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12- The Daily Sentinel. Mid&lt;licporl-Poml'fny. 0,. M;1rch 22. 1974

Jury report must go to committee
WASHI NGTON\ UP! I - - "111e
grand jury n.•view of Pres ident

Nixon's role in tile Walergall'
coverup must go to the House
cornnnttee that may sa) the
Prestdent should be 1111·
peached, u U.S. Appeab Court

ruled.
In a 5- l decision Thursday,
the cour t swatted aSide appeals

by attorneys for three of the
seven Watergate defendants
seeking a stay of U.S Distnct
Judge John J. Smca's ru lmg

Monday tl1at the House Jud iciary Comm ittee had to see the

maten al.
The appeals court gave at torneys for H.R. Haldeman and
John D. Ehrlichman - two of
Nixon's former closest aides and Gordon Strachan until 5
p.m. Monday to seek help from
tile U.S. Supreme Court
But John J . Wilson and
Frank M. Strickler, attorneys
for Haldeman and Ehrlichman, said tiley believed there
would not be any more appeals.
' 'Gut Feeling"
"My thoughts are this is the
end of the line," Strickler said.
·•r think we've exhausted all
reasonable avenues for revtew.
That's my gut feeling, and my
gut feeli ngs almost never
change.'"
Wilson, usually an ebullient
man, let Stnckler do the
talking. " If we take any action,
it won't be before Monday," he
said.
Bray said he would give the
matter "careful review ,"

it was tile end of the line,
tile final leg of tile trip began
Monday wben Sirica ordered
that a report and accompan·
ying materials gathered by the
grand jury which indicted tile
seven Watergate defendants
U

MEIGS THEATRE
Ton1ght-Sat -Sun .
Mon &amp; Tue s.
M arch 12 26
Wall Di!.ne-y ' s
ROBIN HOOO
{ Techn1color l
Meet Rob 1n Hood and h1s
merry M enagerie
(G)

D1 sney Fe-.Jturelte·
Island s of the Sea
Di sney Cartoon:
Peter and the Wolf
Show Starts 7 p.m .

MASON DRIVE-IN
THEATRE
DOUBLE FEATURE
EVERY NIGHT
Ton1ght-Sat. -Sun .
March 22-23-24
Double Feature Program
"' THE BIG BUST OUT"

Rated R
-PLUS" HELL "S
BLOODY DEVILS "

should

go tn the H QUSC
JudiCiary Committee considering the impeachment of l'\'1xon.
'f" o-D:.1y St:.l)

Siril'a gav(• defe nse a ttome~ s a two-day stay to seek
an a ppeal. then grante d
another 24-hour stay - hringin g
h1 s cleadlmc tr&gt; i pIll Thursclar The appeals cuur t scud
W~clnc&gt;sd.ay It \\tHt ld hear

arguments 5 1 ~ hours before, at
10:30 a .m EDT
W1l son. wean ng a sllff·

colla red white sh1rt he had sa1d
he would press into ser V1ce if
he had to go before the
Supreme Court, argued solely
on behalf of Haldeman.
He said the matenal Slflca
ordered sent to tile House
committee contamed a tape of
transcriptiOn of a March 21 1

1973, conversation tilat would
connect Ha ldeman -eha rged
with perjury - with the Impeachment proceedings. And,

Jw

~ti d ,

1lw ma te raal surr ly
\\ ould Ut' leaked to thr press.

d1selosurf' wnn1.4 fn ll ,-,w ' """

snuffmg out th e chances of a

J.!,rand jury's rN~iving the
r eport, leadmg to un fav&lt;Jr abl e

fai r trw! for the mdi cted.
" Is 1t only because the

publ1r1 ty," IS at best a sle nder
inte rest on which to support"

President of the United Slates suppression ol the malenal.
mvolved in ttns case Umt tile
rourl'\ shou1d be more liberal
15

But , the court smd , that was
nut the ba s1c reason for

the rules" governing pretrial denying the petitions.
publicity, Wilson asked.
'"U the "disclosures to the

m

Publirity Cyrlont•

public so feared by pelitwners

Bray smd his client's hopes
wou ld ride ··a cyclone of
pubhcity" because of 1mpeachment, and would be thrown for
a loss.
"We tilink 1t of sigmf\Cance
that the Pres1dent ol the Umted
States, who IS described by all
part1es as the focus ol the
report and who presumably
would have the greatest interest 111 1ts dispositiO n, has interposed no objectiOn to the
D1strict Co ur t's 1Sirica'sl actwn ," 1t said .
lt said the idea that public

do in fact take place and have
the consequences that petitioners predict, they will be free at
trial to ra ise these claims in the
light or what has actually
happened, and to see tile
traditional relief ranging from
continuance tilrough change of
venue to dismissa l of their
indictments
"Il appears to be premature
at the least to make their
speculations about futur e
prejudice the basis lor present
employment of our extraordinary writ power."

Old pro revolutionary
would free Miss Hearst
'

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) The former leader of a
Philippine guerrilla movement
has appealed "as one revolutionary to another " for the
kldnapers ol Patricia Hearst to
free the newspaper helress.
Luis M. Taruc, 60, who
commanded the left wmg Huk
guerrilla orgariization when it
was a threat to the Philippine
government, appeared at the
office of the Berkeley Gazette
lo make his appeal to the
terrorist Symb1o n ese
Liberation Army which has
held Patricia since Feb. 4.
Patricia, granddaughter of
newspaper giant William Randolph Hearst, was kidnaped 46
days ago from her apartment
in Berkeley.
Since then her SLA al&gt;duclors ha ve issued five
''co mmunications'' listing
ransom demands, one of them
leading to her fa ther, Randolph
A. Hearst, to begin distnbu tion
of $2 million worth of free
groceries to 120,000 persons.
Taruc was co-founder of the
Socialist Party of the Philippines, and led a coalition of
Socialists and Communists m
1948, although he says he is not
a Communist.
In his appeal to the SLA, he
said: "Kidnaping for ransom,
senseless violence, deliberate
capture, detention and torture,
and wanton killings of innocent
persons have been proven to be
the most self-defeating acts of
so-called liberation
movements anywhere in the

A convenient loan
from us
clear up
/natNirlq back bills.
Our serVIce 1s courteous.
Come m and ask
about our
pocket pain-killer.

WATCH FOR OPENING OF OUR

AUTO BANK

world.
'"But , even as I take exception to SLA metilods, you
have delivered a message.
And, I believe, even from the
capitalists has come a deeper
realization or the fundamental
need which has been ignored
by tile affluent society : 'That
all men are created equal...'

and that they must love one
another, live and work together
while sharing together God's
blessings as one holy family.
"!, therefore, urge you to be
compassionate and humane
and release Patricia safe and
unharmed. This is the only way
you can prove the sincerity of
your intentions.11

By GENE POYTHRESS
confidential, nevertheless handWASHINGTON (UP!) - A ed out printed copiep of his
secret House report criticizing remarks to the committee in
spending on President Nixon's which he disclosed its concluvacation homes m California 1 sions.
and Florida has already trigBrooks " handout referred to
gered a White House charge " loose arrangements" for paythat it is " partisan politics."
ing lor items, the procurement
The House Government Af- of items "far in excess of
fa1r s subcommittee chairman, security needs, " and the
Rep. Jack Brooks, D-Tcx., left "obligation or federal fund s by
little doubt about the thrust of nongovernment personnel. 11
the report when he sa1d 1t deals
"The agencies involved have
with "obvious problems" in exhibited an inability to exerNixon's handling of the matter. cise reasonable discretion in
Ken Clawson, White House carrymg out their duties in
co mmunications
director 1 providing protection at pnvatequickly assailed the report as ly owned residences, 1' he said .
"based on runaway partisanThe report, more than six
ship and not facts ... construct- months in the making, deals
ed to unjustly malign the with the expenditure of some
President ... 11
$10 million on "security"
Brooks, reminding the com- measures at Nixon 's homes in
mittee to keep the report San Clemente, Calif., and Key
Biscayne , Fla., the Bahamian
home of industrialist 6obert
Abplanalp where he occasional-

Injuries to 2
proved minor

Two persons were treated for
minor mjuries and released
from the Holzer Medical
Center Thursday following an
accident on Slate Route 124 in
Minersville earlier that day.
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach's
Dept. said a van driven by
David Moorhead, 26, Miners·tille, pulled from Brown 1s
Trailer Court in the path of a
pickup truck driven by Glenn
E. Enslen, 23 , Syracuse . Heavy
damages were incurred to both
vehicles.
Janice R. Enslen, a
passenger in the truck driven
by her husband, and Moorhead
were taken to the medical
center by the Meigs Branch of
SEOEMS. Moorhead has been
Cited to court for failing to yield
right of way. The accident
occurred at 7:45 a.m. Thursday. Mrs. Enslen is a teacher
at Meigs High School and
Moorehead a teacher at the
Syracuse Elementary School.

BIRTHDAYS
ARE SPECIAL
SEND HER A

BLOOMING
PLANT

•4.00
Dudley's Florist

From

Holzer Medical Center
(Disc"barges, March 21)
Jill Allison , Charles Andrews, Mrs. John C. Ball and
daughter, Patricia Bradford,
Samuel Buckley, Okie Camp,
Maxine Church, Bernice
Colley, John Copas, Linda
Davis, Donna Dowler, Basil
Evans, Howard Ferguson ,
Flossie Franz, Mrs. Eugene
Gibeaut and daughter, Dora
Hamm, Andrew Hill, Edna
Jenkins,
Mary
Ellen
Kalklosch, Chloe Kelly , Clyde
Lacy, Bertha Martin, Patty
Montgomery, Connie Sue
Morrison, Linda Ondera, Clyde
Price, Gary Priddy, Georgia
Rathbutn, Melinda Simms,
Timothy Spurlock, Wayne
Stafford, Jacqueline Wallen,
Paulin~ White.
(Births)
Mr. and Mrs. David Grate, a
son, Rutland ; Mr. and Mrs .
Alfred Holley, a daughter ,
Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs.
William B. Harder, a son,
Gallipolis ; Mr. and Mrs.
·Truman Moore, a daughter,
Wellston.

pomeroy
national
bank
the bank of
!h e ce ntury
es !abhshed IB72

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FDIC

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Mon

I

MAIN OFFICE
Tues., Wed, Thurs 9 a m -3 p m .
Fr1 day 9 a m to 7 p m

Satu rd ay 9 a .m . to 12 Noon
RUTLAND BRANCH
Men , Tues , Wed , Sat , 9 a m .J p! m
Thursday 9a m t o 12 Noo n
Friday 9 a m to 7 p m

A hometown friend.

or

FalrSundayanda chance
SloOW north and rain/south

Munday

and

clea ring

bonds and a f1 fth was fi nc&gt;d on

Tuesday. Low in the teens
two cha rges d11rin g a &lt;"our t
Sunday moderating to the
,ess1on Thursday mght before
20s Monday and Tuesday ,
Pomeroy Mayor Dnle Smith
Highs in the upper 20s and
Fined
was
Marv1n
30sSundayandinthe:rosand
Cremeans, Cool ville, $100 and
lower 40s Monday and
costs and three days in jail on a · Tuesday.
cha rge of driving while in- ~:~&lt;:::::x!%-u.::::::-.::~~:::::::;.::~:::~~
tox 1cated, and $50 and cost!; on
a cha rge of re:m;ting arrest. ·
Forfeiting bonds were Travis
Forsythe, Pomeroy , $200
M
CLIFTON , W. Va. rs.
d. .
posted on a charge of nvm g Jen ni e H. Riley, 70, died
while intoxicated; Tommy Tuesda) evening at tile Holzer
McGrath, Long Bottom, $23.70 Medical Center.
posted on a speeding charge;
Mrs. Riley was the daughter
Delbert Luckeydoo, $25 posted ol the la te Alonzo and Allee
on intoxication charges, and Shane McNickels. She was
Sam Buckner, $25 posted on born Jun e 17, 1903, m Leta rt
mtox1cat10n char ges. Ad ·
Falls, Ohio.
dresses were not li sted for
SurviVIn
· · g are her husb a nd ,
Buckner and Luckeydoo.
Ed, Clilton; a son, Gene,
Clifton; four grandchildren ;
thre~ . s1s ters Mrs. Leona
SEOEMS CALLED
Dudding, Nitro, W. Va ; Mrs.
The Meigs br anch ol Lillian Bumgarner , Mason,
SEOEMS was called to the and Mrs. Helen •William s,
Syracuse Nursmg Home at 4 Clifton ; several nieces and
p.m. Thursday to lake Dana nephews.
Barr to Veterans Memonal
Funeral serv1ces will be at
Hospital and to West Mam St. 1:30 p.m. Sunday at the Clifton
in Pomeroy at 5:30p.m. for an United Methodist Church with
auto accident where it was not the Rev. J ames Dempsey
needed as tile E-R squads of officiating. Burial will be in
Pomeroy and Middlepor t were Kirkland Memonal Gardens.
on the scene.
Friends may call at the
Foglesong Funeral Home from
2 to 4 and from 7 to 9 p.m·.
GET YOU &gt;YEARS
Saturday. The body will be
TAIPEI (UP! ) - Anyone taken to the church one hour
caught streaking 111 Taiwan before the service.
will be prosecuted under
criminal law which ca rries a
maximum five·year pnson
Ira Curtis Stout, 93, Rt. I
term, Minister of Justice Wang Rutland, died Thursday at
Jen-yuan said today.
Veterans Memorial Hospilal

Jennie R ifey
of Clifton dies

"II .the u.a
-l~y
!?

after • •

Nixon may suTrender disputed tapes

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by the editor
.
. It's now pot;sible in this greatest of all nations of all time to
make a buck doing about anything you please. If you are so
unlucky as to haveyournameon a mailing list that has been sold
to ny-by-t1ight promoters of this-or-that, you have an idea of what.
,
I speak.
f'or example, over 2,000 persons have mailed a~ay a
sawbuck for a year's membership in the National Orgaruzation
for Non-Parents (NON).
"NON emphasizes the benefits of child-free life styles; but
we are concerned about children. That is why we 're concerned.
about the quality of parents," Ellen Peck, founder of NON, told
the UP! recently in an interview.
.
We in southeastern Ohio's small, homey towns full of parents
witil children won't be crowding into tine to contribute $10 to
Madan'l Peck's NON . NON's concern for the quality of parents .~
laudable. U we thought $10 would make better moms and da~
the price would be cheap . But alas, much more is needed.
:

BY GRANT DILLMAN
.WASHINGTON (UP!) - President
Nixon is believed to be getting ready to
SUrrender some or even all the 42
Watergate tapes demanded by the House
Judiciary Conunittee for ita ir!IPeaclunent
inquiry, it was learned Saturday.
The President's indicated change of
heart was said to have followed a meeting
Tuesday at which Senate Republican
Leader Hugh Scott and several other GOP
senators warned Nixon's lawyer, James
D. St. Clair, that a continued hard line on
the tapes issue would result in a House

vote for impeaclunent.
part of a series of meetings by ad- federa l sources who have heard tile tape of
The senators alsO were said to have ministratioo aides with House and Senate the March 21, 1973,"hush money" conwarned that it would cost the President at members to whip up support for t,he versation between Nixon and his fired
least 15 Senate votes if the corrunittee cited President's position. Also said to have special counsel, John W. Dean III.
the President for contempt for refusing to been present were Sens. Robert P. Griffin,
The newspaper said its sources said the
turn over the tapes. Sources said there are R-Mich. , and Norris Cotton, R-N. Y.
conversation is ' 'explosive, 11 and clea rl y
35 "sure" Senate votes for conviction now
According to the account provided UP!, proves tilat Dean told the truth about the
and that would push the total above 50.
they told the President's attorney Nixon conversation and Nixon did not. At the
It takes a aimpl~ majority vote for would be "well advised to cooperate fully" meeting, the two talked about buying the
impeachment-or indictment-in th·e with the House Judiciary Committee silence of the seven onginal Watergate
House, but a constitutional two-thirds because failure to do so would result in a defendants .
majority is required for Senate con- sure impeachment vote by t.he full House.
viction--'7 of the 100 senators.
The Los Angeles Times, in its Saturday
The White House said Satunday it stands
Sources said St. Clair met with Scott as morning editions, said it talked with by its position tilat the tape of the March 21

15 champ

Mr and Mrs. Roy Hannum ,
Lo ng
Bo ttom ;
Don a ld
Longenette, se11en th grader ,
son of Mr and Mr s Duane
Longenette, Long Bottom
Ru tl and John Jacobs ,
s1xfh grader, son of Mr and
Mrs. John Jacobs , Rutland;
Lynda Black. sixth grader .
daughter or Mr . and Mrs .

Mrs. Ned Sw 1ndell , Shade.
Southern Junior H igh Marty Foley . eighth grader ,
Mr . and Mrs. Gary Foley ,
Syracuse , Brent Patterson,
seventh grader son of Mr . and
Mrs. jame s Patterson , Racine.
Syracuse - Sonia Ash , sixth
grader, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Ash, Syracuse;
Jack Duffy , sixth grader, son
· of Mr . and Mrs. Jack Duffy,
Syracuse. ·
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Tuppers Plains - Dorothy
Runyon.
eighth
grader ,
daughter of Don Runyon, Coolville; Kaleen Millhone, s i x~ h
grader daughter of Mr. and
·Mrs. La r r y Millhone, Tuppers
Plain s

Elberfelds In

Pomeroy~-~

Open Both Friday and
Saturday ,Night Til 9 P.M.
Special Friday a~d Saturday Sale brings big savings on
mens knit dress slacks - mens and boys lightweight
jackets . boys short sleeve sport shirts - Sale of Serta
mattresses and box springs.

The

mo.~t

popular night club in

the tri-county area is proud to
present the return of

GEO. HALL
AND THE HALLMARKS

TONIGHT 10 TIL 2 '

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EACH SCHOOL champion

w ill re ceive a cer tificate of
award and the champion of the
county will
rece ive an
engraved pin as a trophy and
will enter the Oh1o spelling
conte st to be held on M ay 4 in
Columbus . A plaqu e will be
presented to the school which
the county champion a ttends.
The publi c is inv ited to attenO
the Mondoy nig ht coun t y bee.

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The MEIGS INN

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Womens Dusters are on sale - womens pants suits special group womens and misses coordinate sportswear
'
womens panty hose.

And ·At The Warehouse on
Mechanic Street Special Sale Porch,
Lawn and Patio Furniture

Elberfelds In
.

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Pomeroy~:,,
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3 SECTION S

------------~~~~------------------------------------------------ --------------VOL 9 NO.8
Gallipolis-Point Pleasant
Pomeroy-Middlepmt
SUNDAY, MARCH 24, 1974

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TRI-a:&gt;UNTY RESIDENTS are Invited to participate in
the1974 Ohio traffic safety contest which will close on April!.
Entry blanks may be obtained at the local police departmenta, sheriff's departments or from independent insurance
agents. The state-wide contest is sponsored by the Ohio
Department of Highways and Ohio Association of Insurance
Agenta,lnc. The person submitting tbe top slogan will get the
free use of this 1974 Mustang II, full inSIII'ance coverage for

one year plus the No. I license plate. Russ Thomas of the
Safety Divlsioo, Ohio Dept. of Highways displayed the· car
Thursday in Gallipolis. Checking the vehicle were left to
right, Don Stanley of McGinness-Stanley Insurance; Harold
Wiseman, Wiseman Agency; City Manager Paul Willer; Lt.
Silas J . Hamilton of the Gailla County Sheriff's Dept. ;
Gallipolis Police Chief John Taylor, and Lt. E . W. Wigglesworth of the Gallla-Melgs Post State Highway Patrol.

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Man pinned by auto dies
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CROWN CITY- Danny F. Stewart, 19,
Rt. 2, Crown City, died in a single car
accident at 7;45 p.m. Friday on Swan
Creek Rd., one tenth of a mile north of
Hannan Trace Rd.
According to the Gallia - Meigs Post
Slate Highway Patrol, Stewart was a
passenger in a car driven by John H.
Hornsby, 30, Rt. 2, Crown City.
Hornsby was driving a C)evrolet
owned by the Gallipolis Motor Company
north on Swan Creek Rd. when he lost
control In a curve. The auto went off the
left ·side of the road, struck an embankment, and overturned.
The victim, It was reported, was
thrown partially out of the vehicle which
overturned on him.
The body was removed to the Holzer
Medical CentOt: by the Gallia County
Volunteer Emergency Squad before Dr.
Donald R. Warehime, Gallia County
Coroner arrived at the scene.
No ruling on the death had been made
late Saturday afternoon.
Hornsby and two other passengers,
Gary A. Lambert, 18, and Richard L.

Lambert, 15, both of Rt. 2, Crown City,
escaped injury.
It was the second fatality in the last 48
bours in Gallia County and fourth of the
year. The patrol investigated four other
traffic accidents Friday.
An injilry mishap occurred at 9:50
p.m. on RockyRuh Rd. sfx tenths of a mile
west of Rt. 7 where cars driven by William
Richard Lewis, 18, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, and
Sandra K. Demis, 22, Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
collided.
Both drivers were taken to the Holzer
Medical Center by the Gallia E-R Squad
where they were treated and released. No
charges were filed.
Another collision occurred at 7:45a .m.
Friday on Little Kyger Rd. six tenths of a
mile from Rt. 7 where vehicles driven by
Robert L. Pearson, 42, Rt. I, Cheshire, and
Harry J. Simmons , 37, Huntington,
collided.
Harold Harmon, 25, Gallipolis, was
charged with DWI following an accident at
11:15 p.m. Friday oo Bob McCormick Rd .
The patrol said Harmon's car struck a
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric

CHARLESTON, W. Va .- Charleston
based Midwest Corporation Friday announced record ea rnings and sales for the
first.three quarters of their fiscal year.
Sam Silverstein, president, said the
nine months ending January 31, 1974 net
operatmg income was up 60 pet., an increase to $528,000 from last year's $331,000.
The company 1s sa les revenues were
$16,535,000 compared to the previous
period's $12,090,000. Income per share
before extraordinary credits for the same
period reached 24 cents compared to last
year's 15 cents .
The thind quarter net operating profit
increased from $120,000 last year to
$224,000 lor this fiscal quarter.
Midwest is a multi-state company
head quartered in Charleston. The compan y manufactures specialty steel
products and is engaged in cable TV,
paper recyclmg , closed circuit TV
systems, home appliance and restaurant
equipment distribution . Its various
facilities are located in West Virginia,
Ohio, Maryland, Illinois, Virginia and
Florida.
The company operates the Gallipolis
Cable Systems under the Point View Cable
name. Midwest's Pomeroy, Ohio plant
produces steel rail and rail accessories.
Midwest's cable TV operations are
franchised in 24 communities in West
Virginia, Ohio and Maryland . Subscribers
now total in excess of 18,500
As a publicly owned company, Midwest has over 2,100 share holders lrom
coast to coast and is traded on the ovPrtile-counter stock market.

PRICE 20 CENTS

MEMBERS OF THE SCHOOL PATROL of the Pomeroy Elementary School
held tag day on the streets of Pomeroy all day Saturday to raise funds towards
their amual trip to WaShington, D. C. in late April. Anumber of other activities to
raise funds are planned. Mrs. Bonnie Fisher, a teacher at the school is advisor of
the group. Giving a tag to Rev. William Sydenstricker Saturday were Kim Seth,
left, and Charlene Goegleln. The patrol, which helps safeguard children going to
and from school, this year had tile added problems of darkness brought about by
daylight savings time.

pole.
Wishard Lemaster, 57, Gallipolis, was
cited to Municipal Court for failure to stop
within the assured clear distance following
an accident on Rt. 7, eight tenths miles
south of Rt. 554.
The patrol said Lemaster's car struck
Purpose of the society 1s to coopera&lt;e
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Julia Webb has
the rear end of an auto operated by Herwith coWlty commissioners in improving been elected president of the newly
man L. Rossiter, 50, of Crown City.
services or the animal shelter ; to assist organized Gallia County Humane Society.
Danny Franklin Stewart was a
BUS GAS STOLEN
citizens in solving their pet problems, and
deckhand with the G&amp;C Towing Company
GALLIPOLIS - Sheriff's deputies generally to distribute informa tiOn Other officers are Cheryl Robie, viceof Point Pleasant. He was born Aug. I, Fnday inves tiga ted the theft ol gasoline regarding the society's objectives. The president; Linda Shrader, secretary, and
1954.
from three school buses parked at the public is invited to attend the nex t meeting J eanne Belville, treasurer . Board
Survivors include his mother, Pauline Gallipolis City Schools Bus Garage at in April at the Grace United Methodist members are Bill Webb, Rev. Albert
MacKenzie, Jay Sheppard, Sandy Kopack
Stewart Hornsby, and two brothers, Steve Centenary.
Church.
and
Barbara Bohach.
and Gary Stewart of Rt. 2, Crown City .
Stewart was a veteran of the Vietnam War
and attended Hannan Trace High School.
Funeral services will be held at I p.m.
Monday from the Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral Home with burfsl following in the
Old Mercerville Cemetery. Visitation will
rugs, Howell said tha t he feels rugs is "a ni ce way to pass the about a mile and a half each
BY BOB HOEFLICH
be held at the funeral home from 7-9
POMEROY - The advice to one can't really count the hours time away. It gives me day. He believes in exercise
today.
a good housekeeper once was of labor involved since the somethmg to do when rm and keeping busy. Making rugs
Hdust under the rug ." pleasure one receives from alone and particularly in the helps with the latter belief.
So, if you don't want to dust
However, if you have a Dana creating such a floor covering evemngs."
In excellent health, Howell
under the rug, I suggest you get
Howett rug, you don't have to i~ a form of remumeration .
do that. You just turn it over. Howell feels that crocheting until the past few weeks jogs yourself a Dana Howell rug.
What's a Dana Howett rug?
•
Well, a Dana Howell rug is a
hexagon shaped, quite colorful,
crocheted rug . created by 83year-old Dana Howell of
Darwin.
A residen t of Darwin for a
POMEROY - A public hearing on number of years and a poulb'y
GALUPOLIS - Coin collectors and addition, an extensive sbowlng of United extended toll free service between sub- raiser before he retired,
the interested public from 9 to 90 years of States postage and first day covers are in scribers of the General Telephone Co. in Howett not only is an expert In
the Pomeroy area and subscribers of the turning out the attractive floor
·
age will have their day here next Sunday the offering.
Southeastern
Telephone Co. of Coolville coverings. Twice a week he
when a quarter of a milllon dollars or more
Readers and local collectors are in(those
with
985
numbers ), will be held at appears at tbe Senior Citizens
worth of rare coins, paper currency, vited to participate in exhibiting any
Center in Pomeroy to share his
postage stamps, and medals will ' be on numismatic material of their own. Metal 10:30 a.m. on May 21 in Pomeroy.
Mrs.
Sandy
Griffith,
who
has
headed
a
know-how
in classes on rug
display in the ba!lquet rooms of the security cases will be provided for this
campaign
to
obtain
the
extended
area
making.
So
far , he has taught
Holiday Inn motel at Kanauga .
purpose by the host organization. All ·
Southeastern
subscribers
,
service
for
about 40 other Meigs Countians
The occasion ts the lith arulllal Spring competition in the exhibits will be nonreceived riotice of the hearing from the tile technique of creating their
Coin Show hosted by the OH KAN Coin competitive.
Club of Middleport. The event open to the
Club members will be on hand to offer Public Utilities Commission ol Ohio . The own rugs.
A widower about three years,
public without charge will begin at 9 a.m. identification and free appraisal of any hearing will be held in tile co\Uicil
and continue to 5 p.m. Plenty of easy Items lrought in by the public. Members chambers of Pomeroy Village Hall. Mrs. Howell was taught how to
parking fs available.
feel that many persons in the area have Griffith urged all residents served by make the rugs by his daughter,
Sixteen coin delers of Ohio and West material of their own at home, ldthout either company who are Interested in the Mrs. Donna Story of Dayton.
VIrginia have made advance registrations knowing what they own or its current establishmeni of the extended service to Mrs. Story also is "in charge"
attend.
·
of yarn supply for the rugs. She
to open the show buying, selling, and value. ·
secures
the nylon rug yam,
trading every sort of numismatic
The OH KAN Coin Club was organi2ed
by
a Georgia firm, in
made
material, said James PbUlip!, show · in 1962 at Pt. Pleasant with about 25
Dayton. The rugs are reverchalnnan of Pt. Pleasant. Genuine silver members. The late Paul Wedge of that city
sible, washable and featured a
' dollant will be given every how- of the served as Its first president.
four-inch fringe around the
show as door prizes, with special wooden
Since its beginning, the organization
edge.
nickel souvenlors, and free coin has been successful in ita operations,
AUTO BURGLARED
One can only use so many
publicatlonsgiventoallinatteildance. The providing monthly meetings, numismatic
GALLIPOLIS - City pollee Friday
day loog event will close with giving away education discussions coin auctions"and· investigated the theft of an electric guitar rugs and Howell reached the
'150 in &lt;!sh prizes.
trading se;.;ions for ev~one interested in and carrying case valued at over $400 from saturation point so he began
The public interested in the history of · the hobby. Presently the club has 70 a car parked at Elliott's Appliance Store selling them for the reasonable
the counb'y will find a vast assortment of members. Serving currently are Edward on Pine St. Lan;y Smith of Gallipolis sum of $10. Four dollars cost fs
exhibits, enlarged over other y~rs, with Burkett, president ; John Sebo, vice Ferry, W. Va. told investigating officers he involved just in the yarn and it
showings of rare co~~ts and paper mon~y president; Don Thomas, secretary ; David parked his car in the store's parking lot takes Howell, working an hour
dating back to tbe very beginning of this Gerard, treasurer and John Bryan, Sgt.- and went Inside for about 10 minutes, Upon or bwo each evening, over a
EIGHTY-THREE-YEAR-OW DANA HOWETr fs crocheting on an Americana colOred
to
complete
a
rug.
week
lljltion. Eyery type of United Slates At-Arms.
rug
a~
the Meigs County Senior Citi2ens Center where he instructs twice a week to pass on his
returning, Smith discovered his car had
coinage will be . on hand for viewing. In
In
setting
the
price
for
the
techniques
to other , nlor citizens.
been entered by breaking a wing gla5.1.

