knight, all of
Meigs County; Mr. and Mrs.
Daria. Fell, Washington Court
House; Mrs. Mildred Collins,
Canton; Edward Parker,
Columbus; Mr . ·and Mrs.
Nelson Stewart, Conneant.;
Rodney Parker, Parkersburg,
West Virginia ; Mr. and Mrs .
Rayroond Gooch, Gallipolis.
The reunion will be held next
year on the last Sunday In July.
The place will be announced
later .

[ Forest Run WSCS meets
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. I'OMEROY - Members of presented: "Joanne Bethune"
WSCS of the Forest Run by Mrs. John Scott; "Ann
United Methodist Church held Wilkins" by Mrs. Alfred
their monthly meeting at the Yeauger; ."Diane Deutsch" by
church Tuesday evening,
· · Mrs. Olan Genheimer and
The meeting opened with a "Lenore Johnson" by Mrs.
song _by the group and prayer Uswin Nease. A discussion of
. by Mrs. Richard Jarvis. 1\frs. the readings was held. Also
DenverHolterwaslnchargeof Included in the program were
the program and her topic was articles pertaining to the
"Personal Mission" taken subject. They were "Message
from the program book "Uve a to the Heart," Mrs. Richard
New Life." The purpose was to Jarvis; "When 'the Phone
make women more aware of Rlngs,"Mrs Russ Watson; "A
the mission opportunities open Day of Loving," Mrs. Fred
to them, to describe mission Nease; "How to Have a Per,
.projects in the world,and what feet Day," Mrs. Ullian Henwomen in the past and present derson; ''The Quiet People,"
have undertaken.
Mrs. Lawrence Napper; "i Ask
The following readings were Why ' Doesn't Somebody do
th~

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PORTI.AND -A reunion of
the descendants of Hiram (Ott)
and Wllhernina Hensley was
held Sunday, August 19 at Portland Park. There were 71 in
attendance.
They were Mr. and Mrs.
Anton Uter and son Richard,
-Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Haley,
Debbie, Kim, Tammy and
Christie, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
MUIJ'ay, Mrs. Iva Carpenter,
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Spencer,
Terri and Jeff, Mr. and Mrs.
Butch Carpenter, Wendy,
Jody, Timmy and Craig, Mr.
and 1/'~rs. , Roger Carpenter,
Rogef;;; ~.r'., and Gregory, Mr.
and Mrs. John P. Hensley ·and
Dick, Mr . and Mrs. Jo
Rebecca, J. D. and Colleen,
.George Hensley, Sr., Mr. and

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REEDSVILLE - Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Robbins, 1923
Washington Blvd., B.~lpre,
celebrated their 50th wedding
anniversary at the Lions Club
Building in Belpre. The couple
was married Mlly 6, 1923.
Mrs. Robbins is the former
Ethel Farley, daughter of the
late Thomas and Sarah Farley.
Ro~bins is the son of the late
John and Mary Robbins. They
have four children, Curtis
Robbins, Pataskala, Mrs. Orna
Cox, New Cumberland, W. Ya.,
Mrs. Da Osborne, Long Bottom, and Mrs. Avis Lou Welch,
Eaton. There are 12 grandchildren and one greatgrandchild.
Attending the celebration
were Mr. and Mrs. Curtis
Robbins, Cheryl, Roland, and

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RACINE - Kindergarten
• . llllignments for the Southern
IAlcal School District have
' bej!ll completed. They Include: .
•
Morning class, kindergarten,
lmi Adams, Wanda Adkins,
; Jay Bostick, Alana Lyons,
C&amp;role Cross, Kerri Taylor,
Kelly Rizer' Kendal Rizer'
Tom Proffitt, Bob Ritchie,
:
Regina Nance, Darin stafford,
• David Duffy, Becky Adkins,
• Juanita Guinther, David
• Hubbard, Melissa Hubbard,
. Randall Roush, Jeff Frank,
i . · Mike Chancey, Chad Sayre,
; Jerry Jo Grueser, Brian
; ; Freeman, Kelley Grueser,
• Kennetb Grueser, Mike
, Qmdlff, Ty Blaker, Melinda
I
Hlll, Scott Grueser, Becky
Roush, Jill Nease , Eric
, , Thbren, Rooald Rice, Melissa
' · lhle, Richard Werry, Becky

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Vore, high priestess, will be
guest of honor. Reservations
are to be sent to Miss Shirley
Beegle on or before Monday,
September 17.
An invitation was extended
to the Shrlnettes and their
families tO come to the Twin
City Shrine Club picnic at the
park in Racine on Labor Day at
2 p.m. They are to bring
covered dishes.
The October meeting will be
at the home of Mrs. Barbara
Dugan, October 18.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Adams, assisted by
Mrs. Barbara Dugan, to Mrs.
Mary . Hughes, Mrs. Marie
Hawkins, Mrs. Irma Yoho,
Mrs. Beulah Ewing, Mrs.
Gertrude Mitchell, Mrs. Cora
Beegle and Miss Shirley
Beegle.

Fall Comes To
lola's

Vows exchanged

Average factory
wage at $203
during ]uiy

POMEROY - In an af- shape surrounded by carternoon ceremony August 4 at nations, daisies an.d baby's
the Faith Evangelical Free breath.
Church at GarrettSville, Ohio,
Mrs. Patricia Hall, WindMiss · . Diana Kitelinger, ham, served as matron of
daughter of Mr, and Mrs. honor. She wore a mint green
William R. Kitelinger, Wind- dotted swiss gown with an
ham, and George E. Skinner, empire waist, gathered at the
son of Mr. and Mrs. George B. back with a bow from which
Skinner,_Rt. 3, · Pomeroy ex- fell a' hemline !rain. The atchanged wedding vows.
tendants were Miss Cynthie
The Rev. LeRoy Glover Brobst, Warren, Mrs. Mark
performed the ceremony Grueser, sister of the groom,
following a program of organ Shade, and Mrs . Anthony
music by Mrs. Ralph Dutter, Sprague, Garrettsville, a
and vocal selections by Mrs. cousin of the bride. They wore
Clarence Olin, both cousins of baby blue dotted swisS gowns
the bride.
of idenUcal design to the
The altar was .decorated wih matron . of honor. Mrs. Hall
· mums, gladioli, daisies and . carried yellow roses, green
palms,
with
flowers tinted carnations. and white
surrounding the tapers used in daisies, while. the other attendthe candlellghting ceremony . ants carried bouquets of pink
Red roses were presented to roses, pink tinted carnations
both the mother of the bride and white daisies, all arranged
and the mother of the ·groom in heart shapes.
immediately following the
Robert C. Miller, UtUe
ceremony.
Hocking, was best man for the
Given in marriage by her bridegroom. Ushers were
father, the bride wore a gown Roger Dixon, Pomeroy, Alan
of Jlnen lace fashioned with an McLaughlin, Warren, and
empire waist and a train at- Mark Grueser, Shade.
!ached at the back waist. Her . For her daughter's wedding,
veil was held in place with a Mrs. Kitelinger wore a pink
satin beaded juliet cap. The gown which swept to a flowing
bride's' bouquet featured a-line. Mrs. Skinner chose a ·
yellow roses arranged in heart yellow ani! white gown trim-

COLUMBUS- (UPIJ - For
the second consectitlye month,
the average July, weekly
earnings for factory producUun
workers In Ohio set a new
record, the Bureau of Employment Ser\rlces reported
Friday.
Nearly $Ztl3 was !ll!t as the
average . weekly factory
worker's earnings, reflecUng
considerable ove~tlme at
premium rates, officials said.,
Officials .sald n,arly 2. 7
million persons wet:e on the
payrolls of state .manufac,
turing industries during July,
with a Z per cent gqln In employment figures over July of
last year.
Contract construction
workers received the highest
wages In the state dqrlng July.
With weekly hours running
over 38 last month) officials
reported construcUoh workers
grossed an average 'of. nearly
$300 per week.
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Y,oung family has reunion
,,

RIJTLAND - The annual
Y0111g family reunion wlls held
Sunday, August 9, at the home
olllfr. and Mrs. Frank Youn•
Rutland.
••
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Wllb
ur Young and Mindy
Middldeport; Mrs, Luren~
· Kenne y and Clarence Edwards, Galena; Mr. and Mrs.
William Buck, Sr., Rutland ·
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Young:
Troy ; Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Young, .Rutland; Mrs . J. A.

POi'fEROY - The family
reunion of the Charles and
Minnie Springer Calaway
family was held !)unday at the
. ... hom~ of Vere Calaway.
,.
The eldest member of the
family present was Everett R.
Calaway, 81 years young. The
youngest present was Adam
Calaway, 10 days old, son of
Buck Calaway.
Dinner and supper "were
served and several games
' were )layed during the day.
Th~e attending the gala
" festival were Mr. and Mrs.

{

road
vehicles
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COLUMBUS - State motor
vehicles registrar c. Donald
Curry today reminded all
O~ioans who own snowmobiles,
trail or mini-bikes or other
types of "off-the-road"
vehicles that their 1973
.registrations
will· expire at
dni
ml .ght Aug. 31 ·
"Anyone operating a vehicle
of thj$ type on pubhc land.s ~r
on pnvate property that 1sn t his ~n after ~ug. 31 will be
reqwred to diSplay the approprlate 1974 decal or license
late, 'd Cur
"
P ' 881
ry. Anyone
ope~aUng an unregistered
vehicleiSsubjectto a fine of up
to $50 for the firstoffe~ -so 1
would strongly advise all
owners 10 pay the $5 fee and
obtain their 1974 plate o~ decal
before Sept. I, even If they
,_ 1
th off th
don 't p...
n o use e1r - eroad vehicle until la!fr in the
year. The licenses are sold in
Gallia County by Vaugh!
Smith, 1911 Eastern, Gallipolis,
and ·in Meigs County by Paul
Simon, 104 W. Main St.,

We celebrate Halloween
year-round here ; we have an
awful lot of pumpkin heads in
the place.
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are announced

l Area Deaths

Parenti Are Planners
Rap :
J'm only IZ and already my parcnill are lelllng me wl!at 1
&amp;hall be when I!P'OW up. They ar~n·t f01clng me - yet but
they're dropping hlnll.
For example, my Dad wan Ill me to be either an a&lt;."Countant
!Ike him, or work in an airline so when he retires hi$ trip to Spain
will be cheaper ,
·
My mother wants me to be a teacher beCa!llle SHE says I
appeal to children. These thlnW! are not for rne. I want to be a
child psychiatrist.
What should I do?- UNDECIDED WITH PARENTS WHO
ARE SURE
UWPWA$ :
Your parents aren'lforcing you, so don 't get uptight about It
They're dreaming abOut your future as they dla about their own,
for having children, It would seem, Is almost like living your own
childhood all over again.
·
Also, they may be offering you several different ideas just to
start you thinking early about a career. And they've succeeded,
haven't they ? - SUE

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Dear Undecided :
Afavorite parent ga me Is "What will my child be when she
(he) grows up?" It's about equal parts wishful thinking, pride,
kidding around (that cheap trip to Spain) allll "childhood
revisited.''
·
So play the game with equal parts of listening and friendly
argument. You'lllearn a lot abotlt career choices th~t way . HELEN
.

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Dear Helen and Sue :
I'm going with a guy my sister used to date. She cheated on
Frank so they broke up. She iells everybody she dropped HIM ,
He Is sur vived by his fOrmer
.but it was the other way around .
wile, Evelyn; a son. Donald, of
He gave me a ring and she's green with jealousy because he Groveport , and his lather,
Elmer, of Columbus. Funeral
never gave her one.
services will be announced by
She won't leave liS alone. When he comes over she's there M-'rfin Funeral Home.
with her wisecracks and taunting remarks. She does everything
FREDA GRATE
to aggravate Frank and me.
RUTLAND
- Freda Grate,
The other day she said, "You get my leftovers, like a dog." 76, College St.,
Rutland, died
.It ·~ obvious she still wants him, but why all the bunk ?
· .
Sa 1.urday morning at her
Our patents tell her to leave us alone, but. she won't l et up. res1dence. She was preceded in
death by her first husband,
What should I do?- ADOG WITH SISTER'S LEl'TOV'ERS
Clarence (Tan) Schoonover
and

her seco nd husband.

Dear Sis :
Garland Grate.
She i s survived by a
U Frank didn't enjoy this double play for him, he wouldn't daugh1er
, Juanita Bolen ,
keep coming over to your house. Instead, he'd avoid "!rouble" by Columbus, and these sons,
taking you out.
Jack Schoonover, and Charles
Sc
hoonover, both of Mansfield ;
U you weren't secreUy afraid your sister might win him
Clarence
Schoonover,
back, you could feel sorry for her. rather than furious.
Columbus·; Thomas and Gene
So face the fact that you're jealous and worried too, and don't Schoonover, both of Ru11and,
be quite so hard on a sister who lost : it might be YOU next time. and Jerry .Schoonover of
Pomero[ ; three brothers,
- HELEN
.Russell lttle, Rutland ; Vern
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Little. Middleport, and Terry
Sis:
Little, Athens; 22 grand children
and 10 great .
And hope your sister gets a new boyfriend so~n. That will
grandchildren .
solve all your problems. (Unless he's Frank .) - SUE
Funeral services will be

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Rap:
About MS. versus MISS. I have elected to title myself MS.
Reasons:
·
I. I don't want to Jl.et married .
2. I don't want to have children .
3. I'm going to have a wonderful career.
4. And I DO like men.
·
Nothing turns's man off faster than a 20-year-&lt;Jid "Miss Doris
Day.:•- MS. K.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Announcement of grand lodge
appointments was. made here
Friday at ths opening of the
44th'aimual fall meeting of the
Ohio Elks Association. The
three-day meeting will continue through Sunday with M.r s. Hysell has
about 900 representatives of 98
Ohio Elk lodges attend' lh
advanced degree
meeting.
mg e
Named to national posts
POMROY - Receiving a
were Elwood W. Reed of dipl9ma recently in advanced•
r
Bow I~g Green, new lodges hair design and beauty culture
committee; Carleton L. Riddle was Mr.s. Pauline Hysell,
of Willard, youth activities Pomeroy, cosmetology incommittee; and I.awrence R. structor of the junior class at
Derry of Barnesville, state Meigs High School, ai ,Bruno's
associations committee. Advanced Academy of Hair
District Deputy Grand Exalted Design in Toronto, Canada.
Rulers for Ohio for the coming
Mrs. Hysell said upon her
year Include Leslie Do las of return the shag will "still be
M ·
·
ug
artms Ferry, . southeast in" but. a new blower and
d'15 tri t
curling Iron technique will be
c·
seen in the future in which the
hair dryer will not be used.
This style is called the
NOWVOUKNOW
"Canadians." Mrs. Hysell also
A male swan is called a cob wok a course there in the
and a female is a pen.
styling of long hair.

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Mix &amp; Match
Separates
lOLA'S

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AWide ·choice of

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WIN DILL OllloTE

RUTLioND,O.

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OFF
WHILE
SUPPLY

lASTS

JOHN P. SAYRE
NEW HAVEN - John P.

Sayre, 65, Midway Drive, New
Haven, died Friday afternoon

at University
Columbus. .

Hospital ,

Mr. Sayre was a former
supervisor in the fabrication

shop at Marlella Mfg ., Co., Pt.
Pleasant, for 2~ years and was

later employed at Midwest

RETURNS TO HOLZER
MINERSVILLE - Albe'rt
(Red ) Keeton of Minersville
has been returned to the Holzer
Medical Center for additional
treatment.
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BIG YANK BRAND

Steel in Pomeroy. .
·
Mr. Sayr.e was born Jan. lJ,

1908 at Letart, W. Va., the son

REGULAR
JEANS

01 the tate Bert E. and Anna
Thomas Sayre.

Mr. Sayre is survived by his
wife, Margaret McMillian
s~rre; one son, Herbert, of
Mo ton, W. Va .; a grand·
daughter ,
Cathy ;
four
brothers, Harold , Hupped,

CASUAL ·JEANS

AUCTION

While 150 Pairs Last

MENS
WOMENS

COMPLETE LIQUIDATION

FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 10 A.M.

GIRLS

Your
Choice

PRICE

FIXTURES FROM

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10 NCR Cash Register . 13 Check Out Counters, 120 Tables,
150 Shopping Carts, 52 X Racks. 5 Racks. Round Racks.
Emergency Lights, Tying ' Machine, 22 Fire Ex·
llngulshers, Clothes Hangers. (J) No . &lt;B Pin on Machines,
Wire Baskets. 8 Rackbars. Roll Around Hanging Carls,
Window Shade Cutter, Wrapping Machine. 'Two Wheel
Dollies .

OFFICE EQUIPMENT
Sign Machine, Safe, Olivetti Calculator, NCR Adding
Machine, Check Protector, SCM Classic 12 Typewriter,
Smith Corona Adding Machi· e. PA System., Brun ing
Copier. Oak Oesks, Secreterla ' Ch•''" i:J IIng Cabinets.
Water Cooler, Ladders.

DESKS and

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74 2·4211

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NEVER
BEFORE

announced by Martin Funeral
Home.

191HEETMODERN GONDQLASHELVING

Main at Sycamore
Pomeroy, Ohio

R.UTLAND
fURNITURE

JUST IN .TIME FOR BACK TO SCHOOL

PARK SHOPPING CENTER
PARKERSBURG, WEST VIRGINIA

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UNIT CALLED
POMEROY - ·The Pomeroy
Emergency Squad was called
to Darwin at Z:07. a.m.,
Saturday for James Cunningham who was ill at his
home . He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted.

Today

PRICE BREAK!

ARlAN'S DEPARTMENT STORE

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See Beautiful

CRll Us

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Wray , Oonn te Wray , C1rl

lodlly (Sunday) from noon to 9

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Everett R. Calaway, Mr. and
Mrs. Vere Calaway, Nina Jean
and Ranson, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Calaway, Robert, Warren,
Ernie, Linda, Charles and
Brenda, Harry Calaway, Mrs.
Hattie Calaway and Cathy, Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Hawk, Lisa
and Julie, Mr. and Mrs. Buck
Calaway, Tammy, Missy and
Adam, Mr. and Mrs. William
Pullins; JoAnn and Patty ,
Bobby Boggs, Bernice Boggs,
Johnny Hawk and Carolyn
Sidwell.

.·· Re$'istration due. Appointments
fo~ off the
to grand lodge

heritage house
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Young, Sr., Middleport ; Mr.
and Mrs. William Buck, Jr.,
Rick, Shelley and Pat Hager,
Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs. J . A.
Young, Jr., Joe and Luanne,
Cambridge ; Mr. and Mrs .
Ralpb Clark, Bob and Riehle,
New Haven, . W. Va .: Mrs .
· and
Nancy Pope, Doug, Toni
Tracy, Middleport ; Mrs. Susan
Hibbs, Mary and Greg,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Bintz, Beaver.

Cqlrzways have reunion

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Wood, Sue and Roonle, Mr. and
Mra. Webber Wood, Mr. and
Mr•. Virgil King, Geneva,
David a.nd Helen, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold White, Letha Cowa·n,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wellh,
Mr · •nd Mrs. J,eroy Weilh and
Homer, Mr. and ~rs. Darrell
Napper, Steve Brlcklea, all of
Pomeroy ; Elfie IVood, Albany;
Mr. and Mrs. Earle Wood
Middleport ; Mr. and Mrs:
Norman Will and Duane
Rutland ; Mr. and .Mrs. !ferry
Kroll, Wyandotte, Mich. ·
It was voted to meet next
year at the same place on the
second Sunday In August

today (Sunday) ,
Patibearero will be Harold

Dunlope Funeral HOm.e, 215
Fernwood Rd., Winlersvllle,

p.m. S.rvlces will be at lhe Wray, Fred Wroy, Gory Flnloy
home al II a.m. Monday with and AI Bowen .
Pastor David M. Collin, priost
C. A. JENKIN$0N
Dan and Ed, itll ol Letart, W. ol the Reorganized Church of
RENNA FUNK LIN
POMEROY - Clifford Allen Va .
Jesus
Christ
of
Latter
Day
PT.
PLEASANT - ~h.
Jenkinson, 84. Mulbl!rry Ave .•
Funeral services will be Salnls, olllclallng.
Re.nna
0
. Fronklln, 17, :IOIJ.9tt,
Pomeroy, died Friday at Monday al 1&lt;30 p.m. at
StrHt,
Poinl Pleuant, lor
Burial
will
be
al
the
V
lnlon
Veteran) Memorial Hospital Foglesong Funeral Hom.e In Memorial Cemetery with many years
a well known and
following an extended lllne., , Mason with Tom Clarke ol- graveside services at~ : 30 p.m , prom lnen t business
wOman In
""-· Jenkinson was born In llclallng. Burial will be In
Point
Pleaoant,
died
Friday In
Pomeroy, Oct. J, 1888, the ..,n Evergreen Cemetery at Letart.
Mason
.
She
owned
and
ol lhe late Jame&amp; H. and Friends may call at the luneral
GRANT R. WRioY
operated
a
Ladles
Dress
Shop
Margaret Swauger Jenkinson. home today from J lo 5 aod 7 to
CROWN CITY - Gran! R. on Main StrHt, better known
On Jan . !8, 1910 he was 9.
Wray, 84, Rl. 2, Crown City, as
M.s. Franklin's Store.
married lo the former Garnett
Bladen·Mercervllle Rd .. died
Mn.
was a member
Hesson who died in 1964. He
ARTHUR T. YOHO
at B a.m. Saturday at his of the Franklin
Bapllst
In
was also preceded In deat~ by
WINTERSVILLE - Arthur residence. He had been In Ravenswood andChurch
was
a
two brothers t~nd three- sisters . T. Voho. 46, RD 2, Bantam lolling heallh severo! years. He
member
of
the
da119hters
of
He IP"n t hi• life In Meigs Ridge, Win tersville. died at was a retired Iarmer.
American Revolution In
County wllh Ihe exception of t3 4:25 a.m. Saturday In Ohio
He was born July 7, 1890 In The
Ravenswood . She was bot-n
years when he li'Yed 1n Cr'ooks· Valley Hospital, Steubenville. Ohio Township, Gall Ia County,
25, 1886, at Kenna, W. Va.,
ville employed at !he Jones
He was born October t5, 1926, the son ol !he late John and aJuty
da119hler
of Flournoy M. and
Mines. He worked as a coal the son ol the late Luther Yoho Laura Ross Wray . He was Sarah Adams
Maddo• and was
miner, bul retired In 1952duelo and Ethel Robinson, Athens. preceded In death by his wife, the
widow
of
late John C.
Injuries suflered In a fall from
An employee of the Bessie C. Wray. In August. Franklin also the
remembered
as
a llppte. He wao a member of engi neering department of 1969, whom he married f'llarch a Point Preasant business man
.
Fralernal Order of Eagles · Wh ee ling -Pit!sburgh Stee l 30, 1912. They spent most ol
Mrs
.
Franklin
Is
survived
by
Aerie 2171,
Corporation , Yorkville Plan!, their lives In Gallla County.
a foster sister, Betty Mae
Mr . Jenkinson Is survived by he was a member of the
He Is survived by three sons, Sheward of Polnf Pleasant.
·
a daughter . Mrs . Rober! Central Ave. United Method lsi Garland and David. Columbus;
Funeral
services
will
be
!Maxine! Russell, Crooksville; Church, Athens, the Stevens- Thurman, Rl. 2. Crown City; 11
Monday at 2 p.m. at
a granddaughter, M.s. Ned Christian Posl 557, American grandchildren, and 11 great- conducled
lhe
Stevens
Funeral Home.
!Belle) Grant. Crooksvllle, and Legion , Wintersville, ~nd th(! grandchildren; one brother, Burial will lollow
In the Lone
a sister, Mrs . Glenna Hess ol American Iron and Steel John Wray, Columbus; and Oak Cemetery. Friends
will be
Bucyrus.
Association . He was an Air Geneva Hall, who was raised In received at 1he tuneral home
Funeral servic;:es will be Force ve1erl!ln of World War II. the family home.
.
Monday at 1:30 p.m. a! Ewing
He Is survived by his wife,
He was preceded In death by !rom 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 lo 9 p.m.
Chapel. Burial will be In Beech Nan cy Walker Yoho ; his two sons, one daughter, three
}'LIES TO MEXICO CITY
Grove Cel)1e lery. Friends may mother, one daughter, Robin brothers and tour sis ters.
MEXICO CITY (UPI) call anytime .
Lynn at home; lwO brothers,
Funeral services will be a1 2
Henry
A. Kissinger flew , to
Ray Lloyd, Springfield and p.m. . Monday at the Bethel
ORVILLE NAPPER
Luther Eugene, Athens ; two Church near Bladen with the Mexico City Friday to attend
MIDDL EPORT - · Orvi lle · ·Sisters. Mrs. Willard (Eileen I Rev , Charles Lusher of- the sliver wedding anniver1111ry
(Hobl Napper, 54. Rt. 1 Mid- Border, El Paso, Tex :, and flclatlng . Burial will follow at
dleport, died Sat.urday mor- Mrs, Warren !Allee ) Dogson, . Bethel Cemetery. Friends may of Mexico's foreign minister in
nlng at University · Hospilal, Athens .
call at the Waugh·Halley-Wood his first trip abroad since being
Columbus. Mr . Napper was
Friends may call at the Funeral Home after 3 p.m. nominated secretary of state.
born Nov. 3, 1918 In Rutland.
He was preceded In death by'
-his mother, Lucille Napper .

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Bryon, Mr. and Mrs. tnysses
Cox, Paulett&amp;, Terry, Alan and
Mary Beth, Mrs. 11a Osborne
and Bill, Kathy Dill, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Welch and Diane,
Mrs. Ada Shutts, ~s. VIvian
'Archer, Mr. and· Mrs. Charles
Lee Archer, Monica and
Gregory Lee, Mr. and Mfs.
Dean Archer, Marie Rhodes,
Lorain Grim, · Kathy Jean
Grim, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Slephard, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Wyers, Mrs. Carroll Moore,
Ricky and Mary Ann Moore,
Greta Miller, Esther Dotson,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Cox, Mr.
and Mrs. G. E. Mills, Mrs.
Marie Snider, Holan Young,
Mr . arid Mrs. Lovell Smedley,
D. C. Yates, Mr. and·Mrs. G. C.
Tatterson, Eric Lee Tatterson
aild Mrs. Kathryn Brooker.

Mr. and Mrs.' George Skinner

RIJ'I'LAND - The Wood
family reunion wu held at
~'or111t Acree Pll'k on Aua. 12.
Ofllf;en e~led lor nut year
were Er1111t Wood , prealdent·
.W.ara Will, vice prealdent:
Jean Wood, secretary and
lr~,urer. and Deloria Kine
pro.ram chairman. Prize~
went to Elfie Wood, oldett,
Horner Wellh, youngest and
coming the fartheat, Mr. and
Mrs. Terry Knoll of Wyandotte
Mich. The door prize and
guOflng game prize was won
by L181'rell Napper.
· .\\ttendlng were Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Wood, Earl and
Edith, Mr. and Mrs. Norman
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CARPET SPECIAL!

Velerau Memorial Htspltal
ADMITTED - · Barbara
Baer, Minersville; Maggie
King, Clio, W. Va.; Myla
Hud10n, Srracuae; Freda
: . Laudermilt, Pomeroy; Carol
Drake, New Haven.
DISCHARGES - Audrey
MEETING CAlLED
• Arn~ld, Chi'Uitlne Mu111er,
TUPPERS PJ.,AINS
Gllldya Q-ua, Dallal Edwards, Chriatmaa decoratloM will be
Ruby Eynon, ,Kate Price, on dllplay by Deco Mfg. Co.,
Edward Findley, Clarence Columpga, at a public meeting
McDaniel, Hazel Curtis, at the community building here
' Mitchell Holley, KeiDiy LurlJ.. Thursday, Aug. 30,at 7p.m. All
• l«d.
.
citlzeM are Invited.
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A recepUon honorlfll the

coople was held II Kennedy
center, Hiram, !rom • to I p.m.
Mums gladioli, carnation•
and · ' dai1ie1
deco(ated
the bride's table , Tire
three tiered cake wu
l!&gt;pped - with the !radiUonlll
mlnlloture bride and groom.
Mrs wilbur Valot presided at
the · table and Mrs . Irlla
Robinson registered the
guests.
For a wedding trip to .
Niagara Falls and to Grand
Band Ontario, Canada, the
bride'changed Into a brown and
white plaid suit with a corsage
of white carnations and pink
roses. ··. ·
Agraduate of Windham High
School, she Is employ&lt;! by the
Sajar Plastics Corp., Mid·
dlefield. Skinner graduated
from Meigs High School and
attends General Motprs In·
sUtute as a cooperaUve student
sponsored by Fisher Body
Lordstown Fabrication Plant.
He Is a member of Sigma
Alpha Epsilon Fraternity.
Guests were from Elgin, Jll.,
Buffalo, N. Y., Columbus ,
Dayton, Tallmadge, Shade,
UtUe Hocking an.d' Pomeroy;

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Wood reunion held

e~nagu.

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Shrinettes have meet

::•• Assignments made for
•• Southern kindergarten
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.and baby's breath ae&lt;:ented
'l'lilh blue cornflowers and
purple violets.
Miss Janet .Gray served as
maid of honor. She wore an Ice
blue staley crepe gown !rimmed In white venise lace and
accented with royal blue
ribbon.
Bridesmaids were Miss
Patricia Wickham, sister of the
bride, who was dressed
ldenUcally to the maid of
honor, Miss Sue Bell! and Miss
Unda Corey. The latter two
were dressed In lila~ staley
crepe accented wflh deep
purple rlbbQn. All the attend·
ants carried colonial nosegays
of white gardenias, blue cornflowers, deep purple violets
and baby's breath.
Ronald Bikacsan served as
best man. Ushers were
Michael Hoffman, Roy
Kisseberth and Tim Kilmer.
A six-tiered wedding cake
with\ilolet trim centered with a
fountain and topped by a gold
wedljing cross was the focal
point of the reception, held in
the church social room.
Following a wedding !rip to
Sarasota, Fla., the couple will
reside at 681 Burns Ave., West
Carrollton.
The bride is a 1971 graduate
of West Carrollton High School
and is employed by the Dayton
Division of Dayton Walther.
The groom, also a graduate of
West Carrollton, attended
Wright State University and is
presently enrolled at ITT
Technical Institute. He is
employed by Frigidaire.

Observe 50th anniversary

Something," Mrs. Edith
Sisson. Two special arUcles
were presented, Mrs. Harry
Wyatt read "It's No Time" and
Mrs. John Scott read "You've
Come a Long Way, Teacher." .
· The business meeting opened
with reading of the minutes
and
the
Jove
offering ,
The
service
of celebration meeting to be
held at Christ United Methodist
Church at Marietta on September 16 was discussed. The ·
nominating committee
presentedthenamesofofficers
for the coming year, They are
Mrs. Russ Wat&amp;on, president,
Mrs. Edith Sisson, vicepresident, Mrs. Vernon Nease,
secretary, and Mrs. Alfred
Yeauger, treasUrer. A motion
was made and carried that the
officers so nominated be
elected.
Forty-five sick calls
llirs. George Hensley, Jr.,
Deanna, Sandra, Angela and were made on sick and shut-in
POMEROY- The Twin City
Gregory, Mrs. Barbara Hens- people in the community by the
Shrlnettes
met at the home of
ley, Charles, Paul and Matt, members the past month.
Cookies and coffee were Mrs. Clara Adams, Thursday
Mrs. Mary Evans, Mindy,
Johnny : and Dianna, Mrs. served to Mrs. Hanson Holter, evening.
Mrs. Cora Beegle, president,
Sharon Hensley, Penny; Mr. Mrs. Ulllan Henderson, Mrs.
&amp;·nd !'Irs. Henry Hensley, Uswin Nease, Mrs. Edison named committees of Mrs,
Ronme and Melissa, Mrs. Hollon, Ml'S. Lawrence Nap• Viole.! Miller, vice president
per, Mrs. Harry Wyatt, Mrs. and Mrs. Beulah Ewing,
Leona Hensley,
There were 16 guests, Justis Richard Jarvis, Mrs. Denver treasurer to register guests at
(a friend of Richard Uter), Holter, Mrs. John Scott, Mrs. the Meigs Inn, September 20, at
Mona Johnson, Jinlmy Lan- Alfred Yeauger, Mrs. Dian 6:30 p.m. when Lady Ethel De
don, Mike Hall, Leota Ferrell, Genheimer, Mrs. Vernon
ENJOY PICNIC
Mrs. Ethel Carter, Mr. and Nease, Mrs. Fred Nease and
REEDSVILLE
The
Mrs. John Carter, Matt, Amy, Mrs. Russ Watson.
following members and guests
Julie, and Phillip, Mr. and Mrs.
of the Community Builders
David Carter, VIcki and Cathy.
held a picnic at Forked Run
It was planned to have the · To be on council
State
Park Saturday evening,
next reunion on the third
POMEROY - Miss Ingrid Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brown
Sunday In August 1974 at PortHawley, daughter of Mrs. and David, Mr. and Mrs.
land Park.
Dianne Hawley, Pomeroy has Ronald Osborne and guests,
been selected to serve on the Mr. and Mrs. Tom Osborne
Greenville, S.C., Mr. and Mrs:
state 4-H Teen Council. ·
Ingrid is 11 and has been in 4- Ernest Whitehead, Jane and
H work for seven years when Juli, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
she has taken cooking, sewing, Myers and David Young, Mr.
and furniture projects, served and Mrs. Dohrman Reed, Kim
on the Meigs County Junior and Kirk, and Mr . and Mrs.
VanMeter, Kenneth Swine.
Afternoon class - : Keith Fair Board fofthree years, and Warre~ Pickens and Kay
Allen, Jill Arnott, Rail'lly continues as a member of the Balderson.
Beegle, Teresa Burnside, county Junior Leader Club. She
Tracy Cleland, Jack Corn.ell is a junior leader In her local
.
AT.OPEN.HOUSE
Tonya Cummins, Jay Dod: club, the Middleport Merry
·
POMEROy - Mr. and Mrs
derer, Dixie Dugan, Richard Munchers.
Ingrid, along with the other George Kalatta, Syracuse, and
Gilbride, Reba Green, Ji1flny
Hanning, HeatlrHUI, Max Hill, Ohio Teen Council members Mrs. Dorothy Johnston
Mark Jarrell, Mike Johnson will be honored with a break: Pomeroy, attended the 50th
Tina Joy, Slerrie Lawson: fast on Aug . . 'l1 at Rhodes Wedding anniversary recently
David Proffitt, Tammy Center at the Ohio State Fair. ~~:~::.Mrs. E. L. Raines,
Proffitt, Renee Rhodes, Harold
Roush, Andrew Rose, Robin
Savage, Teresa Slulet, Slerrl
Sisson, Karla Smith, Slawn
Stobart, Joseph Tucker, Keith
Whlte, ,Scott Wickline, Charles
Wolfe,. :Jr. Jimmy Wolfe,
Cheryl Sellers, Mandy Hill.

Hensley reunion held

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MIAMISBURG
The
marriage of Stephanie Michele
Wickham and Dennis Mark
Blkacsan was solemnlled at
the Judson Baptist Churcl\. at
8:30p.m. June 16.
Rev. Walter P. Blkacsan
conducted the can dl~llght
ceremony for his son and the
daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
Douglas Wickham, 2640 Nyack
-· we, Miami Twp. The Rev.
Blkacsan Is now pastor of the
Racine Baptist Church. The
bride is the grandniece of Mrs.
Caddie Wickham, Pomeroy
and the granddaughter of the
late Ray and Mary Ellen Hood
Ohlinger Wickham, Meigs
County.
The altar was decorated with
a double candelabra and
arrangements of white gladioli
and rosebuds. The organist
was Rick Wills with Mrs.
Walter P. Bikacsan, mother of
the groom, as soloist.
Escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride chose a formal gown of while satinized
. organza and venise lace. The
empire gown featured a deep
lace yoke, circled with a self
ruffle of venlse lace. A high
wedding ring collar and long,
ruffled bridal lace sleeves
completed the bodice. The skirt
swept to a full cathedral train
and was appliqued in roses
circled with wide venlse lace
ruffles. Her !)ouffant veil of
imported silk illusion was
caugpt to a juliet cap of venise
lace and seed pearls. The bride
carried a colonial bouquet of
":bite gardenias, ste_phanotis

II - The Sunday Timea. 8entlnel,Sunday, Au~. 211. 1q13

me&lt;lwllll braid. Both mothert
wore carnation lnd rose

Try 'em I You'll love 'em I Soft·s1yle uppers on I!:Ushlon-y
crepe soles and easy-going, low·down heels ..High ·varnp
pump style In Black. New sling style In Camel.

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BOOK CASES

RUTAURANT EQ,UtPMENT
Scottsman · lce Machine, 4' Refrigerator, Stainless Steel

Back Bar, Stainless Steel Two Door Refrigerator
Tral lmaster Grill, 3 Compartment Stainless Steel Sink 4:
Stai nless Steel Bar, Misc . Items.
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I Sizes On Sale
AS
LOW
AS

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A just In tlrne for school sale of regular
jeans and many styles of casual jeans .
Regular denims, brushed denims and
other good washable fabrics. . Good
ection of colors and patterns. Sli.m ·
'IHH 1 ··~ styles, bell bottoms and fl
bottoms. Shop early!

POMEROY

In All Styles &amp; Finishes!

LANDMARK

FIXTURES FROM7S;ooo ~Q. FT. BUILDING
· 5250,000 REPLACEMENT COST
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.PR.

DELTA AUCTION COMPANY
465 HIGH POINT TERRACE
MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE :11122
901·324·3501

YOU CAN BUV AT LANDMARK-

Everyone Can!

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JACK W. CARSEY, Mgr .
Serving Meig~. Gallia, Mason Counties
Open Mon.-Sat. Til6:00 P.M.
PHONE 992-2181
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�Couple wed in june
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Members of the OleSter High Class of 1931 present for the recent class reunion Include

seated, left to right, Pauline Ridenour, Mildred Collins, l.Alnora Betzing and Clifford Hayes ;
standing, Henry Beaver (teacher), Irene Parker, Opal Wickham, Esther Gooch, Earl Knight
l!eacher), Betty Fell, John Bailey, Nellie Parker, Fred Smith and VirgU McElroy.

Chester High reunion held
CHESTER -

5tembers of
ths Chester High Class of 1931
held Their annual picnic Sunday, July 29 at the Chester Fire
HoWle with Mr. and Mrs. John
Wickham the hosts.

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A basket dinner was. enjoyed
at noon . Mrs. Raymond Gooch
asked the blessing. The group
read a thank-you note from the
family of Wilma Fenton for
flowers sent to her funeral.
Get-well cards were signed to
be sent to Mrs. Clifford Haye8,

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Mrs. Hallie Huloert and Mrs.
John Bailey . .The ·class was
happy to have two former
teachers present: Earl Knight ·
and Henry Beaver.
Others present were Mr. and
Mrs. Wilber Parker, NJrs.
Joseph Poole and Will, John
Bailey, Virgil McElroy, Mrs.
Mary Buck, Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Parker, Mr. and Mrs.
Buel Ridenour, Lenora Betzing, Clifford and Greg Hayes,
Mr. and Mrs. Fred B. Smith,
Henry B•~ver, Jean Sum-

merfield, Earl Knight, all of
Meigs County; Mr. and Mrs.
Daria. Fell, Washington Court
House; Mrs. Mildred Collins,
Canton; Edward Parker,
Columbus; Mr . ·and Mrs.
Nelson Stewart, Conneant.;
Rodney Parker, Parkersburg,
West Virginia ; Mr. and Mrs .
Rayroond Gooch, Gallipolis.
The reunion will be held next
year on the last Sunday In July.
The place will be announced
later .

[ Forest Run WSCS meets
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. I'OMEROY - Members of presented: "Joanne Bethune"
WSCS of the Forest Run by Mrs. John Scott; "Ann
United Methodist Church held Wilkins" by Mrs. Alfred
their monthly meeting at the Yeauger; ."Diane Deutsch" by
church Tuesday evening,
· · Mrs. Olan Genheimer and
The meeting opened with a "Lenore Johnson" by Mrs.
song _by the group and prayer Uswin Nease. A discussion of
. by Mrs. Richard Jarvis. 1\frs. the readings was held. Also
DenverHolterwaslnchargeof Included in the program were
the program and her topic was articles pertaining to the
"Personal Mission" taken subject. They were "Message
from the program book "Uve a to the Heart," Mrs. Richard
New Life." The purpose was to Jarvis; "When 'the Phone
make women more aware of Rlngs,"Mrs Russ Watson; "A
the mission opportunities open Day of Loving," Mrs. Fred
to them, to describe mission Nease; "How to Have a Per,
.projects in the world,and what feet Day," Mrs. Ullian Henwomen in the past and present derson; ''The Quiet People,"
have undertaken.
Mrs. Lawrence Napper; "i Ask
The following readings were Why ' Doesn't Somebody do
th~

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PORTI.AND -A reunion of
the descendants of Hiram (Ott)
and Wllhernina Hensley was
held Sunday, August 19 at Portland Park. There were 71 in
attendance.
They were Mr. and Mrs.
Anton Uter and son Richard,
-Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Haley,
Debbie, Kim, Tammy and
Christie, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
MUIJ'ay, Mrs. Iva Carpenter,
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Spencer,
Terri and Jeff, Mr. and Mrs.
Butch Carpenter, Wendy,
Jody, Timmy and Craig, Mr.
and 1/'~rs. , Roger Carpenter,
Rogef;;; ~.r'., and Gregory, Mr.
and Mrs. John P. Hensley ·and
Dick, Mr . and Mrs. Jo
Rebecca, J. D. and Colleen,
.George Hensley, Sr., Mr. and

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REEDSVILLE - Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Robbins, 1923
Washington Blvd., B.~lpre,
celebrated their 50th wedding
anniversary at the Lions Club
Building in Belpre. The couple
was married Mlly 6, 1923.
Mrs. Robbins is the former
Ethel Farley, daughter of the
late Thomas and Sarah Farley.
Ro~bins is the son of the late
John and Mary Robbins. They
have four children, Curtis
Robbins, Pataskala, Mrs. Orna
Cox, New Cumberland, W. Ya.,
Mrs. Da Osborne, Long Bottom, and Mrs. Avis Lou Welch,
Eaton. There are 12 grandchildren and one greatgrandchild.
Attending the celebration
were Mr. and Mrs. Curtis
Robbins, Cheryl, Roland, and

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RACINE - Kindergarten
• . llllignments for the Southern
IAlcal School District have
' bej!ll completed. They Include: .
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Morning class, kindergarten,
lmi Adams, Wanda Adkins,
; Jay Bostick, Alana Lyons,
C&amp;role Cross, Kerri Taylor,
Kelly Rizer' Kendal Rizer'
Tom Proffitt, Bob Ritchie,
:
Regina Nance, Darin stafford,
• David Duffy, Becky Adkins,
• Juanita Guinther, David
• Hubbard, Melissa Hubbard,
. Randall Roush, Jeff Frank,
i . · Mike Chancey, Chad Sayre,
; Jerry Jo Grueser, Brian
; ; Freeman, Kelley Grueser,
• Kennetb Grueser, Mike
, Qmdlff, Ty Blaker, Melinda
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Hlll, Scott Grueser, Becky
Roush, Jill Nease , Eric
, , Thbren, Rooald Rice, Melissa
' · lhle, Richard Werry, Becky

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Vore, high priestess, will be
guest of honor. Reservations
are to be sent to Miss Shirley
Beegle on or before Monday,
September 17.
An invitation was extended
to the Shrlnettes and their
families tO come to the Twin
City Shrine Club picnic at the
park in Racine on Labor Day at
2 p.m. They are to bring
covered dishes.
The October meeting will be
at the home of Mrs. Barbara
Dugan, October 18.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Adams, assisted by
Mrs. Barbara Dugan, to Mrs.
Mary . Hughes, Mrs. Marie
Hawkins, Mrs. Irma Yoho,
Mrs. Beulah Ewing, Mrs.
Gertrude Mitchell, Mrs. Cora
Beegle and Miss Shirley
Beegle.

Fall Comes To
lola's

Vows exchanged

Average factory
wage at $203
during ]uiy

POMEROY - In an af- shape surrounded by carternoon ceremony August 4 at nations, daisies an.d baby's
the Faith Evangelical Free breath.
Church at GarrettSville, Ohio,
Mrs. Patricia Hall, WindMiss · . Diana Kitelinger, ham, served as matron of
daughter of Mr, and Mrs. honor. She wore a mint green
William R. Kitelinger, Wind- dotted swiss gown with an
ham, and George E. Skinner, empire waist, gathered at the
son of Mr. and Mrs. George B. back with a bow from which
Skinner,_Rt. 3, · Pomeroy ex- fell a' hemline !rain. The atchanged wedding vows.
tendants were Miss Cynthie
The Rev. LeRoy Glover Brobst, Warren, Mrs. Mark
performed the ceremony Grueser, sister of the groom,
following a program of organ Shade, and Mrs . Anthony
music by Mrs. Ralph Dutter, Sprague, Garrettsville, a
and vocal selections by Mrs. cousin of the bride. They wore
Clarence Olin, both cousins of baby blue dotted swisS gowns
the bride.
of idenUcal design to the
The altar was .decorated wih matron . of honor. Mrs. Hall
· mums, gladioli, daisies and . carried yellow roses, green
palms,
with
flowers tinted carnations. and white
surrounding the tapers used in daisies, while. the other attendthe candlellghting ceremony . ants carried bouquets of pink
Red roses were presented to roses, pink tinted carnations
both the mother of the bride and white daisies, all arranged
and the mother of the ·groom in heart shapes.
immediately following the
Robert C. Miller, UtUe
ceremony.
Hocking, was best man for the
Given in marriage by her bridegroom. Ushers were
father, the bride wore a gown Roger Dixon, Pomeroy, Alan
of Jlnen lace fashioned with an McLaughlin, Warren, and
empire waist and a train at- Mark Grueser, Shade.
!ached at the back waist. Her . For her daughter's wedding,
veil was held in place with a Mrs. Kitelinger wore a pink
satin beaded juliet cap. The gown which swept to a flowing
bride's' bouquet featured a-line. Mrs. Skinner chose a ·
yellow roses arranged in heart yellow ani! white gown trim-

COLUMBUS- (UPIJ - For
the second consectitlye month,
the average July, weekly
earnings for factory producUun
workers In Ohio set a new
record, the Bureau of Employment Ser\rlces reported
Friday.
Nearly $Ztl3 was !ll!t as the
average . weekly factory
worker's earnings, reflecUng
considerable ove~tlme at
premium rates, officials said.,
Officials .sald n,arly 2. 7
million persons wet:e on the
payrolls of state .manufac,
turing industries during July,
with a Z per cent gqln In employment figures over July of
last year.
Contract construction
workers received the highest
wages In the state dqrlng July.
With weekly hours running
over 38 last month) officials
reported construcUoh workers
grossed an average 'of. nearly
$300 per week.
·
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Y,oung family has reunion
,,

RIJTLAND - The annual
Y0111g family reunion wlls held
Sunday, August 9, at the home
olllfr. and Mrs. Frank Youn•
Rutland.
••
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Wllb
ur Young and Mindy
Middldeport; Mrs, Luren~
· Kenne y and Clarence Edwards, Galena; Mr. and Mrs.
William Buck, Sr., Rutland ·
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Young:
Troy ; Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Young, .Rutland; Mrs . J. A.

POi'fEROY - The family
reunion of the Charles and
Minnie Springer Calaway
family was held !)unday at the
. ... hom~ of Vere Calaway.
,.
The eldest member of the
family present was Everett R.
Calaway, 81 years young. The
youngest present was Adam
Calaway, 10 days old, son of
Buck Calaway.
Dinner and supper "were
served and several games
' were )layed during the day.
Th~e attending the gala
" festival were Mr. and Mrs.

{

road
vehicles
.

COLUMBUS - State motor
vehicles registrar c. Donald
Curry today reminded all
O~ioans who own snowmobiles,
trail or mini-bikes or other
types of "off-the-road"
vehicles that their 1973
.registrations
will· expire at
dni
ml .ght Aug. 31 ·
"Anyone operating a vehicle
of thj$ type on pubhc land.s ~r
on pnvate property that 1sn t his ~n after ~ug. 31 will be
reqwred to diSplay the approprlate 1974 decal or license
late, 'd Cur
"
P ' 881
ry. Anyone
ope~aUng an unregistered
vehicleiSsubjectto a fine of up
to $50 for the firstoffe~ -so 1
would strongly advise all
owners 10 pay the $5 fee and
obtain their 1974 plate o~ decal
before Sept. I, even If they
,_ 1
th off th
don 't p...
n o use e1r - eroad vehicle until la!fr in the
year. The licenses are sold in
Gallia County by Vaugh!
Smith, 1911 Eastern, Gallipolis,
and ·in Meigs County by Paul
Simon, 104 W. Main St.,

We celebrate Halloween
year-round here ; we have an
awful lot of pumpkin heads in
the place.
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Po~roy.

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are announced

l Area Deaths

Parenti Are Planners
Rap :
J'm only IZ and already my parcnill are lelllng me wl!at 1
&amp;hall be when I!P'OW up. They ar~n·t f01clng me - yet but
they're dropping hlnll.
For example, my Dad wan Ill me to be either an a&lt;."Countant
!Ike him, or work in an airline so when he retires hi$ trip to Spain
will be cheaper ,
·
My mother wants me to be a teacher beCa!llle SHE says I
appeal to children. These thlnW! are not for rne. I want to be a
child psychiatrist.
What should I do?- UNDECIDED WITH PARENTS WHO
ARE SURE
UWPWA$ :
Your parents aren'lforcing you, so don 't get uptight about It
They're dreaming abOut your future as they dla about their own,
for having children, It would seem, Is almost like living your own
childhood all over again.
·
Also, they may be offering you several different ideas just to
start you thinking early about a career. And they've succeeded,
haven't they ? - SUE

+++
Dear Undecided :
Afavorite parent ga me Is "What will my child be when she
(he) grows up?" It's about equal parts wishful thinking, pride,
kidding around (that cheap trip to Spain) allll "childhood
revisited.''
·
So play the game with equal parts of listening and friendly
argument. You'lllearn a lot abotlt career choices th~t way . HELEN
.

+++

Dear Helen and Sue :
I'm going with a guy my sister used to date. She cheated on
Frank so they broke up. She iells everybody she dropped HIM ,
He Is sur vived by his fOrmer
.but it was the other way around .
wile, Evelyn; a son. Donald, of
He gave me a ring and she's green with jealousy because he Groveport , and his lather,
Elmer, of Columbus. Funeral
never gave her one.
services will be announced by
She won't leave liS alone. When he comes over she's there M-'rfin Funeral Home.
with her wisecracks and taunting remarks. She does everything
FREDA GRATE
to aggravate Frank and me.
RUTLAND
- Freda Grate,
The other day she said, "You get my leftovers, like a dog." 76, College St.,
Rutland, died
.It ·~ obvious she still wants him, but why all the bunk ?
· .
Sa 1.urday morning at her
Our patents tell her to leave us alone, but. she won't l et up. res1dence. She was preceded in
death by her first husband,
What should I do?- ADOG WITH SISTER'S LEl'TOV'ERS
Clarence (Tan) Schoonover
and

her seco nd husband.

Dear Sis :
Garland Grate.
She i s survived by a
U Frank didn't enjoy this double play for him, he wouldn't daugh1er
, Juanita Bolen ,
keep coming over to your house. Instead, he'd avoid "!rouble" by Columbus, and these sons,
taking you out.
Jack Schoonover, and Charles
Sc
hoonover, both of Mansfield ;
U you weren't secreUy afraid your sister might win him
Clarence
Schoonover,
back, you could feel sorry for her. rather than furious.
Columbus·; Thomas and Gene
So face the fact that you're jealous and worried too, and don't Schoonover, both of Ru11and,
be quite so hard on a sister who lost : it might be YOU next time. and Jerry .Schoonover of
Pomero[ ; three brothers,
- HELEN
.Russell lttle, Rutland ; Vern
+++
Little. Middleport, and Terry
Sis:
Little, Athens; 22 grand children
and 10 great .
And hope your sister gets a new boyfriend so~n. That will
grandchildren .
solve all your problems. (Unless he's Frank .) - SUE
Funeral services will be

+++

Rap:
About MS. versus MISS. I have elected to title myself MS.
Reasons:
·
I. I don't want to Jl.et married .
2. I don't want to have children .
3. I'm going to have a wonderful career.
4. And I DO like men.
·
Nothing turns's man off faster than a 20-year-&lt;Jid "Miss Doris
Day.:•- MS. K.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Announcement of grand lodge
appointments was. made here
Friday at ths opening of the
44th'aimual fall meeting of the
Ohio Elks Association. The
three-day meeting will continue through Sunday with M.r s. Hysell has
about 900 representatives of 98
Ohio Elk lodges attend' lh
advanced degree
meeting.
mg e
Named to national posts
POMROY - Receiving a
were Elwood W. Reed of dipl9ma recently in advanced•
r
Bow I~g Green, new lodges hair design and beauty culture
committee; Carleton L. Riddle was Mr.s. Pauline Hysell,
of Willard, youth activities Pomeroy, cosmetology incommittee; and I.awrence R. structor of the junior class at
Derry of Barnesville, state Meigs High School, ai ,Bruno's
associations committee. Advanced Academy of Hair
District Deputy Grand Exalted Design in Toronto, Canada.
Rulers for Ohio for the coming
Mrs. Hysell said upon her
year Include Leslie Do las of return the shag will "still be
M ·
·
ug
artms Ferry, . southeast in" but. a new blower and
d'15 tri t
curling Iron technique will be
c·
seen in the future in which the
hair dryer will not be used.
This style is called the
NOWVOUKNOW
"Canadians." Mrs. Hysell also
A male swan is called a cob wok a course there in the
and a female is a pen.
styling of long hair.

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Mix &amp; Match
Separates
lOLA'S

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AWide ·choice of

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WIN DILL OllloTE

RUTLioND,O.

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OFF
WHILE
SUPPLY

lASTS

JOHN P. SAYRE
NEW HAVEN - John P.

Sayre, 65, Midway Drive, New
Haven, died Friday afternoon

at University
Columbus. .

Hospital ,

Mr. Sayre was a former
supervisor in the fabrication

shop at Marlella Mfg ., Co., Pt.
Pleasant, for 2~ years and was

later employed at Midwest

RETURNS TO HOLZER
MINERSVILLE - Albe'rt
(Red ) Keeton of Minersville
has been returned to the Holzer
Medical Center for additional
treatment.
'

BIG YANK BRAND

Steel in Pomeroy. .
·
Mr. Sayr.e was born Jan. lJ,

1908 at Letart, W. Va., the son

REGULAR
JEANS

01 the tate Bert E. and Anna
Thomas Sayre.

Mr. Sayre is survived by his
wife, Margaret McMillian
s~rre; one son, Herbert, of
Mo ton, W. Va .; a grand·
daughter ,
Cathy ;
four
brothers, Harold , Hupped,

CASUAL ·JEANS

AUCTION

While 150 Pairs Last

MENS
WOMENS

COMPLETE LIQUIDATION

FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 10 A.M.

GIRLS

Your
Choice

PRICE

FIXTURES FROM

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10 NCR Cash Register . 13 Check Out Counters, 120 Tables,
150 Shopping Carts, 52 X Racks. 5 Racks. Round Racks.
Emergency Lights, Tying ' Machine, 22 Fire Ex·
llngulshers, Clothes Hangers. (J) No . &lt;B Pin on Machines,
Wire Baskets. 8 Rackbars. Roll Around Hanging Carls,
Window Shade Cutter, Wrapping Machine. 'Two Wheel
Dollies .

OFFICE EQUIPMENT
Sign Machine, Safe, Olivetti Calculator, NCR Adding
Machine, Check Protector, SCM Classic 12 Typewriter,
Smith Corona Adding Machi· e. PA System., Brun ing
Copier. Oak Oesks, Secreterla ' Ch•''" i:J IIng Cabinets.
Water Cooler, Ladders.

DESKS and

:J
:J
74 2·4211

%

SAVE LIKE
NEVER
BEFORE

announced by Martin Funeral
Home.

191HEETMODERN GONDQLASHELVING

Main at Sycamore
Pomeroy, Ohio

R.UTLAND
fURNITURE

JUST IN .TIME FOR BACK TO SCHOOL

PARK SHOPPING CENTER
PARKERSBURG, WEST VIRGINIA

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UNIT CALLED
POMEROY - ·The Pomeroy
Emergency Squad was called
to Darwin at Z:07. a.m.,
Saturday for James Cunningham who was ill at his
home . He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted.

Today

PRICE BREAK!

ARlAN'S DEPARTMENT STORE

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FOR

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See Beautiful

CRll Us

I

Wray , Oonn te Wray , C1rl

lodlly (Sunday) from noon to 9

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Everett R. Calaway, Mr. and
Mrs. Vere Calaway, Nina Jean
and Ranson, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Calaway, Robert, Warren,
Ernie, Linda, Charles and
Brenda, Harry Calaway, Mrs.
Hattie Calaway and Cathy, Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Hawk, Lisa
and Julie, Mr. and Mrs. Buck
Calaway, Tammy, Missy and
Adam, Mr. and Mrs. William
Pullins; JoAnn and Patty ,
Bobby Boggs, Bernice Boggs,
Johnny Hawk and Carolyn
Sidwell.

.·· Re$'istration due. Appointments
fo~ off the
to grand lodge

heritage house
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Young, Sr., Middleport ; Mr.
and Mrs. William Buck, Jr.,
Rick, Shelley and Pat Hager,
Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs. J . A.
Young, Jr., Joe and Luanne,
Cambridge ; Mr. and Mrs .
Ralpb Clark, Bob and Riehle,
New Haven, . W. Va .: Mrs .
· and
Nancy Pope, Doug, Toni
Tracy, Middleport ; Mrs. Susan
Hibbs, Mary and Greg,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Bintz, Beaver.

Cqlrzways have reunion

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Wood, Sue and Roonle, Mr. and
Mra. Webber Wood, Mr. and
Mr•. Virgil King, Geneva,
David a.nd Helen, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold White, Letha Cowa·n,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wellh,
Mr · •nd Mrs. J,eroy Weilh and
Homer, Mr. and ~rs. Darrell
Napper, Steve Brlcklea, all of
Pomeroy ; Elfie IVood, Albany;
Mr. and Mrs. Earle Wood
Middleport ; Mr. and Mrs:
Norman Will and Duane
Rutland ; Mr. and .Mrs. !ferry
Kroll, Wyandotte, Mich. ·
It was voted to meet next
year at the same place on the
second Sunday In August

today (Sunday) ,
Patibearero will be Harold

Dunlope Funeral HOm.e, 215
Fernwood Rd., Winlersvllle,

p.m. S.rvlces will be at lhe Wray, Fred Wroy, Gory Flnloy
home al II a.m. Monday with and AI Bowen .
Pastor David M. Collin, priost
C. A. JENKIN$0N
Dan and Ed, itll ol Letart, W. ol the Reorganized Church of
RENNA FUNK LIN
POMEROY - Clifford Allen Va .
Jesus
Christ
of
Latter
Day
PT.
PLEASANT - ~h.
Jenkinson, 84. Mulbl!rry Ave .•
Funeral services will be Salnls, olllclallng.
Re.nna
0
. Fronklln, 17, :IOIJ.9tt,
Pomeroy, died Friday at Monday al 1&lt;30 p.m. at
StrHt,
Poinl Pleuant, lor
Burial
will
be
al
the
V
lnlon
Veteran) Memorial Hospital Foglesong Funeral Hom.e In Memorial Cemetery with many years
a well known and
following an extended lllne., , Mason with Tom Clarke ol- graveside services at~ : 30 p.m , prom lnen t business
wOman In
""-· Jenkinson was born In llclallng. Burial will be In
Point
Pleaoant,
died
Friday In
Pomeroy, Oct. J, 1888, the ..,n Evergreen Cemetery at Letart.
Mason
.
She
owned
and
ol lhe late Jame&amp; H. and Friends may call at the luneral
GRANT R. WRioY
operated
a
Ladles
Dress
Shop
Margaret Swauger Jenkinson. home today from J lo 5 aod 7 to
CROWN CITY - Gran! R. on Main StrHt, better known
On Jan . !8, 1910 he was 9.
Wray, 84, Rl. 2, Crown City, as
M.s. Franklin's Store.
married lo the former Garnett
Bladen·Mercervllle Rd .. died
Mn.
was a member
Hesson who died in 1964. He
ARTHUR T. YOHO
at B a.m. Saturday at his of the Franklin
Bapllst
In
was also preceded In deat~ by
WINTERSVILLE - Arthur residence. He had been In Ravenswood andChurch
was
a
two brothers t~nd three- sisters . T. Voho. 46, RD 2, Bantam lolling heallh severo! years. He
member
of
the
da119hters
of
He IP"n t hi• life In Meigs Ridge, Win tersville. died at was a retired Iarmer.
American Revolution In
County wllh Ihe exception of t3 4:25 a.m. Saturday In Ohio
He was born July 7, 1890 In The
Ravenswood . She was bot-n
years when he li'Yed 1n Cr'ooks· Valley Hospital, Steubenville. Ohio Township, Gall Ia County,
25, 1886, at Kenna, W. Va.,
ville employed at !he Jones
He was born October t5, 1926, the son ol !he late John and aJuty
da119hler
of Flournoy M. and
Mines. He worked as a coal the son ol the late Luther Yoho Laura Ross Wray . He was Sarah Adams
Maddo• and was
miner, bul retired In 1952duelo and Ethel Robinson, Athens. preceded In death by his wife, the
widow
of
late John C.
Injuries suflered In a fall from
An employee of the Bessie C. Wray. In August. Franklin also the
remembered
as
a llppte. He wao a member of engi neering department of 1969, whom he married f'llarch a Point Preasant business man
.
Fralernal Order of Eagles · Wh ee ling -Pit!sburgh Stee l 30, 1912. They spent most ol
Mrs
.
Franklin
Is
survived
by
Aerie 2171,
Corporation , Yorkville Plan!, their lives In Gallla County.
a foster sister, Betty Mae
Mr . Jenkinson Is survived by he was a member of the
He Is survived by three sons, Sheward of Polnf Pleasant.
·
a daughter . Mrs . Rober! Central Ave. United Method lsi Garland and David. Columbus;
Funeral
services
will
be
!Maxine! Russell, Crooksville; Church, Athens, the Stevens- Thurman, Rl. 2. Crown City; 11
Monday at 2 p.m. at
a granddaughter, M.s. Ned Christian Posl 557, American grandchildren, and 11 great- conducled
lhe
Stevens
Funeral Home.
!Belle) Grant. Crooksvllle, and Legion , Wintersville, ~nd th(! grandchildren; one brother, Burial will lollow
In the Lone
a sister, Mrs . Glenna Hess ol American Iron and Steel John Wray, Columbus; and Oak Cemetery. Friends
will be
Bucyrus.
Association . He was an Air Geneva Hall, who was raised In received at 1he tuneral home
Funeral servic;:es will be Force ve1erl!ln of World War II. the family home.
.
Monday at 1:30 p.m. a! Ewing
He Is survived by his wife,
He was preceded In death by !rom 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 lo 9 p.m.
Chapel. Burial will be In Beech Nan cy Walker Yoho ; his two sons, one daughter, three
}'LIES TO MEXICO CITY
Grove Cel)1e lery. Friends may mother, one daughter, Robin brothers and tour sis ters.
MEXICO CITY (UPI) call anytime .
Lynn at home; lwO brothers,
Funeral services will be a1 2
Henry
A. Kissinger flew , to
Ray Lloyd, Springfield and p.m. . Monday at the Bethel
ORVILLE NAPPER
Luther Eugene, Athens ; two Church near Bladen with the Mexico City Friday to attend
MIDDL EPORT - · Orvi lle · ·Sisters. Mrs. Willard (Eileen I Rev , Charles Lusher of- the sliver wedding anniver1111ry
(Hobl Napper, 54. Rt. 1 Mid- Border, El Paso, Tex :, and flclatlng . Burial will follow at
dleport, died Sat.urday mor- Mrs, Warren !Allee ) Dogson, . Bethel Cemetery. Friends may of Mexico's foreign minister in
nlng at University · Hospilal, Athens .
call at the Waugh·Halley-Wood his first trip abroad since being
Columbus. Mr . Napper was
Friends may call at the Funeral Home after 3 p.m. nominated secretary of state.
born Nov. 3, 1918 In Rutland.
He was preceded In death by'
-his mother, Lucille Napper .

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Bryon, Mr. and Mrs. tnysses
Cox, Paulett&amp;, Terry, Alan and
Mary Beth, Mrs. 11a Osborne
and Bill, Kathy Dill, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Welch and Diane,
Mrs. Ada Shutts, ~s. VIvian
'Archer, Mr. and· Mrs. Charles
Lee Archer, Monica and
Gregory Lee, Mr. and Mfs.
Dean Archer, Marie Rhodes,
Lorain Grim, · Kathy Jean
Grim, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Slephard, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Wyers, Mrs. Carroll Moore,
Ricky and Mary Ann Moore,
Greta Miller, Esther Dotson,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Cox, Mr.
and Mrs. G. E. Mills, Mrs.
Marie Snider, Holan Young,
Mr . arid Mrs. Lovell Smedley,
D. C. Yates, Mr. and·Mrs. G. C.
Tatterson, Eric Lee Tatterson
aild Mrs. Kathryn Brooker.

Mr. and Mrs.' George Skinner

RIJ'I'LAND - The Wood
family reunion wu held at
~'or111t Acree Pll'k on Aua. 12.
Ofllf;en e~led lor nut year
were Er1111t Wood , prealdent·
.W.ara Will, vice prealdent:
Jean Wood, secretary and
lr~,urer. and Deloria Kine
pro.ram chairman. Prize~
went to Elfie Wood, oldett,
Horner Wellh, youngest and
coming the fartheat, Mr. and
Mrs. Terry Knoll of Wyandotte
Mich. The door prize and
guOflng game prize was won
by L181'rell Napper.
· .\\ttendlng were Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Wood, Earl and
Edith, Mr. and Mrs. Norman
•

CARPET SPECIAL!

Velerau Memorial Htspltal
ADMITTED - · Barbara
Baer, Minersville; Maggie
King, Clio, W. Va.; Myla
Hud10n, Srracuae; Freda
: . Laudermilt, Pomeroy; Carol
Drake, New Haven.
DISCHARGES - Audrey
MEETING CAlLED
• Arn~ld, Chi'Uitlne Mu111er,
TUPPERS PJ.,AINS
Gllldya Q-ua, Dallal Edwards, Chriatmaa decoratloM will be
Ruby Eynon, ,Kate Price, on dllplay by Deco Mfg. Co.,
Edward Findley, Clarence Columpga, at a public meeting
McDaniel, Hazel Curtis, at the community building here
' Mitchell Holley, KeiDiy LurlJ.. Thursday, Aug. 30,at 7p.m. All
• l«d.
.
citlzeM are Invited.
•

A recepUon honorlfll the

coople was held II Kennedy
center, Hiram, !rom • to I p.m.
Mums gladioli, carnation•
and · ' dai1ie1
deco(ated
the bride's table , Tire
three tiered cake wu
l!&gt;pped - with the !radiUonlll
mlnlloture bride and groom.
Mrs wilbur Valot presided at
the · table and Mrs . Irlla
Robinson registered the
guests.
For a wedding trip to .
Niagara Falls and to Grand
Band Ontario, Canada, the
bride'changed Into a brown and
white plaid suit with a corsage
of white carnations and pink
roses. ··. ·
Agraduate of Windham High
School, she Is employ&lt;! by the
Sajar Plastics Corp., Mid·
dlefield. Skinner graduated
from Meigs High School and
attends General Motprs In·
sUtute as a cooperaUve student
sponsored by Fisher Body
Lordstown Fabrication Plant.
He Is a member of Sigma
Alpha Epsilon Fraternity.
Guests were from Elgin, Jll.,
Buffalo, N. Y., Columbus ,
Dayton, Tallmadge, Shade,
UtUe Hocking an.d' Pomeroy;

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

Wood reunion held

e~nagu.

1

Shrinettes have meet

::•• Assignments made for
•• Southern kindergarten
•

.and baby's breath ae&lt;:ented
'l'lilh blue cornflowers and
purple violets.
Miss Janet .Gray served as
maid of honor. She wore an Ice
blue staley crepe gown !rimmed In white venise lace and
accented with royal blue
ribbon.
Bridesmaids were Miss
Patricia Wickham, sister of the
bride, who was dressed
ldenUcally to the maid of
honor, Miss Sue Bell! and Miss
Unda Corey. The latter two
were dressed In lila~ staley
crepe accented wflh deep
purple rlbbQn. All the attend·
ants carried colonial nosegays
of white gardenias, blue cornflowers, deep purple violets
and baby's breath.
Ronald Bikacsan served as
best man. Ushers were
Michael Hoffman, Roy
Kisseberth and Tim Kilmer.
A six-tiered wedding cake
with\ilolet trim centered with a
fountain and topped by a gold
wedljing cross was the focal
point of the reception, held in
the church social room.
Following a wedding !rip to
Sarasota, Fla., the couple will
reside at 681 Burns Ave., West
Carrollton.
The bride is a 1971 graduate
of West Carrollton High School
and is employed by the Dayton
Division of Dayton Walther.
The groom, also a graduate of
West Carrollton, attended
Wright State University and is
presently enrolled at ITT
Technical Institute. He is
employed by Frigidaire.

Observe 50th anniversary

Something," Mrs. Edith
Sisson. Two special arUcles
were presented, Mrs. Harry
Wyatt read "It's No Time" and
Mrs. John Scott read "You've
Come a Long Way, Teacher." .
· The business meeting opened
with reading of the minutes
and
the
Jove
offering ,
The
service
of celebration meeting to be
held at Christ United Methodist
Church at Marietta on September 16 was discussed. The ·
nominating committee
presentedthenamesofofficers
for the coming year, They are
Mrs. Russ Wat&amp;on, president,
Mrs. Edith Sisson, vicepresident, Mrs. Vernon Nease,
secretary, and Mrs. Alfred
Yeauger, treasUrer. A motion
was made and carried that the
officers so nominated be
elected.
Forty-five sick calls
llirs. George Hensley, Jr.,
Deanna, Sandra, Angela and were made on sick and shut-in
POMEROY- The Twin City
Gregory, Mrs. Barbara Hens- people in the community by the
Shrlnettes
met at the home of
ley, Charles, Paul and Matt, members the past month.
Cookies and coffee were Mrs. Clara Adams, Thursday
Mrs. Mary Evans, Mindy,
Johnny : and Dianna, Mrs. served to Mrs. Hanson Holter, evening.
Mrs. Cora Beegle, president,
Sharon Hensley, Penny; Mr. Mrs. Ulllan Henderson, Mrs.
&amp;·nd !'Irs. Henry Hensley, Uswin Nease, Mrs. Edison named committees of Mrs,
Ronme and Melissa, Mrs. Hollon, Ml'S. Lawrence Nap• Viole.! Miller, vice president
per, Mrs. Harry Wyatt, Mrs. and Mrs. Beulah Ewing,
Leona Hensley,
There were 16 guests, Justis Richard Jarvis, Mrs. Denver treasurer to register guests at
(a friend of Richard Uter), Holter, Mrs. John Scott, Mrs. the Meigs Inn, September 20, at
Mona Johnson, Jinlmy Lan- Alfred Yeauger, Mrs. Dian 6:30 p.m. when Lady Ethel De
don, Mike Hall, Leota Ferrell, Genheimer, Mrs. Vernon
ENJOY PICNIC
Mrs. Ethel Carter, Mr. and Nease, Mrs. Fred Nease and
REEDSVILLE
The
Mrs. John Carter, Matt, Amy, Mrs. Russ Watson.
following members and guests
Julie, and Phillip, Mr. and Mrs.
of the Community Builders
David Carter, VIcki and Cathy.
held a picnic at Forked Run
It was planned to have the · To be on council
State
Park Saturday evening,
next reunion on the third
POMEROY - Miss Ingrid Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brown
Sunday In August 1974 at PortHawley, daughter of Mrs. and David, Mr. and Mrs.
land Park.
Dianne Hawley, Pomeroy has Ronald Osborne and guests,
been selected to serve on the Mr. and Mrs. Tom Osborne
Greenville, S.C., Mr. and Mrs:
state 4-H Teen Council. ·
Ingrid is 11 and has been in 4- Ernest Whitehead, Jane and
H work for seven years when Juli, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
she has taken cooking, sewing, Myers and David Young, Mr.
and furniture projects, served and Mrs. Dohrman Reed, Kim
on the Meigs County Junior and Kirk, and Mr . and Mrs.
VanMeter, Kenneth Swine.
Afternoon class - : Keith Fair Board fofthree years, and Warre~ Pickens and Kay
Allen, Jill Arnott, Rail'lly continues as a member of the Balderson.
Beegle, Teresa Burnside, county Junior Leader Club. She
Tracy Cleland, Jack Corn.ell is a junior leader In her local
.
AT.OPEN.HOUSE
Tonya Cummins, Jay Dod: club, the Middleport Merry
·
POMEROy - Mr. and Mrs
derer, Dixie Dugan, Richard Munchers.
Ingrid, along with the other George Kalatta, Syracuse, and
Gilbride, Reba Green, Ji1flny
Hanning, HeatlrHUI, Max Hill, Ohio Teen Council members Mrs. Dorothy Johnston
Mark Jarrell, Mike Johnson will be honored with a break: Pomeroy, attended the 50th
Tina Joy, Slerrie Lawson: fast on Aug . . 'l1 at Rhodes Wedding anniversary recently
David Proffitt, Tammy Center at the Ohio State Fair. ~~:~::.Mrs. E. L. Raines,
Proffitt, Renee Rhodes, Harold
Roush, Andrew Rose, Robin
Savage, Teresa Slulet, Slerrl
Sisson, Karla Smith, Slawn
Stobart, Joseph Tucker, Keith
Whlte, ,Scott Wickline, Charles
Wolfe,. :Jr. Jimmy Wolfe,
Cheryl Sellers, Mandy Hill.