Over $114 -million on
show by collectors

Mrs. Webb is Humane Society president

Howett, at 83, busy rug maker

Phone hearing
set on May 21

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Midwest
•
earnmgs
set record

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has been some movement in the White
House" indicating tha t the President is
gettin g ready to give up some or ail of the
controversial tapes.
One ol the things said to have impressed
the White House was a warning to St. Clair
that Scott and tile other senators present at
the Tuesday meeting probably would have
no altern ative but to vote for conviction
if the House actually cited Nixon for
contempt and sent the issue to the Senate.
" It would then become an mstitutional
struggle between the executive and
legislative branches," a source said.

Your In vited Gu&lt;!.~t
R ~aching More
Than 12,000
Families

34 PAGES

New power

a

St. Clair was said to be disbelieving
when Scott and other senators warned
about the probability of impeachment if
Nixon persisted in withholding the tapes
requested by the Judiciary committee.
The senators then warned him he had
better " take thi s directly to the
President," sources said.
-;
As a result, these sources added, "there

Devoted To The Greater
Middle
Ohio Vallev
.
'

Ira Stout dies

Pictures shown

St. Clair Dlsbelievl ug

tmts

Cold today, in the high 30s
southeast Ohio. Cloudy, today,
cleating tonight and Monday.
Continued cool. Lows tonight in
tile 31l&lt;!.

1

meeting is '~ambiguous" and open to
various interpretations "by different
people with different motives."

+

Weather

•

WHEN SOME ONE YOU KNOW is injured critically doinl,
his tiling to earn a living, friends and acquaintances pour out thfl:
"gel-well" cards. But what about the fellow who is injure~!; ·
working 5,000 miles from home? How many will be so thoughtful'
as to express themselves to him?
It's sort of like losing your best friend hunking at your side tO
a World War II steel-jacketed machine gun slug. That's hard t&lt;l
lake.
:
Reading the totals of the nameless dead and wounded in It,
battle halfway around the world in the Vietnam War that didn ~
seem worth winning, is less soul-Btirring, although these num•
bers are infinitely greater in their aggregate of death, pain and:
suffering.
:
· This occurred to us Tuesday upon learning of the critical:
injuries to Kurt Muri, age 34, of Switzerland Monday at theJames M. Gavin Plant. Muri, residii!g below Gallipolis while
working at Gavin as a superintendent on the installation of..a.
turbo generator manufactured by the Brown-Boveri Co. ol his_:
native country, fell an estimated 66 feet and as of Tuesday had:
survived. But ba_rely.
,,
From the official medical description, "fractured skull;,
chest and ankle injuries," Mr. Muri at best will have a difficult"
time ahead. He is at Holzer Medical Center. Wednesday his.
condition remained critical. A get-well card mailed to Mr. Milri
would be a true Christian act. Humanity, after all, is a family~
STREAKING WILL END when the novelty (newness that
gets it in headlines) wears off, cooler heads around the country
are saying .Maybe so . However, a Hebron, Ohio preacher has pu~
following a brief illness.
a proper end to such hopes. He has shown streaking has been
Mr. Stout was born Feb. 10, with us roughly 1,941 years, give or take a couple. H his claim is·
1881, the son of the late Arthur true, don't look for streaking to end tomorrow.
·
and Margretta Camp Stout. He
Rev. George Wright, pastor of the Hebron Church of Christ,;
is survived by two nephews,
ly vacationed, and at places Victor Braley and Delbert told UP! Wednesday St. Mark was the first streaker. Wright said
Chapter 14, Book of Mark, refers to a man who "Came up to;
where his daughters lived.
Ro111ine of tile Rutland area. Jesus with just a linen cloth around his naked body and ned,
Brooks~ committee had hardFuneral services will be at 2
ly adjourned before Clawson p.m. Sunday at the Walker leaving the cloth behind him." Wright believes this streaker,
·
issued a statement saying: Funeral Home in Rutland with probably was St. Mark!
"Either deliberately or unwil- the Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm, Jr. ,
MEANWIDLE, THE GOOD St. Mark apparently is gaining
tingly, Brooks has become a officiating.
member of an unprincipled Burial will be in tile Miles more followers dally. An Item on the wire Thursday that lost the
gang of Democratic congress- Cemetery. Friends may call at daily news versus space battle reported two TV newscasters in
men ben t on destroying the the funeral home at any time Tucson, Ari2., sat dumbfounded Wednesday night as a male
streaker, wearing nothing but a Nixon mask and tennis shOCl&gt;,
President without regard to the after 3:30p.m. Saturday.
dashed
across the set during a live broadcast. He lugged a sign
national interest.''
"Nixon bare it all."
saying,
He said Brooks was "trying Veterans Memorial Hospital
"The newscast came apart after that," said KZAZ-TV
to deceive the American people Admitted - William Dye,
newscaster
George Borozan.
by deliberately repeating a New Haven ; Anna Hoffman,
The
streaker
dashed in front of the cameras, operated by an
report based on runaway Clifton; Donald Nickols,
all-female
crew,
just as the newscast was to go into a compartisanship, and not facts." Middleport; Phyllis Cline,
Clawson referred to an audit Pomeroy ; Gertrude ,. Harris, mercial break. The station's telephone switchboard was
by the General Accounting Mid9leport; Perry Shirley, swamped with callers "telling us what happened, but, hell we
Dana
Barr , knew what happened," Borozan said.
Office that he said revealed Hartford;
One of the guests waiting to be interviewed was police Maj.
that less than 10 per cent of the Syracuse; Lillie Johnson,
Francis
Kesller, who sat there as dumbfounded as everybody
amount mentioned by Brooks Racine; Charles Bailey ,
The
streaker escaped through the door with station emelse.
was actually spent on Nixon 's Pomeroy ; Vern Little, Midployes
in
pursuit.
'
homes.
dleport; David Donahoe,
Racine .
'
Discharged - Francis Rizer,
Truneda Bragg, Mark Bailey,
William Grueser, Ollie Tyree,
Meigs JIU!ior High School
(Continued from page I) ·
Mabel Swan, Edward King.
special education students charged the Kincalds a $100 fee
PLEASANT VALLEY
IContinued from page I)
enjoyed a fihn slide presengr-ader, son of Mr. and Mrs.
DISCHARGES
Mrs . tation Tuesday by Ohio for the second tap-on, which
Charles ManueL Ra cil'}e.
Samuel Bonecutter, Point University student Michael they refused to pay. The
Me igs Junior High - Laura
district took the case to
Pleasant; Ralph Spencer , Miller.
Hoover.
e ighth
grader.
justice of the peace, who or~
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Galhpolis Ferry; Roy Cain,
Miller, who had a fellowship dered the payment.
Wendell Hoover, Pomeroy , Leon ; Mrs. Cordell Harris,
to spend a year 6ludying in
Mike Way land, e1ghfh grader,
The Kincaids appealed to the
Letart ; Faires Hill, West Australia and New Guinea,
son of Mr and Mrs. Gary
Fayette
County Circuit Court'
Wavland . Rutland .
Columbia; Charles Roberts, showed slides of unusual birds
Pomeroy
Lind~
Point Pleasant; Hollis Myers, and animals native to which referred the case to the
Kovalchik,
f1fth
gra d e r,
~
Gallipolis; Mrs. Fred Perry, Australia and of natives of both PSC.
daughter of Mr and Mrs.
The commission held that thl!
Roger L Kova lchik , Pomeroy ;
Buffalo ; Charles Thevenin , Australia and New Guinea. He
Tanya Tay lor, f ilth grader,
Kincaids
didn't need to pay a
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. William described
the
open-air second tap-on fee but should~
daughter of Mr . and Mrs . Tony
Searls, Middleport ; Mrs. Oscar preserves which house the
Ta ylor, Pomeroy .
Fry , Gallipolis ; Thelma wildlife instead of zoos as are charged $4 per month for
Portland - Jam es Meadows,
sixth grader . son of Mr . and Johnson , Middleport; Mrs.
service on the house and traiTef.
fourid in most cOWitries. He each.
Mrs. James Meadows, Long
If
Bottom. Danny Ta lbott, fifth Gordon Bowles, son, Roberts- also answered questions of
grader, son of Mr . and Mr s. burg ; Harrel Miller, Point pupils about customs of the two
Danny Tablott, Portland .
Pleasant; Mrs. J . H. Fauver, countries.
"
Racine - Amy Fisher, s1xth
Leon
; Mrs. Jack Smith,
WILL SING
grade, daughter of Mrs. Bonni e
UICAL TEMPS
The Meigs County SeniOJ:
Fisher, Rac1ne; Camellia Mason; Mrs. Stewart McThe temperature in down- Citizens Choir will be at the
Brinager,
sixth
grader , Comas, Gallipolis Ferry; Paul
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Cecil
Ritchier, Point Pleasant; town Pomeroy at 11 a.m. Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Brinager , Racine.
Rivervi ew - Susan Hannum, Eloise Hedwick, Hurricane, Friday was 37 degrees under Church at 7:30 p.m. Sunday;
seventh grader, daughter of and Grant Roush, New Haven. s\Uiny skies.

Warren Black . Rutland .
Salem Center - Greg
DIVORCEGRANTED
Walker, sixth grader, son of
On grounds of gross neglect Mr . and Mrs. Vester Walker,
Middleport ; Penny Jacks,
of duty and extreme cruelty, sixt h grader, daughter of Mr
Carl L. Barringer has been and Mrs Richard Jack s,
granted a divorce from Langsville.
.
.
.
Sal1sbury - Kathy Qu 1vey,
Frances E. Barrmger m the . s 1xth grader , daughter of Mr
Meigs Co\Uity Common Pleas and Mr s. Jam es Quivey,
Court. The maiden name of tile Shade ; Camille Sw indell, fifth
defend ant, " Ruble n was grader , daughter of M r. and
restort!d.

cu\Jand

F'uur d efe ndants forfeited

:::&lt;:::;~;~~;;;~~~=;o/$

Spending questions dodged

59 N. Second St.
Middleport, 0 .

pomeco,

Four forfeited
hon d s to court

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1,~ .-:. ·.-:

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2- Tbe&amp;llday Times-Sentinel, Swlday, M_arch 24, 1971
I

'

3- The Sunday Times - Sentinel, Sunday, March 24, 1974

Tele~siQn Log
S~NDAY, MARCH24,1.974
6. _
· 30 Newsmaker 74 13; Lamp Unto My Feet 10 · lnlernation~l
Zone 4.
'
,.
7:00 - Jerry Falweli13; Communique6· Look Up and Live 10·
Film 4.
'
·
'
7: 30- Revival f. ires 6 ; Herald of Truth 3; Camera Three 10;

. Church By The Sideoflhe Road 4: Talking Hands 8.

8. 00 -. Gos~l Caravan 6 ; Church Service 13 ; Billy James
H~rg1s &amp; H1s All American Kids 10 ; Mormon Choir 3; Days of
Discovery 4; Rev. Leonard Repass 8.

8: 30- ~raJ Roberts 3: Your Health 4.; Ka1hryn Kuhlman 6; Day
F'ir~s~~~ery 8; Get Together 10 ; Relo: Humbard 13 ; Revival

r

•'

S: 55 - Black Cameo 4.
9:00 - Sing ing Jubilee 3; Cadle Chapel 4; Oral Roberts 10; 'Rex
Humbard 6, 15; Kathrvn Kuhlman 8.
9 : Jo-~hrist is !he Answer 13; Church Services 10 ; Yours for the
Askmg 4; J1mmy Swaggart 8.
10:00- Church Services 4; This is the Life 3 : Faith for Today 15 ;

'· '

Kid Power 6, 13; Thinking in the Black S; High School
. Basketball 33; Movi~ "That's My Boy" 10.

10.30 - Y•s•on.On6; lns1ght 4 ; Captain Noah 3; This is The Life

. 15; V1ewpooniS: Whal the Bible Plainly Says 13.
II. 00 - TV Chapel 3; Focus On Columbus 4; Across the Fence

,.

~

. 15; H. ~ · ~ufnstuf 13 i'Point of View 6 ; Energy 8.
11 . 30 - Th1s IS the Answer 3; Make A Wish 6, 13; Insight 15; Face
the Nation a·,.
12:00 - At Issue 3; Bowling 6; Rev . Calvin Evans 13 ; Relo:
Humbard 8; Columbus Town Meeting 10; Sacred Heart 15 ·
World of Survi val 4; High School Basketball 33.
'

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12: 15 - Open Bible 15.

12:30 - MeetthePress3,4.15 ; Revival Fires 13.

SELWYN WIUTE

WARREN SHEETS

1:00 - Lower Lighlhouse 13; Wally 's Workshop 3; Call of the
West 15 ; LawrenceWelk 4; NIT BasketballS, 10.

WENDELL THOMAS

1:30- Issues &amp; Answers 6, 13; Limits of Man 15 ; New Dafing
Game 3.

2:00- It Takes A Thief 3; ABC's Championship Aulo Racing 6,
13; NHL Hockey 4, 15; High School Basketball 33.
3:00- Wagon Train 3; NBA BasketballS, 10.

c.. '\
\ ·"

Bank hoard enlarged
by two new members

3: 30 - American Srortsman 6, 13.
4:00 - French Che 33.
4:15 - Howard Cosell's Sports Magazine 6, IS.
4:30- Cancer : Life or Death 33; Other People. Other Places 13;
Wide World of Sporls 6; Sea Pines Heritage Golf Classic 3, 4,

15.

5:00-Movie "The File on Thelma .Jordan" 13.
5: 30 - Vi.r~il Ward Fishing ShowS; Championship Fishing 10.
6: 00 - L1l1as, Yoga &amp; You 33; Petticoat .Junction 3; News 4 ;
World at War 6; 60Minutes S, 10; TBA 15.

GALUPOLIS - Emerson E. Evans, assistant vice president, have both bee n
president, announced election of two new promoted, Saunders to the position of vtce
ART STUDENTS OF MRS. MARGARET ElLA LEWIS
members to the board of directors and two president and cashier, and Thomas to vtce
Friday placed exhibits of various types of work done at Meigs
staff promotions Wednesday at the annual president and senior loan officer.
High School art classes at the Ohio Power Co. office in
Saunders will also serve as Secretary
meeting of stockholders of the Ohio Valley
Pomeroy and at the Columbia Gas Co. office in Middleport in
of the Board of Directors.
Bank.
observance of Ohio Youth Art Month during March as
Saunders, born in Huntington, W.Va .,
Attorney Warren F. Sheets and the
proclaimed by Gov. John Gilliean. The displays will be in
has
been a resident of Galli&gt; County the
Bank Executive VIce President, Selwyn R.
White, have been elected to the board past 35 years. A graduate of the Ohio
Bankers Association's Ohio School of
increasing its members from seven to
Banking, Ohio University, Athens, and
nine.
· Sheets, a native of Gallia County, has American Bankers Association National
been practicing law since 1952. From 1953 Mortgage School at Ohio State University
lhrough 1964 he was elected to serve three In Columbus, he has been associated with
before midnight,
WASHINGTON (UPI) terms as Prosecuting Attorney . A the Ohio Valley Bank Company since
Kissinger planned to stop for
Secretary of State Henry A.
graduate of Ohio Northern University law March 1,1949. He is a member and former
Kissin ger flew to Moscow Sunday lunch with West Gerschool, Sheels is presently associated with ·director of the Gallipolis Lions Club.
Saturday night for talks he man Foreign Minister Walter
Saunders resides at 12 Belmont Drive
!he Halliday&amp;Sheets Law Firm, 19 Locust
hopes will
break
the Scheel in Bonn, and will arrive
Street He is also chairman of the board of with his wife, G. Juanita, and two sons,
•
"stalemate" in U.S.-Soviet nu- in Moscow midnight Sunday.
Ronald L. Saunders and Brent A. Sauntrustees of Holzer Hospital Foundation.
On his return to Washington
clear arms talks and pave the
He resides at 120 First Ave. with his
ders.
C. LEON SAUNDERS
Thw-sday,
Kissinger plans to
way for President Nixon's
Thomas, born In Meigs County, has
wife, Phyllis Y. They have three children,
stop
In
London
for discussions
swrunit visit in late June.
been a resident of Gallia County the past 33
Valori Sheets Carter, Kaven Sheets and
with
British
Foreign
Secretary
Middle East peace efforts,
years. Associated with the Ohio Valley
Mark Sheets.
James Callaghan.
White, also a native of Galli&amp; County, Bank Co. since Feb. 1, 1956, Thomas was Haskins, John McNeill, Frank H. Mills, East-West relations in general,
a graduate of Ohio School of Banking, Ohio Jr., Ernest N. Wiseman, Keith R. Bran- and bilateral matters between
has lived In the GaWa area most of his life.
The stops underscore the fact
University, Athens, and Ohio School of deberry , James L. Dailey and W. Lewis Washington and Moscow also
He has been associated with the Ohio
West
Germany and Britain
will be discussed. Kissinger's
lnstallment Credit, Kent State University. Brown, director emeritus.
Valley Bank since December 1, 1953.
within
the past few days have
In addition to Saunders and Thomas, meetings with Soviet leaders
He is chairman of the board of trustees of
Previously, he was employed by the First
backed
President Nixon In his
the First Baptist Church and a director of bank officers are Mr . Evans, president; are expected to take place
National Bank of Gallipolis. White is
tough talks to Western Eurothe Gallipolis Area Chamber of Com- Mr . Haskins, seni or vice president ; mostly in a dacha about 130
director and treasurer of the Gallia County
pean allies about the dangers
Selwyn R. Whi te, execu tive vfce miles north of Moscow.
Community tnlprovement Corp, and a
merce. He resides with his wife, Lois A.1
of
unilateral action Nixon's
Kissinger is taking his
and two sons, David W. Thomas a no president; Wilma P. Webster, assistant
member of the York Rite of the Masonic
feels
is fueling a new
cas hi er ; Madge E. Boggs. assistant children, Elizabeth, 14, and
Order.
Gregory A. Thomas at 164 Chillicothe
cashier and comptroller; Joycelyn M. David, 12. Kissinger was isolationism in the United
President Evans also announced that
Road.
States.
Reelected to the Ohio Valley Bank Barlow, Larrv E. Lee, and Marion E. divorced in 1964. Soviet ambasC. Leon Saunders, assistant vice
At a news conference Thw-ssador Anatoly F. Dobrynin also
board were Emerson E. Evans. Morris E. Caldwell, assistant cashiers.
president, and Wendell B. Thomas,
was going on the flight leaving day, Kissinger acknowledged
Andrews AFB, Md., shortly · that In the Strategic Arms

6:30-0ieana Trail33; NBC News3,15; News4.
7:00 - Zoom 20; Untamed World 13 ; Let's Make A Deal 6;

Conflicts of Harry S Truman 33; Safari to Adventure 3 ; Wild
Kingdom 15; Lassie 8; In The Know TO ; Probe : Conference

both locations through next Friday and include charcoals,
stencil work, posters, spatter painting, bead work, pastels
and modern. Students at one display point from the ieft are
Vicky Slack, Middleport; Bill McKinney, Pomeroy; Dreama
Hovatter, Middleport, and Paul Hatfield of Dexter.

With Mayor 4.
7:30- Moun lain Scene 33 ; French Chef 20; World of Disney 3, 4.
15; FBI 6, 13; Apples' Way S. 10.
S: 00 - lnlerface 20, 33.

8:30- Religious America 20. 33; McCloud J, 4, 15; Movie

"Cleopatra" 6, 13; Mannix S; Kopycats 10.
9:00 - Masterpiece Theater 20. 33.
9:30 - Barnaby Jones S, 10.
10:00 - Firing Line 20, 33.
•
10:30 - News 6, B, 10; High Road lo Adventure 10; Newsmaker
'7413; Pollee Surgeon 15; We Think You Should Know 3. .
II: 00 - News 3, 10, 15; ABC News 6, 13; CBS News S; Bonanze 4.
11:15- Police Surgeon 6 ; CBS News 10; News 13 ; Movie "The

Kissinger winging to Moscow

Degree won
Vietnam Veterans Day set
in English
- Appropriate officials of
POMEROY - Vietnam ·veterans Day on March 29 is in

keeping with the joint
resolution on Congress signed
last month by the President In
recognition of the 6.5 million
Vietnam era veterans who
have served their country with
distinction including those of
Meigs County.
It points out there are over
six and one-half million
Vietnam-era veterans, of
whom more than two and oneThe untiring devotion that half million served In Vietnam.
characterized the Armed
- Those who served, those
Forces during this trying who gave their lives, those who
conflict is a tribute to the were disabled, and those who
national character.
are still missing in Southeast
According to W. W. Am· Asia - and whose full acberger, Meigs County Veterans counting we shall continue to
Officer,
the seek - deserve the profound
Service
. proclamation setting Vietnam gratitude of their countrymen.
Veterans Day, established in a
proclamation by President
Nixon, emphasizes that as
America enters its second year
of peace after a decade of
conflict, it is highly appropriate to acknowledge the
debt owed to those veterans
who served In the Armed
Forces during the conflict in
Southeast Asia.

the Government are directed to
arrange for the display of the
flag of the United States on all
public buildings on that day;
and officials of Federal, State,
and local Governments, and
CIVIC
and
patriotic
. organizations are to give their
enthusiastic support to appropriate ceremonies and
observances throughout the
nation .
- All citizens of every age
are urged to participate in the
events of this day as one means
of honoring those men and
women who served their
country
faithfully
and
courageously during the
Vietnam conflict.

Hiring is blocked by crowd
WELLSTON - Pressure
tactics applied by a crowd
eslimated at 500 persons last
week Weed the majority of
members of the Wellston
Board of Educa lion to abandon
an attempt to rehire Ralph
Crabtree as business manager
for the Wellstori City School
sy~tern.

the meeting for an executive
session, after which the motion
and second were withdrawn.
Terry Lee, representative of
the Ohio Education Association
told the crowd to continue its
taclics and w-ged the Citizens
Committee
for
Better
Education to consider starting
recall of the school board

members.
A motion ID rehire Crabtree
plus a second were !loth with·
drawn after the crowd forced
three board members to recess

Supt. Ralph McCormick
reported to the board that the
district had suffered revenue
loss because of a decrease in

Guilt pleaded
POMEROY - James Howard Stepp,
19, entered a plea of guilty when arraigned
before Judge John c. Bacon In Meigs
County Conunon Pleas Court on a
breaking and entering indictment,
Stepp was charged with entering the
A. and P. Company store in Middleport on
Jan. 14 and stealing a quanUty of merchandise. Bond of $500 for Stepp, of
Columbusoi was renewed pending sentencing.
·
Also, three divorces were granted, all
en grounds of gross neglect of duty and
l!:ltreme cruelty. Granted divorces were
Eileen Buck, Racine Route 2, from Roy
Buck; Charles R. Conner from Virginia
Conner, and Horner MDOdispaugh, Middleport, from Mililred Moodispallih.

utilities (railroads) and an
increase in tax dollars because
of property taxes.
In other matters the board
authorized an advance draw
for "payroll purposes, employed
James Kubiak as a substitute
teacher, employed Lori Cassell
as a substitute bus driver ,
authorized purchase of girls'
physical education equipment
($1,316) and changed school
hours back to regular starting
and ending \inies April 1.

COMING MONDAYS
POMEROY - James E.
Roush, County Auditor, ~id
Saturday L, D. Moore of the
Ohio Department of Taxation
will be In his office every
Monday from March 25
through April 8 to assist persons needing help with their
State lncome tax. His bow-s
will be from 9 a.m. to noon and
1- • p.m.