Hensley reunion held

••

MIAMISBURG
The
marriage of Stephanie Michele
Wickham and Dennis Mark
Blkacsan was solemnlled at
the Judson Baptist Churcl\. at
8:30p.m. June 16.
Rev. Walter P. Blkacsan
conducted the can dl~llght
ceremony for his son and the
daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
Douglas Wickham, 2640 Nyack
-· we, Miami Twp. The Rev.
Blkacsan Is now pastor of the
Racine Baptist Church. The
bride is the grandniece of Mrs.
Caddie Wickham, Pomeroy
and the granddaughter of the
late Ray and Mary Ellen Hood
Ohlinger Wickham, Meigs
County.
The altar was decorated with
a double candelabra and
arrangements of white gladioli
and rosebuds. The organist
was Rick Wills with Mrs.
Walter P. Bikacsan, mother of
the groom, as soloist.
Escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride chose a formal gown of while satinized
. organza and venise lace. The
empire gown featured a deep
lace yoke, circled with a self
ruffle of venlse lace. A high
wedding ring collar and long,
ruffled bridal lace sleeves
completed the bodice. The skirt
swept to a full cathedral train
and was appliqued in roses
circled with wide venlse lace
ruffles. Her !)ouffant veil of
imported silk illusion was
caugpt to a juliet cap of venise
lace and seed pearls. The bride
carried a colonial bouquet of
":bite gardenias, ste_phanotis

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PHONE 992-2181
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-- -~--- -- - - -

12- The SUilday Tinm . Sentinel, SWldav. Au~. ?i), t973
JMI-~~::.-:.:~:;:::.;::~;:·:;~.- . . -..;:.: · .::::::;.:;:::~~==~=:~~:~:::·:-;::::::::::::·:·::-':·:·:•::.·!·:·:::;.~&gt;'·:·.··.

Martha Mitchell insists

Briefs~'

ews .. in

l

,

By United Pre&amp;s lnteroallonat
WASHINGTON - CITING THE "REALITIES of lhe
111111'ket," the government authorized Interes~ rates to rise to ~
ret'OI'd hlgb U per cent Saturday on feder~lly msured mortglljJes
to help prospective low . and middle~nC&lt;Jme buyers compete for
ICllrce mortgage money. The new rate raises a home buyer's
lllQilthly payment for principal and interest about S9 to $t73 on a
$20,000 mortgage over zo years.
But the increase - the second in 15 days lor mortgages up to
$33,000 Insured by the Federal Housing Administration and lhe
Velel'ans Administration .,.. was still short of the 9 per cent and
higher Interest rates for conventional loans. '
·
Everett Matson, president of the Mortgage_ Bankers
A.9aociation said the decision was "a welcome Signal that
economic ~llty has overcome political expediency." G~rge C.
Martin, president of the Na.tional Association of Home Brnlders,
assailed the Increase saying it would "reinforce '' the htgher
rates on conventional loans and "add to the burdens of the
already troubled consumer seeking housing."
·

SAN CI.EMENTE, Calif. (IJPI) - Martha Mitchell, disputing
bo~ her husband and Presidllnt Nixon , claims the two men
.l&amp;lked frequently in the summer of 1972 while the Watergate
cover-up was building, and that Nixon knew about "the whole
goddamn tlllny."
The wife ~ former Attorney General John N. Mitchell, In
telephone Interviews Thureday and Friday from her New York
City apartment, a lao said her husband was "a goddamn fool"
for shielding the President during his testimony before the
Senate Watergate Committee.
Mitchell backed up Nixon's claim or uninvolvement In
Watergate In hopes that the President wW come to his rescue II
· he i.s convicted of any crime, she said, adding "he thinks he
would give hlm clemency for what be has done for him."
Mitchell is scheduled to go pn trial Sept. llln New York on
I

'

LJNCOLN, NEB . - THE NEBRASKA Parole Board has
paved the way to freedom for Caril Ann Fugate, 30, the com·
panion of mass killer Charles Starkweather when he went on an
11-murder rampage in 1958. In it£ decision Friday to commute
Miss Fugate's life sentence to a fixed number of years so she
would be eligible for parole, the board said she was "an .acceptable risk for parole consideration."
Miss Fugate was 14 when she accompanied Starkw~ath~r
from the Uncoln area to Douglas, Wyo:, leavmg II v1ctuns. m
!1ncoln dead of gunshot Bl!d stab wounds . Star.kweather ":as
convicted of murder in 1959 and executed the same year. MISS
Fugate was sentenced to life imprisonment on a first-degree
murder conviction for her part in the slayings.

PRICES GOOD SUN ....

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By EUGENE V. RISHER
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
(UP!) - Some of Presldllnt
Nl!&lt;on's aides expressed confi·
'deflCe Saturday he had "bottomed out" in popularity polls
and was on his way to
recpvering prestige and pollti·
cal clout lost In the Watergate

On Saturday morning, Nixon
and h~ daughter, Trlcia, went
on what deputy·press secretary
Gerald L. Warren said was a
"private drive." He decli_ned to
say .where they went.
·"The President likes to be
private from lime to lime,"
Warren said.
aff~ir.
Since his news conference,
A White House spokesman Nixon has been operating on a
said calls and telegrams to the vacation schedule and trying to
~!dent following his news get some rest.
conference Wednesday were
"very favorable/' Other aides Although his aides expect an
expressed a more enthusiastic upswing in the popularity polls,
view, describing the news they conceded that Nixon had
coo!.erence as the most Inten- not regained control of the
sive grilling yet of a President bureaucracy and still was a
and saying he passed with high long war from regaining the
is.
pre-Watergate momentum of
Reporters sensed a feeling of his administration,
optirt\ism among the White Alexander M. Haig Jr., the
House family that has not been White House chief of staff who
evidenlfor months.
· The President has been under
extraordinary pressure and has
showp signs of Irritability.
According to one official, Nixon
was ·angered when he saw
reporters trailing him Thursday
on an exCin'sion with his
daughter, , Julie Ei.senhower,
and friend, C.G. Rebozo, to Red
Beacll, a deserted strip set
aside Jo~ his use on the Camp
Pendl~ton rnllltary reservation.
By DANIEL L. TAYLOR
DENVER (UPI) - Citizen
band radio operators south of
Denver Saturday picked up
transmissions from a man who
.' ' ' i
. threatened to IIIII President
Nixon and VIce Preside~ I

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from. full or tWin size.

NEW ORLEANS - A WOMAN WHO said ex-policeman
Edwin M. Gaudet Jr., threatened to kill President Nixon said
Friday she was not so sure and the charges were dropped.
Although the federal charges were quickly dropped, Gaudet, 30,
remained in an Alburquerque, N. M., jail on state charges of
aggravated assault on a police officer with intent to commit a
violent felony in connection with his arrest.
· ' The woman who was not identified, decided she was not sure
who she heard threaten the President in a New Orleans bar.

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KENT, OHIO - MAURICE F. STRONG, an environmentalist in the United Nations, warned today the future of
mankind is threatened not only by nuclear holocaust, but also by
"neglect and mismanagement" of the environment. Strong,
executive director of the United Nations Environment Program,
spoke at the summer commencement exercises at Kent Slate
University. More than 1,600 degrees were awarded and Strong
received an honorary doctor of laws degree.
"The heart of the matter is that this is the first generation
. , . in which God has placed in our hands the power either to
usher in a new golden era or to bring the human experiment on
this planet to an end - through a single act of nuclear sell·
destruction or through 'the careless neglect and management of
the very growth processes that produce our wealth," he said.

HECK'S REG 1.38

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BELLEFONTAINE- Paper mill strikes and labor disputes
in Canada, making newsprint scarce, resulted in the Bellefontaine Examiner (10,000 ell:.) missing its first publication
Saturday. The newspaper has published six days a week for more
than 82 years and this is the first missed publication.
·
- Publisher Tom Hubbard said the paper had not received any
shipments of newsprint for two months. He said his shipment was
apparently still in Canada. Strikes have hit the Canadian paper
mills and the country's railroads, Mills have notified customers
their shipments would be reduced by 15 per cent during the next
'leW months.

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$1.84

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PORTLAND, ORE. - EMPLOYES in the state office
building found out Friday tbat Goy. Tom McCall meant business
wben he ordered cutbacks in·energy consumption.
.·~y have no hoi water. All rest rooms, except those next to
· the i&amp;baratorles on the loth floor and for' cafeteria workers on the
seventh Door ,have the hot water turned off. Not only is the water
turned off Wlder the sinks, but the handles of the hot water
spigots have been removed . ..

,

74~

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1ft Jim Staataor Joe Gilts
J~sr Sovth of Silwer

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~~ n~~~~~~~s PP;:~~Y t~~

state...
Vetter said the first signal
was heard about !p.m. MDT (3.
·
p,~H~~~~~e on every hour on
the hour since then," Vetter
said. "But he's smart. He stays
on only a short time because he
knows If be stays on longer he
canbetraced.Iunderstandthe
same thing happened in New
Mexico."
Vetter said that during one
transmission, the man said he
•

MIDDLEPORT ~ Paul privileges, freedom, standard
Smart, retired president of the of living, and opportunities or
Middleport Citizens National any people In the world/' he
Bank, loves America . It said.
doesn't require much of a push
Among other features of
to get hlm talking about what America menUoned were Its
he calla, "still the greatest great flower gardens, bridges,
and museums. Bob Bumgarner
country In tbe worgd."
Friday evenlug he addressed was program chairman.
the Middleport • Pomeroy
Guests introduced were Dr.
Rotary Club following dinner . Milton. Mason, a new, oP·
at Heath Me thodlat Church on tometrist IISSOCiated with Dr.
Bradshaw In Middleport. Dr,
hla favorite subject.
•
Oblll!rvlng that he has vi.sile~ · Maaon and hie family reside on
39 of the 40 great ClUes of L.lncoln Helghta, Pomeroy. He
America, Smart cited several was a guest of Bernard Full2,
with outstanding attractions, Other guests were the Rev. Ed
Including New York City, San Fischer and Harold HenFrancllco, Chicago and others. drlckaon, Elmira, Ind.,guest of
San DIIJO is the city the Smart John Werner.
family haa mlllld vlaiUng, .
Ladies of the church served a
"Too many people l~nore that aleak dinner.
Americans enjoy the m01t

T:e~~~~M:a~o~~o!~~~~ein

the west was contained
Saturday, and an army of
10,000 firemen began returning
to their homes across the
nation after the worst outbrea. k
of timber blazes in the area's
history. Nearly 200,000 acres of
timber and range land were
blackened. Damage estimates
exceeded $100 million. About 30
million board · feet of lumber
was lost in California's
Eldorado National ' Forest
alone. Roughly, this was
enough for 3,000 three-bedroom
houses.

" It included the procedures of everything that has happened. !
saw it with my own two eyes, when I was trying to press John not

to go into the campaign."
Mrs. Mitchell said she !eared her husband would never be able
to extricate himself from Watergate and that the scandal had
hurt their personal relationship.
"What Watergate has d.one to our lives," she mused. "We
have been suffering . The President has assaulted both John and
me in taking everything we had or wanted."

SUNDAY. AUGUST 26 1973

PAGE 13

as 'threat' real?

Wolfe
named
Jackson SD

u~:~~~~· the

man lapsed
1
f'?totabchidld's vtoicie ldlurintg ththe
Irs roa cas • s m ar 0 e
voice "Larry" used in appealing for help.
· ·
"W ,
Ito
e te get g a rea1 strong
signal," Vetter said. "The guy
s;tys be's in New Mexico but
the signal is so strong that he
may be in Colorado. If he is in

I ,
'?I

frequently . reflects Nixon's
thinking, said thought some of
the questions at the Wednesday
news conference "bordered on
the edge of · impropriety even
under the circumstances."
But he said generally the 5().
minute sesSion was a "good,
healthy confrontation" in which
the Presidet:~t maintained his
"dignity and cool."
ED WOLFE
"We are all very. pleased and
I would hope some of the
press's concerns are al·
levialed," he said.
Bryce Harlow, a highly
regarded Nixon adviser who
was called out of retirement
from public service io be a
post-Watergate counselor to the
President, said he thought
Nixon did so well in the session RACINE -Ed Wolfe, son of
he would be having them more Mr . and Mrs. Dory WoHe,
Racine, has been named
often.
service director for the 'city of
Jackson effective Sept. 10 .
For the past five and one-ball
years, Wolfe has · been employed as as~istant cashier ai
the Jackson First National
Bank. He was formerly employed in Dayton with the
General Electric Ctedit 0&gt;.
and with the Economy Loan
0&gt;. in Gallipolis. He has had
wide experience in the
was trapped in an overturned financial and personnel field
car and that gasoline was which he feels will be of great
lealling on him.
":'e to him In dealing with the
"At first we believed he was City budget proble!"s a~d
drunk but now we don't think workmg With the various City
so-.. Vetter said, ·"l'lut wi'"cf~ I departments.
!·
'
Appomted by Mayor James
thmk the gay Is crazy'._He has Jenkins WoHe and his wife the

th
If' .
f
f ..
t .nd
.
New Me1&lt;1co·
au oriUes to Ohlmlc.~~1s or at1mg o 1I
search for a' boy named Larry.
'This
ha
y lte
'd h
,_ . th
'
guy s got to be a
e r sal e was ... pmg e
psycho, " said Robert Vetter, a signal for authorities.
service station owner who first "There is a possibility he is
monitored the call. ''He threat· moving around, but I think we
ened to kill Nixon and Agnew will find him if the signal
and then he threated to kill comes back as strong as it had
everyone. He's daring anyone been," Vetter said. "The guy
to find him."
·
says the country is stupid and
Earlier this month, New · couldn't find themselves if they
Mexico officials spent at least wanted to."
$20,000 and hundreds of manhours searching for a child who
broadcast a plea for help. The
transmissions were heard
across the western part of the

book" and hinted that ll includes plans ~ - Waterpte.;tyle
maneuvers .
"I saw the leFAher-bound campaign strategy book lor 1972lhat·
was written by Nixon and (H,R.) flaldeman, " the former White
House chief of staff, she said.

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

~r;.~bf:~or ~a~~xh~hat~: ~~~n ;:;yb~~1:· ~~; ';,';~~~~ fo~mer'.

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CASAGRANDE, Ariz. (UP!)
- ResCuers Saturday broke a
small hole through earth and
debris' to the copper mine
·tunnel where two miners have
been entombed for eight days
by a cave-ln.
The ·diggers were able to
shine lights into the blocked
dead-end tunnel, but they could
not see the trapped men, David
Deeder, 41, and Terry Udall,
24, of Ft. Collins, Colo, Nor was
there any response to their
repeated shouting. During the
more ;than a week of frantic
digging the rescue crews have
not known whether the men
· were dead or alive.
After boring a small hole
through to the two miners'
prison, the rescue crews
conltnued moving out earth by
machine, working to get cloae
enough to dig through with
shovels. Mine officials said it
mlght take hours to hack out an
opening big enough for men to
enter the blocked tunnel.
At almost the same time the
first boring was made .all the
way thrOilgh the cave-In area,
drilling crews on the surface,
· 1,300 feet above, completed a
slx·lnch vent line to the tunnel.
A test of air there showed it .
was free of poisonous gases
and carbon monoxide. The
temperature was believed to be
about 100 degrees.

HECK'S REG. $31.11

· Sfr.,ju IOf tif,bt , , , Br.o• rtsi1la"+. c:liohwaol.r tal., olai"'
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electronic shutter loi . oulomolic expo~ure~ . 4 ' sharp ] ·element
len~ . 8uilt·in flash thor uu~s inexpensive 4·shot llathci.o&amp;t. VaLl
'filll'l ~Sylvan ia 4 ·shot lloshc~bet in yoyr kit . And there'u1 pock of
square 1 ype 88 colOf film , that KliVt.l you money on.,.,, inttant
pi clune you toke . You get a coupon for three free copi4o1 ol?n• of
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·'

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(Continued on Page 18)

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CLEAN.

BOSTON '-- KENNEDY AND NIXON appeared in Boston
MWllcipal Court Friday on burglary c.harges, while a fellow
named Tnunan was sentenced for cashing a forged check.
Roger Kennedy, 18, and Philip Nixon, 20, pleaded innocent to
possession of burlgar's tools. Edward W. Truman was given a
six-month suspended jail sentence for forgery and attempted
larceny.

ALL PRO

I

JEWEliiY
DEPT.

VOL. 8 NO. 30

CB'ers hear
kill threats

1

Nixon lying

He told the Senate committee that he n&lt;&gt;ver mlormed Nixon
about the l'&lt;JVCr·up because he feared the President would blow
the alory wide Qpen and jeopardize his re-election chances. But
the former attorney general also said Nixon never asked him
whether top administration or campaign officials were involved
In o cover-up and that he would have given him all the inlormution If the President had inquired.
.
Nixon told a news conference here last Wednesday that
Mitchell was right to think be would "blow my stack" if he
learfl\)d about the -cover-up and that he never asked Mitchell ·
about news reports because all Investigative reports sent him
gave no indication that Mitchell or other officials were Involved.
Mrs. Mltc.hell i18ld Nixon not only knewIntimate details of the
Watergate operation In the summer of t972·as related by Mitchell, but that she had read a Nixon-written "campaign stratei(V

Nixon encouraged
by newest polls

MONDAY AUGUST 26 and 27

r11

charges of obstrucUng juslke and attempting to defraud the
government in co11necUon with a $200,000 contrlbuUon W the
Nixon re-&lt;!lectlon campaign.
Nixon. and Mitchell have indicated U1cy had liLLie contact last
summer. Mrs. Mitchell offered a different view.
"Nixon was aware or the whole goddamned thing," she
1188Crted. "For God'.s sake, he used to call Jo()n aU o'clock In the
morning. And he said he didn't call his attorney general? He
called him every night ." 1
"Why did \bey go out on the Sequoia {the presidential yacht)
every night last summer during re-election ?" she said,
Mitchell left the Justice Department March 1, 1972, to serve as
Nixon's campaign manager. He resigned that post two weeks
alter the June 17, 1972, break-in at the Democrals' Watergate
headquarters.
·

hush8nd~

Sharon Bro~n' .of
MinersVIlle, and two children,
Jamie, 7, and Janelle, 3, live at .
371 W. Second St., Jackson .
Wolfe is a member of the
Jackson Liolls Club and is an
active worker in the Gideons
and in the Calvary United
Methodist Church where he is a
member of the church board,
chairman of the worship and
education committee aM
teacher of the seventh and
eighth grade boys Sunday
school class.
Wolfe reports that he plans
no major changes in Jackson at
the present time and looks
forward to cooperating with

regarded as the first of public
presidential appearances after
months of silence on the
Watergate scandal.
- Nearly a week later, no one
had been arrested or even
charged in the conspiracy
case, and charges against
Gaudet, subject of an lnteMlve
manhWlt in New Mexico at one
point, have evaporated.
Was the threat a false
alarm? New Orleans Mayor
.Moon Landrieu doesn't · think

WASHINGTON (UP!) Was there a ·serious threat on
President Nixon 's life last
Monday in New Orleans, or did
the Secret Service and local
police fall embarrassing prey
to nothing more than bizarre
rumors and scare stories?
The question is being asked
nearly a week after the Secret
Service, in a rare public annoWlcement, said there was a
"possible · conspiracy" to
assassinate the President
which prompted a change In
his motorcade route through
the city and a search for
suspects that has yet to
produce any arrests.
The Secret Service and New
Orleans officials insist the
threat was real. Six black
militants are reported to have
conceived the alleged death
plot, and are still being wat.
ched ciosely.
·
Charges have been dropped
against another suspect,
Edwin Michael · "Punchy"
Gaudet Jr., 30, in what might
have been a case of mistaken
identity.
Gaudet,. a former New
Orleans policeman and prizefighter, contends he was in
New Mexico, I,OOO.miles away,
at the time he allegedly threatened Nixon's ~e in a New
Orleans drugstore.
A presidential assassination
plot, real or suspected, is never
routine but the New Orleans
affair has aroused · unusual
interest for several reasons :
-The threat was made
known by the Secret Service In
advance of Nixon's arrival in
New Orleans from Key Biscayne, Fla., a virtually unprecedented action by the
agency.
- Nixon's speech before a
Veterans of Foreign Wars
convention, which he gave as
scheduled
despite
the
assassination scare, was

so.
"! can tell you that the
President's parade was cancelled because the FBI o~ the
Secret Service thought there
was serious information concerning the President's
safety," Landrieil told UP!.
Jack Warner, spokesman for
the Secret Service, dismisses
suggestions the service pushed
the panic button when it
publiCized the threat betorehand.
"We have to take appropriate measures to
safeguard the life of the
President. We do not believe
we overreacted,'' Warner said.
Nixon had planned on the
way to the convention hall
Monday to wave to spectators
along Canal Street from his
partially open .llmousine, ·and
even to get out of the car and
walk into the crowd at one
point.
/
Following it£ usual routine,
the Secret Service had been
reviewing ils files of people in
the area who were known to
have threatened the President
in the past. Many on the list
were mentally disturbed and
considered relative harmless, but others were taken
seriously.
One of those on the li.st was
Gaudet, who three years before
had thrown a burning
American flag at Nixon'S
limousine.

On the Wednesday before
Nixon's visit, a man identified
as Gaudet reportedly walked
into a drugstore in New
Orleans and said, "Somebody
ought to kill President Nixon. If
no one has the guts, I'll do it."
Authorities Intensified their
sear~h for Gaudet without
success.
A clearer threat had
emerged a few days earlier
when an informer tipped New
Orleans police that six black
militants were overheard
planning to gun down Nixon
during the parade. The Long
Island, N.Y., newspaper
Newsday said one of the six
was "a known hitter
{assassin), a bad actor known
to carry guns."
The SeCret Service was said
to have urged the police to put
the men "in the Icebox Wllil
Nixon leaves town." The police
refused for lack of evidence,
but promised to keep the six
under surveUlance.
Heightening the concern was
New Orleans' reputation for
exotic "conspiracies" and racial unrest.
With Nixon relaxing at his
Key Biscayne, Fla., home
during the weekend and lite
reports of security problems
mduntjng, the Secret .Serv~
decided to act.
In Washington, Deputy
Director Lilburn "Pat" Boggs
telephoned the President's
staff in Florida with a "strong
recommendation" that Nixon
not take the prearranged and
publicized motorcade route on
Monday.
Nixon reluctantly agreed.
"Like any good politician, he
dido 't relish the Idea of passing
up · a demonstration of· support," said Alexander M. Halg
Jr., the White flouse chief of
staff.
The Secret Service, ac-

cording to ijalg, made two
other suggestions vetoed by
Nixon: that the New Orleans
trip be scrapped entirely, or
that the President drive swiftly
down the motorocade route
"buttoned up" Inside his
bulletproof limousine. The
agency denies it requested
these stepa.
Meanwhile, some strange
Incidents were caualng headaches for the New Orleans ·
police.
Late Saturday night, a police
uniform was stolen from the
car of Officer Bennett Lacour.
About 2a.m. Sunday the car of
Police Comrnlasloner Clarence
Giarrusso was stolen from In
front of his home, It was
recovered six hours later,
abandoned but with nothing
rnls.iing.
Just before Nixon's departure from Florida, Warner
called news services and
broadcast networks in
·Washington with a brief
statement saying 'the orlgbuil
molol'cade route had been
cancelled because of a
"possible conspiracy" agalnat
Nixon's life .
"We had alrudy started to
get lnquicles," Warner n;.
pll\lned later, adding It would
·only have Increased confUSion
.and Jnqulrles from reporters
had tbe service kept quiet.
Gaudet · was traced to a
commune called Morning ·star,
12 miles north of Taos, N.M.
Aflel' a flight through the
mountains and a long talk with
his wife, he surrendered to
authorities.
But the witness in New
Orleans against Gaudet said
she could not make a positive
identllication and the charges
of threatening the President
were dropped. Gaudet now
faces possible state charges for
firing at police officers during
the mountain chase.

H
•
•
k
.
d
Y
•
D
C6
~eo~~~~/~:'i,~~n~~~
IJaC ~r su~en \ ers emeni

possible for the citizens of
Jackson.

INSURGENTS HIT
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia
(UP!) - Cambodian insur gents Saturday launched
their biggest attacks since the
end of American bombing,
firing rockets into the Phnom
Penh airport, cutting a vital
rice supply route and increasing pressure against a
besieged provincial capital.

R ecord pnces
• .hI,•t
.
•
F
•
Sal
un
·
tor
at
'
r
e
J
.

COLUMBUS (UP!)
Bob Evans Steak House of
Several records were set Gallipolis purchased the grand
Friday in the Junior Fair Sale champion Charolals bull
of Champions at l~e Ohio Slate weighing 1,210 lbs ..from Randy
Fair, as pork and lamb prices Cook, Rt. 2, Sidney, for $1.26
soared to $20 a pound and per lb.
more.
Randy Shane, 11, Fostoria,
The grand champion lamb, got $10 a . pound for his grand
exhibited by Chris Smith of champion Angus.Simmenlal
Fredericktown, brought a Steer, then got to keep the
record $21 a pound.
animal to try to resell it.
Former state fair manager
Reluma Steer To Owner
Jerry Kallenbach, now
McDonald's Rstaurants
president of the Gooding bought the 1,085 pound steer,
Amusement Co., Columbus, thn returned it to Shane, who
paid the Ul for the Suffolk . figures he could receive more
Cross grand champion lamb, for It alter the beef price frcez~
That brought the exhlbi\or is lilted Sept, 12.
$2,289.
·
McDonald's also purchased
The price lopped the 1971 the
1,0Q.pound reserve
mark of $16.42.
champion steer from Margery
Steve WesUake of Marysville Molitor of Fayetteville for $3.20
got $11.50 for his reserve a pOIUld.
champion lamb . The Ohio
Pork brought $20 a pound for
Youth Choir bought It and Marsha Larrick of Leesburg,
doilated it to the Columbus Zoo who got $4,100 from Bob Evans
lor the second consecutive Farm which bought her 21)5.
yea1.
pound grand charppion Duroc.

.
KUWAIT (UP!) - AYemeru
d 'th · t I d ha d
arme w1 a PIS o an a n
grenade hijacked a N'"'th
Yemeni Airlines OC6 to Kuwait
Sa d
nd
d ed to
· tur RY a surren er
Kuwait authorities ~Iter Wl·
successfully negolla tlng a
number of unspecified
demands.
The 10 passengers and six
crewmen aboard the plane
were releaSed unharmed. An
Interior Ministry statement
said the passengers and crew
were Yemenis and Italians.
The hijacked plane circled
the airport for nearly two hours
with smoke trailing from one of
its propeller driven engines
belore officials gave it permissiontolandatii:55p.m.(ll:55
a.m. EDT).
The hijacker, identified as
Nasser Aluned Abu Baker, a
Yemeni about 50 to 60 years

old, negotiated for 90 minutes
· ff' · 1 ·
with Yemem o 1c1a s, m·
eluding Foreign Minister Jaber
Al:Abmad As-Sabah, before he
ded
nd
was persua
to surre er,
officials said, They did not
reveal his demands.
He was arrested and held for
questioning, they said.
Kuwaiti authorities said they
allowed the plane to land
because "one of its engines was
out of action, the fuel was
running short and the hijacker
threatening it with destruc·

lion," a statement by the
Kuwaiti Interior Ministry said.
"After it safely landed, a
dialogue took place between
the hijacker and the foreign
minister who was at the airport
control tower. Following thjs
dialogue, tbe hijacker was
persuaded to surrender his
weapons and himself," the
statement said.
"He was taken into custody
by security authorities for
questioning and the passengers
and crew were safely relea·

sed."
•
The Yemen Airways plane
was dn a flight from the Arab
Republic of Yemen to Asmara, .
Ethiopia, when the hijacker
took control over Ethiopia's
Red Sea coast. The gunman
forced the pilot to land at
Djibouti In the French territory
of Mars and Jssas for refueling
and then ordered him to fly
back across the Red Sea and
across the Arabtan desert to
Kuwait on the northeast corner
of the Arabian peninsula.

Rogers ·kept in dark on
wire tapping activity

Pool-hours

By NICHOLAS .DANILOFF
WAS!IINGTON (UP!) - Outgoing Secretary of Slate William' P. Rogers said Saturday
he did not know about and
would not have approved the
reported wiretapping of three of
his top aides between 1969 and
1971 as part of a secret White
House effort to stop news leaks.

are changed
MIDDLEPORT ~ Swim.
mlng pool hours this week
leading up to the closing on
Labor Day were announced
Saturday by pool director
David Jenkins.
Tuesday, Wednesday and
Thursday the pool will be. open
from 4-7 p.m. with special fees
as follows, · 25 cents per
swimmer for all witl10ut season
passes, 10 cent£ for those with
season Uckets. The pool will be
closed Friday.
Saturday, Sunday and
Monday It will be open the
r~gular 1-6 p.m. hours with
regular season admission,
season ticket holders free,
others 50 cents.
1.

Rogers' comment through a
State Department spokesman
seemed to put further distance
between him and President
Nixon, who has acknowledged
authorhing wiretaps on telephones of sonie government
officials and jOUrnalists to hall
publication of "highly sensitive
foreign tJQlicy Initiatives , .
which wer3 obviously based on
leaks."
Last Monday, two days
before Nixon announced Rogers' resignation and appoint-

,.

\~
''

mentor Henry A. Kissinger to
succeed hlm on Sept. 3, Rogers
told a news conference the
United States must not be "so
obsessed with security matters
that laws are freely violated"
at the eJtpense of individual
rights. •
Rogers commented Saturday
In response to questions about a
New York Times report ihat
tile wiretaps authori~ed by
Nixon were placed on 13
government officials, including
William H. Sullivan, then
deputy assistant secretary ~
state for East Asia; Richard F.
Pedersen, then counselor to the
Slate Department, and Richard
L. Sneider, vow Sullivan's
successor.
Spokesman Paul Hare said
the State Department
Wlable to confirm the Times
report because offlclala did not
have access to the list of those

••s

whose telephones were tapped.
But Hare said:
"I've been in touch with the
secretary of state by phona and
the secretary said he had rio
knowledge of these wlretape,
did not approve them and
would not have approved them.
"He said the three officers
mentioned in the story are very ·
dedicated and loyal officers
who served their country with
great dl.!tlnctlon."
Sullivan, now amba...4or to
the Philippines, klft the Slltte
Department during the VIetnam
peace talk&amp; last year to Hl'VI
as an aide to Kissinger 11 the
White HOUIIe. PedtrMn II
amba1111dor to HW18uy,
The reported wll'llllpp\118
apparently wu prompted by
press dilclciiUHI of tht Mml
u.s. nesotlaUna flOiltlon 11 tht
Soviet-American armt conlrGI
talk&amp;.

�..

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

12- The SUilday Tinm . Sentinel, SWldav. Au~. ?i), t973
JMI-~~::.-:.:~:;:::.;::~;:·:;~.- . . -..;:.: · .::::::;.:;:::~~==~=:~~:~:::·:-;::::::::::::·:·::-':·:·:•::.·!·:·:::;.~&gt;'·:·.··.

Martha Mitchell insists

Briefs~'

ews .. in

l

,

By United Pre&amp;s lnteroallonat
WASHINGTON - CITING THE "REALITIES of lhe
111111'ket," the government authorized Interes~ rates to rise to ~
ret'OI'd hlgb U per cent Saturday on feder~lly msured mortglljJes
to help prospective low . and middle~nC&lt;Jme buyers compete for
ICllrce mortgage money. The new rate raises a home buyer's
lllQilthly payment for principal and interest about S9 to $t73 on a
$20,000 mortgage over zo years.
But the increase - the second in 15 days lor mortgages up to
$33,000 Insured by the Federal Housing Administration and lhe
Velel'ans Administration .,.. was still short of the 9 per cent and
higher Interest rates for conventional loans. '
·
Everett Matson, president of the Mortgage_ Bankers
A.9aociation said the decision was "a welcome Signal that
economic ~llty has overcome political expediency." G~rge C.
Martin, president of the Na.tional Association of Home Brnlders,
assailed the Increase saying it would "reinforce '' the htgher
rates on conventional loans and "add to the burdens of the
already troubled consumer seeking housing."
·

SAN CI.EMENTE, Calif. (IJPI) - Martha Mitchell, disputing
bo~ her husband and Presidllnt Nixon , claims the two men
.l&amp;lked frequently in the summer of 1972 while the Watergate
cover-up was building, and that Nixon knew about "the whole
goddamn tlllny."
The wife ~ former Attorney General John N. Mitchell, In
telephone Interviews Thureday and Friday from her New York
City apartment, a lao said her husband was "a goddamn fool"
for shielding the President during his testimony before the
Senate Watergate Committee.
Mitchell backed up Nixon's claim or uninvolvement In
Watergate In hopes that the President wW come to his rescue II
· he i.s convicted of any crime, she said, adding "he thinks he
would give hlm clemency for what be has done for him."
Mitchell is scheduled to go pn trial Sept. llln New York on
I

'

LJNCOLN, NEB . - THE NEBRASKA Parole Board has
paved the way to freedom for Caril Ann Fugate, 30, the com·
panion of mass killer Charles Starkweather when he went on an
11-murder rampage in 1958. In it£ decision Friday to commute
Miss Fugate's life sentence to a fixed number of years so she
would be eligible for parole, the board said she was "an .acceptable risk for parole consideration."
Miss Fugate was 14 when she accompanied Starkw~ath~r
from the Uncoln area to Douglas, Wyo:, leavmg II v1ctuns. m
!1ncoln dead of gunshot Bl!d stab wounds . Star.kweather ":as
convicted of murder in 1959 and executed the same year. MISS
Fugate was sentenced to life imprisonment on a first-degree
murder conviction for her part in the slayings.

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By EUGENE V. RISHER
SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.
(UP!) - Some of Presldllnt
Nl!&lt;on's aides expressed confi·
'deflCe Saturday he had "bottomed out" in popularity polls
and was on his way to
recpvering prestige and pollti·
cal clout lost In the Watergate

On Saturday morning, Nixon
and h~ daughter, Trlcia, went
on what deputy·press secretary
Gerald L. Warren said was a
"private drive." He decli_ned to
say .where they went.
·"The President likes to be
private from lime to lime,"
Warren said.
aff~ir.
Since his news conference,
A White House spokesman Nixon has been operating on a
said calls and telegrams to the vacation schedule and trying to
~!dent following his news get some rest.
conference Wednesday were
"very favorable/' Other aides Although his aides expect an
expressed a more enthusiastic upswing in the popularity polls,
view, describing the news they conceded that Nixon had
coo!.erence as the most Inten- not regained control of the
sive grilling yet of a President bureaucracy and still was a
and saying he passed with high long war from regaining the
is.
pre-Watergate momentum of
Reporters sensed a feeling of his administration,
optirt\ism among the White Alexander M. Haig Jr., the
House family that has not been White House chief of staff who
evidenlfor months.
· The President has been under
extraordinary pressure and has
showp signs of Irritability.
According to one official, Nixon
was ·angered when he saw
reporters trailing him Thursday
on an exCin'sion with his
daughter, , Julie Ei.senhower,
and friend, C.G. Rebozo, to Red
Beacll, a deserted strip set
aside Jo~ his use on the Camp
Pendl~ton rnllltary reservation.
By DANIEL L. TAYLOR
DENVER (UPI) - Citizen
band radio operators south of
Denver Saturday picked up
transmissions from a man who
.' ' ' i
. threatened to IIIII President
Nixon and VIce Preside~ I

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NEW ORLEANS - A WOMAN WHO said ex-policeman
Edwin M. Gaudet Jr., threatened to kill President Nixon said
Friday she was not so sure and the charges were dropped.
Although the federal charges were quickly dropped, Gaudet, 30,
remained in an Alburquerque, N. M., jail on state charges of
aggravated assault on a police officer with intent to commit a
violent felony in connection with his arrest.
· ' The woman who was not identified, decided she was not sure
who she heard threaten the President in a New Orleans bar.

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KENT, OHIO - MAURICE F. STRONG, an environmentalist in the United Nations, warned today the future of
mankind is threatened not only by nuclear holocaust, but also by
"neglect and mismanagement" of the environment. Strong,
executive director of the United Nations Environment Program,
spoke at the summer commencement exercises at Kent Slate
University. More than 1,600 degrees were awarded and Strong
received an honorary doctor of laws degree.
"The heart of the matter is that this is the first generation
. , . in which God has placed in our hands the power either to
usher in a new golden era or to bring the human experiment on
this planet to an end - through a single act of nuclear sell·
destruction or through 'the careless neglect and management of
the very growth processes that produce our wealth," he said.

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BELLEFONTAINE- Paper mill strikes and labor disputes
in Canada, making newsprint scarce, resulted in the Bellefontaine Examiner (10,000 ell:.) missing its first publication
Saturday. The newspaper has published six days a week for more
than 82 years and this is the first missed publication.
·
- Publisher Tom Hubbard said the paper had not received any
shipments of newsprint for two months. He said his shipment was
apparently still in Canada. Strikes have hit the Canadian paper
mills and the country's railroads, Mills have notified customers
their shipments would be reduced by 15 per cent during the next
'leW months.

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PORTLAND, ORE. - EMPLOYES in the state office
building found out Friday tbat Goy. Tom McCall meant business
wben he ordered cutbacks in·energy consumption.
.·~y have no hoi water. All rest rooms, except those next to
· the i&amp;baratorles on the loth floor and for' cafeteria workers on the
seventh Door ,have the hot water turned off. Not only is the water
turned off Wlder the sinks, but the handles of the hot water
spigots have been removed . ..

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CLOTHING
DEPT.

HOURS: 9 TO 8 MONDAY THRU F~IDAY ,
9 TO 5 SATURDAY-ClOSED SUNDAY
Multi ·co lor runners that are
comp lel ely reversible. Washable.
and colorfasl . A mvsl at often
used door ways and olher trouble

cY~&lt;tf~ · .

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53.66
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Hetk'• Reg. 11.88

HECK'S

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., ..

'366
$366

PSODENT'
TOOTHPASTE

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MOBILE
HOME SAl FS
1ft Jim Staataor Joe Gilts
J~sr Sovth of Silwer

e,•dgt Shoo~·"'O "ozo

.,

G I; ah. Olllt

•I

II
I

1

~~ n~~~~~~~s PP;:~~Y t~~

state...
Vetter said the first signal
was heard about !p.m. MDT (3.
·
p,~H~~~~~e on every hour on
the hour since then," Vetter
said. "But he's smart. He stays
on only a short time because he
knows If be stays on longer he
canbetraced.Iunderstandthe
same thing happened in New
Mexico."
Vetter said that during one
transmission, the man said he
•

MIDDLEPORT ~ Paul privileges, freedom, standard
Smart, retired president of the of living, and opportunities or
Middleport Citizens National any people In the world/' he
Bank, loves America . It said.
doesn't require much of a push
Among other features of
to get hlm talking about what America menUoned were Its
he calla, "still the greatest great flower gardens, bridges,
and museums. Bob Bumgarner
country In tbe worgd."
Friday evenlug he addressed was program chairman.
the Middleport • Pomeroy
Guests introduced were Dr.
Rotary Club following dinner . Milton. Mason, a new, oP·
at Heath Me thodlat Church on tometrist IISSOCiated with Dr.
Bradshaw In Middleport. Dr,
hla favorite subject.
•
Oblll!rvlng that he has vi.sile~ · Maaon and hie family reside on
39 of the 40 great ClUes of L.lncoln Helghta, Pomeroy. He
America, Smart cited several was a guest of Bernard Full2,
with outstanding attractions, Other guests were the Rev. Ed
Including New York City, San Fischer and Harold HenFrancllco, Chicago and others. drlckaon, Elmira, Ind.,guest of
San DIIJO is the city the Smart John Werner.
family haa mlllld vlaiUng, .
Ladies of the church served a
"Too many people l~nore that aleak dinner.
Americans enjoy the m01t

T:e~~~~M:a~o~~o!~~~~ein

the west was contained
Saturday, and an army of
10,000 firemen began returning
to their homes across the
nation after the worst outbrea. k
of timber blazes in the area's
history. Nearly 200,000 acres of
timber and range land were
blackened. Damage estimates
exceeded $100 million. About 30
million board · feet of lumber
was lost in California's
Eldorado National ' Forest
alone. Roughly, this was
enough for 3,000 three-bedroom
houses.

" It included the procedures of everything that has happened. !
saw it with my own two eyes, when I was trying to press John not

to go into the campaign."
Mrs. Mitchell said she !eared her husband would never be able
to extricate himself from Watergate and that the scandal had
hurt their personal relationship.
"What Watergate has d.one to our lives," she mused. "We
have been suffering . The President has assaulted both John and
me in taking everything we had or wanted."

SUNDAY. AUGUST 26 1973

PAGE 13

as 'threat' real?

Wolfe
named
Jackson SD

u~:~~~~· the

man lapsed
1
f'?totabchidld's vtoicie ldlurintg ththe
Irs roa cas • s m ar 0 e
voice "Larry" used in appealing for help.
· ·
"W ,
Ito
e te get g a rea1 strong
signal," Vetter said. "The guy
s;tys be's in New Mexico but
the signal is so strong that he
may be in Colorado. If he is in

I ,
'?I

frequently . reflects Nixon's
thinking, said thought some of
the questions at the Wednesday
news conference "bordered on
the edge of · impropriety even
under the circumstances."
But he said generally the 5().
minute sesSion was a "good,
healthy confrontation" in which
the Presidet:~t maintained his
"dignity and cool."
ED WOLFE
"We are all very. pleased and
I would hope some of the
press's concerns are al·
levialed," he said.
Bryce Harlow, a highly
regarded Nixon adviser who
was called out of retirement
from public service io be a
post-Watergate counselor to the
President, said he thought
Nixon did so well in the session RACINE -Ed Wolfe, son of
he would be having them more Mr . and Mrs. Dory WoHe,
Racine, has been named
often.
service director for the 'city of
Jackson effective Sept. 10 .
For the past five and one-ball
years, Wolfe has · been employed as as~istant cashier ai
the Jackson First National
Bank. He was formerly employed in Dayton with the
General Electric Ctedit 0&gt;.
and with the Economy Loan
0&gt;. in Gallipolis. He has had
wide experience in the
was trapped in an overturned financial and personnel field
car and that gasoline was which he feels will be of great
lealling on him.
":'e to him In dealing with the
"At first we believed he was City budget proble!"s a~d
drunk but now we don't think workmg With the various City
so-.. Vetter said, ·"l'lut wi'"cf~ I departments.
!·
'
Appomted by Mayor James
thmk the gay Is crazy'._He has Jenkins WoHe and his wife the

th
If' .
f
f ..
t .nd
.
New Me1&lt;1co·
au oriUes to Ohlmlc.~~1s or at1mg o 1I
search for a' boy named Larry.
'This
ha
y lte
'd h
,_ . th
'
guy s got to be a
e r sal e was ... pmg e
psycho, " said Robert Vetter, a signal for authorities.
service station owner who first "There is a possibility he is
monitored the call. ''He threat· moving around, but I think we
ened to kill Nixon and Agnew will find him if the signal
and then he threated to kill comes back as strong as it had
everyone. He's daring anyone been," Vetter said. "The guy
to find him."
·
says the country is stupid and
Earlier this month, New · couldn't find themselves if they
Mexico officials spent at least wanted to."
$20,000 and hundreds of manhours searching for a child who
broadcast a plea for help. The
transmissions were heard
across the western part of the

book" and hinted that ll includes plans ~ - Waterpte.;tyle
maneuvers .
"I saw the leFAher-bound campaign strategy book lor 1972lhat·
was written by Nixon and (H,R.) flaldeman, " the former White
House chief of staff, she said.

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

~r;.~bf:~or ~a~~xh~hat~: ~~~n ;:;yb~~1:· ~~; ';,';~~~~ fo~mer'.

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popular "Pinehurst" decor.
.

CASAGRANDE, Ariz. (UP!)
- ResCuers Saturday broke a
small hole through earth and
debris' to the copper mine
·tunnel where two miners have
been entombed for eight days
by a cave-ln.
The ·diggers were able to
shine lights into the blocked
dead-end tunnel, but they could
not see the trapped men, David
Deeder, 41, and Terry Udall,
24, of Ft. Collins, Colo, Nor was
there any response to their
repeated shouting. During the
more ;than a week of frantic
digging the rescue crews have
not known whether the men
· were dead or alive.
After boring a small hole
through to the two miners'
prison, the rescue crews
conltnued moving out earth by
machine, working to get cloae
enough to dig through with
shovels. Mine officials said it
mlght take hours to hack out an
opening big enough for men to
enter the blocked tunnel.
At almost the same time the
first boring was made .all the
way thrOilgh the cave-In area,
drilling crews on the surface,
· 1,300 feet above, completed a
slx·lnch vent line to the tunnel.
A test of air there showed it .
was free of poisonous gases
and carbon monoxide. The
temperature was believed to be
about 100 degrees.

HECK'S REG. $31.11

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Designed to Provide
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loild comero. Not on ly doe\ It vive you beoulilul pi&lt;lvrt~ in jv1t
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electronic shutter loi . oulomolic expo~ure~ . 4 ' sharp ] ·element
len~ . 8uilt·in flash thor uu~s inexpensive 4·shot llathci.o&amp;t. VaLl
'filll'l ~Sylvan ia 4 ·shot lloshc~bet in yoyr kit . And there'u1 pock of
square 1 ype 88 colOf film , that KliVt.l you money on.,.,, inttant
pi clune you toke . You get a coupon for three free copi4o1 ol?n• of
· your lirtl pic utres . .t.nd there's a handsome case to n"r hll'fy·
thing oround in.
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DETROIT - ABOUT 13,000 American Motors workers will
share in a $2 milllon Christrnss bonus, the first time in seven
(Continued on Page 18)

FOR

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WITH LIMO~

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HUTCH OFFICIAL
LEATHER ·FOOTBALL

CLEAN.

BOSTON '-- KENNEDY AND NIXON appeared in Boston
MWllcipal Court Friday on burglary c.harges, while a fellow
named Tnunan was sentenced for cashing a forged check.
Roger Kennedy, 18, and Philip Nixon, 20, pleaded innocent to
possession of burlgar's tools. Edward W. Truman was given a
six-month suspended jail sentence for forgery and attempted
larceny.

ALL PRO

I

JEWEliiY
DEPT.

VOL. 8 NO. 30

CB'ers hear
kill threats

1

Nixon lying

He told the Senate committee that he n&lt;&gt;ver mlormed Nixon
about the l'&lt;JVCr·up because he feared the President would blow
the alory wide Qpen and jeopardize his re-election chances. But
the former attorney general also said Nixon never asked him
whether top administration or campaign officials were involved
In o cover-up and that he would have given him all the inlormution If the President had inquired.
.
Nixon told a news conference here last Wednesday that
Mitchell was right to think be would "blow my stack" if he
learfl\)d about the -cover-up and that he never asked Mitchell ·
about news reports because all Investigative reports sent him
gave no indication that Mitchell or other officials were Involved.
Mrs. Mltc.hell i18ld Nixon not only knewIntimate details of the
Watergate operation In the summer of t972·as related by Mitchell, but that she had read a Nixon-written "campaign stratei(V

Nixon encouraged
by newest polls

MONDAY AUGUST 26 and 27

r11

charges of obstrucUng juslke and attempting to defraud the
government in co11necUon with a $200,000 contrlbuUon W the
Nixon re-&lt;!lectlon campaign.
Nixon. and Mitchell have indicated U1cy had liLLie contact last
summer. Mrs. Mitchell offered a different view.
"Nixon was aware or the whole goddamned thing," she
1188Crted. "For God'.s sake, he used to call Jo()n aU o'clock In the
morning. And he said he didn't call his attorney general? He
called him every night ." 1
"Why did \bey go out on the Sequoia {the presidential yacht)
every night last summer during re-election ?" she said,
Mitchell left the Justice Department March 1, 1972, to serve as
Nixon's campaign manager. He resigned that post two weeks
alter the June 17, 1972, break-in at the Democrals' Watergate
headquarters.
·

hush8nd~

Sharon Bro~n' .of
MinersVIlle, and two children,
Jamie, 7, and Janelle, 3, live at .
371 W. Second St., Jackson .
Wolfe is a member of the
Jackson Liolls Club and is an
active worker in the Gideons
and in the Calvary United
Methodist Church where he is a
member of the church board,
chairman of the worship and
education committee aM
teacher of the seventh and
eighth grade boys Sunday
school class.
Wolfe reports that he plans
no major changes in Jackson at
the present time and looks
forward to cooperating with

regarded as the first of public
presidential appearances after
months of silence on the
Watergate scandal.
- Nearly a week later, no one
had been arrested or even
charged in the conspiracy
case, and charges against
Gaudet, subject of an lnteMlve
manhWlt in New Mexico at one
point, have evaporated.
Was the threat a false
alarm? New Orleans Mayor
.Moon Landrieu doesn't · think

WASHINGTON (UP!) Was there a ·serious threat on
President Nixon 's life last
Monday in New Orleans, or did
the Secret Service and local
police fall embarrassing prey
to nothing more than bizarre
rumors and scare stories?
The question is being asked
nearly a week after the Secret
Service, in a rare public annoWlcement, said there was a
"possible · conspiracy" to
assassinate the President
which prompted a change In
his motorcade route through
the city and a search for
suspects that has yet to
produce any arrests.
The Secret Service and New
Orleans officials insist the
threat was real. Six black
militants are reported to have
conceived the alleged death
plot, and are still being wat.
ched ciosely.
·
Charges have been dropped
against another suspect,
Edwin Michael · "Punchy"
Gaudet Jr., 30, in what might
have been a case of mistaken
identity.
Gaudet,. a former New
Orleans policeman and prizefighter, contends he was in
New Mexico, I,OOO.miles away,
at the time he allegedly threatened Nixon's ~e in a New
Orleans drugstore.
A presidential assassination
plot, real or suspected, is never
routine but the New Orleans
affair has aroused · unusual
interest for several reasons :
-The threat was made
known by the Secret Service In
advance of Nixon's arrival in
New Orleans from Key Biscayne, Fla., a virtually unprecedented action by the
agency.
- Nixon's speech before a
Veterans of Foreign Wars
convention, which he gave as
scheduled
despite
the
assassination scare, was

so.
"! can tell you that the
President's parade was cancelled because the FBI o~ the
Secret Service thought there
was serious information concerning the President's
safety," Landrieil told UP!.
Jack Warner, spokesman for
the Secret Service, dismisses
suggestions the service pushed
the panic button when it
publiCized the threat betorehand.
"We have to take appropriate measures to
safeguard the life of the
President. We do not believe
we overreacted,'' Warner said.
Nixon had planned on the
way to the convention hall
Monday to wave to spectators
along Canal Street from his
partially open .llmousine, ·and
even to get out of the car and
walk into the crowd at one
point.
/
Following it£ usual routine,
the Secret Service had been
reviewing ils files of people in
the area who were known to
have threatened the President
in the past. Many on the list
were mentally disturbed and
considered relative harmless, but others were taken
seriously.
One of those on the li.st was
Gaudet, who three years before
had thrown a burning
American flag at Nixon'S
limousine.

On the Wednesday before
Nixon's visit, a man identified
as Gaudet reportedly walked
into a drugstore in New
Orleans and said, "Somebody
ought to kill President Nixon. If
no one has the guts, I'll do it."
Authorities Intensified their
sear~h for Gaudet without
success.
A clearer threat had
emerged a few days earlier
when an informer tipped New
Orleans police that six black
militants were overheard
planning to gun down Nixon
during the parade. The Long
Island, N.Y., newspaper
Newsday said one of the six
was "a known hitter
{assassin), a bad actor known
to carry guns."
The SeCret Service was said
to have urged the police to put
the men "in the Icebox Wllil
Nixon leaves town." The police
refused for lack of evidence,
but promised to keep the six
under surveUlance.
Heightening the concern was
New Orleans' reputation for
exotic "conspiracies" and racial unrest.
With Nixon relaxing at his
Key Biscayne, Fla., home
during the weekend and lite
reports of security problems
mduntjng, the Secret .Serv~
decided to act.
In Washington, Deputy
Director Lilburn "Pat" Boggs
telephoned the President's
staff in Florida with a "strong
recommendation" that Nixon
not take the prearranged and
publicized motorcade route on
Monday.
Nixon reluctantly agreed.
"Like any good politician, he
dido 't relish the Idea of passing
up · a demonstration of· support," said Alexander M. Halg
Jr., the White flouse chief of
staff.
The Secret Service, ac-

cording to ijalg, made two
other suggestions vetoed by
Nixon: that the New Orleans
trip be scrapped entirely, or
that the President drive swiftly
down the motorocade route
"buttoned up" Inside his
bulletproof limousine. The
agency denies it requested
these stepa.
Meanwhile, some strange
Incidents were caualng headaches for the New Orleans ·
police.
Late Saturday night, a police
uniform was stolen from the
car of Officer Bennett Lacour.
About 2a.m. Sunday the car of
Police Comrnlasloner Clarence
Giarrusso was stolen from In
front of his home, It was
recovered six hours later,
abandoned but with nothing
rnls.iing.
Just before Nixon's departure from Florida, Warner
called news services and
broadcast networks in
·Washington with a brief
statement saying 'the orlgbuil
molol'cade route had been
cancelled because of a
"possible conspiracy" agalnat
Nixon's life .
"We had alrudy started to
get lnquicles," Warner n;.
pll\lned later, adding It would
·only have Increased confUSion
.and Jnqulrles from reporters
had tbe service kept quiet.
Gaudet · was traced to a
commune called Morning ·star,
12 miles north of Taos, N.M.
Aflel' a flight through the
mountains and a long talk with
his wife, he surrendered to
authorities.
But the witness in New
Orleans against Gaudet said
she could not make a positive
identllication and the charges
of threatening the President
were dropped. Gaudet now
faces possible state charges for
firing at police officers during
the mountain chase.

H
•
•
k
.
d
Y
•
D
C6
~eo~~~~/~:'i,~~n~~~
IJaC ~r su~en \ ers emeni

possible for the citizens of
Jackson.

INSURGENTS HIT
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia
(UP!) - Cambodian insur gents Saturday launched
their biggest attacks since the
end of American bombing,
firing rockets into the Phnom
Penh airport, cutting a vital
rice supply route and increasing pressure against a
besieged provincial capital.

R ecord pnces
• .hI,•t
.
•
F
•
Sal
un
·
tor
at
'
r
e
J
.

COLUMBUS (UP!)
Bob Evans Steak House of
Several records were set Gallipolis purchased the grand
Friday in the Junior Fair Sale champion Charolals bull
of Champions at l~e Ohio Slate weighing 1,210 lbs ..from Randy
Fair, as pork and lamb prices Cook, Rt. 2, Sidney, for $1.26
soared to $20 a pound and per lb.
more.
Randy Shane, 11, Fostoria,
The grand champion lamb, got $10 a . pound for his grand
exhibited by Chris Smith of champion Angus.Simmenlal
Fredericktown, brought a Steer, then got to keep the
record $21 a pound.
animal to try to resell it.
Former state fair manager
Reluma Steer To Owner
Jerry Kallenbach, now
McDonald's Rstaurants
president of the Gooding bought the 1,085 pound steer,
Amusement Co., Columbus, thn returned it to Shane, who
paid the Ul for the Suffolk . figures he could receive more
Cross grand champion lamb, for It alter the beef price frcez~
That brought the exhlbi\or is lilted Sept, 12.
$2,289.
·
McDonald's also purchased
The price lopped the 1971 the
1,0Q.pound reserve
mark of $16.42.
champion steer from Margery
Steve WesUake of Marysville Molitor of Fayetteville for $3.20
got $11.50 for his reserve a pOIUld.
champion lamb . The Ohio
Pork brought $20 a pound for
Youth Choir bought It and Marsha Larrick of Leesburg,
doilated it to the Columbus Zoo who got $4,100 from Bob Evans
lor the second consecutive Farm which bought her 21)5.
yea1.
pound grand charppion Duroc.

.
KUWAIT (UP!) - AYemeru
d 'th · t I d ha d
arme w1 a PIS o an a n
grenade hijacked a N'"'th
Yemeni Airlines OC6 to Kuwait
Sa d
nd
d ed to
· tur RY a surren er
Kuwait authorities ~Iter Wl·
successfully negolla tlng a
number of unspecified
demands.
The 10 passengers and six
crewmen aboard the plane
were releaSed unharmed. An
Interior Ministry statement
said the passengers and crew
were Yemenis and Italians.
The hijacked plane circled
the airport for nearly two hours
with smoke trailing from one of
its propeller driven engines
belore officials gave it permissiontolandatii:55p.m.(ll:55
a.m. EDT).
The hijacker, identified as
Nasser Aluned Abu Baker, a
Yemeni about 50 to 60 years

old, negotiated for 90 minutes
· ff' · 1 ·
with Yemem o 1c1a s, m·
eluding Foreign Minister Jaber
Al:Abmad As-Sabah, before he
ded
nd
was persua
to surre er,
officials said, They did not
reveal his demands.
He was arrested and held for
questioning, they said.
Kuwaiti authorities said they
allowed the plane to land
because "one of its engines was
out of action, the fuel was
running short and the hijacker
threatening it with destruc·

lion," a statement by the
Kuwaiti Interior Ministry said.
"After it safely landed, a
dialogue took place between
the hijacker and the foreign
minister who was at the airport
control tower. Following thjs
dialogue, tbe hijacker was
persuaded to surrender his
weapons and himself," the
statement said.
"He was taken into custody
by security authorities for
questioning and the passengers
and crew were safely relea·

sed."
•
The Yemen Airways plane
was dn a flight from the Arab
Republic of Yemen to Asmara, .
Ethiopia, when the hijacker
took control over Ethiopia's
Red Sea coast. The gunman
forced the pilot to land at
Djibouti In the French territory
of Mars and Jssas for refueling
and then ordered him to fly
back across the Red Sea and
across the Arabtan desert to
Kuwait on the northeast corner
of the Arabian peninsula.

Rogers ·kept in dark on
wire tapping activity

Pool-hours

By NICHOLAS .DANILOFF
WAS!IINGTON (UP!) - Outgoing Secretary of Slate William' P. Rogers said Saturday
he did not know about and
would not have approved the
reported wiretapping of three of
his top aides between 1969 and
1971 as part of a secret White
House effort to stop news leaks.

are changed
MIDDLEPORT ~ Swim.
mlng pool hours this week
leading up to the closing on
Labor Day were announced
Saturday by pool director
David Jenkins.
Tuesday, Wednesday and
Thursday the pool will be. open
from 4-7 p.m. with special fees
as follows, · 25 cents per
swimmer for all witl10ut season
passes, 10 cent£ for those with
season Uckets. The pool will be
closed Friday.
Saturday, Sunday and
Monday It will be open the
r~gular 1-6 p.m. hours with
regular season admission,
season ticket holders free,
others 50 cents.
1.

Rogers' comment through a
State Department spokesman
seemed to put further distance
between him and President
Nixon, who has acknowledged
authorhing wiretaps on telephones of sonie government
officials and jOUrnalists to hall
publication of "highly sensitive
foreign tJQlicy Initiatives , .
which wer3 obviously based on
leaks."
Last Monday, two days
before Nixon announced Rogers' resignation and appoint-

,.

\~
''

mentor Henry A. Kissinger to
succeed hlm on Sept. 3, Rogers
told a news conference the
United States must not be "so
obsessed with security matters
that laws are freely violated"
at the eJtpense of individual
rights. •
Rogers commented Saturday
In response to questions about a
New York Times report ihat
tile wiretaps authori~ed by
Nixon were placed on 13
government officials, including
William H. Sullivan, then
deputy assistant secretary ~
state for East Asia; Richard F.
Pedersen, then counselor to the
Slate Department, and Richard
L. Sneider, vow Sullivan's
successor.
Spokesman Paul Hare said
the State Department
Wlable to confirm the Times
report because offlclala did not
have access to the list of those

••s

whose telephones were tapped.
But Hare said:
"I've been in touch with the
secretary of state by phona and
the secretary said he had rio
knowledge of these wlretape,
did not approve them and
would not have approved them.
"He said the three officers
mentioned in the story are very ·
dedicated and loyal officers
who served their country with
great dl.!tlnctlon."
Sullivan, now amba...4or to
the Philippines, klft the Slltte
Department during the VIetnam
peace talk&amp; last year to Hl'VI
as an aide to Kissinger 11 the
White HOUIIe. PedtrMn II
amba1111dor to HW18uy,
The reported wll'llllpp\118
apparently wu prompted by
press dilclciiUHI of tht Mml
u.s. nesotlaUna flOiltlon 11 tht
Soviet-American armt conlrGI
talk&amp;.

�10 - Thl Su!'lday Tlmea -sentinel. Sund.llv, Aug. 71'1, 1973 •
I

l4 - The SWiday Tlm~a ·Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 26, 1973

MRS.MIUERIU
MIDDLEPORT
The
Middleport E-R aquad ·was
Cllled to eelS. Seventh Ave., at
12:3t p.m. Saturday for Mrs.
David Miller wbo was Ul. She
waa taken to Holzer Medical
Center.
·•

Your Ri2ht to Know
and be Informed Of the tunc ·
t lons of your governm en t are
.-mbor;t.led tn public notices . In
that self -government charges
all citizens to be informed ;

th is newspaper vro's ever"

ci tizen to refld and stOdy th ese
·noti ces. . We strongly lldv lse
lhose ci t izens, seeking further
intormatiQno, to exercise the ir
right ot access tO public
records and public mee tings .

'PUBLIC NOTICE
WHEREAS , a petll lon lo
Improve certain public roads
has been presented to the Gall Ia
county Board of County Com ·
m lssloners :
AND
WHEREAS 1
said
petition Is attached her eto and
made a part·hereof as If hi lly re ·
writ ten herein ;

,~

WHEREAS ,

~.

said

petit ion Is signed by f !fty .one
percent of the land or lot
owners. residents of such
county , who are to specially
taxed or asses~ed for said
Improvement ; .
AND WHEREAS , uld county
commissioners have ¥iewed the
proposed Improvement within
th irty days of the presentation
of said petition ;
BE
IT
THEREFORE

RESOLVED

lhat the Gallla

County Commiss ioners find that
the Publfc convenience and
welfare require that Said lm .
provement as requested In the
attached pet ition be made .

BE

IT

FURTHER

RESOLVED , that the county
engineer shall Prer,are the
necessary pl'ans , est mates of
"'
cost , and specif ications for the
lmpr···vement together with an
.... ' estlmi!rred assessment, based
up~m the estimates of cost, upon
the real estate to be charged
therewith .

..
t

...
•
••

•

!,
"''
7..
•

-

.. ·

~

~

BE

IT

FURTHER

RESOLVED , that a hearing to
hear objections to said fm .
provem ent! and to such
estimated assessments shall be
had at the meeting room of the
Gallia County Commissioners,
Gallla County Courthouse.
Gallipolis, Ohio at 1:00 p .m .
Monday, September 10, 1973.

BE

IT

FURTHER

RESOI..-VEO , that a notice be
publlshd in a newspaper of
general circulation in the ·
county that a ·resolution has
been adopted prov iding for
•mprovement called for In the
au ached petition and that the
plans, estimates of cost. and
specificat ions for the im ·
provement. together w i th
estimated assessments upon
the abutlng land or lot
owners, as petitioned for , are
1
0

~~~~l~e o;n.c~~ m i~~f:ne~ s ~~~

....

•
t'
..

::

the inspection of · persons
Interested therein . Said
notice Shall also contain the
time and place for · the
hearing ot obleCtlons to said
Improvements and to such
estimated
assessments
r:,·~~~~~~~d abuting land or

.;

PETITION TO IMPROVE
PUBLIC ROADS

..

WHEREAS ,c ei"teln publi c
roads In Green Township are In
need of extensive repair and re surfacing ; and,
WHEREAS , neithe'r the
township nor the county have
funds available to carry out ·the
needed repair ; and ,

,..

;

•

WHEREAS, Chapter SSSS ot

the Ohio Revised Code provide
for the improvement of 'publiC
roads and charging th! abutting
land owners as a special
assessment; and,

:;
..

·:...·

POMEROY - "Operation Red Ball"
will boWice into the Meigs COWity area
during fire prevenUon month In October.
The Meig3 CoWity Jaycees, sPQnsors,
said the Red Ball rescue sticker is to aid
firemen and policemen In the rescue of
children or invalids. A "red ball" emblem
on a house will save precious, life saving
minutes by Identifying the need for help
rapidly,
·The 4-inch Red Ball decal is designed
to be placed in the upper left corner of a
child's or lnva.lld's bedroom window. This
will help firemen locate bedrooms of a
child or Invalid in case of a fire. Plans
were also made to contact local village
officials concerning a Jaycee Halloween
Patrol. Bob Buck was named chainnan
with Victor Gaul co-chairman.
Plans were made to order name tags
for all members in good standing.
Victor Gaul, membership c~irrnan, ,
annOWICed plans were underway for a
"M" night.
And young men between the ages of 11135 are invited to join the Jaycees and help
improve the commWiity. The Jaycees
meet the second and fourth Wednesday at
B p.m. at the Pomeroy Villa~~ Hall. The
next meeting will be Sept, 12.

1• 4
~.·
•
...;

·~

'

1

•
, •

•
•

•,

..• .
~·
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with Oak Dive;
PeCin Strut, 12 feet from Its
lnttrltctlon with Mtp le Drive
to 111 tnd ;
3. The cost of the lm.
provement II estimated to be
111 ,924 .50 and the tolal cost of

I)

County and Mrs. A, R. Knight, long active
in both DAR and the scouting program,
participated.
Another recalled the reception which
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter members
staged for the visiting officials at the Hotel
Martin, now the Meigs Inn.
Plans for the bi-centennial, according
to the DAR state regent, will include
revisiting all of the sites which reproduce
the little known journey of George
Washington in 1770 overland to the
"western country," then under the
dominion of Britain, and his voyage down
the Ohio River as far as the Great
Kanawha, and the return boat trip.
The first marker is at East Uverpool
where Washington first stepped on Ohio
land. The second is at Potter Springs,
Mingo Junction, where the pageant attracle!i an audience of over 30,000, according to DAR records. The third marker isat
Powhatan Point, the fourth In Monroe
County, the ·fifth is at old Dam 17 near

LONG BOTTOM MARKEll - Thlolarge bronze marker at Long Bottom, one
of eight along 250 miles marking George WashinMton 's landings along the Ohio
!liver, will he restored and rededicate'() In ceremonies planned for the bicentennial observance or t11e Nation in 1976, 'n;ls picture was taken by Mrs, Leona
Hensley of Long Bottom, at the 1932 dedication attended by over 2,000 people, and
was one of several reproduced for use by U1e Ohio Society of the Daughters of the
American Revolution and local Return JonnU1an Meigs Chapter in planning
restoration of the marker and its site. .

Marietta , the sixth at' Parkersburg, the
seventh at Hockingport, and the eighth at
Long Bottom, where the commemoration
ended.
Local DAR members atlending the onsite inspection, all enthusiastic about the
prospects of the bi-centennial restoration
and rededication of the markers and the
proposed ceremonies and pageantry, were
Miss Lucille Smith, regent, who arranged
for the clearing of shoulder-high weeds.
around the marker prior to the inspection
by the state officials; Md. Thereon
John;;on, vice regent; Mrs, Pearl Mora,
treasurer; Mrs. Patrick Lochary, past
Southeast Director; Mrs. J. E. Foster,
registrar; Mrs. Everett Hayes, Mrs.
Daniel Thomas, Mrs. Margaret Parsons,
Mrs. Nan Moore, and Mrs. David C.
Miller.
District directors attending who will
assist in the bi-centennial celebration
planning include Mrs, Robert W. Hagan,
Huntington , Southeas t District ; Mrs.
&amp;jlpb Donges, Xenia, Southwest Distric.i;
and · Mrs. Donald Brumley, Findlay,
Northeast District.

The officials of the Ohio Society
Daughlers of the American Revolution
present for the on-site inspection were
.
' .
Mrs. Norman H. DeMent, Deftance,
· regent; Mrs, MerrittS. Huber, B~ ttsville,
swte vlce regent; Mrs. H. H. ~awor th ,
Wilmington, state librarian ; Mrs. Gray
Hussey, Columbus, state historian, and
Mrs. 1!:. William Monter, Cincinnati, vice
president, Waldschmidt House. ,
They were also joined for 1the inspection visit by Mrs. Thorne Cpttrlll of
Logan, and Mrs, Charles W. M"cDailiel,
Jane Washington.
,
Return Jonat han Meigs ~hapter
hosted a picnic for the visiting di~niiarles
and guests at Forked Run Park_following
the Inspection,
PILOTS ON STRIKE
PANAMA CITY (UP!) -Ship traffic
through the Panama Canal came to a near
swndstill Saturday when 96 American
canal pilots stayed off their jobs in a labor
dispute with the Panama Canal Co., aU. S.
government agency.

10 DAYS ONLY!

No one injured

or naUonal origin.
Under the provision of the
PQlicy the building principals
will review applications and
determine eligibility.
If a parent is dissatisfied
with the ruling of the official,
he may make a request either
orally or in writing to Supt.
David Campbell for a hearing
to appeal the decision. Hearing
procedures are outlined in the
PQlicy.
· Acomplete copy of the PQlicy
ill on file in each school and in
the office ·of the local superintendent where it may he reviewed by any Interested
party,

).

,,

Nation•l LIIIUI
East
W, L. Pet. G. B.
St. Louis
65 62 .512
Pittsburgh
61 63 .-492 2112
Chicag o
61 . 66 .&lt;80 •
Mo!ltreal
. 59 67 . 468 5'h
Philadelphia 59 68 .&lt;6S 6
New York
58 69 . 457 7

W. L.

Atlanla

79

. 617

76 54
71 56

.5 85
.559

67

.515 13

63

Detroit

69

New York
Milwaukee
Cleve lan d

.548

57

70 58 ,S&lt;J
68 62 .523

4
71h

Squires open 4th
campaign Oct. 11

ouun.

No Primer Necessary
Non Chalking
Dries In 30 Minute-s
White That Stays White
Lasts For Years
Soap &amp; ·Water Cleanup

Ham Slices

Wit h Coupon ond Purcho 11 ol

"

$2 ..50 or More Any &amp;rand

4

Seafood

200 Extra

Top Value Stamps
With Coupon and Purchr;ue

U.S. Gavl. Inspected
Fresh Fr ying Mi• ed

of One 6·1b. 6-oa:. Ct11'1 Hono••r

..Wimle Potatoes
~Uitllhl1 ,

Fryer Parts

fo5te1 f-ried

Beef
Patties
Turbot
Fillets
U.S.
lnspecled
Turkey
Hindquarters

'•~UJ:e

.. Ctlllllll ll•im

1t7l

111,l1fn S 111 111nltrs witll bck . l ~rml
l 2 ,,.,, lliltts, IIICIIfllll

llllldiiS Wt lll iiCil, ) Wlllf;l

ftiC.I

Willi Ctu.tn
IYe•teo Poly lo 11

Iced Tea Mix

Frozen Cello Wrapped

10·CI. 8 9
Pkg.

f.

Govl.

s1
3
s1
.
3
4,o.••. s1

Counhy Onn Tw i1h.

Stick1, Rir.gs or

to .••.

Rod~o

P~SI ' ·

PreiiBis

t6····
Can•

l&lt;rogl!!r Fully !ckttd

PIISI•·

Dinner Rolls

59

CD•"Iry Ctw• lltnlllt, tllecDiatt, StJiwUrrr,

~~~""' ""'""~/a-Gal.
1

·(

,J

'!' \

Ctn. .

ream

w,,. ·e'""

·

/_

Lody S&lt;on

'( si:az athroom Tissue
Cu,u h,lns St,ltMIIII 1, 111l
"Swllitct 11 '"ll•lllt S1t1e ad
u'al bits fa~ "

Doz.
Setact Lart• Eggs ••• Dt1. 83c

-==

39

5
=
=

11111111111111111111111111111~

=\ I

MUMS

BAG WORMS

,.

"BUILDING SUPPLIES" .
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Artifacts
Excavation for Mexi co
City 's subway provi ded archeologists wllh a bonanza of
Aztec artifacts . Watc hed
closely by archeological re·
covery tea ms , workm en
unearthed painted sculptures,
bonos. 40 ton s of .ceramic
fragments, 380 bunul s, and
eve n u "mull temple. Th o
.letnplu wa $ !crt In piucc a•
the centerpiece ol' one subway
station .

The heig ht ol economy is
achieved by those who spread
mustard on the hot dogs at
foolbi llgames.

=

Lilt Permanent

=
-

Ate Destroying Many Beautiful
Shrubs and Trees. Cone-Shaped
Cacoons Hang From Limbs on
Which They Feed.
Control By Spraying.

"hlll&lt;l to A"llt1lll Stltl '"'

Lml Sllnlu"

i5
-

:

H oc &gt;" &lt; ou •o•::Ji
. .nE ·~~
W1th CDupon

5
-

tluct&gt;Ov::·~~~·~~~~::•gulu•

?\ I . Maxwell House

I $I.UW'".~
~

·-•

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r:

.. Open 9 to 8 Weekdays

-

.SUNDAY 1 TO 5

')

CtW,III h'irU St.IIMIItr 1, 1111
" Su~jtcl II aU iCalllt 1t1t1 IIIII

ltUI Ulll Ill"

Willi Ctttll

Glont 5iu O.ltrgent

5etdltn

~Sliver
~
'

8af\1..ett Pears.

"-10,lllc:l
~G,· ll
~lllli::"~..!''!.£0:!~ •o u•~ ~

011 II~

t-_\- ' cou

on El

lb.
Can

·

lroi se,tlmbO! t , 1913
"S~b 'ectle Applltable State ond
I Lacol Saleslu "

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49·•··
Box

Dust

69

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CIWUII lOifll Sultlllll" 1, 1113
" S..}ICI It lft!IIC..-11 11111 111•
lUll Ulll tn "

llSSiu

8.m11111111111111111111111111111.:d...,11· 1~

•

59,

ttl.

-= White Grapes
-:- lb.)91

f.
-.....
•et:-~3
'2''
. meItZer Ga·rden Cen'ter
S
4 miles west of

Ajax

~1 11111111111~~;;1;;;;;;~111111111~

ii

Guaranteed to give complete satisfaction.
If not satisfied after you apply this product
as directed on the label, return remainder
to our S&amp;TStore for refund of the full
price you paid.

C111~111

Wila

Olskwo1hir.g l iqu id

&lt;,,,ts~ure Deodorant i ·
tf 5 9

:-

In Two Gallon Container
Regular $16. 50 Value

CASH &amp; CARRY

.

\_M~~'?.~~ Margarine ~

CARTER &amp; EVANS, INC.
85 OLIVE ST.

W.ilh Coupon and Purcl\o1e ol

Two or Mou• Poc.kogtl Smok•d

Top Value Stamps

-==

CAREFREE SHRUBS

Reusable Plastic Bucket
Easily Cleaned--Has 1001 Other Uses

Top Value Stamps

""rv'

7
.476 13

Pittsburgh at Atlanll .

on no-hitter

It•••

50 Extra

60 66
53 75 .414 21
West
W. L. Pet. G . B.
Oakland
' 7S 52 .591
Kansas City
73 56 .566 3
M innesota
60 66 .476 14 112
Ca llfofn la
58 66 .468 15 'h
Chicago
59 69 .465 16112
Texas
43 82 .344 31
Friday's Results
Minnesota 3 Milwaukee o
Baltimore 6 Kan City 0
Detr-oit 6 Ch.lcago 5
ClelJeland 11 Te xas 5
Oakland 5 New York 1
Boston 3 California 2
Sunday's Games
New York at Oakland
Milwaukee at Minnesota
Texas at Cleveland , 2
Kansas City at Bait, twilight
Boston at CallforniJ . tw ilight
Detroit at Chicago , 2

62 68 .477 18
San Diego
47 80 ;370 31'h
· ~rlday's ResU11i
San Diego 5 Montr ea l 3
New York 1 San Fran 0, 10 Inns.
Los Ang , les ~ Philadelph ia o
St . Louis S Clnci 4, 11 Ins.
Atlanta. 3 Pittsburgh 2
Houston 4 Chicago 2
Sunday ' s Games
San Diego at Montreal
Los Angeles at Phli O$:fel ph la
San Er_~c:;iJc;.o ot New York
St . Lou is at Cin c innati

LL series

Ctnrir" till. Th Rr~&amp;•r c• .
.11f Prim ''" '''M Stf1.
11 lflJ. Wt
th rlflt II
111111 -11a11ltltl, fiOIIl tO D fO

100 Extra

W, L. Pet. G. B.
72 52 .S81

Baltimore
Boston

Pet. G.8,

49

· Monday, Sapl. 3
9 A.M. to 6 P.M.

,Cheese

50

GALLIPOLIS - Applying
for a marriage Ucenae Friday
In Gallla County Probate Court
were G. Silas Johnson,' 23, ·
Ewlngton, bulcher, and Joanne
Sinon, 19,, Northup, EKG
technician.

(

By Un ted Press International

Los Angeles
Cincinnati
San Fri!lnclsco
Houston

'· Will Be Open

Amertcan Lneue
East

Malor League ·Standlngs

West

·for Your Shopping
•Convenience
Your Pomeroy
and Silver Bridge
Kroger Store

WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (UPI)
NORFOLK, Va. (UP!)
10,000-seat Coliseum in ad- HeavUy favored Tainan The Virginia Squires will open dition to the three in the 10,700lb.
City, Taiwan, lived up to ex- their fourth
American seat llichmond Coliseum.
pectations Saturday when Basketball Association season
All home games during the
Huang Ching-Hul hurled his on Oct. II in the Norfolk Scope '1973-74 season will begin at a
oecond straight no-hitter and against !be Caro.lina Cougars, p.m., a half-hour later than last
Nationalist Chinese batters it was announced Saturday.
season's starting time.
mounted a nine-hit attack to
The Squires make their
The early-season schedule
beat Tucson, Ariz., 12-0, to win season debut In the Hampton will be demanding for coach AI ..
the Utile League World Series . · Roads Colisewn Oct. 13 against Bianchi and his Squires. In the!'
Acrowd of 32,000 saw Taiwan the l'&gt;enver Rockets. They will first 25 games, the Sqwres face, .. f
win ita third straight cham- play three games on successive Carolina, ·New York and ' •
pionship and four!b in five Saturdays In February in llicb- Keni)Jcky four times each and
years.
mond against the Cougars, the Indiana three times.
Huang Chlng-Hul, who Memphis Tams and the
Twenty-six of the 42 home
slrf!ck out 14 and walked only defending ABA · champion games will be played on
one, pitched a perfect game Indiana Pacers.
Fridays and Saturdays, with
four days earlier in an 18-0
The club's 42-game home eight on Fridays and 18 on
victory over Bltburg AFB, schedule includes 23 games In Saturdays. Nine home dates
WestGennany, Another batter the 10,500-seat Scope, 16 in the fall on Thursdays, three on
reached base on an error.
Wednesdays and Tuesdays and
In three series games, the
one is on a Sunday.
'Trolley Dodgers'
opposition failed to get a hit off
Afte r the last streetcar has The Squires will tWie up for
two Chinese pitchers, Kuo ground to a stop, baseball fans the season with eight preWen.Li notched a no-hitter in a and historians will have rea- season exhibition games ,
21.0 shellacking of Tampa, son to reme mber. Years ago , beginning with a match with ·
a look-lively labyri nth of the Capital Bullets of the
Fla., Thursday.
Chen Pal..shen went four for downtown stree tcar tra cks National Basketball
its name to the loca l
four In the final game to give gave
Kroger Small or large Curd
quick-footed baseball players. Association Sept. 19 in Richhim a new series record of II Th e Trolley Dodgers later mond.
24·01.
hits over three games. Mter became famous as the Brook·
three scoreless innings, he got lyn Dodgers
Ctn.
the Chinese attack rolling ~~:lth
a lead-Off homerun ag~lilst
. . . . l v4LU A11LI IO.R OG I N {.OuPoN:JIIIG
starter and loser Mike Fimbers
'Penny Black'
HOWELL NAMED
.
in the fourth.
Willi C1~'11
The British "Penny Black ..
CHARLESTON,
W,
Va
.
• Two more ruiUI crossed the the world' s first adhesive pos2 Tubs- SOft
plate on singlea by Huang tage stamp. issued in 1840 is (UP!) - Former Ohio
Cblng-Hui and Wang Cbing- neither the mo st ex pensive University basketball player
CbWig, a walk and two passed nor the rares t stam p sought Bob Howell has been named
by collectors today. A number assistant basketball coach at
Rtg,
Pkg .
;
balls.
of
the
64
milliOn
"
Penny
Fimbers was replaced by Blacks" that were pri nt ed Morris Harvey College here,
5~ C ..'SIIIjiCI
,. ll!lrtl SlllteM•Ir 1, IIU
I a,lictlllt stall ad
succeeding Carl Bradford.
Mike Martinez in the fifth, and survive in stamo albums,
IIIII IIIU IU"
' the Chinese immediately ...·~ ¥·-· .'............J:.....~.......···:-:,·:·:···:~···············:·
Ill
greeted him with a flve-rWI
• • • • V4LU .. BLI KR~t~U PO ,. llllill
outburst, including a three-run
.: homer by Huang Chlng-HI and
W1th lltl,tn
~
Rlgular
or Un•ct nt•d
:
a solo blast by Juo Wen-u:
\""Antl·hnpl
ra11t
:
Taiwan added four more in ·
Hardy, ready to plant
the final stanza behind back-toback doubles by Lu Mlng:
~s·~~~
. ~
Kwang and Huang Ming-Uang
for fall bloom
1...
6 •o&amp; . Con
,,
5
and Chen Pel.shen's fourth hit
~ 1\
CMUt ll!lrtl 11111t1111m 1, 1m
:;
of the game.
:I
"Sukjtct 1 alllilll,ll Slat• .1n•
The only Tucson batters to
reach base were Tony Bravo,
..
who walked in the first inning
. . . . . \1 111 1,1 111\ll "R O(;. I If I_?•H'ON 1111{!!1
Ideal lor business places,
and Martinez, who got aboard
on an error in the fourth.
:
Willi UIIJU
homes, etc.
:
Spt1ciol or &amp;udy Wa.~~ Homu
:
Martinez was thrown out
tiling to steal.
Among six recorda set by the
Cblnese In the World Series
$1.69 •• 8 8
~1.89 '5i1•
. ;
wu the team'• total of 12 home
_
e.~~ ... hill'" s.,1'"'''' 1, ,m
_
runs In three games.

TWO
ALL ON

.ASK TOWED

UNIT CALLED
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
E-R squlld was e~lled to 328
Condor St., at 12:19 p.m.
Saturday for Leo Vining who
was taken to Veterans
Memorial HospitaL

YWieSe win

£"'1..!4.-.

Norm Cash then singled and
Bahnsen walked Aurelio
Rodrigu!ll to rm the bases.
Eddie Brinkman walked on a 31 pitch to force In McAuliffe
and Northrup followed with a
single to left field to score Cash
and Rodrlgu!ll.
The Sllll got a run In the third
on singles by Jorge Orta,
Bucky Dent and Pat Kelly and
Bill Sharp's sacrifice fly .
Iletroii got an Wlearned rur
in the fifth Inning after Mickey
Stanley's fiy ball eluded Jerry
Hairston for a two-base error,
Designed hitter Gates Brown
then singled home Stanley.

defeated the Chicago White
Sox, 4-2.
Tiger starter Jim Perry
raised hla record to 1~11 but
gave way to John Hiller after
Carlos May led off the ninth for
the White Sox with his 13th
homer of the season , II was
Perry's 18th career victory
over Chicago. Hlller picked up
bls 29th save of the season.
Bahnsen, who lost a no-littler
with two out in the ninth inning
in his_last start oo Tuesday
night, suffered his 16th defeat
against 18 wins.
He walked Dick McAullfie
with one out in the second.

{ottage

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
GALLIPOLIS - Three
persons were transported to
the Holzer Medical Center
Friday by the Gallia County
Volunteer Emergency Squad,
Shirley Taylor, 22, Rt. I,
VInton, was admitted as a
medical patient as was Billy
Masters, age 7, of Rt. I,
Gallipolis.
Cyn\hiaSwlsher,age7,Rt I,
Gallipolis, was taken to the
hospital for Injuries suffered In
a fall from a swing.

TWO ARRESTED
GALLIPOLIS - City pollee
recorded two arrests Friday
night Clarence Williams, Jr .,
28, Point Pleasant was charged
with assault and battery and
restating arrest. Roy Mooney,
7~, Rt. I, Ga!Upolla, was booked
for intoxication.

NEW YORK (UP!)- Garry
Maddox alngled home Gary
Matthews from oecond base
with two out in the flral inning
and Tom Bradley went on to
pitch a four-hitter Saturday as
the San Francisco Giants
edged the New York Mets, 1.0.
Bradley struck out five and
walked one as he outdueted
Mets ace Tom 'Seaver to even
bls record at 11-11.
Seaver, now Jll-7, gave up a
single to Matthews to open the
game. Tito Fuentes' sacrifice
moved Matthews to second.
After Bobby llonds popped to
Short, Willie McCovey was
walked Intentionally. Maddox
then lined a single to right to
bring home the only rWI of the
game.
Only one Met rWiner reached
third base, Felix Millan, who
bad two &lt;t New York's hits
doubled to open the third In:
nlng. He advanced to thlrd on
Rusty Staub's fiy tq .center but
was thrown out easily attempting to score on John
Milner's gr_oWider to Bradley.
Seaver lowered his ERA to
· 1.74, the best in the National
league among starting pitchers while boosting his
league-leading strikeout total
to 196 with two strikeouts.
In other Major League action
Saturday afternoon the Tigers
cashed In on Stan Bahnsen's
wUdness in the second Inning
· as Jim Northup keyed a threerWI explosion with a basesloaded slnRie, and Detroit

'

Lunch policy set

GALLIPOLIS - No one wu
injured or cited in two minor
traffic accidents Investigated
Improvement shall be paid ., Friday by city pollee officers.
follows :
a . 12,500.00 by tht Green The first occurred on Second
Townsh ip Trustees ;
Ave. at the G. C, Murphy Store
b . The b1J1nce ot the cost
btlng equally assessed against where an auto driven by Connie
IICh tbUttlng lOt OS a opec111 J . Snodgrass, 17, Rt .. 2,
lllttamtnt to be certlfle~ to the
County Auditor to be pieced on e Gallipolis, backed into a
special dupl icate and collected parked vehlde owned by
11 other ti)IH 11 provided by
IIW i
Earnest Dale Roush of
c . A complete flat of abuttlno Waterloo .
tot owners Is etteched hereto
1nd mldt 1 part hereof.
. Aaecond m!Jhap occurred at
518
Third Ave., whre an auto
GA~LIA COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS driven by FIO)I'd Kemper, Rt. 2,
MORTON DICKEY, Bidwell, atruck a parked e~r
CLK . OF BOARD OWned by Gil')' 1M BroWn, 24,
Aug. ~,, thru Sept. 7 lntll•"he
of Galllpolla.
I

Rededication
(Continued from page

POMEROY - Robert Wood, center.
22, Rt.l, Long Bottom, escaped
Gary Hood, 17, GalliPQiis,
serious injury in a single car was cited to Juvenile Court for
accident at 4 a.m. Saturday on hit-skip following an accident
Rl. 124 at Minersville.
at 12:20 a.m. Saturday on the
The Gallia-Meigs Post State Fairfield- Centenary Rd., four
Highway Patrol said Wood, tenthsofamilenorthofRI.I41.
driving west lost c.ontrol of his
Officers sa.id Hood lost
car which skidded off the left control of his car in a .curve,
side of the highway into a · The auto hit an embal)kment,
guardrail and telephone PQie. damaging it heavily. •
The car was demolished,
Hood suffered minor injuries
He was taken to the Holzer but was not immediately
Medical Center for treatment treated.
of minor injuries by a relative,
A final mishap Saturday
No charge was filed.
occurred at 7:45 a.m. at the
Another single car accid&lt;:nt junction of Rt. 3S and 160 where
occurred at 4:15a.m. Saturday an auto driven · by Jerry
on Rt. 160, ooe and one half Ferrell, 25, of Charleston
mlles north of Rt. 554 where struck the rear end of an auto
GlennMIIler,33, Rt.I,Bidwell, operated by Richard Eskew,
lost control of bill car which ran 31, of Vinion.
off the highway into two trees.
Ferrell was cited to
Miller suffered lacerations of MWilcipal Court for disobeying
his left knee and forehead, He · an automatic traffic signal.
was cited for dri¥ing left of

•)

.~

BOLD YELLOW LE'ITERS,Iarge enough to be read by voyagers on the Ohio
River, painted on the cliff background at the marker, have long since washed
away, and the stones and rocks creating the date, "1932," are now covered with
soil. As a part of Ohio's celebration of the bi-centennial of the Nation, these things
will be restored. This picture was taken by Mrs. Leona Hensley of Long Bottom at
the Oct. 28, 1932 dedication.

Driver injured
early Saturday

Beverly 1

Mag nolle Drive , 18 feet from
.,. • , • Hlldl
Drive to Its Intersection

Labor Day
Store Hours:

get by White Sox, 4-2 .

·

VINTON - North Gallia
..
Local
School District ill arr
•
WHEREAS , the undersigned
,:,_ , constitutes 51 percent of the nouncing a free and reduced
... • abutting land owners to the
price lWich policy for all
roads to be Improved; and.
,, ( WHEREAS,
the
putill~ students who are Wlable to pay
' to
convenience
and
welfare
nqulre that said · road Jm . full pdce for meals which are
provements shall be made;
served in school ·under the
NOW, WHEREFORE, t11e provisions of the Na tiona)
•'
·~
undersigned hereby petition the
...
Gallla County Commissioners School Lunch Program.
to rer,alr and re -surface th
Students from families
spec if ed roads and assess the
..
abutting land owners In the whose income ill below that in
manner provided herein .
1. Th following roads are to be posted tables are eligible for
repaired and re -surfaced :
free or reduced meals. In
...... .
a. Oak Drive from Its In· addition, families not in this
Intersections with u . S. 35 to Its
•
• · Intersection w ith Maple Drlv~ j criteria but with other unusual
•..
b. Maple · Drive· from Its in ·
'.
tersectlon with Magnolia Drive expenses due to unusually high
':r
to Its end at the propartv medical expenses, shelter
, ... . bounded by the J~mes Beverly costs in excess of 30 pet. of
J
-. resJdence
c . Magnolia Drive from the income, special education
",
Intersection with Oak Drive to expenses due to mental or
·"'l'
Its Intersect ion with HI Ida·
physical condition of a child,
•
Orfve:
d . Pecan Drive from Its In · and disaster or casualty losses
...
tersectlon with Maple Orlve to
may apply also.
·. lis end ;
2. Said road repair shall In ·
They may do so by filling in
elude the following :
the
application forma sent
.. .;. ,
a . Crown the road for proper
.. . . drainage ;
home with a letter to parents.
b . Stabilizat ion of present
• • roadbed to prevent future Additional copies are available
.. ~
break -up of the improved road ; at the principal's office in each
;
c. Installation of side ditches
The Information
,
to prevent water from running school.
"
across and under the · road ;
provided on the application will
d . All other work deemed
be
confidential and will be used
·--~
neCessary by the CountY
Engineer to Insure a proper only for the purpoee of deterroadbed for the resurfac'lno of
mining eligibility. Applications
r. said roads ;
1
5
....
sh~·,, ~ ! ;::udr ta'g,3~/f{;P;~~~~ may be submitted any Ume
Inch layer of
"hot mix during the school year.
~
macadam" .which shall be
In certain cases, foster
applied in a workmansh ip
children
are also eligible for
.. "~' manner and shall be Inspected
and accepted by the County these benefits, H parents have
Engineer ;
•·
f . All roads shall be paved to such children living with them
the followln~ Widths :
and wish to apply for such
Oak Drive, 16 feet ucept on
curves which shall be ·made · meals, they should contact the
..
wider;
school.
.. ..
Maple Dr ivel 18 teet from
In the operation of child
~..
Magnolia Drive to Its In ·
~~~
teruction with Oak Drive. and feeding programs, no child will
::
12 ftetfrom Its interaectlo·n with
,.
Oak Drlv.e, and 12· teat from Its ,be discriminated against
~' ;~~·r,~•cc~~~~o~~~~ 1?~ek o~~}:~!~ because of his race, sex, color
~

SF edges Mets; Tigers·

announced

PUBLIC NOTICES

AND

OperatiOn
,
R ed Ball

W1th Coup011
Krogec

,..,
,. lll v&gt;&lt;UABU
...,.. :
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KMOGlH

cou•o •

IllI\;]
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W1lh Coupon

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~~ s::l. ~nstant Coffee ~ sils~ 53cott 2~~=1els .
i -w rr ~~~~z·88"''t
::t"'1i.~r:~~"''G:
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Pka•·

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1~ 111111111111111111111111111111111.

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Cuupon EIP'"' S~ptembll 1• 19n
" SuiJ et llo Apphcable ~tote ond
Loc al sa l!! Til

::

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:

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-

Allii
~1111111111 11111111111111111111111.,

tupun bfjlns ,.,, ...... , 1.11n
" SuDlttt to AppllcoDil State and
·
Laul Solulu"

:
..

IY:!l,lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll

15
I'

r.

=

�10 - Thl Su!'lday Tlmea -sentinel. Sund.llv, Aug. 71'1, 1973 •
I

l4 - The SWiday Tlm~a ·Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 26, 1973

MRS.MIUERIU
MIDDLEPORT
The
Middleport E-R aquad ·was
Cllled to eelS. Seventh Ave., at
12:3t p.m. Saturday for Mrs.
David Miller wbo was Ul. She
waa taken to Holzer Medical
Center.
·•

Your Ri2ht to Know
and be Informed Of the tunc ·
t lons of your governm en t are
.-mbor;t.led tn public notices . In
that self -government charges
all citizens to be informed ;

th is newspaper vro's ever"

ci tizen to refld and stOdy th ese
·noti ces. . We strongly lldv lse
lhose ci t izens, seeking further
intormatiQno, to exercise the ir
right ot access tO public
records and public mee tings .

'PUBLIC NOTICE
WHEREAS , a petll lon lo
Improve certain public roads
has been presented to the Gall Ia
county Board of County Com ·
m lssloners :
AND
WHEREAS 1
said
petition Is attached her eto and
made a part·hereof as If hi lly re ·
writ ten herein ;

,~

WHEREAS ,

~.

said

petit ion Is signed by f !fty .one
percent of the land or lot
owners. residents of such
county , who are to specially
taxed or asses~ed for said
Improvement ; .
AND WHEREAS , uld county
commissioners have ¥iewed the
proposed Improvement within
th irty days of the presentation
of said petition ;
BE
IT
THEREFORE

RESOLVED

lhat the Gallla

County Commiss ioners find that
the Publfc convenience and
welfare require that Said lm .
provement as requested In the
attached pet ition be made .

BE

IT

FURTHER

RESOLVED , that the county
engineer shall Prer,are the
necessary pl'ans , est mates of
"'
cost , and specif ications for the
lmpr···vement together with an
.... ' estlmi!rred assessment, based
up~m the estimates of cost, upon
the real estate to be charged
therewith .

..
t

...
•
••

•

!,
"''
7..
•

-

.. ·

~

~

BE

IT

FURTHER

RESOLVED , that a hearing to
hear objections to said fm .
provem ent! and to such
estimated assessments shall be
had at the meeting room of the
Gallia County Commissioners,
Gallla County Courthouse.
Gallipolis, Ohio at 1:00 p .m .
Monday, September 10, 1973.

BE

IT

FURTHER

RESOI..-VEO , that a notice be
publlshd in a newspaper of
general circulation in the ·
county that a ·resolution has
been adopted prov iding for
•mprovement called for In the
au ached petition and that the
plans, estimates of cost. and
specificat ions for the im ·
provement. together w i th
estimated assessments upon
the abutlng land or lot
owners, as petitioned for , are
1
0

~~~~l~e o;n.c~~ m i~~f:ne~ s ~~~

....

•
t'
..

::

the inspection of · persons
Interested therein . Said
notice Shall also contain the
time and place for · the
hearing ot obleCtlons to said
Improvements and to such
estimated
assessments
r:,·~~~~~~~d abuting land or

.;

PETITION TO IMPROVE
PUBLIC ROADS

..

WHEREAS ,c ei"teln publi c
roads In Green Township are In
need of extensive repair and re surfacing ; and,
WHEREAS , neithe'r the
township nor the county have
funds available to carry out ·the
needed repair ; and ,

,..

;

•

WHEREAS, Chapter SSSS ot

the Ohio Revised Code provide
for the improvement of 'publiC
roads and charging th! abutting
land owners as a special
assessment; and,

:;
..

·:...·

POMEROY - "Operation Red Ball"
will boWice into the Meigs COWity area
during fire prevenUon month In October.
The Meig3 CoWity Jaycees, sPQnsors,
said the Red Ball rescue sticker is to aid
firemen and policemen In the rescue of
children or invalids. A "red ball" emblem
on a house will save precious, life saving
minutes by Identifying the need for help
rapidly,
·The 4-inch Red Ball decal is designed
to be placed in the upper left corner of a
child's or lnva.lld's bedroom window. This
will help firemen locate bedrooms of a
child or Invalid in case of a fire. Plans
were also made to contact local village
officials concerning a Jaycee Halloween
Patrol. Bob Buck was named chainnan
with Victor Gaul co-chairman.
Plans were made to order name tags
for all members in good standing.
Victor Gaul, membership c~irrnan, ,
annOWICed plans were underway for a
"M" night.
And young men between the ages of 11135 are invited to join the Jaycees and help
improve the commWiity. The Jaycees
meet the second and fourth Wednesday at
B p.m. at the Pomeroy Villa~~ Hall. The
next meeting will be Sept, 12.

1• 4
~.·
•
...;

·~

'

1

•
, •

•
•

•,

..• .
~·
'

~ '\

with Oak Dive;
PeCin Strut, 12 feet from Its
lnttrltctlon with Mtp le Drive
to 111 tnd ;
3. The cost of the lm.
provement II estimated to be
111 ,924 .50 and the tolal cost of

I)

County and Mrs. A, R. Knight, long active
in both DAR and the scouting program,
participated.
Another recalled the reception which
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter members
staged for the visiting officials at the Hotel
Martin, now the Meigs Inn.
Plans for the bi-centennial, according
to the DAR state regent, will include
revisiting all of the sites which reproduce
the little known journey of George
Washington in 1770 overland to the
"western country," then under the
dominion of Britain, and his voyage down
the Ohio River as far as the Great
Kanawha, and the return boat trip.
The first marker is at East Uverpool
where Washington first stepped on Ohio
land. The second is at Potter Springs,
Mingo Junction, where the pageant attracle!i an audience of over 30,000, according to DAR records. The third marker isat
Powhatan Point, the fourth In Monroe
County, the ·fifth is at old Dam 17 near

LONG BOTTOM MARKEll - Thlolarge bronze marker at Long Bottom, one
of eight along 250 miles marking George WashinMton 's landings along the Ohio
!liver, will he restored and rededicate'() In ceremonies planned for the bicentennial observance or t11e Nation in 1976, 'n;ls picture was taken by Mrs, Leona
Hensley of Long Bottom, at the 1932 dedication attended by over 2,000 people, and
was one of several reproduced for use by U1e Ohio Society of the Daughters of the
American Revolution and local Return JonnU1an Meigs Chapter in planning
restoration of the marker and its site. .

Marietta , the sixth at' Parkersburg, the
seventh at Hockingport, and the eighth at
Long Bottom, where the commemoration
ended.
Local DAR members atlending the onsite inspection, all enthusiastic about the
prospects of the bi-centennial restoration
and rededication of the markers and the
proposed ceremonies and pageantry, were
Miss Lucille Smith, regent, who arranged
for the clearing of shoulder-high weeds.
around the marker prior to the inspection
by the state officials; Md. Thereon
John;;on, vice regent; Mrs, Pearl Mora,
treasurer; Mrs. Patrick Lochary, past
Southeast Director; Mrs. J. E. Foster,
registrar; Mrs. Everett Hayes, Mrs.
Daniel Thomas, Mrs. Margaret Parsons,
Mrs. Nan Moore, and Mrs. David C.
Miller.
District directors attending who will
assist in the bi-centennial celebration
planning include Mrs, Robert W. Hagan,
Huntington , Southeas t District ; Mrs.
&amp;jlpb Donges, Xenia, Southwest Distric.i;
and · Mrs. Donald Brumley, Findlay,
Northeast District.

The officials of the Ohio Society
Daughlers of the American Revolution
present for the on-site inspection were
.
' .
Mrs. Norman H. DeMent, Deftance,
· regent; Mrs, MerrittS. Huber, B~ ttsville,
swte vlce regent; Mrs. H. H. ~awor th ,
Wilmington, state librarian ; Mrs. Gray
Hussey, Columbus, state historian, and
Mrs. 1!:. William Monter, Cincinnati, vice
president, Waldschmidt House. ,
They were also joined for 1the inspection visit by Mrs. Thorne Cpttrlll of
Logan, and Mrs, Charles W. M"cDailiel,
Jane Washington.
,
Return Jonat han Meigs ~hapter
hosted a picnic for the visiting di~niiarles
and guests at Forked Run Park_following
the Inspection,
PILOTS ON STRIKE
PANAMA CITY (UP!) -Ship traffic
through the Panama Canal came to a near
swndstill Saturday when 96 American
canal pilots stayed off their jobs in a labor
dispute with the Panama Canal Co., aU. S.
government agency.

10 DAYS ONLY!

No one injured

or naUonal origin.
Under the provision of the
PQlicy the building principals
will review applications and
determine eligibility.
If a parent is dissatisfied
with the ruling of the official,
he may make a request either
orally or in writing to Supt.
David Campbell for a hearing
to appeal the decision. Hearing
procedures are outlined in the
PQlicy.
· Acomplete copy of the PQlicy
ill on file in each school and in
the office ·of the local superintendent where it may he reviewed by any Interested
party,

).

,,

Nation•l LIIIUI
East
W, L. Pet. G. B.
St. Louis
65 62 .512
Pittsburgh
61 63 .-492 2112
Chicag o
61 . 66 .&lt;80 •
Mo!ltreal
. 59 67 . 468 5'h
Philadelphia 59 68 .&lt;6S 6
New York
58 69 . 457 7

W. L.

Atlanla

79

. 617

76 54
71 56

.5 85
.559

67

.515 13

63

Detroit

69

New York
Milwaukee
Cleve lan d

.548

57

70 58 ,S&lt;J
68 62 .523

4
71h

Squires open 4th
campaign Oct. 11

ouun.

No Primer Necessary
Non Chalking
Dries In 30 Minute-s
White That Stays White
Lasts For Years
Soap &amp; ·Water Cleanup

Ham Slices

Wit h Coupon ond Purcho 11 ol

"

$2 ..50 or More Any &amp;rand

4

Seafood

200 Extra

Top Value Stamps
With Coupon and Purchr;ue

U.S. Gavl. Inspected
Fresh Fr ying Mi• ed

of One 6·1b. 6-oa:. Ct11'1 Hono••r

..Wimle Potatoes
~Uitllhl1 ,

Fryer Parts

fo5te1 f-ried

Beef
Patties
Turbot
Fillets
U.S.
lnspecled
Turkey
Hindquarters

'•~UJ:e

.. Ctlllllll ll•im

1t7l

111,l1fn S 111 111nltrs witll bck . l ~rml
l 2 ,,.,, lliltts, IIICIIfllll

llllldiiS Wt lll iiCil, ) Wlllf;l

ftiC.I

Willi Ctu.tn
IYe•teo Poly lo 11

Iced Tea Mix

Frozen Cello Wrapped

10·CI. 8 9
Pkg.

f.

Govl.

s1
3
s1
.
3
4,o.••. s1

Counhy Onn Tw i1h.

Stick1, Rir.gs or

to .••.

Rod~o

P~SI ' ·

PreiiBis

t6····
Can•

l&lt;rogl!!r Fully !ckttd

PIISI•·

Dinner Rolls

59

CD•"Iry Ctw• lltnlllt, tllecDiatt, StJiwUrrr,

~~~""' ""'""~/a-Gal.
1

·(

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Ctn. .

ream

w,,. ·e'""

·

/_

Lody S&lt;on

'( si:az athroom Tissue
Cu,u h,lns St,ltMIIII 1, 111l
"Swllitct 11 '"ll•lllt S1t1e ad
u'al bits fa~ "

Doz.
Setact Lart• Eggs ••• Dt1. 83c

-==

39

5
=
=

11111111111111111111111111111~

=\ I

MUMS

BAG WORMS

,.

"BUILDING SUPPLIES" .
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Artifacts
Excavation for Mexi co
City 's subway provi ded archeologists wllh a bonanza of
Aztec artifacts . Watc hed
closely by archeological re·
covery tea ms , workm en
unearthed painted sculptures,
bonos. 40 ton s of .ceramic
fragments, 380 bunul s, and
eve n u "mull temple. Th o
.letnplu wa $ !crt In piucc a•
the centerpiece ol' one subway
station .

The heig ht ol economy is
achieved by those who spread
mustard on the hot dogs at
foolbi llgames.

=

Lilt Permanent

=
-

Ate Destroying Many Beautiful
Shrubs and Trees. Cone-Shaped
Cacoons Hang From Limbs on
Which They Feed.
Control By Spraying.

"hlll&lt;l to A"llt1lll Stltl '"'

Lml Sllnlu"

i5
-

:

H oc &gt;" &lt; ou •o•::Ji
. .nE ·~~
W1th CDupon

5
-

tluct&gt;Ov::·~~~·~~~~::•gulu•

?\ I . Maxwell House

I $I.UW'".~
~

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.. Open 9 to 8 Weekdays

-

.SUNDAY 1 TO 5

')

CtW,III h'irU St.IIMIItr 1, 1111
" Su~jtcl II aU iCalllt 1t1t1 IIIII

ltUI Ulll Ill"

Willi Ctttll

Glont 5iu O.ltrgent

5etdltn

~Sliver
~
'

8af\1..ett Pears.

"-10,lllc:l
~G,· ll
~lllli::"~..!''!.£0:!~ •o u•~ ~

011 II~

t-_\- ' cou

on El

lb.
Can

·

lroi se,tlmbO! t , 1913
"S~b 'ectle Applltable State ond
I Lacol Saleslu "

=- -.'1/ /
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49·•··
Box

Dust

69

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CIWUII lOifll Sultlllll" 1, 1113
" S..}ICI It lft!IIC..-11 11111 111•
lUll Ulll tn "

llSSiu

8.m11111111111111111111111111111.:d...,11· 1~

•

59,

ttl.

-= White Grapes
-:- lb.)91

f.
-.....
•et:-~3
'2''
. meItZer Ga·rden Cen'ter
S
4 miles west of

Ajax

~1 11111111111~~;;1;;;;;;~111111111~

ii

Guaranteed to give complete satisfaction.
If not satisfied after you apply this product
as directed on the label, return remainder
to our S&amp;TStore for refund of the full
price you paid.

C111~111

Wila

Olskwo1hir.g l iqu id

&lt;,,,ts~ure Deodorant i ·
tf 5 9

:-

In Two Gallon Container
Regular $16. 50 Value

CASH &amp; CARRY

.

\_M~~'?.~~ Margarine ~

CARTER &amp; EVANS, INC.
85 OLIVE ST.

W.ilh Coupon and Purcl\o1e ol

Two or Mou• Poc.kogtl Smok•d

Top Value Stamps

-==

CAREFREE SHRUBS

Reusable Plastic Bucket
Easily Cleaned--Has 1001 Other Uses

Top Value Stamps

""rv'

7
.476 13

Pittsburgh at Atlanll .

on no-hitter

It•••

50 Extra

60 66
53 75 .414 21
West
W. L. Pet. G . B.
Oakland
' 7S 52 .591
Kansas City
73 56 .566 3
M innesota
60 66 .476 14 112
Ca llfofn la
58 66 .468 15 'h
Chicago
59 69 .465 16112
Texas
43 82 .344 31
Friday's Results
Minnesota 3 Milwaukee o
Baltimore 6 Kan City 0
Detr-oit 6 Ch.lcago 5
ClelJeland 11 Te xas 5
Oakland 5 New York 1
Boston 3 California 2
Sunday's Games
New York at Oakland
Milwaukee at Minnesota
Texas at Cleveland , 2
Kansas City at Bait, twilight
Boston at CallforniJ . tw ilight
Detroit at Chicago , 2

62 68 .477 18
San Diego
47 80 ;370 31'h
· ~rlday's ResU11i
San Diego 5 Montr ea l 3
New York 1 San Fran 0, 10 Inns.
Los Ang , les ~ Philadelph ia o
St . Louis S Clnci 4, 11 Ins.
Atlanta. 3 Pittsburgh 2
Houston 4 Chicago 2
Sunday ' s Games
San Diego at Montreal
Los Angeles at Phli O$:fel ph la
San Er_~c:;iJc;.o ot New York
St . Lou is at Cin c innati

LL series

Ctnrir" till. Th Rr~&amp;•r c• .
.11f Prim ''" '''M Stf1.
11 lflJ. Wt
th rlflt II
111111 -11a11ltltl, fiOIIl tO D fO

100 Extra

W, L. Pet. G. B.
72 52 .S81

Baltimore
Boston

Pet. G.8,

49

· Monday, Sapl. 3
9 A.M. to 6 P.M.

,Cheese

50

GALLIPOLIS - Applying
for a marriage Ucenae Friday
In Gallla County Probate Court
were G. Silas Johnson,' 23, ·
Ewlngton, bulcher, and Joanne
Sinon, 19,, Northup, EKG
technician.

(

By Un ted Press International

Los Angeles
Cincinnati
San Fri!lnclsco
Houston

'· Will Be Open

Amertcan Lneue
East

Malor League ·Standlngs

West

·for Your Shopping
•Convenience
Your Pomeroy
and Silver Bridge
Kroger Store

WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (UPI)
NORFOLK, Va. (UP!)
10,000-seat Coliseum in ad- HeavUy favored Tainan The Virginia Squires will open dition to the three in the 10,700lb.
City, Taiwan, lived up to ex- their fourth
American seat llichmond Coliseum.
pectations Saturday when Basketball Association season
All home games during the
Huang Ching-Hul hurled his on Oct. II in the Norfolk Scope '1973-74 season will begin at a
oecond straight no-hitter and against !be Caro.lina Cougars, p.m., a half-hour later than last
Nationalist Chinese batters it was announced Saturday.
season's starting time.
mounted a nine-hit attack to
The Squires make their
The early-season schedule
beat Tucson, Ariz., 12-0, to win season debut In the Hampton will be demanding for coach AI ..
the Utile League World Series . · Roads Colisewn Oct. 13 against Bianchi and his Squires. In the!'
Acrowd of 32,000 saw Taiwan the l'&gt;enver Rockets. They will first 25 games, the Sqwres face, .. f
win ita third straight cham- play three games on successive Carolina, ·New York and ' •
pionship and four!b in five Saturdays In February in llicb- Keni)Jcky four times each and
years.
mond against the Cougars, the Indiana three times.
Huang Chlng-Hul, who Memphis Tams and the
Twenty-six of the 42 home
slrf!ck out 14 and walked only defending ABA · champion games will be played on
one, pitched a perfect game Indiana Pacers.
Fridays and Saturdays, with
four days earlier in an 18-0
The club's 42-game home eight on Fridays and 18 on
victory over Bltburg AFB, schedule includes 23 games In Saturdays. Nine home dates
WestGennany, Another batter the 10,500-seat Scope, 16 in the fall on Thursdays, three on
reached base on an error.
Wednesdays and Tuesdays and
In three series games, the
one is on a Sunday.
'Trolley Dodgers'
opposition failed to get a hit off
Afte r the last streetcar has The Squires will tWie up for
two Chinese pitchers, Kuo ground to a stop, baseball fans the season with eight preWen.Li notched a no-hitter in a and historians will have rea- season exhibition games ,
21.0 shellacking of Tampa, son to reme mber. Years ago , beginning with a match with ·
a look-lively labyri nth of the Capital Bullets of the
Fla., Thursday.
Chen Pal..shen went four for downtown stree tcar tra cks National Basketball
its name to the loca l
four In the final game to give gave
Kroger Small or large Curd
quick-footed baseball players. Association Sept. 19 in Richhim a new series record of II Th e Trolley Dodgers later mond.
24·01.
hits over three games. Mter became famous as the Brook·
three scoreless innings, he got lyn Dodgers
Ctn.
the Chinese attack rolling ~~:lth
a lead-Off homerun ag~lilst
. . . . l v4LU A11LI IO.R OG I N {.OuPoN:JIIIG
starter and loser Mike Fimbers
'Penny Black'
HOWELL NAMED
.
in the fourth.
Willi C1~'11
The British "Penny Black ..
CHARLESTON,
W,
Va
.
• Two more ruiUI crossed the the world' s first adhesive pos2 Tubs- SOft
plate on singlea by Huang tage stamp. issued in 1840 is (UP!) - Former Ohio
Cblng-Hui and Wang Cbing- neither the mo st ex pensive University basketball player
CbWig, a walk and two passed nor the rares t stam p sought Bob Howell has been named
by collectors today. A number assistant basketball coach at
Rtg,
Pkg .
;
balls.
of
the
64
milliOn
"
Penny
Fimbers was replaced by Blacks" that were pri nt ed Morris Harvey College here,
5~ C ..'SIIIjiCI
,. ll!lrtl SlllteM•Ir 1, IIU
I a,lictlllt stall ad
succeeding Carl Bradford.
Mike Martinez in the fifth, and survive in stamo albums,
IIIII IIIU IU"
' the Chinese immediately ...·~ ¥·-· .'............J:.....~.......···:-:,·:·:···:~···············:·
Ill
greeted him with a flve-rWI
• • • • V4LU .. BLI KR~t~U PO ,. llllill
outburst, including a three-run
.: homer by Huang Chlng-HI and
W1th lltl,tn
~
Rlgular
or Un•ct nt•d
:
a solo blast by Juo Wen-u:
\""Antl·hnpl
ra11t
:
Taiwan added four more in ·
Hardy, ready to plant
the final stanza behind back-toback doubles by Lu Mlng:
~s·~~~
. ~
Kwang and Huang Ming-Uang
for fall bloom
1...
6 •o&amp; . Con
,,
5
and Chen Pel.shen's fourth hit
~ 1\
CMUt ll!lrtl 11111t1111m 1, 1m
:;
of the game.
:I
"Sukjtct 1 alllilll,ll Slat• .1n•
The only Tucson batters to
reach base were Tony Bravo,
..
who walked in the first inning
. . . . . \1 111 1,1 111\ll "R O(;. I If I_?•H'ON 1111{!!1
Ideal lor business places,
and Martinez, who got aboard
on an error in the fourth.
:
Willi UIIJU
homes, etc.
:
Spt1ciol or &amp;udy Wa.~~ Homu
:
Martinez was thrown out
tiling to steal.
Among six recorda set by the
Cblnese In the World Series
$1.69 •• 8 8
~1.89 '5i1•
. ;
wu the team'• total of 12 home
_
e.~~ ... hill'" s.,1'"'''' 1, ,m
_
runs In three games.

TWO
ALL ON

.ASK TOWED

UNIT CALLED
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
E-R squlld was e~lled to 328
Condor St., at 12:19 p.m.
Saturday for Leo Vining who
was taken to Veterans
Memorial HospitaL

YWieSe win

£"'1..!4.-.

Norm Cash then singled and
Bahnsen walked Aurelio
Rodrigu!ll to rm the bases.
Eddie Brinkman walked on a 31 pitch to force In McAuliffe
and Northrup followed with a
single to left field to score Cash
and Rodrlgu!ll.
The Sllll got a run In the third
on singles by Jorge Orta,
Bucky Dent and Pat Kelly and
Bill Sharp's sacrifice fly .
Iletroii got an Wlearned rur
in the fifth Inning after Mickey
Stanley's fiy ball eluded Jerry
Hairston for a two-base error,
Designed hitter Gates Brown
then singled home Stanley.

defeated the Chicago White
Sox, 4-2.
Tiger starter Jim Perry
raised hla record to 1~11 but
gave way to John Hiller after
Carlos May led off the ninth for
the White Sox with his 13th
homer of the season , II was
Perry's 18th career victory
over Chicago. Hlller picked up
bls 29th save of the season.
Bahnsen, who lost a no-littler
with two out in the ninth inning
in his_last start oo Tuesday
night, suffered his 16th defeat
against 18 wins.
He walked Dick McAullfie
with one out in the second.

{ottage

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
GALLIPOLIS - Three
persons were transported to
the Holzer Medical Center
Friday by the Gallia County
Volunteer Emergency Squad,
Shirley Taylor, 22, Rt. I,
VInton, was admitted as a
medical patient as was Billy
Masters, age 7, of Rt. I,
Gallipolis.
Cyn\hiaSwlsher,age7,Rt I,
Gallipolis, was taken to the
hospital for Injuries suffered In
a fall from a swing.

TWO ARRESTED
GALLIPOLIS - City pollee
recorded two arrests Friday
night Clarence Williams, Jr .,
28, Point Pleasant was charged
with assault and battery and
restating arrest. Roy Mooney,
7~, Rt. I, Ga!Upolla, was booked
for intoxication.

NEW YORK (UP!)- Garry
Maddox alngled home Gary
Matthews from oecond base
with two out in the flral inning
and Tom Bradley went on to
pitch a four-hitter Saturday as
the San Francisco Giants
edged the New York Mets, 1.0.
Bradley struck out five and
walked one as he outdueted
Mets ace Tom 'Seaver to even
bls record at 11-11.
Seaver, now Jll-7, gave up a
single to Matthews to open the
game. Tito Fuentes' sacrifice
moved Matthews to second.
After Bobby llonds popped to
Short, Willie McCovey was
walked Intentionally. Maddox
then lined a single to right to
bring home the only rWI of the
game.
Only one Met rWiner reached
third base, Felix Millan, who
bad two &lt;t New York's hits
doubled to open the third In:
nlng. He advanced to thlrd on
Rusty Staub's fiy tq .center but
was thrown out easily attempting to score on John
Milner's gr_oWider to Bradley.
Seaver lowered his ERA to
· 1.74, the best in the National
league among starting pitchers while boosting his
league-leading strikeout total
to 196 with two strikeouts.
In other Major League action
Saturday afternoon the Tigers
cashed In on Stan Bahnsen's
wUdness in the second Inning
· as Jim Northup keyed a threerWI explosion with a basesloaded slnRie, and Detroit

'

Lunch policy set

GALLIPOLIS - No one wu
injured or cited in two minor
traffic accidents Investigated
Improvement shall be paid ., Friday by city pollee officers.
follows :
a . 12,500.00 by tht Green The first occurred on Second
Townsh ip Trustees ;
Ave. at the G. C, Murphy Store
b . The b1J1nce ot the cost
btlng equally assessed against where an auto driven by Connie
IICh tbUttlng lOt OS a opec111 J . Snodgrass, 17, Rt .. 2,
lllttamtnt to be certlfle~ to the
County Auditor to be pieced on e Gallipolis, backed into a
special dupl icate and collected parked vehlde owned by
11 other ti)IH 11 provided by
IIW i
Earnest Dale Roush of
c . A complete flat of abuttlno Waterloo .
tot owners Is etteched hereto
1nd mldt 1 part hereof.
. Aaecond m!Jhap occurred at
518
Third Ave., whre an auto
GA~LIA COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS driven by FIO)I'd Kemper, Rt. 2,
MORTON DICKEY, Bidwell, atruck a parked e~r
CLK . OF BOARD OWned by Gil')' 1M BroWn, 24,
Aug. ~,, thru Sept. 7 lntll•"he
of Galllpolla.
I

Rededication
(Continued from page

POMEROY - Robert Wood, center.
22, Rt.l, Long Bottom, escaped
Gary Hood, 17, GalliPQiis,
serious injury in a single car was cited to Juvenile Court for
accident at 4 a.m. Saturday on hit-skip following an accident
Rl. 124 at Minersville.
at 12:20 a.m. Saturday on the
The Gallia-Meigs Post State Fairfield- Centenary Rd., four
Highway Patrol said Wood, tenthsofamilenorthofRI.I41.
driving west lost c.ontrol of his
Officers sa.id Hood lost
car which skidded off the left control of his car in a .curve,
side of the highway into a · The auto hit an embal)kment,
guardrail and telephone PQie. damaging it heavily. •
The car was demolished,
Hood suffered minor injuries
He was taken to the Holzer but was not immediately
Medical Center for treatment treated.
of minor injuries by a relative,
A final mishap Saturday
No charge was filed.
occurred at 7:45 a.m. at the
Another single car accid&lt;:nt junction of Rt. 3S and 160 where
occurred at 4:15a.m. Saturday an auto driven · by Jerry
on Rt. 160, ooe and one half Ferrell, 25, of Charleston
mlles north of Rt. 554 where struck the rear end of an auto
GlennMIIler,33, Rt.I,Bidwell, operated by Richard Eskew,
lost control of bill car which ran 31, of Vinion.
off the highway into two trees.
Ferrell was cited to
Miller suffered lacerations of MWilcipal Court for disobeying
his left knee and forehead, He · an automatic traffic signal.
was cited for dri¥ing left of

•)

.~

BOLD YELLOW LE'ITERS,Iarge enough to be read by voyagers on the Ohio
River, painted on the cliff background at the marker, have long since washed
away, and the stones and rocks creating the date, "1932," are now covered with
soil. As a part of Ohio's celebration of the bi-centennial of the Nation, these things
will be restored. This picture was taken by Mrs. Leona Hensley of Long Bottom at
the Oct. 28, 1932 dedication.

Driver injured
early Saturday

Beverly 1

Mag nolle Drive , 18 feet from
.,. • , • Hlldl
Drive to Its Intersection

Labor Day
Store Hours:

get by White Sox, 4-2 .

·

VINTON - North Gallia
..
Local
School District ill arr
•
WHEREAS , the undersigned
,:,_ , constitutes 51 percent of the nouncing a free and reduced
... • abutting land owners to the
price lWich policy for all
roads to be Improved; and.
,, ( WHEREAS,
the
putill~ students who are Wlable to pay
' to
convenience
and
welfare
nqulre that said · road Jm . full pdce for meals which are
provements shall be made;
served in school ·under the
NOW, WHEREFORE, t11e provisions of the Na tiona)
•'
·~
undersigned hereby petition the
...
Gallla County Commissioners School Lunch Program.
to rer,alr and re -surface th
Students from families
spec if ed roads and assess the
..
abutting land owners In the whose income ill below that in
manner provided herein .
1. Th following roads are to be posted tables are eligible for
repaired and re -surfaced :
free or reduced meals. In
...... .
a. Oak Drive from Its In· addition, families not in this
Intersections with u . S. 35 to Its
•
• · Intersection w ith Maple Drlv~ j criteria but with other unusual
•..
b. Maple · Drive· from Its in ·
'.
tersectlon with Magnolia Drive expenses due to unusually high
':r
to Its end at the propartv medical expenses, shelter
, ... . bounded by the J~mes Beverly costs in excess of 30 pet. of
J
-. resJdence
c . Magnolia Drive from the income, special education
",
Intersection with Oak Drive to expenses due to mental or
·"'l'
Its Intersect ion with HI Ida·
physical condition of a child,
•
Orfve:
d . Pecan Drive from Its In · and disaster or casualty losses
...
tersectlon with Maple Orlve to
may apply also.
·. lis end ;
2. Said road repair shall In ·
They may do so by filling in
elude the following :
the
application forma sent
.. .;. ,
a . Crown the road for proper
.. . . drainage ;
home with a letter to parents.
b . Stabilizat ion of present
• • roadbed to prevent future Additional copies are available
.. ~
break -up of the improved road ; at the principal's office in each
;
c. Installation of side ditches
The Information
,
to prevent water from running school.
"
across and under the · road ;
provided on the application will
d . All other work deemed
be
confidential and will be used
·--~
neCessary by the CountY
Engineer to Insure a proper only for the purpoee of deterroadbed for the resurfac'lno of
mining eligibility. Applications
r. said roads ;
1
5
....
sh~·,, ~ ! ;::udr ta'g,3~/f{;P;~~~~ may be submitted any Ume
Inch layer of
"hot mix during the school year.
~
macadam" .which shall be
In certain cases, foster
applied in a workmansh ip
children
are also eligible for
.. "~' manner and shall be Inspected
and accepted by the County these benefits, H parents have
Engineer ;
•·
f . All roads shall be paved to such children living with them
the followln~ Widths :
and wish to apply for such
Oak Drive, 16 feet ucept on
curves which shall be ·made · meals, they should contact the
..
wider;
school.
.. ..
Maple Dr ivel 18 teet from
In the operation of child
~..
Magnolia Drive to Its In ·
~~~
teruction with Oak Drive. and feeding programs, no child will
::
12 ftetfrom Its interaectlo·n with
,.
Oak Drlv.e, and 12· teat from Its ,be discriminated against
~' ;~~·r,~•cc~~~~o~~~~ 1?~ek o~~}:~!~ because of his race, sex, color
~

SF edges Mets; Tigers·

announced

PUBLIC NOTICES

AND

OperatiOn
,
R ed Ball

W1th Coup011
Krogec

,..,
,. lll v&gt;&lt;UABU
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KMOGlH

cou•o •

IllI\;]
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W1lh Coupon

:
•

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Oeco•alor

~~ s::l. ~nstant Coffee ~ sils~ 53cott 2~~=1els .
i -w rr ~~~~z·88"''t
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Cuupon EIP'"' S~ptembll 1• 19n
" SuiJ et llo Apphcable ~tote ond
Loc al sa l!! Til

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Allii
~1111111111 11111111111111111111111.,

tupun bfjlns ,.,, ...... , 1.11n
" SuDlttt to AppllcoDil State and
·
Laul Solulu"

:
..

IY:!l,lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll

15
I'

r.

=

�17 - The Sunday l'hn s -sentlrtel , Sunday, Aug, 26, 1973

16- The Sunday Til ,,es. Sentinel, Sunday , Aug. 26, 1973
l,

Late drives give Meigs 16-0 win
BY DENNY FOBES
MIDDLEPORT
The
Meigs Marlllden,
IICW·
lng !lll drives of eo and 42
yards late In the game, turned
back Ripley (W. Va.), 16-0 In a
pre-seaaon scrimmage
Saturday.morning at the Meigs
Junlar High S!adlum.
The seeond string, engineered by junior quarterback Perlul.ult and sparked
by the rmnlng of sophQmores
Marty Dugan an.d Mike
Magnotta, accounted for both
scores.
Neither team threatened at
the beginning, with the first
serious drive a· result of
linebacker Andy English's recovery of a Ripley fumble on
the West Virginians' 30 yard
line.
()) the first play following
the recovery, senior wingback
Miclt Ash got a pitch-out from
quarterback Jay Warner and
circled left end for 13 yards,
ooly to have the gain nullified
by an oftside penalty.
Junior tailback Terry
Whitlatch then went for $ off
right tacltle and 4 off left
tacltle. Warner kept for 5

l:ringlng up a fourth and I on
the Ripley 21. But the drive
ended there, with the West
Virginia defense stopping
Whitlatch oo a pitch to the left
side.
The first score of the
scrimmage came on the nextto-the last offensive series for
Meigs.
Dugan capped that 60 yard

drive with a 2 yard plunge olf
left tackle, with senior tailback
Mike Hollman runnln~ a pitchout across the goal line for
the conversion . The drive
started on the Meigs 40, with
Dugan carrying S times for 30
yards. Mngnotta 's broken field
running accounted for the
other 30 yards on 3 carries.
Following the conversion ,

Ripley took over on lts own 30,
bot ran out of downs on
the 42, where liMo Marauders
needed only a plays to reach
paydirt again.
Tailback John Thomas
started the drive with a 3 yand
gain off left tackle, followed by
a counter for no gain and an
incomplete pass. Then on
fourth and 7from the Ripley 39,

Tuero gives U. S. big
Wightman tennis lead
BROOKUNE, Mass. (IJPI)
- American Linda Tuero,
coming back from a 4.{) de(icit
in the first set, gave the United
States an overwhelming ~
lead in Wightman Cup tennis
play here . Saturday by
defea ling Glynis Coles of
Britain, 7~. S-2.
On Friday night Chris Evert
had whipped Virgirila Wade
arid Pa IIi Hogan topped

Veronica Burton to give the
United States a 2~ edge in this
50th anniversary of cup play.
After Miss Tuero'swin, Chris
and 17-year-old Marita
RedOndo met Miss Wade and
Miss Coles in lh1l first doubles
of lh1l seven match series.
Miss Coles held her opening
service on an 86 minute match
despite a shaky start, fighting
off three break points. She then

Mai!notta zipped through a
gigantic hole wovtded by the
left side of the lihe, and dashed
26 yards to the Ripley 13. From
there, Hoffman carried twice
for 7 yands, and Thomas once
for 3, before Dugan crashed
across f10111 \he 3for his second
score.
Magnotta made lh1l conwrs!on good on a counter off
the left side.
While the Meigs of·
fense was running up 239
defense he.ld Rlpley~ scoreless,
with the West Virginians
managing only 104 rushing
yards In 57 carries, and 104
ya_rds passing on 9 completions
In 18 attempts.
The closest Ripley managed
to drive towands Maroon and
Gold's end zone was a 54 yard
drive tluit stalled on the 29.
Ripley had a third and 4 on the
Meigs 13 when the Marauder
line dwnped the quarterback
for a loss back around the 20.
But Ripley was ·called for
clipping, and the Marauders
accepted the penalty bringing
up a third and 23 on the 32. A
quarterback keeper around
right end went for 3, and on
fourth and 20 the quarterback

was aucked again by the
Marauder l!ne lor a 10 yard
loss ,
The QUllrtQrback spot, one of
the big questlonmarks when
the Marauders started pruseason drll!s, rema!AA just
tllal, a question. Jay Wunter
started, passed ! . tlm.es lor no
completions, qne lnteroeptlon,
and ran once for l&gt; yards,
Ault replaced Warner and
completed 3 passes !ri D al·
tempts for 20 yards, with ono
lnterceptlon ,and ran for minus
one yard in 6 carries . Lonnie
Coates completed one out of
two passes for six yards, and
one interception. .
Sophomore fullback Dugan
led all ball carries, rushing for
68 yards in II carries, followed
by Magnotta with 56 yards In 6
carries, and Whitlatch 14 (or 45
yards. Jack Oiler added 22
yards on 6 carries, Ash 19
yards on 3 carries, and Hoffman lugged the ball 6 times for
a net of 11 yards.
Both teams recovered two
opponents ' fumbles , while
Ripley was penalized 7 times
for 94 yards and Meigs 5times
for 45 yards .

Dolphins ready
~hulu

110nt In the sub. after
by JIWJ I'AIINICEI.LI
Mlalllllwd a 17-4 !ead
the
d
Ui'I8JH1riJ Wrltor ·
11
""'
hln
Tho Miami Dol)&gt;hlns g~ve IMlCond and lll 1r • "' ...,.p
. uotil.., tu U1e Nutlonal ~'ootbuli dufefllle held oil 1 de~nnll*l
Ut
•ortorl by Jiimea Harrla, the
J.e•Hue Friday nl~ ht
;;y'ro nama' No. 2 quart.rback, to
r~ody . 'rho rlnul K&lt;'w-o - 17-14
rl&gt;r hh
over thtr l.o,~ JlllAIICl Jtams - win.
rnoy not lndlc~te It, but lhu
llurrla tllking
~~
HMno could very well hilve llodl in the see
q
been u cuulplcto rout if 0011ch combined with Lurry M~·
Don Shuln lwdn't yunk~d his Cutcl!oon on 8 30-yard ..er~n
lint team Jllldwuy Utrouyh the Pill! lor on~ TD ond th~ew 15$
arter
yards to Horold Jackaon for
scco.nd qu
·
· ~
II
0 ld Rav who
But whllo they wore In tilC uno ler, . av
· '·
game, !lob Orie¥e und Com· tnl811cd a 27-yard lleld ~~1
pany save un awesome por· attempt wJth no lime
'lorrnance and showed Ju•t why remaining in the firlt half,
the Dolphins rJn!shed t7~ last blew • 33-yard a::.t with
se•son and captured the Super 4:301eU to kill the ·
hopes
Bowl.
lor a tie.
.
Griese playing ror the first
In lhe only other Nji'L pre·
time in 'two weeks nfU!r an season game, Ken J\nderson
elbow Injury directed the threw an 81-yard TO pass tD
Dolphins to l~o touchdowns light end !lob Trumpy to lead
and a field goal the first three the Cincinnati Benga~ to a 17tlmes they handled the ball. 10 vlctnry over the Detroit
Uons.
Trwnpy's TO, follpwJng a
one-yord
scoring r!lll by Doug
Team Slota
Ripley rushing - 57 carries. Dressier, gave Cincinnati a 14104 yards.
0 lead. Detroit battled' back on
Ripley passing - 18 at. a 30-yard field goal by Errol
tempts, 9 complellons, 104
yards (50 pel.).
Mann and a three·Yat:? TO by
Total yards - 208.
Nick . Eddy but : •.Horst
Meigs rushing - 60 carries, Muhlmann's 31-yard field goal
239 yards .
Meigs ,passing - 14 af. ended the Uons' comeback
tempts, 4 completions, 26 yards hopes.
135 ~ct.) .
..
Total yards - 265.
Individual Slats
Meigs Passing
All. Com . Yds. tnt;
Warner
3
0
0
1
Ault
9
3 20
1
Coates
2
1
6
1
Meigs Rushing
C. Yds.

.nd

o;.:

r.

broke Miss Tuero In the second
and fourth games to lead W,
but then her game . began to
come apart.
Unda, the 22-year-4\d .from
New Orleans, got her first
service bf'1lak in the fifth game
and then held service for 5-2
when the 1!1-year-&lt;&gt;ld British
girl dumped an easy o~rhead
Into the net to trail 40-15.
From that point in the
match, Miss Coles seemed
finished . Miss Tuero took her
full service in the ninth to get to
5-4 then moved ahead at 6-5 In
the lith, as Miss Coles; obviously tiring badly, could not
cope with Uncia's tenacity in
the long rallies. At one stage
the English girl scored only 10
DETROIT (UP!) - Quar- yard pass tun !Duchdown play.
I S
points in lhs span of six games. terback Ken Anderson says
" We got them in the right Warner
Ault
7 ·I
The ~cond set was a mere Bob Trumpy has "great speed defense with the right play," Oiler
6 22
formality
. They exchanged_ for a tight end" and that said Anderson who went all the Eason
4 8
By
CINCINNATI (UP!) - A passes for 143 yands and two
The Bengala' starting defen- service breaks in the first three cou1 dn't be e..
-•'.ibited better way a t quarterback, •"and Bob Whillatch
14
45
pair of youngsters from such touchdowns.
sive backfield is strong, but
than
·
Dugan
II 68
TERRY
Friday night when the Just outran everybody after Magnotta
unlikely colleges as Augustana
"I think I've got a lot more Brown is worried about re- games but •....'nda took the
6 56 r
advantage In ihe fifth ga.me-for Cincinnati Bengals defeated that. He has great speed for a Ash
and Bethune-Cookman is good games coming up this placements. .
3 19
JOHN&lt;n"'
th
tr · ·
ti h
Thomas
3 6, I
a deciding break. The fatal
e Oe 011 Uons 17-10.
g tend."
causing veteran coach Paul year." said Anderson. "I've
Tommy Casanova,
a stan- blow for Miss Col~ was a
• 1 · just a we 11 designed Hoffman
6 11 •
· last year,
An derson, passing f rom
Brown to predict his Cincinnati really got the confidence now." dout as a rookie
is
=
Ia' twas
•
'd
f1ave you been t~lnklng
Fumbles lost - Ripley 2. 1
Bengals "will·be a better team
his
own
12
yard
line
on
a
P
Y
,'
sat
Trurnpy,
"and
Clark, a burly 6-2, 245- joined in the backfield by Ken double fault to go down love 30. f'about.
Meigs
2
(Whitlatch,
Hoffman)
.
1
of
buying a mobile home.
1 d
·
Penalties
Ripley,
7 for 94 1 but wondered wher,e you
than a year ago."
tts
an
10
on
the
Bengals
19,
we've
practiced
it
and
pounder out of Bethune-Cook- Riley, Neal Craig and Lemar Miss Tuero then served out"·
""'
put it?
The Bengala' 3-6 mark last man college in Daytona Beach, Parrish. The three consta nlly set with Miss Coles valiantly -hi\ Trurnpy on the Uons 45 practiced it and practiced it." yds.; Meigs, 5 for 45 yds.
I would
In
some
rural or tresort
season was only good enough Fla., was orily the team's 12th anaIyze and cntlque
· · ea ch oIll er avo. iding one match point ,yard line and he simply outran
The other Bengal touchdown :':':':':':':':':':':':':':':':':::,:,:,:~,:,:,:::':':~::;:::':':&gt;.':::;~ ~~~~~ /~~m~
~~h~r~~~ ~~~
for !hind place in the four-team round draft choice, but he'll" m
before accepting defeat.
the Uon secondary !or an 81· carneonaoneyardplungeona
· practice .
Central Division of the Ameri- been so impressive in Jrainlng
II already own. - or.buy or
Cincinnati's kicking game
On a lighter note, as the
t
fourth and one situation by
renla site. But mosf people
can Conference, which Brown camp he could be starting should be strong this year _ second day got underway
.
S
running back Doug Dressler.
TORNADOES LOSE
I
prefer the advantages of
believes is the toughies\ In pro ninning back when the reguliu- Gerrnan soccer-style kicker . Saturday, Mrs. Hazel Hot"No One was really grabbing
The Southern TornadO.s,
the mobile home pa'rk.
'I
football.
season begins.
Horst Muhlmann says he's in chkiss Wightman, now 86, went OD
me so I started moving outside playing Ullder a bolllng SWl
Modern parks are laid
Brown
is
optimistic
H Clark continues to im- top form. He's been booting 61). down to the court tD hit the first
and feU miD the end zone,"
out like suburbap sub- I
that caused one pl~yer to
divisions with paveQ I
primarUy because of the prove, Brown will team him ysndfieldgoalsinpracticeand ball of Play,
CINCINNATI (UPI)- The · sa!~ Dre:"'ler. .
.
suffer a beat stroke, lost tD
streets,
sidewalk's and· 1
~,. emergence of Kenny Anderson with veteran Doug Dressler in
booming kickoffs out of the end
Bn:UIIng, the granddame of Cincinnati Reds placed pitcher
The b1ggest lhmg about thts Lucasville, 20·12, In a
landscaped
grounds. Your 1
as a smart, . hand-throwing the backfield and use speed- zone.
tenrus l~bbed a sh~t over the Roger Nelson and outfielder game w~~ th~ last twoor ~~ee ·scrimmage at Lucasville
site will usually Include a 1
quarterback and the promise sters like ES$0X Johnson on a
The Bengals, forrned as ~n net to Miss Tuero, Ail if to show Bobby Tolan on disabled lists rrunutes, said Dressler. I ve Saturday.
patio and maybe a cpr port. I
of a big rookie running back in "spot" basis. Brown says expansion team in 1968, are tlrat was no fluke, Mrs. Saturday and called up from seen games hefor~ where we
Renlal will norm.ally I
Tornado Greg Dunning
include wa1er, seWer &amp;
Charles "Bobby" Clark.
Jolmson, four inches, shorter entering their sixth season and Wightman promptly lobbed Indianapolis in the American ~d a seven-point lead and lost suffered what was believed
trash collection and a lot of I
Two years ago Anderson was and 45 pounds lighter lh&amp;{l , the veteran players arxl C()- another ond over and 'Miss Assoc!·ation outfielders Ken II.
other little· extras fer your I
to
be
a
heal
stroke
during
the
just a raw rookie from Clark, "jus\ got worn down'' aches say the attitude at the Tuero • and her opponent, Griffey and Ed Armbrister.
"We wo~'l blow a~r more game. and was taken to a
convenience.
J
Augustana, a small college in when he played regularly la!f Wilmington, Ohio training Britaln:s Glynis C~les, Jed the Nelson, out for most of the . games h,~e that,
So
why
put
if
off.
See
us,
J
said LucasvWe hospital.
and
we
will
not
only
help
1
Rock Island, Ill. Since then he year.
.
camp this year is the best ever. crowd m applause. .
season with an elbow problem, . Dressler. . The w~ole team
Southern's scores came on
you
choose
the
right
mobile
1
has surpassed Virgil Carter as
"H we can use Clark as our
"We hav~ the attitude that
Mrs. Wightman put the cup was put back on the 2!-day now has. conflence. .
.
a 20 yard run aroUild left end
home lor your purpqses, we I
the team's No. 1 quarterback 'big back' then we can bring we can play with anybody," In competition In 1919 but the disabled list. H.- has a 3The
Uons
got
three
pomts
will also help you In finding I
and Brown thinks he could Essex in , and with his says Brown who is entering his firstserieswasnotp~yeduntil record in 11 games this year.2 just before halftime on a .30- on a pitch from veteran
a
location .
·
I
quarterback Verne Ord to
become one o! the premier freshness and speed, hope he 39th year of coaching. Already 1923 at the West Side Tennis
Tolan was placed on the !5- y~d f1eld goal by Earl Mann Mitch Nease, and a :iO yard
JOHNSON'S MOBILE
I
passers and team leaders in can break the big play."
regarded as one of the masters Club's new stadium In Forest day disabled list because of a which was set up by a patt o&gt;f pass from Ord to Dave
HOME
SALE~
I
the league.
The offense is strengthened of football coaching, the 64- Hills, N. Y.
back ail!nent.
penalties ag~inst the Bengals Clark.
mo
Eastern
Avel)ue
I
''The biggest single reason by two quick receivers -No. 1. year-~)]d Brown says he still . Mrs. Wightman played in the
Gallipolis, Ohio
I
Griffey, 25, has a .327 batting Lemar. Parnsh.
we're better than last season is draft choice Isaac Curtis from · enjoys putting in tbe long hours Inaugural and four times average and has been either . Parrtsh wascall~d for a pass
Phone 614-446-3547
1
the maturity of Anderson," San Diego State and Charlie required of a general manager thereafter, making her last first or second in the AA bat- mterference agamst· Larry
Brown said. "He has a strong Joiner, who was picked up and head coach.
·
appearance as a player In 1931. ling race throughout the Walton and another 15 yard
md accurate arm. He can from the Houston Oilers last
"I like this life," he said.
On Friday, Mrs. Wighbnan, season. He has ten homers and penalty was tacked on when
lbrotr the loog ball and it looks season. They join Chip Myers, "I'm ·not in this for money.
by order ol Queen Elizabeth n, S8RBI's. He leads the league in Parr':lh· b?'"ped one. of the
lille we're going to have that the team's leading receiver People fascinate me -dealing
was made an Honorary stolen bases with 43 .
off1.c1als m proteshng the
long passing threat we've last year.
.
.
with them. It's a pleasnat Commander of the Order~ the
Armbrister has a .308 deciSion.
)
Brown
is
counting
on
tackle
• '""' ill the put. ..
situation here.''
British Empire.
average with ten homers and
"I disagreed with the call,"
ADdeiUI, a 1).!_ %l~er, Mike Reid, who sometimes
72 RBI's.
said Parrish. "The rule says I
ahead) has been lmpiessive in plays coocert piano with the
0
The Reds had lost four can throw up my hands as long
pu
" garnet . In a ~21 Cincinnati Symphony Orches"For That Personal &amp; Professional Touch'' '
straight
games goln into as I don't wave them and I
rout ~ tbe philadelphia tra, and end Sherman White,
FEATURING
·'
Eagles, be played ooJy the firs\ . last year's IDp draft choice, to
SAN SEBASTIAN, Spain between his victor1·es •·
"" had to Saturday night's conte~t ne•e didn't wave them."
(UPI)-Hugh Porter ol becontentwithl:ronzeorsllver with the St. Louis candlnals.
bllf, but CODII*ted 11 Of 12 anchor the defell$ive line.
·~4
Britain, a 33-year-old bicycle medals.
Griffey and Armbrister were to
ANDREWS RECALLED
manufacturer, today won his
Porter, whose greatest be available for the Cardinals
ST. LOUIS (UP!) - Pitcher
fourth world cycling tide in the strength is the evenness and game.
Jim Andrews was recalled
Professionals Pursuit Event·by clockwork-like regularity of his
from Tulsa of the American
Specializing in AMF &amp;
::;:: ( )· .
defeating Rene Pljnen of racing, let Pijnen draw a~d
Associalion by the St. Louis
Columbia Bowling Balls.
~Y@\\
Hollarxlln the final.
by as many as four secoods m
.
Cardinals Friday to replace
Porter, who is from Pot- theearlystagesoftheroce, bot
PROFESSIONAL. BALL FITTING,
''-.,~
Rich ·Folkers who has weekend
tingham,
Staffordshire,
then
gained
a
second
in
every
DRILLING&amp;
INmilitary duty.
•
covered 3.2 miles on the Anoeta lap to win by a clear margin.
STRUCTION AVAILABLE
CLEVELAND (UP!) OAKLAND ( UPI) - V.tda lea1Jng,tbe0akland A's to a 24 track in 6:J.l2.97 to beat Pijnen · Tbe title was the ooly one at
SPECIAL RATES TO:
Gloster
Richardsoo, Cleveland
by
9.5
secoods.
stake
today
in
the
track
Bhlt pitdled • loll'-bit dmf,o!Jt 'rieUrry aver tbe New York
WILL NOT SELL
CHURCH GROUPS,
Ferdinand Bracke of · champiooships which will end Browns wide receiver, has
PARTIES, STUDENTS.
f&lt;r his tiDh llraigbt victory Yanke=.
NORFOLK, Va. (UPI )
pleaded
innocent
to
charges
of
Belgium
capiured
the
bronze
Monday,
with
road
racing.
n wa~ tbe.A:s l2:t.h victay in
and UGI Ill tbe
U1 and Sal
Owner Earl Fordman said
"All New AMF Equipment" ·
Bando 1!1\'1! bim aD the belp he lbe last ll P1Dill wbile the medal arxl Mogens Frey of beginning at Barcelona four traffic violations and Friday he does not plan to sell
possession
of
marijuana.
Denmark
finished
fourth.
Wednesday.
needed 'llidlbll 22lld h(l])er ill Yank= Ufered tbeir fifth
the Virginia Squires of the
The victory broke the jinx of
Defending champioo Robert
Richardson entered the plea American Ba s ketball
Upper Rt, 7 Kanauga, Ohio.
the filii! iJDae Saturday in ... _:nmve defeat.
Friday
in
South
Euclid
the
uneven
years
which
has
Vanlacker
of
Belgium
led
.Bhlt., ..no bas JP:Veo IGues,
Association at ''the present
didn't give up a bit 1llrlil tbe followed Porter in his ap. seven other riders Into the Municipal Court. A irial date tune."
•
'
foal1ll when Mlie HfpJ lifted pearances in the World Cycling quarterfinals of the ll"OS sprint has not yet been set.
Richardson, 32, Chicago, was
"kq fly lD ~ wlach Champlonshlpa. He woo the event.
charged
following a minor
World
Title
in
1968
1970
and
Two
Dutchmen,
Klas
lialk
NEW Y()ltt (VPI ) - Vdo •eot ~ a irip1e wbeu Bill 1972, but in 1967 and the years and Piet Oe Witt, woo the traffic accident on Aug. 12.
Ail\oufermo, a 21-fear-old N&lt;l1h loll it in. ,the BUn. But
preliminary heats of the pros
He was also charged with
truckdriver fn1n ~ N. Blue saved his11bu1Diitwhen he
·moior1l8ced event ·to emerge driving while intoxicated,
Y., hammered wt a rit'tliJ,ed Bobby Murcer oo a
as favorites for Monday's final. leaving the scene of an acWlanimous lkow:Jd ' decilklP ·lbcni folil to leftfielder Joe ·
The
defending champion, Thea cident, failure to maintain
over Danny McAJaai1 Sllbrday Rudi .and then the A's infield
STINCHCOMB DIES
Verschueren of Belgium, with- assured clear distan&lt;!e and
at Madison ~ Gvden'l ran dP1rll Began on a ,smash to
FINDLAY, Ohio ( UP!)
drew because his pacemaker driving without a license.
Jlbort by Tllltman ldunson. Ohio State Unlverslty football
Felt Forwn. ·
had been disqualified · under
Antuolermo, 1l'bo lllff.ered lii.Uil80Jl made 111!Wnd on the All-American G. R. "Pete" a new International CycUng
On modern highways, your car
11%
hil flnt proleutonalto. iD bil play l:Ju1 Blue retired Graig Stinchcomb died Friday night Union ruling that rider and
NeU.lell
oo
/1.
lap
to
leCIII&lt;t
less gasoline at 50 miles per hour than at 60.
IMt fl8bt, was the 'CCI 11
at Blanchand Valley Hospital pacemaker must hold the same
The
on!;v
other
time
the
If you drop ·from 70 to 50, you save one
tllrot181Wt the ~
after ubortillnesll . He was 79. IU!tionality.
bout, which was leleviJed Vaol:eer got a JDIUI liS far 811
gallon
In ~ry seven! '
stincbcomb was named AllNCODd wao in the eighth on ~can after World War I.
natlonllly.
. NEW COMMISSIONER
There are many ways 11&gt;1ery Ame rican
HERD TACKLE IU.
Tile victory raised An· anglet by Gem Michllel and He was a member of OSU's
CHARLOTTE,, N. C. (tJPIJ
.can help save energy. You're saving
tuGienno'a recml to 11-1-1 Matty .A!Pu. Alliu's bit CIIIJle first undefeated football team . HUNTINGtON, W. Va. - Ken Germann, athleUc
much more than money when you hold
while McAlOOn, who hal fllll&amp;bt wifb two out.s and Blue retired which w~t to the Rose Bowl at (UP!) - Marshall University director
at
Columbia
your speedometer below 50. You're
starting , tackle
Mark University fn New York,
lbe belt 1D tbe dlvlllon,lolt tar 11egan on a tap ballk to the boll. the end of the 1920 season.
Blue
Jlruli:
out
tbr!!e
and
saving
precious energy that th is country . ·
Brookover
of
Stockp&lt;rt,
O.hlo,
lbe lOth time In 13 flghls.
Friday waa named to succeed
will be out of action for about a Lloyd Jordan aa commt..!oner
can't afford to waste.
Bolli 111111 weiCbed 11611 1faikeel liwo and th!! libulput
.....
mlyllif
leoCOOd
PI
the
year.
month
with
mononucleotla,
II willll.
of the Southern Athletic
Every American can help save energy. Write
Pat Doblon went the
coach .Jack Lengyel announced . Conference. ,
It . . 11 .,..atnc Bght and
today for a free copy of "A Consumer's
··
Friday,
IleA'- ...eel aJIII'If! to diltaooe fQI' New 1'ork aod
Guide to Efficient Energy Use in the Home."
BREAK8 RECORD
Brookover'• iiJneas pull him
.., tbe lbll u be . . bat- IUII«ed hill fiffh loll in 12
H's packed with ideas that can save the
A'IlfENS (UP!) - Zvetla out of the Sept. 15 opener
Inti ~~~~at 111e
.An- deruionl.
p
.•
MILLION
OFFER
.
nallon's 8(lergy and your money.
The A'l teached tlGbloo for Slateva Of Bulgaria broke the against Morehead (Ky.)
h'
•
wauwd all onr
NEW
YORK
(UP!)
Bob
"Mill a. . Ia . . alalb !Wid II!Ven Ntlllut QeYer were able women's world record for 1100 University. The 84001·1, 2IJt). Arum, prnldint of, Top Rank
to put two !all~ in any meters Friday with a time of pound B~ookover started at
•sstltll££
Jjllltu
Inc., lilld Mlllwnmad AU'I
one minute, 67.48 seconds at offensive tac:lde the last half rl. legal 1dvlfor, received a SU
I
Tile A'l ICcnd their other the opening of the Balkan hil freshman yllll'. Hiii!IOI on
P' I 'IWri'Wc-eel
Ohio Petroleum Council
m!Uion
offer
Friday
for
hil
. . . . N .... ...,.rr ltJe .,.. in the eighth on a triple by Track and Field gamea. The the first unit wW be taken by fighter to meet heaV)'Welgh\
88 East Broad Street
Bert Campaner ie and a old mark of 1:08.50 was ~et by 240-pound Roger HlllJa of Hazel
I "
Columbus, Ohio 43216
chamjlion Geqe Foreman In
l
IIIICriflce fly by Deron Johnson. Hlldeprd Falck of Germany. Grl!ell, A),,
.................!.
SeatQe, Waah.
0

Brown predicts better
year for Cincy grid

Bengals' Trumpy·
shows fine speed

I

Red

l

2

PU
disabled Jist

"---------... ---·

SKYLINE LANES
.

and .PRO-SHOP,

Bn•t}•sh·. CyeliSt WIDS

New AMF Lanes

•Snack Bar and

A's top ·Yankees
on Blue shutout

,Captain's LDunge

,Wide receiver

pleads innocent

\\~/· /

~\\

&gt;

PHONE
446-3362

Middleweight
wins decision

Under 50, you
save more
than money•.
uses

rmc.