SQUAD CALLED
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
E·R squad answered a call at
10:51 a.m. Saturday for Gladys
Taylor, Union Ave: She · was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital as a medical patient.
J

·A
.

RUTLAND - Miss Beverly
Kay Thompson , daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Thompson, received her BA degree In
English from the College of
Arts at Ohio State University
Friday, March 15.
The winter quarter commencement exercises were
held Friday in St. John Arena
for the 1,7 96 graduating
seniors. A graduate in the
honors
pro gram ,
Miss
Thompson plans to study law
this fall. She was honored with
a dinner and was presented
gifts Friday following the
conunencement at the Hai Lai
In Columbus.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Thompson;
her
brother, Phillip; her sister,
Gloria Cross; Miss Bonnie
Denison of Missouri ; Mr. and
Mrs. Allen Bolla, and Richard
Mann, all of Columbus. Miss
Thompson is a para-legal with
the law finn of Bolla-Bolla,
Mann and Caulfield in
Columbus.

Meaning of
Rotary is
•
•
m se:nnce

Wallace in race
for governorship
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI)
- Starting a new campaign for
governor but with his eye on
the national scene in 1976, Gov.
George C. Wallace told a
cheering crowd of 4,000 Friday
night that "God made all
human beings.
Wallace, who tried to physically block integration of the
University of Alabama in 1963,
said, "I want to tell those who
have misunderstood our past
policies that we have always
believed that God made every
human being.
"He loves all of us," he said.
"Our actions have never been
against individual people but
against big government."
Wallace, 54, and crippled
since an assassination attempt
as he campaigned for president
at Laurel, Md., in 1972, said he
still wants to be a powerful
influence on the national
political parties In 1976.
"! do · not mean ID tell you
that I'm tunning two races,"
he said. "! am running for
governor, but I want to be in
the position to say that I
reptesent millions of people
who want some changes
brought about.
" H you re-elect ~e as your
governor it's going to send a
message loud and clear that
times are going to change,"
Wallace . "You will send a
message to the national Democratic Party that it had better
come back to the middle of the
road and start talking conunon
sense.
"Neither party can win in
1976 without the support of
people who think as you do,"
Wallace promised "four
more years of good , honest

MIDDLEPORT - James
Roush told the Middleport Pomeroy Rotary Club, Friday
ni ght "Rotary brings one in
touch with his fellowman."
His impromptu remarks when a scheduled program
could not be presented - were
directed to the theme of what
Rotary meant to him, a new
member of the club. To him,
th.e Rotary motto , Service
above Sell, derives di(ectly
from the first two command,
ments, love God above all, and
love thy neighbor as thysell. He
hoped through Rotary to be Park.
·able to see the entire world
Gene Riggs, president of the
unsellishly.
Meigs County
Crippled
President Harold Hubbard Children and Adult Society,
earlier appointed Roush, Dr. asked Rotarians to be alert for
'Milton Mason and Dan Thomp- persons needing assistance.
son to arrange the annual'1 Ladies of the church served a
Easter Egg Hunt at Municipal ' fried ·chicken dinner.

goverrunent."
Wallace has controlled
Alabama government since
1963 except for a 31-rnonth
period following the death of
his first wife, Gov. Lurleen
Wallace in 1968. Lt. Gov. Albert
Brewer Inherited the office and
kept it until 1971.
Brewer defeated Wallace In
the 1970 Democratic primary,
but lost a runoff.
Wallace's opponents lnclode
state Sen. Gene McLain of
Huntsville, former Gov. James
E. "Big Jim" Folsom, perennial candidate Ralph "Shorty"
Price, and political unknown
Thomas Robinson. None of the
fow- is considered a threat to
Wallace.

Driver has
2 fractures
POMEROY - Frank W.
Smeecks, 23, Coolville, escaped
death but not injury about 11
pm. Thw-sday when his auto
went out of control In Olive
Township, .6 of a mile
west of State Route 681, into
a creek where it rammed into a
,
boulder.
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach's
Dept. said Smeecks was taken
to St. Joseph Hospital In
Parkersburg by his family. He
suffered fractures In his right
arm and left leg, and cuts aqd
lruises In the face. Smeecks'
car was demolished. No charge '
was filed,
Moderate damage was
reported ID a tractor and car at
i:ll p,m. Friday at the Jn..
tersection of State Route 338
and township road 371 in Sutton
Twp. The sheriffs department
said the fann tractor driven by
Charles Yost, 17, Racine Route
1, was turning left onto the
township road as !he car driven
by Ada Van Meter, 64, Rt. 1
Portland, went to pass. Neither
Yost nor Mrs. Van Meter was
lnjw-ed. There was no charge
filed.

Limitation Talks (SALT) with
the Russians, there had been a
"stalemate in the negotiating
process" the two sides had
used primarily to clarify
teclmical information.
Now, he said, there must be
''a
conceptual
breakthrough"- a point
"where the two sides have to
agree on what it is they are
trying to accomplish."
Such as agreement apparently is the most Kissinger
expects by the time Nixon goes
to Moscow, but it will give the
President something to sign
with Leonid I. Bre2imev to
signify further improvement in
Soviet-American relations.
U.s. peace efforts in the
Mideast probably is the most
pressing matter on the agenda
because of Israeli.Syrian artillery duels. Kissinger has said

the United States does not
"hold tt.e Soviet Union responsible" for the duels on the
Golan Heights.
Kissinger's major weakness
in negotiating further concessions from the Russians on any
point, lies in the fac t he and
Nixon have been unable to
make good on one of the major
sections of the trade
agreement negotiated the
Moscow summit conference in
May, 1972.
Nixon pledged to secure the
appro~al of Congress granting
the Soviet Union "most favored
nation" treatment -meaning
Russian goods no longer will
face heavier import duties. The
Senate is insisting that Russia
formally must rescind its laws
taxing emigration, which fall
most heavily on educated
Russian Jews.

Generation Rap

Walls of Jericho" 8.
11 : 30- Face the Nation 10; Don Kirshner's Rock Concert .13 ;
Johnny Carson 15; Movie "International House" J.
II : 45 - Good News 6.
·
12: 00- Urban League 10; Johnny Carson 4.
12: 30- Movie "Scream and Scream Again" 10.

1:00 - News 13.

1: 30 -

News 4.

RANDALL WOODCOCK
HUNTINGTON - Randall
Woodcock. 33, of Louisville,
Ky . died at 9 a.m . Saturday in
~ St . Mary's Hospital here as a
result of a self -inflicted bullet
W'ound of his head suffered
Friday night at the Ward
Bloomf ield re sidence near
Gallia .
According to the Gallia
County
Sheriff 's
Dept.
Woodcock was founQ mortally
wounded on the back porch at
the Bloomfield home . The
victim was Bloomfield 's SOn ·in·
law .
Woodcock was rushed to the
Holzer Medical Center by the
Gall ia County
Volunteer
Emergency Squad and was
later transferred to St. Mary's
Hospital by the Southeastern
Ohio Medical Service Am bulance .

JOHNW. ROSS
MASON - John W. Ross,

76 ,

formerly of Mason County,
died Friday at his residence at
1631 Park Ave .• East Liver.
poool .
Mr. Ross was a retired niQht
watchman of the TreadWell
C:oristruction Co . at East
Liverpool. He was born July 31,
1897 in Clifton and was a
member of the Oakland Free
Methodist Church in East
Liverpool .
Preceding him in death were
his parents, Abb and Elizabeth
Ross and his wife, Lena , who

nllernuon

her
hom e
POMEROY - Nineteen
extended illness
defendants
wen: filled and five
She was born in Coo lvill e Feb
others
forfeited
bonds in the
24, 1917, daughter of lhe lat~
Charles A. and Meltania Foster Meigs County Court of Judge
Cowdery
Frank W. Porter Friday.
She was a member of th e
Fined were Elmer G.
Coolville United Methodis t
Church, the United Methodist Hastings, South Point, $10 and
Women, and had been a Sun· costs, le!t of center; Virgil B.
day School teacher in Class
Five for several years . She was Bonnette, Marietta, $10 and
a past matron of Min ea r costs, stop sign violation;
Chapter274, OE S. at Guysville. George E. Holman, Syracuse,
and had been secretary of Troy
$15 and cos ts, speeding;
Grange No. 904, Coolville.
Survivors
include
her Patricia J . Light, Athens, $10
husband. Russell L. Ba'ily, and costs, passing- at an in·
Coolville: one son, Lowell 0 .
Baily, Charlotte, ('1. , C.; one tersection ; George M. Sen-

daughter, Mrs. Gary (Cynthia

6:30- School Scene 10; Folk Literature 3.
6:25- Farm Report 13.
6:30 -

Five Minutes to Live By

&lt;I;

News 6; Bible Answers 8;

Good News 13.
6:35 - Columbus Today 4.
6:45 - Farmllme 10; Morning Reporl 3.
7:00 - Today3. 4,15; CBS NewsS.IO ; Dick Van Dyke 13; Bugs
Bunny 6.
.
7:30- Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle 13; New Zoo Revue6.
S:OO- Capt: Kangaroos, 10; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33;
Jeff's Collie 6.

8:25- Jack Lalanne 13.
8: 30 - Brady Bunch 6.
S:55- News 13.
9:00- Paul Dixon 4; Friendly Junction 10; AM 3; Abbott Costello 8; Wild, Wild Wesl6; Phil Donahue 15; Movie "Little
Boy Lost" 13.
9:30- To Tell the Truth 3; Tattletales B.
9:55 - Chuck While Reporls 10.
10:00 - Dinah Shore 3, 15; Joker's WildS, 10; Company 6.
10:30- $10,000 Pyraml6 s. 10; Jeopardy 3, 4, 15.
11:00 - GambitS, 10; Password 13 ; Mike Douglas 6; Wizard ol
Odds 3, 4. 15; Unto lhe Hills 33.
11:30- Hollywood Squares 3, 4. 15; Love of Life S. 10; Brady
Bunch 13; Sesame St. 33.
II : 55- CBS News S; Imel's World 10.

"

'I

12 : 00- Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; Password 6; News 8, 10, 13;

Jackpot 3, 15.
12:30- Split Second 6; Search for Tomorrows. 10; Baffle 3, 15.
12:55- News 3, 15.
1:00 - News 3; All My Children 6, 13; Not For Women Only 15 ;
Concentration S; What's My Line? 10.
.
1:30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15; The World Turns B, 10; Let's Make
A Deal 6, 13.
2:00 - Day sot Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Guiding LightS, 10; Newlywed
Game 6. 13.
2:30 - Edge of NightS, 10; Girl In My Lile 6, 13; Doctors 3, ~. 15.
3:00- General Hospltal6, 13; Antiques 20; Another World 3. 4,
15; Price Is Right S, 10.
3:30- How To Survive AMarriage 3. 15; One Life To Live 6. 13;
Phil Donahue4; Match Games, 10; French Chef 20.
4:00- Mr. Cartoon 3; Somerset 15; Sesame St. :ro. 33; Love.
American Slyle 13; Lucr, Show S; Huck and Yogi 6; Mov ie
"Escape From Zahraln' 10.
4:30 - Green Acres 3; Gilligan's Is. 6, 13; Bonanza 15; Jackpot
4; 'Hazel S.
5:00 - Mr. Rogers 20, JJ ; Bonanza 3; Mer~ Griffin 4; Andy
Griffith 8; Gomer Pyle 13; Big Valley 6.
5:30 - Beverly Hillbillies S; Elec. Co. 33; Hodgepodge Lodge 20;

Are Men In Hiding?
Rap :
I have a theory about modern man. As soon as women
started getting liberated, he went into hiding - behind beards,
sunglasses, lots of hair. Even the new swim suits for men are
longer and sometimes cover the chest.
Are men getting so scared that they won't even show their
facial featw-es or bodies any more ? What other reason would
there be for growing all that stupid hair on their faces and heads?
- FRAN

Fran:
If yoor theory is correct, then why were beards popular way

back when women "swooned" at a mouse ? And why is super-hair
going out of fashion just when women's liberation is at its height ?
But ... let's hear from the men. Why DO (or did ) you grow
beards, if not for hiding behind? -HELEN AND SUE

Trails West 15; Hoga.n's Heroes 13.

6:00 - News 3, 4, S, 10, 15; Sesame Sl . :W; ABC News 13; Personality &amp; Behavioral Development 33; Truth or Con·

+++

sequences 6.

Dear Helen and Sue :
I went out with this boy for about two monllls last year. We
had a rough lreak-up, but I find I've pretty well gotten over him.
He still ignores me.
He now has a girlfriend I resented at first. We have since
decided that being enemies is stupid, so we 've become good
friends. We eat lunch together (when the guy isn't there) and
exchange confidences.
At first we compared notes about "him," but we rarely
mention him any more in our talks.
The problem is, he resents ow- friendship, and has got his
buddies on his side, so whenever the girl and I are together we
get nothing but dirty looks. She says, "He can't pick my
friends!" but I don't want to be the cause of them having a big

6:30- NBC News 3,

.
4,

15; CBS News S, 10; Room-222 13; ABC

News 6.

7:00- Truth or Conseq. 3'; Whars My Line B; Elec. Co. 20; Beal
the Clock 4; News 6. 10; Readlng for the Classroom Teacher
33; Call of the West 15; Circus[ 13.
7:30- Bobby Goldsboro3; Buck Owens S; Lock. Stock &amp; Barrel
20; Wacky World of Jonathan Winters 15 ; To Tell the Trulh 6;
Hollywood Squares 4: Episode Action 33; Municipal Court 10;
Beat the Clock 13.
s:oo- National Geographic 6; Magician 3, 4. 15; Rookies 13 ;
The Selfish Giants, 10; Racheal, La Cabana 10; La Rondine
33.
8:30 - Dr. Seuss Cartoon S, 10.
9:00 - Here's Lucy S, 10; Movie "Cleopatra" 6, 13; NCAA
Basketball 3, 4, 15.
9· 30- Book Beat 20, 33; Dick Van DykeS, 10.
10: 00- News 20; Paul Nuchlms 33; Medical Center 8, 10.
11 : oo- News 3, 4, 6. 8, 10, 13, 15, 20; Janakl33.
11 :30-JohnnyCarson 3, 4, 15; Movie "Sidekicks" S; "Kisses tor
My President" 10.
12:00- News 6, 13.

fl~ht.

Should I stop going around with her, even though I enjoy her
friendship a lot? I wish guys wouldn't hold grudges long after the
girl has "recovered." - EX-GIRL

1:00- Tomorrow 3. 4; Comedy Pilot 8; Take Five For Life 15.
2:00- News 4.

Dear' Ex:
You aren't alone! Many, many girls wonder why former
boyfriends can't be "just friends" - but I guess that's the nature
of the critter. When a male's pride is hurt, he heals very slowly.
-HELEN
P. S. Here's Sue to answer your question (for both of us ):

SUNDAY nM£S.SENTJNB.
Publllbed el'IQ' SUnclly by t1Je Ohio
VaDerPU-CO.
GALUPOUS
DAILY TRIBUNE
IZl 1blrd A... , Gallipoll1, Ollio al31.
P\lbllltled '""' ......, nmlnt n;.
Pald
o1 Gallljlollo, Ololo ""'·
THE DAILY~
111 c--t St., Pcmlr'OJ, 0 . tiM.

. . -.-aa.. . . .
. -..

+++
It took you a while to. get used to "the new girl" - so give
everyone else time to adjust to your friendship . Perhaps you're
feeling more uncomfortable than necessary . Maybe you're
Imagining some of those "looks" because you expect them.
Maybe not but, anyway, don't give up ,a good friendship over
something that will pass in time . - SUE

...,_....,_..,._ ......

- - •t En--~-­
PameroJ, oruo Polt omce.

wtlk.
ttto
By -Motor route
- . IIAIL
""' per
-mcmth.
· "" ...

Rap :
My sister graduated from school, got a job, and now my
parents tell her she must pay $12 a week room and board! I don 't
understand: They say it's because she must learn the value of
money, but she already knows how far a dollar goes (not far!) .
It seems dwnb that when you've been living in the same
house with your parents all your life for free, you should suddenly
be asked IDpay tollvethere.Right? ,CONFUSED

8UIISCIUPTION RATES
tbeGtlltpoH• 'l'rlblne in 01110 miWml

Old Pomeroy Ji.
High School
Open 8:30.4:30

March 25 - Rug Making,
Crall&gt;, Sq. Dancing 1-J p.m.
March 26 - Rug Making,
Chor.us 1-2; 30 p.m., Cards and

Games .

· March 27 - Chair Caning,
Crafts.
· -·
March 2S - Birthday and 1st
anniversary

Party,

12:30 p.m.
.
March 29 - Bowling ·1-3.

.......

Program Monday through
Friday, 11 :30 . 12:30. No sel

dnt mcmu. •.50; rDOIGr route

a .•

The Dail)' Senllnel, ane 1111111111 t~Jt; ~
,._. til•; Ill mcnltll lUI; three

...... -121 ... .-:""

monllt tUJO; t1ne IDGI'IU. •.~a ; mow

..... P.ll ,_.,.,
1'lli ,tint... ~ ln~tianal ll n:~ enttu.s,., u. .. rl!l' pUbUCIIUOo

o1 all ,... ...,..,.,. cndllod to U.
IIIWIPipct aftd M
tbl local nna
; t 'I ... herein.

Lunch served by Nutrition

charge for Sr. Citizens .
Donations of 25 • SO cents,
whatever the person is able or
Willing .to contribute .

. The bagpipe ·was ~n anctent Greek and Roman in·
strument Emperor Nero was
known to have played it.

'

overload, $25 and costs ; Jim li ce nse suspended for two Guysville Route I, failure to
Harris, Middleport, littering, years, aiding in taking illega l stop within assured clear
$10 and costs; Bernard Gilkey, deer.
distance, $27 .50; Jim M.
Middleport, $25 and costs, $15
Forfeiting bonds were Lester Pierce, Middleport Route I,
suspended, overload; Charles Haning, Pomeroy, $50, assault unsafe vehicle, $22.50; Charles
Curfman, Racine Route I, $10 and battery; Charles H. Van Meter, Middleport,
and costs, violation of license Hoffman, Ravenswood, $27.50, Inadequate prote c tion for
restrictions; Michael Walters, speeding; Robert M. Hart, motorcycle, $17.50.
Cheshire
2, $5 and
costs, .
defective Route
exhaust;
Frederick
Osborne, Reedsville, $150 and
costs, 10 days in jail and license
suspended for one year,
driving while intoxicated;
Randall McClain, Ra cine
Route 2, $150 and costs, three
days in jail and license
suspended for six months,
drivmg while intoxicated;
Helen L. Offenberger, Middleport Route 1, stop sign
violation, $tO and costs; David
Moorhead, Minersville, $10 and
costs, failure to yield right of
way; Kenneth Mohler, Middleport, $100 and costs and deer

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

60 INCH NEW SPRING
POL VESTER KNIT
FANCY, RIBS, SOLIDS
COLOR

COORDINATES

2Q%0FF

FRENCH CITY FABRIC SHOP
58

COURT

SINGER APPROVED DEALER
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

William Davis, Midrlleport :

CASH, CHARGE,

died in 1964.

Surviving are a son, James

LAY-AWAY

W. Ross of Easl Liverpool;
four daughters, Mrs. Thomas ,

I Floral

Shafer, Mrs. Eula

SHOP EARLY WHILE
QUANTITIES LAST

Little ,
Wellsv ille ;
Mrs .
Leonard
Kuzmick ,
Ea st
Liverpool, and Mrs . Ernest
{ Peg) Moore, Benton Harbor,
Mich .; a brother , Herman, of
Mason ; a sister, Mrs . Lola
Emerson. Coshocton. Ohio; 25

EMPRESSES
SOLID COLOR

grandchildren. and 17 greatgrandchildren .
Funeral services will be held
at 11 a.m. Tuesday at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev . Clarence McCloud
officiating . Burial will be in the
IOOF Cemetery. Friends may
call at the fugeral home
Monday from 2 tiA and 7 to 9

DRAPES

p.m.

ROY L. WHITE
POMEROY - Roy L. White,

SOLID

Chocolate
BUNNIES

'

.

ONLY

~~E~H

Raymond L. White, Mansfield,

and Jennings R. White,
Louisville, Ky .; five daughters,
Mrs .
Joseph
Turner,
Westerville ; Mrs. Amos Ooty,
Bellaire ; Mrs. Elson Dailey,

Mrs.

NOW

EASTER

farmer, he was a member of
Racine American Legion Post
602 having served with the U. S.
Army during World War I.
Surviving are two sons,

Portland;

63" Reg. Price ss.44
84" Reg. Price $f;.44

OnePouncl

78, formerly of Meigs County,
who had been residing at Route

Dorolhy

Jack Holland. Wheeling; a
step-son. Walter Harold. of
Louisville ; a step-daughter,
Mrs . E. S. Gaddie, Louisville;
24 grandchildren; il number of
field, and Willie White of

PR.

F1RE-SA.F£ Ff\BAICS Of

' .

Foam backing insulates against

FIBERGLAS

Heat and Cold.

INSULATED

7x10' STEEL SHED

great -grandchildren;
two
brothers, Greel White of Mans-

$ 99

Empress Won 't Stretch or Shrink.

O~.Jr h ~.Jge colledion i ~ per.
feel lor Eosler ba s k e t ~ and lor
individ~.Jol gi lls. Choose your
fav orit e mo~.Jihwolering bun·
nies we ig hing o full 16 oz . of
p~.Jre milk chotolole. Sill ing
and stand ing shapes .

Douglas, Man&lt;: field, and Mrs.

Savannah, Ohio.
Funeral services wUI be held

Reg. $11700

Murphy's Own

at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at the

Wattner Funeral Home in
Mansfield with the Rev. J.
Franklin Beck officiating .
Buri,:tl will be In the Letart
Falls Cemetery in Meigs
County on Monday.

ROSA MATLACi&lt;
STEWART - Mrs. Rosa
Faye Matlack, 52, Stewart,
Ohio, died Saturday mornin~ at

Ohio
State
Univers1ty,
Columbus, following an extended illness.
She was born in Athens
County Dec . 6, 1921, lhe

daughter ol the late Edwin and

Grace Kinney Dunfee. She was

a member ot the Torch Baptlsl
Church Ladles Aid Society, the
John Townsend Sons of the
Union Veterans No. 108, Frost,
Ohio, and the Rebecca Lodge,
Stewart, Ohio. She attended

Rugged construction with weather ·
proof overlapping panels and strong
gable roof. Sliding doors open to
51x6Pi2" ... won't sag or jam. Built in
gutters. Much more!

Coolville schools.

Survivors
Include
her
husband, Howard Lowell
Matlack ; two dauohters, Mrs.

Joseph (Yvonne Kay) Barkle,
Park Hill. Ky. ; Mrs. Gary
(Lola Caroll. Taylor, Lan -

NOW ONLY

caster; one son, Howard L.

Matlack. Jr., Frost; eight

grandchildren, and one niete.
One brother, Ivory, preceded
her in death.
Funeral services will be held

RURAL
MAILBOX

2 p.m. Monday at Torch
Baptist Church with Rev. Gary
K. Taylor officiating.

Burial will be In Coolville
Cemetery. Friends may call at

the White Funeral Home, Cool·
ville afternOOn on Sunday.
WILMA BAlLY
COOL VILLE - Mrs. Wilma
Cowderr Bally, 57. a resident
of Coo ville. died Saturday

FORD ADDS SHIFI'
DETROIT (UP!) - The .
Ford Motor Co. Friday announced It was adding a second
shift at Its Lima, Ohio, engine
plant Monday to produce more
of its 4-cyllnder engines for
the hot-selling Mustang II. The
addition of a second shift at the
plant will mean the recall of
about 150 workers from indefinite layo~s, Three weeks
- ago, Ford added a seco~d shift
to build additional slx.cytinder
engines for economy-minded
motorists.

potluck,

VlrJ'nlll- -~~~ P,IO; one )WI' tliM;

* IDGIIU. ••; dfte monthl ...01.
Ellewtlln ntper Jear: Iii: menU. 111.50;

' I

Sr. Citizens
Cakndar

sabagh, Parkersburg, $10 and

Ann) Griffin. little Hocking ; a costs, speeding; Debra Shelly
twin sister, Mrs . The lma
Crawford, Columbus, and five Mankin , Pomeroy, $10 and
grandchildren .
costs, stop sign violation;
Funeral services will be held William L. Owens Elizabeth
2 p .m . Tuesday at the Coolville
United Methodist Church with W. Va ., $10 ;nd costs'
Rev . Roy W. Rose officiating. speeding; Darrell G. Windle:
Burial will be in Coolville New Carlisle, $10 and costs
Cemetery .
Friends may call at the improper plates; Joseph
White Funeral Home in Schuler, Chester Route 2,
Coolville after 7 p.m. Sunday. overload, $25 and costs·

IS951n West VIrginia . A retired

6:00- Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.

ill

foii(Jwin~ df)

4, Mansfield,died Friday at the
Mansfield General Hospital.

MONDAY, MARCH24, 1974

.

. ! Area Deaths i 19 defendants fined by court

Mr. White was born May 8,

By Helen and Sue Bottel

Confused;
Wrong! She who earns a full-tlme 'salary should pay her way
(and $12 a week scarcely covers food these days!) - HELEN
AND SUE

r------------------------- .

WALKOUT ENDING
CHILUCOTHE, Ohio (UPI)
-Guards were expected to end
their
two-day
walkout'
Saturday morning at the
Chillicothe Correctional Institute. The agreement to
r'!turn followed a long meeting
Friday between the institute
superintendent and the union
local president.

.

VINYL LATEX SURFA-TONE
REGULAR
'4.98 GAL.

STRONG RIBBED STEEL
APPROVED BY P.OSTMASTER GENERAL

SALE

A top quoliiy point for interior
surfo~' , • , plaster, wood,
i~rior brick. Q..,iclc.-drying,
driplen. FormuJated without

99
'

PRICE

lead . Highly washable. White,
decoiotor shode5.

.

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

COMPLOE

ROLLER AND PAN JUST

.

'

Rural Mail Box

88

MOUNTING POST

Sale

HEAVYWEIGHT

Price

74~

sn
. --------------------------ALL PURPOSE • HEAVY DUTY
4" NYLON BRUSH SPEQAL ·$}57

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

PACKAGE OF FOUR All
:'\
PURPOSE PAINT BRUSHES fl~..,;

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA - BOTH DOWNTOWN GAWPOLIS STORES- PT. PLEASANT STORE

�...

·~

'~

·~

1,~ .-:. ·.-:

'•

... .. ··- .- .

'• : •

.

~-

...: 1

.t

2- Tbe&amp;llday Times-Sentinel, Swlday, M_arch 24, 1971
I

'

3- The Sunday Times - Sentinel, Sunday, March 24, 1974

Tele~siQn Log
S~NDAY, MARCH24,1.974
6. _
· 30 Newsmaker 74 13; Lamp Unto My Feet 10 · lnlernation~l
Zone 4.
'
,.
7:00 - Jerry Falweli13; Communique6· Look Up and Live 10·
Film 4.
'
·
'
7: 30- Revival f. ires 6 ; Herald of Truth 3; Camera Three 10;

. Church By The Sideoflhe Road 4: Talking Hands 8.

8. 00 -. Gos~l Caravan 6 ; Church Service 13 ; Billy James
H~rg1s &amp; H1s All American Kids 10 ; Mormon Choir 3; Days of
Discovery 4; Rev. Leonard Repass 8.

8: 30- ~raJ Roberts 3: Your Health 4.; Ka1hryn Kuhlman 6; Day
F'ir~s~~~ery 8; Get Together 10 ; Relo: Humbard 13 ; Revival

r

•'

S: 55 - Black Cameo 4.
9:00 - Sing ing Jubilee 3; Cadle Chapel 4; Oral Roberts 10; 'Rex
Humbard 6, 15; Kathrvn Kuhlman 8.
9 : Jo-~hrist is !he Answer 13; Church Services 10 ; Yours for the
Askmg 4; J1mmy Swaggart 8.
10:00- Church Services 4; This is the Life 3 : Faith for Today 15 ;

'· '

Kid Power 6, 13; Thinking in the Black S; High School
. Basketball 33; Movi~ "That's My Boy" 10.

10.30 - Y•s•on.On6; lns1ght 4 ; Captain Noah 3; This is The Life

. 15; V1ewpooniS: Whal the Bible Plainly Says 13.
II. 00 - TV Chapel 3; Focus On Columbus 4; Across the Fence

,.

~

. 15; H. ~ · ~ufnstuf 13 i'Point of View 6 ; Energy 8.
11 . 30 - Th1s IS the Answer 3; Make A Wish 6, 13; Insight 15; Face
the Nation a·,.
12:00 - At Issue 3; Bowling 6; Rev . Calvin Evans 13 ; Relo:
Humbard 8; Columbus Town Meeting 10; Sacred Heart 15 ·
World of Survi val 4; High School Basketball 33.
'

.,

12: 15 - Open Bible 15.

12:30 - MeetthePress3,4.15 ; Revival Fires 13.

SELWYN WIUTE

WARREN SHEETS

1:00 - Lower Lighlhouse 13; Wally 's Workshop 3; Call of the
West 15 ; LawrenceWelk 4; NIT BasketballS, 10.

WENDELL THOMAS

1:30- Issues &amp; Answers 6, 13; Limits of Man 15 ; New Dafing
Game 3.

2:00- It Takes A Thief 3; ABC's Championship Aulo Racing 6,
13; NHL Hockey 4, 15; High School Basketball 33.
3:00- Wagon Train 3; NBA BasketballS, 10.

c.. '\
\ ·"

Bank hoard enlarged
by two new members

3: 30 - American Srortsman 6, 13.
4:00 - French Che 33.
4:15 - Howard Cosell's Sports Magazine 6, IS.
4:30- Cancer : Life or Death 33; Other People. Other Places 13;
Wide World of Sporls 6; Sea Pines Heritage Golf Classic 3, 4,

15.

5:00-Movie "The File on Thelma .Jordan" 13.
5: 30 - Vi.r~il Ward Fishing ShowS; Championship Fishing 10.
6: 00 - L1l1as, Yoga &amp; You 33; Petticoat .Junction 3; News 4 ;
World at War 6; 60Minutes S, 10; TBA 15.

GALUPOLIS - Emerson E. Evans, assistant vice president, have both bee n
president, announced election of two new promoted, Saunders to the position of vtce
ART STUDENTS OF MRS. MARGARET ElLA LEWIS
members to the board of directors and two president and cashier, and Thomas to vtce
Friday placed exhibits of various types of work done at Meigs
staff promotions Wednesday at the annual president and senior loan officer.
High School art classes at the Ohio Power Co. office in
Saunders will also serve as Secretary
meeting of stockholders of the Ohio Valley
Pomeroy and at the Columbia Gas Co. office in Middleport in
of the Board of Directors.
Bank.
observance of Ohio Youth Art Month during March as
Saunders, born in Huntington, W.Va .,
Attorney Warren F. Sheets and the
proclaimed by Gov. John Gilliean. The displays will be in
has
been a resident of Galli&gt; County the
Bank Executive VIce President, Selwyn R.
White, have been elected to the board past 35 years. A graduate of the Ohio
Bankers Association's Ohio School of
increasing its members from seven to
Banking, Ohio University, Athens, and
nine.
· Sheets, a native of Gallia County, has American Bankers Association National
been practicing law since 1952. From 1953 Mortgage School at Ohio State University
lhrough 1964 he was elected to serve three In Columbus, he has been associated with
before midnight,
WASHINGTON (UPI) terms as Prosecuting Attorney . A the Ohio Valley Bank Company since
Kissinger planned to stop for
Secretary of State Henry A.
graduate of Ohio Northern University law March 1,1949. He is a member and former
Kissin ger flew to Moscow Sunday lunch with West Gerschool, Sheels is presently associated with ·director of the Gallipolis Lions Club.
Saturday night for talks he man Foreign Minister Walter
Saunders resides at 12 Belmont Drive
!he Halliday&amp;Sheets Law Firm, 19 Locust
hopes will
break
the Scheel in Bonn, and will arrive
Street He is also chairman of the board of with his wife, G. Juanita, and two sons,
•
"stalemate" in U.S.-Soviet nu- in Moscow midnight Sunday.
Ronald L. Saunders and Brent A. Sauntrustees of Holzer Hospital Foundation.
On his return to Washington
clear arms talks and pave the
He resides at 120 First Ave. with his
ders.
C. LEON SAUNDERS
Thw-sday,
Kissinger plans to
way for President Nixon's
Thomas, born In Meigs County, has
wife, Phyllis Y. They have three children,
stop
In
London
for discussions
swrunit visit in late June.
been a resident of Gallia County the past 33
Valori Sheets Carter, Kaven Sheets and
with
British
Foreign
Secretary
Middle East peace efforts,
years. Associated with the Ohio Valley
Mark Sheets.
James Callaghan.
White, also a native of Galli&amp; County, Bank Co. since Feb. 1, 1956, Thomas was Haskins, John McNeill, Frank H. Mills, East-West relations in general,
a graduate of Ohio School of Banking, Ohio Jr., Ernest N. Wiseman, Keith R. Bran- and bilateral matters between
has lived In the GaWa area most of his life.
The stops underscore the fact
University, Athens, and Ohio School of deberry , James L. Dailey and W. Lewis Washington and Moscow also
He has been associated with the Ohio
West
Germany and Britain
will be discussed. Kissinger's
lnstallment Credit, Kent State University. Brown, director emeritus.
Valley Bank since December 1, 1953.
within
the past few days have
In addition to Saunders and Thomas, meetings with Soviet leaders
He is chairman of the board of trustees of
Previously, he was employed by the First
backed
President Nixon In his
the First Baptist Church and a director of bank officers are Mr . Evans, president; are expected to take place
National Bank of Gallipolis. White is
tough talks to Western Eurothe Gallipolis Area Chamber of Com- Mr . Haskins, seni or vice president ; mostly in a dacha about 130
director and treasurer of the Gallia County
pean allies about the dangers
Selwyn R. Whi te, execu tive vfce miles north of Moscow.
Community tnlprovement Corp, and a
merce. He resides with his wife, Lois A.1
of
unilateral action Nixon's
Kissinger is taking his
and two sons, David W. Thomas a no president; Wilma P. Webster, assistant
member of the York Rite of the Masonic
feels
is fueling a new
cas hi er ; Madge E. Boggs. assistant children, Elizabeth, 14, and
Order.
Gregory A. Thomas at 164 Chillicothe
cashier and comptroller; Joycelyn M. David, 12. Kissinger was isolationism in the United
President Evans also announced that
Road.
States.
Reelected to the Ohio Valley Bank Barlow, Larrv E. Lee, and Marion E. divorced in 1964. Soviet ambasC. Leon Saunders, assistant vice
At a news conference Thw-ssador Anatoly F. Dobrynin also
board were Emerson E. Evans. Morris E. Caldwell, assistant cashiers.
president, and Wendell B. Thomas,
was going on the flight leaving day, Kissinger acknowledged
Andrews AFB, Md., shortly · that In the Strategic Arms

6:30-0ieana Trail33; NBC News3,15; News4.
7:00 - Zoom 20; Untamed World 13 ; Let's Make A Deal 6;

Conflicts of Harry S Truman 33; Safari to Adventure 3 ; Wild
Kingdom 15; Lassie 8; In The Know TO ; Probe : Conference

both locations through next Friday and include charcoals,
stencil work, posters, spatter painting, bead work, pastels
and modern. Students at one display point from the ieft are
Vicky Slack, Middleport; Bill McKinney, Pomeroy; Dreama
Hovatter, Middleport, and Paul Hatfield of Dexter.

With Mayor 4.
7:30- Moun lain Scene 33 ; French Chef 20; World of Disney 3, 4.
15; FBI 6, 13; Apples' Way S. 10.
S: 00 - lnlerface 20, 33.

8:30- Religious America 20. 33; McCloud J, 4, 15; Movie

"Cleopatra" 6, 13; Mannix S; Kopycats 10.
9:00 - Masterpiece Theater 20. 33.
9:30 - Barnaby Jones S, 10.
10:00 - Firing Line 20, 33.
•
10:30 - News 6, B, 10; High Road lo Adventure 10; Newsmaker
'7413; Pollee Surgeon 15; We Think You Should Know 3. .
II: 00 - News 3, 10, 15; ABC News 6, 13; CBS News S; Bonanze 4.
11:15- Police Surgeon 6 ; CBS News 10; News 13 ; Movie "The

Kissinger winging to Moscow

Degree won
Vietnam Veterans Day set
in English
- Appropriate officials of
POMEROY - Vietnam ·veterans Day on March 29 is in

keeping with the joint
resolution on Congress signed
last month by the President In
recognition of the 6.5 million
Vietnam era veterans who
have served their country with
distinction including those of
Meigs County.
It points out there are over
six and one-half million
Vietnam-era veterans, of
whom more than two and oneThe untiring devotion that half million served In Vietnam.
characterized the Armed
- Those who served, those
Forces during this trying who gave their lives, those who
conflict is a tribute to the were disabled, and those who
national character.
are still missing in Southeast
According to W. W. Am· Asia - and whose full acberger, Meigs County Veterans counting we shall continue to
Officer,
the seek - deserve the profound
Service
. proclamation setting Vietnam gratitude of their countrymen.
Veterans Day, established in a
proclamation by President
Nixon, emphasizes that as
America enters its second year
of peace after a decade of
conflict, it is highly appropriate to acknowledge the
debt owed to those veterans
who served In the Armed
Forces during the conflict in
Southeast Asia.

the Government are directed to
arrange for the display of the
flag of the United States on all
public buildings on that day;
and officials of Federal, State,
and local Governments, and
CIVIC
and
patriotic
. organizations are to give their
enthusiastic support to appropriate ceremonies and
observances throughout the
nation .
- All citizens of every age
are urged to participate in the
events of this day as one means
of honoring those men and
women who served their
country
faithfully
and
courageously during the
Vietnam conflict.

Hiring is blocked by crowd
WELLSTON - Pressure
tactics applied by a crowd
eslimated at 500 persons last
week Weed the majority of
members of the Wellston
Board of Educa lion to abandon
an attempt to rehire Ralph
Crabtree as business manager
for the Wellstori City School
sy~tern.

the meeting for an executive
session, after which the motion
and second were withdrawn.
Terry Lee, representative of
the Ohio Education Association
told the crowd to continue its
taclics and w-ged the Citizens
Committee
for
Better
Education to consider starting
recall of the school board

members.
A motion ID rehire Crabtree
plus a second were !loth with·
drawn after the crowd forced
three board members to recess

Supt. Ralph McCormick
reported to the board that the
district had suffered revenue
loss because of a decrease in

Guilt pleaded
POMEROY - James Howard Stepp,
19, entered a plea of guilty when arraigned
before Judge John c. Bacon In Meigs
County Conunon Pleas Court on a
breaking and entering indictment,
Stepp was charged with entering the
A. and P. Company store in Middleport on
Jan. 14 and stealing a quanUty of merchandise. Bond of $500 for Stepp, of
Columbusoi was renewed pending sentencing.
·
Also, three divorces were granted, all
en grounds of gross neglect of duty and
l!:ltreme cruelty. Granted divorces were
Eileen Buck, Racine Route 2, from Roy
Buck; Charles R. Conner from Virginia
Conner, and Horner MDOdispaugh, Middleport, from Mililred Moodispallih.

utilities (railroads) and an
increase in tax dollars because
of property taxes.
In other matters the board
authorized an advance draw
for "payroll purposes, employed
James Kubiak as a substitute
teacher, employed Lori Cassell
as a substitute bus driver ,
authorized purchase of girls'
physical education equipment
($1,316) and changed school
hours back to regular starting
and ending \inies April 1.

COMING MONDAYS
POMEROY - James E.
Roush, County Auditor, ~id
Saturday L, D. Moore of the
Ohio Department of Taxation
will be In his office every
Monday from March 25
through April 8 to assist persons needing help with their
State lncome tax. His bow-s
will be from 9 a.m. to noon and
1- • p.m.

SQUAD CALLED
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
E·R squad answered a call at
10:51 a.m. Saturday for Gladys
Taylor, Union Ave: She · was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital as a medical patient.
J

·A
.

RUTLAND - Miss Beverly
Kay Thompson , daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Thompson, received her BA degree In
English from the College of
Arts at Ohio State University
Friday, March 15.
The winter quarter commencement exercises were
held Friday in St. John Arena
for the 1,7 96 graduating
seniors. A graduate in the
honors
pro gram ,
Miss
Thompson plans to study law
this fall. She was honored with
a dinner and was presented
gifts Friday following the
conunencement at the Hai Lai
In Columbus.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Thompson;
her
brother, Phillip; her sister,
Gloria Cross; Miss Bonnie
Denison of Missouri ; Mr. and
Mrs. Allen Bolla, and Richard
Mann, all of Columbus. Miss
Thompson is a para-legal with
the law finn of Bolla-Bolla,
Mann and Caulfield in
Columbus.

Meaning of
Rotary is
•
•
m se:nnce

Wallace in race
for governorship
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI)
- Starting a new campaign for
governor but with his eye on
the national scene in 1976, Gov.
George C. Wallace told a
cheering crowd of 4,000 Friday
night that "God made all
human beings.
Wallace, who tried to physically block integration of the
University of Alabama in 1963,
said, "I want to tell those who
have misunderstood our past
policies that we have always
believed that God made every
human being.
"He loves all of us," he said.
"Our actions have never been
against individual people but
against big government."
Wallace, 54, and crippled
since an assassination attempt
as he campaigned for president
at Laurel, Md., in 1972, said he
still wants to be a powerful
influence on the national
political parties In 1976.
"! do · not mean ID tell you
that I'm tunning two races,"
he said. "! am running for
governor, but I want to be in
the position to say that I
reptesent millions of people
who want some changes
brought about.
" H you re-elect ~e as your
governor it's going to send a
message loud and clear that
times are going to change,"
Wallace . "You will send a
message to the national Democratic Party that it had better
come back to the middle of the
road and start talking conunon
sense.
"Neither party can win in
1976 without the support of
people who think as you do,"
Wallace promised "four
more years of good , honest

MIDDLEPORT - James
Roush told the Middleport Pomeroy Rotary Club, Friday
ni ght "Rotary brings one in
touch with his fellowman."
His impromptu remarks when a scheduled program
could not be presented - were
directed to the theme of what
Rotary meant to him, a new
member of the club. To him,
th.e Rotary motto , Service
above Sell, derives di(ectly
from the first two command,
ments, love God above all, and
love thy neighbor as thysell. He
hoped through Rotary to be Park.
·able to see the entire world
Gene Riggs, president of the
unsellishly.
Meigs County
Crippled
President Harold Hubbard Children and Adult Society,
earlier appointed Roush, Dr. asked Rotarians to be alert for
'Milton Mason and Dan Thomp- persons needing assistance.
son to arrange the annual'1 Ladies of the church served a
Easter Egg Hunt at Municipal ' fried ·chicken dinner.

goverrunent."
Wallace has controlled
Alabama government since
1963 except for a 31-rnonth
period following the death of
his first wife, Gov. Lurleen
Wallace in 1968. Lt. Gov. Albert
Brewer Inherited the office and
kept it until 1971.
Brewer defeated Wallace In
the 1970 Democratic primary,
but lost a runoff.
Wallace's opponents lnclode
state Sen. Gene McLain of
Huntsville, former Gov. James
E. "Big Jim" Folsom, perennial candidate Ralph "Shorty"
Price, and political unknown
Thomas Robinson. None of the
fow- is considered a threat to
Wallace.

Driver has
2 fractures
POMEROY - Frank W.
Smeecks, 23, Coolville, escaped
death but not injury about 11
pm. Thw-sday when his auto
went out of control In Olive
Township, .6 of a mile
west of State Route 681, into
a creek where it rammed into a
,
boulder.
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach's
Dept. said Smeecks was taken
to St. Joseph Hospital In
Parkersburg by his family. He
suffered fractures In his right
arm and left leg, and cuts aqd
lruises In the face. Smeecks'
car was demolished. No charge '
was filed,
Moderate damage was
reported ID a tractor and car at
i:ll p,m. Friday at the Jn..
tersection of State Route 338
and township road 371 in Sutton
Twp. The sheriffs department
said the fann tractor driven by
Charles Yost, 17, Racine Route
1, was turning left onto the
township road as !he car driven
by Ada Van Meter, 64, Rt. 1
Portland, went to pass. Neither
Yost nor Mrs. Van Meter was
lnjw-ed. There was no charge
filed.

Limitation Talks (SALT) with
the Russians, there had been a
"stalemate in the negotiating
process" the two sides had
used primarily to clarify
teclmical information.
Now, he said, there must be
''a
conceptual
breakthrough"- a point
"where the two sides have to
agree on what it is they are
trying to accomplish."
Such as agreement apparently is the most Kissinger
expects by the time Nixon goes
to Moscow, but it will give the
President something to sign
with Leonid I. Bre2imev to
signify further improvement in
Soviet-American relations.
U.s. peace efforts in the
Mideast probably is the most
pressing matter on the agenda
because of Israeli.Syrian artillery duels. Kissinger has said

the United States does not
"hold tt.e Soviet Union responsible" for the duels on the
Golan Heights.
Kissinger's major weakness
in negotiating further concessions from the Russians on any
point, lies in the fac t he and
Nixon have been unable to
make good on one of the major
sections of the trade
agreement negotiated the
Moscow summit conference in
May, 1972.
Nixon pledged to secure the
appro~al of Congress granting
the Soviet Union "most favored
nation" treatment -meaning
Russian goods no longer will
face heavier import duties. The
Senate is insisting that Russia
formally must rescind its laws
taxing emigration, which fall
most heavily on educated
Russian Jews.

Generation Rap

Walls of Jericho" 8.
11 : 30- Face the Nation 10; Don Kirshner's Rock Concert .13 ;
Johnny Carson 15; Movie "International House" J.
II : 45 - Good News 6.
·
12: 00- Urban League 10; Johnny Carson 4.
12: 30- Movie "Scream and Scream Again" 10.

1:00 - News 13.

1: 30 -

News 4.

RANDALL WOODCOCK
HUNTINGTON - Randall
Woodcock. 33, of Louisville,
Ky . died at 9 a.m . Saturday in
~ St . Mary's Hospital here as a
result of a self -inflicted bullet
W'ound of his head suffered
Friday night at the Ward
Bloomf ield re sidence near
Gallia .
According to the Gallia
County
Sheriff 's
Dept.
Woodcock was founQ mortally
wounded on the back porch at
the Bloomfield home . The
victim was Bloomfield 's SOn ·in·
law .
Woodcock was rushed to the
Holzer Medical Center by the
Gall ia County
Volunteer
Emergency Squad and was
later transferred to St. Mary's
Hospital by the Southeastern
Ohio Medical Service Am bulance .

JOHNW. ROSS
MASON - John W. Ross,

76 ,

formerly of Mason County,
died Friday at his residence at
1631 Park Ave .• East Liver.
poool .
Mr. Ross was a retired niQht
watchman of the TreadWell
C:oristruction Co . at East
Liverpool. He was born July 31,
1897 in Clifton and was a
member of the Oakland Free
Methodist Church in East
Liverpool .
Preceding him in death were
his parents, Abb and Elizabeth
Ross and his wife, Lena , who

nllernuon

her
hom e
POMEROY - Nineteen
extended illness
defendants
wen: filled and five
She was born in Coo lvill e Feb
others
forfeited
bonds in the
24, 1917, daughter of lhe lat~
Charles A. and Meltania Foster Meigs County Court of Judge
Cowdery
Frank W. Porter Friday.
She was a member of th e
Fined were Elmer G.
Coolville United Methodis t
Church, the United Methodist Hastings, South Point, $10 and
Women, and had been a Sun· costs, le!t of center; Virgil B.
day School teacher in Class
Five for several years . She was Bonnette, Marietta, $10 and
a past matron of Min ea r costs, stop sign violation;
Chapter274, OE S. at Guysville. George E. Holman, Syracuse,
and had been secretary of Troy
$15 and cos ts, speeding;
Grange No. 904, Coolville.
Survivors
include
her Patricia J . Light, Athens, $10
husband. Russell L. Ba'ily, and costs, passing- at an in·
Coolville: one son, Lowell 0 .
Baily, Charlotte, ('1. , C.; one tersection ; George M. Sen-

daughter, Mrs. Gary (Cynthia

6:30- School Scene 10; Folk Literature 3.
6:25- Farm Report 13.
6:30 -

Five Minutes to Live By

&lt;I;

News 6; Bible Answers 8;

Good News 13.
6:35 - Columbus Today 4.
6:45 - Farmllme 10; Morning Reporl 3.
7:00 - Today3. 4,15; CBS NewsS.IO ; Dick Van Dyke 13; Bugs
Bunny 6.
.
7:30- Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle 13; New Zoo Revue6.
S:OO- Capt: Kangaroos, 10; New Zoo Revue 13; Sesame St. 33;
Jeff's Collie 6.

8:25- Jack Lalanne 13.
8: 30 - Brady Bunch 6.
S:55- News 13.
9:00- Paul Dixon 4; Friendly Junction 10; AM 3; Abbott Costello 8; Wild, Wild Wesl6; Phil Donahue 15; Movie "Little
Boy Lost" 13.
9:30- To Tell the Truth 3; Tattletales B.
9:55 - Chuck While Reporls 10.
10:00 - Dinah Shore 3, 15; Joker's WildS, 10; Company 6.
10:30- $10,000 Pyraml6 s. 10; Jeopardy 3, 4, 15.
11:00 - GambitS, 10; Password 13 ; Mike Douglas 6; Wizard ol
Odds 3, 4. 15; Unto lhe Hills 33.
11:30- Hollywood Squares 3, 4. 15; Love of Life S. 10; Brady
Bunch 13; Sesame St. 33.
II : 55- CBS News S; Imel's World 10.

"

'I

12 : 00- Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; Password 6; News 8, 10, 13;

Jackpot 3, 15.
12:30- Split Second 6; Search for Tomorrows. 10; Baffle 3, 15.
12:55- News 3, 15.
1:00 - News 3; All My Children 6, 13; Not For Women Only 15 ;
Concentration S; What's My Line? 10.
.
1:30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15; The World Turns B, 10; Let's Make
A Deal 6, 13.
2:00 - Day sot Our Lives 3, 4, 15; Guiding LightS, 10; Newlywed
Game 6. 13.
2:30 - Edge of NightS, 10; Girl In My Lile 6, 13; Doctors 3, ~. 15.
3:00- General Hospltal6, 13; Antiques 20; Another World 3. 4,
15; Price Is Right S, 10.
3:30- How To Survive AMarriage 3. 15; One Life To Live 6. 13;
Phil Donahue4; Match Games, 10; French Chef 20.
4:00- Mr. Cartoon 3; Somerset 15; Sesame St. :ro. 33; Love.
American Slyle 13; Lucr, Show S; Huck and Yogi 6; Mov ie
"Escape From Zahraln' 10.
4:30 - Green Acres 3; Gilligan's Is. 6, 13; Bonanza 15; Jackpot
4; 'Hazel S.
5:00 - Mr. Rogers 20, JJ ; Bonanza 3; Mer~ Griffin 4; Andy
Griffith 8; Gomer Pyle 13; Big Valley 6.
5:30 - Beverly Hillbillies S; Elec. Co. 33; Hodgepodge Lodge 20;

Are Men In Hiding?
Rap :
I have a theory about modern man. As soon as women
started getting liberated, he went into hiding - behind beards,
sunglasses, lots of hair. Even the new swim suits for men are
longer and sometimes cover the chest.
Are men getting so scared that they won't even show their
facial featw-es or bodies any more ? What other reason would
there be for growing all that stupid hair on their faces and heads?
- FRAN

Fran:
If yoor theory is correct, then why were beards popular way

back when women "swooned" at a mouse ? And why is super-hair
going out of fashion just when women's liberation is at its height ?
But ... let's hear from the men. Why DO (or did ) you grow
beards, if not for hiding behind? -HELEN AND SUE

Trails West 15; Hoga.n's Heroes 13.

6:00 - News 3, 4, S, 10, 15; Sesame Sl . :W; ABC News 13; Personality &amp; Behavioral Development 33; Truth or Con·

+++

sequences 6.

Dear Helen and Sue :
I went out with this boy for about two monllls last year. We
had a rough lreak-up, but I find I've pretty well gotten over him.
He still ignores me.
He now has a girlfriend I resented at first. We have since
decided that being enemies is stupid, so we 've become good
friends. We eat lunch together (when the guy isn't there) and
exchange confidences.
At first we compared notes about "him," but we rarely
mention him any more in our talks.
The problem is, he resents ow- friendship, and has got his
buddies on his side, so whenever the girl and I are together we
get nothing but dirty looks. She says, "He can't pick my
friends!" but I don't want to be the cause of them having a big

6:30- NBC News 3,

.
4,

15; CBS News S, 10; Room-222 13; ABC

News 6.