.....

Your Local Oil Companies

-u.w..

,.._.lrrt-1_.,_
'

I

Trevino upsets
Jack, 4 and 3
CARY, N, C, (UP! ) - 1M
Trevino, with an eagle and
three birdies, shook off an
attack of pessimism and
destroyed awesome Ja ck
Nicklaus in a battle of Utans
Saturday with an over·
whelmtns 4 and 3 victory In the
aecond round olthe $150,000 u.
5. ProCeasional Match Play
Championship.
, Trevino's stunning victory
followed a wave of upsets that
swept U. S. Open Champion
Johnny Miller and Masters
Champion Tommy Aaron out or
the rich event.
Trevino squeezed past Dan
Sikes 1-up in the first round
earlier In the day, then said, "I
shot aboUt par this morning,
and that's not gOOd enough to
heat Jack. I might last throuRh
aboUt 1pe 15th hole this af-

ternoon1"
But Super Mex charged into
the afternoon match with
Nicklaus and reeled off birdies
on the first and. lourth holes at
MacGr~gor Downs Country
Club lo take a tw()-bole advantage.

.~r:~:;!l".~~:=

CHICAGO (UPI) -..:__- Dick
Allen, the White Sox first
baseman who has been
wearing a $125,000 price tag,
called II quits for · .the
remainder of the season
Saturday but vowed he would
return · next year "and lead
Chicago to the American
League Pennant."
The 31-year old controversial
slugger, who broke his right leg
on June 28 In a collision with
Callforni'a•s Mike Epstein, ·
reportedly was going to try and
come back following an earlier
teturn but White Sox officials
decided not to "risk a permanent injury:"
·
Allen, who came to the White
Sox from the Los Angeles
Dodgers at the beginning of the
1972 season, had been im· ·
. ll!ersed in conll'oversy because
qf his failure to report to spring
\falning,
. .
• Allen tried to come back in
late July but "continued pain
made It apparent tluit I was
Just kidding myself," Allen
reported.
Allen, who came to .the
pressbox for Saturday's game
between tile White Sox and the
·Detroit l'igers said: "If the
club had been a game and a
half out of the lead or In first
place I would have considered
the designated hitler role.
Alter all I'm here to give
'whatever help I can. But
't rainer Charlie Saad and
Manager Chuck Tanner
decided that the best thing
would be to for!(et about the
season and get ready !or the
next campaign. I'm going to
stick around Chicago and see if
rcan help some of the younger
players. I'll worry about the
winter after that. I've got some
dxerclses to do and I want to
. get my leg in shape. Alter I
~pme back last month it was a
~se of terrific pain and after I
returned It would not ·heal
~operly . I'm not parllcwa~ly
pleased with being a
designated hitter, that's the
way I am. However, when 1\
lj,!!came apparent that the club
was falling farther and farther
behind ·it no longer became a

Gallipolis
lady's golf

necessity for me to return to
the .lineup. The doctor said I
wouldn'tdo myself any good by
playing and hoping it would
heal. If I can't give 100 per cent
I'd rather not play."
Allen, who hit 33 homers last
year, was hitting .316 with 16
homers and 41 RB!s. At the
time of his injury the White Sox
were tied for first place in the
Western Division of the
American League. Before
Saturday's game with the
Tigers Chicago was 16 games
behind first place Oakland.

U. S. coming home from
Moscow as happy losers

Hoople likes Trojans,
Longhorns and Wolves

then gunned ina 12-footpullfor~·
B
an eagle three on the par five ',
Y
ninth hole for a four-hole ad.
Major Amoo B. Hoople
vantage after the front nine 1
P.. rl111 Prognostleetor
Trevino and Nicklaus beth
Egad, fri ends, here we are
pa rred the lOth and lith holes, on the th res hold of anoth er
.
.
then big Jack took a bogey four ~oll egta te foothall season and
on the par-three 12th hole 10 fall 1t seems like only yesterday l
:""' packmg my bags to take
yet another hole behind;
tn several o! the bo.wl clas ·
1•
.'
sics.
They parred the 13th with
And spea kin g or the bovil
fours, but Trevino ran Into games, my belated thanks to
trouble On the par-four 14th those Of you whO were kind
with a bogey while Nicklaus enough to send me con~ratulafinally caught fire with a lio ns on my predicttons or
Southern Ca lifornia to lrounce
birdie, dropping Trevino to a Ohio State, Auburn to upset
four-hole advantage with four Co lorado , Oklahoma to turn
holes to play.
back Penn Slate and 'rennes•
They then parred the 15th see to edge LSU - and everyhole and it was all over.
'one a bull's-eye -' har-rumph .
Now to the business of 1973.
John Schroeder, plagued
recenUy with tendonitis in this The No. I Trojans of Southern
'f . appear t0 have lhe
thumb, eliminated little Buddy Cal 'orma
Allin 5 and 4 with a scorching. horses to repeat this year. Old
friend John McKay, winner of
second round that included 12 straight in '72, will keep it
four birdies and no bogeys. rolling for the Trojans and
1
!
·
h'
· d
N
· s
Alii
n, sump ng stnce IS won up 0 ·. 1 agatn , am
runaway win in the Florida (Bam) Cunntngham IS JO~e
Ctll'us Open, had two bogeys in but Joh.~ c~n . call on Bad
his round .
Anthony Davts, the . scourg~
~ Notre Dame, passt~ whtz
Haden and :l . K.son ,cKay,
ht.•t
s pass-catchmg
and
that's bad news for USC oppo·
nenls . In our humble - kaff.
kaff - opinion this may be
McKay 's greatest team ever!

Allen calls it
quits for season
l

'

HOOP LE 5

P~"""DICT/

" c::-

:1. 5 OUI

•

ON

f;l ER N

C,O,L

'2 . I EI'.A':o

3.
tj.

M iC H1CSA N
AB A M

The Old loy Himself
The Ivy League race will be
a real humding er with Dartmouth's Indians being routed
from the throne room they 've
inhabited the past
lour years.
Sentimentally,
we should
pick
our beloved alma mater _
.
Boula -Boola - but our vast
knowledge of the loop. talent
points to Cornell as the crown
winner with Yale finishing 11
close second.
In the tough Southeastern
Conlerence il will be a ranliliar script with everyone chasing Bear Bryant's Alabama
boys who will be after their
third consecutive title. Your
favorite correspondent was
the only prognosticatnr in the
nation to pick Shug Jordan 's
Auburn team to whip Alabama - hak -kaff - in the
1972 season and we look for
the Tigers to be every bit as
good this ye"r .

Here is how the Hoople op·
eralives in the field size 'em
up:
In the east , perennial na tional championship contender
Penn Stale will occupy its
familiar role . Joe Paterno 's
Carolina, winner of 15
Niltany Lions have a real of· in North
a
row
the Atlantic Coast
fensive threat retllrning in the loop, willinhave
stiff competiperson of John Cappelletti
tion
from
Len
Holtz
's North
who rushed for 1, 117 yards
Carolina
State
in
their
d~ive
and t2 TDs last year.
lor a third AC title.
· The rough and ready serv The Southern Conference
ice clubs - Army •.and Navy
- will give a good account of will be dominated once again
themselves and the sparkling by Sonny Randle's East Caro·
Delaware Blue Hens (10-0 in !ina club. We look for the Pir'72 ) figure to be every bit as ales· stiffest challenges to
good this lime around - um- come !rom The Citadel, Wm.
kulnph1 ·
&amp; Mary and Richmond.

Of the m" jo r l nd~pend e nt ing to a '10·1 record . This seaelevens in the southland ~' lor- son the offense should make it
Ida State with 25 sea'soned a_little easier for th e defenreturnees loo ks the bes t ill slvc • tal wa rts . The Hooole
this observer.
System sees B~ylor , Arkansas
SMU battlrng for the run0 nee agar..n we see the B.rg and
ner-spot.
Ten race coming down to the
,
.
season· closing· Ohio Sta lc· .Frank Kush s Am ona State
M ichi~an clash November 24 Sun Dcvtl s are once ag atn
in Lansing. Our one-lime pro- t~ps tn the West~rn Athletic
tegc Woody Hayes starting Conference . In 72 th e Sun
his 23rd season as h ~adman of Devt.ls av.eraged 516.5 yards
th~ Buck s. lost gnly six of his r,er. contest In w~nn1ng 10 and
22 off ense and defen siv e ~ S tng 2, and wtth fabulou s
starters from last year's Rose th':'/~iT{e~n back In hfr'f~'~
Bowl entry .
lhi l' gtv~ opdponen s tls
. ·t .
. .
.
' rme aroun ·
,
The ptG ure at Mrchrgan ts
Watch lor Montana State to
~~~ht T!r~ Wolves are re,ady collect the Big Sky Conference
· hey wt~~ he par~cu· Litle and the always rufged
1ar 1Yowroug
on
~nse w ere Air Force Falcon s to leld
~~ec :ntrre starllng ba ckfield rs another powerhouse.
The up and coming Mid- The Pacific 8 race is .praCli·
American Conference will cally over before it starts as
stage
lh its usual wt"de-open race cagey John McKay sends his
wi defending champion Kent Trojan juggernaut onto the
State the early favorite. But gridiron , The only club in the
don't overlook Ohio U., Miami conference which might give
and Bowlin~ Green .
the Trojans a run for the Rose
Bowl bid is UCLA where the
Notre Oame will put a lot brilli ant quarterback Mark
of points on the board for Ara Harmon and fleet running
Parseghian bul he has to fig- backs Kermit Johnson and
ure a way of keeping oppo- James Mcltlli star form the
nents from posting more tal- nucleus of a line football
lies than his stalwarts ·
team .
In the Big Eight there will
That's the way it looks from
be new coaches calling the here, dear readers, and as you
shots at Nebraska and Okla- 'can readily see it won't be
homa but otherwise it will be easy picking the winners in
the same old story - the 1973. But never one to duck a
Cornhuskers and the Sooners challenge, your favorite forewtll be the class of the league. caster is impatiently awaiting
The Louisville Cardinals the first kickoff .
with a new coach, T. W. AI·
ley, but minus the services of The schedule opens Saturgraduated super-star Howard day , September 8 with the
Stevens, will make a strong spotlight on Nebraska ·and.
bid to repeal as Missouri Val· UCLA . Can the Cornhuskers
gel revenge for the shocking
ley champ ..
upset they suffered at the
The story in the Southwest hands of the Uclans just a
Is all Texas as Darrell Royal year ago1 Well, watch these
sends hi,s Longhorns after pages for our forecast on that
their sixtH· straight Conference contest and the 17 other big
crown. Last year Texas did il ones slated lor opening day.
with a great defense which It'll amaze you!
gave up only 121 points in rollINE)NSP ... PEA ENTERPA!9E A9SN .J
-----'---------------Right
Wrong
Ties
Pet.
1972 Season
440
168
ll
.724

1

°

MOSCOW (UPI ) - On the magician, David Thompson,
heels ~ trlomphsnt victories who waa the hero for the United
by their men's baskelbaU team States, scoring a game-high 24
and swimmers, United States polnta and tacking on to thai at
athletes went home happy least a half dozen blocked
losers Saturday with the d011e shots.
of the seventh World
University Games.
Although beaten, 88-19, In the
gold medal chase by the hoe\
Soviet Union, the AmericaiUI
restored much of their prestige
on the final day of compeUUon
with • surprisingly euy 75-67
victory over the Russians in
the finals of the men's
basketball competition.
Couples with that, the U. S.
swlmme~s. led by Jack
Tingley's secood gold medal of
the games, swept five of the
seven firsts contested and
wound up with a 18-ll edge over
. the Russians In that category.
It was the basltelball flnai,
however, that gave the
Americans
their
most
satisfaction. Haunted by the
memory of last year's 51-SO .
defeat by the Russians at the ·
Olympics, and wearied by the
unending publicity from
listing and handy
Wednesday's chair-slinging Complete
score card for all NFL
brawl with Cuba, the U. S. and NCAA games on TV.
cagers fast..breaked the
Broughtto you in part by
Russians tD an early death with your Stale Farm agent,
a crucial 13-polnt spree mld- who also brings you
coverage tor your car,
woy through the !!rst half.
home.life and health .
Thompson Leada Again
Once again, it was North
Stop in for your tree copy.
Carolina Slate's high-flying
Stephen C. Suowdln
UNIFORMS WANTED
55l Runtl St .
(Gra\ftl Hill)
RUTJ .AND :.... All boys who Mldd,eport,
Ohio
played pony and little league
PH. 992·7155
baseball In the Rutland area
are requested to turn In their
Llkil aQOOd neighbor,
uniforms by Tuesday to Max
State F"arrn 11 there.
Whitlatch or Gene Wise at their
STATE FARM
homes on Salem Street,
INSURANCE COMPANIES
Home Qt!;ce.· 8 IOOIIWIQIOI\
Rutland.

FolbN
the Clash
of'73.

Flee .College
&amp; Pro Football
Schedule
&amp; Scaecartl.

1111~1

GOOD
NEWS
FROM

~

Chesapeake gridders

.Trlltl C~Uckta.

edge out Kyger Creek
heat.
Chesapeake threatened
earlier in the first half of the
scrimmage, but· the Bobcat
defense held on a fourth down
situation.
Kyger Creek's offense,led by
senior quarterback Clay
Hudson, could not muster any
generated attack.
, The Bobcats were Inside the
Panther 20 yard . line only
twice.
·
BARBS
Hudson replaced the injured
By PHIL PASTORET
Rick Smith at the qUarterback
There's a wreck on the free- slot. He moved the Bobcats
way every morning . and we down!leld on short passes; but
wish our neighbor would stop was decked when a long
driving it.
passing yardage situation
+ + +
The back pat is the most presented itself.
Kyger Creek's running was
effieient stroke to use in the
social swim.
paced by senior .halfback
Lawrence Tabor and juniors,
+ + +
~'or a tush . a straight line is Mike Rife and Mark Waller.
lhe shortest distance between Dave Rife, 140 pound junior,
two pints.
was Injured in the second team
scrimmage Saturday morning
at Chesapeake. Rife was taken
to the Cabeii·Hunllngton
Hospital for treatment of a
neck Injury.
Coach Jim Sprague's SVAC
team
will
scrimmage
Nelsonvtlle-York and Vinton
County prior to their opening
game Sept. 7 at Wahsma.
North Gallla, another SVAC
team, lost to a tough Fairland

CHESAPEAKE - A fourth
down eight yard touchdown
pass from quarterback Steve
Holbrook to Greg Chinn
carried the hometown Panthers to a· 6-0 victory over
Kyger Creek here Saturday.
The winning TD came in the
waning· "minu·tes of the
acrimmage played in 80 degree

HELEN FENDERBOSCH, tournament director,
congratulates Harriett Thomas, runner-up in the second
flight of the Annual Gallipolis Golf Club Tournament. Mrs.
Thomas defeated Hank Orr in a playoff.

tourney
GALLIPoLIS - The ladies
of the Ga!Upolls Golf Club held
their annual club tournament
on TUesday, , August 21 and
Wedneaday, August 22. A total
of 36 holes were played to
determine club champion and
nlnner-up, and winners in each
night with-runner-up.
TOURNAMENT WINNERS -Helen FenderboiiCh, third from left, was the club champion
Tbe club champion is Helen
Fenderbosch and runner-up, in the Annual Gallipolis Golf Club Tournament. completed last Thursday at the local links,
Monica Roderick, The First Monica Roderick, seated next to Mrs, Fenderboscb, was the runner-up. Joann Thompson, left,
Fllsht winner is Jeannine . was the second flight winner; Jeannine Cunningham was the first filght winner and Betty
McGinness was the runnerup.
Cunningham, and run·ner-up,
Betty M«l!nneu. The Second
Flight winner Is Joann
Thomp1on, Harriet Thomas,
runnet-up. An 18-hole playoff Fenderhosch vs. Betty Som·
Wll played Thursday morning mer and Jeannlne Cunningham
belwee.n Harriet Thomas and va. Dean!&amp; Smith. The winners
Hank Ol"f to determine the of these two matches will then
runner-11p 1pul In the Second play off for the Tribune tlUe
- Fltght,
. and rUilner-up.
The ladies artr'Blso In the · Ladles Day will be Wedthird round of , the Annual nesday, Alljjust 29. Everyone
Tribune Tournament. This should bring a sack lunch and
"eek's play will be Halon play will be ritne holes.

LOWE~ PRI~E~

squad Saturday morning, 24-0.
Coach John Blake, entering
his third year at the Pirate
helm said, "despite the score, I
was pleased with our overall
showing".
Blake commended his offensive backs, SterUrig Logan,
Fred Logan.and Bruce Runyon
for their fine running game. He
noted that mental mistakes
wet'!! cilstly for his young .
Pirates.
John Arnold was the main
offense star for Coach Jim
Mayo's Drago1111.
The Pirates will sCrimmage
Frontier Local later this week.

FQR
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�17 - The Sunday l'hn s -sentlrtel , Sunday, Aug, 26, 1973

16- The Sunday Til ,,es. Sentinel, Sunday , Aug. 26, 1973
l,

Late drives give Meigs 16-0 win
BY DENNY FOBES
MIDDLEPORT
The
Meigs Marlllden,
IICW·
lng !lll drives of eo and 42
yards late In the game, turned
back Ripley (W. Va.), 16-0 In a
pre-seaaon scrimmage
Saturday.morning at the Meigs
Junlar High S!adlum.
The seeond string, engineered by junior quarterback Perlul.ult and sparked
by the rmnlng of sophQmores
Marty Dugan an.d Mike
Magnotta, accounted for both
scores.
Neither team threatened at
the beginning, with the first
serious drive a· result of
linebacker Andy English's recovery of a Ripley fumble on
the West Virginians' 30 yard
line.
()) the first play following
the recovery, senior wingback
Miclt Ash got a pitch-out from
quarterback Jay Warner and
circled left end for 13 yards,
ooly to have the gain nullified
by an oftside penalty.
Junior tailback Terry
Whitlatch then went for $ off
right tacltle and 4 off left
tacltle. Warner kept for 5

l:ringlng up a fourth and I on
the Ripley 21. But the drive
ended there, with the West
Virginia defense stopping
Whitlatch oo a pitch to the left
side.
The first score of the
scrimmage came on the nextto-the last offensive series for
Meigs.
Dugan capped that 60 yard

drive with a 2 yard plunge olf
left tackle, with senior tailback
Mike Hollman runnln~ a pitchout across the goal line for
the conversion . The drive
started on the Meigs 40, with
Dugan carrying S times for 30
yards. Mngnotta 's broken field
running accounted for the
other 30 yards on 3 carries.
Following the conversion ,

Ripley took over on lts own 30,
bot ran out of downs on
the 42, where liMo Marauders
needed only a plays to reach
paydirt again.
Tailback John Thomas
started the drive with a 3 yand
gain off left tackle, followed by
a counter for no gain and an
incomplete pass. Then on
fourth and 7from the Ripley 39,

Tuero gives U. S. big
Wightman tennis lead
BROOKUNE, Mass. (IJPI)
- American Linda Tuero,
coming back from a 4.{) de(icit
in the first set, gave the United
States an overwhelming ~
lead in Wightman Cup tennis
play here . Saturday by
defea ling Glynis Coles of
Britain, 7~. S-2.
On Friday night Chris Evert
had whipped Virgirila Wade
arid Pa IIi Hogan topped

Veronica Burton to give the
United States a 2~ edge in this
50th anniversary of cup play.
After Miss Tuero'swin, Chris
and 17-year-old Marita
RedOndo met Miss Wade and
Miss Coles in lh1l first doubles
of lh1l seven match series.
Miss Coles held her opening
service on an 86 minute match
despite a shaky start, fighting
off three break points. She then

Mai!notta zipped through a
gigantic hole wovtded by the
left side of the lihe, and dashed
26 yards to the Ripley 13. From
there, Hoffman carried twice
for 7 yands, and Thomas once
for 3, before Dugan crashed
across f10111 \he 3for his second
score.
Magnotta made lh1l conwrs!on good on a counter off
the left side.
While the Meigs of·
fense was running up 239
defense he.ld Rlpley~ scoreless,
with the West Virginians
managing only 104 rushing
yards In 57 carries, and 104
ya_rds passing on 9 completions
In 18 attempts.
The closest Ripley managed
to drive towands Maroon and
Gold's end zone was a 54 yard
drive tluit stalled on the 29.
Ripley had a third and 4 on the
Meigs 13 when the Marauder
line dwnped the quarterback
for a loss back around the 20.
But Ripley was ·called for
clipping, and the Marauders
accepted the penalty bringing
up a third and 23 on the 32. A
quarterback keeper around
right end went for 3, and on
fourth and 20 the quarterback

was aucked again by the
Marauder l!ne lor a 10 yard
loss ,
The QUllrtQrback spot, one of
the big questlonmarks when
the Marauders started pruseason drll!s, rema!AA just
tllal, a question. Jay Wunter
started, passed ! . tlm.es lor no
completions, qne lnteroeptlon,
and ran once for l&gt; yards,
Ault replaced Warner and
completed 3 passes !ri D al·
tempts for 20 yards, with ono
lnterceptlon ,and ran for minus
one yard in 6 carries . Lonnie
Coates completed one out of
two passes for six yards, and
one interception. .
Sophomore fullback Dugan
led all ball carries, rushing for
68 yards in II carries, followed
by Magnotta with 56 yards In 6
carries, and Whitlatch 14 (or 45
yards. Jack Oiler added 22
yards on 6 carries, Ash 19
yards on 3 carries, and Hoffman lugged the ball 6 times for
a net of 11 yards.
Both teams recovered two
opponents ' fumbles , while
Ripley was penalized 7 times
for 94 yards and Meigs 5times
for 45 yards .

Dolphins ready
~hulu

110nt In the sub. after
by JIWJ I'AIINICEI.LI
Mlalllllwd a 17-4 !ead
the
d
Ui'I8JH1riJ Wrltor ·
11
""'
hln
Tho Miami Dol)&gt;hlns g~ve IMlCond and lll 1r • "' ...,.p
. uotil.., tu U1e Nutlonal ~'ootbuli dufefllle held oil 1 de~nnll*l
Ut
•ortorl by Jiimea Harrla, the
J.e•Hue Friday nl~ ht
;;y'ro nama' No. 2 quart.rback, to
r~ody . 'rho rlnul K&lt;'w-o - 17-14
rl&gt;r hh
over thtr l.o,~ JlllAIICl Jtams - win.
rnoy not lndlc~te It, but lhu
llurrla tllking
~~
HMno could very well hilve llodl in the see
q
been u cuulplcto rout if 0011ch combined with Lurry M~·
Don Shuln lwdn't yunk~d his Cutcl!oon on 8 30-yard ..er~n
lint team Jllldwuy Utrouyh the Pill! lor on~ TD ond th~ew 15$
arter
yards to Horold Jackaon for
scco.nd qu
·
· ~
II
0 ld Rav who
But whllo they wore In tilC uno ler, . av
· '·
game, !lob Orie¥e und Com· tnl811cd a 27-yard lleld ~~1
pany save un awesome por· attempt wJth no lime
'lorrnance and showed Ju•t why remaining in the firlt half,
the Dolphins rJn!shed t7~ last blew • 33-yard a::.t with
se•son and captured the Super 4:301eU to kill the ·
hopes
Bowl.
lor a tie.
.
Griese playing ror the first
In lhe only other Nji'L pre·
time in 'two weeks nfU!r an season game, Ken J\nderson
elbow Injury directed the threw an 81-yard TO pass tD
Dolphins to l~o touchdowns light end !lob Trumpy to lead
and a field goal the first three the Cincinnati Benga~ to a 17tlmes they handled the ball. 10 vlctnry over the Detroit
Uons.
Trwnpy's TO, follpwJng a
one-yord
scoring r!lll by Doug
Team Slota
Ripley rushing - 57 carries. Dressier, gave Cincinnati a 14104 yards.
0 lead. Detroit battled' back on
Ripley passing - 18 at. a 30-yard field goal by Errol
tempts, 9 complellons, 104
yards (50 pel.).
Mann and a three·Yat:? TO by
Total yards - 208.
Nick . Eddy but : •.Horst
Meigs rushing - 60 carries, Muhlmann's 31-yard field goal
239 yards .
Meigs ,passing - 14 af. ended the Uons' comeback
tempts, 4 completions, 26 yards hopes.
135 ~ct.) .
..
Total yards - 265.
Individual Slats
Meigs Passing
All. Com . Yds. tnt;
Warner
3
0
0
1
Ault
9
3 20
1
Coates
2
1
6
1
Meigs Rushing
C. Yds.

.nd

o;.:

r.

broke Miss Tuero In the second
and fourth games to lead W,
but then her game . began to
come apart.
Unda, the 22-year-4\d .from
New Orleans, got her first
service bf'1lak in the fifth game
and then held service for 5-2
when the 1!1-year-&lt;&gt;ld British
girl dumped an easy o~rhead
Into the net to trail 40-15.
From that point in the
match, Miss Coles seemed
finished . Miss Tuero took her
full service in the ninth to get to
5-4 then moved ahead at 6-5 In
the lith, as Miss Coles; obviously tiring badly, could not
cope with Uncia's tenacity in
the long rallies. At one stage
the English girl scored only 10
DETROIT (UP!) - Quar- yard pass tun !Duchdown play.
I S
points in lhs span of six games. terback Ken Anderson says
" We got them in the right Warner
Ault
7 ·I
The ~cond set was a mere Bob Trumpy has "great speed defense with the right play," Oiler
6 22
formality
. They exchanged_ for a tight end" and that said Anderson who went all the Eason
4 8
By
CINCINNATI (UP!) - A passes for 143 yands and two
The Bengala' starting defen- service breaks in the first three cou1 dn't be e..
-•'.ibited better way a t quarterback, •"and Bob Whillatch
14
45
pair of youngsters from such touchdowns.
sive backfield is strong, but
than
·
Dugan
II 68
TERRY
Friday night when the Just outran everybody after Magnotta
unlikely colleges as Augustana
"I think I've got a lot more Brown is worried about re- games but •....'nda took the
6 56 r
advantage In ihe fifth ga.me-for Cincinnati Bengals defeated that. He has great speed for a Ash
and Bethune-Cookman is good games coming up this placements. .
3 19
JOHN&lt;n"'
th
tr · ·
ti h
Thomas
3 6, I
a deciding break. The fatal
e Oe 011 Uons 17-10.
g tend."
causing veteran coach Paul year." said Anderson. "I've
Tommy Casanova,
a stan- blow for Miss Col~ was a
• 1 · just a we 11 designed Hoffman
6 11 •
· last year,
An derson, passing f rom
Brown to predict his Cincinnati really got the confidence now." dout as a rookie
is
=
Ia' twas
•
'd
f1ave you been t~lnklng
Fumbles lost - Ripley 2. 1
Bengals "will·be a better team
his
own
12
yard
line
on
a
P
Y
,'
sat
Trurnpy,
"and
Clark, a burly 6-2, 245- joined in the backfield by Ken double fault to go down love 30. f'about.
Meigs
2
(Whitlatch,
Hoffman)
.
1
of
buying a mobile home.
1 d
·
Penalties
Ripley,
7 for 94 1 but wondered wher,e you
than a year ago."
tts
an
10
on
the
Bengals
19,
we've
practiced
it
and
pounder out of Bethune-Cook- Riley, Neal Craig and Lemar Miss Tuero then served out"·
""'
put it?
The Bengala' 3-6 mark last man college in Daytona Beach, Parrish. The three consta nlly set with Miss Coles valiantly -hi\ Trurnpy on the Uons 45 practiced it and practiced it." yds.; Meigs, 5 for 45 yds.
I would
In
some
rural or tresort
season was only good enough Fla., was orily the team's 12th anaIyze and cntlque
· · ea ch oIll er avo. iding one match point ,yard line and he simply outran
The other Bengal touchdown :':':':':':':':':':':':':':':':':::,:,:,:~,:,:,:::':':~::;:::':':&gt;.':::;~ ~~~~~ /~~m~
~~h~r~~~ ~~~
for !hind place in the four-team round draft choice, but he'll" m
before accepting defeat.
the Uon secondary !or an 81· carneonaoneyardplungeona
· practice .
Central Division of the Ameri- been so impressive in Jrainlng
II already own. - or.buy or
Cincinnati's kicking game
On a lighter note, as the
t
fourth and one situation by
renla site. But mosf people
can Conference, which Brown camp he could be starting should be strong this year _ second day got underway
.
S
running back Doug Dressler.
TORNADOES LOSE
I
prefer the advantages of
believes is the toughies\ In pro ninning back when the reguliu- Gerrnan soccer-style kicker . Saturday, Mrs. Hazel Hot"No One was really grabbing
The Southern TornadO.s,
the mobile home pa'rk.
'I
football.
season begins.
Horst Muhlmann says he's in chkiss Wightman, now 86, went OD
me so I started moving outside playing Ullder a bolllng SWl
Modern parks are laid
Brown
is
optimistic
H Clark continues to im- top form. He's been booting 61). down to the court tD hit the first
and feU miD the end zone,"
out like suburbap sub- I
that caused one pl~yer to
divisions with paveQ I
primarUy because of the prove, Brown will team him ysndfieldgoalsinpracticeand ball of Play,
CINCINNATI (UPI)- The · sa!~ Dre:"'ler. .
.
suffer a beat stroke, lost tD
streets,
sidewalk's and· 1
~,. emergence of Kenny Anderson with veteran Doug Dressler in
booming kickoffs out of the end
Bn:UIIng, the granddame of Cincinnati Reds placed pitcher
The b1ggest lhmg about thts Lucasville, 20·12, In a
landscaped
grounds. Your 1
as a smart, . hand-throwing the backfield and use speed- zone.
tenrus l~bbed a sh~t over the Roger Nelson and outfielder game w~~ th~ last twoor ~~ee ·scrimmage at Lucasville
site will usually Include a 1
quarterback and the promise sters like ES$0X Johnson on a
The Bengals, forrned as ~n net to Miss Tuero, Ail if to show Bobby Tolan on disabled lists rrunutes, said Dressler. I ve Saturday.
patio and maybe a cpr port. I
of a big rookie running back in "spot" basis. Brown says expansion team in 1968, are tlrat was no fluke, Mrs. Saturday and called up from seen games hefor~ where we
Renlal will norm.ally I
Tornado Greg Dunning
include wa1er, seWer &amp;
Charles "Bobby" Clark.
Jolmson, four inches, shorter entering their sixth season and Wightman promptly lobbed Indianapolis in the American ~d a seven-point lead and lost suffered what was believed
trash collection and a lot of I
Two years ago Anderson was and 45 pounds lighter lh&amp;{l , the veteran players arxl C()- another ond over and 'Miss Assoc!·ation outfielders Ken II.
other little· extras fer your I
to
be
a
heal
stroke
during
the
just a raw rookie from Clark, "jus\ got worn down'' aches say the attitude at the Tuero • and her opponent, Griffey and Ed Armbrister.
"We wo~'l blow a~r more game. and was taken to a
convenience.
J
Augustana, a small college in when he played regularly la!f Wilmington, Ohio training Britaln:s Glynis C~les, Jed the Nelson, out for most of the . games h,~e that,
So
why
put
if
off.
See
us,
J
said LucasvWe hospital.
and
we
will
not
only
help
1
Rock Island, Ill. Since then he year.
.
camp this year is the best ever. crowd m applause. .
season with an elbow problem, . Dressler. . The w~ole team
Southern's scores came on
you
choose
the
right
mobile
1
has surpassed Virgil Carter as
"H we can use Clark as our
"We hav~ the attitude that
Mrs. Wightman put the cup was put back on the 2!-day now has. conflence. .
.
a 20 yard run aroUild left end
home lor your purpqses, we I
the team's No. 1 quarterback 'big back' then we can bring we can play with anybody," In competition In 1919 but the disabled list. H.- has a 3The
Uons
got
three
pomts
will also help you In finding I
and Brown thinks he could Essex in , and with his says Brown who is entering his firstserieswasnotp~yeduntil record in 11 games this year.2 just before halftime on a .30- on a pitch from veteran
a
location .
·
I
quarterback Verne Ord to
become one o! the premier freshness and speed, hope he 39th year of coaching. Already 1923 at the West Side Tennis
Tolan was placed on the !5- y~d f1eld goal by Earl Mann Mitch Nease, and a :iO yard
JOHNSON'S MOBILE
I
passers and team leaders in can break the big play."
regarded as one of the masters Club's new stadium In Forest day disabled list because of a which was set up by a patt o&gt;f pass from Ord to Dave
HOME
SALE~
I
the league.
The offense is strengthened of football coaching, the 64- Hills, N. Y.
back ail!nent.
penalties ag~inst the Bengals Clark.
mo
Eastern
Avel)ue
I
''The biggest single reason by two quick receivers -No. 1. year-~)]d Brown says he still . Mrs. Wightman played in the
Gallipolis, Ohio
I
Griffey, 25, has a .327 batting Lemar. Parnsh.
we're better than last season is draft choice Isaac Curtis from · enjoys putting in tbe long hours Inaugural and four times average and has been either . Parrtsh wascall~d for a pass
Phone 614-446-3547
1
the maturity of Anderson," San Diego State and Charlie required of a general manager thereafter, making her last first or second in the AA bat- mterference agamst· Larry
Brown said. "He has a strong Joiner, who was picked up and head coach.
·
appearance as a player In 1931. ling race throughout the Walton and another 15 yard
md accurate arm. He can from the Houston Oilers last
"I like this life," he said.
On Friday, Mrs. Wighbnan, season. He has ten homers and penalty was tacked on when
lbrotr the loog ball and it looks season. They join Chip Myers, "I'm ·not in this for money.
by order ol Queen Elizabeth n, S8RBI's. He leads the league in Parr':lh· b?'"ped one. of the
lille we're going to have that the team's leading receiver People fascinate me -dealing
was made an Honorary stolen bases with 43 .
off1.c1als m proteshng the
long passing threat we've last year.
.
.
with them. It's a pleasnat Commander of the Order~ the
Armbrister has a .308 deciSion.
)
Brown
is
counting
on
tackle
• '""' ill the put. ..
situation here.''
British Empire.
average with ten homers and
"I disagreed with the call,"
ADdeiUI, a 1).!_ %l~er, Mike Reid, who sometimes
72 RBI's.
said Parrish. "The rule says I
ahead) has been lmpiessive in plays coocert piano with the
0
The Reds had lost four can throw up my hands as long
pu
" garnet . In a ~21 Cincinnati Symphony Orches"For That Personal &amp; Professional Touch'' '
straight
games goln into as I don't wave them and I
rout ~ tbe philadelphia tra, and end Sherman White,
FEATURING
·'
Eagles, be played ooJy the firs\ . last year's IDp draft choice, to
SAN SEBASTIAN, Spain between his victor1·es •·
"" had to Saturday night's conte~t ne•e didn't wave them."
(UPI)-Hugh Porter ol becontentwithl:ronzeorsllver with the St. Louis candlnals.
bllf, but CODII*ted 11 Of 12 anchor the defell$ive line.
·~4
Britain, a 33-year-old bicycle medals.
Griffey and Armbrister were to
ANDREWS RECALLED
manufacturer, today won his
Porter, whose greatest be available for the Cardinals
ST. LOUIS (UP!) - Pitcher
fourth world cycling tide in the strength is the evenness and game.
Jim Andrews was recalled
Professionals Pursuit Event·by clockwork-like regularity of his
from Tulsa of the American
Specializing in AMF &amp;
::;:: ( )· .
defeating Rene Pljnen of racing, let Pijnen draw a~d
Associalion by the St. Louis
Columbia Bowling Balls.
~Y@\\
Hollarxlln the final.
by as many as four secoods m
.
Cardinals Friday to replace
Porter, who is from Pot- theearlystagesoftheroce, bot
PROFESSIONAL. BALL FITTING,
''-.,~
Rich ·Folkers who has weekend
tingham,
Staffordshire,
then
gained
a
second
in
every
DRILLING&amp;
INmilitary duty.
•
covered 3.2 miles on the Anoeta lap to win by a clear margin.
STRUCTION AVAILABLE
CLEVELAND (UP!) OAKLAND ( UPI) - V.tda lea1Jng,tbe0akland A's to a 24 track in 6:J.l2.97 to beat Pijnen · Tbe title was the ooly one at
SPECIAL RATES TO:
Gloster
Richardsoo, Cleveland
by
9.5
secoods.
stake
today
in
the
track
Bhlt pitdled • loll'-bit dmf,o!Jt 'rieUrry aver tbe New York
WILL NOT SELL
CHURCH GROUPS,
Ferdinand Bracke of · champiooships which will end Browns wide receiver, has
PARTIES, STUDENTS.
f&lt;r his tiDh llraigbt victory Yanke=.
NORFOLK, Va. (UPI )
pleaded
innocent
to
charges
of
Belgium
capiured
the
bronze
Monday,
with
road
racing.
n wa~ tbe.A:s l2:t.h victay in
and UGI Ill tbe
U1 and Sal
Owner Earl Fordman said
"All New AMF Equipment" ·
Bando 1!1\'1! bim aD the belp he lbe last ll P1Dill wbile the medal arxl Mogens Frey of beginning at Barcelona four traffic violations and Friday he does not plan to sell
possession
of
marijuana.
Denmark
finished
fourth.
Wednesday.
needed 'llidlbll 22lld h(l])er ill Yank= Ufered tbeir fifth
the Virginia Squires of the
The victory broke the jinx of
Defending champioo Robert
Richardson entered the plea American Ba s ketball
Upper Rt, 7 Kanauga, Ohio.
the filii! iJDae Saturday in ... _:nmve defeat.
Friday
in
South
Euclid
the
uneven
years
which
has
Vanlacker
of
Belgium
led
.Bhlt., ..no bas JP:Veo IGues,
Association at ''the present
didn't give up a bit 1llrlil tbe followed Porter in his ap. seven other riders Into the Municipal Court. A irial date tune."
•
'
foal1ll when Mlie HfpJ lifted pearances in the World Cycling quarterfinals of the ll"OS sprint has not yet been set.
Richardson, 32, Chicago, was
"kq fly lD ~ wlach Champlonshlpa. He woo the event.
charged
following a minor
World
Title
in
1968
1970
and
Two
Dutchmen,
Klas
lialk
NEW Y()ltt (VPI ) - Vdo •eot ~ a irip1e wbeu Bill 1972, but in 1967 and the years and Piet Oe Witt, woo the traffic accident on Aug. 12.
Ail\oufermo, a 21-fear-old N&lt;l1h loll it in. ,the BUn. But
preliminary heats of the pros
He was also charged with
truckdriver fn1n ~ N. Blue saved his11bu1Diitwhen he
·moior1l8ced event ·to emerge driving while intoxicated,
Y., hammered wt a rit'tliJ,ed Bobby Murcer oo a
as favorites for Monday's final. leaving the scene of an acWlanimous lkow:Jd ' decilklP ·lbcni folil to leftfielder Joe ·
The
defending champion, Thea cident, failure to maintain
over Danny McAJaai1 Sllbrday Rudi .and then the A's infield
STINCHCOMB DIES
Verschueren of Belgium, with- assured clear distan&lt;!e and
at Madison ~ Gvden'l ran dP1rll Began on a ,smash to
FINDLAY, Ohio ( UP!)
drew because his pacemaker driving without a license.
Jlbort by Tllltman ldunson. Ohio State Unlverslty football
Felt Forwn. ·
had been disqualified · under
Antuolermo, 1l'bo lllff.ered lii.Uil80Jl made 111!Wnd on the All-American G. R. "Pete" a new International CycUng
On modern highways, your car
11%
hil flnt proleutonalto. iD bil play l:Ju1 Blue retired Graig Stinchcomb died Friday night Union ruling that rider and
NeU.lell
oo
/1.
lap
to
leCIII&lt;t
less gasoline at 50 miles per hour than at 60.
IMt fl8bt, was the 'CCI 11
at Blanchand Valley Hospital pacemaker must hold the same
The
on!;v
other
time
the
If you drop ·from 70 to 50, you save one
tllrot181Wt the ~
after ubortillnesll . He was 79. IU!tionality.
bout, which was leleviJed Vaol:eer got a JDIUI liS far 811
gallon
In ~ry seven! '
stincbcomb was named AllNCODd wao in the eighth on ~can after World War I.
natlonllly.
. NEW COMMISSIONER
There are many ways 11&gt;1ery Ame rican
HERD TACKLE IU.
Tile victory raised An· anglet by Gem Michllel and He was a member of OSU's
CHARLOTTE,, N. C. (tJPIJ
.can help save energy. You're saving
tuGienno'a recml to 11-1-1 Matty .A!Pu. Alliu's bit CIIIJle first undefeated football team . HUNTINGtON, W. Va. - Ken Germann, athleUc
much more than money when you hold
while McAlOOn, who hal fllll&amp;bt wifb two out.s and Blue retired which w~t to the Rose Bowl at (UP!) - Marshall University director
at
Columbia
your speedometer below 50. You're
starting , tackle
Mark University fn New York,
lbe belt 1D tbe dlvlllon,lolt tar 11egan on a tap ballk to the boll. the end of the 1920 season.
Blue
Jlruli:
out
tbr!!e
and
saving
precious energy that th is country . ·
Brookover
of
Stockp&lt;rt,
O.hlo,
lbe lOth time In 13 flghls.
Friday waa named to succeed
will be out of action for about a Lloyd Jordan aa commt..!oner
can't afford to waste.
Bolli 111111 weiCbed 11611 1faikeel liwo and th!! libulput
.....
mlyllif
leoCOOd
PI
the
year.
month
with
mononucleotla,
II willll.
of the Southern Athletic
Every American can help save energy. Write
Pat Doblon went the
coach .Jack Lengyel announced . Conference. ,
It . . 11 .,..atnc Bght and
today for a free copy of "A Consumer's
··
Friday,
IleA'- ...eel aJIII'If! to diltaooe fQI' New 1'ork aod
Guide to Efficient Energy Use in the Home."
BREAK8 RECORD
Brookover'• iiJneas pull him
.., tbe lbll u be . . bat- IUII«ed hill fiffh loll in 12
H's packed with ideas that can save the
A'IlfENS (UP!) - Zvetla out of the Sept. 15 opener
Inti ~~~~at 111e
.An- deruionl.
p
.•
MILLION
OFFER
.
nallon's 8(lergy and your money.
The A'l teached tlGbloo for Slateva Of Bulgaria broke the against Morehead (Ky.)
h'
•
wauwd all onr
NEW
YORK
(UP!)
Bob
"Mill a. . Ia . . alalb !Wid II!Ven Ntlllut QeYer were able women's world record for 1100 University. The 84001·1, 2IJt). Arum, prnldint of, Top Rank
to put two !all~ in any meters Friday with a time of pound B~ookover started at
•sstltll££
Jjllltu
Inc., lilld Mlllwnmad AU'I
one minute, 67.48 seconds at offensive tac:lde the last half rl. legal 1dvlfor, received a SU
I
Tile A'l ICcnd their other the opening of the Balkan hil freshman yllll'. Hiii!IOI on
P' I 'IWri'Wc-eel
Ohio Petroleum Council
m!Uion
offer
Friday
for
hil
. . . . N .... ...,.rr ltJe .,.. in the eighth on a triple by Track and Field gamea. The the first unit wW be taken by fighter to meet heaV)'Welgh\
88 East Broad Street
Bert Campaner ie and a old mark of 1:08.50 was ~et by 240-pound Roger HlllJa of Hazel
I "
Columbus, Ohio 43216
chamjlion Geqe Foreman In
l
IIIICriflce fly by Deron Johnson. Hlldeprd Falck of Germany. Grl!ell, A),,
.................!.
SeatQe, Waah.
0

Brown predicts better
year for Cincy grid

Bengals' Trumpy·
shows fine speed

I

Red

l

2

PU
disabled Jist

"---------... ---·

SKYLINE LANES
.

and .PRO-SHOP,

Bn•t}•sh·. CyeliSt WIDS

New AMF Lanes

•Snack Bar and

A's top ·Yankees
on Blue shutout

,Captain's LDunge

,Wide receiver

pleads innocent

\\~/· /

~\\

&gt;

PHONE
446-3362

Middleweight
wins decision

Under 50, you
save more
than money•.
uses

rmc.

.....

Your Local Oil Companies

-u.w..

,.._.lrrt-1_.,_
'

I

Trevino upsets
Jack, 4 and 3
CARY, N, C, (UP! ) - 1M
Trevino, with an eagle and
three birdies, shook off an
attack of pessimism and
destroyed awesome Ja ck
Nicklaus in a battle of Utans
Saturday with an over·
whelmtns 4 and 3 victory In the
aecond round olthe $150,000 u.
5. ProCeasional Match Play
Championship.
, Trevino's stunning victory
followed a wave of upsets that
swept U. S. Open Champion
Johnny Miller and Masters
Champion Tommy Aaron out or
the rich event.
Trevino squeezed past Dan
Sikes 1-up in the first round
earlier In the day, then said, "I
shot aboUt par this morning,
and that's not gOOd enough to
heat Jack. I might last throuRh
aboUt 1pe 15th hole this af-

ternoon1"
But Super Mex charged into
the afternoon match with
Nicklaus and reeled off birdies
on the first and. lourth holes at
MacGr~gor Downs Country
Club lo take a tw()-bole advantage.

.~r:~:;!l".~~:=

CHICAGO (UPI) -..:__- Dick
Allen, the White Sox first
baseman who has been
wearing a $125,000 price tag,
called II quits for · .the
remainder of the season
Saturday but vowed he would
return · next year "and lead
Chicago to the American
League Pennant."
The 31-year old controversial
slugger, who broke his right leg
on June 28 In a collision with
Callforni'a•s Mike Epstein, ·
reportedly was going to try and
come back following an earlier
teturn but White Sox officials
decided not to "risk a permanent injury:"
·
Allen, who came to the White
Sox from the Los Angeles
Dodgers at the beginning of the
1972 season, had been im· ·
. ll!ersed in conll'oversy because
qf his failure to report to spring
\falning,
. .
• Allen tried to come back in
late July but "continued pain
made It apparent tluit I was
Just kidding myself," Allen
reported.
Allen, who came to .the
pressbox for Saturday's game
between tile White Sox and the
·Detroit l'igers said: "If the
club had been a game and a
half out of the lead or In first
place I would have considered
the designated hitler role.
Alter all I'm here to give
'whatever help I can. But
't rainer Charlie Saad and
Manager Chuck Tanner
decided that the best thing
would be to for!(et about the
season and get ready !or the
next campaign. I'm going to
stick around Chicago and see if
rcan help some of the younger
players. I'll worry about the
winter after that. I've got some
dxerclses to do and I want to
. get my leg in shape. Alter I
~pme back last month it was a
~se of terrific pain and after I
returned It would not ·heal
~operly . I'm not parllcwa~ly
pleased with being a
designated hitter, that's the
way I am. However, when 1\
lj,!!came apparent that the club
was falling farther and farther
behind ·it no longer became a

Gallipolis
lady's golf

necessity for me to return to
the .lineup. The doctor said I
wouldn'tdo myself any good by
playing and hoping it would
heal. If I can't give 100 per cent
I'd rather not play."
Allen, who hit 33 homers last
year, was hitting .316 with 16
homers and 41 RB!s. At the
time of his injury the White Sox
were tied for first place in the
Western Division of the
American League. Before
Saturday's game with the
Tigers Chicago was 16 games
behind first place Oakland.

U. S. coming home from
Moscow as happy losers

Hoople likes Trojans,
Longhorns and Wolves

then gunned ina 12-footpullfor~·
B
an eagle three on the par five ',
Y
ninth hole for a four-hole ad.
Major Amoo B. Hoople
vantage after the front nine 1
P.. rl111 Prognostleetor
Trevino and Nicklaus beth
Egad, fri ends, here we are
pa rred the lOth and lith holes, on the th res hold of anoth er
.
.
then big Jack took a bogey four ~oll egta te foothall season and
on the par-three 12th hole 10 fall 1t seems like only yesterday l
:""' packmg my bags to take
yet another hole behind;
tn several o! the bo.wl clas ·
1•
.'
sics.
They parred the 13th with
And spea kin g or the bovil
fours, but Trevino ran Into games, my belated thanks to
trouble On the par-four 14th those Of you whO were kind
with a bogey while Nicklaus enough to send me con~ratulafinally caught fire with a lio ns on my predicttons or
Southern Ca lifornia to lrounce
birdie, dropping Trevino to a Ohio State, Auburn to upset
four-hole advantage with four Co lorado , Oklahoma to turn
holes to play.
back Penn Slate and 'rennes•
They then parred the 15th see to edge LSU - and everyhole and it was all over.
'one a bull's-eye -' har-rumph .
Now to the business of 1973.
John Schroeder, plagued
recenUy with tendonitis in this The No. I Trojans of Southern
'f . appear t0 have lhe
thumb, eliminated little Buddy Cal 'orma
Allin 5 and 4 with a scorching. horses to repeat this year. Old
friend John McKay, winner of
second round that included 12 straight in '72, will keep it
four birdies and no bogeys. rolling for the Trojans and
1
!
·
h'
· d
N
· s
Alii
n, sump ng stnce IS won up 0 ·. 1 agatn , am
runaway win in the Florida (Bam) Cunntngham IS JO~e
Ctll'us Open, had two bogeys in but Joh.~ c~n . call on Bad
his round .
Anthony Davts, the . scourg~
~ Notre Dame, passt~ whtz
Haden and :l . K.son ,cKay,
ht.•t
s pass-catchmg
and
that's bad news for USC oppo·
nenls . In our humble - kaff.
kaff - opinion this may be
McKay 's greatest team ever!

Allen calls it
quits for season
l

'

HOOP LE 5

P~"""DICT/

" c::-

:1. 5 OUI

•

ON

f;l ER N

C,O,L

'2 . I EI'.A':o

3.
tj.

M iC H1CSA N
AB A M

The Old loy Himself
The Ivy League race will be
a real humding er with Dartmouth's Indians being routed
from the throne room they 've
inhabited the past
lour years.
Sentimentally,
we should
pick
our beloved alma mater _
.
Boula -Boola - but our vast
knowledge of the loop. talent
points to Cornell as the crown
winner with Yale finishing 11
close second.
In the tough Southeastern
Conlerence il will be a ranliliar script with everyone chasing Bear Bryant's Alabama
boys who will be after their
third consecutive title. Your
favorite correspondent was
the only prognosticatnr in the
nation to pick Shug Jordan 's
Auburn team to whip Alabama - hak -kaff - in the
1972 season and we look for
the Tigers to be every bit as
good this ye"r .

Here is how the Hoople op·
eralives in the field size 'em
up:
In the east , perennial na tional championship contender
Penn Stale will occupy its
familiar role . Joe Paterno 's
Carolina, winner of 15
Niltany Lions have a real of· in North
a
row
the Atlantic Coast
fensive threat retllrning in the loop, willinhave
stiff competiperson of John Cappelletti
tion
from
Len
Holtz
's North
who rushed for 1, 117 yards
Carolina
State
in
their
d~ive
and t2 TDs last year.
lor a third AC title.
· The rough and ready serv The Southern Conference
ice clubs - Army •.and Navy
- will give a good account of will be dominated once again
themselves and the sparkling by Sonny Randle's East Caro·
Delaware Blue Hens (10-0 in !ina club. We look for the Pir'72 ) figure to be every bit as ales· stiffest challenges to
good this lime around - um- come !rom The Citadel, Wm.
kulnph1 ·
&amp; Mary and Richmond.

Of the m" jo r l nd~pend e nt ing to a '10·1 record . This seaelevens in the southland ~' lor- son the offense should make it
Ida State with 25 sea'soned a_little easier for th e defenreturnees loo ks the bes t ill slvc • tal wa rts . The Hooole
this observer.
System sees B~ylor , Arkansas
SMU battlrng for the run0 nee agar..n we see the B.rg and
ner-spot.
Ten race coming down to the
,
.
season· closing· Ohio Sta lc· .Frank Kush s Am ona State
M ichi~an clash November 24 Sun Dcvtl s are once ag atn
in Lansing. Our one-lime pro- t~ps tn the West~rn Athletic
tegc Woody Hayes starting Conference . In 72 th e Sun
his 23rd season as h ~adman of Devt.ls av.eraged 516.5 yards
th~ Buck s. lost gnly six of his r,er. contest In w~nn1ng 10 and
22 off ense and defen siv e ~ S tng 2, and wtth fabulou s
starters from last year's Rose th':'/~iT{e~n back In hfr'f~'~
Bowl entry .
lhi l' gtv~ opdponen s tls
. ·t .
. .
.
' rme aroun ·
,
The ptG ure at Mrchrgan ts
Watch lor Montana State to
~~~ht T!r~ Wolves are re,ady collect the Big Sky Conference
· hey wt~~ he par~cu· Litle and the always rufged
1ar 1Yowroug
on
~nse w ere Air Force Falcon s to leld
~~ec :ntrre starllng ba ckfield rs another powerhouse.
The up and coming Mid- The Pacific 8 race is .praCli·
American Conference will cally over before it starts as
stage
lh its usual wt"de-open race cagey John McKay sends his
wi defending champion Kent Trojan juggernaut onto the
State the early favorite. But gridiron , The only club in the
don't overlook Ohio U., Miami conference which might give
and Bowlin~ Green .
the Trojans a run for the Rose
Bowl bid is UCLA where the
Notre Oame will put a lot brilli ant quarterback Mark
of points on the board for Ara Harmon and fleet running
Parseghian bul he has to fig- backs Kermit Johnson and
ure a way of keeping oppo- James Mcltlli star form the
nents from posting more tal- nucleus of a line football
lies than his stalwarts ·
team .
In the Big Eight there will
That's the way it looks from
be new coaches calling the here, dear readers, and as you
shots at Nebraska and Okla- 'can readily see it won't be
homa but otherwise it will be easy picking the winners in
the same old story - the 1973. But never one to duck a
Cornhuskers and the Sooners challenge, your favorite forewtll be the class of the league. caster is impatiently awaiting
The Louisville Cardinals the first kickoff .
with a new coach, T. W. AI·
ley, but minus the services of The schedule opens Saturgraduated super-star Howard day , September 8 with the
Stevens, will make a strong spotlight on Nebraska ·and.
bid to repeal as Missouri Val· UCLA . Can the Cornhuskers
gel revenge for the shocking
ley champ ..
upset they suffered at the
The story in the Southwest hands of the Uclans just a
Is all Texas as Darrell Royal year ago1 Well, watch these
sends hi,s Longhorns after pages for our forecast on that
their sixtH· straight Conference contest and the 17 other big
crown. Last year Texas did il ones slated lor opening day.
with a great defense which It'll amaze you!
gave up only 121 points in rollINE)NSP ... PEA ENTERPA!9E A9SN .J
-----'---------------Right
Wrong
Ties
Pet.
1972 Season
440
168
ll
.724

1

°

MOSCOW (UPI ) - On the magician, David Thompson,
heels ~ trlomphsnt victories who waa the hero for the United
by their men's baskelbaU team States, scoring a game-high 24
and swimmers, United States polnta and tacking on to thai at
athletes went home happy least a half dozen blocked
losers Saturday with the d011e shots.
of the seventh World
University Games.
Although beaten, 88-19, In the
gold medal chase by the hoe\
Soviet Union, the AmericaiUI
restored much of their prestige
on the final day of compeUUon
with • surprisingly euy 75-67
victory over the Russians in
the finals of the men's
basketball competition.
Couples with that, the U. S.
swlmme~s. led by Jack
Tingley's secood gold medal of
the games, swept five of the
seven firsts contested and
wound up with a 18-ll edge over
. the Russians In that category.
It was the basltelball flnai,
however, that gave the
Americans
their
most
satisfaction. Haunted by the
memory of last year's 51-SO .
defeat by the Russians at the ·
Olympics, and wearied by the
unending publicity from
listing and handy
Wednesday's chair-slinging Complete
score card for all NFL
brawl with Cuba, the U. S. and NCAA games on TV.
cagers fast..breaked the
Broughtto you in part by
Russians tD an early death with your Stale Farm agent,
a crucial 13-polnt spree mld- who also brings you
coverage tor your car,
woy through the !!rst half.
home.life and health .
Thompson Leada Again
Once again, it was North
Stop in for your tree copy.
Carolina Slate's high-flying
Stephen C. Suowdln
UNIFORMS WANTED
55l Runtl St .
(Gra\ftl Hill)
RUTJ .AND :.... All boys who Mldd,eport,
Ohio
played pony and little league
PH. 992·7155
baseball In the Rutland area
are requested to turn In their
Llkil aQOOd neighbor,
uniforms by Tuesday to Max
State F"arrn 11 there.
Whitlatch or Gene Wise at their
STATE FARM
homes on Salem Street,
INSURANCE COMPANIES
Home Qt!;ce.· 8 IOOIIWIQIOI\
Rutland.

FolbN
the Clash
of'73.

Flee .College
&amp; Pro Football
Schedule
&amp; Scaecartl.

1111~1

GOOD
NEWS
FROM

~

Chesapeake gridders

.Trlltl C~Uckta.

edge out Kyger Creek
heat.
Chesapeake threatened
earlier in the first half of the
scrimmage, but· the Bobcat
defense held on a fourth down
situation.
Kyger Creek's offense,led by
senior quarterback Clay
Hudson, could not muster any
generated attack.
, The Bobcats were Inside the
Panther 20 yard . line only
twice.
·
BARBS
Hudson replaced the injured
By PHIL PASTORET
Rick Smith at the qUarterback
There's a wreck on the free- slot. He moved the Bobcats
way every morning . and we down!leld on short passes; but
wish our neighbor would stop was decked when a long
driving it.
passing yardage situation
+ + +
The back pat is the most presented itself.
Kyger Creek's running was
effieient stroke to use in the
social swim.
paced by senior .halfback
Lawrence Tabor and juniors,
+ + +
~'or a tush . a straight line is Mike Rife and Mark Waller.
lhe shortest distance between Dave Rife, 140 pound junior,
two pints.
was Injured in the second team
scrimmage Saturday morning
at Chesapeake. Rife was taken
to the Cabeii·Hunllngton
Hospital for treatment of a
neck Injury.
Coach Jim Sprague's SVAC
team
will
scrimmage
Nelsonvtlle-York and Vinton
County prior to their opening
game Sept. 7 at Wahsma.
North Gallla, another SVAC
team, lost to a tough Fairland

CHESAPEAKE - A fourth
down eight yard touchdown
pass from quarterback Steve
Holbrook to Greg Chinn
carried the hometown Panthers to a· 6-0 victory over
Kyger Creek here Saturday.
The winning TD came in the
waning· "minu·tes of the
acrimmage played in 80 degree

HELEN FENDERBOSCH, tournament director,
congratulates Harriett Thomas, runner-up in the second
flight of the Annual Gallipolis Golf Club Tournament. Mrs.
Thomas defeated Hank Orr in a playoff.

tourney
GALLIPoLIS - The ladies
of the Ga!Upolls Golf Club held
their annual club tournament
on TUesday, , August 21 and
Wedneaday, August 22. A total
of 36 holes were played to
determine club champion and
nlnner-up, and winners in each
night with-runner-up.
TOURNAMENT WINNERS -Helen FenderboiiCh, third from left, was the club champion
Tbe club champion is Helen
Fenderbosch and runner-up, in the Annual Gallipolis Golf Club Tournament. completed last Thursday at the local links,
Monica Roderick, The First Monica Roderick, seated next to Mrs, Fenderboscb, was the runner-up. Joann Thompson, left,
Fllsht winner is Jeannine . was the second flight winner; Jeannine Cunningham was the first filght winner and Betty
McGinness was the runnerup.
Cunningham, and run·ner-up,
Betty M«l!nneu. The Second
Flight winner Is Joann
Thomp1on, Harriet Thomas,
runnet-up. An 18-hole playoff Fenderhosch vs. Betty Som·
Wll played Thursday morning mer and Jeannlne Cunningham
belwee.n Harriet Thomas and va. Dean!&amp; Smith. The winners
Hank Ol"f to determine the of these two matches will then
runner-11p 1pul In the Second play off for the Tribune tlUe
- Fltght,
. and rUilner-up.
The ladies artr'Blso In the · Ladles Day will be Wedthird round of , the Annual nesday, Alljjust 29. Everyone
Tribune Tournament. This should bring a sack lunch and
"eek's play will be Halon play will be ritne holes.

LOWE~ PRI~E~

squad Saturday morning, 24-0.
Coach John Blake, entering
his third year at the Pirate
helm said, "despite the score, I
was pleased with our overall
showing".
Blake commended his offensive backs, SterUrig Logan,
Fred Logan.and Bruce Runyon
for their fine running game. He
noted that mental mistakes
wet'!! cilstly for his young .
Pirates.
John Arnold was the main
offense star for Coach Jim
Mayo's Drago1111.
The Pirates will sCrimmage
Frontier Local later this week.

FQR
"FINGER LICKING GOOD"
••••••• CHICKEN , •••• , ,
.WAS

NOW

SAVINGS

SNACK BOX

1.45

1.35

JOe

CARRY OUT BOX

2.10
2.35

1.95
2.25

15c
10C

3.25 2.95
4.25 3.75
7.30 . 6.50

30c
soc

DELUX DINNER
SUP. DEi.. OINNE
. TIHFT BOX
15

pc. BUCKET

9.85

WEARE THE
OLDEST MOBILE
HOME DEALER
IN THE AREA!

'·

THANKS TO EVERYONE WHO VISITED OUR
DISPJ;AY AT THE GALL/A
COUNTY .TUNIOR
FA~It
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2 Bedroom
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Pay Only One
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Addison, ·Ohio

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F'lr Information

Call )ftiriey Adkins

,367-7250

,,

,t~~~::~~d coiling In kitchen - ,_, frtt relri..ratGf with Ice makiiM:avtd
&amp; drip proof - tdgt of kitchen 09unlet ltPf - ~lichen canopy
lartt wardrabo clostta; tic. Many optlona from garba_e • cflspoaal lo

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CHOICE OF BEAUTIFUL DECORS
AVAILABLE IN OTHER SIZI!S

52'

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IS. IMPORT ANT - WE KNOW OUR PRODUCTI
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24'

•

�19 - The Sunday Tim

II-The Sunday Tlmei-Sentinel,Swulay,Aug. 26.1973

11)1 c. E. Blakealee
Counly Eltle,.loa Agent, Agricullul&lt;!
POMEROY- The 1973 Meigs County Junlor and Senior Fair
Ia now hlstory.
I wish 10 express my appreciation to the many people,
volunteer as well as paid, who did such an outstandmg job,
particularly
whO accepted additional responslbiht1es due to
my illness
As our ''Watergate friens" would say, In retrospect and In
point of time, many people did many things to make the fair such
a success It is impossible to U.,t all of them but 11 seems

'

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\hose

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the NEW in FARMING
desirable (agam at this point In time ) to give special mention to
•

F~~,.~ast Results Use The Sunday Times_-Sentinel Classifieds

County Fair wrapup: many for special mention

.r

'I

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many.