7:00- Truth or Conseq. 3'; Whars My Line B; Elec. Co. 20; Beal
the Clock 4; News 6. 10; Readlng for the Classroom Teacher
33; Call of the West 15; Circus[ 13.
7:30- Bobby Goldsboro3; Buck Owens S; Lock. Stock &amp; Barrel
20; Wacky World of Jonathan Winters 15 ; To Tell the Trulh 6;
Hollywood Squares 4: Episode Action 33; Municipal Court 10;
Beat the Clock 13.
s:oo- National Geographic 6; Magician 3, 4. 15; Rookies 13 ;
The Selfish Giants, 10; Racheal, La Cabana 10; La Rondine
33.
8:30 - Dr. Seuss Cartoon S, 10.
9:00 - Here's Lucy S, 10; Movie "Cleopatra" 6, 13; NCAA
Basketball 3, 4, 15.
9· 30- Book Beat 20, 33; Dick Van DykeS, 10.
10: 00- News 20; Paul Nuchlms 33; Medical Center 8, 10.
11 : oo- News 3, 4, 6. 8, 10, 13, 15, 20; Janakl33.
11 :30-JohnnyCarson 3, 4, 15; Movie "Sidekicks" S; "Kisses tor
My President" 10.
12:00- News 6, 13.

fl~ht.

Should I stop going around with her, even though I enjoy her
friendship a lot? I wish guys wouldn't hold grudges long after the
girl has "recovered." - EX-GIRL

1:00- Tomorrow 3. 4; Comedy Pilot 8; Take Five For Life 15.
2:00- News 4.

Dear' Ex:
You aren't alone! Many, many girls wonder why former
boyfriends can't be "just friends" - but I guess that's the nature
of the critter. When a male's pride is hurt, he heals very slowly.
-HELEN
P. S. Here's Sue to answer your question (for both of us ):

SUNDAY nM£S.SENTJNB.
Publllbed el'IQ' SUnclly by t1Je Ohio
VaDerPU-CO.
GALUPOUS
DAILY TRIBUNE
IZl 1blrd A... , Gallipoll1, Ollio al31.
P\lbllltled '""' ......, nmlnt n;.
Pald
o1 Gallljlollo, Ololo ""'·
THE DAILY~
111 c--t St., Pcmlr'OJ, 0 . tiM.

. . -.-aa.. . . .
. -..

+++
It took you a while to. get used to "the new girl" - so give
everyone else time to adjust to your friendship . Perhaps you're
feeling more uncomfortable than necessary . Maybe you're
Imagining some of those "looks" because you expect them.
Maybe not but, anyway, don't give up ,a good friendship over
something that will pass in time . - SUE

...,_....,_..,._ ......

- - •t En--~-­
PameroJ, oruo Polt omce.

wtlk.
ttto
By -Motor route
- . IIAIL
""' per
-mcmth.
· "" ...

Rap :
My sister graduated from school, got a job, and now my
parents tell her she must pay $12 a week room and board! I don 't
understand: They say it's because she must learn the value of
money, but she already knows how far a dollar goes (not far!) .
It seems dwnb that when you've been living in the same
house with your parents all your life for free, you should suddenly
be asked IDpay tollvethere.Right? ,CONFUSED

8UIISCIUPTION RATES
tbeGtlltpoH• 'l'rlblne in 01110 miWml

Old Pomeroy Ji.
High School
Open 8:30.4:30

March 25 - Rug Making,
Crall&gt;, Sq. Dancing 1-J p.m.
March 26 - Rug Making,
Chor.us 1-2; 30 p.m., Cards and

Games .

· March 27 - Chair Caning,
Crafts.
· -·
March 2S - Birthday and 1st
anniversary

Party,

12:30 p.m.
.
March 29 - Bowling ·1-3.

.......

Program Monday through
Friday, 11 :30 . 12:30. No sel

dnt mcmu. •.50; rDOIGr route

a .•

The Dail)' Senllnel, ane 1111111111 t~Jt; ~
,._. til•; Ill mcnltll lUI; three

...... -121 ... .-:""

monllt tUJO; t1ne IDGI'IU. •.~a ; mow

..... P.ll ,_.,.,
1'lli ,tint... ~ ln~tianal ll n:~ enttu.s,., u. .. rl!l' pUbUCIIUOo

o1 all ,... ...,..,.,. cndllod to U.
IIIWIPipct aftd M
tbl local nna
; t 'I ... herein.

Lunch served by Nutrition

charge for Sr. Citizens .
Donations of 25 • SO cents,
whatever the person is able or
Willing .to contribute .

. The bagpipe ·was ~n anctent Greek and Roman in·
strument Emperor Nero was
known to have played it.

'

overload, $25 and costs ; Jim li ce nse suspended for two Guysville Route I, failure to
Harris, Middleport, littering, years, aiding in taking illega l stop within assured clear
$10 and costs; Bernard Gilkey, deer.
distance, $27 .50; Jim M.
Middleport, $25 and costs, $15
Forfeiting bonds were Lester Pierce, Middleport Route I,
suspended, overload; Charles Haning, Pomeroy, $50, assault unsafe vehicle, $22.50; Charles
Curfman, Racine Route I, $10 and battery; Charles H. Van Meter, Middleport,
and costs, violation of license Hoffman, Ravenswood, $27.50, Inadequate prote c tion for
restrictions; Michael Walters, speeding; Robert M. Hart, motorcycle, $17.50.
Cheshire
2, $5 and
costs, .
defective Route
exhaust;
Frederick
Osborne, Reedsville, $150 and
costs, 10 days in jail and license
suspended for one year,
driving while intoxicated;
Randall McClain, Ra cine
Route 2, $150 and costs, three
days in jail and license
suspended for six months,
drivmg while intoxicated;
Helen L. Offenberger, Middleport Route 1, stop sign
violation, $tO and costs; David
Moorhead, Minersville, $10 and
costs, failure to yield right of
way; Kenneth Mohler, Middleport, $100 and costs and deer

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

60 INCH NEW SPRING
POL VESTER KNIT
FANCY, RIBS, SOLIDS
COLOR

COORDINATES

2Q%0FF

FRENCH CITY FABRIC SHOP
58

COURT

SINGER APPROVED DEALER
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

William Davis, Midrlleport :

CASH, CHARGE,

died in 1964.

Surviving are a son, James

LAY-AWAY

W. Ross of Easl Liverpool;
four daughters, Mrs. Thomas ,

I Floral

Shafer, Mrs. Eula

SHOP EARLY WHILE
QUANTITIES LAST

Little ,
Wellsv ille ;
Mrs .
Leonard
Kuzmick ,
Ea st
Liverpool, and Mrs . Ernest
{ Peg) Moore, Benton Harbor,
Mich .; a brother , Herman, of
Mason ; a sister, Mrs . Lola
Emerson. Coshocton. Ohio; 25

EMPRESSES
SOLID COLOR

grandchildren. and 17 greatgrandchildren .
Funeral services will be held
at 11 a.m. Tuesday at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev . Clarence McCloud
officiating . Burial will be in the
IOOF Cemetery. Friends may
call at the fugeral home
Monday from 2 tiA and 7 to 9

DRAPES

p.m.

ROY L. WHITE
POMEROY - Roy L. White,

SOLID

Chocolate
BUNNIES

'

.

ONLY

~~E~H

Raymond L. White, Mansfield,

and Jennings R. White,
Louisville, Ky .; five daughters,
Mrs .
Joseph
Turner,
Westerville ; Mrs. Amos Ooty,
Bellaire ; Mrs. Elson Dailey,

Mrs.

NOW

EASTER

farmer, he was a member of
Racine American Legion Post
602 having served with the U. S.
Army during World War I.
Surviving are two sons,

Portland;

63" Reg. Price ss.44
84" Reg. Price $f;.44

OnePouncl

78, formerly of Meigs County,
who had been residing at Route

Dorolhy

Jack Holland. Wheeling; a
step-son. Walter Harold. of
Louisville ; a step-daughter,
Mrs . E. S. Gaddie, Louisville;
24 grandchildren; il number of
field, and Willie White of

PR.

F1RE-SA.F£ Ff\BAICS Of

' .

Foam backing insulates against

FIBERGLAS

Heat and Cold.

INSULATED

7x10' STEEL SHED

great -grandchildren;
two
brothers, Greel White of Mans-

$ 99

Empress Won 't Stretch or Shrink.

O~.Jr h ~.Jge colledion i ~ per.
feel lor Eosler ba s k e t ~ and lor
individ~.Jol gi lls. Choose your
fav orit e mo~.Jihwolering bun·
nies we ig hing o full 16 oz . of
p~.Jre milk chotolole. Sill ing
and stand ing shapes .

Douglas, Man&lt;: field, and Mrs.

Savannah, Ohio.
Funeral services wUI be held

Reg. $11700

Murphy's Own

at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at the

Wattner Funeral Home in
Mansfield with the Rev. J.
Franklin Beck officiating .
Buri,:tl will be In the Letart
Falls Cemetery in Meigs
County on Monday.

ROSA MATLACi&lt;
STEWART - Mrs. Rosa
Faye Matlack, 52, Stewart,
Ohio, died Saturday mornin~ at

Ohio
State
Univers1ty,
Columbus, following an extended illness.
She was born in Athens
County Dec . 6, 1921, lhe

daughter ol the late Edwin and

Grace Kinney Dunfee. She was

a member ot the Torch Baptlsl
Church Ladles Aid Society, the
John Townsend Sons of the
Union Veterans No. 108, Frost,
Ohio, and the Rebecca Lodge,
Stewart, Ohio. She attended

Rugged construction with weather ·
proof overlapping panels and strong
gable roof. Sliding doors open to
51x6Pi2" ... won't sag or jam. Built in
gutters. Much more!

Coolville schools.

Survivors
Include
her
husband, Howard Lowell
Matlack ; two dauohters, Mrs.

Joseph (Yvonne Kay) Barkle,
Park Hill. Ky. ; Mrs. Gary
(Lola Caroll. Taylor, Lan -

NOW ONLY

caster; one son, Howard L.

Matlack. Jr., Frost; eight

grandchildren, and one niete.
One brother, Ivory, preceded
her in death.
Funeral services will be held

RURAL
MAILBOX

2 p.m. Monday at Torch
Baptist Church with Rev. Gary
K. Taylor officiating.

Burial will be In Coolville
Cemetery. Friends may call at

the White Funeral Home, Cool·
ville afternOOn on Sunday.
WILMA BAlLY
COOL VILLE - Mrs. Wilma
Cowderr Bally, 57. a resident
of Coo ville. died Saturday

FORD ADDS SHIFI'
DETROIT (UP!) - The .
Ford Motor Co. Friday announced It was adding a second
shift at Its Lima, Ohio, engine
plant Monday to produce more
of its 4-cyllnder engines for
the hot-selling Mustang II. The
addition of a second shift at the
plant will mean the recall of
about 150 workers from indefinite layo~s, Three weeks
- ago, Ford added a seco~d shift
to build additional slx.cytinder
engines for economy-minded
motorists.

potluck,

VlrJ'nlll- -~~~ P,IO; one )WI' tliM;

* IDGIIU. ••; dfte monthl ...01.
Ellewtlln ntper Jear: Iii: menU. 111.50;

' I

Sr. Citizens
Cakndar

sabagh, Parkersburg, $10 and

Ann) Griffin. little Hocking ; a costs, speeding; Debra Shelly
twin sister, Mrs . The lma
Crawford, Columbus, and five Mankin , Pomeroy, $10 and
grandchildren .
costs, stop sign violation;
Funeral services will be held William L. Owens Elizabeth
2 p .m . Tuesday at the Coolville
United Methodist Church with W. Va ., $10 ;nd costs'
Rev . Roy W. Rose officiating. speeding; Darrell G. Windle:
Burial will be in Coolville New Carlisle, $10 and costs
Cemetery .
Friends may call at the improper plates; Joseph
White Funeral Home in Schuler, Chester Route 2,
Coolville after 7 p.m. Sunday. overload, $25 and costs·

IS951n West VIrginia . A retired

6:00- Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.

ill

foii(Jwin~ df)

4, Mansfield,died Friday at the
Mansfield General Hospital.

MONDAY, MARCH24, 1974

.

. ! Area Deaths i 19 defendants fined by court

Mr. White was born May 8,

By Helen and Sue Bottel

Confused;
Wrong! She who earns a full-tlme 'salary should pay her way
(and $12 a week scarcely covers food these days!) - HELEN
AND SUE

r------------------------- .

WALKOUT ENDING
CHILUCOTHE, Ohio (UPI)
-Guards were expected to end
their
two-day
walkout'
Saturday morning at the
Chillicothe Correctional Institute. The agreement to
r'!turn followed a long meeting
Friday between the institute
superintendent and the union
local president.

.

VINYL LATEX SURFA-TONE
REGULAR
'4.98 GAL.

STRONG RIBBED STEEL
APPROVED BY P.OSTMASTER GENERAL

SALE

A top quoliiy point for interior
surfo~' , • , plaster, wood,
i~rior brick. Q..,iclc.-drying,
driplen. FormuJated without

99
'

PRICE

lead . Highly washable. White,
decoiotor shode5.

.

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

COMPLOE

ROLLER AND PAN JUST

.

'

Rural Mail Box

88

MOUNTING POST

Sale

HEAVYWEIGHT

Price

74~

sn
. --------------------------ALL PURPOSE • HEAVY DUTY
4" NYLON BRUSH SPEQAL ·$}57

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

PACKAGE OF FOUR All
:'\
PURPOSE PAINT BRUSHES fl~..,;

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA - BOTH DOWNTOWN GAWPOLIS STORES- PT. PLEASANT STORE

�.

.

'. '

'

... .

'

&gt;

••

I •.
&gt;

I

4- The Stinday Tunes- Sentin~. Sunday, March 24, 1974

:························,································~··························!··~
•
•

!.
.

•

Woman 's World

1
'

Dorothy Countryman

Charlene Hoeflich

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Pomeroy-Middleport

446-2342

992-5292

Ladies aid
has meeting

MARRIAGE LICENSES
•
POMEROY
J ohn
RJ!ymond Michael, 24, Mid· ,
dleport, and Deborah Lynn• .
Vferry , 20, Pomeroy; Nathan
Clay Yonker, 18, Letart, W.
Va ., and Michele Eileen Kay ,
New Haven, W.Va.

-

they only
kill =

ma•rtersG

reported at a meeting of the

~
I

'"I

li'!jCl&gt;
I
.

, : '·I
f _·
,...
'

Mr. and Mrs. Barry Cole

'

Wedding vows exchanged
NORTH WALES, Pa. - The
St. Peter's Lutheran Church,
North Wales, Pa ., was the
se ttin g for the wedding of Miss
Linda Sue Brogan, daughter of
.Mr. and Mrs. John W. Brogan
Sr., Rutland, to Barry Allan
Cole, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert W. Cole, Gwynedd, Pa.
The candlelight wedding was
an event of Saturday, Jan. 26 at
7:30 p.m. wilh the Rev .
Theodore Fisher offi ciating at
the . double ring ceremony.
Nuptial music was presented
by Mrs. Zeiss.
The altar was decora ted with
arra ngemenls of pink , blue and
white car!lations.

Given in marriage by her
brother Capt. Lawrence N.
Brogan, Gettysburg, Pa., the
bride was attired in a gown of
white velvet fashioned wi th
empire waist and a light blue
satin bodice featuring lace
overlay and A-line skirt. The
bride wore a headpiece of blue
and white miniature car-

nations with blue baby 's
breath. She carried a bouquet
of blue and whiU, miniature
carnations, white slarbursls
and blue baby's breath from
which fell white velvet
streamers tied in lovers ' knots.
Her only jewelry was white
pearl necklace and earrings.
Maid of honor for the bride
was Miss Barbara Merrill,
Hampton, N. H. She was in a
gown of royal blue velvet of Aline design with an empire
waist and puffed sleeves. Her
headpiece was of pink, blue

STYLE SHOW SET - JoAnn Allen, left, is sh&lt;llrn choosing a pair of-shoes at Carl's for the
Emblem Club Style Show Thursday, March 28 at 8 p.m. Tickels for the show are available from
Mrs. Allen, 44&amp;-1634, from any club member. The show will be held in the Elks Lodge in
Gallipolis with fashions from PJs. Refreshmenls will be served and door prizes awarded
followmg the show. Proceeds will go toward charitable projects of the club. Hostesses will be
Mrs. Allen, Ann Wickline and Barbara Shelton. Marianne Campbell will be commentator.
Models incl~de J~dy _Betz, Ann Carter, Kitty Ferrell, Dorothy Frazier, Nancy Houck,
Marianne Dille, Liz Mtlls, Bette Null, Janet Rees, Mary K. Robinson, Jeni Robinson, Hope
Sievers , Teresa Sievers, Ann Wickline and Mary Ann WooH. All the ladies are members of the
club.

and white miniature car-

nations and she ca rried a

bouquet of blue, pink and white
carnations.

Joseph Wisniewski se rved as
best man for the groom and the
ushers were Bob Fieger, John

Heimer and Jeff Ca pps.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Brogan wore a gown of
blue polyes ter and had a
corsage of orchids. Mrs. Cole
wore a gown of multi-print
jersey and a whiU, carnation
corsage.
A reception honoring the

couple wa s held at the Redwood Inn, Lansdale , Pa.,
following the ceremony. The
three tiered cake was accented
in blue and topped with doves.
Music was provided by "TI1e
Second Time Around". Miss
Dana Russo registered guesls.
The new Mrs. Cole is a 1973
graduate of Meigs High School.
Cole graduated from North
Penn High School, Lansdale,
Pa., in 1969 and is employed as
an electrician. The couple
reside at North Penn Crossing

Apts., Lansdale, Pa .

DINNER SET
HARRISONVILLE - The
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
will hold their birthday dinner
at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
Harrisonville School House.

Potluck refreshmenls are to be
served and those atU,nding are
to take their own table service.
A door prize will be awarded.

5 BIG DAYS
TUES.. WED., THUR ., FRI_., SAT., MARC

•.v.-.'YY.1.'o'Vo'•'•'•'•'O.Vo'
!o' •'•'•':/_'o;.:-«o;&gt;'
..~•:•••;o"0:0'"-"4._.. !o:.::o•o·o;o· o;•»'o'.;.••f1::o'o''-~•·o:&lt;.•'•
..
'~*'**'*~
0;&lt;,•,•,•,•,•,
[..,.......,...;o,•,•,•,•o'o'o'o
•'• •'iY o. •'•:•"&lt;:•:•.•:•:oX•:O:o:.r.•!o!o!o.«o:o~
•'•'•'•'•"'14V."".';n

~Community

(;OLO\' ·

Miss Anita Walker

- ·-.

UIE
Robert Blake

,

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Walker, Thunnan, announce the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Helen Anita, to Richard
Keith Fisher, son of Mr, and Mrs. Richard Fisher, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis. Miss Walker is a 1968 graduate of Southwestern
High School and a 1972 graduate of Morehead State
University with a major in elementary education. At the
present tiine she is a teacher for "Project Hope" in the
Gallipolis City Schools. Fisher is a 1969 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and is currently a second year student
in the college of Veterinary Medicine at Ohio State University. The wedding is being planned for early August.

•

I fl,·"''.

Tonight thru
Tuesday

When will the

killer strike again? .

Pembroke SCOPS meets in Ironton
hears review

CHILLICOTHE - Ironton served , and to any persons
will be the scene of the ne&lt;t interested in attendin g the
meeting of SCOPS, The South meeting a cordial welcome is
GALLIPOLIS - Pembroke Central Ohio Preservation extended.
Club met with Mrs. Eugene Society, Inc ., Sunday, March 31
Gloss
Tuesday evening.
~
$~
at 2 p.m. in the Lawrence
·""'
The program was presented County Courthouse, at Fourth
POMEROY - It's back to Anglesey, Wales today for Gene by Mrs. Edward Sofranko, who Street and Park Ave.
Tonight, Mon ., Tue s.
Harris who has had a delightful visit here with his kids.
reviewed · the book, "Theirs
March 24-26
Gene was sent back to the States by Kaiser for a business Was the Kingdom."
Don Rist will be chairperson
meeting in Cleveland and had several days' free time for visiting
of the meeting and will supply
This book, by R.
Walt Disney's
with John and Margie Blake and son, Frank, in Middleport, and Delderfield, is the second ~ aps for a car tour o! !amous
ROBIN HOOD
Ken and his wife and Nancy Harris in Columbus.
volume in the history of the homes and landnJarks in
(Technico lor)
Things are busy with the Harris family. Rob has just com- Swann family, which began Ironton. He will also answer Meet Robin Hood and his
pleted high school there and is making plans to enroll at Ohio with "God Is An Englishman." any questions.
merry Menagerie.
IGI
State University for the fall quarter. One of his final activities at
In this volume, Adam Swann,
Di sney Featurette :
the school was a skiing trip to Scotland, Kathy is a sophomore · the central character, is
Featured at the meeting will
Islands of lhe Sea
COLOR BY
and enjoying every minute of her school, and Pal, after going portrayed as ambitious, deeply be the Col. C. Lambert Display, Di sney Cartoon: ·
DELUXE•
over at Christmas time decided to remain and is a student at in love with his tough-minded the Don Rist Hanging Rock
Peter and the Wolf
Cartoon
Show Starts 7 p.m .
Richmond College in London. She previously&gt;had been enrolled and
independent
wife, Iron Region Display, ils history
at Morehead. As for Janet ... well there's never a dull moment, Henrietta, and passionately and relics, the Dr. John Haney
what with taking care of the family.
and William B. Haney "Ar·
devoted to his work.
Incidentally, Pat's address is 47 Warwick Road, Flat A,
The · focus, however, . is chaeological Display of
London, SW-5, United Kingdom. She reaDy travels around since beginning to turn to his Prehistoric Man of Lawrence
students receive a 511 pet. discount on the British railway. Her children. Alex is
the County, Ohio."
most recent trips took her to Paris and Switzerland.
professional soldier through
FRI-SAT-SUN
Among the activities will be
Plans are for Janet and Rob to come this summer for a visit. whose eyes the reader sees the
IAII'M' MIITAUTrt·
Then al Christmas, the entire family will make the trip home, triumphs and tragedies of Eng- recognition of the Iron Furnace
and will be here for several days,
land. Deborah devotes herseH Replica on the Courthouse
to uncovering the terrible lawn.
HOW NICE it must have been for Mrs. C. M. Hennesy to have injustices of the period. George
SCOPS awards will be made
all three of her daughters home at the same tiine.
is determined to take over his to Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Edfather's business and reshape
MRS. LAWRENCE Vivian has been here from Woodland it and introduce the first motor- mondson, CoL Lambert, and
Hills, Calif.; Mrs. Julien Motley from San Hosea, Calif., and Mrs. driven transport vehicle to the the Lawrence Co . ·c ommissioners for their financial
Gordon Harris from Columbus.
company. It is this last which support in the restoration of
signals
Adam
Swann's
ACULTURAL arls fair will be held Monday night from 7 to 8 retirement and his passing of Iron Furnace.
p.m. at the Pomeroy Elementary School, and the PTA extends a the torch to a new generation.
Light refreshmenls will be
special invitation to you. There will be no meeting and parenls
and friends are invited to just drop by and take a look. Judging of
the entries is being completed this weekend and the ribbons will
be in place for the fair.
i\.
This year the only entries to go into district competition will 1 V j
J
be UJ.e 11 best of show" in visual arts, written work and music in
the divisions of primary and intermediate.
GALLIPOLIS . The will be Thursday, April 18, at
And just this reminder 7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs,
The District 16 spring conference will be held in Middleport Gallipolis Area Newcomers Tom Tope. Mrs, Barry Cox,
on May 4. School visual arts entries are to be taken to the Meigs Club held its monthly meeting, speech and hearing therapist
Junior High School that morning for judging, but aD music and Thursday at 6:30 p.m. In at the Holzer Medical Center,
written work will be judged in advance of the conference and Oscar's Restaurant. Guests for will present a program on
there is a deadline of April 20 for getting that material to Mrs. the evening were husbands of "Recognizing Speech and
the members. Dr. and Mrs.
Max Eichinger, the conference cultural arts chairwoman.
John Sheels were welcomed as Hearing Problems".
"FREEDOM from care is at the end of a fishing pole, for new members.
Following the dinner, Mrs.
fishing like laughter and tears, is one of the safety valves of
Tom
Hardman, president,
sanity".
introduced
guest speaker, John
Passed along to use recently by Maxine Philson was an
Reece, public affairs coorarticle entitled "Freedom from Care", which advises that in this
"mile-a-minute" economy where many people have fr8zzled dinator of the General James
nerves and are beset by tension fishing is tbe therapy that M. G~vln Plant. Reece gave a
talk and slide presentation on
provides the fifth freedom - "Freedom from Care" . Hand me a
threefold Gavin project which
BETTY OHLINGER
i&gt;ole, friend .
includes the power plant, the
POMEROY
102 E. MAIN
mines and the beltway.
illustrations ~e used to
explain the basic concepts of
the
cooling
towers,
precipitators and slack which
POMEROY - Mrs. Charles Mr. and Mrs. Marcellus Waid, will be major elements In the
Wer ry was honored last Susan and Mark, New Haven ; envirorunental protection plan
Saturday night with a surprise Mr. and Mrs, James. Werry, of the plant. Conventional
''Tamar•"
birthday party at her home. Jiinmy, RJ!ndy and Ricky, Mr. mining and continuous mining,
is tak i'ng the
The party was planned by her and Mrs. Thomas Holter, Mr. the two method.!! of mining
cou rlllwo by storm! Women
daughter-in-law, Mrs. James• and Mrs. Roger Holter, Mr. which will be used at the Gavin
and girls of all age, are mak i ng it
their number one shoe . All ·
Werry of near RJ!cine.
and Mrs . Ronald Holter, mines, were also discussed. A
around, open·toe ·and-heel sty ling
question
and
answer
period·
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. . Deubie and Tammy, Rt, I,
plus unmatchable mftness make
Mike Werry and Brandon, Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Paul followed.
the''ramara"a favori te fo r at hDme,
The next meeting of the club
shopping or eveni ng.wear. Any ·
Belpre; Mrs. Mabel Gerlach, Taylor, Pomeroy; Karen Price
time comfor t's a mun! If!
Point Pleasant, W. Va.; Mrs. and Steve Price, Middleport,
Bl ack . Navy, Red. White,
Carol Goff, Charleston, W.Va.; and Charles Wen;y, ilob and
Bright Bl 1.1e, Pink .
&amp;I ph Gibbs, Sr :, Mr. and Mrs. Kathy. Sending gifts were Mr.
RJ!Iph Gibbs, Jr,, Mr. and Mrs . and Mrs, James Staals and Mr.
MARCHI ASSIGNEI!
Greg Gibbs, Shawn and P. J., and Mrs. Carl Will.
GALLIPOLIS Army

!Corner By Char~ne Hreflich~

MEIGS THEATRE

..

MASON DRIVE IN THEATRE

Tewcomer.·rhave

Marguerit_
e's Shoes

Mrs. Werry honored
get a beautiful

B"xlO"

88(

Living Color
Portrait

*Plus 50.¢
Handling

Babies -children- adults - groups - I Specia l
of each person sing ly 88~. plus 50~ hand ling.
Groups $1.00 per person, plus o ne 50~ ha nd ling .
Select from finished pictures 1n rod1 ont block
wh i te and living .color·

Bonus quality ''Guaran teed Sa tisfac tion."
Limit -

one Spec ial · pe r chil d.

Fast delivery -

co~o.pte o u s ser vi ce .
H R5 :

9: 30 ·S Tues .. Wed .. Thu r s
Fri. 9; 30 ·7 Sat . 9: 30 -1
Lu nch 1.2

· LOWER GALLIPOL IS STORE

co.

AA UW to meet, hear speaker
MIDDLEPORT - Paul
Eich, a native of Switzerland,
recently of Tripoli, Libya, will
speak at the regular meeting of
the Meigs Cou?ty- Chapter of
the American Association of
University Women at the home
of Mrs. Sibley Slack, 449 Norih
Third Ave,; Middleport, at 7:30
p,m. Tuesday.

Eich is being presented by
the Interna tional Relations
Committee
of
lhe
Organization. He' has been
associated with oil companies
for more than 30 years. Eich is
married to the former Grace
Crow and they are residing in
the Crow family horne, Letart
Falls.
·

br oug ht by · Mrs . Pandora

..
,

'the
•••

POMEROY - Members of
six Meigs Coun ty garden cl ubs
were guesls at the ann ual open
meeting of the Winding Trail
Garden Club Wednesday night
at the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Eleclric Co.
Highlighting the meeting
were slides secured through
the Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs of wildflowers and prize
winning plantings.
_Trillium, lily "of the valley,
wJich hazel, winU,rgreen, fi re
pmks, calch fly , marigold,
liver leaf, phlox, squirrel corn ,
blue bells and violels were
among the wildflower slides
shown. Other slides showerl
civic improvement pr ojects

Mrs. Berl Grimm, Meigs
County contact chairwoman
spoke on the Regatta flowe;
show and announced that the
co-chairwomen are Mrs. Guy

Reynolds and Mrs. Harry S.
flow ering shrubs and various Moore of the Middlepor t
edging planls.
Amateur Gardeners.
The slides were shown by
Mrs. Kelton announced that
Mrs. Robert Lewis, Mrs. the Region 11 meeting will be
Robert Thompson and Mrs. April 27 at McArthur and will
Lloyd Moore.
be hosted by the Vinton
Mrs. Harold Deeth gave County Garden Clubs. Mrs.
devotions and a prayer to open Earl Bender will be the guesl
the meeting with Mrs. Cora arranger for the meeting.
Beegle presenting Mrs. Aaron
Refreshmenls were served
Kelton, president of Winding from a green and white table
Trail and the Region II carrying out the St. Patrick's
director, a ye1low mum cor · Day theme. The table-covered
sage.
with white featured a green
nylon

Trio to sing in Athens
ATHENS - The Ohio
The recordings of this prizeUniversity Artist Series will winning ensemble are at the
present the Beaux Arts Tri o top of every best-selling
Wednesday, April 3, at 8 p.m.: classica l list in the United
in Memorial Auditorium.
Stales and their repertoire
The three members of the includes Brahms, Haydn ,
trio are individual musicians Rave l, Moza rt, Beethoven,
who have learned to defer to Shubert and Dvorak.
each other to create a single
Tickels for the Beaux Arls
personality for the ensemble. Trio are still available at the
The virtuosity, coordination Memorial Auditorium box
and musical insight of Isidore office, Monday through
Cohen on .the violin ' Menahem Friday, 1-4 p.m. Mail orders
Pressler on piano and the are accepted and reservations
superb cello of Bernard may be made by calling :i94Greenhouse combine to set this 3471. Tickets are $2 for adulls
trio aparl from all olher and 50 cents for all studenls.
chamber ensembles.
Since their debut, the Beaux
Arls Trio has been hailed on
three contin ents with performances in Israel, Turkey
GALLIPOLIS - Clay PTA
and Iran under the auspices of met Monday , March II, at the
the State Department 's school. The meeting opened
Cultural program.
with the Pledge of Allegiance
and devotions by Rev. Charles
Lusher.
Secretary,
Mrs.
Ann
Meadows , read the minutes of
lhe last meeting and Marvin
Hufford reporled that the
projecls commiltee has approved the purchase of a rug

net overskirt and was

Hollon , Mrs. Charles Bartels
Mrs. Karl Grueser and Mrs:
Mae Hol ter, Wildwood Garden
Club; Mrs. Harold Lohse, Mrs.
Harry Davis, Mrs. Guy
Reyn olds, Mrs. Grace Pratt,
Mrs.· L. E. Reynolds, Mrs.
Erroll Conroy, and Mrs . John
Werner, Middleport Amateur
Gardeners; Mrs. Grimm, Mrs.
Wilson CarpenU,r and Mrs.
Nora Cross, Bend 0' the RiverMrs . John Kincaid, Mrs. M. c:
Wilson, Mrs. Malcolm Roller
Middleport Garden Club; and
Mrs. Reid Youn g, Mrs. Wyatt
Chadwell, ChesU,r Club. Mrs.
Shirley Beegle was also a
guest.
Door prizes were awarded to
Mrs. Willford, Mrs. Bartels,
Mrs. Lohse, Mrs. Pratt, Mts.

centered with a flower
arrangement of whiU, daisies Cross, Mrs. Conroy, Mrs.
and spider mums with Young, Mrs. Wilso n, Mrs.
greenery donated by Frances Holter and Mrs. Hollon .
Florists, and silver candlesticks with green and white
tapers placed on large green
shamrocks .
Mrs. John Terrell poured the
green mint punch, and Mrs.
Kelton presided at the silver
tea service. Party cookies on
GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
silver trays were served by
Citizens
CenU,r, located in the
Mrs. Richard Collins, Mrs.
Holzer
·
Hospital
bldg., Cedar
Beegle and Mrs. Charles
Hayes . Mrs. Earl Thoma St. enti-ance, is open Monday
thronghFridayfrom 9a .m. to 3
regisU,red the guesls.
and one night a week. The
p.m.
GuesiS were Mrs. William
schedule
for !his week is as
Willford , Rutland Friendly
follows
:
Gardeners; Mrs. Edison
Monday, March 25, Pipe
stem crafls, 1-3 p.m., Chorus
Practice, 1:30 p.m.; Tuesday ,
March 26, Physical Fitness, lOll a.m. , Bridge Lessons, 1-3
Nancy Evans, homeroom p.m., Teacher, Aileen Clark·
21:
chairperson, reported that the Wednesday, - March
Quilting,
9
a.m.-3
p.m.
,
Easter party will be April 3 for
Bowling,
I
p.m.;
Thursday,
the kindergarten and April 5
March 28, Aries Birthday
for all other grades.
Party,
I :.30 p.m., Ira Wellman
Th_.ttendance banner went
will
show
slides; Friday,
to Jei-Collins' fifth grade class.
Sehool superintendent, Paul March 29, Rummage Sale, 9
Kuhn, introduced board a.m.-3 p.m., Egg Carton flower
members
Paul
Niday, class 1-3 p.m., Teacher, James
presiden t, Mrs. Katherine Poirier, Center open, 7-9 p.m.,
Williams and Neal Clark, who Vocational School program ;
Saturday, March 30, Rummage
spoke briefly;
Rev. Lusher showed new Sale, 9 a.m.-2 p.m.
slides of the Holy Lands which
RIDERS CONVENE
were both interesting and
MIDDLEPORT
- The Meigs
informative.
The next meeting will be County Riding Club will meet
at 7:30 Tuesday evening at the
April 22.
hom e of Sharon Wilson,

Sr. Citizens
Calendar

Clay PTA has meeting

By

and movie screen for

TERRY
JOHNSON
Looki ng
amazing

.I

back.
it ' s
ho w
lh e
automobile actually survived. It's a wonder th at
people didn't iust revert
back to the horse a nd
buggy when faced with the
obstacles of spec ia l clothes
to w ear. troubles w ith t.he
ca r s whi ch we r e then
r ather new and hard to dea l
w ith, tools to carry and
prejud ices to over come in
order to even be a l lowed t o
operate t heir automobiles.
They must have sensed
that there were better days
to co me. more modern
automob iles to fo ll ow the
fragile ones and a greater
acceptance of the va lue
an d feas ibili ty o f the
au tom ob ile. because they
di dn ' t give up, revert back
or she I ve the idea of
motorized transportat ion .
We can assure you that
mobile homes had a slow
start also, but today , the
modern mobile home is the
greatest dwelling, either
for a summer coltage or a
permanent home you can
hope to live in. Sty li shly
decorated,
com p letely
furni shed , sturd ily bu ilt,
relocatable st ruct.u res that
preserve their beauty and
last a lif et ime , mobile
homes are here to stay and
every year mo r e and more
people are becoming aware
of th eir fea sibili,y . value
and leadership .
Now is the lime to visi t
and get all the information
on mobile hom es and select
one fo r your summer
cottage or permanent
dwelling .

JOHNSON'S MOBILE
HOME SALES

sshoe!

including a mini-park at the
Hancock Historical Museum al
Findlay with pictures of the
area before and after work by a
ga r den club , rock garden
designs, formal gardens,

2110 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
Pho11e I) 14-446-3547

the

kindergarten, an d a new
projector, and has allocated
$15 to each grade for games.
Hufford, Mrs. Bonnie Mitchell and Mrs. Marian Smith
were appointed to the
nominating committee. Mr·s.

Entertainment was provided

·Uniform Center
has
Exercise and Gym Suits

Mrs. Patterson gave the
benediction .

Following the meeting th e
ladies hosU,d a stork shower
for Mrs. J. E. Cremea ns. Dawn
Martin, Barbara Abshire and

For t/;e athletic and figure conscious gals
SIZES 4 - 20

ss.oo

Effie Martin were in charge of

"TRY 'EM YOU'U liKE 'EM"

stork eenterpiece comp leted
the arrangements.

Refr eshments of coffee,
Kool -Aid , mints , coo ki es ,
chips, pie and ca ke were

served.

News
MOREHEAD. Ky . - J ill
Gatewood, Ga llipolis, a freshman

at

Morehead

Sta te

Univ ersit y, is pledging
Gamma Psi Chapter of Sigma
Sigma Sigma Sorority. The

theme or the Tri-sigma socia l
service proJect this year is

"Sigma Serves Children" and
fund s for the project are being
used at the North Carolina
Hospital at Chapel Hill. Miss
Gatewood is the daughU,r of
Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Gatewood ,
Jr. , Rt. 2, Crown City .
RIO GRANDE - Usually
people do not have the opportunity for direc t contact

STOP JJ'\1 AND SEE OUR NEW

MATERNITY LINE

WHITE SWAN

UNifORMS

w

Y ou.r Wbite Swan
Distributor

.
'
et'&amp;\~d
1n.esLafayette Mall
300 Seco!ld Ave.
Gallipolis. 0.

b'"'"'"'"'i

=-•

STORE HOURS

Mon.&amp; Fri.9:30til8p.m .
Tues . Wed . Thur. &amp; Sat.
9:30 tiiS p.m .

with famous au th ors, lec turers, or artists ; however, one

Rio Grande College stud ent has
nol only corresponded with a
nationally known a rtist, she

has had her work critiqued by
him.
Th e stude nt, Charlene
Griffin, a senior, Oak Hill ,
while preparing a paper for
American Cultura l His tory
class, wrote artist Norman
Rockwell for his views. The
subj ect of the paper was the
difference between natural
talent and developed skills.
The paper, prese nted to
Professor Robert Leith's
American Cultural class, was a
study of what effect a single
person ha s ha'd on socie ty in
America. An aiTU:t teur artist,

Miss Griffin enclosed some of
her sketches for Mr. Rockwell
to rev lew. In his response, the
artist encouraged Miss Griffin
to continue her drawing.
Middleport. Residenls wishing
to become new members are

inviU,d.

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA ONLY
OPEN 12:00 NOON TIL 5:00 P.M.

ENJOY SUNDAY LUNCH WITH US!

--SUNDAY SPECIALS==
SUNJ?AY,MARCH 24~ 1974
SERVING BEGINS AT 12:00 NOON TILL 5: 00
"YOU'LL ENJOY THE QUICK, POLITE SERVICE HERE "

MEAT
LOAF
DINNER
Home
sty le meatloaf
covered w ith rich brown
gravy , creamy ma shed
potato.es. buttered
vegelable, warm roll and

bu tt er .

BAKED CHOPPED
SIRLOIN STEAK
DINNER
chopped sir loin sleak,
baked in rich bf'own gravy,
mashed potatoe's , buttered
vege tabl e, warm roll and
butter .
4· DZ .

~1 ·.39 ·

NO. 14 HOT
LIVER AND
ONIONS TURKEY SANDWICH
PLATTER
DINNER
Tender t..aked beef liver
smeth r r ed 'with onions,
rich brown gravy , creamy
mashed P9tatoes. buttered
vegetab le. warm roll and

butter

Tender slices of roast all
white meat turkey on two
slices of White brea d, with
ri ch t urkey gra vy. cran berry
sau ce . cr eamy
mashed Potatoes .

)WI)) DOT
FLOC~WORI6
The look of old :.shio ned, flo cked
do ned Swiss is cJptu red in
doublekni I . .. of 100°/o Dacron®

polyester for good behavior.

Hi gh ly mixable dots, dot/da sh
plai d and flora Is .. . in navv, red,
cl ea n green and brigh t wh.ite .

S1zes 8-18, 5-XL
Swiss dot sh irt jacke t. 32.00

Tultletop, 13.00
Platd pants, 24.00

5,_:,, dot pants, 18.00

Jantzewf

I

,.

.

'

r

ReporL"i from recent district
coun ci l meetings will be heard
and a fi eld represc nf4tive is
expected to atlend . Refreshments will be S(' rv~d.

The

Nancy McCoy.

decorations.A earouse l effect
was created arou nd the gift
ta ble with pink, blue and white
crepe paper streamers and a

MEETING SLATED
GALLIPOLIS - The regular
monthly rneelin~ of the Ga llia
ChapU,r, OCSEA , wi ll be held
Monday at the cl ub rooms, 1622
EasU,rn Ave, at 7:30 p.m.

------------------·----~

''

I
I

private first class Michael B.
-Marchi, 19, son of Mrs.
Margaret J. Hyikema, 360 Dale
Road, Zanesville , Ohio, is
assigned to the 20th engineer
battalion afFt, Campbell, KY.
Pic. Marchi is a construction
specialist with Company C 'of
the battalion . His father, Louis
G. Marchi, lives at 144 Third
Ave., Gallipolis. Hia '!file,
Cindy, lives at 678 Spangler
Drive, .Zanesville.

Meigs gardeners meet

Wchrung, treasurer, a nd Mrs.

revue at the April meeting. A Shirley Baity, Mrs. Lenora
mys tery box to be used as a McKnight, Mrs. Mildred Wells
fund raising project was and Mrs. Flo Stri~kland.

Gardner, Rene Rroy les and

Rohach, Ingrid and Bill Fugate, Jim Brown, imtructor, Irene
and Carl Paulsen, Vel and Gene Harper. Also graduating but
not pictured were Sandy and Bruce Kopack.

presented by Mrs .. Betty

Mn~. · Browning served a
Plan s were ma de ror dessert course to those named
homemade Eas ter bonnet and Mrs. Lucy White, Mrs .

Mar tin , Trilba Patterson, Ollie
Oliver, Lore tw Clark, Eva
GRADUATE - Five new couples have completed square
dance lessons, given by the Tri-Lighters Club. Shown at the
gra doatton party, are left to right, Barbara and Rock

will host the next meeting.
Officers' reports were

home of Mrs. Ann Brownin~.

Door prizes went to Effie

•

PLUS

.~

during the ·~ven ing .

Collins. Mrs. Barbara Mullen

club Wednesday night at the Evelyn Gilmore, secretary .

new mem ber was added to the
group.

\?P, JAMES GAR NER

.

ADDISON - The l'rccwill
Baptist l .tld ies Aid t:unvc ncd
opening the meeting .
Eva Gar dn er had th e
opening prayer ;:md th e
secret.i'!ry 's and trcc-J sur er' s
reports were heard . Thl' group
signed 39 get-well c;m ls to be
sent and reported 22 personal
visits to shut-ins during the
monUl .
There were IB members and
'f. seven guests attend ing an d one

TONIGHT ONLY

POME HOY- Aquilt star ted
by the Sew-Rite-sewing Club
wa s contributed to the Se nior
Ci lizens Cen ter, it. was

recently at the church with
president, Mickey Smith

•

Club donates quilt

by Mrs. Browning's husband,
Ron, and their son, on guitars

I I

�.

.

'. '

'

... .

'

&gt;

••

I •.
&gt;

I

4- The Stinday Tunes- Sentin~. Sunday, March 24, 1974

:························,································~··························!··~
•
•

!.
.

•

Woman 's World

1
'

Dorothy Countryman

Charlene Hoeflich

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Pomeroy-Middleport

446-2342

992-5292

Ladies aid
has meeting

MARRIAGE LICENSES
•
POMEROY
J ohn
RJ!ymond Michael, 24, Mid· ,
dleport, and Deborah Lynn• .
Vferry , 20, Pomeroy; Nathan
Clay Yonker, 18, Letart, W.
Va ., and Michele Eileen Kay ,
New Haven, W.Va.

-

they only
kill =

ma•rtersG

reported at a meeting of the

~
I

'"I

li'!jCl&gt;
I
.

, : '·I
f _·
,...
'

Mr. and Mrs. Barry Cole

'

Wedding vows exchanged
NORTH WALES, Pa. - The
St. Peter's Lutheran Church,
North Wales, Pa ., was the
se ttin g for the wedding of Miss
Linda Sue Brogan, daughter of
.Mr. and Mrs. John W. Brogan
Sr., Rutland, to Barry Allan
Cole, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert W. Cole, Gwynedd, Pa.
The candlelight wedding was
an event of Saturday, Jan. 26 at
7:30 p.m. wilh the Rev .
Theodore Fisher offi ciating at
the . double ring ceremony.
Nuptial music was presented
by Mrs. Zeiss.
The altar was decora ted with
arra ngemenls of pink , blue and
white car!lations.

Given in marriage by her
brother Capt. Lawrence N.
Brogan, Gettysburg, Pa., the
bride was attired in a gown of
white velvet fashioned wi th
empire waist and a light blue
satin bodice featuring lace
overlay and A-line skirt. The
bride wore a headpiece of blue
and white miniature car-

nations with blue baby 's
breath. She carried a bouquet
of blue and whiU, miniature
carnations, white slarbursls
and blue baby's breath from
which fell white velvet
streamers tied in lovers ' knots.
Her only jewelry was white
pearl necklace and earrings.
Maid of honor for the bride
was Miss Barbara Merrill,
Hampton, N. H. She was in a
gown of royal blue velvet of Aline design with an empire
waist and puffed sleeves. Her
headpiece was of pink, blue

STYLE SHOW SET - JoAnn Allen, left, is sh&lt;llrn choosing a pair of-shoes at Carl's for the
Emblem Club Style Show Thursday, March 28 at 8 p.m. Tickels for the show are available from
Mrs. Allen, 44&amp;-1634, from any club member. The show will be held in the Elks Lodge in
Gallipolis with fashions from PJs. Refreshmenls will be served and door prizes awarded
followmg the show. Proceeds will go toward charitable projects of the club. Hostesses will be
Mrs. Allen, Ann Wickline and Barbara Shelton. Marianne Campbell will be commentator.
Models incl~de J~dy _Betz, Ann Carter, Kitty Ferrell, Dorothy Frazier, Nancy Houck,
Marianne Dille, Liz Mtlls, Bette Null, Janet Rees, Mary K. Robinson, Jeni Robinson, Hope
Sievers , Teresa Sievers, Ann Wickline and Mary Ann WooH. All the ladies are members of the
club.

and white miniature car-

nations and she ca rried a

bouquet of blue, pink and white
carnations.

Joseph Wisniewski se rved as
best man for the groom and the
ushers were Bob Fieger, John

Heimer and Jeff Ca pps.
For her daughter's wedding,
Mrs. Brogan wore a gown of
blue polyes ter and had a
corsage of orchids. Mrs. Cole
wore a gown of multi-print
jersey and a whiU, carnation
corsage.
A reception honoring the

couple wa s held at the Redwood Inn, Lansdale , Pa.,
following the ceremony. The
three tiered cake was accented
in blue and topped with doves.
Music was provided by "TI1e
Second Time Around". Miss
Dana Russo registered guesls.
The new Mrs. Cole is a 1973
graduate of Meigs High School.
Cole graduated from North
Penn High School, Lansdale,
Pa., in 1969 and is employed as
an electrician. The couple
reside at North Penn Crossing

Apts., Lansdale, Pa .

DINNER SET
HARRISONVILLE - The
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
will hold their birthday dinner
at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
Harrisonville School House.

Potluck refreshmenls are to be
served and those atU,nding are
to take their own table service.
A door prize will be awarded.

5 BIG DAYS
TUES.. WED., THUR ., FRI_., SAT., MARC

•.v.-.'YY.1.'o'Vo'•'•'•'•'O.Vo'
!o' •'•'•':/_'o;.:-«o;&gt;'
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•'•'•'•'•"'14V."".';n

~Community

(;OLO\' ·

Miss Anita Walker

- ·-.

UIE
Robert Blake

,

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Walker, Thunnan, announce the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Helen Anita, to Richard
Keith Fisher, son of Mr, and Mrs. Richard Fisher, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis. Miss Walker is a 1968 graduate of Southwestern
High School and a 1972 graduate of Morehead State
University with a major in elementary education. At the
present tiine she is a teacher for "Project Hope" in the
Gallipolis City Schools. Fisher is a 1969 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and is currently a second year student
in the college of Veterinary Medicine at Ohio State University. The wedding is being planned for early August.

•

I fl,·"''.

Tonight thru
Tuesday

When will the

killer strike again? .

Pembroke SCOPS meets in Ironton
hears review

CHILLICOTHE - Ironton served , and to any persons
will be the scene of the ne&lt;t interested in attendin g the
meeting of SCOPS, The South meeting a cordial welcome is
GALLIPOLIS - Pembroke Central Ohio Preservation extended.
Club met with Mrs. Eugene Society, Inc ., Sunday, March 31
Gloss
Tuesday evening.
~
$~
at 2 p.m. in the Lawrence
·""'
The program was presented County Courthouse, at Fourth
POMEROY - It's back to Anglesey, Wales today for Gene by Mrs. Edward Sofranko, who Street and Park Ave.
Tonight, Mon ., Tue s.
Harris who has had a delightful visit here with his kids.
reviewed · the book, "Theirs
March 24-26
Gene was sent back to the States by Kaiser for a business Was the Kingdom."
Don Rist will be chairperson
meeting in Cleveland and had several days' free time for visiting
of the meeting and will supply
This book, by R.
Walt Disney's
with John and Margie Blake and son, Frank, in Middleport, and Delderfield, is the second ~ aps for a car tour o! !amous
ROBIN HOOD
Ken and his wife and Nancy Harris in Columbus.
volume in the history of the homes and landnJarks in
(Technico lor)
Things are busy with the Harris family. Rob has just com- Swann family, which began Ironton. He will also answer Meet Robin Hood and his
pleted high school there and is making plans to enroll at Ohio with "God Is An Englishman." any questions.
merry Menagerie.
IGI
State University for the fall quarter. One of his final activities at
In this volume, Adam Swann,
Di sney Featurette :
the school was a skiing trip to Scotland, Kathy is a sophomore · the central character, is
Featured at the meeting will
Islands of lhe Sea
COLOR BY
and enjoying every minute of her school, and Pal, after going portrayed as ambitious, deeply be the Col. C. Lambert Display, Di sney Cartoon: ·
DELUXE•
over at Christmas time decided to remain and is a student at in love with his tough-minded the Don Rist Hanging Rock
Peter and the Wolf
Cartoon
Show Starts 7 p.m .
Richmond College in London. She previously&gt;had been enrolled and
independent
wife, Iron Region Display, ils history
at Morehead. As for Janet ... well there's never a dull moment, Henrietta, and passionately and relics, the Dr. John Haney
what with taking care of the family.
and William B. Haney "Ar·
devoted to his work.
Incidentally, Pat's address is 47 Warwick Road, Flat A,
The · focus, however, . is chaeological Display of
London, SW-5, United Kingdom. She reaDy travels around since beginning to turn to his Prehistoric Man of Lawrence
students receive a 511 pet. discount on the British railway. Her children. Alex is
the County, Ohio."
most recent trips took her to Paris and Switzerland.
professional soldier through
FRI-SAT-SUN
Among the activities will be
Plans are for Janet and Rob to come this summer for a visit. whose eyes the reader sees the
IAII'M' MIITAUTrt·
Then al Christmas, the entire family will make the trip home, triumphs and tragedies of Eng- recognition of the Iron Furnace
and will be here for several days,
land. Deborah devotes herseH Replica on the Courthouse
to uncovering the terrible lawn.
HOW NICE it must have been for Mrs. C. M. Hennesy to have injustices of the period. George
SCOPS awards will be made
all three of her daughters home at the same tiine.
is determined to take over his to Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Edfather's business and reshape
MRS. LAWRENCE Vivian has been here from Woodland it and introduce the first motor- mondson, CoL Lambert, and
Hills, Calif.; Mrs. Julien Motley from San Hosea, Calif., and Mrs. driven transport vehicle to the the Lawrence Co . ·c ommissioners for their financial
Gordon Harris from Columbus.
company. It is this last which support in the restoration of
signals
Adam
Swann's
ACULTURAL arls fair will be held Monday night from 7 to 8 retirement and his passing of Iron Furnace.
p.m. at the Pomeroy Elementary School, and the PTA extends a the torch to a new generation.
Light refreshmenls will be
special invitation to you. There will be no meeting and parenls
and friends are invited to just drop by and take a look. Judging of
the entries is being completed this weekend and the ribbons will
be in place for the fair.
i\.
This year the only entries to go into district competition will 1 V j
J
be UJ.e 11 best of show" in visual arts, written work and music in
the divisions of primary and intermediate.
GALLIPOLIS . The will be Thursday, April 18, at
And just this reminder 7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs,
The District 16 spring conference will be held in Middleport Gallipolis Area Newcomers Tom Tope. Mrs, Barry Cox,
on May 4. School visual arts entries are to be taken to the Meigs Club held its monthly meeting, speech and hearing therapist
Junior High School that morning for judging, but aD music and Thursday at 6:30 p.m. In at the Holzer Medical Center,
written work will be judged in advance of the conference and Oscar's Restaurant. Guests for will present a program on
there is a deadline of April 20 for getting that material to Mrs. the evening were husbands of "Recognizing Speech and
the members. Dr. and Mrs.
Max Eichinger, the conference cultural arts chairwoman.
John Sheels were welcomed as Hearing Problems".
"FREEDOM from care is at the end of a fishing pole, for new members.
Following the dinner, Mrs.
fishing like laughter and tears, is one of the safety valves of
Tom
Hardman, president,
sanity".
introduced
guest speaker, John
Passed along to use recently by Maxine Philson was an
Reece, public affairs coorarticle entitled "Freedom from Care", which advises that in this
"mile-a-minute" economy where many people have fr8zzled dinator of the General James
nerves and are beset by tension fishing is tbe therapy that M. G~vln Plant. Reece gave a
talk and slide presentation on
provides the fifth freedom - "Freedom from Care" . Hand me a
threefold Gavin project which
BETTY OHLINGER
i&gt;ole, friend .
includes the power plant, the
POMEROY
102 E. MAIN
mines and the beltway.
illustrations ~e used to
explain the basic concepts of
the
cooling
towers,
precipitators and slack which
POMEROY - Mrs. Charles Mr. and Mrs. Marcellus Waid, will be major elements In the
Wer ry was honored last Susan and Mark, New Haven ; envirorunental protection plan
Saturday night with a surprise Mr. and Mrs, James. Werry, of the plant. Conventional
''Tamar•"
birthday party at her home. Jiinmy, RJ!ndy and Ricky, Mr. mining and continuous mining,
is tak i'ng the
The party was planned by her and Mrs. Thomas Holter, Mr. the two method.!! of mining
cou rlllwo by storm! Women
daughter-in-law, Mrs. James• and Mrs. Roger Holter, Mr. which will be used at the Gavin
and girls of all age, are mak i ng it
their number one shoe . All ·
Werry of near RJ!cine.
and Mrs . Ronald Holter, mines, were also discussed. A
around, open·toe ·and-heel sty ling
question
and
answer
period·
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. . Deubie and Tammy, Rt, I,
plus unmatchable mftness make
Mike Werry and Brandon, Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Paul followed.
the''ramara"a favori te fo r at hDme,
The next meeting of the club
shopping or eveni ng.wear. Any ·
Belpre; Mrs. Mabel Gerlach, Taylor, Pomeroy; Karen Price
time comfor t's a mun! If!
Point Pleasant, W. Va.; Mrs. and Steve Price, Middleport,
Bl ack . Navy, Red. White,
Carol Goff, Charleston, W.Va.; and Charles Wen;y, ilob and
Bright Bl 1.1e, Pink .
&amp;I ph Gibbs, Sr :, Mr. and Mrs. Kathy. Sending gifts were Mr.
RJ!Iph Gibbs, Jr,, Mr. and Mrs . and Mrs, James Staals and Mr.
MARCHI ASSIGNEI!
Greg Gibbs, Shawn and P. J., and Mrs. Carl Will.
GALLIPOLIS Army

!Corner By Char~ne Hreflich~

MEIGS THEATRE

..