The overall responsibility is of course handled by the
directors and ofllcers of the Meigs County Agricultural Society.
The president, Wallace Bradford, vice-president, Danny Zirkle ;
secretary, Mrs, Marvin King, and treasurer, William Downie,
performed much of the detailed work. They are ably assisted by
Directors David Koblentz, Hugh Custer, Charles Williams,
William Smith, MBl'Vln King, Fred Goeglem, C W Henderson,
Hennan Carson, Harold Carnahan, Lauren Hoffman, Re&lt;
Shenefield, Benny Slawter, and Robert Bowen, ex-officio
director.
For the last several years, President Bradford bas bad not
only the dulles of his office and many details but has been in
charge of locatmg everyone on tbe midway, trying to get all
midway attractions at the proper space while trying to keep
everybody happy, as well as collecting fees on the midway,

News •• • in Briefs

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(Coatlllued fr&lt;~m Page 12)
years that the smallest of the automakers bas been able to make
a proflt-aharmg payment. Workers who have completed at least
1,700 hours, about 42 weeks, With AMC will rece1ve a minimum of
$150 In hls paycheck during the week of Dec. 14, the United Auto
Workers announced Friday. Any worker who begms hls employment by Sept. 29 will receive some portion.
Only AMC of the "Big Four" automakers has a profitsharing plan, first negollaU!d when George Romney, most
recently U. S. secret.ary of housing and urban development,
headed the company. Walter P. Reuther was then president of
tbs UAW.

take care of the activities under each specific department who
spend endless days and some nights throughout the year as well
as at the fair to see thatthe acUvltlesare the best ,
The Livestock Sale Committee concentrated a lot of Its activities in the sale of the market sU!ers,lambs, and pigs A great
deal of responsibility was accepre~ by this group this year which
Included Carol Pierce, Francis Benedwn, Byron Miller, Mr. and
Mrs Clayton Coffey, Bob Spurlock, Everett Holcomb, I. Q,
McCoy, Frank Sisson, Randy Johnson, Mike Benedum, Benny
Slawrer, Grant Johnson, Mr and Mrs VIrgil Windon, Mr. and
Mrs Gay Johnson, Donald Hupp, Junior Salser, and Aaron
Sayre

which is no easy Job
All the directors have specific responsibilities In different
departments The public, however, forgets ti•at keep1ng the fa1r
financially aolvent IS aoother respo1131billly Some years 11 has
been necessary for d1rectors to sign their personal names on a
note so that all exhibitors and all obligaUons of the fair can be
paid.
While there Is some fmane1al reunbursement from county and
state programs, this does not begin to cover the cost of the la1r
The only sources of revenue the Fair Board has Is gate ad·
ml88ions and Income from the midway To make eve• ythlng
balance and buUd the buildings that have been col\'ltructed in the
last 10 years has required excellent financial management
Added ResponslbiUUes
Another group which has conUnued to play a more important
In the livestock department additional responsibilities are
part In the Meigs County Fa1r each of the last 30 years has been
Imposed
because of the necessity of taking care of the livestock
the Meigs County Junior Fair Board. This year 's jumor fair
officers, Marcia Carr, president; Eddie Kennedy, vice- throughout the fair . The Junior Fair Horse Show bas taken an
president ; Amy Hamm, treasurer , Joel Maue, secretary, and increased lnrerest and slgnlfiCanoe In recent years This year
Cathy Davis, publicity chairman, have done an oul.!tand1ng job th1s club was headed by Aimee Huston, youth chau-man, assisted
The adviSOry officers of Patty Kelly, Gay Johnson, Everett by advisors, Leo KeMedy, Jr , Bill Downie, Jr , Rachel Dowme
Bill Cole, and Mike Jones
'
Holcomb, Carol Ohlinger and JaniCe Ritchie have worked closely
In the dairy area, Robm Wmdland, youth chairman, and
with the young people.
Mora and RoyHoiwr, adviSOr, added much to the program
Mark
Each volunteer youth group m the county IS g1ven llle opportunity annually to select Juruor Fa1r d1rectors who plan and this year with the "sweepstake" activity
Whenever money changes hands dec1s1ons must be made.
carry out the juruor fmr activities under tbe direction of their
This was particularly true of the garden tractor pull on Wedelected officers.
Directors this year were Ingnd Hawley, Marc~ a Carr, nesday night which had 74 participants Dorsey Jordan, chrurBarbara Jordan, Aimee Huston, Mandie Rose, Ronrue Wood, • man of the 4-H Advisory Committee, like many others, did an
Lester Jeffers, Grant Johnson, Edd1e Kennedy, Randy Johnson, ouL!itanding job of seeing that this event was a success. Money
Joel Maue, R1cbard Macomber, Rocky Hupp, Don Shaffer, Cathy for llle priZes came from both the Junlor and Seruor Fair Boards
Special mention should be made of the work of the gals of the
Davis, Joann Pu!Uns, Debbie Harden, Bobble Archer, Jyl
Off1ce staff. Joyce Bowen has been doing an outExtension
Beaver, Amy Hamm, Nancy Busku-k, Robm Duckworth, DIXIe
standmg job of coordmating activities which means seemg that
Snyder, and Opal Dyer.
Advisory Board members are Pansy Jordan, Jeanne Braun, everything was ready at the proper lime. She has been assisted
Bob Spurlock, Everett Holcomb, Aaron Sayre, Jamce Ritchie, by Dune Sm1th . The 4-H AssiStants, Patty Kelly, Pansy Jordan,
Irma McClurg, Donna Ohlinger, Mary Powell, and Maxme Dyer and Jeanne Braun, really worked hard thiS year Our two Workstudy students from Ohio Umvers1ty, DorJs Barnhart and Donna
Some people ralle the question about youth activities,
Weber, were everywhere help1ng out to see that things went as
why we have junior fair activities organizing under one
planned
group and county school activities being more a 1141rt of the
In the youth program we could not operate If 11 was not for
senior fair. According to state law, volunteer youth groups
the volunteer leaders and advisors supported by many parents
come under the junior fair whereas schools as such are handand
friends .
ted under the senlor fair. The dHference Is the voluntary
There are many things that can be said about a fair . Certain
nature of membership.
people
have to accept responsibilities m an event of this
Every smgle deparbnent of the Me1gs County Fair has
supermU!ndents, volunteer workers, and lllose that promore and magmtude m a short space of lime and dec1s1ons must be made

Free meal policy announced

WASHINGTON - UNTIL &lt;(ONGRESS makes the next move
In the battle with Prealdent Nixon over social spending
RACINE - The Southern,
!i"OgralllB, the Health, Education and Welfare Department Will • Me1gs and Eastern Local
not use $1.8 billion In health funds already authorized, according School Districts have anto documents obtained by UP!. HEW also Withheld the same nounced a free meal policy for
amolUit from family planning, mental health, biomedical school children unable to pay
research and school programs opposed by Nixon last year.
the full pr1ce of meals served m
"Eaaenlially what we are trying to do Ia to provide enough schools under the NatiOnal
funds to penrut states, localities and other rec1p1ents ~ HEW School Lunch ~;~nd School
funds 10 maintam the staffs which administer these programs Breakfast Programs.
until final decisioll3 are made," Acting HEW Comptroller
Local school off1c1als have
Charles Miller said m a memorandum to Secretary Caspar W adopred the foUowmg family
Weinberger_
size, mcome scale for use m
With Nlx111 under a senes of court challenges for trying to deterrninmg eligibility
suspend or dismantle programs be regards as wasteful and lllFamily Size, Parents,
flatlonary, HEW baa taken a go-Blow spending approach to them children and others listed first,
until Congress acts on the President's new $29.8 mllllon request mcome scale for free meals
for HEW m fiacall973-74. The current Houae vers10n of the bill second -1- $2,740; 2-$3,600; 3
IDta1a $3U billion.
- $4,460; 4. $5,310; 5. $6,100; 6 $6,890; 7- $7,600; 8- $8,310, 9$8,960; 10. $9,600; 11 . $10,240;
12 - $10,880, and Each A~
dltlonal Family Member, $640
Children from fam1hes
whose Income is at or below
that shown are eligible for
meals In addition, families not
meeting their criteria but w1th
other IDlusual expe113es due to
~musuaUy h1gh medical expenses, sheiU!r costs m e.cess
of 30 per cent of mcome,
!Jpecial education expenses due
to the mental and physical
condition of a child, and
disaster or casualty losses may
also apply
They may do so by filling In
the
application forms sent
Pur1na Stock Spray Spec18liB made w1th two powerful
klllere to knock out many atrams of flies resJBtant to
home With a letter to parents.
one maecttc1de Prov1dee long·lastmg repellent act1on
Additional copies are available
too, whether you dip or apray
'
at the principal's office In each
school.
The information
See us for Pur1na Stock Spray Special - a top spray
for cattle on range, p&amp;Jture, or feedlot
JrOvlded on the application will
be confidential and will be used
only for the purpose of
determining eligibility. Applications may be subnutted
Vine St.
anytime during the school
year.
In certain cases, foster
chUdren m also elig1ble for
these benefits If parents have
such children llvlng w1th them

HORN
FLY
PROOF

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with

Purina STOCK SPRAY SPECIAL

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J. D. North Produce Co.

Gallipolis, 0.

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HELD OVER FROM 1972

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Priced Special To Go NOW

I'

NEW INTERNATIONAL 350
FORAGE HARVESTER
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WITH l·ROW CORN AlTACHMENT

--~!!......:_,_____

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40 TON
PER HOUR
CAPACITY

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MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.
PIIONI 992·21~6

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POMEROY. OHIO

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and w•sh to apply for such
meals, they should contact the
school ln the operation of child
feeding programs, no ch1ld will
be d1scnmmated agaiost
becauss of his race, sex, color
or national or1gm
Under the prov1s1on of the
pohcy, the local supermrendent
of Eastern and Southern will
rev1ew applications and
determme eligibility If a
parent 1s dissatisfied With the
rulmg of the official, he may
request e1ther orally or m
wr1tmg to Robert E Bowen,
Meigs Co\mty Supermtendent

of Schools, Box 684, Pomeroy,
for a hearmg to appeal the
deciSIOn. Hearmg procedures
are outlmed m the policy and a
complete copy of the policy 1s
on file m each school and m the
off1ce of each local supermtendent where 1t may be
reviewed by any mterested
party.
In the Meigs weal District,
the apphcatwn w1ll be
rev1ewed by the bUJidmg
prmcipal with the distriCt
supermtendent , George
Hargraves, !l,ervmg as the
appeal off1cer

Krebs sentenced

Lay of the land
purpose of th1s meeting was to
discuss the feas1b1hty of
drammg the school grounds at
Hartford as well as some
nearby pnvate property
We were mformed by Whalen
that the Board of Educallon
had agreed to dram the school
grounds accordmg to a
feaSibility study made by So1l
Conservation Service ln May of
this year. A different outlet
was proposed and a feaSibility

fumlahlng1

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GRAM 01r m x1ng ftoM•
prodwc11 a cltarl, lll'lokt

lht a1r more tltaroughly before 11 mOHI into
P~o~lt

•

fre1, 1001 fr11 odorf111
flam• gl ott fir• ln1l1 to
aa.urt IIKIX mum htal frQnl

maJumum warmth from l VI/)'
mort rod1anl com fort al tht
mort ~t al on the IIQOr

f..,.! .,.11d

to

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IXCLUSIYI :t·WAY
MIAY CllCULATION

and y011 10~1
on fut l bllht

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Dhtrlbvtu on a bundant

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tt:11p1 warm olr In
~ontlont clrcvlat'lon

"CIIICOMAnt

Provide~
drt~ft to

rtgulottd
tkt burur
- boiGnang ail 1:1nd .,
e~lr to CIIIUtt perfea- combwtloll
f111 ltvtiJ

011 th1 noor

on
to
to
of

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Achlolly lurM f~o~tf Otl ln,IO IJ
ga1 1'll•1 patenttd MONO·

RIVIRSI PLOW HU.T IXCHANOIR

11-------....J

ot
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PHANTOM

A SIZE FOR EVERY HOME

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Everyone Can!

Pomeroy landmark
JACK W. CARSEY, Mgr. ~
Serving Meigs, Gallia, Mason Counties~
Open Mon.-Sat. Til6:00 P.M.
PHONE 992·2181
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __;,.:..,._..;..._ _""--'

....
LlT!'LE ORPHAN

550 scouts train
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according to vel
COLUMBUS - Dr Harry
GoldsU!In, State Veterinarian,
dlrecta the attention to the
recent outbreak of Eastern
Eqwne Encephalitis occurring
In M1chigan and New Hampshire The State Veterinarian
stared this was not a new
-disease and horse owners are
advised to have their animals
vaccinared.
Goldstein slated the disease
has not entered Ohio but with
the recent occurrence In
Michigan there Is a sllght
posalblllty the dlseaae could
occur In Ohio. Thte Ia not a
disease that can be tranamltted
from horse to hOrse, but rather
as a result of bird bosl.l with
mosquito• as Intermediary
hosta. The mo1quito is a
common vector Infecting the
equine population,

500 lbs. of

•

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CALF CREEP FREE!

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THAT'S RIGHT 500 LBS. OF CALF CREEP

II
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FREE WITH PURCHASE OF CC-200 CREEP FEEDER.

l

SAVE '41 25
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THIS OFFER GOOD THRU AUGUST ONLYI

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CENTRAL SOYA
'
OF OHIO .

_____.....

'

SfsGallipolls. Ohio

lrd &amp; Syctmort

'
A wltleso driver lo one who
hal blown blo mind.

Your Ftrm lupply Supermarket

"}'II be • men to
I rrt going lo

do or die
http them

through "
The Great Commendtr nu
written t'tl1 name
On lhe roll of H im who ga11e
His On I)' Begotten Son
Anc:l died that we might 11111
He ~a i d ttle debt to his country
lnt ef l ohtforrlghlheh~swon :
A~~o~~~ Kind Of K lnga hu
• Th
~u faithfUl one . well don e"
Idly missed by his
raren ts, Mr ltnd Mrs Aetno
lnd .lind his oran d po~~renh ,
Mr Edward Hoefli ch and Mr
and Mrs Emil Lind
8 26 lie
- -- - -- - - - - - - -

1. 1913. 10 00 1 mt On
ICC:ount of llln111 of
the
owner, tOick'l Ant ique $hDD
tontttd In Sllver tqn , w VI at
lhl I unction ot W V• $ tar ~

19~7

Stpt

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KosCOTKosMEr tCSa.- WIG S MEIGS County native w1nls
acreaoe for retirement
Specials during August are
Bu ildings not Important Send
Koncentree, Mo is t Kate,
Jocat Jon and price to Box 729
Kleanslng Kreem , One Day
M In care of the Cally Sen
Sachet&amp;others Phone Helen
hnel Pom eroy Ohto
Jane Brown , 992 5113
a 22 6tc
8 2 ftc
YAR o -s~e-M ~daY-8n d

Tuesday on county road 19oft
Mw Rt 33· f1rst house on
right Good clothtng, odds end
ends
.,___
8 26 2tc
FOR your new HOME. Call
Roush Construction, Greg
Roush , Syracuse Oh io 992

____________
5039

8 26 ltc
• FOR your ROOF, Call Roush
Construction, Greg Rou sh,
Syracuse. Oh10 992 5039
8 26 ltc
PIANO and organ lessons by
graduate of Cinc innat i
Conservatory of Must c
Gerald Hoffner, Phone 992
3825
826121 &lt;

-------------Auto Sales

1968 CAMARO at P S , 2 door
Ht Will sell wholesale Phone
992 2444
8 26 31p

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

WANTED
CHIPWOOD
POLES
MAXIMUM
DIAMETER
10" ON
LARGEST END

NOW AVAILAaL&amp;

Be In Bullneu For VOcurself
Full or Part Tlmt
DISTRIIUTOR NE EDED
NOW
To tU PPIY and ltndct
company ntablllhad ac
counts In ~our locat area for
I he
WORLD FAMOUS
DONNA LEE COMPANY
No ulllng exper lenc:t
rtQu lrtd 11 company wil l
!urn
0\ltr
comptny
establl&amp;htd •ccounts located
In drug , var ie ty , super
merktf5 end discoun t storn
Prof it poll'"tlal 11 \llrtu•llv
unllmltect S98 and more for
eech day worked 11 e very
conaer-vatlve estimate.
A S3,.&amp;98 secured Inventory
Investment puts you in an
e&amp;tebllshed business right
now
WAITE TODAY
( lncludt phont numbtr)
DONNA LEE COMPANY
noN J1ck5on Street
Media, Penna 1fOU

'-:=========~
r

u-s

POSTAGE
STAMPS

WE

l Secure Locations
2 Place
Mit ch mes

on
Location
3 Furnish Supplies
YOU .
1 Put In Stamps
2 Take Out lhe Money
3 Keep 20 Pet
4 51 795 SIO,OOO Work ing
Caplfal Required 100 pet
Refundable
Send Name, Address, Phone
Number , References to
Postag, Stamps, Inc 300
lnferst•te Norftl, H W Su•te
328, Atlanfa, Ga 30339
(404) 423 4439

PRICE

P AND J HOME
MAINTENANCE
&amp; REPAIR

Roofing.
Spouting,
Porch Repair, Complete
Home
Remodeling

Hea hng - A1r Cond .
~ ,..fnqeratton
Plumbtng ·
EleCfriCdt Appltdtllh Auto
Atr Cond - Reslden tt al or
Commerctal
215 N. Second
Phone 992-3509
24 Hour Service
Al l work guaranteed

CONSTRUCTION

For Free Estimate

Ph. 742-6271
Dick's
Hoard House
"STRIPPERS"
We Sfrlp Paint, Varn ishes,
liilc from Furnlfure
Anllquoa-Modern-Melals
No ruinous lyes or caustlc:s.
used
Pick-Up Service
Avolloblo
We Bur, &amp; Sell Antiques.
D ck Seyler-Owner
Kerr Sl
Pomeroy, 0 .
Phone m .2798

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
992-2094
606 E. Matn Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

For Rent

and ( - - )

SLEEPING room tor rent Call
992 7244
8 26 Jtc
ROOMS by the week , SIB up
Meigs Inn , Pomeroy
712tfc

FURN ITUR't-"'
Slop In and See Our
Floor l?i~!a L

ANNIE

•I'
•

U'l, ABNER

992-2550

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED
DUMP TRUCK
24 HOUR SERVICE

ASK US ABOUT
PRE-FABRICATED

VtOOD TRUSSES
Bull! to Your'$pecs
Delivered lo Job Silt

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.
77:1-5554
MaiOft, w. v•.

Real Estate

2-14'

--------------______

We.talk to you
likt .a person.

'•

0.

JOHN TUCKER
R:t 4, Pomeroy, 0
992-3954 or 992-7349

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

GRAVELY
tRACTOR SALES
-

J

Middleport,

MODERN
SANITATION

FALL CLEARANCE

WMPO.tl390.

Pomero~

SERVICE

-----==--------

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

Ph '992 ll74

ALL -WEATHER

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

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Siding - Spouting
Remodeling
~ Plumbing
Heating.
Complete
Building. Vinyl &amp; Aluminum Siding.

$7.00 Per Ton

OHIO
PALLET CO.

From thtt
Bulldoz.er Radlalor to tt,.
.~mauesr Heller cor• .
Nalhan Btgps
Radtator Spectahs1

ROOFING

PRIVATE meetmg room tor
any organizat ion , phone 992
SpeCJahsl
3975
Employment
Wanted
Wheel
3 11 tfc
Allgnmen1
3 AND 4 ROOM furntshed 11nd EXPERIENCED painter, In
terlor
and
exterior
Call
Don
unfurn tshed apartments
Van Meter, 985 3951
It Mus!
Phone 992 5434
DELIVERED
8 2 301p
4 12 tfc
Be Rtght
or we will
TO
FUR-NISHED apartment
Make
tl Rtght.
Phone 992 3901
Pets For Sale
8 i66fc
MOBILE home space Baer's PARKVIEW Kennels Poodles,
Market, Syracuse
1 toy male and I fema le
Phone 99'2 540
8 26 tfc
a 4 Jo.Da••v. 8 12 ....
7 15 tfC
In
lhe
R H Rawlings Sons
Open Monday through
2 BEDROOM mobtle hom i
Bu11d1ng
.
with patio , Ra cine Cal l
Frtdav 7 a m to 8 30 p m
For Sale
,
.
_99_2_2_I_Ol
___
M
__uld:::..;le::,po.;,r--I,:..O:.i.,l '
Albert Hill, 949 2261
1
1J11 Old Rt. 33
8 24 6tc 7 ROOM house wllh bath In •
Rutland. air conditioned , ELNA and Wh it e Sewing
Phone 992-2689
carpeted, gas furnace, dish
Machines
service on all
MOBILE home space in
washer , double oven range, makes Reasonable rates
Pomeroy, Ohio
Syracuse PtJone 992 5858
double gerage,large carport, The Sewing Cen1er , M1d
6 21 tfc
4 acres. cleared and fenced, dleport, Ohio
11 \6 tfc
small barn and other
buildings Phone 61-4 742 6834
---,~
Help Wanted
Mobile Homes For Sale
r5:30 ttc .. "AUTOM081LE Insurance been
BABYSITTER needed fOr firSt \4 x 65 TRAILE:f~ , 2 be~room, -------..----L-cancelled"
Lost
your
grade ChH d. between J 30
very good condlt10 Phone 773 7 ROOM house In Chesteb large ~q e{afor•s llcens~ Call 992
P m to 12 ~0 am m my
5805 .
2
sun porch, basement, natural
home Inquire at 13.4 But
a 22 tfc
6 15 If
gas, forced air heat Chester
c
ternut Ave In Pomeroy
before J JO p m
s 26 2tp ,-----------:---- ·-T P water, also, dril led well - - - - - - - - - -- - - - Wo!!lklng distance of business NlEGLER Building Supply for
FEMALE-hel;-wan led tor
Air Cond1t1oners
area. school and churches on
building houses Call Cv
large Jot Approx 1mately 2 Nelgler , Racine, Oh10
Gau l's Shake Haven, Chester,
Awmngs
aues, large garden Gordon
8 21 10tp
Ohio Reference preferred, 18
Ridenour , Phone 985 3573
- - - - - - - - - - -- - years or over Inquire tn
Underpmnmg
person , no phone calls
____________ .!_ 26 61 P
For Sale
a 22 4tc Complete mobtle home
3 BEDROOM home, ll\1 83 ACRE FAR:M, gas , water, 6
service - plus gtgant 1c
MALE or female desk clerk, display of mobile homes
lng
room r
kitchen
room house In Langsville
must be able to ltve in Apply
and bath , sto rm win
area
Phone 992 3530 or 742
In person at the Ohio Hotel. _always available at
dows and doors . air
6675
Mtddleport
8 19-IOip
conditioning, take over FHA
B22 6tc
peym ents, new addition ,
MILLER
Syracuse Call 99'2 7452 or 992 "ffiCE6 roo;- house -;Tt"h bath
MA N -~ lo r-reta il-;t-;-;,- wIth
and steam heat, Union Ave ,
2023
sales ex penence InQu ire at
MOBILE HOMES
8 26 3fp Pomeroy Calf 992 2962
'ngels Furniture. Mtddleport
8 24 31C
No age lim It
1220 Washtngton Blvd
3 BEDROOM house l!h baths, 1
8 21 61&lt; 423 7521
formal dining room , 1 living PAG EVILLE Oh io Includes
BELPRE, O
room . kitchen, family room , 2 house, 4 rooms down , 1 up,
CENTRAL DIVISION CON
car garage, full basement, on garage, workshop, and ap
SOL IDATION COAL COM CASH paid tor all mikes ani acre lot Located In Rigos proximately 111-l acres with
PANY , Immediate openings models of mobile hOmes
Crest Manor Phone 992 386J young orchard 1 block. east of
are available In the following Phohe area code 614 423 9531
before 3 p m and ask for Mr
A:t 692, $10 500 Information
positions
Maintenance
413tfc
Ingels
at
house
Foreman (underground ), ----- - - - -- - - -- - 8 26 tfc
8 12 lfc
Ass.stant Mine Foreman
!underground ) , Sec lion For Sale
STORY home m Syracuse, 3 BEDROOM house on Lmcoln
Foremen,
Mine BEAUTIFUL Walnut Stereo - 2 Approximately
2 acres of
Foreman , Surface
Reclamation
Hill , living room , kitchen,
land
,
J
bedrooms,
11\l ln o bath
Fore a p
8
track
tape
com
radio,
and utility room , extra
1
1
m n ersons app Yno
blnatlon , am fm radio, 4 room, dining room, kitchen
large lot over 1 acre Has
and pantrv on first floor wall
sho,~lfdl hllold valid (fOorel m) an
speaker sound svstem
dr iveway
$13,000
Call
cer ca on papers h o or Sa lance $105 49 or use our
to wall carpet. basement has
Sunday
after
12
noon,
on
ha'Ye sufficient experience to budget terms Call 992 3965
outside entr~nce, 1s paneled "weekdays after s p m , 992
apply for State exam !nation
and
has
second
complete
3247
Salary Commensurate w•th
8 22 tfc
kitchen In basement and
E)(perlence
Excellent - - - - - - - - - - - - 8 5 ftc
Benefits TO APPLY Write WILKINSON small engine sates second bath, attic paneled,
could
be
fourth
bedroom,
or
Phone
Personnel and service, 820 3rd Stret,
convenient bu ilding
garage and other out build lngs LARGE,
Dept~~rtment ,
central Middleport Lawn mower and
lots
at
Rock
Springs Area
with space for 3 cars 20
Division . consolidation coal
chain saw repair Free pickup
restricted for houses only
m
tntues
from
Gavin
Plant
Company , Cadiz:, Ohio 43907
and delivery Phone 992 3092
Tuppers Pla ins &amp; Chester
Can be ~asH y financed
Telephone 614 942 4512 AN Also Briggs apd Stratton end
Water available Call or see
8 26 3fc
Bill Wltt1 1 992 2789
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY Tecumseh pariS
pntc
EMPLOYER
8 22 30fc
8 21 tfc G'ROCER Y- business for sale
Building for sale or tease
WAN'fEO
Parttlme
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
babysitter from l D m to 6 30
to 10 p m tor appotntment
p m and Wednesday night ~
3 20 ftc
Call 992 7115 after 6 p m
8 24 31C
CANNING
Tomatoes,
cucumbers. mangoes, and
Wanted To Buy
cantalopes Gera ldine
CORNER cupboards, wall Cleland, Racine
7-31 -lfc
cupboards, chests, old guns,
any condition Also blue
decorated stoneware Write
POMEROY - 2 bedrooms, nice
P 0 Box .u, Martinsburg ,
ABOUT 3YEARS OLD
kitchen, oak floors, gas furnace,
Ohio, 439J5 or call 1 484 4440
TUPPERS
PLAINS - 1 floor
basement
and
large
lof
after 7 p m
8 8 90ft
plan, 3 nice bedrooms wllh
FURNISHED
Ml DD LE PORT
Near closets, modern bath, kit
SPORTSPAL CANOE
NO 1 Copper, 60c, Radiators.
chen with range and oven,
schools,
2
bedrooms
,
large
30c, brass ~ 20c , batteries. 90c
L1sl S334
kitchen , nice bath , front and lots of cabinets, carpeted,
each , clean, dry Ginseng
roots, S60 alb Yellow root , s~ .
back porches Asking only carport, electric h..,t JUST
SALE •280
Moy apple, soc per lb M A
517,000 00
$8900 00.
Hall. Reedsville Call 378
RUTLAND
1-12'
NEW
HOME
6249
3
nice
bedrooms
with closets,
3
BEDROOMS
Bath,
storm
1 31 ftc
SPORTSPAL CANOE
doors and windows, double sink. nice kitchen and din ing area,
WANTED
for
auction,
built-In slove and oven Electric bath, full basement with
List S295
household goods Tools, most
heot Nice Ia! Just SIB,SOO 00 shower, storm windows and
enythlng of value Will buy or
doors, electric heat, 51 acre
TUPPERS PLAINS
SALE •250
1111 on commission Will haul
Sl8.500
00
NEARLY
NEW
Nice
2
Call 992 335&lt; or 992 2792
GOING BUSINESS
bedroom home, bath, sliding
All Fishing
Hayman's
72S tf c
glass doors, bull! m range All Showing a nice profll Good
Rods&amp; Lures
OLD furniture , oak tables ,
clean stock
Excellent
electric, carport and ni ce lot
clocks. Ice bous. bran beds ,
location
A
gr..,!
future lor
515,000
00
or
complete
dllhes
20% OFF
someone
Soiling
due
to Ill
REASONABLE
household• Wr Itt M D
2 BEDROOMS - forced air health COME TO THE
Miller, Rt 4, Pomeroy, Ohio .
We have pltnly of rilles &amp; furnace , nice bath , front porch OFFICE . NO PHONE
call 992 6271
5·13 tfc shot guns In stock - Also and large lot Only 54,000 00
.
CALLS PLEASE
ommunltlon and hunllng
5 ROOM COTTAGE
NEW LISTING
license.
MIDDLEPORT
2
$100 00 - Pe• acre for 60 acres In
Lebonon Township, on good bedrooms . Bath Dining
room 1112 story frame . Some
After Sept I We Will Be gr~vel road.
SOON THINGS WILL BEGIN storm doors and windows
Closed Thur.
Porches La! 100xl25 Asking
TO ROLL HERE IN THE
Open Mon , Tues &amp; Wed.
COUNTY HAVE YOU WHAT $5,500 00
8-5 30
YOU WANT OR NEED WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
Closed Thursday
BEFORE ALL THIS HAP- ALL TYPE PROPERTY,
Open Frl &amp; S..! 8 8
LIST
TODAY
3
PENS IF NOT COME IN AND
ASSOCIATES TO HELP
DISCUSS IT WITH ONE OF US
WITH THE SALE OF YOUR
PROPERTY
HENRY E. CLELAND,
BROKER
ON YOUR DIAL
511 E Mlln
992-2159 • '
Pomeroy, Ohio
If no •nswtr f92·2561
Phond 192 2975
... -~

•

Business Services

WHOLESALE

I)ISTR IIUTOIUH I P

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

'

Disease could hit

true

Viftnam
hit. country
br•ve end

CHEYROLfiT Novo , •lx
cylinder, automatic: ~ rac:llo
Pri ced rt:tllontblt &lt;;all 985
3&amp;?• cnn1'er
8 2• 3tc
Routt 56 &amp; I 17 ti'ut fnllnw lnn 1961 oooG E Potara . Jake ovtt
payments plus SIOO or $1,?50
mtrchandlu will b1 told
Brtu • Bed , Sh ow Can· , cuh Phone 9927836
I 2A lit
w ..hatanct, l plano ttoolt,
mIlk
cena
depru
.......
11on oteu, chine werd,
Lost
2 pit Sifts ,
2 record YOU CA N WIN S.IOO You c1 n
PIIYtrt, Rocker, 9 Olllemg_a
liel p a former resident past 92
Coffee Grlnc:ltr, Sellers
vears Of age Jocatt a case
K lichen Cabin I
Pic ture
w1t ch w ith the lntll111 M L
J:r am~t• f lrQn wart, antique
F ~ on back lid P/'lone Mra
Coat Huter , sword , • metal
Wood1,
992 l.t89
beds, 3 oak rocker&amp; 1 Pede 1 tal
8-26 He
Round Table, Walnut stand,
Brass Kettle, Cernlval Rose \25RiWA R0fo77ttur00f or
Bowl l - 12Gal StoneJif , 2 In for mation leading to the
library tables, Dlnn1r Bell , 2 return of a 12 Inch female
Bullets, 2 Aladd in Lamps 2 beagle stolen or ltrayed from
Cherry Chest of Drawers , '2 county road 13 last Mondo!ly
Telepnone BaKeS Glass Jars, even ing Call H2 .&amp;111
Books, • Clocks, tceboM, 2
8 2~ lie
oressers, Ch erry Bed Wagon
......
Soot. Walnuf Gla!S Door
Cu pboard , Other Cllrnlval Wanted
gtus
MAIO , apply In person HI
trunks, Small
!Ston e Stone
o\lal Jars
TopsJ7, BAR
Ho Bar . Middleport Equal
Cedar Chest. 4 Guns Hall
Seat. 4 Oak Dining Cha lrs
opportunlly employ@r 8 26 6tc
Ca$h Registe r, Insulators,
Wood Heater , 2 pocket wet
ches Manyartlclesnotllsted , WANTED &lt;At all 11mesl wood
chips, gran cli ppings, and
Pick. Trlenc:l, Owner 1 Terms
leaves For our organic farm
cash Not Respon sible ror
on Leading Creek Roed (near
ac ci den's Food available
Karr's Farm l ill II Items may
Sale bV the Bradford
be dumped free at Q:Ur farm
Auction Company, Ra cine,
John Mohler At I, Box 210
Ohio, A c;:
Bradford ,
Middleport Ohio, ~hone 992
'f~~t1~ne~er C C Bradford , 3911
B26 31p
8 26 He

ANTIQUE AUCTION S.turd•V•

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

I
0I

m order to attend Camp
Arrowhead, McCray reported.
McCray states that plans are
now underway for the '74
summer season at Camp
Arrowhead and to dare some 25
lroops have made reservations
for a highlight camping experience.

p F C

Thomu A L.tnd who ~au tl la
ll le for ftlt St1r1 and Slrlptt

of Am Brice In
Augu1t 2,, )961
He
htlfd the cell Of
4 nd 1nawered It

Bu~n~ Opportun~

Notice

Real Estate

Prices Start

t

HUNTINGTON, W Va Tralmng m Scout program
skills was e.perlenced by more
than 550 Scouts from 40 troops
of the Tr1-State Area Council
Boy Seoul.! of America, at
Camp Arrowhead thiS summer, as a part of their yearround campmg program,
according to Richard McCray,
Council Campmg Chairman
In addition to the troops that
used the o111door training
center at Camp Arrowhead, 7
lroops made trips the! took
them to such areas as Greenbo
State Park in Kentucky and
Sherwood Lake In West
Virginia
The Scoutmg council was
also represented at the
National Jamboree, held
at Moraine State Park
In Pennsylvama, by 90
~£_me_ Scouts_ and 10 _leaders
mainly from the Ashland,
Huntington and Point Pleasant
areas
"All of these types of camping experiences are hlghllghta
for the program of our troops.
Scouts learn and apply the
skills they have been dreaming
about all year, and It's a year's
worth of adventure compressed Into a week or 80 "
MCCray said.
'
AI a part of the council
camping program, a total of 20
needy Scouta were provided
financial asslatance by local
organlzatlona and individual..

In MemOIJ
IN ME!MQRV or Marin•

12 ctnts per word thr •
•
consecutive lnurtlons
ll cen ts. per wc*d SIX' con
IICUN\It lnsertlona
25 Per Cent Discount on pa l tt
ads and ada Pl ld with in 10 days
I
(ARI:)OFTHANKS
. a OIITUAR'flt
$1 iO tor so word minim um
EJich tddltlor,el word lc
•LIN DADS
Addlllonal 25 c
Ad vert latment &lt;i harge per
OFFICE HOURS
Notice
8 30 a m to s 00 p m Dally,
8 30 a rn to 12 00 Noon PAINT
lNG eMperienced, roofs
S.• I urday
specialty Phone 992 2239 for
tree Utlmate
8 U 6tc
~rd of Thanks
-------------WE WOVLO like to lhan k tho YARD SALE Monday and
Tuesday on county road 19 off
end neighbors ,
1frlends
new Rt 33. first house on
Minister Kenneth Eberts ,
right Good clothtnv , odds and
Foglesong Funeral Home and
J&gt;rew Webster Post 39 for ends
8 26 ~tc
'Their kind wards and con
slderatlor, during the loss of - -- - -AUcTioN____
pur father and grandfather , MONDAY , Sept 3, 1973 10 30
'Carev. H Hysell Your kind
a m For hea lth reasons the
~ esses and considerations will
personal properh In the
long be remembered Signed,
Frances Stitt home at the
rhe Hysell tamlly
~wer corporation line of
8 26 ltp
acl ne, Ohio 9n St Route
Will b6 sold G E
wEWisH- totxP7eSSOUr sin 124
Refrigerator
. May lag
~tre thanks to our relatives,
A
u
tom
at I c
Washer,
frlends
,
and
neighbors
for
1
Dehum idifier , One Gale Leg
fbelr kindness , sympathy, Tal:lle,
Trunks, oil !amos,
prayers , visits , beautiful
Chest of Drawers 4 desks,
floral offerings, food and
Beds, Pic tures. Old Lanterns
money during the Illness and
Hand
Tools of All kinds, La wn
death of our beloved wjfe
Mower, 2 Davenports, Serve I
sister, and aunt Special
Gas Refrigerator, Maytag
thanks to tlu Doctors and
Wrtnger Washer , 2 gas
nurs!IS ~f the Holzer Medical
heaters. severa l Antique
Center, the R:ev Robert
Chairs, Dishes , some
Buckley, the pallbearers , Oin1ng
Ironstone,
Marble Top
Ewing Funeral Home Gerald
Dresser, Sectional Boo kc ase,
Powell, organ ist, and the Stands
BeQdlng, 2 TV s.
1
Ciass of 1934 You have
Electric
Fan , Aluminum
everlasting gratitude The
Ladder , Cedar Chests,
1Family
of Mary Smith
Kelvinator Deep Freeze ,
Schaefer
Ele ctr ic Sewing
S1nger
8 26 lip
Machine, 2 Pedestal Type
Round Table, Old Rocker&amp;,
Col
lection of Stone Jars and
Notice
Jugs, Other Dressers, Wood
Filing Cab1net. 3 Metal Ward
MEIGS SENIORS, Make your
robes, Book case with Books,
~_ppolntment now to have vour
2 Vacuum Cleo!!ners, Office
S-ENIOR PORTRAIT Ioken
Chair, Step Ladders , Items
Oates for taking MEIGS
not listed Terms cash ,
S1eNIORS are Aug 22, 23, 24
Frances Stitt, Owner, Not
a~d 25, and Sepf 1 Take
Responsible for Acc idents ,
advantage of Special Senior
Sales bv Bradford Auct)on
Prices for these days only
Company, Racine. Ohio, A c
Call GROVER'S STUDIO ,
Bradford , Manager c c
Middleport, Ohio Phone 992
Bradford, Auctioneer
2.75
8 26 He
8 1 22tc

' MAGIC Mil II 'IURNil

wmlgrl lhrgughll\!1
ll•ln1 ll'ltl cl ~ cur
hemt Htat yau can tnt
ond '".,.-whtlhtr yau rt
tlandlnv, tiHing or loungi ng

eaSier
There are three sprmgs
the farm that he plans
eventually develop so as
have an adequaU! source
water for h1s livestock.

5 cents per Word one lnserllot
Minimum Chan~t He

gra1ned or rich fh.1twood v•nylclad cobtnets a~e hand10mely
htghllghted with ,;old anodl1ed
alumtnum to blend !With the ftnlst

t~•

:~er:a~:e~~ss:t~
make the reclaiming process

-.ATE$
F'or Wl l)f Ad Strll lct

Smart decorator-des•en walnvt·

unolo contendere" to an m·

WE HELPED E F Legg
With a Conservation plan for
his farm off Jerry's Run Road
near the Southern We3t
Vu-gm1a Beagle Club Mr. Legg
bought th1s farm a year or two
ago and smce then has been
devotmg b1s efforts toward
restormg It to a grassland
farm When he got 1t, 1t was
grown up wtth brush, briars,
and vines.
He bas also built some fence
w1th the thought ln mind of
putlmg cattle on the farm to

f

I&gt;

Drainage study continuing
study IS bemg made of thisposs1b1hty
LESTER .LITTLE on
Thirteen Mile Creek across the
hill from Arbuckle IS repau-mg
a farm pond Th1s pond was
built m the early '50s and since
that t1me has become
deterwrated as a result of
groundhogs or muskrats
digging along the overflow
pipe Th1s burrowmg allowed
water to flow along the outs1de
of the pipe and subsequently
~lowed the earth to fall m.
Th1s partly dramed the pond.
The repa1r work Involved
consists of mstaUlng another
overflow pipe w1th an antirodent and anll-seep collar,
ll_!ld the filling and repacking of
the f1U where 1t had washed
away The Western Soil ConservatiOn D1str1ct is doing the
earth moving Denver Yoho of
SCS planned the repair job

Th
rl htt 1 Pul)l!lhtr rhervn the
d D 0 tdlt or reltct any Ida
'::red Obtecllonal
The
1 0u ther w ill not be retponslble
ln;errl~~· than ont Incorrect

BEAUTIFUL CABINETS! LUXURIOUS TO':rAL
COMFORT! SAVE UP TO 40% ON FUEL \'IIILLSI

biQnktl g( hea t llwtf l~t
lloor1 111 ~..Mdt I oar to

By John Cooper
Sod Cons. Service
HARTFORD, W Va - We
met With Cllarles Black, mayor
of Hartford, Mildred G1bbs,
prmCipal at Hartford School,
Michael Whalen, Mason
County Board of Education
office; Griffin Boggess, Mason
Co. Farmers Home Admn
Representallve, and concerned
c1t1zens of Hartford The

• tcctptwd vntll9 • m ror
Dat at Publication
R OULATIONS

)

&lt;P~&lt;H~It\M

"'o"1°,.'1,'tm~N

! ~M.Oay BtfOr'l PubiiCIIIon
C onda~ Otldllne t • m
'
Wllr~C'IIIIIOn - Correcttonl

America's Great Oil Heaters

PT PLEASANT - In Mason
County Circuli Court actions
Fnday, Judge James Lee
Thompson sentenced Johnny
Lee Krebs to one year m the
Mason County jail and a fme of
$1,000 upon hiS earlier plea of
dictment chargmg negligent
homicide
Also 10 court actions Friday
JUdgment was granted to
Lievmg Plumbmg and Heatmg
Inc. against Dlllna Bosworth m
the sum of $936 44 with mterest
and costs.
A divorce was granted
Cbmline DeWess from Marvin
DeWess

1

,~.,r)'bcl&lt;ly wQrklnM with the lair tries to mtke right dedal0111,
All In •II cases, tli~NiareliiWIYI twQ aides The declllona may be
favorable to some an(l unfavorable to othen Unforlul!ltely ,It II
difficult, 11 not impoaalbl~, to rilake declah!lll which are pleaalna
to all people. This Is one of the unfortunate U\lnge.
The same Is true In placing of exhibits. A judge Ia hired, II
selecli'&lt;l, or one volunteers He or she makes the beat dec:lalon
possible accord1111J to his undentandlng, hla training, and )be
~hiblt he sees Another judge at another time under 41ffe!'ellt
conditions mlghl make a different decision
1'his Is one I)( the \eii8Qns of competition. As one of our looi!
time showmen staws, " II yOu don 't want to run the rllk rA lOIInil
you had better not exhibit "
We believe the competitive aspects of a fair help our youns
people and aduiL!i learn io be better competitors and more willing
to accept dedslons
In the livestock field ever since fairs were organlzed there
has been llle question of how meat animals are judged. For
example, do you judge on the basis of the amount of milk a cow
w1U produce or hew she looks as she walks in the ring.
These questions w1ll never be settled. Some yeara and some
decades judges go more towards commercial aspects. Other
times they so more toward appeara nee
The fair ls a great Institution in our competitive society. It
proVJdes many different things to many different people, If It
helps one boy or one girl or one'man or one woman to' develop In
thm ability to Jive In our society then It is worthwhile I
Much improvement has been and conlnues to lle made by
volunteer work. Thb year the new bleachers for t~ sheep and
sw1ne judging ring and also used at the meat an~l sale plua
additiOnal gates and platforms for sheep and swine pens were
built by volunreer labor The Agricultural Society fuhllahed the
materllll The FFA boys and their instructors cut the lumber.
The FF A and Me1gs County 4-H Shepherds Club m~bers, adVIsors and parents
the construction

})

-Sentinel , Sunday, AuK. 26,1973

'

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
*5.55
On Most Amencan Cars

- GUARANTEED-:Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto J
Open 8Ttl 5
Monday lhru Saturday
606 E. Mam, Pomeroy, 0

1-..:..:.:..:::;_:.::::::.:.:...:::;::~:.:..::;.o...,.~

EXCAVATING Dozers, Ia ge
and small. Backhoes and
loaders on track and tlr,s..
Dump truck - La boy atr
\lice Septic tanks Installed
Geon1e
Pult1n1, phone
992 '2478 CbliD
or 99 '2 7402.
2 9 ttc
SePTic--TANKS- AROBie
S E W A G E S Y sTeMs
CLEANED , REPAIR:EO
MILLER SAN IT AT I 0 N ,
STEWART OHIO PH 662
J035
10 ~ tfc
SEWING MACHINES ReJJalr
servrce, all makes 992 2284
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
Authorized Singer Sales o!lnd
Service We Sharpen Scissors
3 29 tfc
FOR: FREE estimates on
aluminum siding storm
Doors and Windows, Car
ports, Marquees and Railing,
Phone
Charlei
Lisle,
Syracuse, Ohio Carl Jacob
Sales Represe"tatlve V v
Johnson and Son, Inc
6 22 tf&lt;
-------------DOZER and back hoe work ,
ponds and septic tank$, dlt
Ching service top soli, fill
dirt ,
limestone .
B&amp;K
Escavatlng Phone 992 5367 or
992 3861

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

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

9 fife

--------------TIME to check that oil or gas

furnace for winter Dirty
furnaces cost fuel and could
tost a life Call P &amp; J Home
Maintenance 992 3509, 215 N
Second, Middleport
8 23 301C

READY MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to your
project Fnt and euy Free
estlmafes Phone 992 328•
Goeglein Ready Mix Co ,
Mlddleporl, Oh io
6 30 tfc
SEPTIC TANKS CLEAN!D
REASONABLE rafes Ph -.6
4781, Gall ipol is, John Runel1 ,
Owner and Operator
5 12 lfc
C BRADFORD, Auclloneer
Complete Service
Phone 949 3821
Racme, Ohio
Crill Bradford

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

5 fife

EXCAVATING, dozer loader
and backhoe work , septic
tanks Installed , dump trucks
and lo-boys for hire ; will haul
fill dirt, top soil , limestone
and gra..,el , Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers. day phone 992 7069 ;
night phone ~92 3525 or 9,92
5232
I
211tfc
OPEN - Roger Hysell's Gar
age near Crossroads on st
Rt 124, all mechanical work
Including automatic\ trent•
miss ion$ Monday Friday ,
1 30 a m to .S p m Saturday
- 8 30 fo 12 noon - unltu QY
appointment Phone 992 56.1'
or 992 7121
' ·25 JO!c
DEAD- s TOCK=-Wii17.." .....
et a ri"asonable chl! 1,1 Call
245 55 ..
• 23 tOte
ll'OELL- WHEEL- Allgn;;;tol
located &amp;t Crossroada, Rl. 124 •
now bo!!Ck to work Cornptttt
front end str¥1ce, tune up •nd
bra"' nrvt&lt;:e
Wtleela
balanced tlectronlctlly All
work guar~nteed R111onablt
rates Phone 742 3232
l 18-ff,
-~'--RON SHEPARD. Floor, Wall
~•modeling , Cor em le lilt
bathl Box 280, Rufllnd 743 ~
3664

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

1·21•tfC

---.----------MOBILE homt rtpllr l!ltc1

trlcll plumbing •net hHtlng.
PMnt 992-SUI
1 IS tfc
HARRISON 'S TV ltrvlr• on•
llrv lct ctlll PhOIIt 9fMU2 .
M ·tlc

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----------'

�19 - The Sunday Tim

II-The Sunday Tlmei-Sentinel,Swulay,Aug. 26.1973

11)1 c. E. Blakealee
Counly Eltle,.loa Agent, Agricullul&lt;!
POMEROY- The 1973 Meigs County Junlor and Senior Fair
Ia now hlstory.
I wish 10 express my appreciation to the many people,
volunteer as well as paid, who did such an outstandmg job,
particularly
whO accepted additional responslbiht1es due to
my illness
As our ''Watergate friens" would say, In retrospect and In
point of time, many people did many things to make the fair such
a success It is impossible to U.,t all of them but 11 seems

'

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•

\hose

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the NEW in FARMING
desirable (agam at this point In time ) to give special mention to
•

F~~,.~ast Results Use The Sunday Times_-Sentinel Classifieds

County Fair wrapup: many for special mention

.r

'I

I

many.

The overall responsibility is of course handled by the
directors and ofllcers of the Meigs County Agricultural Society.
The president, Wallace Bradford, vice-president, Danny Zirkle ;
secretary, Mrs, Marvin King, and treasurer, William Downie,
performed much of the detailed work. They are ably assisted by
Directors David Koblentz, Hugh Custer, Charles Williams,
William Smith, MBl'Vln King, Fred Goeglem, C W Henderson,
Hennan Carson, Harold Carnahan, Lauren Hoffman, Re&lt;
Shenefield, Benny Slawter, and Robert Bowen, ex-officio
director.
For the last several years, President Bradford bas bad not
only the dulles of his office and many details but has been in
charge of locatmg everyone on tbe midway, trying to get all
midway attractions at the proper space while trying to keep
everybody happy, as well as collecting fees on the midway,

News •• • in Briefs

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(Coatlllued fr&lt;~m Page 12)
years that the smallest of the automakers bas been able to make
a proflt-aharmg payment. Workers who have completed at least
1,700 hours, about 42 weeks, With AMC will rece1ve a minimum of
$150 In hls paycheck during the week of Dec. 14, the United Auto
Workers announced Friday. Any worker who begms hls employment by Sept. 29 will receive some portion.
Only AMC of the "Big Four" automakers has a profitsharing plan, first negollaU!d when George Romney, most
recently U. S. secret.ary of housing and urban development,
headed the company. Walter P. Reuther was then president of
tbs UAW.

take care of the activities under each specific department who
spend endless days and some nights throughout the year as well
as at the fair to see thatthe acUvltlesare the best ,
The Livestock Sale Committee concentrated a lot of Its activities in the sale of the market sU!ers,lambs, and pigs A great
deal of responsibility was accepre~ by this group this year which
Included Carol Pierce, Francis Benedwn, Byron Miller, Mr. and
Mrs Clayton Coffey, Bob Spurlock, Everett Holcomb, I. Q,
McCoy, Frank Sisson, Randy Johnson, Mike Benedum, Benny
Slawrer, Grant Johnson, Mr and Mrs VIrgil Windon, Mr. and
Mrs Gay Johnson, Donald Hupp, Junior Salser, and Aaron
Sayre

which is no easy Job
All the directors have specific responsibilities In different
departments The public, however, forgets ti•at keep1ng the fa1r
financially aolvent IS aoother respo1131billly Some years 11 has
been necessary for d1rectors to sign their personal names on a
note so that all exhibitors and all obligaUons of the fair can be
paid.
While there Is some fmane1al reunbursement from county and
state programs, this does not begin to cover the cost of the la1r
The only sources of revenue the Fair Board has Is gate ad·
ml88ions and Income from the midway To make eve• ythlng
balance and buUd the buildings that have been col\'ltructed in the
last 10 years has required excellent financial management
Added ResponslbiUUes
Another group which has conUnued to play a more important
In the livestock department additional responsibilities are
part In the Meigs County Fa1r each of the last 30 years has been
Imposed
because of the necessity of taking care of the livestock
the Meigs County Junior Fair Board. This year 's jumor fair
officers, Marcia Carr, president; Eddie Kennedy, vice- throughout the fair . The Junior Fair Horse Show bas taken an
president ; Amy Hamm, treasurer , Joel Maue, secretary, and increased lnrerest and slgnlfiCanoe In recent years This year
Cathy Davis, publicity chairman, have done an oul.!tand1ng job th1s club was headed by Aimee Huston, youth chau-man, assisted
The adviSOry officers of Patty Kelly, Gay Johnson, Everett by advisors, Leo KeMedy, Jr , Bill Downie, Jr , Rachel Dowme
Bill Cole, and Mike Jones
'
Holcomb, Carol Ohlinger and JaniCe Ritchie have worked closely
In the dairy area, Robm Wmdland, youth chairman, and
with the young people.
Mora and RoyHoiwr, adviSOr, added much to the program
Mark
Each volunteer youth group m the county IS g1ven llle opportunity annually to select Juruor Fa1r d1rectors who plan and this year with the "sweepstake" activity
Whenever money changes hands dec1s1ons must be made.
carry out the juruor fmr activities under tbe direction of their
This was particularly true of the garden tractor pull on Wedelected officers.
Directors this year were Ingnd Hawley, Marc~ a Carr, nesday night which had 74 participants Dorsey Jordan, chrurBarbara Jordan, Aimee Huston, Mandie Rose, Ronrue Wood, • man of the 4-H Advisory Committee, like many others, did an
Lester Jeffers, Grant Johnson, Edd1e Kennedy, Randy Johnson, ouL!itanding job of seeing that this event was a success. Money
Joel Maue, R1cbard Macomber, Rocky Hupp, Don Shaffer, Cathy for llle priZes came from both the Junlor and Seruor Fair Boards
Special mention should be made of the work of the gals of the
Davis, Joann Pu!Uns, Debbie Harden, Bobble Archer, Jyl
Off1ce staff. Joyce Bowen has been doing an outExtension
Beaver, Amy Hamm, Nancy Busku-k, Robm Duckworth, DIXIe
standmg job of coordmating activities which means seemg that
Snyder, and Opal Dyer.
Advisory Board members are Pansy Jordan, Jeanne Braun, everything was ready at the proper lime. She has been assisted
Bob Spurlock, Everett Holcomb, Aaron Sayre, Jamce Ritchie, by Dune Sm1th . The 4-H AssiStants, Patty Kelly, Pansy Jordan,
Irma McClurg, Donna Ohlinger, Mary Powell, and Maxme Dyer and Jeanne Braun, really worked hard thiS year Our two Workstudy students from Ohio Umvers1ty, DorJs Barnhart and Donna
Some people ralle the question about youth activities,
Weber, were everywhere help1ng out to see that things went as
why we have junior fair activities organizing under one
planned
group and county school activities being more a 1141rt of the
In the youth program we could not operate If 11 was not for
senior fair. According to state law, volunteer youth groups
the volunteer leaders and advisors supported by many parents
come under the junior fair whereas schools as such are handand
friends .
ted under the senlor fair. The dHference Is the voluntary
There are many things that can be said about a fair . Certain
nature of membership.
people
have to accept responsibilities m an event of this
Every smgle deparbnent of the Me1gs County Fair has
supermU!ndents, volunteer workers, and lllose that promore and magmtude m a short space of lime and dec1s1ons must be made

Free meal policy announced

WASHINGTON - UNTIL &lt;(ONGRESS makes the next move
In the battle with Prealdent Nixon over social spending
RACINE - The Southern,
!i"OgralllB, the Health, Education and Welfare Department Will • Me1gs and Eastern Local
not use $1.8 billion In health funds already authorized, according School Districts have anto documents obtained by UP!. HEW also Withheld the same nounced a free meal policy for
amolUit from family planning, mental health, biomedical school children unable to pay
research and school programs opposed by Nixon last year.
the full pr1ce of meals served m
"Eaaenlially what we are trying to do Ia to provide enough schools under the NatiOnal
funds to penrut states, localities and other rec1p1ents ~ HEW School Lunch ~;~nd School
funds 10 maintam the staffs which administer these programs Breakfast Programs.
until final decisioll3 are made," Acting HEW Comptroller
Local school off1c1als have
Charles Miller said m a memorandum to Secretary Caspar W adopred the foUowmg family
Weinberger_
size, mcome scale for use m
With Nlx111 under a senes of court challenges for trying to deterrninmg eligibility
suspend or dismantle programs be regards as wasteful and lllFamily Size, Parents,
flatlonary, HEW baa taken a go-Blow spending approach to them children and others listed first,
until Congress acts on the President's new $29.8 mllllon request mcome scale for free meals
for HEW m fiacall973-74. The current Houae vers10n of the bill second -1- $2,740; 2-$3,600; 3
IDta1a $3U billion.
- $4,460; 4. $5,310; 5. $6,100; 6 $6,890; 7- $7,600; 8- $8,310, 9$8,960; 10. $9,600; 11 . $10,240;
12 - $10,880, and Each A~
dltlonal Family Member, $640
Children from fam1hes
whose Income is at or below
that shown are eligible for
meals In addition, families not
meeting their criteria but w1th
other IDlusual expe113es due to
~musuaUy h1gh medical expenses, sheiU!r costs m e.cess
of 30 per cent of mcome,
!Jpecial education expenses due
to the mental and physical
condition of a child, and
disaster or casualty losses may
also apply
They may do so by filling In
the
application forms sent
Pur1na Stock Spray Spec18liB made w1th two powerful
klllere to knock out many atrams of flies resJBtant to
home With a letter to parents.
one maecttc1de Prov1dee long·lastmg repellent act1on
Additional copies are available
too, whether you dip or apray
'
at the principal's office In each
school.
The information
See us for Pur1na Stock Spray Special - a top spray
for cattle on range, p&amp;Jture, or feedlot
JrOvlded on the application will
be confidential and will be used
only for the purpose of
determining eligibility. Applications may be subnutted
Vine St.
anytime during the school
year.
In certain cases, foster
chUdren m also elig1ble for
these benefits If parents have
such children llvlng w1th them

HORN
FLY
PROOF

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with

Purina STOCK SPRAY SPECIAL

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J. D. North Produce Co.

Gallipolis, 0.

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HELD OVER FROM 1972

'

Priced Special To Go NOW

I'

NEW INTERNATIONAL 350
FORAGE HARVESTER
-'

••.

WITH l·ROW CORN AlTACHMENT

--~!!......:_,_____

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.,

"'

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&lt;

. ,,

...
•

I

l•o

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40 TON
PER HOUR
CAPACITY

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MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.
PIIONI 992·21~6

••

•

POMEROY. OHIO

.

,

and w•sh to apply for such
meals, they should contact the
school ln the operation of child
feeding programs, no ch1ld will
be d1scnmmated agaiost
becauss of his race, sex, color
or national or1gm
Under the prov1s1on of the
pohcy, the local supermrendent
of Eastern and Southern will
rev1ew applications and
determme eligibility If a
parent 1s dissatisfied With the
rulmg of the official, he may
request e1ther orally or m
wr1tmg to Robert E Bowen,
Meigs Co\mty Supermtendent

of Schools, Box 684, Pomeroy,
for a hearmg to appeal the
deciSIOn. Hearmg procedures
are outlmed m the policy and a
complete copy of the policy 1s
on file m each school and m the
off1ce of each local supermtendent where 1t may be
reviewed by any mterested
party.
In the Meigs weal District,
the apphcatwn w1ll be
rev1ewed by the bUJidmg
prmcipal with the distriCt
supermtendent , George
Hargraves, !l,ervmg as the
appeal off1cer

Krebs sentenced

Lay of the land
purpose of th1s meeting was to
discuss the feas1b1hty of
drammg the school grounds at
Hartford as well as some
nearby pnvate property
We were mformed by Whalen
that the Board of Educallon
had agreed to dram the school
grounds accordmg to a
feaSibility study made by So1l
Conservation Service ln May of
this year. A different outlet
was proposed and a feaSibility

fumlahlng1

)

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GRAM 01r m x1ng ftoM•
prodwc11 a cltarl, lll'lokt

lht a1r more tltaroughly before 11 mOHI into
P~o~lt

•

fre1, 1001 fr11 odorf111
flam• gl ott fir• ln1l1 to
aa.urt IIKIX mum htal frQnl

maJumum warmth from l VI/)'
mort rod1anl com fort al tht
mort ~t al on the IIQOr

f..,.! .,.11d

to

•o%

..

IXCLUSIYI :t·WAY
MIAY CllCULATION

and y011 10~1
on fut l bllht

1

OVIUIZI

Dhtrlbvtu on a bundant

,

~•II n~

tt:11p1 warm olr In
~ontlont clrcvlat'lon

"CIIICOMAnt

Provide~
drt~ft to

rtgulottd
tkt burur
- boiGnang ail 1:1nd .,
e~lr to CIIIUtt perfea- combwtloll
f111 ltvtiJ

011 th1 noor

on
to
to
of

'I
"

Achlolly lurM f~o~tf Otl ln,IO IJ
ga1 1'll•1 patenttd MONO·

RIVIRSI PLOW HU.T IXCHANOIR

11-------....J

ot
TilE

I

PHANTOM

A SIZE FOR EVERY HOME

'I

As Low As

YOU CAN BUY AT LANDMARK-

Everyone Can!

Pomeroy landmark
JACK W. CARSEY, Mgr. ~
Serving Meigs, Gallia, Mason Counties~
Open Mon.-Sat. Til6:00 P.M.
PHONE 992·2181
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __;,.:..,._..;..._ _""--'

....
LlT!'LE ORPHAN

550 scouts train
,..
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according to vel
COLUMBUS - Dr Harry
GoldsU!In, State Veterinarian,
dlrecta the attention to the
recent outbreak of Eastern
Eqwne Encephalitis occurring
In M1chigan and New Hampshire The State Veterinarian
stared this was not a new
-disease and horse owners are
advised to have their animals
vaccinared.
Goldstein slated the disease
has not entered Ohio but with
the recent occurrence In
Michigan there Is a sllght
posalblllty the dlseaae could
occur In Ohio. Thte Ia not a
disease that can be tranamltted
from horse to hOrse, but rather
as a result of bird bosl.l with
mosquito• as Intermediary
hosta. The mo1quito is a
common vector Infecting the
equine population,

500 lbs. of

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CALF CREEP FREE!

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••

THAT'S RIGHT 500 LBS. OF CALF CREEP

II
II

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FREE WITH PURCHASE OF CC-200 CREEP FEEDER.

l

SAVE '41 25
I

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THIS OFFER GOOD THRU AUGUST ONLYI

I

•

CENTRAL SOYA
'
OF OHIO .

_____.....

'

SfsGallipolls. Ohio

lrd &amp; Syctmort

'
A wltleso driver lo one who
hal blown blo mind.

Your Ftrm lupply Supermarket

"}'II be • men to
I rrt going lo

do or die
http them

through "
The Great Commendtr nu
written t'tl1 name
On lhe roll of H im who ga11e
His On I)' Begotten Son
Anc:l died that we might 11111
He ~a i d ttle debt to his country
lnt ef l ohtforrlghlheh~swon :
A~~o~~~ Kind Of K lnga hu
• Th
~u faithfUl one . well don e"
Idly missed by his
raren ts, Mr ltnd Mrs Aetno
lnd .lind his oran d po~~renh ,
Mr Edward Hoefli ch and Mr
and Mrs Emil Lind
8 26 lie
- -- - -- - - - - - - -

1. 1913. 10 00 1 mt On
ICC:ount of llln111 of
the
owner, tOick'l Ant ique $hDD
tontttd In Sllver tqn , w VI at
lhl I unction ot W V• $ tar ~

19~7

Stpt

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

KosCOTKosMEr tCSa.- WIG S MEIGS County native w1nls
acreaoe for retirement
Specials during August are
Bu ildings not Important Send
Koncentree, Mo is t Kate,
Jocat Jon and price to Box 729
Kleanslng Kreem , One Day
M In care of the Cally Sen
Sachet&amp;others Phone Helen
hnel Pom eroy Ohto
Jane Brown , 992 5113
a 22 6tc
8 2 ftc
YAR o -s~e-M ~daY-8n d

Tuesday on county road 19oft
Mw Rt 33· f1rst house on
right Good clothtng, odds end
ends
.,___
8 26 2tc
FOR your new HOME. Call
Roush Construction, Greg
Roush , Syracuse Oh io 992

____________
5039

8 26 ltc
• FOR your ROOF, Call Roush
Construction, Greg Rou sh,
Syracuse. Oh10 992 5039
8 26 ltc
PIANO and organ lessons by
graduate of Cinc innat i
Conservatory of Must c
Gerald Hoffner, Phone 992
3825
826121 &lt;

-------------Auto Sales

1968 CAMARO at P S , 2 door
Ht Will sell wholesale Phone
992 2444
8 26 31p

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

WANTED
CHIPWOOD
POLES
MAXIMUM
DIAMETER
10" ON
LARGEST END

NOW AVAILAaL&amp;

Be In Bullneu For VOcurself
Full or Part Tlmt
DISTRIIUTOR NE EDED
NOW
To tU PPIY and ltndct
company ntablllhad ac
counts In ~our locat area for
I he
WORLD FAMOUS
DONNA LEE COMPANY
No ulllng exper lenc:t
rtQu lrtd 11 company wil l
!urn
0\ltr
comptny
establl&amp;htd •ccounts located
In drug , var ie ty , super
merktf5 end discoun t storn
Prof it poll'"tlal 11 \llrtu•llv
unllmltect S98 and more for
eech day worked 11 e very
conaer-vatlve estimate.
A S3,.&amp;98 secured Inventory
Investment puts you in an
e&amp;tebllshed business right
now
WAITE TODAY
( lncludt phont numbtr)
DONNA LEE COMPANY
noN J1ck5on Street
Media, Penna 1fOU

'-:=========~
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u-s

POSTAGE
STAMPS

WE

l Secure Locations
2 Place
Mit ch mes

on
Location
3 Furnish Supplies
YOU .
1 Put In Stamps
2 Take Out lhe Money
3 Keep 20 Pet
4 51 795 SIO,OOO Work ing
Caplfal Required 100 pet
Refundable
Send Name, Address, Phone
Number , References to
Postag, Stamps, Inc 300
lnferst•te Norftl, H W Su•te
328, Atlanfa, Ga 30339
(404) 423 4439

PRICE

P AND J HOME
MAINTENANCE
&amp; REPAIR

Roofing.
Spouting,
Porch Repair, Complete
Home
Remodeling

Hea hng - A1r Cond .
~ ,..fnqeratton
Plumbtng ·
EleCfriCdt Appltdtllh Auto
Atr Cond - Reslden tt al or
Commerctal
215 N. Second
Phone 992-3509
24 Hour Service
Al l work guaranteed

CONSTRUCTION

For Free Estimate

Ph. 742-6271
Dick's
Hoard House
"STRIPPERS"
We Sfrlp Paint, Varn ishes,
liilc from Furnlfure
Anllquoa-Modern-Melals
No ruinous lyes or caustlc:s.
used
Pick-Up Service
Avolloblo
We Bur, &amp; Sell Antiques.
D ck Seyler-Owner
Kerr Sl
Pomeroy, 0 .
Phone m .2798

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
992-2094
606 E. Matn Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

For Rent

and ( - - )

SLEEPING room tor rent Call
992 7244
8 26 Jtc
ROOMS by the week , SIB up
Meigs Inn , Pomeroy
712tfc

FURN ITUR't-"'
Slop In and See Our
Floor l?i~!a L

ANNIE

•I'
•

U'l, ABNER

992-2550

SEPTIC TANKS
CLEANED
DUMP TRUCK
24 HOUR SERVICE

ASK US ABOUT
PRE-FABRICATED

VtOOD TRUSSES
Bull! to Your'$pecs
Delivered lo Job Silt

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.
77:1-5554
MaiOft, w. v•.

Real Estate

2-14'

--------------______

We.talk to you
likt .a person.

'•

0.

JOHN TUCKER
R:t 4, Pomeroy, 0
992-3954 or 992-7349

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

GRAVELY
tRACTOR SALES
-

J

Middleport,

MODERN
SANITATION

FALL CLEARANCE

WMPO.tl390.

Pomero~

SERVICE

-----==--------

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

Ph '992 ll74

ALL -WEATHER

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

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Siding - Spouting
Remodeling
~ Plumbing
Heating.
Complete
Building. Vinyl &amp; Aluminum Siding.

$7.00 Per Ton

OHIO
PALLET CO.

From thtt
Bulldoz.er Radlalor to tt,.
.~mauesr Heller cor• .
Nalhan Btgps
Radtator Spectahs1

ROOFING

PRIVATE meetmg room tor
any organizat ion , phone 992
SpeCJahsl
3975
Employment
Wanted
Wheel
3 11 tfc
Allgnmen1
3 AND 4 ROOM furntshed 11nd EXPERIENCED painter, In
terlor
and
exterior
Call
Don
unfurn tshed apartments
Van Meter, 985 3951
It Mus!
Phone 992 5434
DELIVERED
8 2 301p
4 12 tfc
Be Rtght
or we will
TO
FUR-NISHED apartment
Make
tl Rtght.
Phone 992 3901
Pets For Sale
8 i66fc
MOBILE home space Baer's PARKVIEW Kennels Poodles,
Market, Syracuse
1 toy male and I fema le
Phone 99'2 540
8 26 tfc
a 4 Jo.Da••v. 8 12 ....
7 15 tfC
In
lhe
R H Rawlings Sons
Open Monday through
2 BEDROOM mobtle hom i
Bu11d1ng
.
with patio , Ra cine Cal l
Frtdav 7 a m to 8 30 p m
For Sale
,
.
_99_2_2_I_Ol
___
M
__uld:::..;le::,po.;,r--I,:..O:.i.,l '
Albert Hill, 949 2261
1
1J11 Old Rt. 33
8 24 6tc 7 ROOM house wllh bath In •
Rutland. air conditioned , ELNA and Wh it e Sewing
Phone 992-2689
carpeted, gas furnace, dish
Machines
service on all
MOBILE home space in
washer , double oven range, makes Reasonable rates
Pomeroy, Ohio
Syracuse PtJone 992 5858
double gerage,large carport, The Sewing Cen1er , M1d
6 21 tfc
4 acres. cleared and fenced, dleport, Ohio
11 \6 tfc
small barn and other
buildings Phone 61-4 742 6834
---,~
Help Wanted
Mobile Homes For Sale
r5:30 ttc .. "AUTOM081LE Insurance been
BABYSITTER needed fOr firSt \4 x 65 TRAILE:f~ , 2 be~room, -------..----L-cancelled"
Lost
your
grade ChH d. between J 30
very good condlt10 Phone 773 7 ROOM house In Chesteb large ~q e{afor•s llcens~ Call 992
P m to 12 ~0 am m my
5805 .
2
sun porch, basement, natural
home Inquire at 13.4 But
a 22 tfc
6 15 If
gas, forced air heat Chester
c
ternut Ave In Pomeroy
before J JO p m
s 26 2tp ,-----------:---- ·-T P water, also, dril led well - - - - - - - - - -- - - - Wo!!lklng distance of business NlEGLER Building Supply for
FEMALE-hel;-wan led tor
Air Cond1t1oners
area. school and churches on
building houses Call Cv
large Jot Approx 1mately 2 Nelgler , Racine, Oh10
Gau l's Shake Haven, Chester,
Awmngs
aues, large garden Gordon
8 21 10tp
Ohio Reference preferred, 18
Ridenour , Phone 985 3573
- - - - - - - - - - -- - years or over Inquire tn
Underpmnmg
person , no phone calls
____________ .!_ 26 61 P
For Sale
a 22 4tc Complete mobtle home
3 BEDROOM home, ll\1 83 ACRE FAR:M, gas , water, 6
service - plus gtgant 1c
MALE or female desk clerk, display of mobile homes
lng
room r
kitchen
room house In Langsville
must be able to ltve in Apply
and bath , sto rm win
area
Phone 992 3530 or 742
In person at the Ohio Hotel. _always available at
dows and doors . air
6675
Mtddleport
8 19-IOip
conditioning, take over FHA
B22 6tc
peym ents, new addition ,
MILLER
Syracuse Call 99'2 7452 or 992 "ffiCE6 roo;- house -;Tt"h bath
MA N -~ lo r-reta il-;t-;-;,- wIth
and steam heat, Union Ave ,
2023
sales ex penence InQu ire at
MOBILE HOMES
8 26 3fp Pomeroy Calf 992 2962
'ngels Furniture. Mtddleport
8 24 31C
No age lim It
1220 Washtngton Blvd
3 BEDROOM house l!h baths, 1
8 21 61&lt; 423 7521
formal dining room , 1 living PAG EVILLE Oh io Includes
BELPRE, O
room . kitchen, family room , 2 house, 4 rooms down , 1 up,
CENTRAL DIVISION CON
car garage, full basement, on garage, workshop, and ap
SOL IDATION COAL COM CASH paid tor all mikes ani acre lot Located In Rigos proximately 111-l acres with
PANY , Immediate openings models of mobile hOmes
Crest Manor Phone 992 386J young orchard 1 block. east of
are available In the following Phohe area code 614 423 9531
before 3 p m and ask for Mr
A:t 692, $10 500 Information
positions
Maintenance
413tfc
Ingels
at
house
Foreman (underground ), ----- - - - -- - - -- - 8 26 tfc
8 12 lfc
Ass.stant Mine Foreman
!underground ) , Sec lion For Sale
STORY home m Syracuse, 3 BEDROOM house on Lmcoln
Foremen,
Mine BEAUTIFUL Walnut Stereo - 2 Approximately
2 acres of
Foreman , Surface
Reclamation
Hill , living room , kitchen,
land
,
J
bedrooms,
11\l ln o bath
Fore a p
8
track
tape
com
radio,
and utility room , extra
1
1
m n ersons app Yno
blnatlon , am fm radio, 4 room, dining room, kitchen
large lot over 1 acre Has
and pantrv on first floor wall
sho,~lfdl hllold valid (fOorel m) an
speaker sound svstem
dr iveway
$13,000
Call
cer ca on papers h o or Sa lance $105 49 or use our
to wall carpet. basement has
Sunday
after
12
noon,
on
ha'Ye sufficient experience to budget terms Call 992 3965
outside entr~nce, 1s paneled "weekdays after s p m , 992
apply for State exam !nation
and
has
second
complete
3247
Salary Commensurate w•th
8 22 tfc
kitchen In basement and
E)(perlence
Excellent - - - - - - - - - - - - 8 5 ftc
Benefits TO APPLY Write WILKINSON small engine sates second bath, attic paneled,
could
be
fourth
bedroom,
or
Phone
Personnel and service, 820 3rd Stret,
convenient bu ilding
garage and other out build lngs LARGE,
Dept~~rtment ,
central Middleport Lawn mower and
lots
at
Rock
Springs Area
with space for 3 cars 20
Division . consolidation coal
chain saw repair Free pickup
restricted for houses only
m
tntues
from
Gavin
Plant
Company , Cadiz:, Ohio 43907
and delivery Phone 992 3092
Tuppers Pla ins &amp; Chester
Can be ~asH y financed
Telephone 614 942 4512 AN Also Briggs apd Stratton end
Water available Call or see
8 26 3fc
Bill Wltt1 1 992 2789
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY Tecumseh pariS
pntc
EMPLOYER
8 22 30fc
8 21 tfc G'ROCER Y- business for sale
Building for sale or tease
WAN'fEO
Parttlme
Phone 773 5618 from 8 30 p m
babysitter from l D m to 6 30
to 10 p m tor appotntment
p m and Wednesday night ~
3 20 ftc
Call 992 7115 after 6 p m
8 24 31C
CANNING
Tomatoes,
cucumbers. mangoes, and
Wanted To Buy
cantalopes Gera ldine
CORNER cupboards, wall Cleland, Racine
7-31 -lfc
cupboards, chests, old guns,
any condition Also blue
decorated stoneware Write
POMEROY - 2 bedrooms, nice
P 0 Box .u, Martinsburg ,
ABOUT 3YEARS OLD
kitchen, oak floors, gas furnace,
Ohio, 439J5 or call 1 484 4440
TUPPERS
PLAINS - 1 floor
basement
and
large
lof
after 7 p m
8 8 90ft
plan, 3 nice bedrooms wllh
FURNISHED
Ml DD LE PORT
Near closets, modern bath, kit
SPORTSPAL CANOE
NO 1 Copper, 60c, Radiators.
chen with range and oven,
schools,
2
bedrooms
,
large
30c, brass ~ 20c , batteries. 90c
L1sl S334
kitchen , nice bath , front and lots of cabinets, carpeted,
each , clean, dry Ginseng
roots, S60 alb Yellow root , s~ .
back porches Asking only carport, electric h..,t JUST
SALE •280
Moy apple, soc per lb M A
517,000 00
$8900 00.
Hall. Reedsville Call 378
RUTLAND
1-12'
NEW
HOME
6249
3
nice
bedrooms
with closets,
3
BEDROOMS
Bath,
storm
1 31 ftc
SPORTSPAL CANOE
doors and windows, double sink. nice kitchen and din ing area,
WANTED
for
auction,
built-In slove and oven Electric bath, full basement with
List S295
household goods Tools, most
heot Nice Ia! Just SIB,SOO 00 shower, storm windows and
enythlng of value Will buy or
doors, electric heat, 51 acre
TUPPERS PLAINS
SALE •250
1111 on commission Will haul
Sl8.500
00
NEARLY
NEW
Nice
2
Call 992 335&lt; or 992 2792
GOING BUSINESS
bedroom home, bath, sliding
All Fishing
Hayman's
72S tf c
glass doors, bull! m range All Showing a nice profll Good
Rods&amp; Lures
OLD furniture , oak tables ,
clean stock
Excellent
electric, carport and ni ce lot
clocks. Ice bous. bran beds ,
location
A
gr..,!
future lor
515,000
00
or
complete
dllhes
20% OFF
someone
Soiling
due
to Ill
REASONABLE
household• Wr Itt M D
2 BEDROOMS - forced air health COME TO THE
Miller, Rt 4, Pomeroy, Ohio .
We have pltnly of rilles &amp; furnace , nice bath , front porch OFFICE . NO PHONE
call 992 6271
5·13 tfc shot guns In stock - Also and large lot Only 54,000 00
.
CALLS PLEASE
ommunltlon and hunllng
5 ROOM COTTAGE
NEW LISTING
license.
MIDDLEPORT
2
$100 00 - Pe• acre for 60 acres In
Lebonon Township, on good bedrooms . Bath Dining
room 1112 story frame . Some
After Sept I We Will Be gr~vel road.
SOON THINGS WILL BEGIN storm doors and windows
Closed Thur.
Porches La! 100xl25 Asking
TO ROLL HERE IN THE
Open Mon , Tues &amp; Wed.
COUNTY HAVE YOU WHAT $5,500 00
8-5 30
YOU WANT OR NEED WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
Closed Thursday
BEFORE ALL THIS HAP- ALL TYPE PROPERTY,
Open Frl &amp; S..! 8 8
LIST
TODAY
3
PENS IF NOT COME IN AND
ASSOCIATES TO HELP
DISCUSS IT WITH ONE OF US
WITH THE SALE OF YOUR
PROPERTY
HENRY E. CLELAND,
BROKER
ON YOUR DIAL
511 E Mlln
992-2159 • '
Pomeroy, Ohio
If no •nswtr f92·2561
Phond 192 2975
... -~

•

Business Services

WHOLESALE

I)ISTR IIUTOIUH I P

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

'

Disease could hit

true

Viftnam
hit. country
br•ve end

CHEYROLfiT Novo , •lx
cylinder, automatic: ~ rac:llo
Pri ced rt:tllontblt &lt;;all 985
3&amp;?• cnn1'er
8 2• 3tc
Routt 56 &amp; I 17 ti'ut fnllnw lnn 1961 oooG E Potara . Jake ovtt
payments plus SIOO or $1,?50
mtrchandlu will b1 told
Brtu • Bed , Sh ow Can· , cuh Phone 9927836
I 2A lit
w ..hatanct, l plano ttoolt,
mIlk
cena
depru
.......
11on oteu, chine werd,
Lost
2 pit Sifts ,
2 record YOU CA N WIN S.IOO You c1 n
PIIYtrt, Rocker, 9 Olllemg_a
liel p a former resident past 92
Coffee Grlnc:ltr, Sellers
vears Of age Jocatt a case
K lichen Cabin I
Pic ture
w1t ch w ith the lntll111 M L
J:r am~t• f lrQn wart, antique
F ~ on back lid P/'lone Mra
Coat Huter , sword , • metal
Wood1,
992 l.t89
beds, 3 oak rocker&amp; 1 Pede 1 tal
8-26 He
Round Table, Walnut stand,
Brass Kettle, Cernlval Rose \25RiWA R0fo77ttur00f or
Bowl l - 12Gal StoneJif , 2 In for mation leading to the
library tables, Dlnn1r Bell , 2 return of a 12 Inch female
Bullets, 2 Aladd in Lamps 2 beagle stolen or ltrayed from
Cherry Chest of Drawers , '2 county road 13 last Mondo!ly
Telepnone BaKeS Glass Jars, even ing Call H2 .&amp;111
Books, • Clocks, tceboM, 2
8 2~ lie
oressers, Ch erry Bed Wagon
......
Soot. Walnuf Gla!S Door
Cu pboard , Other Cllrnlval Wanted
gtus
MAIO , apply In person HI
trunks, Small
!Ston e Stone
o\lal Jars
TopsJ7, BAR
Ho Bar . Middleport Equal
Cedar Chest. 4 Guns Hall
Seat. 4 Oak Dining Cha lrs
opportunlly employ@r 8 26 6tc
Ca$h Registe r, Insulators,
Wood Heater , 2 pocket wet
ches Manyartlclesnotllsted , WANTED &lt;At all 11mesl wood
chips, gran cli ppings, and
Pick. Trlenc:l, Owner 1 Terms
leaves For our organic farm
cash Not Respon sible ror
on Leading Creek Roed (near
ac ci den's Food available
Karr's Farm l ill II Items may
Sale bV the Bradford
be dumped free at Q:Ur farm
Auction Company, Ra cine,
John Mohler At I, Box 210
Ohio, A c;:
Bradford ,
Middleport Ohio, ~hone 992
'f~~t1~ne~er C C Bradford , 3911
B26 31p
8 26 He

ANTIQUE AUCTION S.turd•V•

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

I
0I

m order to attend Camp
Arrowhead, McCray reported.
McCray states that plans are
now underway for the '74
summer season at Camp
Arrowhead and to dare some 25
lroops have made reservations
for a highlight camping experience.

p F C

Thomu A L.tnd who ~au tl la
ll le for ftlt St1r1 and Slrlptt

of Am Brice In
Augu1t 2,, )961
He
htlfd the cell Of
4 nd 1nawered It

Bu~n~ Opportun~

Notice

Real Estate

Prices Start

t

HUNTINGTON, W Va Tralmng m Scout program
skills was e.perlenced by more
than 550 Scouts from 40 troops
of the Tr1-State Area Council
Boy Seoul.! of America, at
Camp Arrowhead thiS summer, as a part of their yearround campmg program,
according to Richard McCray,
Council Campmg Chairman
In addition to the troops that
used the o111door training
center at Camp Arrowhead, 7
lroops made trips the! took
them to such areas as Greenbo
State Park in Kentucky and
Sherwood Lake In West
Virginia
The Scoutmg council was
also represented at the
National Jamboree, held
at Moraine State Park
In Pennsylvama, by 90
~£_me_ Scouts_ and 10 _leaders
mainly from the Ashland,
Huntington and Point Pleasant
areas
"All of these types of camping experiences are hlghllghta
for the program of our troops.
Scouts learn and apply the
skills they have been dreaming
about all year, and It's a year's
worth of adventure compressed Into a week or 80 "
MCCray said.
'
AI a part of the council
camping program, a total of 20
needy Scouta were provided
financial asslatance by local
organlzatlona and individual..

In MemOIJ
IN ME!MQRV or Marin•

12 ctnts per word thr •
•
consecutive lnurtlons
ll cen ts. per wc*d SIX' con
IICUN\It lnsertlona
25 Per Cent Discount on pa l tt
ads and ada Pl ld with in 10 days
I
(ARI:)OFTHANKS
. a OIITUAR'flt
$1 iO tor so word minim um
EJich tddltlor,el word lc
•LIN DADS
Addlllonal 25 c
Ad vert latment &lt;i harge per
OFFICE HOURS
Notice
8 30 a m to s 00 p m Dally,
8 30 a rn to 12 00 Noon PAINT
lNG eMperienced, roofs
S.• I urday
specialty Phone 992 2239 for
tree Utlmate
8 U 6tc
~rd of Thanks
-------------WE WOVLO like to lhan k tho YARD SALE Monday and
Tuesday on county road 19 off
end neighbors ,
1frlends
new Rt 33. first house on
Minister Kenneth Eberts ,
right Good clothtnv , odds and
Foglesong Funeral Home and
J&gt;rew Webster Post 39 for ends
8 26 ~tc
'Their kind wards and con
slderatlor, during the loss of - -- - -AUcTioN____
pur father and grandfather , MONDAY , Sept 3, 1973 10 30
'Carev. H Hysell Your kind
a m For hea lth reasons the
~ esses and considerations will
personal properh In the
long be remembered Signed,
Frances Stitt home at the
rhe Hysell tamlly
~wer corporation line of
8 26 ltp
acl ne, Ohio 9n St Route
Will b6 sold G E
wEWisH- totxP7eSSOUr sin 124
Refrigerator
. May lag
~tre thanks to our relatives,
A
u
tom
at I c
Washer,
frlends
,
and
neighbors
for
1
Dehum idifier , One Gale Leg
fbelr kindness , sympathy, Tal:lle,
Trunks, oil !amos,
prayers , visits , beautiful
Chest of Drawers 4 desks,
floral offerings, food and
Beds, Pic tures. Old Lanterns
money during the Illness and
Hand
Tools of All kinds, La wn
death of our beloved wjfe
Mower, 2 Davenports, Serve I
sister, and aunt Special
Gas Refrigerator, Maytag
thanks to tlu Doctors and
Wrtnger Washer , 2 gas
nurs!IS ~f the Holzer Medical
heaters. severa l Antique
Center, the R:ev Robert
Chairs, Dishes , some
Buckley, the pallbearers , Oin1ng
Ironstone,
Marble Top
Ewing Funeral Home Gerald
Dresser, Sectional Boo kc ase,
Powell, organ ist, and the Stands
BeQdlng, 2 TV s.
1
Ciass of 1934 You have
Electric
Fan , Aluminum
everlasting gratitude The
Ladder , Cedar Chests,
1Family
of Mary Smith
Kelvinator Deep Freeze ,
Schaefer
Ele ctr ic Sewing
S1nger
8 26 lip
Machine, 2 Pedestal Type
Round Table, Old Rocker&amp;,
Col
lection of Stone Jars and
Notice
Jugs, Other Dressers, Wood
Filing Cab1net. 3 Metal Ward
MEIGS SENIORS, Make your
robes, Book case with Books,
~_ppolntment now to have vour
2 Vacuum Cleo!!ners, Office
S-ENIOR PORTRAIT Ioken
Chair, Step Ladders , Items
Oates for taking MEIGS
not listed Terms cash ,
S1eNIORS are Aug 22, 23, 24
Frances Stitt, Owner, Not
a~d 25, and Sepf 1 Take
Responsible for Acc idents ,
advantage of Special Senior
Sales bv Bradford Auct)on
Prices for these days only
Company, Racine. Ohio, A c
Call GROVER'S STUDIO ,
Bradford , Manager c c
Middleport, Ohio Phone 992
Bradford, Auctioneer
2.75
8 26 He
8 1 22tc

' MAGIC Mil II 'IURNil

wmlgrl lhrgughll\!1
ll•ln1 ll'ltl cl ~ cur
hemt Htat yau can tnt
ond '".,.-whtlhtr yau rt
tlandlnv, tiHing or loungi ng

eaSier
There are three sprmgs
the farm that he plans
eventually develop so as
have an adequaU! source
water for h1s livestock.

5 cents per Word one lnserllot
Minimum Chan~t He

gra1ned or rich fh.1twood v•nylclad cobtnets a~e hand10mely
htghllghted with ,;old anodl1ed
alumtnum to blend !With the ftnlst

t~•

:~er:a~:e~~ss:t~
make the reclaiming process

-.ATE$
F'or Wl l)f Ad Strll lct

Smart decorator-des•en walnvt·

unolo contendere" to an m·

WE HELPED E F Legg
With a Conservation plan for
his farm off Jerry's Run Road
near the Southern We3t
Vu-gm1a Beagle Club Mr. Legg
bought th1s farm a year or two
ago and smce then has been
devotmg b1s efforts toward
restormg It to a grassland
farm When he got 1t, 1t was
grown up wtth brush, briars,
and vines.
He bas also built some fence
w1th the thought ln mind of
putlmg cattle on the farm to

f

I&gt;

Drainage study continuing
study IS bemg made of thisposs1b1hty
LESTER .LITTLE on
Thirteen Mile Creek across the
hill from Arbuckle IS repau-mg
a farm pond Th1s pond was
built m the early '50s and since
that t1me has become
deterwrated as a result of
groundhogs or muskrats
digging along the overflow
pipe Th1s burrowmg allowed
water to flow along the outs1de
of the pipe and subsequently
~lowed the earth to fall m.
Th1s partly dramed the pond.
The repa1r work Involved
consists of mstaUlng another
overflow pipe w1th an antirodent and anll-seep collar,
ll_!ld the filling and repacking of
the f1U where 1t had washed
away The Western Soil ConservatiOn D1str1ct is doing the
earth moving Denver Yoho of
SCS planned the repair job

Th
rl htt 1 Pul)l!lhtr rhervn the
d D 0 tdlt or reltct any Ida
'::red Obtecllonal
The
1 0u ther w ill not be retponslble
ln;errl~~· than ont Incorrect

BEAUTIFUL CABINETS! LUXURIOUS TO':rAL
COMFORT! SAVE UP TO 40% ON FUEL \'IIILLSI

biQnktl g( hea t llwtf l~t
lloor1 111 ~..Mdt I oar to

By John Cooper
Sod Cons. Service
HARTFORD, W Va - We
met With Cllarles Black, mayor
of Hartford, Mildred G1bbs,
prmCipal at Hartford School,
Michael Whalen, Mason
County Board of Education
office; Griffin Boggess, Mason
Co. Farmers Home Admn
Representallve, and concerned
c1t1zens of Hartford The

• tcctptwd vntll9 • m ror
Dat at Publication
R OULATIONS

)

&lt;P~&lt;H~It\M

"'o"1°,.'1,'tm~N

! ~M.Oay BtfOr'l PubiiCIIIon
C onda~ Otldllne t • m
'
Wllr~C'IIIIIOn - Correcttonl

America's Great Oil Heaters

PT PLEASANT - In Mason
County Circuli Court actions
Fnday, Judge James Lee
Thompson sentenced Johnny
Lee Krebs to one year m the
Mason County jail and a fme of
$1,000 upon hiS earlier plea of
dictment chargmg negligent
homicide
Also 10 court actions Friday
JUdgment was granted to
Lievmg Plumbmg and Heatmg
Inc. against Dlllna Bosworth m
the sum of $936 44 with mterest
and costs.
A divorce was granted
Cbmline DeWess from Marvin
DeWess

1

,~.,r)'bcl&lt;ly wQrklnM with the lair tries to mtke right dedal0111,
All In •II cases, tli~NiareliiWIYI twQ aides The declllona may be
favorable to some an(l unfavorable to othen Unforlul!ltely ,It II
difficult, 11 not impoaalbl~, to rilake declah!lll which are pleaalna
to all people. This Is one of the unfortunate U\lnge.
The same Is true In placing of exhibits. A judge Ia hired, II
selecli'&lt;l, or one volunteers He or she makes the beat dec:lalon
possible accord1111J to his undentandlng, hla training, and )be
~hiblt he sees Another judge at another time under 41ffe!'ellt
conditions mlghl make a different decision
1'his Is one I)( the \eii8Qns of competition. As one of our looi!
time showmen staws, " II yOu don 't want to run the rllk rA lOIInil
you had better not exhibit "
We believe the competitive aspects of a fair help our youns
people and aduiL!i learn io be better competitors and more willing
to accept dedslons
In the livestock field ever since fairs were organlzed there
has been llle question of how meat animals are judged. For
example, do you judge on the basis of the amount of milk a cow
w1U produce or hew she looks as she walks in the ring.
These questions w1ll never be settled. Some yeara and some
decades judges go more towards commercial aspects. Other
times they so more toward appeara nee
The fair ls a great Institution in our competitive society. It
proVJdes many different things to many different people, If It
helps one boy or one girl or one'man or one woman to' develop In
thm ability to Jive In our society then It is worthwhile I
Much improvement has been and conlnues to lle made by
volunteer work. Thb year the new bleachers for t~ sheep and
sw1ne judging ring and also used at the meat an~l sale plua
additiOnal gates and platforms for sheep and swine pens were
built by volunreer labor The Agricultural Society fuhllahed the
materllll The FFA boys and their instructors cut the lumber.
The FF A and Me1gs County 4-H Shepherds Club m~bers, adVIsors and parents
the construction

})

-Sentinel , Sunday, AuK. 26,1973

'

EXPERT
Wheel Alignment
*5.55
On Most Amencan Cars

- GUARANTEED-:Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto J
Open 8Ttl 5
Monday lhru Saturday
606 E. Mam, Pomeroy, 0

1-..:..:.:..:::;_:.::::::.:.:...:::;::~:.:..::;.o...,.~

EXCAVATING Dozers, Ia ge
and small. Backhoes and
loaders on track and tlr,s..
Dump truck - La boy atr
\lice Septic tanks Installed
Geon1e
Pult1n1, phone
992 '2478 CbliD
or 99 '2 7402.
2 9 ttc
SePTic--TANKS- AROBie
S E W A G E S Y sTeMs
CLEANED , REPAIR:EO
MILLER SAN IT AT I 0 N ,
STEWART OHIO PH 662
J035
10 ~ tfc
SEWING MACHINES ReJJalr
servrce, all makes 992 2284
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
Authorized Singer Sales o!lnd
Service We Sharpen Scissors
3 29 tfc
FOR: FREE estimates on
aluminum siding storm
Doors and Windows, Car
ports, Marquees and Railing,
Phone
Charlei
Lisle,
Syracuse, Ohio Carl Jacob
Sales Represe"tatlve V v
Johnson and Son, Inc
6 22 tf&lt;
-------------DOZER and back hoe work ,
ponds and septic tank$, dlt
Ching service top soli, fill
dirt ,
limestone .
B&amp;K
Escavatlng Phone 992 5367 or
992 3861

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

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

9 fife

--------------TIME to check that oil or gas

furnace for winter Dirty
furnaces cost fuel and could
tost a life Call P &amp; J Home
Maintenance 992 3509, 215 N
Second, Middleport
8 23 301C

READY MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to your
project Fnt and euy Free
estlmafes Phone 992 328•
Goeglein Ready Mix Co ,
Mlddleporl, Oh io
6 30 tfc
SEPTIC TANKS CLEAN!D
REASONABLE rafes Ph -.6
4781, Gall ipol is, John Runel1 ,
Owner and Operator
5 12 lfc
C BRADFORD, Auclloneer
Complete Service
Phone 949 3821
Racme, Ohio
Crill Bradford

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

5 fife

EXCAVATING, dozer loader
and backhoe work , septic
tanks Installed , dump trucks
and lo-boys for hire ; will haul
fill dirt, top soil , limestone
and gra..,el , Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers. day phone 992 7069 ;
night phone ~92 3525 or 9,92
5232
I
211tfc
OPEN - Roger Hysell's Gar
age near Crossroads on st
Rt 124, all mechanical work
Including automatic\ trent•
miss ion$ Monday Friday ,
1 30 a m to .S p m Saturday
- 8 30 fo 12 noon - unltu QY
appointment Phone 992 56.1'
or 992 7121
' ·25 JO!c
DEAD- s TOCK=-Wii17.." .....
et a ri"asonable chl! 1,1 Call
245 55 ..
• 23 tOte
ll'OELL- WHEEL- Allgn;;;tol
located &amp;t Crossroada, Rl. 124 •
now bo!!Ck to work Cornptttt
front end str¥1ce, tune up •nd
bra"' nrvt&lt;:e
Wtleela
balanced tlectronlctlly All
work guar~nteed R111onablt
rates Phone 742 3232
l 18-ff,
-~'--RON SHEPARD. Floor, Wall
~•modeling , Cor em le lilt
bathl Box 280, Rufllnd 743 ~
3664

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

1·21•tfC

---.----------MOBILE homt rtpllr l!ltc1

trlcll plumbing •net hHtlng.
PMnt 992-SUI
1 IS tfc
HARRISON 'S TV ltrvlr• on•
llrv lct ctlll PhOIIt 9fMU2 .
M ·tlc

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

----------'

�II- The Sunday Times

Sentinel Sundav AuR

26

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
For Sale

For Silt

'ER~Y

MILLER Mob e Homo
Sa tt hn 1 ot to offer when

you start

no tor vour

I~OPP

Mobile Home You can beat
you
h1v1 on your home the t rst

1 l~t ~lgh dtprtc allon

two y11rs by lhopplng tor ~
lite model Ultd Mob le Hom I!
Her• are some every da y low
pr c;:es 60 x 12 Atlent c 3
bedroom U 495
60 x 12
Otlrolter lntw) ss 99l 46 x
10 Armor 2 bed oom $2 495

50 x 10 Rego 2 bedroom
S2 9t5 60 x 12 Champ on 2
btdroom U 495 60 x 12 PM c
- txtra sharp $4 995 65 x 12
Forest Park J bedroom
Sl l9S 52 x 12 R chardson
bttutlful U 495 60,.; 12 Ne w
Moon 2 bedroom $4 495 60 x
12 Monarch 2 bedroom new
$7 795 a super va ue at ss 795

Tht'* are most y all

ate

model homes end the pr ces
ncludt your de very and

camp ete set up So tor an

hontSt to goqdneu good d&amp;ill

stop n today at Berry M er
Mobile Home Sales 705
Farson St eet Be pre Oh o
phone 423 9!31 c osed Sun
dlyl
8 23 6tc
FReEzE"Rc O.il for s.&lt;-c.
Ph p F sher at 9A9 A41 or.
• come to he f rst house n
Ani QUitY
8 24 Jtc
:NOBLET wood f n sh car net
for sa e Horn and case n
exce lent cond tlon Ce 992
239l
i
824 3tc

------ - ----\969 FOLD DOWN lenl cam

r.ceer

slnps a 3 burner stove
bOx canopy
n good
cond lion Phone 992 1378
8 24 3tp
\----

--

1912 BEN ELL Enduro A I
cond ton S200 949 2225
8 24 3tc
GREEN upha s ered p atform
rocker Pr ce SlO Ca
992
310l
8 24 3tp
I

H P LAWN and garden
tractor $17l Phone 173 5867
8 24 3tc

1959 MACK Tractor good
runn no cond ton T res very
good Call days 992 2689
even ngs 992 2941 or 992 3301
8 24 8 c
1973- Zig Zag sew no mach ne
Th s mach ne da ns em
bra dtrs overcasts button
holes
A I w thout
at
tach menta Pay ba ance of
$38 so or pay $5 per month
Call 992 5331
6 10 fc
EXCELSIOR Sat Works E
Main St Pomeroy A k nds
of sa t water pe ets wa e
nuggets bock sat and own
Oh o R ver Salt Phone 992
3891
65 tic
NEW sola o~ds sofa by day
bed by h ght Your cho ce of
colors while they ast on y
U9 95 Pomeroy Recovery
622 E Man St. Pome ov
Oh o Phone 992 7ll4
8 2J61c

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

WIN AT BRIDGE

Easy spades
misplayed
NORTH (D)
+ASS

23

of Thanks

Card

BRUS H HOGS
992

phone

4Xl I

me

W SH
and D

of me

1 lS fc

----------

---- ----ANT QUES FO R SALE

3

p ece F ench Love Set~
1
h gh pos er
oom se s - 1
pl nea pp e a ved ch ppen
da e desks hea v v car ved
cente ab e ga me tmd ca d
t ab es
b ar y li b e Ia ge
god eaf p erm rro ov e 8 fl
ta
amps car ved Bu t r
sec r eta a desk w h book
case op round map e chll
cli!lwfoot able find can e
bottom c ha rs Rosewoo d
Square G an tS neway p ano
f noe car ved Jovesea and
char a Qep nedr y s nk and
man y othe
ems A o d
p1eces and n good cond on
W se separate or as g ou p
W
shoW by appoln m en
o al 1 304 422 61 29
8 26 6t c

GA S furna c e w h blow e
e eel c counter top r: ange
and oven Ca 992 2377
8 26 lip

-----------BABY S TTER MIJ SI ha ve own
t an sporta on

-------------Lew s Sm lh R
- -----------

and
ca

Ca

446 3797
99 6

BA BYS TTER fo 2 year old
boy n o a ound R. o G an de
a ea 5 days a week Phon e
245 5095 o 2-45 5582 eve n n gs
99 4

8 26 3 c

KNAflP shoes new fa
w n er st y es now ou
992 l324

202

Wanted
AGED ady waniS room bat h
an d mea s n p Iva e home
Ca
M dd eoor 992 5Bd9 o
w e Bo x 01 M dd epor
20 3

-

3 WE.EK OLD wh te faced bu
ca f wh te faced he er ca f
964 p ckup tru c k
B too
boot
8 26 3 c

Kay

------

- ---

H &amp; N da y o d o star ed
L eghorn pulle s Bo h f oo o
cage
g own
ava ab e
Pou ry
hous ng
&amp;
automa on M dern Pou ry
399 w M a n Pomeroy 99 2
2164
8 26 It &lt;

lhll "k Or Pa e son
Kemp t o he ca e
w h le
wu In Ho zer

Wanted To Rent
2 BE DR OO M ~o u se or apar t
m en
lor Sc ou
execu ve
mov no to th s area Ca 523
Jd08 Hunt ng on o w l e n
ca e of Tr bune Box 280
99 6

912 YAMAHA motorcycle 2S
cc ess han 500 m e.s Phone
992 5 Ol
8 261 p
......

992 6 8S

o

R obe 1 S Be l

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

Help Wanted
REL ABLE sa es adv 0 WO k
n Bakery Prete age 2 o 50
nu Sunday work
Pa d
ho days p us
nsu an c e
App y n person M stead
Sake y 234 Th d Ave
98 If

,-------------1
1

f

puehl

970 BSA 250 Ca
Ca I 985 3919

af er 2 p m

Jt•••

I

L--------------1

NEW 1973 z g zag
mach nes n o g na ac o y
ca on Z g zag to ma.ke
bu tonholes sew on butons
monog ams and make fancy
des gns w h us the tw st of a
s ngle d a Let n ay a way
and ne\ler been used W II sell
fo on v S47 cash o terms
ava abe Phone 992 2984
8 26 6tc

DAY CAR E

STROUT
REALTY

World-\ Larg&lt;!st

r----- ------,

-- - ------

---·-----

------ --

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

--------

-------

INVESTMENTS We have
RU SS S GLASS Se v ce g ass For Rent
several business and rental
fo a needs spec a z ng n
3 ROOM apt unfu n shed S 5
propert es for sale Income
w ndsh etds
m ro s
Phone 4d6 066 or 446 46 8
f gures can be g ven o
p ex g ass resc een 704 Pine
193
R o Grande 245 50-48
qua f ed buye s
----------~OO tf -M--0- B
- -L- E
- -h- o--m
-e ·o--n--R--3-S
- -ura
COUNTRY HOMES- We have
water and rash p ckup w
TWO WA Y RadOS Sa es &amp; be ready Sep
seve al Some w th acreage
Ph 245 5028
Se v ce New and used C B s
and some w lhout Pr ces
20
3
po ce mon tors an ennas
-------~sla I In !he low teens
e c Bobs C zen Band Rad o
FURN
SHED
apa tmen
4
FARMsEqu p Gorges Creek Rd
rooms and ba h f rs f oo
DAIRY FARM - 163 A close lo
Ga po s Oh o 4d6 dS 7
$1 25 man h ·U6 3844 afte 1
Rio Grande so d 7 rm house
22
pm
goc:id bi!Jidlngs
arge lob
ba~ pond frontage on 3 rds
stand ng crops go with farm
Look ng for a mob le home
LECTA - 135 A 35 A farm
lot or a qual tv. mobile home'
ground 1 860 lb lob base
[ We have both at
516 500

NOI.ll'IOS

QUAIL CREFK

SUNDAY AUGUST 26 1973
ACROSS

EAST

+Void

+JlOU
•Qs
t9633

.K!Ot83
t107U
+10983

29- Lad e
13 - Food sh

1:n-Towt n1

22- G be ween
23 - Man s name
25-Hawa an w u h
2

- s

ke o

-c

ok

89-

Ce

3

+H2

ow

.2

+AQ
None vulnerable
Nort~

1•
Pa11
Paos

Pall

3+
••

Pass

~ntn1lead

By Oswald

Rodney '-ura Ra
Rodney Oh o
Hou s 9a m to9p m
Monday thru Saturda~
Ph 24l 9374-245 S021

.

tAKQJ

3 ROOM and ba h furn shed
apar men $ 50 Phone .446
6 5 0 446 12.. 3
202 t

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

:----------

Pass

+LO

&amp; James Jacoby

A plamt1ve letter from Flori
da reads 1n part
I am sure
tbat I have read 1n bndge books
and newspaper articles that
when you hold the three top
honors m trumps you should
play a h1gh honor from the
hand w1th two of them when
you start to lead the sUit
I won the club lead played
s eep
my kiRI of spades and had to go
&amp;J
Wo
m
down one smce West showed
6 - Poseo o po a
out
Was! wrong or were the
books wrong or maybe was my
partner wrong to raJSe me w1th
just three trumps?
We llanswerthelastques
Uon lust North was r~ght to
raue 1mmed1ately to three
spades
Now for the second question
The books were not wrong
Give North the 10 mstead of the
eight of spades and our corre
spondent would have made the
book play because tf both oppo
nentJ followed he could cIa 1m
if one showed out he could h
nesse agamst the JaCk 1rrespec
live of where twas located
F1nally our correspondent
was wrong He bad no wornes
lfDieSS all four trumps showed
up m the same band He could
dO nothmg but go down 1f West
held all four but 1f he started
by )ead1ng a spade to the ace
and West showed out he would
be able to lead lw1ce through
Eut s jack and 10 and make
the 1r10d slam tn sp1te of the

bad break
,_.,.,Afl£111 ENTEAPA SEA.SSN

DOWN

at doorways b gh and fluffy
aga n w th Blue Lustre G c
Murphy Low e S ore
202 6

CARTERS PLUMB NG
AND HEAT NG
Co Four h &amp; P ne
Phone -446 3888 or 446 4477
I6S tf

abb

6 - Me a

----

- Pt
6-H se y

0 N E of the f ner h ngs of fe
B ue Lustre carpet c eane
Ren e ec c shampooe s a
G C Mu phy Co
S ve
B dge P aza
202 6

9-Heb ew e e
0- Gu des

HOU SE 6 rooms and bath 2
storv 707 Th d Av enu e 446
0322
202 If

------

Tbe b1ddlnc hat been

r..
r..

Nri
1•

:tiP
SNT

!oat
Pus
Pu•
Pan

n.t.,..._,
Yoa Soallt llold

•4111 U tn tH

+A I Jl 7

A-,111 YM lilt .. , ... wl"
. . .,. - · ..... 1111,.. ...,.ld
_ , _ , . , ll"tJc&lt;'pt.. l

184 II

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

DEWITT S PLUMB NG
AND HEAT NG
Route 60 a Everg een
Phone 446 2735
187 tf

--- .....

Ph

oom s

"!-~l--f3

!i'i+--11--t

I

Ga a
94 If

BEDROOM 1972 Mob e home
nen c ookware a r con
d tloned e ev s on furn shed
W II ren to 3 men $20 a week
ea ch SSO depos
equ red
Ready 992 3S09 M ddlepo
Oh o
46 If

Wanted To

----------

SE PT C tankn e o~~ ned ser v ng
Gal 41 and Ma son coun es
Fu d ep en dabl e se rv ces
George Plants own e Phon e
615 5049
157 tf

__

-- -----

STEWART E ectr ca Serv ct
Repa r hou se w r ng
e ec tr c heat nQ Phone 446
4561
211 II

Centr•t Air Cand I on ng
&amp; Heilflnt
Free Estimates
Stewarts Hardwlre
V nton Oh o
1d4 tf

SEPTIC TANKS
c eaned and nata ed
Russel s P umblng A-4' 4782

BACKHOE DOZER
TRENCHER
CALL Jackson 286 ~5 24 A
types of backhoelng sept c
tanks tooters etc A so a
types of
t enchlng water
nes gas lines etc
87 II

29711

----~-

G LLENWATER S SEPT C
TANK CLEAN NG AND
REPA R
ALSO HOUSE
WRECK NG Ph 44t9099
Estab shed n 19.40
169 II

- NSTALL- a um n;-m S dlng
gu e s
downspouts
awn ngs storm w nQows and
doors Free es ma e Cal
361 0128
189 26

ALBERT EHMAN
water 0e1111ery Servl ~ e
Pa rot Stll Rt Gal lpo 1
Ph 319 213'
2&lt;3 tf

P &amp; J odds and ends shop Used
turn ure and g fts 21 5 N
Second M dd epa
74 30

BANKS TREE SERVICE
FREE est mates I ab v In
surance Prun ng tr mm ng
and cavity work tree end
stump emoval Ph 446 4953

TI!OMAS FAIN
EX TERM NATING CO
Term te &amp; Pes Contro
Whee e sbu g Oh o

1311

-----

-

-

..!...-

MOTORIST MUTUAL
INSURANCE
THE best nsuranct at the best
pr ce
For auto
home
bus ness ~Jnd fe Rmy Hawk
agen 446 2l00 541 4th Ave
150 II

REfR GERAt ON
a
con
d on ng plumbing elec
ca auto a
cond on ng
comp e e home ma ntenance
24 hours serv ce P &amp; J
App ances 2 5 N Second ~
A11e M dd epor
114 30
LAYNES Potable Wedng
ce 1 f ed p essu e pip ng
ce t f ed structura s ee
we ct ng a um num He arc
Ph 446 3470 24 hour ser11 ce
19811

-1--

DEAD STOCK
$5 00 Serv ce Charge
W II removeJour dead
horse an cows
lisll Jackson 286 45~1

CABINET Shop a I types of
wood work 01 Court L_Street
187 tf

The Shop
' r.ustom meat cuttmg"

·-·-...
I
0.'- ',
'i
---..:. -. -~

Pleasant R1dge Road
POMEROY OHIO ~

OICI&lt; &amp;
really
know
how to cut ""

CUT

WRAPPED

1

FROZEN

TO YOUR SPECIFICATION
1\ ck Vaughan
9923374

FOR
BEST
BUYS
65 X 12 GRA YWOOD

3 BEDROOMS
Fronl kitchen cathedral cell ng house type
door rear jal door house type sliding win
dews 30 gal water heater 2x4 studs 2x6 floor
!Olsts on 16 center hum cane t1e down UL:
approved

Do

--

ATTUtTIDN VETERANS - Gl Loans ava I able no down
payment with approved cred I

·----------

...,.._________ - - -

RENT A MOTOR HOME
FOR YOUR VACATION

.-

- T"E"R. iiTe'P"EsT- co"iiriDL
F R E E lnspec: tiOI'I Call 446 3145
M err
o De
Operator b'll
ex e m na T m te Serv ~; a
0 Be mong Dr
261 II

H OLLE Y B os Con slru c l on
bu doz 110 bl!lt k hoe work
d ch ng under road s bar no
Phone 245 50 8 o 245 5006
18 f

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

--..,.,1--f

DR Y WAL L urv Ct bV con
r ac:l Willa d Boal ey 44'
4954
282 tl

Sleeps 6 camp ete prima y
nsurance p ov ded Rates 120
per day on weekly basis
CLOSE OUT SPECIALS
S.v"al Travel Trailers
12&amp; 13 Fl

&amp; up

Economy Motor Sales
&amp; Rentals
Motor Homos &amp;
Travol Trailers
1401 Easlern Ave
Ph 444 1425
200 II

-- ----

-----

------------UPT012YEAR
FINANCING
WE SERVICE
WHAT WE SELL

Many Other
Mobile Homes
All tiOor Plans

Wantatl To Buy
WANTED - G pung $65 per
lb Go den Seo 14 SO per b f
the market ra lei 10 w my
P ce Cut th • ad o
end
save Dea er 1 prlcu paid for
th • w nter Lawren ce Me
Cu touoh Eut L.lverpoo
Oh o 43920 Phone 116 l85
1832
2•o 3

50xl2 to 70x14

2 &amp;3 Bedrooms

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

CORNER cupbollrds
wilT
cupbOard• chlilt o d guns
anv cond ton A so b ut
det:orattd atonew•rt Wrltt
P o Box u Mart 111 Ferry
Ohio 43935 or ca
~u 4440

""" 1

111 If

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

2 ROOMS end both all pr volt 55 H P or arger o~o~tbolrd motor
Adults only Phone 446 0370
Ph 256 6821 lfttr 2 30 p m
200 3
198 6

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

m

Locust

St

992 7004
Oo"" R to 6 Mon thru

Middleport
Sat

Cally Blo 6 ICiottd Sundays) c..,.tn ~&lt;nytfmt by
Conl•d Oao ThompSOn "' Tom L1vonrl•r

SOLD I LAST WEEK -

WE NEED

•9
~

I

3

-Z

OHIO RIVER

i

WE NEED LISTINGS

Q
vt

s

OFFICE 446-3643

~

EVENINGS CALL:

I;J

•,.

E. M. "IKE" WISEMAN 446-3716

~

E. N, WISEMAN 446-4500
BUD McGHEE

~

!

446 1255

M

~

I
"'O::I:IN:";IM':'""~-~li~I~IM~1~SV~1~8-0-10-S---S-~-N-I-1S_I1_0_J_J_N..IIM

;

Our Specialty Is Selling Your Property.

MASSIE

REALTY

32 State St
4461998

Realty,

Tel
25 LOCUit St
Howard Brannon Broker
LUXURY LV NG
LOWER
I 011 446 2674
R VER RO
- 8biO rms all
Lucille Brannon
br ck 1 f r 2 2 ba hs 2 F p
Eve 446 1226 or 446 26'4
deep c osets ned w h cedar
A PICTURE WINDOW
a I carpet d eam k tchen
W TH a v ew worth beho d ng
has d sposa
double .s eel
You I be enchllnled by h s
s nk d shwesher b ender
up to them nute ranch home
gr nder and m xe
bu
n
w th everv modern con
oven
refr gerator
end
ven ence
Inc ud ng w w
freezer
This home has
carpet a dream of 1!1 k tchen
qua tv p us wa k out of the
w th p~t o doors In he d n ng
mas er bdrm and take 1!1 d ve
;~~rea 3 n ce BR:
l!lrge v ng
n the poo 20 x 50 Located
room garage and a well
on
A I eve ot w th r ver
cared for
awn
Owner
v ew
eavlng town Price S24 500
SCHOOL DAY SPECIAL
MERCERY LLE - 2 bdrm
$ 9 ~0 W LL buy this com
frame house w h bath N ce
pletely rem ode eo two sto v 3
lot and good ocat on Can be
BR home w w carpet up o
bough I for $8 000
date k tchen and aundry
forma d n ng room large LOWER R YER RD
S rms
covered pet o front porch
and ba h n good epalr 2
cl!lrport deep ot 100 )( 75
storage bldgs and oceted on
shrubs and trees alt th s lust
1 A eve lot Ideal for the
m nutea from town Call soon
gardene or a Tra er Park
t won t last ong at h s
Only $13 900
prlco
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY IF YOU don t be eve
- lust
Come n and d scuss with us
cal and see what can be
N ce lam ly dea nels S2S 000
bought for 12 ooo 3 BR
annually
beau+ fUI k tchen w tl) a the
extras deep pi e carrot n CROWN CITY
Cheap
LR
laundry carpor and
housing 5 roooms and balh
storaoe we I landscaped awn
I v rm 12 x 19 H W floors
120 x 65 this home has
storm doors and windows
centra a r and on v 6 years
od
This n ce home Is on y 8 yrs
PERFECTION
old and s In good repair II
AT $26500
has a utility bldg 8 x 16 and
NEW rancher - centra a r
localed on 52 A ol Priced
carpet throughout n ce eat n
for a quick sale at $12 900
k tchen 3 B R. w th cedar
c osets attached garage w th
concrete dr ve ot 100 x 85
WHI EAVE -4 nice rms on~
ocated nee~r town
bath Lol 100 x 100 Pr ce
CROWN CITY
$1 000
2 BR and bath kllc~en and
dinette utll ty room oil
1969 Kirk
furnace HW f oo s carport EVERGREEN wood Mobile Home with 2
dr ed well A so a l room
rms added located on 1 • A
end blth on rear of lot ent ng
tor 135 Lot Is 11 x 80 Pr ced
flat land Use either good
at S20 000
drilled well or Ru al Water
DIAL YOUR WEATHER
Pr ce $12 700
A CHARM NG 3 BR: rancher In
West ~eve lopment al bul I In
k tchen and din ng area push ADDISON - 1 mile off Rt 7
beaullful rambling 7 rm
carpet n LR and ha
gas
furnace and centra air
frame Ranch on I A lot II
garage and aundrv Redu'ced
has everything all carpel
to $23 500
over H W firs cen air F P
ELEGANT LIVING
n rec
rm N gas heal 2
TH S s the home that w
balhs
u
rm
1S x 26 and a
we come the large fam ty
kllchen the Mrs wl I ove Low
The huge p ayroom s wa ng
taxes and good schools All of
for chi dren o en loy t a
beaut ful eat n k chen \'!lith
lh s for 132 500
double oven and att the ex as
down to the efrlgerator 4 ACROSS HWY FROM AD
B R ~ bath fu I d v ded
DAVILLE SC - Beautiful 5
basement carpet throuonout
rm
br tk and frame w lh
deer lot cone e e dr veway
utlllly rm and balh large
Cal now to see h s new hOme
and move In before schoo
carport Located on ' A flat
starts
lol Pr ce reduced Ia 122 500
PEACE &amp; QUIET
IS WHAT you cou d have nth s ST RT 218 - 4roomhouseand
5 BR rl!lnch home just a
, A lot Only 16 000
m nute from town A de l uxe
k tchen
arge china and
FARMS
storage wal
n the din ng
71 A
Ap
area 011e s ze L R. oca ed on ST RT 218 l
acre ot On v S24 500
proximally
0 A Guyon
PLANT YOUR $All NGS
Bottom balance Ish
gent e
IN SOILI
Slope and 1 at 1 829 lbs lob
ACREAGE values have been
base sell 2 381 lb !his year
soaring Here s a good
buyer
gels half the 13
country home l!lnd 64 acres ol
proceeds II ha• a s rm
and A so 6 acres p us a
modern house p enty waler
eroe two story home a
remodeled end carpeted 5
good barn 60 x 66 wllh 10 cow
BR ond 2 bath
slanch ons Th sIs a good buy
DUPLEX
tor S21 500
DOWNTOWN edecorated 6
rooms and bath
storage
basement A so 7 room 5 and ST R"I.IIS - 80 A 10 m es
from town 8 rm house barn
bath sto age and basement
36 x 60 wilh concrele fir with
Good jnvestment o ve none
sheds added Silo 6 x 50
and rent the other
IRICK ~ANCH
Near new Badger Loader
3t.t ACRE evellot 3 BR carpel
Near all of 80 A s lractor
throughout spa~; ous lc. tchen
and It has a pond and
w th {range 1nd oven full watering
trough P ce only
basement
we
wa er
143 000
garage Kyger creek School
o str cl
VACANT LAND
COUNTRY Lilli NCO
TH NKJNG ol re r ng - or 25 A Level land at Rodney On
re axing n he coun r')l?
water line Price 135 000.
Plent'll roam for the ~;h dren
to r di the r horn 5 acres 9 A across hwy from Shrl ne
Racc~on bottom located near
ne
Club On rural water
T')ICOOM Lalc.e Two ato Y
$17
000
home f rst f oor comp etely
remodeled new root s d ng
f oors bat!"l and furnace HAVE BUYERS FOR GOOD
Barn Iaroe garage 30 X 36
HOMES CALL NOW
good fence
ANY HR 4~6 1191
WHAT A \1 EWI
A PERFECT Utt ng for a good
mob I 1 home one and one NEW br ck home ust com
third acre ot near new 2 BR
pleted 3 bedroom 12 bath all
1 ~ bath mobile home t!"le
cenm c tile tu v carpeted
k tchtn modern a:atomorrow
centra 1 r plenty of cab ne s
d n ng area laundry beamed
d shwuher d spoul • ectrlc
••, ulrn•g• cnarkp"t!hegno dbu'l~n~
range nice level ot located 6
f 1
"
ml es up Route 1 n Countrv
ch na
cab net
qu ck
Alre Estates
'!iqu re at
polltiSIOn
y
corb n &amp; Snyd~r Furn lurt
CINTINAR
Co 446 1111 After 5 col 4~6
NEW modu e home on good
2573
love lot 3 i!R I 12 balh
116 tf
comtortab e work ng k tchen - - - - - -- -- - - - - large I.R carpet throughou WORKERS ior San tat on
Coli IOdiY
- ______
11 W POY
Oepl
Dept
____
...___
Meehan
calWiler
Dept
Street
LUSTROUS country homt
Dept and Sewage reatment
"fproJ mateiY 6 m ltl North
plant
APP y
at
ty
Manager a office 5 8 Second
0 Pf. p aeunt Route 2
ctntrll hut no •nd cook no 4 Ava
bedroom balh and hall
198 6
acre of ground and mor1 f - - - -..... - - - - - - - nttdld
Shown
bY IP
po nlmtnl only 675 5 62 199 5

c

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

3 BI!O~OOM hOult IOCIItd 1
milo out Nt DhbOrhOOd Rd oft
141 Bot~ and II• nv room
cerpettd 1 ctr v•regt snack
blr ~ 110011 bU It n kiiChtn
In loll of cab noll 1 btdroom
~ellway and pori of
vlng
room pant 1d Central hUt
IOd A ( Appro• 1 11 ecrtl
WI!~ Olrdtn dog lol Wllh
hou11~ must stll Return ng to
IChOO 120 000 Ph ~46 1327
btfor 2 30 pm ....
916

_________ ____

PUBLIC
NOTICE
Wt 1tll anything for
enybody Iring your
lttml Ia knolls Com
munlly Auction lern
Corner Thlrd &amp; Ollvt
For IPPOintmenl att
2U " ' ' efltr
p m
5alt every Saturday
ovenlnt at 7 0 Clock

s

Realty

~

If you wa~t to sell your property, why not list with
Galha Co s largest Real Estate Agency

_______ ____

WALLPAPERING and Poll n
I ng Phone 446 9865 o 379
2471
8311

J&amp; W MOUNT
CLEAN NG SERVICE
GENERAL house clean ng We
supply a
he c ean ng sup
P les 388 8875 after 6 p m ca
_._
388 8865 weekly or mon h y
c ean no by appo ntmen
SLE E P N G rooms week y
9 If
ra es f ee oa age park ng
L bby Hole
sha pen no
s~ws
24 If TOOL
sc sso s shurs home and
g a den oo s Sharp Shop
API-\t( rv tNT to con struct on
A ey rear 47 Second
men Ph A46 0 56
2 6 If
267 f
TYP NG SERY CES Phono"6
.U21
192 2

z

eo a LAN IS
Camp
1t'
Boakkltplng and TIK
o P Mar t n &amp; San Wa er
Servin 424 1J• Plaurth Ave
o e very
se v ce
Yovr
K•niUII BullfttU by IP
pa ronag e w I be ap
po
ntm 1 nt
Ph
4"6 H 04t
p ec at ect Ph 446 0463
PIUII Clll lltlf f P m
2 f
71811
..,..

~~6

l --~---------------~202

I WE NIED LISTINGS -

Services Offered

RUSSELL 5
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
Gil I polls 446 4782
297 tf

LE home

Prtced $595

Willi

&amp;

Plumbing
Healing
GENE PLANTS &amp; SON
PLUMB NG - Heat ng - A r
Cond ton ng JOO Fourth Ave
Ph 446 1637
48 If

4- Enco need
5-Sa

PRICE reduced S 500 3 BR
home bu
n k tchen
ec
room fu
basemen and
ga age 2 blocks f om Ho zer
Med ca Center •46 3375 for
appo ntment
202 3

SAVE B g Do your own rug and
upho s ery c ean ng w h B ue
L.us e
Ren
e ec c
shampooe S at Cent a
Supp y Co
202 6

- --MAKE bea en down carpe nap

- R ppn
2- Wa ks ns ead y
3- he aama

ROOF NG end Spoul )no Sh n
g l el an d Bu dup Hot
r oofl
Fra t
E1t l
ma e - 26 yr txp•rl•nct
JIMtl Marc um vlnfon Qtllo
_ 3888
____
4 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..t,...6111

G 8SO N les Pau Jr E ct c
gu or Rep llOOno w I SQ 615
4848

Offered

1ST NGS
NEEDED
E!SPECIIALL Y FARMS
NATIONWIDE
AD
VERTISING PAYS
Ranny Blackburn
Branch Manager

COMMUNITY
&amp; SALES

33-Bod
35-S

+KQ9763

Wnt

Ser~~tes

Instruments

'

!!tontine I SWlday Aus 28 1973

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

NEARRI0 - 40A rollng an1
$19 000

MOBILE

a Ame can

28- Ma age
30-G s ame

SOUTH

I'

MuSICal

Sale

FE M ALE sa es clerk needtd
S~ N VALLEY NU •o Y Schoo
App ca ons be ng acup ed
cenud by Sl a e of Oh o
)
da v 9 t o S APP v w ll h E'd
m Its west o new hosp ta
w1 a Evans 1 1 Farmers
517 Sun V. t ey O r Ph Ad J6S7
Ha rd w a e l 0 2n d Ave
Oay ca e
ha
says
we
Ga ll po s: Oh o
ca e
Madge Hau d en
200 2
Owne
Lond h and John
Havl d en Opera ors
BASVS TTE R 3 even ng s a
• f
wee k on Georgel Creek Road
Phone ,.., 015•
BETTER obs e eave ab e to
200 3
GBC gradua te Enro now fo
rHE LEADER SINCE 1100 I~
he fa
qua r er Ga pO s
SERVING
THE NATJON S
Bus ness Co ege St~ t e No
BUYERS &amp; S EL L~RS
7 02 00328
Ph 146 0008
7l26 Immedia t e opening s 10
P M I II 6 A M shill Grill
BIDWELL 2 homes-one
FO R YOUR needs n Por r a t
cooks and wa1tresses good
new and the other a most
com me r e .s lin d w edd no pay work ng cand t1ons and
pt'l otog aph y ca
Tawney s
new Boih a
or iced be ow
hosplt I tal on vacation 18
Stu d o 446 615 Gal pol 5
rna ket va lue l!l ""1 6 900 and
and over Apply in person at
Oh o
$19 500
Bob Evans Steak House
WOOOS MIL L RD - 5 rm
modern home w th 3 A and
3 FA M L Y yard sa le M onda y
NSURANCE
$1~
700
Augus 27 9
1 ust one
INSPECTOR
m e ou an Ne- ohbo h ood
MM E D ATE
pa t
t me
Rd oft 41 C o h ng d shes
Open ng mu s hav e day gh NICELY REMOD ELE D 1 rm
oys and some an ques
home c ose 1o T ycoon Lake
hou s to devo e must be a $e t
20 2
with shade lrees and 400 fl
star t er and hatJ e decendab e
auto good supo ementa n
fronlage on a BT r d SI S 500
CLEARANCE Sft e on a
come
Reply
o P
0
ma e a Sa
h u Thu r s
Bo x
5187
Co umb us NEW LISTING - E UREKA 0 30 a m o 6 p m a th e on o 432 2
BEAU T I FUL 2 stor y home
Ho m es ead Shop n M
200 3
Ou e
Hende son W Va
w th riv er view has been
An n M cCoy own er
c ompl etel y remodeled and
AV ON e tor y snow op en n
202
ncludes 4 BR
ca pet
Ga pa s area wou d you
ke
o ca
on
Avon
modern
k
tchen
formal
M ENT AL eta da on g oup n
cus omen. Ca Mrs He en
d
n
ng
rm
larqe
rm
w th
Oh o s seek ng nformat on
Y e a~ e
J a ck~on 286 ~0 28
WB tlre pla ce and pa I
om pa s and present at en d
202 3
basement See th s one
an s o e a ded n S afe n
--,---_
s tut ons n Oh o To he p th e WOMEN tor day Sh ft Apply a
r etard ed ca
216 659 9858
Shawn s Or ve n n Add son CITY TAKE OVER MORT
om 6 p m o 7 30 p m
GAGE- $2 000 down qualities
or ph 2.45 5050
200 3
2023
you lo move Into this 6 m
home mmed ately
ASS STANT
ma nager
ex
per enced or we w
t an
Y a d fo em an exper enced OWNER MOVED OUT OF
county and s offering th s
Fo p ospe ous and grow ng
BOA RD your pe s at K &amp; P
ovely 7 rm home at a price
lumb er co
n mmed a e
Ken ne s 38 8 8274
you can f refuse Located n
area send esum e stat ng
200 l
qual f cat ons o ex per ence
an ce subdlv slon off U S 35
--~c--­
o Box 281 co Ga polis Da v
DEAD STOCK
RODNEY - MODERN RANCH
w LL emove a a reasonab e Tr bune
w th over an acre of land Th s.
cha ge Ca I 2d5 55 -4
4 BR home Is ke new and
featu es a 2 car garage :v~
baths air cond
laundry
rm
fam ly rm
n the
20 3
basement with a Ia ge stone
NEEDS LPN or r e ed RN o
f replace and bar
wo k n nu s ng home Can
ve n W e Box 313 Rt
MILLS VILLAGE - '14 acre lot
o on Oh o
conta ns more than you wou d
2013
expect for less !han $30 000
Fo mal
d n ng
rm
basement fami y rm
2
2oo 2 Camping Equipment
flrep !)ces are only a few of
S-W
--E-E-P
-ER·---------~STARCRAFT
the features Call fo ap
CLOSE OUT on a 973 models
po ntment
Salle $1 263 on 241 7 n Sa\le
S 00 on 22 f 7 n Save $975
on 20 f 7 n Sa11e $854 on 8 LOW DOWN PAYMENT New sect anal w lh Spanish
It 7 n CAMP CONLEY
decor s completely furnished
STARCR/IFT
SALES
Rl
62
WE HAVE a comp e e ne of
~ of Pt P easanl beh nd Red
and read~ to move nto If
wa ches and d amonds
c;a pef Inn Pt1o11e 675 5384
your cred t s good cal about
Compa e
ou
p ces
188
anywhe e Tawney s Jewe ry
th s one

t8

WEST

For

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

• AJ76.
+KJ7~

Estate

s

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

ELECTR.OLU X
vacuum
c eane A 1 cond on uses
paper bag s has co dw nder
and many a achmen s A so
shampoo attachmen
n
c uded.
on y -4 ava ab e
$37 70
cash
or
t e ms
ava abe Phone 9112 Y8 4
B '26 6 c

Real

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

your phone w1Jl Jin&amp;hl
clth ruulta" too wh.enJ
1 1 ou phce en
ect Dn lent I
1963 Mode 97 3 owe
ac o
1 Ad
You
can
ull
futn tu e
P S d ese S 300 Ca 843
lapp! •ncu c:lothu
do I
245
8 21 6tc l••n• of other unu . .d but I

B 1d tfc

llelp Wanted

Notlte

Hosp If'
A so o 0
Tom
Morgan D
Brandebe r ry
and 0
0 Ro u ke for the
conce n A great dea of
g at ude goes out Q a of he
Su r g ca l Staff who he ped
nc ud ng the Nu ses Nu ses
A des an d f s year nu ses on
Second F oor E as or he r
he p en d ca e
A
at
of
han k s t o
nnvmer
abe
peop e ..t o
t he r
ca s o my j'1u sban d and me
abou my cond on
canno t
fo oe he many r e at ves and
f ends who ook IMI
me o
se nd me encou r egem enl o
ge we bV send ng me ca d$
and f owe s Thanks from th e
bo om of m y hea r
Mr s

973 b 70 MOB LE h ome
w ash er and dryer d sh
washe sta nless s ee-l s nk
ge bflg ! d sposa eye ev e
ovtn olnue di!lcr on po yester
carpe arge lot Phone 741
308 3
7 8 f

__ _..,._.__

The Sunday r~nea

n-

1971

522 1361
186 ACRES (85 acres bollom
land) located 3 mttes from
Timbre
R dge
lake
deve opmenl Some timber
fenced 5 room house good 50
x 80 barn several other
outbulld ngs Less than 1300
acre
123 ACRES - Iocaled In heart of
Gallipolis bul ding area
Beautiful roll ng land 10
acres oft mber 6 room house
large barn and other out
bu ld ngs JusI $690 acre

Olcer Bai rd
Doug Welhtrholl
Brokers
OI C:Ir ti l r d
DOI.,It Wetherhol
•rakers
Of ct 441 1434
M LLS V LLAGE
Ve r y
ove y t hree bedroom br ck
home wllh fam y room and
den on m 11 n floor beau f u
CIJirl) e l hr OIJOhOUI WO bll lh s
wo I n tp aces cent a a
con fu t basement and r ec
room tnd a ta ched ga a~e
L ar ge Qua tv ho me w l h
cho ce oc a lon
TR I LEVH BEAU TV
PR YA CY w th 1 de ph ful
v ew ov er ook ng Ga l lpc s
c an
be
yours
w h
hll
OVOY
lh oo
bed aom hom e wth push
fa c t es
Forma
d in ng
room c ly wa e and schoo s
ctntra a r nn ft Anti hA I bo'l hi
p us.
a
po.,wder
room
carpet no on a arge o
Owner wl
t ade to
a
cheaper farm or hou se
THREE MILES OUT
VER.Y n cehome w th utra ot
near e ementa y Schoo on
state h Qhwav c ty water
large I v no room a ached
garage ceram c bath car
pet no e the h ng s you re
rooking fa
n a hou se us
outs de of town w th oom o
brea he
SPLIT LEVEL DREAM
TH S ove v home about f ve
m es from tne park has o s of
oom beaut tu bu
n kit
chen one and ha f ba hs
wa k n c osets furnace heat
400 squa e feet of I 11 no
area ust a ovelv home n a
beautlfu se t no
IN TOWN BARGA N
NINEroomhouseon a gee v
o
c ose to markets and
stores cou d be made no two
apa tments verv eas y A
one f oor furnace heat fu
bath hardwood t oors
NEIGHBORHOOD ROAD
NICE three bed oom se ctona
home n c ty schoo d s c
forced a r fu nace w ndow
a r cond toner and a n ce o
Good v ng fo on y S 3 200

130 ACRE farm Operal ng
dalrJfarm w lh young herd 60
hea Ho sleln callle lois of
equipment
new
m k
bu Iding 30 acres corn 12 000
worth of tobacco
Good
look ng land Remodeled 6
room house Wei localed Ius!
a few m nules from Gall polls
EUREKA
or Crown C ty Ohio Let us N CE view of he
ve w lh
giVe you all the details Ca I
h s hree bedroom home n ce
ba h furnace .hea t
ove y
Now
dln ng and I v ng oom w th
f ep ace ga age and abo o
WOULD PROBABLY VA
GOOD three bedroom home
w h ba h furnace new carpet
n I 11 ng oom ocatd c ose to
town on a n ce eve o

PANCAKE
REAL TYCO

SEVE R.AL good bu d ng s es
and acreage

l\1!111-.l II

Aller hours phone
Francis McGuire
Area code 6u 861 3725
Don Seely
Are Code 304 429 2631
J1m Scott
Area Code 304 525 9715

WE NEED s ngs f you have
a home or acreage o se o
ade ca Oh o R ver Rea ty
oday we
be g ad o he p
you
Even ngs Ca 1444. 4244
Steven Betz 446 9583
John Fu ler 446 4327

The WISEMAN
Agency
REALTOR
Bus mess Opportumty
FO R QUA L F lED PE RSO N
VE R Y
PRO SP ERO U S
BU SIN ESS
N GA LL A
COUN TY IS YOURS F VOU
ARE W LL NG TO WORK
HARD NCLUOE S LARGE
RE TA IL SEL L NG AR EA
LOAD S OF
ST ORA GE
SPACE W TH
LV NG
QUAR T ER S AT SAME
LO CATI ON OWNE R
S
RE T R NG AND W LL
HELP F NANCE
F OR
R GH T PER SON WE CAN
SHOW BV APPOIN TMENT
ONLY
FOR F UR f HER
N F ORMAT ON CALL US
TO D AY

BYOWNER
5acresonState
Route lot&gt;acco base rura
water and tap pa d cons de
land contrec1 to r ght pertv
co 446 2852
192 If
~A o
ta m Lau anoe
Ph 24ll320

~5

000
201 6

BV owner house on LeGrade
B vd 446 3798
201 3
NEW 4 bedroom br ck car
peted 2 h baths 2 car garage
Lake D
R a Gr~nde price
m d th r es ow nte est ra e
Ph 24S 5439
201
BY OWNER
3 BR home
bath near Spr no Valley
P ua M d 20 s 446 4315
200 3
_ ..1,.

- --

BY OWNER
3 BR
v ng
oom arge fam v rm arge
bu t n k tchen w h rltnge
and oven bath oom w th
bu t n cab ne s aundry rm
w th arge bu t n cab ne A
carpeted cen ral a
w th
hum d v con o
aro e
c ose s backya d fenced n
a ge pa o extra carpo t 2
d veways separate 2 ca
garage w h water and heat
a cove ga age f n shed fo
s or age shop benches and
too cab ne s bu
n ~ m e
f om c tv safe ne ghbo hood
for ch ldren 446 1903 or 446
992
BY OWNER - 3 BR b ck l h
baths
woad
bu n ng
f rep ace e eel c k chen
cent a a r 533 H da 0
Fa rv ew Subd v son 446
0999

3 BEDROOM house a car
peted neturl!l gas heat fult 7 ROOMS on ower Th rd Ave
beoul fu 70 x 200 ol NO
basement on v ved In 3
pets - NO ch d en S 75 pe
months has 3 ots for sale or
monlh Call 446 0160 ef er
trade Raymond Sm th 446
pm
3409
202 I
202 2

- --

MOVE TO A FR END L Y
NE GHBORHOOD ENJOY
THE FAM LY ROOM W TH
FIREPLACE
CON
VEN ENT
TO
THE
HO SPI TAL 3 BEDROOMS
VERY N CE KITCHEN
OWNER WOULD L KE TO
SELL BEFORE SCHOOL
STAR T S LOW TWENT ES
SHOWN
BY
AP
PO NTMENT ONLY
C1ty Water
Country L1111ng
2M LE S OUT 2h ACRE S
TO PLAY N FRONT NG
STATE HIGHWAY 3 OR 4
BEDROOMS
0 N NG
ROOM
BU L T N K T
L KE
NEW
CARPET
LARGE LV NG ROOM
LARGE
CLOSETS
STORAGE BU LDING
CALL NOW PR CEO TO
SELL
Excellent Family
Home
LARGE
FLAT
LOT
R ECOND T ON ED
THROUGHOUT
NEW
CARPET
FLOOR
COYER NG N KITCHEN
NEW PAINT OUTS DE
LARGE FAM LV ROOM 3
B R
BATH WITH
SHOWER C TV SCHOOL
0 ST
M 0 TWENT ES
CALL NOW
FOR AP
PO NTMENT
lmmed1ate
Possessmn
TRANSFERR NG N OR
JUST
LOOK NG
FOR
SOMETHING
BETTER
CENTRAL
A R
3
BEDROOM
BR CK
BEAUT FULLY
AP
POINTED
K TCHEN
CARPETED
LV NG
ROOM HAuL UT L TV
ROOM STORM W NOOWS
ANO
DOORS
2 CAR
GARAGE C TY SCHOOL
0 STR CT

Like New
EDGE OF TOWN ROOMY
KITCHEN
LOTS
OF
CAB NETS UT ROOM 3
BEDROOMS CARPET N
BEDROOMS
LV NG
ROOM &amp;
HALL
AT
TACHED
GARAGE
LARGE FLAT LOT C TY
SCHOOL D ST OWNER
MOVING OUT OF STATE
CALL NOW FOR AP
POINTMENT SAVE $$

40 Acres

5 Bedroom house w lh

Oh o R lver view brick dwelling with 3 lj R 1 12 beth
arge 1 v ng room and dining room all carpeted all cedar
c osets 2 flrep aces and planlor modern kitchen wllh bar
full base ment a r cond toned fu nace 3 por ches
garage c ty wate ol from h I to Oh oR ver
8 34 A and w th 4 B R home kitchen w lh cab nets 4
ctosets bath fuel oil furnace small cellar house 2 wells
garage Ira lerspace elec S T and water 20 trulltrees 4
outbu ld ngs close to Rio G ande p ce Sl4 200

TH S HOME S 3 BLOCKS
FROM C TY SCHOOLS T S
N
AN
EXCELLENT
NEIGHBORHOOO ON A
LARGE
SECLUDED
LANDSCAPED LOT ANO
YOU WON T BEL EYE
THE PR CE OF $23 900
INCLUDES 3 BEDROOMS
N CE KITCHEN LARGE
CLOSETS
BASEMENT
GARAGE
ANO
N CE
HEATED WORKSHOP T S
ONE OF THE BEST BUYS
N TOWN R GHT NOW
Best Buy
Of The Year
OWNER VERY
VERY
ANX OUS - MUST SELL
MMED ATELY TH S S
YOUR
OPPORTUN TY
FOR
A
BARGA N
4
BEDROOMS
F N SHED
FAMILY ROOM
CAR
PETED
L VING
AND
0 NING NICE K TCHEN
GOOD
NE GHBORHOOO
N TOWN OWNER W LL
HELP F NANCE SO DON T
PUT OFF SEEING THIS
ONE

TEAM$--CASH
Welch For Sign&amp;
Tommy Jot Sltwert
Gelllpolls Ohio
Ph 446 3941

L.. Johnson
Crown City Ohio
Ph 256 4740

\

See these and many more
We need land tor Sale Let
us work for you Ltst w1th
us for best results

soo

350 A and n Pe ry Twp county wale close by
00 A Perry Twp county water S 00 per A
A elec home fusl off 5 R S88 3 B R balh n ce kitchen
garage lot 95x 65 pr ce $1 000

On 3rd Ave 3 B R home modern kllchen 2 baths lois ol
c osets small basement gas
On 2nd Ave 3 B R home 1 ' bath close to C ty Bu ld ng
and w 1h n 2 c ty blocks of 5 churches
At Porter large lot with shadelrees several tru t trees 3
B R home noodern k tchen with d shwasher balh sma I
basement a r cond t on fuel oil furnace price $20 000

REALTORS

tllUSE fOR SALE

AUCTIONEERS
R VERFRON PROPERTY Ove 200 fl 1 on age on Oh a
Rver

6 room house at 131

NVESTMENT Be ween own
11nd hospital three bedr.oom
lurn shed home pus un que
Span sh sty e home dea for
off ce
Perfect locat on
Exce lent ncome p ope v

completely
redecorated One car
garage 1'12 bath 3 BR
beautifully courtyard

MOB LE home lots on State Rt
P me com me c a and on
R 35 Acreage n the coun
y Baby farms n R:accoon
Pe y and Green Twps
Owner w II f nance
FREE coun y maps
s ng
b ochu es
park ng Free coffee at
conven ent rea o on
R
60

F ee
F ee
your
Sta e

RURALL ST NGSneeded Any
s ze Any locat on We buy
se
tr'ade and auct on rea
es ate

•

1o

a

IIUU •

•

qQ6·00nl

Neal Reai!J
NEW LISTING
197065x12 SCHULT 2 BR mob le
home located on a 2 acre lot
aboul4 miles from town Th s
home has had excellent care
and has a r cond
storm
windows
washer
dryer
small storage building Wou d
make a good nvestment or a
nice home
The Neal Insurance and Realty
s now at their new location
The Ltbby Hole!
Off ce Phone 446 1694
Even ngs
Charles M Neal446 1546
J Michael Neal446 1503
SAM NEAL446 7358

TARA
OEVELOPMENT
OORP.