MASON DRIVE IN THEATRE

Tewcomer.·rhave

Marguerit_
e's Shoes

Mrs. Werry honored
get a beautiful

B"xlO"

88(

Living Color
Portrait

*Plus 50.¢
Handling

Babies -children- adults - groups - I Specia l
of each person sing ly 88~. plus 50~ hand ling.
Groups $1.00 per person, plus o ne 50~ ha nd ling .
Select from finished pictures 1n rod1 ont block
wh i te and living .color·

Bonus quality ''Guaran teed Sa tisfac tion."
Limit -

one Spec ial · pe r chil d.

Fast delivery -

co~o.pte o u s ser vi ce .
H R5 :

9: 30 ·S Tues .. Wed .. Thu r s
Fri. 9; 30 ·7 Sat . 9: 30 -1
Lu nch 1.2

· LOWER GALLIPOL IS STORE

co.

AA UW to meet, hear speaker
MIDDLEPORT - Paul
Eich, a native of Switzerland,
recently of Tripoli, Libya, will
speak at the regular meeting of
the Meigs Cou?ty- Chapter of
the American Association of
University Women at the home
of Mrs. Sibley Slack, 449 Norih
Third Ave,; Middleport, at 7:30
p,m. Tuesday.

Eich is being presented by
the Interna tional Relations
Committee
of
lhe
Organization. He' has been
associated with oil companies
for more than 30 years. Eich is
married to the former Grace
Crow and they are residing in
the Crow family horne, Letart
Falls.
·

br oug ht by · Mrs . Pandora

..
,

'the
•••

POMEROY - Members of
six Meigs Coun ty garden cl ubs
were guesls at the ann ual open
meeting of the Winding Trail
Garden Club Wednesday night
at the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Eleclric Co.
Highlighting the meeting
were slides secured through
the Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs of wildflowers and prize
winning plantings.
_Trillium, lily "of the valley,
wJich hazel, winU,rgreen, fi re
pmks, calch fly , marigold,
liver leaf, phlox, squirrel corn ,
blue bells and violels were
among the wildflower slides
shown. Other slides showerl
civic improvement pr ojects

Mrs. Berl Grimm, Meigs
County contact chairwoman
spoke on the Regatta flowe;
show and announced that the
co-chairwomen are Mrs. Guy

Reynolds and Mrs. Harry S.
flow ering shrubs and various Moore of the Middlepor t
edging planls.
Amateur Gardeners.
The slides were shown by
Mrs. Kelton announced that
Mrs. Robert Lewis, Mrs. the Region 11 meeting will be
Robert Thompson and Mrs. April 27 at McArthur and will
Lloyd Moore.
be hosted by the Vinton
Mrs. Harold Deeth gave County Garden Clubs. Mrs.
devotions and a prayer to open Earl Bender will be the guesl
the meeting with Mrs. Cora arranger for the meeting.
Beegle presenting Mrs. Aaron
Refreshmenls were served
Kelton, president of Winding from a green and white table
Trail and the Region II carrying out the St. Patrick's
director, a ye1low mum cor · Day theme. The table-covered
sage.
with white featured a green
nylon

Trio to sing in Athens
ATHENS - The Ohio
The recordings of this prizeUniversity Artist Series will winning ensemble are at the
present the Beaux Arts Tri o top of every best-selling
Wednesday, April 3, at 8 p.m.: classica l list in the United
in Memorial Auditorium.
Stales and their repertoire
The three members of the includes Brahms, Haydn ,
trio are individual musicians Rave l, Moza rt, Beethoven,
who have learned to defer to Shubert and Dvorak.
each other to create a single
Tickels for the Beaux Arls
personality for the ensemble. Trio are still available at the
The virtuosity, coordination Memorial Auditorium box
and musical insight of Isidore office, Monday through
Cohen on .the violin ' Menahem Friday, 1-4 p.m. Mail orders
Pressler on piano and the are accepted and reservations
superb cello of Bernard may be made by calling :i94Greenhouse combine to set this 3471. Tickets are $2 for adulls
trio aparl from all olher and 50 cents for all studenls.
chamber ensembles.
Since their debut, the Beaux
Arls Trio has been hailed on
three contin ents with performances in Israel, Turkey
GALLIPOLIS - Clay PTA
and Iran under the auspices of met Monday , March II, at the
the State Department 's school. The meeting opened
Cultural program.
with the Pledge of Allegiance
and devotions by Rev. Charles
Lusher.
Secretary,
Mrs.
Ann
Meadows , read the minutes of
lhe last meeting and Marvin
Hufford reporled that the
projecls commiltee has approved the purchase of a rug

net overskirt and was

Hollon , Mrs. Charles Bartels
Mrs. Karl Grueser and Mrs:
Mae Hol ter, Wildwood Garden
Club; Mrs. Harold Lohse, Mrs.
Harry Davis, Mrs. Guy
Reyn olds, Mrs. Grace Pratt,
Mrs.· L. E. Reynolds, Mrs.
Erroll Conroy, and Mrs . John
Werner, Middleport Amateur
Gardeners; Mrs. Grimm, Mrs.
Wilson CarpenU,r and Mrs.
Nora Cross, Bend 0' the RiverMrs . John Kincaid, Mrs. M. c:
Wilson, Mrs. Malcolm Roller
Middleport Garden Club; and
Mrs. Reid Youn g, Mrs. Wyatt
Chadwell, ChesU,r Club. Mrs.
Shirley Beegle was also a
guest.
Door prizes were awarded to
Mrs. Willford, Mrs. Bartels,
Mrs. Lohse, Mrs. Pratt, Mts.

centered with a flower
arrangement of whiU, daisies Cross, Mrs. Conroy, Mrs.
and spider mums with Young, Mrs. Wilso n, Mrs.
greenery donated by Frances Holter and Mrs. Hollon .
Florists, and silver candlesticks with green and white
tapers placed on large green
shamrocks .
Mrs. John Terrell poured the
green mint punch, and Mrs.
Kelton presided at the silver
tea service. Party cookies on
GALLIPOLIS - The Senior
silver trays were served by
Citizens
CenU,r, located in the
Mrs. Richard Collins, Mrs.
Holzer
·
Hospital
bldg., Cedar
Beegle and Mrs. Charles
Hayes . Mrs. Earl Thoma St. enti-ance, is open Monday
thronghFridayfrom 9a .m. to 3
regisU,red the guesls.
and one night a week. The
p.m.
GuesiS were Mrs. William
schedule
for !his week is as
Willford , Rutland Friendly
follows
:
Gardeners; Mrs. Edison
Monday, March 25, Pipe
stem crafls, 1-3 p.m., Chorus
Practice, 1:30 p.m.; Tuesday ,
March 26, Physical Fitness, lOll a.m. , Bridge Lessons, 1-3
Nancy Evans, homeroom p.m., Teacher, Aileen Clark·
21:
chairperson, reported that the Wednesday, - March
Quilting,
9
a.m.-3
p.m.
,
Easter party will be April 3 for
Bowling,
I
p.m.;
Thursday,
the kindergarten and April 5
March 28, Aries Birthday
for all other grades.
Party,
I :.30 p.m., Ira Wellman
Th_.ttendance banner went
will
show
slides; Friday,
to Jei-Collins' fifth grade class.
Sehool superintendent, Paul March 29, Rummage Sale, 9
Kuhn, introduced board a.m.-3 p.m., Egg Carton flower
members
Paul
Niday, class 1-3 p.m., Teacher, James
presiden t, Mrs. Katherine Poirier, Center open, 7-9 p.m.,
Williams and Neal Clark, who Vocational School program ;
Saturday, March 30, Rummage
spoke briefly;
Rev. Lusher showed new Sale, 9 a.m.-2 p.m.
slides of the Holy Lands which
RIDERS CONVENE
were both interesting and
MIDDLEPORT
- The Meigs
informative.
The next meeting will be County Riding Club will meet
at 7:30 Tuesday evening at the
April 22.
hom e of Sharon Wilson,

Sr. Citizens
Calendar

Clay PTA has meeting

By

and movie screen for

TERRY
JOHNSON
Looki ng
amazing

.I

back.
it ' s
ho w
lh e
automobile actually survived. It's a wonder th at
people didn't iust revert
back to the horse a nd
buggy when faced with the
obstacles of spec ia l clothes
to w ear. troubles w ith t.he
ca r s whi ch we r e then
r ather new and hard to dea l
w ith, tools to carry and
prejud ices to over come in
order to even be a l lowed t o
operate t heir automobiles.
They must have sensed
that there were better days
to co me. more modern
automob iles to fo ll ow the
fragile ones and a greater
acceptance of the va lue
an d feas ibili ty o f the
au tom ob ile. because they
di dn ' t give up, revert back
or she I ve the idea of
motorized transportat ion .
We can assure you that
mobile homes had a slow
start also, but today , the
modern mobile home is the
greatest dwelling, either
for a summer coltage or a
permanent home you can
hope to live in. Sty li shly
decorated,
com p letely
furni shed , sturd ily bu ilt,
relocatable st ruct.u res that
preserve their beauty and
last a lif et ime , mobile
homes are here to stay and
every year mo r e and more
people are becoming aware
of th eir fea sibili,y . value
and leadership .
Now is the lime to visi t
and get all the information
on mobile hom es and select
one fo r your summer
cottage or permanent
dwelling .

JOHNSON'S MOBILE
HOME SALES

sshoe!

including a mini-park at the
Hancock Historical Museum al
Findlay with pictures of the
area before and after work by a
ga r den club , rock garden
designs, formal gardens,

2110 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
Pho11e I) 14-446-3547

the

kindergarten, an d a new
projector, and has allocated
$15 to each grade for games.
Hufford, Mrs. Bonnie Mitchell and Mrs. Marian Smith
were appointed to the
nominating committee. Mr·s.

Entertainment was provided

·Uniform Center
has
Exercise and Gym Suits

Mrs. Patterson gave the
benediction .

Following the meeting th e
ladies hosU,d a stork shower
for Mrs. J. E. Cremea ns. Dawn
Martin, Barbara Abshire and

For t/;e athletic and figure conscious gals
SIZES 4 - 20

ss.oo

Effie Martin were in charge of

"TRY 'EM YOU'U liKE 'EM"

stork eenterpiece comp leted
the arrangements.

Refr eshments of coffee,
Kool -Aid , mints , coo ki es ,
chips, pie and ca ke were

served.

News
MOREHEAD. Ky . - J ill
Gatewood, Ga llipolis, a freshman

at

Morehead

Sta te

Univ ersit y, is pledging
Gamma Psi Chapter of Sigma
Sigma Sigma Sorority. The

theme or the Tri-sigma socia l
service proJect this year is

"Sigma Serves Children" and
fund s for the project are being
used at the North Carolina
Hospital at Chapel Hill. Miss
Gatewood is the daughU,r of
Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Gatewood ,
Jr. , Rt. 2, Crown City .
RIO GRANDE - Usually
people do not have the opportunity for direc t contact

STOP JJ'\1 AND SEE OUR NEW

MATERNITY LINE

WHITE SWAN

UNifORMS

w

Y ou.r Wbite Swan
Distributor

.
'
et'&amp;\~d
1n.esLafayette Mall
300 Seco!ld Ave.
Gallipolis. 0.

b'"'"'"'"'i

=-•

STORE HOURS

Mon.&amp; Fri.9:30til8p.m .
Tues . Wed . Thur. &amp; Sat.
9:30 tiiS p.m .

with famous au th ors, lec turers, or artists ; however, one

Rio Grande College stud ent has
nol only corresponded with a
nationally known a rtist, she

has had her work critiqued by
him.
Th e stude nt, Charlene
Griffin, a senior, Oak Hill ,
while preparing a paper for
American Cultura l His tory
class, wrote artist Norman
Rockwell for his views. The
subj ect of the paper was the
difference between natural
talent and developed skills.
The paper, prese nted to
Professor Robert Leith's
American Cultural class, was a
study of what effect a single
person ha s ha'd on socie ty in
America. An aiTU:t teur artist,

Miss Griffin enclosed some of
her sketches for Mr. Rockwell
to rev lew. In his response, the
artist encouraged Miss Griffin
to continue her drawing.
Middleport. Residenls wishing
to become new members are

inviU,d.

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA ONLY
OPEN 12:00 NOON TIL 5:00 P.M.

ENJOY SUNDAY LUNCH WITH US!

--SUNDAY SPECIALS==
SUNJ?AY,MARCH 24~ 1974
SERVING BEGINS AT 12:00 NOON TILL 5: 00
"YOU'LL ENJOY THE QUICK, POLITE SERVICE HERE "

MEAT
LOAF
DINNER
Home
sty le meatloaf
covered w ith rich brown
gravy , creamy ma shed
potato.es. buttered
vegelable, warm roll and

bu tt er .

BAKED CHOPPED
SIRLOIN STEAK
DINNER
chopped sir loin sleak,
baked in rich bf'own gravy,
mashed potatoe's , buttered
vege tabl e, warm roll and
butter .
4· DZ .

~1 ·.39 ·

NO. 14 HOT
LIVER AND
ONIONS TURKEY SANDWICH
PLATTER
DINNER
Tender t..aked beef liver
smeth r r ed 'with onions,
rich brown gravy , creamy
mashed P9tatoes. buttered
vegetab le. warm roll and

butter

Tender slices of roast all
white meat turkey on two
slices of White brea d, with
ri ch t urkey gra vy. cran berry
sau ce . cr eamy
mashed Potatoes .

)WI)) DOT
FLOC~WORI6
The look of old :.shio ned, flo cked
do ned Swiss is cJptu red in
doublekni I . .. of 100°/o Dacron®

polyester for good behavior.

Hi gh ly mixable dots, dot/da sh
plai d and flora Is .. . in navv, red,
cl ea n green and brigh t wh.ite .

S1zes 8-18, 5-XL
Swiss dot sh irt jacke t. 32.00

Tultletop, 13.00
Platd pants, 24.00

5,_:,, dot pants, 18.00

Jantzewf

I

,.

.

'

r

ReporL"i from recent district
coun ci l meetings will be heard
and a fi eld represc nf4tive is
expected to atlend . Refreshments will be S(' rv~d.

The

Nancy McCoy.

decorations.A earouse l effect
was created arou nd the gift
ta ble with pink, blue and white
crepe paper streamers and a

MEETING SLATED
GALLIPOLIS - The regular
monthly rneelin~ of the Ga llia
ChapU,r, OCSEA , wi ll be held
Monday at the cl ub rooms, 1622
EasU,rn Ave, at 7:30 p.m.

------------------·----~

''

I
I

private first class Michael B.
-Marchi, 19, son of Mrs.
Margaret J. Hyikema, 360 Dale
Road, Zanesville , Ohio, is
assigned to the 20th engineer
battalion afFt, Campbell, KY.
Pic. Marchi is a construction
specialist with Company C 'of
the battalion . His father, Louis
G. Marchi, lives at 144 Third
Ave., Gallipolis. Hia '!file,
Cindy, lives at 678 Spangler
Drive, .Zanesville.

Meigs gardeners meet

Wchrung, treasurer, a nd Mrs.

revue at the April meeting. A Shirley Baity, Mrs. Lenora
mys tery box to be used as a McKnight, Mrs. Mildred Wells
fund raising project was and Mrs. Flo Stri~kland.

Gardner, Rene Rroy les and

Rohach, Ingrid and Bill Fugate, Jim Brown, imtructor, Irene
and Carl Paulsen, Vel and Gene Harper. Also graduating but
not pictured were Sandy and Bruce Kopack.

presented by Mrs .. Betty

Mn~. · Browning served a
Plan s were ma de ror dessert course to those named
homemade Eas ter bonnet and Mrs. Lucy White, Mrs .

Mar tin , Trilba Patterson, Ollie
Oliver, Lore tw Clark, Eva
GRADUATE - Five new couples have completed square
dance lessons, given by the Tri-Lighters Club. Shown at the
gra doatton party, are left to right, Barbara and Rock

will host the next meeting.
Officers' reports were

home of Mrs. Ann Brownin~.

Door prizes went to Effie

•

PLUS

.~

during the ·~ven ing .

Collins. Mrs. Barbara Mullen

club Wednesday night at the Evelyn Gilmore, secretary .

new mem ber was added to the
group.

\?P, JAMES GAR NER

.

ADDISON - The l'rccwill
Baptist l .tld ies Aid t:unvc ncd
opening the meeting .
Eva Gar dn er had th e
opening prayer ;:md th e
secret.i'!ry 's and trcc-J sur er' s
reports were heard . Thl' group
signed 39 get-well c;m ls to be
sent and reported 22 personal
visits to shut-ins during the
monUl .
There were IB members and
'f. seven guests attend ing an d one

TONIGHT ONLY

POME HOY- Aquilt star ted
by the Sew-Rite-sewing Club
wa s contributed to the Se nior
Ci lizens Cen ter, it. was

recently at the church with
president, Mickey Smith

•

Club donates quilt

by Mrs. Browning's husband,
Ron, and their son, on guitars

I I

�I

,

I

LAST
EE

••• GO ON A

•

EE •••
•

•Sentinel, Sunday,March 24, 1974
'·

841 ~~cond ,.,., •.

Pt!one 4.. 6·140S
Callipe~li,

ONE BASSEn

••••

ONE GROUP

MODERN SOFA
AND CHAIR

5 &amp; 6 PIECE
BASSEn &amp; SINGER

BEDROOM
SUITES

REG. •749.95

NOW
Five generations are pictured in this photo. Shown are, left to right, great-grandmother,
Elaine B. Kingery, great-great-grandmother Lena Walters Burke, fonnerly of Big Stone Gap,
Va., now residing in Gallipolis, grandmother, Margaret Ann Hall, mother Julie Annette H.
Roach, and the baby, Jessica Annette Roach. All are residents of Gallia County.

r*x.::::::;:;:~~::::~;~:-~~~=»;::::::~;:1

Mr. and Mrs. David H. Mohler

Nuptials solemnized
GALUPOUS - A flowered
arch surrounded by seven
candelabra highlighted the
sanctuary, when Miss Roberta
Kay Dowell became the bride
of David H. Mohler in a doublering ceremony performed by
the Rev. Normal Nash at
Beech Hill United Methodist
Church, Beech Hill, W. Va.,
Feb. 16.
The new Mrs. Mohler is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard A. Dowell, Southside,
W. Va ., and the groom is the
son of Mrs. Mabel Mohler, Rio
Grande.
Music was presented by Mrs.
Brand, organist, and her
husband, who sang "0 Promise
Me'' and ''The Lord's Prayer.''
Giwn in marriage by her
lather, Miss Dowell wore a
bishop-sleeved high necked
gown of polyester silk under a
sleeveless redingote overdress
of crocheted lace which flowed
into the chapel train. Her
waist-length mantilla was
edged with matching lace. She
carried a bouquet of red
rosebuds and white carnations
on a white Bible.
Miss Sue Dempsey, Oak Hill,
was maid of honor. Mrs. Nancy
Dowell, Gallipolis Ferry, W.
Va., and Mrs. Wanda Ray,
Virginia Beach, Va ., were
bridesmatrons. They wore
gowns of red crepe and carried
long-stemmed white rosebuds.
Miss Leslie Ray, niece of the
groom, was the flower girl,
Bobby Powell, nephew of the
!ride, was the ringbearer.
Keith Sheets, Gallipolis,
serv"!! as best man for the

SALE PLANNED
LANCASTER - An Antique
Show and Sale will be held
April 6 and 7 at the Lancaster
High Sc' X&gt;l, Rt. 37 North,
Lancaster . Granville Rd.,
Lancaster. Hours are 11 a .m. to
10 p.m., Saturday, and 12 noon
to 6 pm., Sunday. Admission is
$1.25. Unlimited free parking
and homemade food will be
available. All items are for sale
including Period and Country
Furniture, antique jewelry,
silver,
china,
crystal,
primitives, etc. With many line
dealers this promises to be an
excellent
show.
Pick
Richardson will again manage
the show which is sponsored by
Lancaster . Fairfield Hospital
Twig 14.

wedding. Ushers were Ken
Soles and Jason Sheppard.
Barbara Sheets registered
the guests. Those assisting
with the reception were Mrs.
Phyllis Dowell, . Mrs. Dorothy
Cook and Mrs. Nancy Powell.
For traveling the bride
removed her lace overdress
and wore the long-sleeved
dress and a corsage of red

roses.
The new Mrs. Mohler is a
1969 graduate of Point Pleasant
High School and a 1971
graduate of St. Mary's School
lor Certified Laboratory
Assistants. She is presently
employed at the Holzer
Medical Center.
The groom, a 1968 graduate
of Gallia Academy High
School, is presently employed
by the Gallia County Highway
Garage as a mechanic.
The couple resides at 240\1
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.

Boosters meet
MERCERVILLE - Hannan
Trace High School Boosters held their regular monthly
meeting at the high school;
March 18.
Two games of rinky-dink
basketball entertained the 200
parents and guests present
prior to the me.eting.
President Norman Hineman
called the business meeting to
order and plans were made lor
the high school athletic
banquet.
Final plans for putting
limestone on a parking area to
the west of the high school were
also completed. This will allow
use of an open lot during
special occasions and ball
games.
Refreshments were served.
All interested parents and
the members are urged to
attend the next meeting, April
lfi, at 8 p.m.

club plans open meet

if Com Ing I

I

GALLIPOLIS - Men at a
garden club meeting'
::l
This is what the members of
~
the Ye Olde Village Garden
't':
: &lt; Club hope to see at their open
meeting, Thursday night in the
dining room of the Grace
SUNDAY
United Methodist Church. The
REV . BRUCE UNROE will
open session will beg in at 7:30
preach at Bailey Chapel, 7:30 p.m.
p.m.
The subject of this open
PREACHING service at the meeting, which should be of
Mt. Zion Baptist Church, old interest to everyone is
Rt. 7, 7:30p.m. Special singing "Vegetable Gardening." The
by the Sanders Trio. George program will be presented by
Sexton is the pastor .
Clinton Smith, director of
MONDAY
GALLIA-Lawrence County
Unit, Division 14, Licensed
Practical Nurses at the
LONG GRADUATED
.Gallipolis State Institute, West
MIDDLEPORT - Jan Long,
Hall, 7:30p.m.
son
of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Long
TUESDAY
of
Middleport,
graduated from
RIVERSIDE Study Club, 1
p.m. with Mrs. Julia Leimann. Ohio State University on
ANN JUDSON Bible Class of Friday, March 15, with a
the First Baptist Church, 7 bachelor of arts degree from
the College of Social and
p.m. at the church.
GOLDEN CIRCLE meets at Behavioral Sciences. AtGrace United Methodist tending the commencement
Church, potluck at 12 noon. exercises at St. John's Arena
Bring table service and were Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Long
covered dish. Alma Caudill will of Middleport; Miss Dorothy
show slides or her trip to the Long, Pomeroy, and Mrs. Ray
Redman and son, Ray,
Philippines.
Gallipolis.

Events .'

gardening at the Gallipolis
State Institute.
There will no doubt be a lot of
small scale gardening in the
suburbs this season and to aid
in this, there ·will be a display
of pamphlets from the extension office on home gardening. These are free to
anyone wishing to order them.
Be sure and plan to attend
this informative meeting,
Thursday night and bring a
friend.
Remember, thatfriend could
be your husband.

REG. •449.95 &amp; '479.95

OPEN 9 'TIL 9 DAILY-CLOSED SUNDAY
252 THIRD AVENUE, GAlliPOLIS

ALL
LIVING ROOM

ARMOUR*STAR BEEF-U.S.D.A. CHOICE
U.S.GOVT.
INSPECTED

RIB

SALE
Clayton Marcus,
Bu~ington House,
Stratford

CI.OSE-OUTI
GLOBE

lb.