NEW
HOMES
FOR SALE

25 A Nelghbo hood Rd pr ce S5 000
OFFICE 446 1064
EVENINGS
Russell D Wood-446 4618
Ron Canaday--446 3636
John I R chardS-444 0280

Second fully carpeted

full length lot
Pnce
$25 700 Call446 2457 or
see Tom Tope of Tope
Furmture

Building
Site~
Ava1lable Klngsberry
Homes built to fit any
speclflcati(\I'IS
All
Underground Utilities

\

Provided

---------For lnformatton
Or Aopomtment

PHONE

367-7250
AddiSOn I)

PUBLIC AUCTION
Located 1 mole East of Jackson Ohto onto Old Slate
Route 35 Walch tor Pub he Aucl1on S1gns to be ereded
SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 1 1973
Startmg al10 30 A M
Cons sl ng n part of 3 Chevy 2 Ton Pickup Trucks
Corva r Dune Buggy Dynamark 8 H P 36
R ding
Mower .tinvlls Brass Wash ng Mach ne 1 12 Ton Chain
Holst Milk Cans Eledr c Fans Wicker Couch Eledr c
Power Plant Come A Long Railroad Lanlerns Cha n
Saws Tools of all k nds E eclr c Drills Hedge Tr mmer
Blacksm lh Vice Photo Developer Paneling Fuel 011
Wa I Furnace Glass Bock Roofing Used Lumber
Rotol I er 4 H P Wooden Boat Glazed Bock Sickle Bar
Power Mowers Abooga Horns Electr c Gu Iars and
Amp tiers Brass Kellle Wash Stand 16 ga Doub e
Barrell Sholgun Lafever 16 ga Single Barrell W n
chester Model1200 12 ga Pump Gun Hunt ng Bows Lon
Lawn Ornament (plaster) Slokermal c Coal Stove
Co Iodor s &amp; Ant que Items olher Items too numerous to
men! on A arge var ely sale Lunch will be served
Terms Cash
MR ED F WRIGHT OWNER
Daryl Alban
-AUCTIONEER$Kenneth Swatn
Oak Htll Oh o
Gallipolis Ohio
REAL ESTATE IS FOR SALE
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS
. . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ,
"

AUCTION
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1973

Building Lots
on Rt. 35.
Ca II 446·1997

ANTIQUE AUCTION

Portable elec cement mixer 60 cement bocks Rockwell
Band saw Mercury gu tulor wheel barrow e oc
hedge lr mmera etec wire efec boxes elec sw I
ches pipe fittings •mall lool• 15 alum num sheets
Polaro d camera ani que school desk• Tools of all
k nds

storm doors and w ndows
large rooms bath 40 x60
ba n with concrete floor
hen house corn cr b m
plement shed and others
Timber
Ask ng
only
s 650000

Farm 124 A t 1able 35 A 2 ponds some timber 1600 lb
T B barn 30x.40 3 oulbu l d ngs good tences and 3 B R
house carpet modern kitchen range w th hood fue o I
furnace storm doors and w ndows on S R 775 price
$31

Located ol ChtShfrt Ohio on Sovlh Fourth St

Chrome dlnelte sol sofa bed 3 occoslonal cho rs single
bed G E sweepar elec Iron humidifier refr gerator
Co dspol) elec add ng mochlne elec outdoor clock
rug shampooer hair dryer dishes lnens lays
fealher pillows antiques

2 Bedroom new bath front
&amp; enclosed ba ck porch
Lois ol outbu ld ngs barn
all m neral r ghls goes
Rural water system Ap
prox 12 15 ac r es t fable
w th tra ctor Asking only
S1 5 000 00

2 Bed 09m home w th bath
drilled well enc losed back
porch T mber ba sement
barn A steal at SIB 000 00

AUGUST 30 • 12:00 P.M •
ENOS HARRISON- OWNER

30 Acres

162 Acres

Locahon Is Most
Important

Ga lila Co s La rgesl Real
Eslale Sales Agency
Olf ce 446 3643
Evenings Call
E M Ike Wiseman
446 3116
E N Wl5tman 446 4SOO
Bud McGhee 446 125S

PUBLIC SALE
THURSDAY

POS N G T HE FAT H ER and his co1109e age son for a
p clure the photog r apher suggested ! hot the boy slond
w I~ his hand on his father s shoulder
If you wa n! II to look natural
sad the long
suffering parenl he could pul his hand In my pocket

Quick Possess1on

OUT OF TOWN N THE
QUIET COUNTRY
T S
ONLY 3 YRS OLO WITH
HARDW'DOD
FLOORS
CARPE'T
N
L V NG
ROOM 3 BEDROOMS UT
ROOM GARAGE RURAL
WATER SYSTEM ONLY 6
MILES F ROM TOWN 3
M LES FROM HMC
PRICED TO SELL CALL
TODAY

central a1r plenty of cabmets dishwasher
d 1sposal electric range mce level lot located
6 m1les up Route 7 m Country A1re Estates
$31 500 Inquire at Corbm &amp; Snyder Furm ure
Co 446 1171 After 5 call 446 2573

REALTOR 446-1066

Off 446 3643

Very Reasonable

New bnck home 1ust completed 3 bedroom
1 2 bath all ceramic hie fully carpeted

RUSSELL WOOD

Thursday Aug 30th atlO

oo A

M

In Bartlett Ohto 20 m1les N E of Athens or
m1les west of Manetta on Rt SOA

20

W II sell
wh le marble top wash sland !walnut)
brown
marble top wash stand (walnut) round lab e walnul dry
sink wa nut 2 d corner c upboard w th 2 glass Clarks
0 NT spool cabinet (2 nice bass bed s 1 Is a sle gh bed)
old h gh chair !mall leaded g ass s de boa d w eke
loveseat wicker rocker 4 pc oak bed oom sulle marble
lop dreoser curved glass ch na cablnel 2 pc walnut
cupboard secrelary sterling tlatware many artllacls 10
old do s n rough Iars lugs lois of glass china and many
Items not sled
HAROLD GODDARD INC

STARTING AT 10 A.M.
PaulL Berkley Rt 2 Letart W Va
Havmg sold my farm I w11l sell my machmery
at the larm on the 8th day of Sept
1973
D1rechons Go on Sand H11l Rd about 31/z m1
or to top of h11l past Rayburn Cross Rd f1rst
road to left at top of hsll Watclt for sale s1gn

Cherry Burrell
634 m lk cooler bulk lank ml king
machlno Universal 2 cans complete 1964 Rambler
Cia .. c 2 door good transportation Fairbank! Morse
hammer mill hand corn sheller Ford 956 modellraclor
recenlly overhauled New Holland 66 Baler Oliver 77
tractor In good work ng cond lion Oliver wagon on
rubber and good body New Holland 55 Hay Raka Oliver
Cu II valor 0 ver 2 bollom plow on rubber Ford I bottom
pow 3 pt h lch 01 ver 1 row corn p cker good work lng
cond ton 30 II elevalor 120 It liter carrier track no
bucket 6 bu ld ngs ch cken hse 30x8 II corn cr b 6&lt;1?~8
high 1 smoke hoiJ•e 12 xB 2 barns back of corn crib 5
room house near smoke houto Dlrtcllon&amp; From Ntw
Haven go to Sasofr11 Walch for till sign&amp;
LUNCH AVAILA,ILI!
COL JIMME SAYRE
AUCTIONEER
2145 Eatltrn Ave O.lllpolls Ohio
Phont U14) 446 :1444

•
~·

~~------------------~~--------------------~'
\

�II- The Sunday Times

Sentinel Sundav AuR

26

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
For Sale

For Silt

'ER~Y

MILLER Mob e Homo
Sa tt hn 1 ot to offer when

you start

no tor vour

I~OPP

Mobile Home You can beat
you
h1v1 on your home the t rst

1 l~t ~lgh dtprtc allon

two y11rs by lhopplng tor ~
lite model Ultd Mob le Hom I!
Her• are some every da y low
pr c;:es 60 x 12 Atlent c 3
bedroom U 495
60 x 12
Otlrolter lntw) ss 99l 46 x
10 Armor 2 bed oom $2 495

50 x 10 Rego 2 bedroom
S2 9t5 60 x 12 Champ on 2
btdroom U 495 60 x 12 PM c
- txtra sharp $4 995 65 x 12
Forest Park J bedroom
Sl l9S 52 x 12 R chardson
bttutlful U 495 60,.; 12 Ne w
Moon 2 bedroom $4 495 60 x
12 Monarch 2 bedroom new
$7 795 a super va ue at ss 795

Tht'* are most y all

ate

model homes end the pr ces
ncludt your de very and

camp ete set up So tor an

hontSt to goqdneu good d&amp;ill

stop n today at Berry M er
Mobile Home Sales 705
Farson St eet Be pre Oh o
phone 423 9!31 c osed Sun
dlyl
8 23 6tc
FReEzE"Rc O.il for s.&lt;-c.
Ph p F sher at 9A9 A41 or.
• come to he f rst house n
Ani QUitY
8 24 Jtc
:NOBLET wood f n sh car net
for sa e Horn and case n
exce lent cond tlon Ce 992
239l
i
824 3tc

------ - ----\969 FOLD DOWN lenl cam

r.ceer

slnps a 3 burner stove
bOx canopy
n good
cond lion Phone 992 1378
8 24 3tp
\----

--

1912 BEN ELL Enduro A I
cond ton S200 949 2225
8 24 3tc
GREEN upha s ered p atform
rocker Pr ce SlO Ca
992
310l
8 24 3tp
I

H P LAWN and garden
tractor $17l Phone 173 5867
8 24 3tc

1959 MACK Tractor good
runn no cond ton T res very
good Call days 992 2689
even ngs 992 2941 or 992 3301
8 24 8 c
1973- Zig Zag sew no mach ne
Th s mach ne da ns em
bra dtrs overcasts button
holes
A I w thout
at
tach menta Pay ba ance of
$38 so or pay $5 per month
Call 992 5331
6 10 fc
EXCELSIOR Sat Works E
Main St Pomeroy A k nds
of sa t water pe ets wa e
nuggets bock sat and own
Oh o R ver Salt Phone 992
3891
65 tic
NEW sola o~ds sofa by day
bed by h ght Your cho ce of
colors while they ast on y
U9 95 Pomeroy Recovery
622 E Man St. Pome ov
Oh o Phone 992 7ll4
8 2J61c

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

WIN AT BRIDGE

Easy spades
misplayed
NORTH (D)
+ASS

23

of Thanks

Card

BRUS H HOGS
992

phone

4Xl I

me

W SH
and D

of me

1 lS fc

----------

---- ----ANT QUES FO R SALE

3

p ece F ench Love Set~
1
h gh pos er
oom se s - 1
pl nea pp e a ved ch ppen
da e desks hea v v car ved
cente ab e ga me tmd ca d
t ab es
b ar y li b e Ia ge
god eaf p erm rro ov e 8 fl
ta
amps car ved Bu t r
sec r eta a desk w h book
case op round map e chll
cli!lwfoot able find can e
bottom c ha rs Rosewoo d
Square G an tS neway p ano
f noe car ved Jovesea and
char a Qep nedr y s nk and
man y othe
ems A o d
p1eces and n good cond on
W se separate or as g ou p
W
shoW by appoln m en
o al 1 304 422 61 29
8 26 6t c

GA S furna c e w h blow e
e eel c counter top r: ange
and oven Ca 992 2377
8 26 lip

-----------BABY S TTER MIJ SI ha ve own
t an sporta on

-------------Lew s Sm lh R
- -----------

and
ca

Ca

446 3797
99 6

BA BYS TTER fo 2 year old
boy n o a ound R. o G an de
a ea 5 days a week Phon e
245 5095 o 2-45 5582 eve n n gs
99 4

8 26 3 c

KNAflP shoes new fa
w n er st y es now ou
992 l324

202

Wanted
AGED ady waniS room bat h
an d mea s n p Iva e home
Ca
M dd eoor 992 5Bd9 o
w e Bo x 01 M dd epor
20 3

-

3 WE.EK OLD wh te faced bu
ca f wh te faced he er ca f
964 p ckup tru c k
B too
boot
8 26 3 c

Kay

------

- ---

H &amp; N da y o d o star ed
L eghorn pulle s Bo h f oo o
cage
g own
ava ab e
Pou ry
hous ng
&amp;
automa on M dern Pou ry
399 w M a n Pomeroy 99 2
2164
8 26 It &lt;

lhll "k Or Pa e son
Kemp t o he ca e
w h le
wu In Ho zer

Wanted To Rent
2 BE DR OO M ~o u se or apar t
m en
lor Sc ou
execu ve
mov no to th s area Ca 523
Jd08 Hunt ng on o w l e n
ca e of Tr bune Box 280
99 6

912 YAMAHA motorcycle 2S
cc ess han 500 m e.s Phone
992 5 Ol
8 261 p
......

992 6 8S

o

R obe 1 S Be l

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

Help Wanted
REL ABLE sa es adv 0 WO k
n Bakery Prete age 2 o 50
nu Sunday work
Pa d
ho days p us
nsu an c e
App y n person M stead
Sake y 234 Th d Ave
98 If

,-------------1
1

f

puehl

970 BSA 250 Ca
Ca I 985 3919

af er 2 p m

Jt•••

I

L--------------1

NEW 1973 z g zag
mach nes n o g na ac o y
ca on Z g zag to ma.ke
bu tonholes sew on butons
monog ams and make fancy
des gns w h us the tw st of a
s ngle d a Let n ay a way
and ne\ler been used W II sell
fo on v S47 cash o terms
ava abe Phone 992 2984
8 26 6tc

DAY CAR E

STROUT
REALTY

World-\ Larg&lt;!st

r----- ------,

-- - ------

---·-----

------ --

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

--------

-------

INVESTMENTS We have
RU SS S GLASS Se v ce g ass For Rent
several business and rental
fo a needs spec a z ng n
3 ROOM apt unfu n shed S 5
propert es for sale Income
w ndsh etds
m ro s
Phone 4d6 066 or 446 46 8
f gures can be g ven o
p ex g ass resc een 704 Pine
193
R o Grande 245 50-48
qua f ed buye s
----------~OO tf -M--0- B
- -L- E
- -h- o--m
-e ·o--n--R--3-S
- -ura
COUNTRY HOMES- We have
water and rash p ckup w
TWO WA Y RadOS Sa es &amp; be ready Sep
seve al Some w th acreage
Ph 245 5028
Se v ce New and used C B s
and some w lhout Pr ces
20
3
po ce mon tors an ennas
-------~sla I In !he low teens
e c Bobs C zen Band Rad o
FURN
SHED
apa tmen
4
FARMsEqu p Gorges Creek Rd
rooms and ba h f rs f oo
DAIRY FARM - 163 A close lo
Ga po s Oh o 4d6 dS 7
$1 25 man h ·U6 3844 afte 1
Rio Grande so d 7 rm house
22
pm
goc:id bi!Jidlngs
arge lob
ba~ pond frontage on 3 rds
stand ng crops go with farm
Look ng for a mob le home
LECTA - 135 A 35 A farm
lot or a qual tv. mobile home'
ground 1 860 lb lob base
[ We have both at
516 500

NOI.ll'IOS

QUAIL CREFK

SUNDAY AUGUST 26 1973
ACROSS

EAST

+Void

+JlOU
•Qs
t9633

.K!Ot83
t107U
+10983

29- Lad e
13 - Food sh

1:n-Towt n1

22- G be ween
23 - Man s name
25-Hawa an w u h
2

- s

ke o

-c

ok

89-

Ce

3

+H2

ow

.2

+AQ
None vulnerable
Nort~

1•
Pa11
Paos

Pall

3+
••

Pass

~ntn1lead

By Oswald

Rodney '-ura Ra
Rodney Oh o
Hou s 9a m to9p m
Monday thru Saturda~
Ph 24l 9374-245 S021

.

tAKQJ

3 ROOM and ba h furn shed
apar men $ 50 Phone .446
6 5 0 446 12.. 3
202 t

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

:----------

Pass

+LO

&amp; James Jacoby

A plamt1ve letter from Flori
da reads 1n part
I am sure
tbat I have read 1n bndge books
and newspaper articles that
when you hold the three top
honors m trumps you should
play a h1gh honor from the
hand w1th two of them when
you start to lead the sUit
I won the club lead played
s eep
my kiRI of spades and had to go
&amp;J
Wo
m
down one smce West showed
6 - Poseo o po a
out
Was! wrong or were the
books wrong or maybe was my
partner wrong to raJSe me w1th
just three trumps?
We llanswerthelastques
Uon lust North was r~ght to
raue 1mmed1ately to three
spades
Now for the second question
The books were not wrong
Give North the 10 mstead of the
eight of spades and our corre
spondent would have made the
book play because tf both oppo
nentJ followed he could cIa 1m
if one showed out he could h
nesse agamst the JaCk 1rrespec
live of where twas located
F1nally our correspondent
was wrong He bad no wornes
lfDieSS all four trumps showed
up m the same band He could
dO nothmg but go down 1f West
held all four but 1f he started
by )ead1ng a spade to the ace
and West showed out he would
be able to lead lw1ce through
Eut s jack and 10 and make
the 1r10d slam tn sp1te of the

bad break
,_.,.,Afl£111 ENTEAPA SEA.SSN

DOWN

at doorways b gh and fluffy
aga n w th Blue Lustre G c
Murphy Low e S ore
202 6

CARTERS PLUMB NG
AND HEAT NG
Co Four h &amp; P ne
Phone -446 3888 or 446 4477
I6S tf

abb

6 - Me a

----

- Pt
6-H se y

0 N E of the f ner h ngs of fe
B ue Lustre carpet c eane
Ren e ec c shampooe s a
G C Mu phy Co
S ve
B dge P aza
202 6

9-Heb ew e e
0- Gu des

HOU SE 6 rooms and bath 2
storv 707 Th d Av enu e 446
0322
202 If

------

Tbe b1ddlnc hat been

r..
r..

Nri
1•

:tiP
SNT

!oat
Pus
Pu•
Pan

n.t.,..._,
Yoa Soallt llold

•4111 U tn tH

+A I Jl 7

A-,111 YM lilt .. , ... wl"
. . .,. - · ..... 1111,.. ...,.ld
_ , _ , . , ll"tJc&lt;'pt.. l

184 II

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

DEWITT S PLUMB NG
AND HEAT NG
Route 60 a Everg een
Phone 446 2735
187 tf

--- .....

Ph

oom s

"!-~l--f3

!i'i+--11--t

I

Ga a
94 If

BEDROOM 1972 Mob e home
nen c ookware a r con
d tloned e ev s on furn shed
W II ren to 3 men $20 a week
ea ch SSO depos
equ red
Ready 992 3S09 M ddlepo
Oh o
46 If

Wanted To

----------

SE PT C tankn e o~~ ned ser v ng
Gal 41 and Ma son coun es
Fu d ep en dabl e se rv ces
George Plants own e Phon e
615 5049
157 tf

__

-- -----

STEWART E ectr ca Serv ct
Repa r hou se w r ng
e ec tr c heat nQ Phone 446
4561
211 II

Centr•t Air Cand I on ng
&amp; Heilflnt
Free Estimates
Stewarts Hardwlre
V nton Oh o
1d4 tf

SEPTIC TANKS
c eaned and nata ed
Russel s P umblng A-4' 4782

BACKHOE DOZER
TRENCHER
CALL Jackson 286 ~5 24 A
types of backhoelng sept c
tanks tooters etc A so a
types of
t enchlng water
nes gas lines etc
87 II

29711

----~-

G LLENWATER S SEPT C
TANK CLEAN NG AND
REPA R
ALSO HOUSE
WRECK NG Ph 44t9099
Estab shed n 19.40
169 II

- NSTALL- a um n;-m S dlng
gu e s
downspouts
awn ngs storm w nQows and
doors Free es ma e Cal
361 0128
189 26

ALBERT EHMAN
water 0e1111ery Servl ~ e
Pa rot Stll Rt Gal lpo 1
Ph 319 213'
2&lt;3 tf

P &amp; J odds and ends shop Used
turn ure and g fts 21 5 N
Second M dd epa
74 30

BANKS TREE SERVICE
FREE est mates I ab v In
surance Prun ng tr mm ng
and cavity work tree end
stump emoval Ph 446 4953

TI!OMAS FAIN
EX TERM NATING CO
Term te &amp; Pes Contro
Whee e sbu g Oh o

1311

-----

-

-

..!...-

MOTORIST MUTUAL
INSURANCE
THE best nsuranct at the best
pr ce
For auto
home
bus ness ~Jnd fe Rmy Hawk
agen 446 2l00 541 4th Ave
150 II

REfR GERAt ON
a
con
d on ng plumbing elec
ca auto a
cond on ng
comp e e home ma ntenance
24 hours serv ce P &amp; J
App ances 2 5 N Second ~
A11e M dd epor
114 30
LAYNES Potable Wedng
ce 1 f ed p essu e pip ng
ce t f ed structura s ee
we ct ng a um num He arc
Ph 446 3470 24 hour ser11 ce
19811

-1--

DEAD STOCK
$5 00 Serv ce Charge
W II removeJour dead
horse an cows
lisll Jackson 286 45~1

CABINET Shop a I types of
wood work 01 Court L_Street
187 tf

The Shop
' r.ustom meat cuttmg"

·-·-...
I
0.'- ',
'i
---..:. -. -~

Pleasant R1dge Road
POMEROY OHIO ~

OICI&lt; &amp;
really
know
how to cut ""

CUT

WRAPPED

1

FROZEN

TO YOUR SPECIFICATION
1\ ck Vaughan
9923374

FOR
BEST
BUYS
65 X 12 GRA YWOOD

3 BEDROOMS
Fronl kitchen cathedral cell ng house type
door rear jal door house type sliding win
dews 30 gal water heater 2x4 studs 2x6 floor
!Olsts on 16 center hum cane t1e down UL:
approved

Do

--

ATTUtTIDN VETERANS - Gl Loans ava I able no down
payment with approved cred I

·----------

...,.._________ - - -

RENT A MOTOR HOME
FOR YOUR VACATION

.-

- T"E"R. iiTe'P"EsT- co"iiriDL
F R E E lnspec: tiOI'I Call 446 3145
M err
o De
Operator b'll
ex e m na T m te Serv ~; a
0 Be mong Dr
261 II

H OLLE Y B os Con slru c l on
bu doz 110 bl!lt k hoe work
d ch ng under road s bar no
Phone 245 50 8 o 245 5006
18 f

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

--..,.,1--f

DR Y WAL L urv Ct bV con
r ac:l Willa d Boal ey 44'
4954
282 tl

Sleeps 6 camp ete prima y
nsurance p ov ded Rates 120
per day on weekly basis
CLOSE OUT SPECIALS
S.v"al Travel Trailers
12&amp; 13 Fl

&amp; up

Economy Motor Sales
&amp; Rentals
Motor Homos &amp;
Travol Trailers
1401 Easlern Ave
Ph 444 1425
200 II

-- ----

-----

------------UPT012YEAR
FINANCING
WE SERVICE
WHAT WE SELL

Many Other
Mobile Homes
All tiOor Plans

Wantatl To Buy
WANTED - G pung $65 per
lb Go den Seo 14 SO per b f
the market ra lei 10 w my
P ce Cut th • ad o
end
save Dea er 1 prlcu paid for
th • w nter Lawren ce Me
Cu touoh Eut L.lverpoo
Oh o 43920 Phone 116 l85
1832
2•o 3

50xl2 to 70x14

2 &amp;3 Bedrooms

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

CORNER cupbollrds
wilT
cupbOard• chlilt o d guns
anv cond ton A so b ut
det:orattd atonew•rt Wrltt
P o Box u Mart 111 Ferry
Ohio 43935 or ca
~u 4440

""" 1

111 If

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

2 ROOMS end both all pr volt 55 H P or arger o~o~tbolrd motor
Adults only Phone 446 0370
Ph 256 6821 lfttr 2 30 p m
200 3
198 6

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

m

Locust

St

992 7004
Oo"" R to 6 Mon thru

Middleport
Sat

Cally Blo 6 ICiottd Sundays) c..,.tn ~&lt;nytfmt by
Conl•d Oao ThompSOn "' Tom L1vonrl•r

SOLD I LAST WEEK -

WE NEED

•9
~

I

3

-Z

OHIO RIVER

i

WE NEED LISTINGS

Q
vt

s

OFFICE 446-3643

~

EVENINGS CALL:

I;J

•,.

E. M. "IKE" WISEMAN 446-3716

~

E. N, WISEMAN 446-4500
BUD McGHEE

~

!

446 1255

M

~

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"'O::I:IN:";IM':'""~-~li~I~IM~1~SV~1~8-0-10-S---S-~-N-I-1S_I1_0_J_J_N..IIM

;

Our Specialty Is Selling Your Property.

MASSIE

REALTY

32 State St
4461998

Realty,

Tel
25 LOCUit St
Howard Brannon Broker
LUXURY LV NG
LOWER
I 011 446 2674
R VER RO
- 8biO rms all
Lucille Brannon
br ck 1 f r 2 2 ba hs 2 F p
Eve 446 1226 or 446 26'4
deep c osets ned w h cedar
A PICTURE WINDOW
a I carpet d eam k tchen
W TH a v ew worth beho d ng
has d sposa
double .s eel
You I be enchllnled by h s
s nk d shwesher b ender
up to them nute ranch home
gr nder and m xe
bu
n
w th everv modern con
oven
refr gerator
end
ven ence
Inc ud ng w w
freezer
This home has
carpet a dream of 1!1 k tchen
qua tv p us wa k out of the
w th p~t o doors In he d n ng
mas er bdrm and take 1!1 d ve
;~~rea 3 n ce BR:
l!lrge v ng
n the poo 20 x 50 Located
room garage and a well
on
A I eve ot w th r ver
cared for
awn
Owner
v ew
eavlng town Price S24 500
SCHOOL DAY SPECIAL
MERCERY LLE - 2 bdrm
$ 9 ~0 W LL buy this com
frame house w h bath N ce
pletely rem ode eo two sto v 3
lot and good ocat on Can be
BR home w w carpet up o
bough I for $8 000
date k tchen and aundry
forma d n ng room large LOWER R YER RD
S rms
covered pet o front porch
and ba h n good epalr 2
cl!lrport deep ot 100 )( 75
storage bldgs and oceted on
shrubs and trees alt th s lust
1 A eve lot Ideal for the
m nutea from town Call soon
gardene or a Tra er Park
t won t last ong at h s
Only $13 900
prlco
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY IF YOU don t be eve
- lust
Come n and d scuss with us
cal and see what can be
N ce lam ly dea nels S2S 000
bought for 12 ooo 3 BR
annually
beau+ fUI k tchen w tl) a the
extras deep pi e carrot n CROWN CITY
Cheap
LR
laundry carpor and
housing 5 roooms and balh
storaoe we I landscaped awn
I v rm 12 x 19 H W floors
120 x 65 this home has
storm doors and windows
centra a r and on v 6 years
od
This n ce home Is on y 8 yrs
PERFECTION
old and s In good repair II
AT $26500
has a utility bldg 8 x 16 and
NEW rancher - centra a r
localed on 52 A ol Priced
carpet throughout n ce eat n
for a quick sale at $12 900
k tchen 3 B R. w th cedar
c osets attached garage w th
concrete dr ve ot 100 x 85
WHI EAVE -4 nice rms on~
ocated nee~r town
bath Lol 100 x 100 Pr ce
CROWN CITY
$1 000
2 BR and bath kllc~en and
dinette utll ty room oil
1969 Kirk
furnace HW f oo s carport EVERGREEN wood Mobile Home with 2
dr ed well A so a l room
rms added located on 1 • A
end blth on rear of lot ent ng
tor 135 Lot Is 11 x 80 Pr ced
flat land Use either good
at S20 000
drilled well or Ru al Water
DIAL YOUR WEATHER
Pr ce $12 700
A CHARM NG 3 BR: rancher In
West ~eve lopment al bul I In
k tchen and din ng area push ADDISON - 1 mile off Rt 7
beaullful rambling 7 rm
carpet n LR and ha
gas
furnace and centra air
frame Ranch on I A lot II
garage and aundrv Redu'ced
has everything all carpel
to $23 500
over H W firs cen air F P
ELEGANT LIVING
n rec
rm N gas heal 2
TH S s the home that w
balhs
u
rm
1S x 26 and a
we come the large fam ty
kllchen the Mrs wl I ove Low
The huge p ayroom s wa ng
taxes and good schools All of
for chi dren o en loy t a
beaut ful eat n k chen \'!lith
lh s for 132 500
double oven and att the ex as
down to the efrlgerator 4 ACROSS HWY FROM AD
B R ~ bath fu I d v ded
DAVILLE SC - Beautiful 5
basement carpet throuonout
rm
br tk and frame w lh
deer lot cone e e dr veway
utlllly rm and balh large
Cal now to see h s new hOme
and move In before schoo
carport Located on ' A flat
starts
lol Pr ce reduced Ia 122 500
PEACE &amp; QUIET
IS WHAT you cou d have nth s ST RT 218 - 4roomhouseand
5 BR rl!lnch home just a
, A lot Only 16 000
m nute from town A de l uxe
k tchen
arge china and
FARMS
storage wal
n the din ng
71 A
Ap
area 011e s ze L R. oca ed on ST RT 218 l
acre ot On v S24 500
proximally
0 A Guyon
PLANT YOUR $All NGS
Bottom balance Ish
gent e
IN SOILI
Slope and 1 at 1 829 lbs lob
ACREAGE values have been
base sell 2 381 lb !his year
soaring Here s a good
buyer
gels half the 13
country home l!lnd 64 acres ol
proceeds II ha• a s rm
and A so 6 acres p us a
modern house p enty waler
eroe two story home a
remodeled end carpeted 5
good barn 60 x 66 wllh 10 cow
BR ond 2 bath
slanch ons Th sIs a good buy
DUPLEX
tor S21 500
DOWNTOWN edecorated 6
rooms and bath
storage
basement A so 7 room 5 and ST R"I.IIS - 80 A 10 m es
from town 8 rm house barn
bath sto age and basement
36 x 60 wilh concrele fir with
Good jnvestment o ve none
sheds added Silo 6 x 50
and rent the other
IRICK ~ANCH
Near new Badger Loader
3t.t ACRE evellot 3 BR carpel
Near all of 80 A s lractor
throughout spa~; ous lc. tchen
and It has a pond and
w th {range 1nd oven full watering
trough P ce only
basement
we
wa er
143 000
garage Kyger creek School
o str cl
VACANT LAND
COUNTRY Lilli NCO
TH NKJNG ol re r ng - or 25 A Level land at Rodney On
re axing n he coun r')l?
water line Price 135 000.
Plent'll roam for the ~;h dren
to r di the r horn 5 acres 9 A across hwy from Shrl ne
Racc~on bottom located near
ne
Club On rural water
T')ICOOM Lalc.e Two ato Y
$17
000
home f rst f oor comp etely
remodeled new root s d ng
f oors bat!"l and furnace HAVE BUYERS FOR GOOD
Barn Iaroe garage 30 X 36
HOMES CALL NOW
good fence
ANY HR 4~6 1191
WHAT A \1 EWI
A PERFECT Utt ng for a good
mob I 1 home one and one NEW br ck home ust com
third acre ot near new 2 BR
pleted 3 bedroom 12 bath all
1 ~ bath mobile home t!"le
cenm c tile tu v carpeted
k tchtn modern a:atomorrow
centra 1 r plenty of cab ne s
d n ng area laundry beamed
d shwuher d spoul • ectrlc
••, ulrn•g• cnarkp"t!hegno dbu'l~n~
range nice level ot located 6
f 1
"
ml es up Route 1 n Countrv
ch na
cab net
qu ck
Alre Estates
'!iqu re at
polltiSIOn
y
corb n &amp; Snyd~r Furn lurt
CINTINAR
Co 446 1111 After 5 col 4~6
NEW modu e home on good
2573
love lot 3 i!R I 12 balh
116 tf
comtortab e work ng k tchen - - - - - -- -- - - - - large I.R carpet throughou WORKERS ior San tat on
Coli IOdiY
- ______
11 W POY
Oepl
Dept
____
...___
Meehan
calWiler
Dept
Street
LUSTROUS country homt
Dept and Sewage reatment
"fproJ mateiY 6 m ltl North
plant
APP y
at
ty
Manager a office 5 8 Second
0 Pf. p aeunt Route 2
ctntrll hut no •nd cook no 4 Ava
bedroom balh and hall
198 6
acre of ground and mor1 f - - - -..... - - - - - - - nttdld
Shown
bY IP
po nlmtnl only 675 5 62 199 5

c

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

3 BI!O~OOM hOult IOCIItd 1
milo out Nt DhbOrhOOd Rd oft
141 Bot~ and II• nv room
cerpettd 1 ctr v•regt snack
blr ~ 110011 bU It n kiiChtn
In loll of cab noll 1 btdroom
~ellway and pori of
vlng
room pant 1d Central hUt
IOd A ( Appro• 1 11 ecrtl
WI!~ Olrdtn dog lol Wllh
hou11~ must stll Return ng to
IChOO 120 000 Ph ~46 1327
btfor 2 30 pm ....
916

_________ ____

PUBLIC
NOTICE
Wt 1tll anything for
enybody Iring your
lttml Ia knolls Com
munlly Auction lern
Corner Thlrd &amp; Ollvt
For IPPOintmenl att
2U " ' ' efltr
p m
5alt every Saturday
ovenlnt at 7 0 Clock

s

Realty

~

If you wa~t to sell your property, why not list with
Galha Co s largest Real Estate Agency

_______ ____

WALLPAPERING and Poll n
I ng Phone 446 9865 o 379
2471
8311

J&amp; W MOUNT
CLEAN NG SERVICE
GENERAL house clean ng We
supply a
he c ean ng sup
P les 388 8875 after 6 p m ca
_._
388 8865 weekly or mon h y
c ean no by appo ntmen
SLE E P N G rooms week y
9 If
ra es f ee oa age park ng
L bby Hole
sha pen no
s~ws
24 If TOOL
sc sso s shurs home and
g a den oo s Sharp Shop
API-\t( rv tNT to con struct on
A ey rear 47 Second
men Ph A46 0 56
2 6 If
267 f
TYP NG SERY CES Phono"6
.U21
192 2

z

eo a LAN IS
Camp
1t'
Boakkltplng and TIK
o P Mar t n &amp; San Wa er
Servin 424 1J• Plaurth Ave
o e very
se v ce
Yovr
K•niUII BullfttU by IP
pa ronag e w I be ap
po
ntm 1 nt
Ph
4"6 H 04t
p ec at ect Ph 446 0463
PIUII Clll lltlf f P m
2 f
71811
..,..

~~6

l --~---------------~202

I WE NIED LISTINGS -

Services Offered

RUSSELL 5
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
Gil I polls 446 4782
297 tf

LE home

Prtced $595

Willi

&amp;

Plumbing
Healing
GENE PLANTS &amp; SON
PLUMB NG - Heat ng - A r
Cond ton ng JOO Fourth Ave
Ph 446 1637
48 If

4- Enco need
5-Sa

PRICE reduced S 500 3 BR
home bu
n k tchen
ec
room fu
basemen and
ga age 2 blocks f om Ho zer
Med ca Center •46 3375 for
appo ntment
202 3

SAVE B g Do your own rug and
upho s ery c ean ng w h B ue
L.us e
Ren
e ec c
shampooe S at Cent a
Supp y Co
202 6

- --MAKE bea en down carpe nap

- R ppn
2- Wa ks ns ead y
3- he aama

ROOF NG end Spoul )no Sh n
g l el an d Bu dup Hot
r oofl
Fra t
E1t l
ma e - 26 yr txp•rl•nct
JIMtl Marc um vlnfon Qtllo
_ 3888
____
4 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..t,...6111

G 8SO N les Pau Jr E ct c
gu or Rep llOOno w I SQ 615
4848

Offered

1ST NGS
NEEDED
E!SPECIIALL Y FARMS
NATIONWIDE
AD
VERTISING PAYS
Ranny Blackburn
Branch Manager

COMMUNITY
&amp; SALES

33-Bod
35-S

+KQ9763

Wnt

Ser~~tes

Instruments

'

!!tontine I SWlday Aus 28 1973

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

NEARRI0 - 40A rollng an1
$19 000

MOBILE

a Ame can

28- Ma age
30-G s ame

SOUTH

I'

MuSICal

Sale

FE M ALE sa es clerk needtd
S~ N VALLEY NU •o Y Schoo
App ca ons be ng acup ed
cenud by Sl a e of Oh o
)
da v 9 t o S APP v w ll h E'd
m Its west o new hosp ta
w1 a Evans 1 1 Farmers
517 Sun V. t ey O r Ph Ad J6S7
Ha rd w a e l 0 2n d Ave
Oay ca e
ha
says
we
Ga ll po s: Oh o
ca e
Madge Hau d en
200 2
Owne
Lond h and John
Havl d en Opera ors
BASVS TTE R 3 even ng s a
• f
wee k on Georgel Creek Road
Phone ,.., 015•
BETTER obs e eave ab e to
200 3
GBC gradua te Enro now fo
rHE LEADER SINCE 1100 I~
he fa
qua r er Ga pO s
SERVING
THE NATJON S
Bus ness Co ege St~ t e No
BUYERS &amp; S EL L~RS
7 02 00328
Ph 146 0008
7l26 Immedia t e opening s 10
P M I II 6 A M shill Grill
BIDWELL 2 homes-one
FO R YOUR needs n Por r a t
cooks and wa1tresses good
new and the other a most
com me r e .s lin d w edd no pay work ng cand t1ons and
pt'l otog aph y ca
Tawney s
new Boih a
or iced be ow
hosplt I tal on vacation 18
Stu d o 446 615 Gal pol 5
rna ket va lue l!l ""1 6 900 and
and over Apply in person at
Oh o
$19 500
Bob Evans Steak House
WOOOS MIL L RD - 5 rm
modern home w th 3 A and
3 FA M L Y yard sa le M onda y
NSURANCE
$1~
700
Augus 27 9
1 ust one
INSPECTOR
m e ou an Ne- ohbo h ood
MM E D ATE
pa t
t me
Rd oft 41 C o h ng d shes
Open ng mu s hav e day gh NICELY REMOD ELE D 1 rm
oys and some an ques
home c ose 1o T ycoon Lake
hou s to devo e must be a $e t
20 2
with shade lrees and 400 fl
star t er and hatJ e decendab e
auto good supo ementa n
fronlage on a BT r d SI S 500
CLEARANCE Sft e on a
come
Reply
o P
0
ma e a Sa
h u Thu r s
Bo x
5187
Co umb us NEW LISTING - E UREKA 0 30 a m o 6 p m a th e on o 432 2
BEAU T I FUL 2 stor y home
Ho m es ead Shop n M
200 3
Ou e
Hende son W Va
w th riv er view has been
An n M cCoy own er
c ompl etel y remodeled and
AV ON e tor y snow op en n
202
ncludes 4 BR
ca pet
Ga pa s area wou d you
ke
o ca
on
Avon
modern
k
tchen
formal
M ENT AL eta da on g oup n
cus omen. Ca Mrs He en
d
n
ng
rm
larqe
rm
w th
Oh o s seek ng nformat on
Y e a~ e
J a ck~on 286 ~0 28
WB tlre pla ce and pa I
om pa s and present at en d
202 3
basement See th s one
an s o e a ded n S afe n
--,---_
s tut ons n Oh o To he p th e WOMEN tor day Sh ft Apply a
r etard ed ca
216 659 9858
Shawn s Or ve n n Add son CITY TAKE OVER MORT
om 6 p m o 7 30 p m
GAGE- $2 000 down qualities
or ph 2.45 5050
200 3
2023
you lo move Into this 6 m
home mmed ately
ASS STANT
ma nager
ex
per enced or we w
t an
Y a d fo em an exper enced OWNER MOVED OUT OF
county and s offering th s
Fo p ospe ous and grow ng
BOA RD your pe s at K &amp; P
ovely 7 rm home at a price
lumb er co
n mmed a e
Ken ne s 38 8 8274
you can f refuse Located n
area send esum e stat ng
200 l
qual f cat ons o ex per ence
an ce subdlv slon off U S 35
--~c--­
o Box 281 co Ga polis Da v
DEAD STOCK
RODNEY - MODERN RANCH
w LL emove a a reasonab e Tr bune
w th over an acre of land Th s.
cha ge Ca I 2d5 55 -4
4 BR home Is ke new and
featu es a 2 car garage :v~
baths air cond
laundry
rm
fam ly rm
n the
20 3
basement with a Ia ge stone
NEEDS LPN or r e ed RN o
f replace and bar
wo k n nu s ng home Can
ve n W e Box 313 Rt
MILLS VILLAGE - '14 acre lot
o on Oh o
conta ns more than you wou d
2013
expect for less !han $30 000
Fo mal
d n ng
rm
basement fami y rm
2
2oo 2 Camping Equipment
flrep !)ces are only a few of
S-W
--E-E-P
-ER·---------~STARCRAFT
the features Call fo ap
CLOSE OUT on a 973 models
po ntment
Salle $1 263 on 241 7 n Sa\le
S 00 on 22 f 7 n Save $975
on 20 f 7 n Sa11e $854 on 8 LOW DOWN PAYMENT New sect anal w lh Spanish
It 7 n CAMP CONLEY
decor s completely furnished
STARCR/IFT
SALES
Rl
62
WE HAVE a comp e e ne of
~ of Pt P easanl beh nd Red
and read~ to move nto If
wa ches and d amonds
c;a pef Inn Pt1o11e 675 5384
your cred t s good cal about
Compa e
ou
p ces
188
anywhe e Tawney s Jewe ry
th s one

t8

WEST

For

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLE

• AJ76.
+KJ7~

Estate

s

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

ELECTR.OLU X
vacuum
c eane A 1 cond on uses
paper bag s has co dw nder
and many a achmen s A so
shampoo attachmen
n
c uded.
on y -4 ava ab e
$37 70
cash
or
t e ms
ava abe Phone 9112 Y8 4
B '26 6 c

Real

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

your phone w1Jl Jin&amp;hl
clth ruulta" too wh.enJ
1 1 ou phce en
ect Dn lent I
1963 Mode 97 3 owe
ac o
1 Ad
You
can
ull
futn tu e
P S d ese S 300 Ca 843
lapp! •ncu c:lothu
do I
245
8 21 6tc l••n• of other unu . .d but I

B 1d tfc

llelp Wanted

Notlte

Hosp If'
A so o 0
Tom
Morgan D
Brandebe r ry
and 0
0 Ro u ke for the
conce n A great dea of
g at ude goes out Q a of he
Su r g ca l Staff who he ped
nc ud ng the Nu ses Nu ses
A des an d f s year nu ses on
Second F oor E as or he r
he p en d ca e
A
at
of
han k s t o
nnvmer
abe
peop e ..t o
t he r
ca s o my j'1u sban d and me
abou my cond on
canno t
fo oe he many r e at ves and
f ends who ook IMI
me o
se nd me encou r egem enl o
ge we bV send ng me ca d$
and f owe s Thanks from th e
bo om of m y hea r
Mr s

973 b 70 MOB LE h ome
w ash er and dryer d sh
washe sta nless s ee-l s nk
ge bflg ! d sposa eye ev e
ovtn olnue di!lcr on po yester
carpe arge lot Phone 741
308 3
7 8 f

__ _..,._.__

The Sunday r~nea

n-

1971

522 1361
186 ACRES (85 acres bollom
land) located 3 mttes from
Timbre
R dge
lake
deve opmenl Some timber
fenced 5 room house good 50
x 80 barn several other
outbulld ngs Less than 1300
acre
123 ACRES - Iocaled In heart of
Gallipolis bul ding area
Beautiful roll ng land 10
acres oft mber 6 room house
large barn and other out
bu ld ngs JusI $690 acre

Olcer Bai rd
Doug Welhtrholl
Brokers
OI C:Ir ti l r d
DOI.,It Wetherhol
•rakers
Of ct 441 1434
M LLS V LLAGE
Ve r y
ove y t hree bedroom br ck
home wllh fam y room and
den on m 11 n floor beau f u
CIJirl) e l hr OIJOhOUI WO bll lh s
wo I n tp aces cent a a
con fu t basement and r ec
room tnd a ta ched ga a~e
L ar ge Qua tv ho me w l h
cho ce oc a lon
TR I LEVH BEAU TV
PR YA CY w th 1 de ph ful
v ew ov er ook ng Ga l lpc s
c an
be
yours
w h
hll
OVOY
lh oo
bed aom hom e wth push
fa c t es
Forma
d in ng
room c ly wa e and schoo s
ctntra a r nn ft Anti hA I bo'l hi
p us.
a
po.,wder
room
carpet no on a arge o
Owner wl
t ade to
a
cheaper farm or hou se
THREE MILES OUT
VER.Y n cehome w th utra ot
near e ementa y Schoo on
state h Qhwav c ty water
large I v no room a ached
garage ceram c bath car
pet no e the h ng s you re
rooking fa
n a hou se us
outs de of town w th oom o
brea he
SPLIT LEVEL DREAM
TH S ove v home about f ve
m es from tne park has o s of
oom beaut tu bu
n kit
chen one and ha f ba hs
wa k n c osets furnace heat
400 squa e feet of I 11 no
area ust a ovelv home n a
beautlfu se t no
IN TOWN BARGA N
NINEroomhouseon a gee v
o
c ose to markets and
stores cou d be made no two
apa tments verv eas y A
one f oor furnace heat fu
bath hardwood t oors
NEIGHBORHOOD ROAD
NICE three bed oom se ctona
home n c ty schoo d s c
forced a r fu nace w ndow
a r cond toner and a n ce o
Good v ng fo on y S 3 200

130 ACRE farm Operal ng
dalrJfarm w lh young herd 60
hea Ho sleln callle lois of
equipment
new
m k
bu Iding 30 acres corn 12 000
worth of tobacco
Good
look ng land Remodeled 6
room house Wei localed Ius!
a few m nules from Gall polls
EUREKA
or Crown C ty Ohio Let us N CE view of he
ve w lh
giVe you all the details Ca I
h s hree bedroom home n ce
ba h furnace .hea t
ove y
Now
dln ng and I v ng oom w th
f ep ace ga age and abo o
WOULD PROBABLY VA
GOOD three bedroom home
w h ba h furnace new carpet
n I 11 ng oom ocatd c ose to
town on a n ce eve o

PANCAKE
REAL TYCO

SEVE R.AL good bu d ng s es
and acreage

l\1!111-.l II

Aller hours phone
Francis McGuire
Area code 6u 861 3725
Don Seely
Are Code 304 429 2631
J1m Scott
Area Code 304 525 9715

WE NEED s ngs f you have
a home or acreage o se o
ade ca Oh o R ver Rea ty
oday we
be g ad o he p
you
Even ngs Ca 1444. 4244
Steven Betz 446 9583
John Fu ler 446 4327

The WISEMAN
Agency
REALTOR
Bus mess Opportumty
FO R QUA L F lED PE RSO N
VE R Y
PRO SP ERO U S
BU SIN ESS
N GA LL A
COUN TY IS YOURS F VOU
ARE W LL NG TO WORK
HARD NCLUOE S LARGE
RE TA IL SEL L NG AR EA
LOAD S OF
ST ORA GE
SPACE W TH
LV NG
QUAR T ER S AT SAME
LO CATI ON OWNE R
S
RE T R NG AND W LL
HELP F NANCE
F OR
R GH T PER SON WE CAN
SHOW BV APPOIN TMENT
ONLY
FOR F UR f HER
N F ORMAT ON CALL US
TO D AY

BYOWNER
5acresonState
Route lot&gt;acco base rura
water and tap pa d cons de
land contrec1 to r ght pertv
co 446 2852
192 If
~A o
ta m Lau anoe
Ph 24ll320

~5

000
201 6

BV owner house on LeGrade
B vd 446 3798
201 3
NEW 4 bedroom br ck car
peted 2 h baths 2 car garage
Lake D
R a Gr~nde price
m d th r es ow nte est ra e
Ph 24S 5439
201
BY OWNER
3 BR home
bath near Spr no Valley
P ua M d 20 s 446 4315
200 3
_ ..1,.

- --

BY OWNER
3 BR
v ng
oom arge fam v rm arge
bu t n k tchen w h rltnge
and oven bath oom w th
bu t n cab ne s aundry rm
w th arge bu t n cab ne A
carpeted cen ral a
w th
hum d v con o
aro e
c ose s backya d fenced n
a ge pa o extra carpo t 2
d veways separate 2 ca
garage w h water and heat
a cove ga age f n shed fo
s or age shop benches and
too cab ne s bu
n ~ m e
f om c tv safe ne ghbo hood
for ch ldren 446 1903 or 446
992
BY OWNER - 3 BR b ck l h
baths
woad
bu n ng
f rep ace e eel c k chen
cent a a r 533 H da 0
Fa rv ew Subd v son 446
0999

3 BEDROOM house a car
peted neturl!l gas heat fult 7 ROOMS on ower Th rd Ave
beoul fu 70 x 200 ol NO
basement on v ved In 3
pets - NO ch d en S 75 pe
months has 3 ots for sale or
monlh Call 446 0160 ef er
trade Raymond Sm th 446
pm
3409
202 I
202 2

- --

MOVE TO A FR END L Y
NE GHBORHOOD ENJOY
THE FAM LY ROOM W TH
FIREPLACE
CON
VEN ENT
TO
THE
HO SPI TAL 3 BEDROOMS
VERY N CE KITCHEN
OWNER WOULD L KE TO
SELL BEFORE SCHOOL
STAR T S LOW TWENT ES
SHOWN
BY
AP
PO NTMENT ONLY
C1ty Water
Country L1111ng
2M LE S OUT 2h ACRE S
TO PLAY N FRONT NG
STATE HIGHWAY 3 OR 4
BEDROOMS
0 N NG
ROOM
BU L T N K T
L KE
NEW
CARPET
LARGE LV NG ROOM
LARGE
CLOSETS
STORAGE BU LDING
CALL NOW PR CEO TO
SELL
Excellent Family
Home
LARGE
FLAT
LOT
R ECOND T ON ED
THROUGHOUT
NEW
CARPET
FLOOR
COYER NG N KITCHEN
NEW PAINT OUTS DE
LARGE FAM LV ROOM 3
B R
BATH WITH
SHOWER C TV SCHOOL
0 ST
M 0 TWENT ES
CALL NOW
FOR AP
PO NTMENT
lmmed1ate
Possessmn
TRANSFERR NG N OR
JUST
LOOK NG
FOR
SOMETHING
BETTER
CENTRAL
A R
3
BEDROOM
BR CK
BEAUT FULLY
AP
POINTED
K TCHEN
CARPETED
LV NG
ROOM HAuL UT L TV
ROOM STORM W NOOWS
ANO
DOORS
2 CAR
GARAGE C TY SCHOOL
0 STR CT

Like New
EDGE OF TOWN ROOMY
KITCHEN
LOTS
OF
CAB NETS UT ROOM 3
BEDROOMS CARPET N
BEDROOMS
LV NG
ROOM &amp;
HALL
AT
TACHED
GARAGE
LARGE FLAT LOT C TY
SCHOOL D ST OWNER
MOVING OUT OF STATE
CALL NOW FOR AP
POINTMENT SAVE $$

40 Acres

5 Bedroom house w lh

Oh o R lver view brick dwelling with 3 lj R 1 12 beth
arge 1 v ng room and dining room all carpeted all cedar
c osets 2 flrep aces and planlor modern kitchen wllh bar
full base ment a r cond toned fu nace 3 por ches
garage c ty wate ol from h I to Oh oR ver
8 34 A and w th 4 B R home kitchen w lh cab nets 4
ctosets bath fuel oil furnace small cellar house 2 wells
garage Ira lerspace elec S T and water 20 trulltrees 4
outbu ld ngs close to Rio G ande p ce Sl4 200

TH S HOME S 3 BLOCKS
FROM C TY SCHOOLS T S
N
AN
EXCELLENT
NEIGHBORHOOO ON A
LARGE
SECLUDED
LANDSCAPED LOT ANO
YOU WON T BEL EYE
THE PR CE OF $23 900
INCLUDES 3 BEDROOMS
N CE KITCHEN LARGE
CLOSETS
BASEMENT
GARAGE
ANO
N CE
HEATED WORKSHOP T S
ONE OF THE BEST BUYS
N TOWN R GHT NOW
Best Buy
Of The Year
OWNER VERY
VERY
ANX OUS - MUST SELL
MMED ATELY TH S S
YOUR
OPPORTUN TY
FOR
A
BARGA N
4
BEDROOMS
F N SHED
FAMILY ROOM
CAR
PETED
L VING
AND
0 NING NICE K TCHEN
GOOD
NE GHBORHOOO
N TOWN OWNER W LL
HELP F NANCE SO DON T
PUT OFF SEEING THIS
ONE

TEAM$--CASH
Welch For Sign&amp;
Tommy Jot Sltwert
Gelllpolls Ohio
Ph 446 3941

L.. Johnson
Crown City Ohio
Ph 256 4740

\

See these and many more
We need land tor Sale Let
us work for you Ltst w1th
us for best results

soo

350 A and n Pe ry Twp county wale close by
00 A Perry Twp county water S 00 per A
A elec home fusl off 5 R S88 3 B R balh n ce kitchen
garage lot 95x 65 pr ce $1 000

On 3rd Ave 3 B R home modern kllchen 2 baths lois ol
c osets small basement gas
On 2nd Ave 3 B R home 1 ' bath close to C ty Bu ld ng
and w 1h n 2 c ty blocks of 5 churches
At Porter large lot with shadelrees several tru t trees 3
B R home noodern k tchen with d shwasher balh sma I
basement a r cond t on fuel oil furnace price $20 000

REALTORS

tllUSE fOR SALE

AUCTIONEERS
R VERFRON PROPERTY Ove 200 fl 1 on age on Oh a
Rver

6 room house at 131

NVESTMENT Be ween own
11nd hospital three bedr.oom
lurn shed home pus un que
Span sh sty e home dea for
off ce
Perfect locat on
Exce lent ncome p ope v

completely
redecorated One car
garage 1'12 bath 3 BR
beautifully courtyard

MOB LE home lots on State Rt
P me com me c a and on
R 35 Acreage n the coun
y Baby farms n R:accoon
Pe y and Green Twps
Owner w II f nance
FREE coun y maps
s ng
b ochu es
park ng Free coffee at
conven ent rea o on
R
60

F ee
F ee
your
Sta e

RURALL ST NGSneeded Any
s ze Any locat on We buy
se
tr'ade and auct on rea
es ate

•

1o

a

IIUU •

•

qQ6·00nl

Neal Reai!J
NEW LISTING
197065x12 SCHULT 2 BR mob le
home located on a 2 acre lot
aboul4 miles from town Th s
home has had excellent care
and has a r cond
storm
windows
washer
dryer
small storage building Wou d
make a good nvestment or a
nice home
The Neal Insurance and Realty
s now at their new location
The Ltbby Hole!
Off ce Phone 446 1694
Even ngs
Charles M Neal446 1546
J Michael Neal446 1503
SAM NEAL446 7358

TARA
OEVELOPMENT
OORP.

NEW
HOMES
FOR SALE

25 A Nelghbo hood Rd pr ce S5 000
OFFICE 446 1064
EVENINGS
Russell D Wood-446 4618
Ron Canaday--446 3636
John I R chardS-444 0280

Second fully carpeted

full length lot
Pnce
$25 700 Call446 2457 or
see Tom Tope of Tope
Furmture

Building
Site~
Ava1lable Klngsberry
Homes built to fit any
speclflcati(\I'IS
All
Underground Utilities

\

Provided

---------For lnformatton
Or Aopomtment

PHONE

367-7250
AddiSOn I)

PUBLIC AUCTION
Located 1 mole East of Jackson Ohto onto Old Slate
Route 35 Walch tor Pub he Aucl1on S1gns to be ereded
SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 1 1973
Startmg al10 30 A M
Cons sl ng n part of 3 Chevy 2 Ton Pickup Trucks
Corva r Dune Buggy Dynamark 8 H P 36
R ding
Mower .tinvlls Brass Wash ng Mach ne 1 12 Ton Chain
Holst Milk Cans Eledr c Fans Wicker Couch Eledr c
Power Plant Come A Long Railroad Lanlerns Cha n
Saws Tools of all k nds E eclr c Drills Hedge Tr mmer
Blacksm lh Vice Photo Developer Paneling Fuel 011
Wa I Furnace Glass Bock Roofing Used Lumber
Rotol I er 4 H P Wooden Boat Glazed Bock Sickle Bar
Power Mowers Abooga Horns Electr c Gu Iars and
Amp tiers Brass Kellle Wash Stand 16 ga Doub e
Barrell Sholgun Lafever 16 ga Single Barrell W n
chester Model1200 12 ga Pump Gun Hunt ng Bows Lon
Lawn Ornament (plaster) Slokermal c Coal Stove
Co Iodor s &amp; Ant que Items olher Items too numerous to
men! on A arge var ely sale Lunch will be served
Terms Cash
MR ED F WRIGHT OWNER
Daryl Alban
-AUCTIONEER$Kenneth Swatn
Oak Htll Oh o
Gallipolis Ohio
REAL ESTATE IS FOR SALE
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS
. . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ,
"

AUCTION
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1973

Building Lots
on Rt. 35.
Ca II 446·1997

ANTIQUE AUCTION

Portable elec cement mixer 60 cement bocks Rockwell
Band saw Mercury gu tulor wheel barrow e oc
hedge lr mmera etec wire efec boxes elec sw I
ches pipe fittings •mall lool• 15 alum num sheets
Polaro d camera ani que school desk• Tools of all
k nds

storm doors and w ndows
large rooms bath 40 x60
ba n with concrete floor
hen house corn cr b m
plement shed and others
Timber
Ask ng
only
s 650000

Farm 124 A t 1able 35 A 2 ponds some timber 1600 lb
T B barn 30x.40 3 oulbu l d ngs good tences and 3 B R
house carpet modern kitchen range w th hood fue o I
furnace storm doors and w ndows on S R 775 price
$31

Located ol ChtShfrt Ohio on Sovlh Fourth St

Chrome dlnelte sol sofa bed 3 occoslonal cho rs single
bed G E sweepar elec Iron humidifier refr gerator
Co dspol) elec add ng mochlne elec outdoor clock
rug shampooer hair dryer dishes lnens lays
fealher pillows antiques

2 Bedroom new bath front
&amp; enclosed ba ck porch
Lois ol outbu ld ngs barn
all m neral r ghls goes
Rural water system Ap
prox 12 15 ac r es t fable
w th tra ctor Asking only
S1 5 000 00

2 Bed 09m home w th bath
drilled well enc losed back
porch T mber ba sement
barn A steal at SIB 000 00

AUGUST 30 • 12:00 P.M •
ENOS HARRISON- OWNER

30 Acres

162 Acres

Locahon Is Most
Important

Ga lila Co s La rgesl Real
Eslale Sales Agency
Olf ce 446 3643
Evenings Call
E M Ike Wiseman
446 3116
E N Wl5tman 446 4SOO
Bud McGhee 446 125S

PUBLIC SALE
THURSDAY

POS N G T HE FAT H ER and his co1109e age son for a
p clure the photog r apher suggested ! hot the boy slond
w I~ his hand on his father s shoulder
If you wa n! II to look natural
sad the long
suffering parenl he could pul his hand In my pocket

Quick Possess1on

OUT OF TOWN N THE
QUIET COUNTRY
T S
ONLY 3 YRS OLO WITH
HARDW'DOD
FLOORS
CARPE'T
N
L V NG
ROOM 3 BEDROOMS UT
ROOM GARAGE RURAL
WATER SYSTEM ONLY 6
MILES F ROM TOWN 3
M LES FROM HMC
PRICED TO SELL CALL
TODAY

central a1r plenty of cabmets dishwasher
d 1sposal electric range mce level lot located
6 m1les up Route 7 m Country A1re Estates
$31 500 Inquire at Corbm &amp; Snyder Furm ure
Co 446 1171 After 5 call 446 2573

REALTOR 446-1066

Off 446 3643

Very Reasonable

New bnck home 1ust completed 3 bedroom
1 2 bath all ceramic hie fully carpeted

RUSSELL WOOD

Thursday Aug 30th atlO

oo A

M

In Bartlett Ohto 20 m1les N E of Athens or
m1les west of Manetta on Rt SOA

20

W II sell
wh le marble top wash sland !walnut)
brown
marble top wash stand (walnut) round lab e walnul dry
sink wa nut 2 d corner c upboard w th 2 glass Clarks
0 NT spool cabinet (2 nice bass bed s 1 Is a sle gh bed)
old h gh chair !mall leaded g ass s de boa d w eke
loveseat wicker rocker 4 pc oak bed oom sulle marble
lop dreoser curved glass ch na cablnel 2 pc walnut
cupboard secrelary sterling tlatware many artllacls 10
old do s n rough Iars lugs lois of glass china and many
Items not sled
HAROLD GODDARD INC

STARTING AT 10 A.M.
PaulL Berkley Rt 2 Letart W Va
Havmg sold my farm I w11l sell my machmery
at the larm on the 8th day of Sept
1973
D1rechons Go on Sand H11l Rd about 31/z m1
or to top of h11l past Rayburn Cross Rd f1rst
road to left at top of hsll Watclt for sale s1gn

Cherry Burrell
634 m lk cooler bulk lank ml king
machlno Universal 2 cans complete 1964 Rambler
Cia .. c 2 door good transportation Fairbank! Morse
hammer mill hand corn sheller Ford 956 modellraclor
recenlly overhauled New Holland 66 Baler Oliver 77
tractor In good work ng cond lion Oliver wagon on
rubber and good body New Holland 55 Hay Raka Oliver
Cu II valor 0 ver 2 bollom plow on rubber Ford I bottom
pow 3 pt h lch 01 ver 1 row corn p cker good work lng
cond ton 30 II elevalor 120 It liter carrier track no
bucket 6 bu ld ngs ch cken hse 30x8 II corn cr b 6&lt;1?~8
high 1 smoke hoiJ•e 12 xB 2 barns back of corn crib 5
room house near smoke houto Dlrtcllon&amp; From Ntw
Haven go to Sasofr11 Walch for till sign&amp;
LUNCH AVAILA,ILI!
COL JIMME SAYRE
AUCTIONEER
2145 Eatltrn Ave O.lllpolls Ohio
Phont U14) 446 :1444

•
~·

~~------------------~~--------------------~'
\

�-

'

. I

.

'-2- The SUnday TLnea- Sentinel, SUildQy, Aug. 26, 1973

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.
500 E. MAIN POMEROY, OHIO PH. 992-21n

You Caught Us With

FORD

•

•

.
•

•

•

OUR PRICES
DOWN

MIDDLEPORT, O.

•
•

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
Your Chevy Dealer

WE CAN SAVE
YOU MONEY!
1972 DfEVROLET................. ~ ... s3595
•
•

•'
•

2-seat i&lt;INGSWOOD WAGON, 16,500 miles, by local 1owner, factory air-tinted glass, 400 engine. automatic
transmission, 'power steering &amp; bra~es, radio, luggage
rack, gold finish, white-wall tires. A sharp clean car.

73 Sedan DeVIlle
Demonstrator

------------------------71 ·CADILLAC
tan finish , brown vinyl top, matching interior,
full power equipment, AM-fM radio, Climate
Control air conditioning, tilt &amp; tel . steering
wheel .

Lu&lt;ury Sedan, 4 door H. Top, local car &amp; has new appearance inside. &amp; out, 6-way seat, power door locks, ·

power windows, Comtortron air cond., radio with ·tape, ,
steel Radial tires, dark brown finish with matching in·
terlor wHh. beige vinyl . roof. This car is loaded. Priced
below book value. ·

•
'.

Now Taking Orders for 1974 Model CC~dillacs

Coupe, 1-owner car, less than 33,000 miles, brown finish
with matching vinyl roof, and vinyl interior, 302 V-8
engine, standard transmission, power steering, and

992·5l42

Cadillac . Oldsmobile
GMAC Financing Available

Fin!bird Esprit, local 1-oWne:r car, 3SO ·V-8 engine, power
steering &amp; automatic transmission , AM· FM radio, like
new while lettered tires, 307 V-8, radio, clean Interior·. A
sharp one.

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY 111 ........ }1395 ·
.4-door, V-8 automatic, power steering , radio, good tires.
blue finish, spotless interior .

For Sale

For Sale

Corbin &amp; Snyder
·· Furniture ·

MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE
RECONDITIONED
MOBILE HOMES
1970 12 x 60 2 BR Challenger
1969 12 x 60 2 BR Baron
19.64 10 )( 55 2 BR Princess
1965 10 x so 2 BR Monarch
19SS 8 X 4() 2 BR Londola . '
1'965 10 x .55 2 BR Roycrolft ·

1970 DODGE POlARA ................$1395

B&amp;S MOBILE HOMES
Second &amp;'Viand St.

4-door. factory air, automatic transmission, power
steering &amp; brakes. go.o d while wall tires . while f inish,
vinyl rQOf, radio, heavy dufy suspension.

(""!ext to H~ck's)

1967 DfEVEl!E ...................... ..S995
4-door, 6 cylinder automatic transmission, good tires,
clean interior , beige finish. radio &amp; heater, real economy
&amp; a popular model .

1969 PLYMOUTH FURY 1............. s795
4 -door, 52,000: miles, · good tires,· 6 _cylinder, automatic
r transmlssio.n, black finish .
.
.

Truck Specials

1971 DfEVROLET % TON.......... s2395

Pt . Pleasant

New : Serta

and Bemco mat.
tress and box springs . Large
selection In stock - twin , ful/ 1
Qoeen size . Save up to $40 a

set.

us Second Avenue
446·117

176-11
-------------SINGER Sewing Machine Sales
&amp; Service. All models In

stock . Free dellverr. Ser'lllce
guar.a nteed. Modes priced
from 569.95. French City
Fabric Shoppe, Sl nQer ap proved dealer , 58 Court St .
Ph . 446-9255 .
.308-1

8' Fleelside, 350 V-8 engine, 15" heavy duty tires, 3-speed
transmission. like new and ready to go.

1970 DfEVROLET 2-TON .......... ;.s2495

69 FORD LID ..........................'1295
V- , euto ., P. steering, vinyl roof, fac . air, w-s-w tires
whee1 covers, radio .. Ex tra Sharp 1

r;

992-2174

2 Dr . hardtop, small V-8, stand .
excellent cond. Gold with blk .

500 E. Main St. Pomeroy, onio

For' Sale
Aluminum
Sheets
'

t.................... . .....
~

.,
•'•
"

"""'

20t

.'7.3 CLEARAN.CE
.,

,,',..

l

,l

'!

••

,,

~

8 for SLOO

Gallipolis
Daily 1ribune

1973 - Zig Zag sewing machine.
This machine darns , em broiders, overcests, button
825 Third Ave.
holes . All
without at .
Gallipoll• · n
tachments . F?ay baiance of
$j8 ,50 or pay $5 per month .
C~ll446 - 0255.
·
137-tf DESK, chair , filing cabinet in
---------------.
s tock, Immediate delivery ,
67 CAMARO ss 675-5623.
Simmons Ptg . &amp; Office Equip .
198-5
....._
178-tf

_________ ___ _
--------------

WITH OUR UII••IW CUI

t
..
•

DEMONSTRATOR SPECIALS!

......

73 MERCURY

.,

Beautiful cars, beautifully equipped.
Save, Save, Save.

.".

that you may find objectionable.

.,::;...
19114 Models will be higher priced &amp;
" wip have more E.P.A. control systems

~arquls, 2 dr. H.T., red with white vlnyl 'top, spllffront seat,

factory air, P.S., P. B., steel belted radial tires, less than 5 000
miles, new car warranty.
. ',

.

,,

73 FORD.

,RIVERSIDE AMC ··JEEP

(,~an Corino, ·2 dr. H. 1 ., saddle bronze with dar.k·brown v1ny1
top. steel belted radial tires, factory air, P.S., P·. B;i 6,000
m1les, new car warrantv:
Sticker Price $4579.
·

SALE

2~- AMBASSADOR SEDANS
1 .... JAVELIN

••,

•4895

{I

•

••

Now •3895

.

'

1969 PLYMOUTH road runner,
90(Hj condition . Call 446-7448

between 9 a .m. and l p.m .
201 -6
1961 TRAILER 3 BR,\ '1, balhS,
Jlr cond. ,' awnlg and un derp in, Cell 2.45-SOlot or 2..s.
5033. Paul Sm lth, adm ..
Harrl$burg Rd .
201 ·l

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

67 M081LE home, 2 bedroom,

very gOOd condition . Call A.t6 ·
11.. 9. Clll between one lt l'! d 5
p.m .
201-6

---------Ot

Calhoun , AK(.
rog. Tov Poodle puppies . $50
IO ..5. 256 -6247 .
201 -26

KENNEL

'

SPECIAL CLEARANCE PRICE
SPECIAL CLEARANCE PRICE

----------- ~ -·

66 BUICK SpeCiilr, gpod con .
dltlon , air cond ., e /ec. win dows, $700. Les Paul Jr .
tlectrrc gu itar, exc . cond .•
$125 . 675-•a•a.
AKG reg . Maltese piJps 1150.
19A-lf
.., .•922.
201 -6 SIGNS- ~,- 8/lkinds-;paper,
metal , magneflc car and
·SuR PLUS two motalsecrttary
truck sig ns . Slmm ol'ls Pig .,
thelra, 1 real good buy.
460 Second .
'
Wood a Insurance Agency , 32 ·
178 -W
LOCuli, Ph . •46-1066.
201 ·lf
IF YOU ere bUilding It new
tlome or remodeling , see us .
JOH .. Oltrt Dozer. 1970 Ch'evy
We art bulldtrs , O!strlbutor
plekup, 1967 Pontile Tem ·
for Hotpolnt Appl /a ncu
pnt . 446.1502.
Allison Electtlc.
'
201-12
. 154-lf

'8,995

. PARKWOOD SUGGESTED LIST PRICE

$9,700

•8,795

See Frank Gheen, (sales manager). he will be happy to show you alllhe
· fine features of these 2 homes.
.

Larry's Mobile Homes Sales Inc.

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

600 West Main Street nex1 to the Jones Boys.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph. 992·7777
Hrs.: Mon. thru Fri. 9 a.m. to 8 p.m .
Sat. 9to6 p.m., Sun. 1 to6 p.m.

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

TRAILER COURT, $2.$00. per GOOD CLEAN LUMP and
pod, Ph . 361-7634.
stoker coaL Carl Winters . Rio
Grande . Phone 2A.5 · ~1 15 .
.
lU-11
8-tl
--- ---------~----~---: ---- ---

t

'

73 DODGE

cylinder ,

For sate

RICE'S

'1495

73 PLYMOUTH
DUSTER

For Sale

72 CAMARO

WSW tires. air cond.

1973 PONTIAC
CATALINA 4 DOOR
SEDAN
Fully equipped, including air cond.,
radio, P.S., P.B:; hydramatic trans.,
tinted glass and many other accessories.

Duster. automatic, V-8.

•2695

OVER 35 .
.GOOD CLEAN
USED CARS

1973 DUSTERS

ALL 1974 MODELS WILL HAVE

REASONS

1. INCREASED PRICES

TO BUY

2. LESS GAS MILEAGE
3. COMBINATION SHOULDER HARNESS AND SEAr
BELTS MUST BE FASTENED TO START ENGINE
4. PROBABILITY OF HIGHER INTEREST

1973
MODELS

·ON Alt :DISCOUNT PRICES. ~

.

7 NEW PONTIACS JUST ARRIVED!

Gallipolis Chrysler·Pijmouth
~ve.

FULL
PRICE

OUR USED CAR INVENTORY IS LOW. TRADE-lNS ACCEPTED

AS LOW~;., $,
.
AS

1639 EasTern

$

FULL
PRICE

6 Cyilnder. automatic .

Gallipolis

446-3273

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC, INC.

Summer '73
Clearance Sale

"Your Authorized Buick-Pontiac Dealer" .
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO .
.1900 EASTERN AVENUE

71 PONTIAC CATALINA

NOW IN FULL SWING

Phone 592-4491 ·

- For Sate

AKC Ir ish Se tter pup , excellent

blood line, reasonable . Phone
AA6-3964,
202 ·3
.

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

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

DACHSHUNO Puppies ,
Rev . Phone .446-4999 .

AKC

eLINCOLN CONTINENTAL • ·COUGAR

202·6
AM su5i'Nes5Banilrodi0., 85
walt Input Johnson model, 6oo
ban with tlltphone lint
remote control , 6 mObile
unltl. model PAU. ·New ~o•t
S3,300 . Make rlesoneb/1!1 offer
Oavld Culpepper, P , &lt;
). ao,C
131 , 4.46·1639,
It
.
202-6

tMERCURY MONTEGO • COMET
eCAPRI tDATSON • SUB~RU • MARK IV
DA TSON Phone 592-4463

------:--------·--

_____________ _:_nlf

Since Smith Auto has discontinued
'
Datsun, we will be hiJPPY to service
any Datsuns at our dealershi~.

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

-------------- --------------·-

•2695

ATHENS, OHIO
YOUR DEALER FOR

NEW &amp; USED FU~NITVRE
SE LMER Perfs alto saxophone,
854 Seconct An., 44•.un
exce llent condition. Phone
NEW 5 pc . maple all wood
"6·1865,
.~lnette se t, $129.95 . New 7 pc .
maple all wood dlf'l ette 111
202 ·l
......
$219 .95 . F i rm 11'\n erspr lnO
mattress: SJ9 .95 . New 3 pc e nd MANUA L typewriter , .4.46-11.41 .
.
202 -l
table sell $16,95.
·
--~---------~
1971 350 SL Honda , excelle.t
GOOD Ull~ Tomeo bottled gu
condition . Phone 367 -0182. ·
floor furnace . Cell 367 -7Ut.
1969 CHEVY Nova , 1967 Chevy
202-3
Impale flr n and wh eels,
------------20~3
headers and pipe• end en 1-4 FT . fiberglass boat AS HP BROWNING Eagle Bau stoll&amp;n
motor , tre liar 1 excellent
utra 396 engine plus all tx tra
2l Chonntl SST, Browning
ports . $1 ,750 . A46. ~600.
condl llon . ~46 - 1073 .
mobile radio, towtr , anttnnl
.
202-1
199-6
new
Demeo modulatot '
bridge meier, Call '46 .3
1972 CAMARO, l07 V8, turbo
alter I :30.
·
1971 VINOALE moblll home ,
auto ., P .S., P .B., dlx Int., 19
102:6
all e lectr ic and ctfltrel a·Jr,
mpg , like new, t2,750 or. Offlr ,
underpinning end 2 aw,. 1nosr
AIID- Int. Bus , converted to
storag e building , m any •x ·
cam per , good cond ,, ldtl/ for
tru . C1ll 388.&amp;630 tor tn.
towing , hunting , etc . 1395 or
se .. vlce · ,t.llon for llltt
fo rmation.
olflr . .4ot6-7.t38 .
·
within the city . For lurlhor
1~9 . 6
202·1
lnlormollon, coli 367.1119.

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

1973 LeSABRE
4 DOOR SEDAN
PB, PS, auto. trans., tinted gla.ss,

Sport '340' . Only 9,0 00
miles.

600 E. STATE ST.
&amp; 1200 E. STATE ST,

1

sg,goo ·

CROYOON SUGGESTED LIST PRrCE

70 MAVERICK

. DAl£ R. SANDERS INC.

RIGGS
USED
CARS
LOCATJ:DON ST. RT. 7
985-4100
. CHESTER 0,

· Two great homes with craHmanship that makes each an outstanding
value. You need to see them to realize the luxury they have to offer.
Both homes are 12x65 - 2 bedroom. Millergun furnace, carpet
th.roughout, Deluxe furniture &amp; decor, storms &amp; screens, house type beds,
·~·med dryer. plumb. washer, vent in bath, lf4 inch paneling throughout
and many other fine features.

$

2 dr. l)ardtop, radio. P. steering, P. brakes.
lac . air cond .• white finish with blue nylon
interior, w·s·w tires. 17,000 miles. Excellent
cond.

•2795

SEE RAY RIGGS ga ROGiR RIIIIL .

Quality BuiH Homes by Croydon &amp; Palttwood

FULL
PRICE

I

4295

For Sale

radio, WSW tires, air cond.

195 Upper River Rd.
GaJiipolis. Oh.
Ph. 446-9800

.'~

Monte Carlo, 2. dr. H. T ., beige In color with cnamols vinyl
roof, factory .aJ r, P.S., P. !3., steel belted radial tires ·with. ·
rally wh~ls, less than 6,000 miles.
,

"Your Chevy Dealer"
992-2126 Open Eves. TillS Pomeroy

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

'1495

6

PS, PB, auto, trans., t.inted glass.

2 Door . See thi s one .

'1995

'3695

•

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

199-tf

71 CHEV. VEGA

73 DODGE

13 CHEV.

Ave.

71 PONTIAC

6
standard shift, P . steering, radio, .w-s-w llres, w·
covers .

"'"

·CLEARANCE

Brunlcardl Houu of Music, 54
State Street . Phone 446-0687.
.
190-tf
-----~-------PIPES, Pipes
Pipes . GBD' ,
Ch4t(atan, BBB, Jobey, Hilson
end others . Tawney's Pip&amp; and
Trophy House, .422 Siecond

•2895

Ventura \1 2 dr ., automatlc,
P .S., P. B .. sharp.

Custom cab, radio, new paint. A real ni ce truck .

cV1..

'1995

2 · Door.
automatic .

4 DOOR SEDAN

Gran Cpe ., 2 dr . H.T.,
automatic, P.S., P. B., air,
automatic speed control.

4-speed .

Western mirrors. radio, rear step bumper, standard shift,
6 cyl. Nice!
·

USE.D OFFSET PLATES .
HAVE
MANY USES

Visit our As Is Dept. for cheap transportation.
Approx. 15 cars less than $500.00.

CLOSE OUT on new zlg .J:ag
sewing machines . For sewing
stretch fabr l ~s, buttonholes,
fancy designs , etc . Paint
slfghtly blemished . Ch oice of
carry ing case or sewing
stand . ~9 . 80 cash or terms
available. Phone -H 6 ·2460.
197-6
ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe
mod&amp;L Complete with all
cleaning attachments and
uses paper bags , S/lgh ly used
but cleans lind looks Ilk'! new ,.
Will sell for SJ7 .25 ·cuh or
terms av~l/able . Phone .416 ·
24 60 .
197-6
MOTO R- -h'Q;;;e- i97o-F ord
Chassis , completely self .cotalned , ges or electric , sleeps
6, lots of extras, 12,000 m lies
$5,995 . See al Kellh Goble'
Mobile Home Salts, Mid ·
dleport, 0 . or call 367 -76"5 In
Cheshire.
198-5

72 PLYMOUTH

69 FORD F-100 .....................;.}1295

69 FORD RANDfERO 500......... }1495

71 PLYMOUTH

71 AMX

70 DiEV. CUSTOM .DEWXE....... ..S2195

Serwice Til 12
Woon on ~id~

'2895

•1895

3W V-8, standard shift. radio, rear step bumper, c hrome
western mirrors, .57,000 miles approx .

FORD F-100 ........................ '1195

steering wheel, ·AM - FM
radio, A· I condi tion .

'1795

FORD F-100 ........................ s2195

~

2 Door H.T .. a ir. 1111

Sa tellite 4 Door. nice clean
car, automatic, P.S.

4 Wheel ~r., Stallonwagon, V'B engine, radio, free running
hubs, auxiliary seat, locally owned.
,.

30~ V-8, auto., chrome western mirrors, reaf. step bumper,
bumper guards. radio . '

72 CAPRICE

Matador 4 dr . sed ,, like
new, 32.000 miles.

.71 FORD BRONCO ................... ..'2795

36"x23":w:009

MOBILE HOME

NEW and used Instruments,

•995

·

Ton Pickup, Delu xe
topper, auto.. P.S ., only
3,000 miles. .

350 cu. In V-B 15,000 lb. fs peed rear a&lt;le, good 825x20 10
ply tires, heavy duly front &amp; rear springs, 108" cab to
axle. Clean cab, heater .

For Sale

Fury Ill 4 dr . sed ., P.S,
P. B., air .

lh

149-tt .

COAC HMAN Travel Trailer,.
Motor Homes, 5th Wheel ,
Truck Campers , Apple City
Auto Slates, Rt., 35 N . Jllckson , ·
Ohio . Phorye 286 ·5700.
110-tf

68 PLYMOUTH

71 RAMBLER

111 7 o.m. &amp;
~l 'til 5 p.m.

8

USED CAR S.PECIALS

'

67 DODGE CORONET................... s795

Open Evenin&amp;l-

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC

1973 CENTURY

'

For Sale

" You ' ll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business"

1970 PONTIAC ...•.••.....•......•...•s2195

•4295
G. T .. 5,000 miles, auto. Red . Sharp.
•3595
Caprice Custom , 2 dr .• H.T. . Loaded.
'4295
Cornet, 6 cyl., auto .. P.S. Shi!r.,.
•2695'
Charger .. Red, black vinyl top, auto.
' '2495
LTO 4 Dr., H. T .• factory air, AM· FM, ster.eo tape •
'2595
LeSabre Custom, 4 dr. H. T. Lots of miles.
ONLY •2495
Super Beetle, 4 speed. Shi!rp.
'1795
Fury Ill 4 dr .. air low mileage.
•18f}5
Catalina 4 dr., air. Low mileage.
'26.95
Imp., 2 dr: H. T.; air. Clean . One owner .·
'1595
L.T. D., 2 dr. H. I., air, local one. owner.
'1595
Caprice Classic. Loaded. Like new .

We Want To Make ;You Happy

Pomeroy

Open Eves. Tii6-Til5 P.M. Sat.

brakes , radio, really sharp .

•'

OUR WORD IS
'OUR BOND

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

Malibu ... door, 307 V-8 engine, automatic trans., power
steering, radio, clea,n Interior, gold finish.

REMEMBER

THE
GREAT BUICK
COUNTDOWN

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S
DfRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER

SEE Ceward Calvert, Peggy Story or Ron Hester
REMEMBER We Want .You Back Because
The Job Was Done Right Not Because The Job Was Done W

We Service
Wh11t We Sell

'4800

1970 CHEVROLET.................. ..S1695
1971 FORD .TORINO 500 .. :.........S2095

1973 CHEV;
1973 OPEL
1973 CHEVROLET
1972 DODGE ·
1971 DODGE
1971 FORD
1971 BUICK
1971 v.w.
1970 PLYMOUTH
1970 PONTIAC
1969 CHEV.
1969 FORD

SEDAN DeVILLE

. 1971 OLDS ..98''......................s2995

";od.

pblut, blk . vinyl roof , all blue vin yl
•
·
au
o.,
. siHrlng, P . brak", radio w 1 w
11
r ... w-covero . This car In best eond . Drlvts the boil .

SOME GREAT USED CAR BUYS

KEITH GOBLE FORD, INC.
992-2196

:.,~;;,~:r~-~p,

We Have 50 New Buick &amp; Pontiacs In Stock. You Can Save Hundreds of Dollars:·
They Are Going Fast. Beat The 74 Price Raise .

Close Out Prices On Alll973 L.T.D.,
Gran Torino, Trucks and Used Cars.
S. 3rd AVE.

•u

69 FORD LID ........................... 95

1973 MODEL
CLEARANCE SALE

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLERPLYMOUTH
'

----~-------~10 X 50 MOBILE 1101\'lt, 2 BR .

e6t

-----------'1__

For Sale

Business Oppciftunilies-

U

.

191·11

-----------.1..-For Ren+ ot &amp;...e .·

1 - 9 IN . 8 &amp; 0 fltt ylbrallng
742,5980.
. ·
·
202 -1
Unde:r . 1 - W11rm Mornli'IO s
rm . n111ture1 or b!1ftletf ~u - - - - -- - - - - - - h&amp;al&amp;r. used 1 wlh lor , 1 _ 1967 &amp;UlCK Wlldcol, • dr .. J''7 OFFiCI! sptCI tor IIUI, 2nd
Avl , 1cros1 from ~fly Ptrk
Graf/ex preu camtr.t WUh 4
Chtv roJ,t , _Vl1 4 Clr . 11 an,
toll 446·1119 or ... John
and 6 ln . flull gu~ . 1 - 7 In ,
1961 Chovy va, ~ dr . wogon, .
ll&lt;k•r.
feather edg~r rottry und;r 1 phone 446·9052 arttr 2 p.m_ .
brand new . 446·0670.
IDM
Ul ·lf
202·3 - - - - - - - - - - - OOWNTOWNb-;;ol.;;;spoce
-------- ---~-.
1963 GORVAIR M~ft ll, 2 ar,.
tor te•••· 2nd Ave .; acro 11
22 FT .. llll ·&lt;on la lnod Ttrr~
bu&lt;kot oooto, •utolrono., 111111
lrom City ~ork , Appro . 2,100
travel trail er. Retlt t,ltch
paint , OOOd COI"Id Uan 1 U,5,
Sq. Fl . Coli ~46· 1119 or " '·
lnclud od . Sleeps 6, •46·0100
Phone 2•5-&amp;e?l,
1126 or tot John lcktr .
202·6
102.3

----------... -- ----------·

12\.11

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

1

.

For Sale

BU CK Special. Electric
\llllndows . Air &lt;: onCiltlon Int .
Exctl!inl colldltlon, $700, 9
Ford van, uood con 1·
lion,
Sl,UO.
70
Ford
PICkup 19!0 . 6)$ .•
18&lt;·11

1...

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

1957 CHEVY 1 dr . Slollon
wagon . Mint condltlo·n . 270
H .P , hlanced , poiltrltlon
5: 31, ~ I Pttd . Man 'f utras
IUO . "6·4999 .
71 ·tf

on
ott up
ultd
lurnlturs
Savt
to 70
r,ct . off Inonslock
Ultd.
turnl!ure . Ul) o 110 pt:;t . ofl on
ntw furnlturl , T/"111 Wllk 'a
SptC:III bunk btd Uti S98
compltte .
119·1!

ALL TYP!S ol bolldlno
m-ototllll, bloc-. brick. uwor
plpn1 windows. linitis , tic .
NING lomtlou , Clll
' CltuGI Wlnllrl• Rio Ortndo. CAN
Cleudt W ~ nttrs , H5·5121.
O. • Phpnt IA$.5121 tlltr .~) 3 . 11
lftA ,If

WOOD MOTOR SALES
Eastern Ave.

.

see h o w wise y ou were to wa lt ' til vur and· to do
v- our ntw·t-IIH l)uy ing l Sej;j the kinds of nvlngs w~' re
offering on 11111 oU' gri:HII '7 3&amp; ·• upecla lly ou r fme
se lec t ion of Potar111s. Make thiS vur , vour 't'IJ~' to
real l't' mov11 u p lr;'l uylll , In ro orn an d lu xu r v l P11 tt B
Polo ra at our showroorn he l o re you buy any rUIW ca rl

Gallipolis
446-~240

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

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

Shop now ... tell 'em HONEY sent yal

CARROLL NORRIS
DODGE INC.
so State Street ·

-------------"""

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

Gallipolis. Ohio

For Sale
Upper River Rd.
Ph.

For Sale

CLEAN rugs, l!ke new , so easv lO CASTLE llghled show cases .

to do with Blu e Lustre . Rent
· e lec;t r lc shampooer Sl at
Cen tral Supply Co ,
197 -6

InQ uire at Bernadine 's, 326
Second Aven u e. Phone 446
2477 . Alter s Phone 446· 1969.

.

"'

MODEL A Ford molor, trans ·
CORBIN &amp; SNYDER
mission , redletor plus other
p~rts ,
Melv in Li ttle at 36 lN , COPP~ RTONE Tappen
gas range ; 2 pc. living room
Cheshire .
suite ; 2 rec liners, brtekfast
200-3
set with 4 ch air s,· 2 coffee
tables; lull size coil springs .
197 2 HONDA 350, excellent
condition , 1,500 miles . .446· NEW : Refrigerator, hei'vest
gold. •Ingle dreue r with
0175 .
m lrror ,
200 -6
us Second Avenue
m .m\ Oren Frl~IV till I
TROTWOOD
cam per
27'
. P 1anty o tnt plrklng
camper , llir codl tioned , 1972
151 ·11
model , hllch, I owner . 1969
lrotwood camper 2'' 1969
N•w GMC
model.
air co ndi tio ned,
Truck HudqUarttrs
awning , hitch . tun loaded,
both se\f .contalned . Ciall 4.46· 1969 FO:rd 3A ton camper special!
1968 GMC 'lio Jon pickup
3611 .
200-3 1967 'V• T. GMC PV
1966 ~. T . GMC PU
SC HOOL clothes . excellent 1969 V~ T . GMC PU
con dit ion , Jr . girls sizes 7 and 1969 Chevrolet 11) ton pickup
9, boys sizes l2 pann , shirts 1967 'h ton Chev .
1966 G-"'-"C V1 ton PU
sites 12 to 14 . 446·4441.
200-3 1969 'h T. Ford PV
1969 Dodge Station Wagon
1973 KAWASA KI 100 Enduro 1959 Ford (;11ex le
like new , 1.400 miles. U25, 1967 1/ 2 ton Chevv pickup
includ ing 2 helm ets , AA6-00SO . 19" 1h ton GMC pickup
100·3 1965 7 ton Chevy truck
1969 3 lon OMC !ruck
CO PP ERtONE GE was he ron d 1910 i/1 T. Ct)ev . PU
dryer , very good c:ondlt lon. !969 1(1 T', Ch,v . PU
1969 '1'1 T. GMC PU
4•6 ·0466 .
200-l 1968 'h TO . GMC PU
Jq66 '~• T, GMC PU
UPRI GHT plano . Ca ll 245 ·5431 1968 'll T. GMC PU'
1967 v, T. GMC PV
a ll er .4 :30p .m .
200·3 19~7 '12 T . GMC PU
1961 I¥&lt; T . GMC PU
1972 CO NCO RD travel trailer . 1969 '1'1 Ton GMC PV
SOMM.IS O .M.C
35' x H1 with •• Jr: 6' tip out. air
TRUCKS, lNC .
cond ., other utrl$ . Can be
Ill P'lnt II.
tow ed wllh p ick up truCk . 446-·
44f·UU
9322 .
100·3
_....._

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

Come by soon.

Over 100 Machines ·
To Choose From

Ga llipolls, Ohio

For Sale

For Sale

Ride a Honda to work during .lhe week. Bea1 !he truffle
and 1he high cosl of gas. Then ride il on the weekend lo
open air and open coun iry, Only your.. Honda dealer.offers
you the greatest seteclion of models in I he ind uslrj( 10
chopse from. There's sure In be o ne ju.&lt;J right for you.

,f.~.~~~~ SMITHSALES
HONDA
.

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

-------------,.

Ride a Honda.

OF A
YEAR
END
DEAL
CLEARANCE PRICED
DODGE POLARAS!

.

l

t.~

II

______ _
••

--- -

'I

�-

'

. I

.

'-2- The SUnday TLnea- Sentinel, SUildQy, Aug. 26, 1973

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.
500 E. MAIN POMEROY, OHIO PH. 992-21n

You Caught Us With

FORD

•

•

.
•

•

•

OUR PRICES
DOWN

MIDDLEPORT, O.

•
•

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
Your Chevy Dealer

WE CAN SAVE
YOU MONEY!
1972 DfEVROLET................. ~ ... s3595
•
•

•'
•

2-seat i&lt;INGSWOOD WAGON, 16,500 miles, by local 1owner, factory air-tinted glass, 400 engine. automatic
transmission, 'power steering &amp; bra~es, radio, luggage
rack, gold finish, white-wall tires. A sharp clean car.

73 Sedan DeVIlle
Demonstrator

------------------------71 ·CADILLAC
tan finish , brown vinyl top, matching interior,
full power equipment, AM-fM radio, Climate
Control air conditioning, tilt &amp; tel . steering
wheel .

Lu&lt;ury Sedan, 4 door H. Top, local car &amp; has new appearance inside. &amp; out, 6-way seat, power door locks, ·

power windows, Comtortron air cond., radio with ·tape, ,
steel Radial tires, dark brown finish with matching in·
terlor wHh. beige vinyl . roof. This car is loaded. Priced
below book value. ·

•
'.

Now Taking Orders for 1974 Model CC~dillacs

Coupe, 1-owner car, less than 33,000 miles, brown finish
with matching vinyl roof, and vinyl interior, 302 V-8
engine, standard transmission, power steering, and

992·5l42

Cadillac . Oldsmobile
GMAC Financing Available

Fin!bird Esprit, local 1-oWne:r car, 3SO ·V-8 engine, power
steering &amp; automatic transmission , AM· FM radio, like
new while lettered tires, 307 V-8, radio, clean Interior·. A
sharp one.

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY 111 ........ }1395 ·
.4-door, V-8 automatic, power steering , radio, good tires.
blue finish, spotless interior .

For Sale

For Sale

Corbin &amp; Snyder
·· Furniture ·

MOBILE HOMES
FOR SALE
RECONDITIONED
MOBILE HOMES
1970 12 x 60 2 BR Challenger
1969 12 x 60 2 BR Baron
19.64 10 )( 55 2 BR Princess
1965 10 x so 2 BR Monarch
19SS 8 X 4() 2 BR Londola . '
1'965 10 x .55 2 BR Roycrolft ·

1970 DODGE POlARA ................$1395

B&amp;S MOBILE HOMES
Second &amp;'Viand St.

4-door. factory air, automatic transmission, power
steering &amp; brakes. go.o d while wall tires . while f inish,
vinyl rQOf, radio, heavy dufy suspension.

(""!ext to H~ck's)

1967 DfEVEl!E ...................... ..S995
4-door, 6 cylinder automatic transmission, good tires,
clean interior , beige finish. radio &amp; heater, real economy
&amp; a popular model .

1969 PLYMOUTH FURY 1............. s795
4 -door, 52,000: miles, · good tires,· 6 _cylinder, automatic
r transmlssio.n, black finish .
.
.

Truck Specials

1971 DfEVROLET % TON.......... s2395

Pt . Pleasant

New : Serta

and Bemco mat.
tress and box springs . Large
selection In stock - twin , ful/ 1
Qoeen size . Save up to $40 a

set.

us Second Avenue
446·117

176-11
-------------SINGER Sewing Machine Sales
&amp; Service. All models In

stock . Free dellverr. Ser'lllce
guar.a nteed. Modes priced
from 569.95. French City
Fabric Shoppe, Sl nQer ap proved dealer , 58 Court St .
Ph . 446-9255 .
.308-1

8' Fleelside, 350 V-8 engine, 15" heavy duty tires, 3-speed
transmission. like new and ready to go.

1970 DfEVROLET 2-TON .......... ;.s2495

69 FORD LID ..........................'1295
V- , euto ., P. steering, vinyl roof, fac . air, w-s-w tires
whee1 covers, radio .. Ex tra Sharp 1

r;

992-2174

2 Dr . hardtop, small V-8, stand .
excellent cond. Gold with blk .

500 E. Main St. Pomeroy, onio

For' Sale
Aluminum
Sheets
'

t.................... . .....
~

.,
•'•
"

"""'

20t

.'7.3 CLEARAN.CE
.,

,,',..

l

,l

'!

••

,,

~

8 for SLOO

Gallipolis
Daily 1ribune

1973 - Zig Zag sewing machine.
This machine darns , em broiders, overcests, button
825 Third Ave.
holes . All
without at .
Gallipoll• · n
tachments . F?ay baiance of
$j8 ,50 or pay $5 per month .
C~ll446 - 0255.
·
137-tf DESK, chair , filing cabinet in
---------------.
s tock, Immediate delivery ,
67 CAMARO ss 675-5623.
Simmons Ptg . &amp; Office Equip .
198-5
....._
178-tf

_________ ___ _
--------------

WITH OUR UII••IW CUI

t
..
•

DEMONSTRATOR SPECIALS!

......

73 MERCURY

.,

Beautiful cars, beautifully equipped.
Save, Save, Save.

.".

that you may find objectionable.

.,::;...
19114 Models will be higher priced &amp;
" wip have more E.P.A. control systems

~arquls, 2 dr. H.T., red with white vlnyl 'top, spllffront seat,

factory air, P.S., P. B., steel belted radial tires, less than 5 000
miles, new car warranty.
. ',

.

,,

73 FORD.

,RIVERSIDE AMC ··JEEP

(,~an Corino, ·2 dr. H. 1 ., saddle bronze with dar.k·brown v1ny1
top. steel belted radial tires, factory air, P.S., P·. B;i 6,000
m1les, new car warrantv:
Sticker Price $4579.
·

SALE

2~- AMBASSADOR SEDANS
1 .... JAVELIN

••,

•4895

{I

•

••

Now •3895

.

'

1969 PLYMOUTH road runner,
90(Hj condition . Call 446-7448

between 9 a .m. and l p.m .
201 -6
1961 TRAILER 3 BR,\ '1, balhS,
Jlr cond. ,' awnlg and un derp in, Cell 2.45-SOlot or 2..s.
5033. Paul Sm lth, adm ..
Harrl$burg Rd .
201 ·l

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

67 M081LE home, 2 bedroom,

very gOOd condition . Call A.t6 ·
11.. 9. Clll between one lt l'! d 5
p.m .
201-6

---------Ot

Calhoun , AK(.
rog. Tov Poodle puppies . $50
IO ..5. 256 -6247 .
201 -26

KENNEL

'

SPECIAL CLEARANCE PRICE
SPECIAL CLEARANCE PRICE

----------- ~ -·

66 BUICK SpeCiilr, gpod con .
dltlon , air cond ., e /ec. win dows, $700. Les Paul Jr .
tlectrrc gu itar, exc . cond .•
$125 . 675-•a•a.
AKG reg . Maltese piJps 1150.
19A-lf
.., .•922.
201 -6 SIGNS- ~,- 8/lkinds-;paper,
metal , magneflc car and
·SuR PLUS two motalsecrttary
truck sig ns . Slmm ol'ls Pig .,
thelra, 1 real good buy.
460 Second .
'
Wood a Insurance Agency , 32 ·
178 -W
LOCuli, Ph . •46-1066.
201 ·lf
IF YOU ere bUilding It new
tlome or remodeling , see us .
JOH .. Oltrt Dozer. 1970 Ch'evy
We art bulldtrs , O!strlbutor
plekup, 1967 Pontile Tem ·
for Hotpolnt Appl /a ncu
pnt . 446.1502.
Allison Electtlc.
'
201-12
. 154-lf

'8,995

. PARKWOOD SUGGESTED LIST PRICE

$9,700

•8,795

See Frank Gheen, (sales manager). he will be happy to show you alllhe
· fine features of these 2 homes.
.

Larry's Mobile Homes Sales Inc.

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

600 West Main Street nex1 to the Jones Boys.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph. 992·7777
Hrs.: Mon. thru Fri. 9 a.m. to 8 p.m .
Sat. 9to6 p.m., Sun. 1 to6 p.m.

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

TRAILER COURT, $2.$00. per GOOD CLEAN LUMP and
pod, Ph . 361-7634.
stoker coaL Carl Winters . Rio
Grande . Phone 2A.5 · ~1 15 .
.
lU-11
8-tl
--- ---------~----~---: ---- ---

t

'

73 DODGE

cylinder ,

For sate

RICE'S

'1495

73 PLYMOUTH
DUSTER

For Sale

72 CAMARO

WSW tires. air cond.

1973 PONTIAC
CATALINA 4 DOOR
SEDAN
Fully equipped, including air cond.,
radio, P.S., P.B:; hydramatic trans.,
tinted glass and many other accessories.

Duster. automatic, V-8.

•2695

OVER 35 .
.GOOD CLEAN
USED CARS

1973 DUSTERS

ALL 1974 MODELS WILL HAVE

REASONS

1. INCREASED PRICES

TO BUY

2. LESS GAS MILEAGE
3. COMBINATION SHOULDER HARNESS AND SEAr
BELTS MUST BE FASTENED TO START ENGINE
4. PROBABILITY OF HIGHER INTEREST

1973
MODELS

·ON Alt :DISCOUNT PRICES. ~

.

7 NEW PONTIACS JUST ARRIVED!

Gallipolis Chrysler·Pijmouth
~ve.

FULL
PRICE

OUR USED CAR INVENTORY IS LOW. TRADE-lNS ACCEPTED

AS LOW~;., $,
.
AS

1639 EasTern

$

FULL
PRICE

6 Cyilnder. automatic .

Gallipolis

446-3273

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC, INC.

Summer '73
Clearance Sale

"Your Authorized Buick-Pontiac Dealer" .
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO .
.1900 EASTERN AVENUE

71 PONTIAC CATALINA

NOW IN FULL SWING

Phone 592-4491 ·

- For Sate

AKC Ir ish Se tter pup , excellent

blood line, reasonable . Phone
AA6-3964,
202 ·3
.

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

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

DACHSHUNO Puppies ,
Rev . Phone .446-4999 .

AKC

eLINCOLN CONTINENTAL • ·COUGAR

202·6
AM su5i'Nes5Banilrodi0., 85
walt Input Johnson model, 6oo
ban with tlltphone lint
remote control , 6 mObile
unltl. model PAU. ·New ~o•t
S3,300 . Make rlesoneb/1!1 offer
Oavld Culpepper, P , &lt;
). ao,C
131 , 4.46·1639,
It
.
202-6

tMERCURY MONTEGO • COMET
eCAPRI tDATSON • SUB~RU • MARK IV
DA TSON Phone 592-4463

------:--------·--

_____________ _:_nlf

Since Smith Auto has discontinued
'
Datsun, we will be hiJPPY to service
any Datsuns at our dealershi~.

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

-------------- --------------·-

•2695

ATHENS, OHIO
YOUR DEALER FOR

NEW &amp; USED FU~NITVRE
SE LMER Perfs alto saxophone,
854 Seconct An., 44•.un
exce llent condition. Phone
NEW 5 pc . maple all wood
"6·1865,
.~lnette se t, $129.95 . New 7 pc .
maple all wood dlf'l ette 111
202 ·l
......
$219 .95 . F i rm 11'\n erspr lnO
mattress: SJ9 .95 . New 3 pc e nd MANUA L typewriter , .4.46-11.41 .
.
202 -l
table sell $16,95.
·
--~---------~
1971 350 SL Honda , excelle.t
GOOD Ull~ Tomeo bottled gu
condition . Phone 367 -0182. ·
floor furnace . Cell 367 -7Ut.
1969 CHEVY Nova , 1967 Chevy
202-3
Impale flr n and wh eels,
------------20~3
headers and pipe• end en 1-4 FT . fiberglass boat AS HP BROWNING Eagle Bau stoll&amp;n
motor , tre liar 1 excellent
utra 396 engine plus all tx tra
2l Chonntl SST, Browning
ports . $1 ,750 . A46. ~600.
condl llon . ~46 - 1073 .
mobile radio, towtr , anttnnl
.
202-1
199-6
new
Demeo modulatot '
bridge meier, Call '46 .3
1972 CAMARO, l07 V8, turbo
alter I :30.
·
1971 VINOALE moblll home ,
auto ., P .S., P .B., dlx Int., 19
102:6
all e lectr ic and ctfltrel a·Jr,
mpg , like new, t2,750 or. Offlr ,
underpinning end 2 aw,. 1nosr
AIID- Int. Bus , converted to
storag e building , m any •x ·
cam per , good cond ,, ldtl/ for
tru . C1ll 388.&amp;630 tor tn.
towing , hunting , etc . 1395 or
se .. vlce · ,t.llon for llltt
fo rmation.
olflr . .4ot6-7.t38 .
·
within the city . For lurlhor
1~9 . 6
202·1
lnlormollon, coli 367.1119.

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

1973 LeSABRE
4 DOOR SEDAN
PB, PS, auto. trans., tinted gla.ss,

Sport '340' . Only 9,0 00
miles.

600 E. STATE ST.
&amp; 1200 E. STATE ST,

1

sg,goo ·

CROYOON SUGGESTED LIST PRrCE

70 MAVERICK

. DAl£ R. SANDERS INC.

RIGGS
USED
CARS
LOCATJ:DON ST. RT. 7
985-4100
. CHESTER 0,

· Two great homes with craHmanship that makes each an outstanding
value. You need to see them to realize the luxury they have to offer.
Both homes are 12x65 - 2 bedroom. Millergun furnace, carpet
th.roughout, Deluxe furniture &amp; decor, storms &amp; screens, house type beds,
·~·med dryer. plumb. washer, vent in bath, lf4 inch paneling throughout
and many other fine features.

$

2 dr. l)ardtop, radio. P. steering, P. brakes.
lac . air cond .• white finish with blue nylon
interior, w·s·w tires. 17,000 miles. Excellent
cond.

•2795

SEE RAY RIGGS ga ROGiR RIIIIL .

Quality BuiH Homes by Croydon &amp; Palttwood

FULL
PRICE

I

4295

For Sale

radio, WSW tires, air cond.

195 Upper River Rd.
GaJiipolis. Oh.
Ph. 446-9800

.'~

Monte Carlo, 2. dr. H. T ., beige In color with cnamols vinyl
roof, factory .aJ r, P.S., P. !3., steel belted radial tires ·with. ·
rally wh~ls, less than 6,000 miles.
,

"Your Chevy Dealer"
992-2126 Open Eves. TillS Pomeroy

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

'1495

6

PS, PB, auto, trans., t.inted glass.

2 Door . See thi s one .

'1995

'3695

•

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

199-tf

71 CHEV. VEGA

73 DODGE

13 CHEV.

Ave.

71 PONTIAC

6
standard shift, P . steering, radio, .w-s-w llres, w·
covers .

"'"

·CLEARANCE

Brunlcardl Houu of Music, 54
State Street . Phone 446-0687.
.
190-tf
-----~-------PIPES, Pipes
Pipes . GBD' ,
Ch4t(atan, BBB, Jobey, Hilson
end others . Tawney's Pip&amp; and
Trophy House, .422 Siecond

•2895

Ventura \1 2 dr ., automatlc,
P .S., P. B .. sharp.

Custom cab, radio, new paint. A real ni ce truck .

cV1..

'1995

2 · Door.
automatic .

4 DOOR SEDAN

Gran Cpe ., 2 dr . H.T.,
automatic, P.S., P. B., air,
automatic speed control.

4-speed .

Western mirrors. radio, rear step bumper, standard shift,
6 cyl. Nice!
·

USE.D OFFSET PLATES .
HAVE
MANY USES

Visit our As Is Dept. for cheap transportation.
Approx. 15 cars less than $500.00.

CLOSE OUT on new zlg .J:ag
sewing machines . For sewing
stretch fabr l ~s, buttonholes,
fancy designs , etc . Paint
slfghtly blemished . Ch oice of
carry ing case or sewing
stand . ~9 . 80 cash or terms
available. Phone -H 6 ·2460.
197-6
ELECTROLUX Sweeper deluxe
mod&amp;L Complete with all
cleaning attachments and
uses paper bags , S/lgh ly used
but cleans lind looks Ilk'! new ,.
Will sell for SJ7 .25 ·cuh or
terms av~l/able . Phone .416 ·
24 60 .
197-6
MOTO R- -h'Q;;;e- i97o-F ord
Chassis , completely self .cotalned , ges or electric , sleeps
6, lots of extras, 12,000 m lies
$5,995 . See al Kellh Goble'
Mobile Home Salts, Mid ·
dleport, 0 . or call 367 -76"5 In
Cheshire.
198-5

72 PLYMOUTH

69 FORD F-100 .....................;.}1295

69 FORD RANDfERO 500......... }1495

71 PLYMOUTH

71 AMX

70 DiEV. CUSTOM .DEWXE....... ..S2195

Serwice Til 12
Woon on ~id~

'2895

•1895

3W V-8, standard shift. radio, rear step bumper, c hrome
western mirrors, .57,000 miles approx .

FORD F-100 ........................ '1195

steering wheel, ·AM - FM
radio, A· I condi tion .

'1795

FORD F-100 ........................ s2195

~

2 Door H.T .. a ir. 1111

Sa tellite 4 Door. nice clean
car, automatic, P.S.

4 Wheel ~r., Stallonwagon, V'B engine, radio, free running
hubs, auxiliary seat, locally owned.
,.

30~ V-8, auto., chrome western mirrors, reaf. step bumper,
bumper guards. radio . '

72 CAPRICE

Matador 4 dr . sed ,, like
new, 32.000 miles.

.71 FORD BRONCO ................... ..'2795

36"x23":w:009

MOBILE HOME

NEW and used Instruments,

•995

·

Ton Pickup, Delu xe
topper, auto.. P.S ., only
3,000 miles. .

350 cu. In V-B 15,000 lb. fs peed rear a&lt;le, good 825x20 10
ply tires, heavy duly front &amp; rear springs, 108" cab to
axle. Clean cab, heater .

For Sale

Fury Ill 4 dr . sed ., P.S,
P. B., air .

lh

149-tt .

COAC HMAN Travel Trailer,.
Motor Homes, 5th Wheel ,
Truck Campers , Apple City
Auto Slates, Rt., 35 N . Jllckson , ·
Ohio . Phorye 286 ·5700.
110-tf

68 PLYMOUTH

71 RAMBLER

111 7 o.m. &amp;
~l 'til 5 p.m.

8

USED CAR S.PECIALS

'

67 DODGE CORONET................... s795

Open Evenin&amp;l-

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC

1973 CENTURY

'

For Sale

" You ' ll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business"

1970 PONTIAC ...•.••.....•......•...•s2195

•4295
G. T .. 5,000 miles, auto. Red . Sharp.
•3595
Caprice Custom , 2 dr .• H.T. . Loaded.
'4295
Cornet, 6 cyl., auto .. P.S. Shi!r.,.
•2695'
Charger .. Red, black vinyl top, auto.
' '2495
LTO 4 Dr., H. T .• factory air, AM· FM, ster.eo tape •
'2595
LeSabre Custom, 4 dr. H. T. Lots of miles.
ONLY •2495
Super Beetle, 4 speed. Shi!rp.
'1795
Fury Ill 4 dr .. air low mileage.
•18f}5
Catalina 4 dr., air. Low mileage.
'26.95
Imp., 2 dr: H. T.; air. Clean . One owner .·
'1595
L.T. D., 2 dr. H. I., air, local one. owner.
'1595
Caprice Classic. Loaded. Like new .

We Want To Make ;You Happy

Pomeroy

Open Eves. Tii6-Til5 P.M. Sat.

brakes , radio, really sharp .

•'

OUR WORD IS
'OUR BOND

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

Malibu ... door, 307 V-8 engine, automatic trans., power
steering, radio, clea,n Interior, gold finish.

REMEMBER

THE
GREAT BUICK
COUNTDOWN

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S
DfRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER

SEE Ceward Calvert, Peggy Story or Ron Hester
REMEMBER We Want .You Back Because
The Job Was Done Right Not Because The Job Was Done W

We Service
Wh11t We Sell

'4800

1970 CHEVROLET.................. ..S1695
1971 FORD .TORINO 500 .. :.........S2095

1973 CHEV;
1973 OPEL
1973 CHEVROLET
1972 DODGE ·
1971 DODGE
1971 FORD
1971 BUICK
1971 v.w.
1970 PLYMOUTH
1970 PONTIAC
1969 CHEV.
1969 FORD

SEDAN DeVILLE

. 1971 OLDS ..98''......................s2995

";od.

pblut, blk . vinyl roof , all blue vin yl
•
·
au
o.,
. siHrlng, P . brak", radio w 1 w
11
r ... w-covero . This car In best eond . Drlvts the boil .

SOME GREAT USED CAR BUYS

KEITH GOBLE FORD, INC.
992-2196

:.,~;;,~:r~-~p,

We Have 50 New Buick &amp; Pontiacs In Stock. You Can Save Hundreds of Dollars:·
They Are Going Fast. Beat The 74 Price Raise .

Close Out Prices On Alll973 L.T.D.,
Gran Torino, Trucks and Used Cars.
S. 3rd AVE.

•u

69 FORD LID ........................... 95

1973 MODEL
CLEARANCE SALE

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLERPLYMOUTH
'

----~-------~10 X 50 MOBILE 1101\'lt, 2 BR .

e6t

-----------'1__

For Sale

Business Oppciftunilies-

U

.

191·11

-----------.1..-For Ren+ ot &amp;...e .·

1 - 9 IN . 8 &amp; 0 fltt ylbrallng
742,5980.
. ·
·
202 -1
Unde:r . 1 - W11rm Mornli'IO s
rm . n111ture1 or b!1ftletf ~u - - - - -- - - - - - - h&amp;al&amp;r. used 1 wlh lor , 1 _ 1967 &amp;UlCK Wlldcol, • dr .. J''7 OFFiCI! sptCI tor IIUI, 2nd
Avl , 1cros1 from ~fly Ptrk
Graf/ex preu camtr.t WUh 4
Chtv roJ,t , _Vl1 4 Clr . 11 an,
toll 446·1119 or ... John
and 6 ln . flull gu~ . 1 - 7 In ,
1961 Chovy va, ~ dr . wogon, .
ll&lt;k•r.
feather edg~r rottry und;r 1 phone 446·9052 arttr 2 p.m_ .
brand new . 446·0670.
IDM
Ul ·lf
202·3 - - - - - - - - - - - OOWNTOWNb-;;ol.;;;spoce
-------- ---~-.
1963 GORVAIR M~ft ll, 2 ar,.
tor te•••· 2nd Ave .; acro 11
22 FT .. llll ·&lt;on la lnod Ttrr~
bu&lt;kot oooto, •utolrono., 111111
lrom City ~ork , Appro . 2,100
travel trail er. Retlt t,ltch
paint , OOOd COI"Id Uan 1 U,5,
Sq. Fl . Coli ~46· 1119 or " '·
lnclud od . Sleeps 6, •46·0100
Phone 2•5-&amp;e?l,
1126 or tot John lcktr .
202·6
102.3

----------... -- ----------·

12\.11

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

1

.

For Sale

BU CK Special. Electric
\llllndows . Air &lt;: onCiltlon Int .
Exctl!inl colldltlon, $700, 9
Ford van, uood con 1·
lion,
Sl,UO.
70
Ford
PICkup 19!0 . 6)$ .•
18&lt;·11

1...

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

1957 CHEVY 1 dr . Slollon
wagon . Mint condltlo·n . 270
H .P , hlanced , poiltrltlon
5: 31, ~ I Pttd . Man 'f utras
IUO . "6·4999 .
71 ·tf

on
ott up
ultd
lurnlturs
Savt
to 70
r,ct . off Inonslock
Ultd.
turnl!ure . Ul) o 110 pt:;t . ofl on
ntw furnlturl , T/"111 Wllk 'a
SptC:III bunk btd Uti S98
compltte .
119·1!

ALL TYP!S ol bolldlno
m-ototllll, bloc-. brick. uwor
plpn1 windows. linitis , tic .
NING lomtlou , Clll
' CltuGI Wlnllrl• Rio Ortndo. CAN
Cleudt W ~ nttrs , H5·5121.
O. • Phpnt IA$.5121 tlltr .~) 3 . 11
lftA ,If

WOOD MOTOR SALES
Eastern Ave.

.

see h o w wise y ou were to wa lt ' til vur and· to do
v- our ntw·t-IIH l)uy ing l Sej;j the kinds of nvlngs w~' re
offering on 11111 oU' gri:HII '7 3&amp; ·• upecla lly ou r fme
se lec t ion of Potar111s. Make thiS vur , vour 't'IJ~' to
real l't' mov11 u p lr;'l uylll , In ro orn an d lu xu r v l P11 tt B
Polo ra at our showroorn he l o re you buy any rUIW ca rl

Gallipolis
446-~240

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

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

Shop now ... tell 'em HONEY sent yal

CARROLL NORRIS
DODGE INC.
so State Street ·

-------------"""

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

Gallipolis. Ohio

For Sale
Upper River Rd.
Ph.

For Sale

CLEAN rugs, l!ke new , so easv lO CASTLE llghled show cases .

to do with Blu e Lustre . Rent
· e lec;t r lc shampooer Sl at
Cen tral Supply Co ,
197 -6

InQ uire at Bernadine 's, 326
Second Aven u e. Phone 446
2477 . Alter s Phone 446· 1969.

.

"'

MODEL A Ford molor, trans ·
CORBIN &amp; SNYDER
mission , redletor plus other
p~rts ,
Melv in Li ttle at 36 lN , COPP~ RTONE Tappen
gas range ; 2 pc. living room
Cheshire .
suite ; 2 rec liners, brtekfast
200-3
set with 4 ch air s,· 2 coffee
tables; lull size coil springs .
197 2 HONDA 350, excellent
condition , 1,500 miles . .446· NEW : Refrigerator, hei'vest
gold. •Ingle dreue r with
0175 .
m lrror ,
200 -6
us Second Avenue
m .m\ Oren Frl~IV till I
TROTWOOD
cam per
27'
. P 1anty o tnt plrklng
camper , llir codl tioned , 1972
151 ·11
model , hllch, I owner . 1969
lrotwood camper 2'' 1969
N•w GMC
model.
air co ndi tio ned,
Truck HudqUarttrs
awning , hitch . tun loaded,
both se\f .contalned . Ciall 4.46· 1969 FO:rd 3A ton camper special!
1968 GMC 'lio Jon pickup
3611 .
200-3 1967 'V• T. GMC PV
1966 ~. T . GMC PU
SC HOOL clothes . excellent 1969 V~ T . GMC PU
con dit ion , Jr . girls sizes 7 and 1969 Chevrolet 11) ton pickup
9, boys sizes l2 pann , shirts 1967 'h ton Chev .
1966 G-"'-"C V1 ton PU
sites 12 to 14 . 446·4441.
200-3 1969 'h T. Ford PV
1969 Dodge Station Wagon
1973 KAWASA KI 100 Enduro 1959 Ford (;11ex le
like new , 1.400 miles. U25, 1967 1/ 2 ton Chevv pickup
includ ing 2 helm ets , AA6-00SO . 19" 1h ton GMC pickup
100·3 1965 7 ton Chevy truck
1969 3 lon OMC !ruck
CO PP ERtONE GE was he ron d 1910 i/1 T. Ct)ev . PU
dryer , very good c:ondlt lon. !969 1(1 T', Ch,v . PU
1969 '1'1 T. GMC PU
4•6 ·0466 .
200-l 1968 'h TO . GMC PU
Jq66 '~• T, GMC PU
UPRI GHT plano . Ca ll 245 ·5431 1968 'll T. GMC PU'
1967 v, T. GMC PV
a ll er .4 :30p .m .
200·3 19~7 '12 T . GMC PU
1961 I¥&lt; T . GMC PU
1972 CO NCO RD travel trailer . 1969 '1'1 Ton GMC PV
SOMM.IS O .M.C
35' x H1 with •• Jr: 6' tip out. air
TRUCKS, lNC .
cond ., other utrl$ . Can be
Ill P'lnt II.
tow ed wllh p ick up truCk . 446-·
44f·UU
9322 .
100·3
_....._

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

Come by soon.

Over 100 Machines ·
To Choose From

Ga llipolls, Ohio

For Sale

For Sale

Ride a Honda to work during .lhe week. Bea1 !he truffle
and 1he high cosl of gas. Then ride il on the weekend lo
open air and open coun iry, Only your.. Honda dealer.offers
you the greatest seteclion of models in I he ind uslrj( 10
chopse from. There's sure In be o ne ju.&lt;J right for you.

,f.~.~~~~ SMITHSALES
HONDA
.

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

-------------,.

Ride a Honda.

OF A
YEAR
END
DEAL
CLEARANCE PRICED
DODGE POLARAS!

.

l

t.~

II

______ _
••

--- -

'I

�'

.

.
'

24- The Swlday Time•. !lentinel, SWJday, Aug. 2G, 1973

10 Fined, 15 give up bonds
POMEROY - Ten delend·
ants were fined and 15 forfeited
bonda and one was assessed
c&lt;»ts only in Meigs County
.codrt Friday.
Fined by Judge Frank W.
Pqrter were Sidney C. Paf..
tenon, Marietta, $5 and costs,
speeding; Nanci G. Maynard,
Bidwell, and Richard Till,
Zanesville, $10 and coots each,
paasing without assured clear

distance; Robert Palm, Irwin,
Pa., US and costs, speeding,
J oyc e
J o h n s I o .n ,
Langsville , $10 and costs ,·
failure to yield right
of way : Michael W.
Kelley, Rt. 4, Pomeroy , $20 and
costs, speeding; Ivan B.
Walker, Jr., Rt. 3 Pomeroy, $10
and costs, left of center; Fonna
K. _CU!lums, Hemlock Grove,
$19, and costs, passing at intersection; Gerald F. Barrett,
Rt.l,Middleport;$10andcos!s,
no operator's license; James
Ramsey, Athens, $}0 and
costs passmg at mtersectiOn,
and Christine S. Tucker Rt. 2,
~cine, costs only, !allure to
y1eld.
Forfeiting bonds were Gary
L. Renk, New Eagle,. Pa.,
$32.50, speeding; Ricky L.
Blake Rt. 1 Reedsvil)e, $25,
Improper registration; Teddy
R. Roach, Bellville, $55,
l1l speedi ng; Darrell Norris,
Racine, $25, disl\!rbing the
peace;
Charlie
Hill,
Racine,
$50,
disturbing the peace and ob-

sceAe language ; Steven B.
Schoonover, Chauncey, end
John M. Cllepes, Parkersburg,
$27.50
each,
speeding ;
Raymond Y. Yerian, Caldwell,
$27 .50, overheig)lt · load ;
Patricia Crossan, Rt. l Miners·
ville, $42.50, speeding ; Stephen
Henderson, Middleport, $27,50,
stop sign ; Monty B. Pratt, Van
Wert, $27.50, improper
backing ; Walter J . Mercer,
Jr .,
Cheshire ,
$37.50
speeding ;
Jim
Ritchie, Racine, and George D.
Stobart, Jr., Racine, $25 each,
disturbing the peace; Thomas
Gospers , Fanklin Furnace,
$22. 50, no eye protection on
cycle.

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emor CJIJzen
center activities

POMEROY - Monday, Aug.
'll, Decopage, 1-3.
Tuesday, Aug. 28, Cards and
Games, 1-4.
Thursday, Aug . 30, Birthday
Party, I p.m. Help us
celebrate!
Friday, Aug. 31, Rug
hooking, 9-11 .
Emergency unit
Quilting, rug hooking, horse
shoes, shuffie board, cards,
makes two caHs
games, crafts, anytime you
like. Check the bus schedule
RACINE - The Racine ER and come in, do your shopping,
For help with all your
unit made one run Thursday or play with us. Bring your
and one Friday.
family insurance needs,
sack lunch - we have the
On Thursday at 4 p.m. Eddie coffee and iced tea!
see:
Taylor, 38, Rl. 1 Racine, was
taken to ·Veterans Memorial
Hospital with a back injury.
· Por.k•Ctntral
Friday at 10 p.m. Henry
tlotol Biela.
Walker, 60, PorUand, who was
SeconCI Avenue
having difficulty breathing,
Gallipolis, Ohio
was also taken to Veterans
Phone 446-4290
Home-446-4518
By Bertha Parker
Memorial. Both were treated
Sabbath
School attendance
and released.
Until fu r ther notice , the Aug. 19 at the Free Methodist
IrATI J,UM
Stile Farm
Racine unit will be using its Church was 99, offering from
lnturance Companias white truck for emergency all services was $198.47.
Home Of!fcas:
Rev. Hurd, New York, gave a
. 'lloomlngton, Illinois calls and green truck on fire talk and showed pictures of the
calls.
Gerry Home, New York. The
home is finan ced by the Free
Methodist Churches.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Stanley
For eirline reserv1tions 'around the corner .. .
have
purchased the property of
or around· the world . ..
Lawrence Eblin and have
occupied it. They are announ cing tile birth of their first
child,
Kristen Marl, born Aug.
Ca II 446-0699
3 at Holzer Medical Center.
Mr . and Mrs . Norman
Schaefer visited recently with
Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Stahl, New
Marshfield.
33 Court Street
Mr. and Mrs. Roy How·ell,
AMERICA~S LARGEST TRAVEL AGENCY . Mr. and Mrs. Larry Walker,
'
Indiana, spent the weekend at
th·eir home here.

Like a
good
State Farm

is there.---,----,
Snowden

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

A

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Riffe finds
•
opportunism

in Kurfess

RACINE
Airman
Nicholas R. lhle, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John N. Ihle of Rt,
I, has been assigned to
Sheppard AFB, Te&gt;., after
complellng Air Force basic
training. He bas been
•~signed to the Technical
Training Center ai Sheppard
for specialized training In
the com munication field.
lhle is a 1973 gradullte of
Southern High School.

Two car accident
occurs on SR 124
POMEROY -sheriff Robert
D. Hartenbach's deparlment
investigated a two car accident
Satur-day morning at 9:30 on
SR 124 in Minersville.
A pickup truck . driven : by
David Lee Hill, Racine, struck
the rear of a ·car driven by
Ronald D. Butcher, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, as Butcher prepared
to stop to pick up two
pedestrians.
Mayme Mallory, a passenger
in th.e Hili car, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by th!l Pomeroy ER Squad with
a leg injury.
The accident is still under
investigation.
VOTE TO STRIKE
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UPI)
- The I ,200 teachers in the
Youngstown City School
System voted Friday to strike
Sept. 4 unless a "fair and
equitable" contract settlement
is reached by that date
the first scheduled day of
school.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
House Speaker Vernal Riffe, DNew Booton, has charged Rep.
Charles Kurfess, R-Bowling
Green, lhe minority Houae
leade•, wilh a!tempUng to
make ·" political hay" out or
incidents at lhe new Southern
Ohio Correctional Facility.
Kurfess and Rep . Sam
Speck, R-New Concord, issued
a "White Paper" last Wed·
nesday on the troubled new
maximum security prison.
Frankly, I expectro a much
more enlightened and concerned approac h on your
behalf," Riffe said in a letter to
Kurfess.
Rifte said Kurfess was most
interested in "generating press
MEIGS MINE TOUR- Gealy Wallwork (second from right), manager of coal mining
releases and bathing in
operations at the Meigs Mine complex, points out new construction at mine site No. I to Rep.
television ligbts."
Clarence Miller (right) during a recent tour of the Gavin Power· Meigs Mine facilities. Joining
. Riffe, whose district includes
Rep. Miller and Wallwork are Chuck Keffler (left), Ohio Power CoJilpany's fuei!Uld natural
Lucasville , also accused
resources supervisor, and Doug Dempaey of the Meigs !dine staff. Rep. Miller has announced
Kurfess of misusing the . that a public meeting of the Task Force surveying the economic development of Southeastern
Legislative Service ComOhio will be held at 1p.m.on September 19at the Meigs County Courthouse.
mission ,.. a bipartisan
research arm of the General
Assembly which Kurfess
chairs.
·
·
Kurfess went ahead with "a
lCe Sue Or
largely political and obviously .
biased inquiry" into the Lucas.
ville prison incidents after the
DAYTON (UP! ) - ~ven­
PT. PLEASANT - A onecommission named a bipar- teen white Dayton policemen
vehicle accident was intisan nine-member committee have filed a suit for $1.5 million
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Knapp of vestigated by the Mason
to investigate the state charging the city of Dayton, Terre Haute, Indiana, wa~ last
County Sheriff's ~partment
Corrections Department, Riffe two city commissions and two ThUrsday visitor of Mr. and
Friday afternoon on State
said.
city offic ials with racial Mrs. Lincoln Russell.
Route 62, but no injuries were
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Russell, reported.
discrimination in their
Tena Rae of Kentucky were
promotional policies.
Deputy James Craddock
The suit claims the officers Thursday and Friday visitor~ made invesUgation and said
passed a 1971 promotional of Mr. and Mrs . Lincoln the driver was Curtis F. Riffle,
examination and were placed Russell.
810 W. Main Street, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley T. Riffle told police another
on a waiting list valid for two
years . The Dayton Police Johnson and Mr. and Mrs. vehicle hit the left side of his
Contrary to liberal expecta· Department allowed the list to Howard Thoma enjoyed car near the bumper and
lions, the passage of a shield expire, despite vacancies in the homemade ice cream Monday
fender.
law (for reporters) would
evening at the home of Mr. and
deparlment,
the
suit
charged.
concede additional authority
At the time, the city was Mrs. Harley E. Johnson,
to those people whom the
press chooses to identify as its following a policy of Tommy, Cheryl and Terry. · Just read a bqrror story
Faye Donlavy of Columbus about football, where the en·
enemies.
promotions for black officers
- Lewis H·. Lapham, manag- only. That policy was ruled was a weekend visitor of her thusiastic crowds took down
ing edjtor of Harper's mag- discriminatory in a suit last daughter, Mr. and Mrs. George the ghoul posts at the end of
azine.
the game.
Warner and family. ·
spring.

P,ol'
fi
$1.5 mt'llw'n

Wolfpen

News, Notes

Pomeroy man

unhurt Friday
"

:Put and take stripping wo:fks in Pennsylvania
Guckert 118id the method waa " 110 •imple I don~ know why
It hadn't been thought of before."
.
"You put the spll back In where the coal csme from ," he

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UPI) - Pennsylvania officials
contended here Sunday that the "put and take" strip mine
reclamalloolylltem, used suc&lt;:essfully in their state in reeent
years, 111\ould be put to use in West Virginia .
"!know thllaystem can work in West Virginia, " Dire&lt;1or
William E. Guckert of Pennsylvania's Bureau of Surface
Mine Reclamation told a legislative interun committee
studylpg West VIrginia's coal production and mine employment decline .

c~plained .

','Nearly everywhc'l'e In other Btates people are saying ban
strip mining,'' Guckert said. "But you don't hear thai In
Pennsylvania any more. The people Qren't &lt;'Omplalnlng

anymore.''
Slides were shown of successful •trip mine reclamation in
Pennsylvania.
The committee later looklldat films of reclamation in West
Virginia .
The difference between work done in the two states was
t~at highwalls were covered back over In Pennsylvania,
while in most West Virginia projects the 30-fool highway
allowed by law was left standing.
Lancaster called the highwall "an l.sland Inaccessible to
wildlife and hunters."
"Why leave the 30-foot hlghwall?" he asked. "What's the

Guckert appeared before the ·committee alonQ with Tnapecwr-at·Large Edward R. Lancaster or his agency .and
coilf milling official Edward Mears of Marion Center, Pa.
Meara Is president of Mears Coal Co., which developlld the
"modified block cut" mining method and put it to use fullscale In 1971.
Sometbnes referred to as the "controlled placement"
method In West Virginia, the system involves the back filling
of dirt and other mine refuse into the mined out are•.

QUOTES

Mostly sunny, hot and humid
today and Tuesday. Higha both
days In the low and mid 90s;
Clear and warm tonight lows In
the upper 90s and low 70s.

en tine
Devoted To 17ae In~rf!'U Of~ Meig•·MaMJn Area
MONDAY, AUGUST 27, 1973

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXV NO. 94

A 6,000 gallon tar tank the weekend, Sheriff Robert C,
containing 3,000 gallons of tar Hartenbach's Dept. said today.
The tank is located on county
was dumped on Leading Creek
road by vandala sometime over road 3 (Leading Creek Road)

which connects the Route 7
bypass and Rutland.
When county highway employes went today to get the

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.

YES, WE MUST CLOSE OUT THIS BUSINESS SO THE ESTATE OF THE
'
lATE BOB REES CAN BE SETTLED.

NINE USED CARS
·THE·Y MUST BE SOLD!

lHE TIME TO BUY, COME IN PICK OUT
THE CAR' OF YOUR CHOICE. GIVE US YOUR OFFER, IF AT All POSSIBLE ••• .

Just Received .A Large Shipment Of
&amp;pen Stock Maple Bedroom Furniture

Singl e · Double and Tripl e ·Dressers with Mirrors Four, five, six and eight drawer Chests . Night Stands .
Single and Double Beds.

Come to the Furniture Department on the 3rd Floor and
lake advantage of the many furniture values.

Free customer parking on Second Strf!el and at Elberfelds Mechanic Street Warehouse.
Visit Elbertelds Warehouse on Mechanic Street· for Appliances
Wasiiers •
Dryers ·· Refrigerators · Freezers · Gas Ranges · Electric Ranges · Humidifiers
• Dehumidifiers - Air Conditioners · Metal Cabinets · Wardrobes · Water Heaters .
Kitchen Cabinets · Kitchen Sinks · Room Heaters · linoleum • Congoleum . all
widths . Big selection Room Size Rug's • 12 and 15 foot wide Carpet. Metal Trim.

Be thrifty! Save all of your saleslips from

OPEN TIL 7 PM MONDAY THRU FRIDAY

_.a.~--.~.--.Th.lr•a•&amp;._co.u.rt•s•'·-.-.~-Ph·o·ne4~-1~5~13~. . . .~G~a~~~

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·-·

?
.
V1ctory
.,

THI~ I~

BOB REES PONTIAC, INC.

~ .·

WORK IS PROGRESSING on repair of the Pomeroy Post Office which was heavily
damaged by a rock slide on Dec. 3, 1971. Contract for repair of the structure and loading dock at
the side of the buDding has been awarded to the Arthur Painting Co. of Akron . Presently
workers are repairing a whole in the building and are rebuilding the loading dock after which
time the Interior of the structure wiU be repaired. Work has been underway for the past month
a.nd it's expected to bt four more weeks before the post office operation can be returned to the
building. The post office has been located in the former Pomeroy Senior High School since
December, 1972.

ONE NEW GRAND PRIX

DONT BUY ANOTHER CAR UNTIL YOU
·CHECK AT OUR LOT FIRST I YOU CAN
NAME YOUR OWN PRICE HEREJ

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

/

Tanko tar dumped

,If

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.I

SORRY NO TRADE-INS - All SALES ARE FINAL

The UnltOO States first lssulld
paper money in 1862 to help pay
for the Civil War, but by the
end of the war Inflation had
reduced the value of the paper
dollar to 35 cents.

/

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..:;

·-~·

Greene said strip mining totals In West VIrginia so far lhis
year are down about SO per t-ent from last year. Actual

Now You Know

Open Weekdays 9:30 tp 9 p;m.-Fridays and Saturdays 9: 30 to 9

BOB REES PONTIAC, INC.

ONLY A FEW CARS LEFT!
NOW AT BIG SAVINGS!

areas."

He said additional financing, some system of matching
funds or increased assessment fees would "have to become a
reality" for the fund to remain adequate.
Commltlee Chairman Sen. Alan Susman, DRaleigh, said .
President Arnold Miller of the United Mine Workers union
was scheduled to appear at next month's meetlng.

TIMELY

f

YOU'LL OWN THAT CAR.

But he aaid the co!M to West Virginia strip miners, who
face more severe topography problems than those In Penn·
sylvania, would have to be justified.
Greene released to the panel a rt'CenUy completed Inter
agency report on surface mining in West Virginia , which
stated that the "modJIIC(J block cut appellrS to be a marked
bnprovement over early mining methods, especially on steep

tonnage, he noted, decreased 24 per cent and 104 companies
went out of business since tbe tum of the decade.
Plus factors .for the Industry, he added, included new teeh·
nology and indications that the "coal market altuation •P·
pears to be picking up."
Of "great concern," Greene said, was the curent status of
the state 's special reclamatioolund whereby companiea are
assessed for the acreage they mine a.nd the money is used to
reel aim the land .
Allhough his agency has collected $6.3 million since July I,
1963, Greene said lhe fund now had disbursed about $5.5 mil·
lion .

Weather

ELBERFELDS IN· POMEROY
.

difference bt:tween JOfeet, 110 feet and 90 feet?"
Ben Greene, chief of West Virginia 's Reclamation DIvision, t'Oncl!tled that 30 feet "is no m a~l c number ...but it's
what the at1 (the state'siD71stripmine law) requires."
.
Green praised the Pennsylvania syl!tem, and noted It was
being ulled by some West Virginia companies, partk ularly
Hobtt Mining and Conl!tructlon Co. at Its operations near
Trat-c Fork, Mingo County.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
I

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I

By United Press International
SAJGON - SUPPORTERS OF PRESIDENT Nguyen Van
Thieu swept all 31 races Sunday in South Vietnam's Senate
election, the first national vote since the Jan. 28 cease.flre,
unofficial returns showed today. The vote gave Thieu's sup. porters a two-thirds majority In the Senate, thus empowering the
iill'year-old president, If he chooses, to amend the constitution to
permit him to run for an unprecedented third term.
Government spokesmen said more than 92 per cent ot the
nation's registered voters cast ballots, in spite of several
reported terrorist incidents at the polls and boycotts by
neutralist and Communist parties. Two slates of candidates
committed to Thieu - the president's own Dan Chu or
democracy alliance, and the White Elephant party l~ d by
. Foreign Minister Tran Van Lam - overwhelmed two opposition
states by margins of better tha.n five to one.

or defeat
PHNOM PENH (UPI) - One
day after announcing its
greatest victory since the U.S.
bomb Halt Aug. 15, the Cambodian army surrendered the
vital village of Sethbo, 10 miles
south of Phnom Penh, arid lost
ground contact with 122 men in
the town ol Phum Sala Kruors,
field reporters said today .
The Communist victories at
(Continued on page 6)

CASAGRANDE, ARJZ. - TWO MINERS trapped nine days
1n a dead end ~Wlnell,300 feet beneath the baking desert were
dead "at least five days and possibly longer" before ,rescuers
found the bodies, a medical report disclosed Sunday. Justice of
the Peace George Pickerel, ex-officio coroner in the case, could
not plllpoint the exact time of death of David Deeder, 41, Casa
Grande, and Terry Udall, 24, Fort Collins, Colo. He empaneled a •·
coroner's jury and said an Inquest would be continued, probably
111W next week.
State M.lne Inspector Verne C. MccUtchan, who said, "We
dld everything possible· to get them out," added that temperatures in the tunner were close to 120 degrees when rescuers
fiilallY broke through lhe rock and muck Saturdey night. He sold
that might have had "an important bearing on their deat11s."
WASHINGTON - THE SOVIET UNION will goln a
"strategic edge" uilleliSthe United Slates makes some response
to the Runlan development of multiple warheads lor nucloar
mlliSllea, Defense Secretary James R. Schlesslnger believes.
Schlealnger discussed the Soviet development of the SO·
called MIRVS in a &amp;lnday television interview. He was asked if
the development Increased lhe likelihood of nuclear war, and he
replied that depended upon the reactions. "The likelihood of
nucletlt wilt laexceedil'lgly low , and u lona as both sides retain o
(Con Unued on page 6)

I

tank to move it to another area
they discovered that its contents had been spilled on the
highway.
Rolland Crabtree,
superintendent of the county
Highway Dept., notified the
sheriff this morning.
Dave Spencer of the highway
deparlment said the loss is ·
costly, not only in the loss of tar
but in man hours in cleaning up
the tar, hopefully to prevent it
from polluting Leading Creek
which runs along the road. The
incident is under investigation.
The sheriff's dept. Investigated a hif..skip Sunday at
7 p.m. on SR 338 at Apple
Grove.
Roger Milliron,, 23; Racine,
Rt. 2., was trave)lng.north when
he went off the highway on the
right and struck a ·malllwx
belonging to A. E. Wheeler,
Racine, Rt. 2, and failed to
stop. The department said
charges will be filed.
The department Friday
apprehended a male juvenile
from Springfield who was
wanted on a delinquency
warrant. The youth was
alleged to have been involved
in the theft of a truck and
equipment belonging to
Kenneth Rose, Springfield. He
was picked up here Saturday
by SpringfieW authorities.

Students
to have
Premiums
•

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,
Over $300 in premiums to
Meigs County school students
will be presented after
Tuesday's opening of schools.
The premiums were earned
by students who exhibited in
the school section of the amual
Meigs County Fair. Besides
ribbons, sludents won for
themselves $1.50 for a blue
ribbon; $1 for a red ribbon and
·50 cents for a third plac~ white
ribbon. Each student was
permitted to enter one exhibit
of his work In the field of either
science or arts and crafts
(ConUnued on page 6)

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. .NEW f!EADQUARTERS - Work Js mov,lng ahead .on
construction of the new Pomeroy Fire Department
headquarters on Butternut Ave. General contractor on the
building is the Athens Masonry Co., Athens. Ground was
broken for the $103,000 structure July 16. An Economic ·
Deveopment Admiriistration grant of $75,200 is helping to pay
for the project which will permit consolidation of all fire and

Four calls
The Pomeroy E-R squad
answered four calls Saturday
night and Sunday. They were :
- At 5:10 p.m. Sunday to
Dexter for Eva McKinney who
had fallen at home. She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and admitted.
- At 2:51 p, m. Sunday to
Harrisonvllie for Henry Eblin
who was choking on an apple.
He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital, treated,
and released.
- At 10:56 a.m. Sunday, to
the Ada Harper residence on
Chester Road for Sheila
Bumgardner who. was ill . She
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital, treated,
and released.
- And at 9:31 p.Jil. Saturday,
to the Evelyn Landers home ,
104 Union Ave., for Penny
Landers, 14, having trouble
breathing. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
treated and released.
- At 8:14 p.m. Saturday, ·
the fire dept. was called to the
area of Craw's Steak House on
w. Main St., where a car was
reported on fire . The call was
cancelled .

Gallia, not Meigs
An "impact" meeting on
Sept. 19 conducted by lhe
task force surveytag the
economic development of
southeastern Ohio announced earlier to be held In
the Meigs County Cour·
thouse will be held Instead In
the Gallla County Court·
huuse.
Congressman Clarence
Miller's offi ce said this
morning unforseen clr·
cumstances had arisen
making
the
change
necessary.
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at II a. m.
Monday was 84 degrees under
sunny skies.
LIGHT IN BUSINESS
Motorists in Pomeroy are
reminded by police today that
the traffic light ot the corner of
Union and Mulberry Aves. has
been put into operation in
preparation for tomorrow's
operilng of school. The light has
been used only as a warning
signal at the intersection
during the summer.

emergency equ~pt:qe,~~t 1. Collso\idatloft :ol.tha deparlmentaat
one location has been a "dream;' of at least 25 years ··
durl!tion. UnW the early 60s Pomeroy had three separate fire
deparlments each with its own headquarters. But not until
the Butternut Ave. headquarters is occupied will all of
Pomeroy's volunteer deparlmenta and their supporting
equipment and supplies be under one roof.

Tractor pulls won
by Circlevillian
FORT RECOVERY, Ohio
(UP!) - Mike Rittinger of
Circleville won both the 9,000
and the 7,000 pound modified
classes Sunday at the Ohio
State Championship Tractor
Pull here.
Bittinger used his International Harvester tractor
powered by a Lincoln Continental 430 engine to capture the
two titles at the final four
events of the two-day pull at
Ambassador Park sponsored
by the Fort Recovery Community Improvement Cor·
poration .
More than 7,500 persons
watched the competition by 130
tractors !rom the Midwest and
Canada.
Blaine Keck of Monroe,
Mich., driving a Massie 1130
with a tank engine, won the
12,000 pound open class and
Rubm Tingley of Martinsville,
Ill .• drove his John Deere 4430
to vicwry In the 9,000 pound
superstock division .
Paul Bosse or Ada was
poltlld modi·

fled class competition, which
attracted 18 entries. Trailing
were Gaylord Zechman of
Green Springs; Steve. Drew,
New Madison; and Wayne
Patchett, Frankfort, Ind.
Bill Noland of Kokomo, Ind.,
finished second among the 27
entries in the 7,000 pound modilied contest. TraDing were Jim
Wilson, GreenvUle ; Maynard
8osselott, Sardinia; and
Wayne Patchett, Frankfort,
Ind .
Ronald Johnson Ada was
· runnerup ln the 12,000 Pound
open tractor pull in which nine
competed. Other in the top five
were Ral!il Chamberlin, Bucyrus · Carl Boose Ada· and
' Oughtred, ' Brantford,
'
. Gord
Ont., Can.
Bob Grove of Beloit waa
second in the 9,000 pound
superstock ·class, which attracted 15 entries. Trailing
were Sam Curts, Muncie, Ind. ;
Ben Greenwald, Indianapolis;
Gord Oughtred, Brantford,
Ont., Can .

Senior citizens lived it up at State Fair
By Mrs. VIlma Plkkoja
This is an "I wish you were here" letter to all the senior
citizens of Meigs County who couldn't be with us at the State
Fa ir.
.,
A perfect day, a very enjoyable day it was, marred only
by a thought thot you, too, couldn't share the pleasant trip
with us.
It was two b\15 loads and a mini bus thai left Pomeroy
Friday morning in a drizzle of mist which fortunately never
~eveloped into rain.
·
Well planned and organized In advance down to minor
details; the trip took us through the gates of the fair without
·any interruption ; even the entrance fee was paid in the one
$0.50fee. You didn't have the trouble pf parking your car and ·
you landed directly In front of lhe senior citizens' center
tents, three large ones.
Hot coffee and tealn-e of charge were waiting for us and
even the Governor himself ceme to us. We didn't have to
move to go to see hint He came and signed a very Important
bill, one that finally transferred the senior citizens agency
nway from the "menially retarded and rehabllitaUon"
division to end by itself .~ a result of many conferences we

have attended and many resolutions we have sent, ihe
legislature had acted and we are proud to be a one-million
strong group of residents known as "senior citizens".
TI1ere is dignity and pride In btlonging to a group of people
who readily have become known as Meigs County Senior
Citizens.
·
When Mrs. Rose Papier, tho coordinator of the Agency
spoke briefly In the afternoon, she mentioned Meigs County
as tho exa mple of jobs well done not once, but a couples· or
Urnes. She said that the Nelsonville forltlll which was under
the leadership of Mrs. Eleanor Thomas, Pomeroy, with
Meigs County as the. organizing group, was an amazing
surprise to the visitors from Washington, D. C., as well as to
the leadership In Columbus.
Mrs. Papier observed that Dr. Flemming ," the .commissioner on aging from Washington, D. C., who was the
main speaker at the forum, was greatly lmpressetl and
probsbly would come again if asked. Tins is building confidence in quarters where it really counts, Washington and
Columbus.
Mrs. Papier commended the many citizens who had
written their legislators and Hdvlsed that this is the best way

.

.

to get results. Let yourself be known and Jet your wishes and
needs be known; only then will results be possible, she
commented.
And you should have seen the many heauUful quilts and
afghans on display in the a riB and cra£18 building . The junior
arts and crafts building was so crammed with vl~itors that
one could hardly get ln. I watched a 9 \1-yea r~ld I!Chooi gtrl
display polished stones and jewelry she had made. lt -wa1
remarkable how professional a nlne-year~ld could be in this
field.
The vocational training demonstrations had a variety ol
topics. Ayoung glfl demonstrated how to saddle a horae and
i!omrone else showed how to shear a slleep. There were
cooking demonstrations in the electric build!~ and the laney
decorated cukes in the arts ond crafts building, the largest
und best looking vegetables and the ca nned preservea - ull
gave inspiration.
wen, why not plan to take In the State Fair ntltt year and
take uionK a quilt or a gourd. You ml&amp;ht even win a blue
ribbon .
'
Jusl plan to be Ill ere. We miNed you I

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