BURLINGTON HOUSE

eSOFA eCHAIR .OITOMAN •NEST OF TABLES •SQUARE
COMMODE eDOOR COCKTAIL eHEX COMMODE

CANDIDATES MEET
POMEROY - c;ontestants in
the annual Queen and Princess
of Hearts Contest being conducted in conjunction with the
Meigs County Heart Fund
drive are to meet at 2 p.m.
Sunday at Pomeroy village hall
to make their first accounting
of the contest.

KANAUGA - The Silver
Memorial Youth Group opened
its meeting March 17 at 6 p.m.
by singing "He Set Me Free" .
Prayer was led by Sharon
Hively.
Roll call and secretary's
report was by Doris Hively.
Treasurer's report was by
Sharon Hively. Bible quiz was
by Doris Hively, winner was
Sharon
Hively .
Eleven
members were present with
two guests. Refreshments were
enjoyed by all.
The next meeting will be
March 31. Everyone is
welcome.

$2009.65

Now.................. ..

SOLD IN AS G'OUP ONLY
eCLOUOUT PRICES ON ALL OTHER GLOBE
BURLINGTON HOUSE FURNITURE

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Maude
Young, Racine; Evelyn Mc·

Bailey, Reedsville; Clinton
A thought for the day : British Douglas, Pomeroy.
DISCHAI;I.GED- Christine
King George the sixth said:
Branham,
Robert Wood, Philip
"The highest of distinctions is
Donovan.
service to others."

Row! The

lfaflation
fight.,

Florida SEEDLESS GRAPEFRUIT Wh~~~··t .s~.... lOc
Calif. SUNKIST NAVEL ORANGES s~•..•.••. 1
FRESH TEXAS CARROTS ............ ~ 1
FANCY GREEN PEPPERS ............... 10c
U.S. No. 1 Grade SPANISH ONIONS .... lb. 10c

.MISS WONDERFUl. GOES ,\LL OUT FOR LEGS

WEO

.MIRE ltiiiOMt·oiiCIMAHS

to g1ve you more

for your money!

1-lb. 4-oz. Loaf
DONALD DUCK FLORIDA FROZEN CONCENTRATED 100%

ORANGE

RHUBARB

APPLE
PIES

79~

Co-o rd 1nated Gi fl Registry • Complete S~ l~tt ion of China .
Sterlmg. CrySta l • Attend ant's Gifts • Socially Correct
l n vit~ tion s • R~gtstere d Bridal Consultant at yDur ·service
witlwu t char ge • Reception Service loaried without chJrge

BLACK
WHITE

l:·lb• •
Can

Bone-tone ... the light of spring in
a shining patent, crinkled a bit, opened
at toe and heel, platformed slightly
to delight your sole. Light. bpen. Lively.

P L DAVIES
J WELERS

l f17

2-oz, Jar

COFFEE
·~' 249

LIQUID PLUMR

Jar

Thinp Are

NOW

.95
REG.

SAVE sso RIGHT NOW ON TWIN l1 FULL-SIZE
BEMCO
MATI'RESS SETS

$18995
to
$19995

KRAFT DRESSINGS

French • . . . . . . . . .~~49 c
Oil &amp; V!negar ... • .::.:~ 47c
French ...... ; ... :~69c

LAMPs

size

..
.•
~

eTABLE

eTRAY

SAVE
UPTO
Model EXT-19NK

1

:·

A GREAT BUY AT ANY PRICE!

20FF

OCCASIONAL
TABLES
..

Fo rev~r "

..,
'

•

$179.90 per set.

:swAc

84 2 Seca•nC

NATIONAL IIRIOA\. SE RVICE

Reg lJi arly

Regularly

S159.9 0per sel.

'TWIN SIZE

36·9
••'·'•

SIZe

ON TWIN O'R FULL SIZE SETS

95

FORMULA ..409"

full
..

twin

Freezer

-Gallipolis, Ohio
M ~ MIIER

REGULAR •599.95
•

12 OFF

Refrigerator

1-oz. Jar

404 Second Avenue·

"'"S om~

BEDROOM SUITE

UPTO .

19 Cu. Ft.

69~

SANKJ!. FRIIZE DRIED

'145

4-oz. Jar

. ...

Whirlpool

SANKA INSTANT COFFEE

COFFEE

6 PIECE MEDITJRRANEAN

SAVE

\ ~'31\)\)

\lode

151,12-oz. Can
CHASE &amp; SANBORN

ONE BASSEn

RECLINERS

THE PAIR

REEN BEANS

4-oz,
Jar

"90UY bnoofstore .

eBASSETT
•KINCAID
•VIRGINIA HOUSE

n

WOnderful ....
"90UY we33il1f]

$AVE

JUICE

Miss

Everything Is
Guaranteed

'MAPLE
DINING ROOM
FURNITURE

Whirlpool
WasherDryer

BREAD

RED

REGULAR '899.95

STRATOLOUNGER

WHITE

the newest
crinkle is
neutral

BEDROOM SUITE

OPEN STOCK

ONE GROUP

STATE FARE SLICED

MRS. WHITE HURT
MIDDLEPORT The
Middleport E-R squad was
called to the Shoe Box on North
Second Ave. at 3:08 p.m.
SALES REPORTED
GALLIPOLIS - Luther E. Friday for Mrs. Judson
Gunsett, Gallia County Area (Helen) White, who suffered an
Manager, has reported injured ankle in a fall. She was
January sales of Series E &amp; H taken to the office of Dr. J. J.
Savings Bonds in the county Davis. At 3:40p.m. the squad
were $38,559. The county returned to Dr. Davis' office
achieved 11.4 pet. of its annual and transported Mrs. White to
sales goal of $336,960 on Holzer Medical Center for
further treatment.
January 31.

Since 1859

To Satisfy- '
Or Money8ack

$

Regular

Daniel, New Haven; Brent

Youth meet

ONE
BASSETT
•
MEDITERRANEAN
5 PIECE

Bassett, Sjnger,

CUT FROM THE LARGE END

6th and
7th Rib

95

IN STOCK NOW ON

ROASTS

reserve the right to
all quantities in
Price' etfeclive
. March Jl),
sold to deal ·

$

SUITES

ENGLISH MOUNTAIN
CUT

\.

NOW

PI-tone 4.. 6-140
Gallipe~lis

Bemco Qulllorama " Postu~e I wl.th ellclusive Health-0 -Malic ...
conotructlongl¥esyouasupplosurfaco,doop-downtirmneu.

�I

,

I

LAST
EE

••• GO ON A

•

EE •••
•

•Sentinel, Sunday,March 24, 1974
'·

841 ~~cond ,.,., •.

Pt!one 4.. 6·140S
Callipe~li,

ONE BASSEn

••••

ONE GROUP

MODERN SOFA
AND CHAIR

5 &amp; 6 PIECE
BASSEn &amp; SINGER

BEDROOM
SUITES

REG. •749.95

NOW
Five generations are pictured in this photo. Shown are, left to right, great-grandmother,
Elaine B. Kingery, great-great-grandmother Lena Walters Burke, fonnerly of Big Stone Gap,
Va., now residing in Gallipolis, grandmother, Margaret Ann Hall, mother Julie Annette H.
Roach, and the baby, Jessica Annette Roach. All are residents of Gallia County.

r*x.::::::;:;:~~::::~;~:-~~~=»;::::::~;:1

Mr. and Mrs. David H. Mohler

Nuptials solemnized
GALUPOUS - A flowered
arch surrounded by seven
candelabra highlighted the
sanctuary, when Miss Roberta
Kay Dowell became the bride
of David H. Mohler in a doublering ceremony performed by
the Rev. Normal Nash at
Beech Hill United Methodist
Church, Beech Hill, W. Va.,
Feb. 16.
The new Mrs. Mohler is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard A. Dowell, Southside,
W. Va ., and the groom is the
son of Mrs. Mabel Mohler, Rio
Grande.
Music was presented by Mrs.
Brand, organist, and her
husband, who sang "0 Promise
Me'' and ''The Lord's Prayer.''
Giwn in marriage by her
lather, Miss Dowell wore a
bishop-sleeved high necked
gown of polyester silk under a
sleeveless redingote overdress
of crocheted lace which flowed
into the chapel train. Her
waist-length mantilla was
edged with matching lace. She
carried a bouquet of red
rosebuds and white carnations
on a white Bible.
Miss Sue Dempsey, Oak Hill,
was maid of honor. Mrs. Nancy
Dowell, Gallipolis Ferry, W.
Va., and Mrs. Wanda Ray,
Virginia Beach, Va ., were
bridesmatrons. They wore
gowns of red crepe and carried
long-stemmed white rosebuds.
Miss Leslie Ray, niece of the
groom, was the flower girl,
Bobby Powell, nephew of the
!ride, was the ringbearer.
Keith Sheets, Gallipolis,
serv"!! as best man for the

SALE PLANNED
LANCASTER - An Antique
Show and Sale will be held
April 6 and 7 at the Lancaster
High Sc' X&gt;l, Rt. 37 North,
Lancaster . Granville Rd.,
Lancaster. Hours are 11 a .m. to
10 p.m., Saturday, and 12 noon
to 6 pm., Sunday. Admission is
$1.25. Unlimited free parking
and homemade food will be
available. All items are for sale
including Period and Country
Furniture, antique jewelry,
silver,
china,
crystal,
primitives, etc. With many line
dealers this promises to be an
excellent
show.
Pick
Richardson will again manage
the show which is sponsored by
Lancaster . Fairfield Hospital
Twig 14.

wedding. Ushers were Ken
Soles and Jason Sheppard.
Barbara Sheets registered
the guests. Those assisting
with the reception were Mrs.
Phyllis Dowell, . Mrs. Dorothy
Cook and Mrs. Nancy Powell.
For traveling the bride
removed her lace overdress
and wore the long-sleeved
dress and a corsage of red

roses.
The new Mrs. Mohler is a
1969 graduate of Point Pleasant
High School and a 1971
graduate of St. Mary's School
lor Certified Laboratory
Assistants. She is presently
employed at the Holzer
Medical Center.
The groom, a 1968 graduate
of Gallia Academy High
School, is presently employed
by the Gallia County Highway
Garage as a mechanic.
The couple resides at 240\1
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.

Boosters meet
MERCERVILLE - Hannan
Trace High School Boosters held their regular monthly
meeting at the high school;
March 18.
Two games of rinky-dink
basketball entertained the 200
parents and guests present
prior to the me.eting.
President Norman Hineman
called the business meeting to
order and plans were made lor
the high school athletic
banquet.
Final plans for putting
limestone on a parking area to
the west of the high school were
also completed. This will allow
use of an open lot during
special occasions and ball
games.
Refreshments were served.
All interested parents and
the members are urged to
attend the next meeting, April
lfi, at 8 p.m.

club plans open meet

if Com Ing I

I

GALLIPOLIS - Men at a
garden club meeting'
::l
This is what the members of
~
the Ye Olde Village Garden
't':
: &lt; Club hope to see at their open
meeting, Thursday night in the
dining room of the Grace
SUNDAY
United Methodist Church. The
REV . BRUCE UNROE will
open session will beg in at 7:30
preach at Bailey Chapel, 7:30 p.m.
p.m.
The subject of this open
PREACHING service at the meeting, which should be of
Mt. Zion Baptist Church, old interest to everyone is
Rt. 7, 7:30p.m. Special singing "Vegetable Gardening." The
by the Sanders Trio. George program will be presented by
Sexton is the pastor .
Clinton Smith, director of
MONDAY
GALLIA-Lawrence County
Unit, Division 14, Licensed
Practical Nurses at the
LONG GRADUATED
.Gallipolis State Institute, West
MIDDLEPORT - Jan Long,
Hall, 7:30p.m.
son
of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Long
TUESDAY
of
Middleport,
graduated from
RIVERSIDE Study Club, 1
p.m. with Mrs. Julia Leimann. Ohio State University on
ANN JUDSON Bible Class of Friday, March 15, with a
the First Baptist Church, 7 bachelor of arts degree from
the College of Social and
p.m. at the church.
GOLDEN CIRCLE meets at Behavioral Sciences. AtGrace United Methodist tending the commencement
Church, potluck at 12 noon. exercises at St. John's Arena
Bring table service and were Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Long
covered dish. Alma Caudill will of Middleport; Miss Dorothy
show slides or her trip to the Long, Pomeroy, and Mrs. Ray
Redman and son, Ray,
Philippines.
Gallipolis.

Events .'

gardening at the Gallipolis
State Institute.
There will no doubt be a lot of
small scale gardening in the
suburbs this season and to aid
in this, there ·will be a display
of pamphlets from the extension office on home gardening. These are free to
anyone wishing to order them.
Be sure and plan to attend
this informative meeting,
Thursday night and bring a
friend.
Remember, thatfriend could
be your husband.

REG. •449.95 &amp; '479.95

OPEN 9 'TIL 9 DAILY-CLOSED SUNDAY
252 THIRD AVENUE, GAlliPOLIS

ALL
LIVING ROOM

ARMOUR*STAR BEEF-U.S.D.A. CHOICE
U.S.GOVT.
INSPECTED

RIB

SALE
Clayton Marcus,
Bu~ington House,
Stratford

CI.OSE-OUTI
GLOBE

lb.

BURLINGTON HOUSE

eSOFA eCHAIR .OITOMAN •NEST OF TABLES •SQUARE
COMMODE eDOOR COCKTAIL eHEX COMMODE

CANDIDATES MEET
POMEROY - c;ontestants in
the annual Queen and Princess
of Hearts Contest being conducted in conjunction with the
Meigs County Heart Fund
drive are to meet at 2 p.m.
Sunday at Pomeroy village hall
to make their first accounting
of the contest.

KANAUGA - The Silver
Memorial Youth Group opened
its meeting March 17 at 6 p.m.
by singing "He Set Me Free" .
Prayer was led by Sharon
Hively.
Roll call and secretary's
report was by Doris Hively.
Treasurer's report was by
Sharon Hively. Bible quiz was
by Doris Hively, winner was
Sharon
Hively .
Eleven
members were present with
two guests. Refreshments were
enjoyed by all.
The next meeting will be
March 31. Everyone is
welcome.

$2009.65

Now.................. ..

SOLD IN AS G'OUP ONLY
eCLOUOUT PRICES ON ALL OTHER GLOBE
BURLINGTON HOUSE FURNITURE

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Maude
Young, Racine; Evelyn Mc·

Bailey, Reedsville; Clinton
A thought for the day : British Douglas, Pomeroy.
DISCHAI;I.GED- Christine
King George the sixth said:
Branham,
Robert Wood, Philip
"The highest of distinctions is
Donovan.
service to others."

Row! The

lfaflation
fight.,

Florida SEEDLESS GRAPEFRUIT Wh~~~··t .s~.... lOc
Calif. SUNKIST NAVEL ORANGES s~•..•.••. 1
FRESH TEXAS CARROTS ............ ~ 1
FANCY GREEN PEPPERS ............... 10c
U.S. No. 1 Grade SPANISH ONIONS .... lb. 10c

.MISS WONDERFUl. GOES ,\LL OUT FOR LEGS

WEO

.MIRE ltiiiOMt·oiiCIMAHS

to g1ve you more

for your money!

1-lb. 4-oz. Loaf
DONALD DUCK FLORIDA FROZEN CONCENTRATED 100%

ORANGE

RHUBARB

APPLE
PIES

79~

Co-o rd 1nated Gi fl Registry • Complete S~ l~tt ion of China .
Sterlmg. CrySta l • Attend ant's Gifts • Socially Correct
l n vit~ tion s • R~gtstere d Bridal Consultant at yDur ·service
witlwu t char ge • Reception Service loaried without chJrge

BLACK
WHITE

l:·lb• •
Can

Bone-tone ... the light of spring in
a shining patent, crinkled a bit, opened
at toe and heel, platformed slightly
to delight your sole. Light. bpen. Lively.

P L DAVIES
J WELERS

l f17

2-oz, Jar

COFFEE
·~' 249

LIQUID PLUMR

Jar

Thinp Are

NOW

.95
REG.

SAVE sso RIGHT NOW ON TWIN l1 FULL-SIZE
BEMCO
MATI'RESS SETS

$18995
to
$19995

KRAFT DRESSINGS

French • . . . . . . . . .~~49 c
Oil &amp; V!negar ... • .::.:~ 47c
French ...... ; ... :~69c

LAMPs

size

..
.•
~

eTABLE

eTRAY

SAVE
UPTO
Model EXT-19NK

1

:·

A GREAT BUY AT ANY PRICE!

20FF

OCCASIONAL
TABLES
..

Fo rev~r "

..,
'

•

$179.90 per set.

:swAc

84 2 Seca•nC

NATIONAL IIRIOA\. SE RVICE

Reg lJi arly

Regularly

S159.9 0per sel.

'TWIN SIZE

36·9
••'·'•

SIZe

ON TWIN O'R FULL SIZE SETS

95

FORMULA ..409"

full
..

twin

Freezer

-Gallipolis, Ohio
M ~ MIIER

REGULAR •599.95
•

12 OFF

Refrigerator

1-oz. Jar

404 Second Avenue·

"'"S om~

BEDROOM SUITE

UPTO .

19 Cu. Ft.

69~

SANKJ!. FRIIZE DRIED

'145

4-oz. Jar

. ...

Whirlpool

SANKA INSTANT COFFEE

COFFEE

6 PIECE MEDITJRRANEAN

SAVE

\ ~'31\)\)

\lode

151,12-oz. Can
CHASE &amp; SANBORN

ONE BASSEn

RECLINERS

THE PAIR

REEN BEANS

4-oz,
Jar

"90UY bnoofstore .

eBASSETT
•KINCAID
•VIRGINIA HOUSE

n

WOnderful ....
"90UY we33il1f]

$AVE

JUICE

Miss

Everything Is
Guaranteed

'MAPLE
DINING ROOM
FURNITURE

Whirlpool
WasherDryer

BREAD

RED

REGULAR '899.95

STRATOLOUNGER

WHITE

the newest
crinkle is
neutral

BEDROOM SUITE

OPEN STOCK

ONE GROUP

STATE FARE SLICED

MRS. WHITE HURT
MIDDLEPORT The
Middleport E-R squad was
called to the Shoe Box on North
Second Ave. at 3:08 p.m.
SALES REPORTED
GALLIPOLIS - Luther E. Friday for Mrs. Judson
Gunsett, Gallia County Area (Helen) White, who suffered an
Manager, has reported injured ankle in a fall. She was
January sales of Series E &amp; H taken to the office of Dr. J. J.
Savings Bonds in the county Davis. At 3:40p.m. the squad
were $38,559. The county returned to Dr. Davis' office
achieved 11.4 pet. of its annual and transported Mrs. White to
sales goal of $336,960 on Holzer Medical Center for
further treatment.
January 31.

Since 1859

To Satisfy- '
Or Money8ack

$

Regular

Daniel, New Haven; Brent

Youth meet

ONE
BASSETT
•
MEDITERRANEAN
5 PIECE

Bassett, Sjnger,

CUT FROM THE LARGE END

6th and
7th Rib

95

IN STOCK NOW ON

ROASTS

reserve the right to
all quantities in
Price' etfeclive
. March Jl),
sold to deal ·

$

SUITES

ENGLISH MOUNTAIN
CUT

\.

NOW

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8- The Sund11v Timi'S-lientinel, SUn~ay,March 24, 1974

~ - TheSundavTimes-Sentinei,Sunday, M~rch 24, 1974

Nurses will meet Monday
GALLIPOLIS - Licensed
, Practical Nurses of the Gallia- ,
Lawrence Unit of Division 14
are invited to meet in West Hall
of the Gallipolis State Institute,
Monday, March 25 at 7:30p.m.
An interesting program has
been planned featuring Uoyd
Turvey,
LPN.AO
Labor

·

Gallia countians enter contest

Relations
Arbitration
Specialist, who will ~nswer any
questions regarding labor
negotiations.
. ·
Special guests. w11l be M_rs .
Mildred H. Smtih, executt~e
secretary of LPNAO, and Mlss
Eliza M. Lounsbury, LPNAO
consultant.

Sears
BETH BASTIAN!

enntot•e Vae SAIAE

COURSE ANNOUNCED
MASON, W. Va. - James
Lavender, Chief of the Mason
Emergency Squad, Saturday
announced a First Aid Course
will begin Friday, March 29, at
the Mason Fire Station. The
classes will be lor 5 to 6 weeks
and will begin at 7:30p.m. and
continue until 10:30 p.m. The
classes are being conducted for
interested or
potential
members for the Mason Squad.
Persons interested are asked to
get in contact with Chief
Lavender or Chief of Police
John Harrah.

1.6 HP
( peak o utput)

VAC

With Cord
Ree l and Set
of Attachments

Miss
Robyn
•
M. Mills

Mr. and Mrs. James K. Ables

Michael G.
Boring

Exchange wedding vows
POMEROY - Miss Rhonda
Elaine Bales became the bride
of James Keith Ables, Monday,
Jan. 14, at 7:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Seventh-Day Adventist Church. The double
ring ceremony was performed
by the Rev. Robert Kuhn with
Pastor Herbert C. Morgan
assisting.
The new Mrs. Ables is the
daughter of Mrs. Irma D.
Bales, Rt. 1, Cheshire, and
Mayo R. Bales, Carrsville,
Va. The groom Is the son of
Mrs. Martha Grueser, Minersville and the late Dana M.

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Mills, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, announce the engagement of their
daughter, Robyn Marlene, to Michael Grant Boring, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Grant Boring, Reedsville. Miss Mills is a senior
at Ohio University, majoring lil elementary education and
will graduate in June. She is a member of Kappa Della Pi, a
national honorary for education. Her fiance is a junior at
Ohio University majoring in secondary education. He is a
cadet major in the Air Force ROTC and a member of the
Saber and Blade and Arnold Air Society. A June wedding is
being planned.

Peddler 's Pantry

1)\)

I

Nuptial music was presented
by Mrs. Joseph W. White, Jr.,
pianist, whose selections ineluded "Whispering Hope," "I
Love You More Today" and "I
Can 'I Help Falling In Love
With You." Joseph W. While,
Jr., was soloist and sang "The
Tweifth of Never" and "Love
Me Tender " accompanied by
his wife. '
White satin bows marked the
.GALLIPOLIS, OHIO ...J family pews.
The bride wore a gown of
while polyester crepe with a
front and back v-neckline, an
empire waist, long fitted
sleeves with ruffles at the
wrists and a chapel length
detachable train. The bodice
and sleeves were of white
georgette embossed with silver
over crepe. While satin buttons
were sewn down the front from
the neckline to the waistline.
Her elbow length veil of illusion
was of double tiered tulle
caught to a headband with
BlACK rosebuds fashioned with
white crepe matching the ·
&amp;
gown. Her only jewelry was a
WHITE white gold encircled cross
pendant, a gift from the groom.
BROWN Attending the bride as
matron of honor was Mrs.
&amp;
Debbie Rizer Raclqe. She
WHITE wore a dress' of royal blue
polyester crepe featuring an
empire waist line a low round
neckline and long, full sleeves
elasticized at the wrists. The
PLAZA
bodice was overlaid with
matching late and had front

has

GRUMBACHER
ART SUPPLIES

l

L

STATE &amp; THIRD

-

-"

Able~.

!

l

Sunday Special
LADIES

SPECTATOR PUMPS
SIZES

f?orrP/11
SILVER BRIDGE

self-covered buttons or crepe.
Her short double tiered veil
was of royal blue tulle, held 10
place by a triple bow or ~he
same fabnc as the dress. She
wore a white gold cross pendant, a gift from the bride, a.nd
camed a smgle whtte carnation with greenery and white
satin streamers.
.
Bridesmaids were M1ss
Diana Lynn Spires, Rt. . I,
Chesh1re, cousm of the bnde
and Mtss Dtane LoUise Ables,
Minersville, sister of the
groom. They wore dresses and
veils made identically to that of

Mrs. Lawrence E. Williams

+

Vows exchanged
JA CKSON VII.l.E: , Fla. MISs Juli a Kathleen Dowell,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Walter B. Dowell, Jr., and
Lawrence Edwin Williams , Jr. ,

son of Mr. and Mrs . Lawrence
E. Williams, were united in
marria ge by the Rev. Donald
Jones in a double ring
ceremony at the Epperson
Uni ted MethodiSt Church
March 16 at 6 p.m.
White flowers with accents of
blue, native gree nery and
candelabra accented the altar
setting in the church.
the matron of honor in medium
Preceding the ceremony , a
blue and pale. blu~, respec- seleetion of traditional wed·
lively, and earned smgle white ding music was presented by
carnattons wtth greenery and Mrs. Hugh Elmer, organist.
blue satin streamers matchmg
The brid e, givtn in marriage
their dresses. They also wore by her father, wore a gown of
white gold pendants, gi rts of white silk organza featuring a
the bride.
_
_
bod ice and app liques of
Kenneth Ri zer, Racm e, chantilly lace. Her headpiece
served the groom as best man . was a julie t cap of chantilly
Ushers were Rick Ables,
Minersville, brother of the
groom, Ralph Bales, brother of ty i".
The new Mrs. Ables attended
the bride.- and Rodney Spires,
Kyge
r Creek High School.
Jr., cousm of the bnde, both
Ables is a 1972 graduate of
Rt. I, Cheshire. ,
.
For her daughters weddmg, Southern High School. They
Mrs. Bales wore a lime green are residing in Racine.
Guests attending the weddress of polyester double kmt
with long sleeves or matchmg ding were Mrs. and Mrs .
chiffon. Her corsage was of BW'dell Black, Pomeroy; Mrs.
Bessie Athey and Alice Euler,
white carnations.
Mrs. Grueser, mother of the Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Bob
groom, wore a dre~s of . blue Lipsc omb, Eyria , Robert,
polyester double kmt, wtth a Daniel and William, New
contrasting blue bodice and Ha ven, W. Va.; Mrs. George
long sleeves. She also wore Lemley. Debbie, and Chris, .
white carnations.
. Mr . and Mrs . Rodney Spires,
The wedding gown and v~ Il, Rodn ey Jr., Diana , and
the dresses and veils of M1ss Timmy , Mrs. Denny M. Spires,
Spires and M1ss Ables, the veil Denise and Julie, Mrs. Irma D.
of Mrs. Rtzer and the dress or Bales, Mr . and Mrs. Joseph W.
Mrs. Joseph Wh1te, Jr., were White, .Jr., and Ralph Bales, all
fashioned by Mrs. Irma Bales, of Cheshire; Miss Linda
Jenkins, Bidwell: Mr. and Mrs.
as was her own dress.
Mrs. Phyllis Edwards, Louis Bush , Sheryl and Shawn,
Racine, registered the guests. Chester; Mrs. Patty Bentz,
Following "the wedding. a Denise, Dana and James Jr.,
reception was held in the Pomeroy ; Mrs. Eber Pickens,
fellowship room of the church Elizabe t h Rice and Vicky
basement. The. bride's table Rizer , Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs.
featured a whtle cover w1th Kenneth Rizer, Mrs. Phyllis
silver wedding bells and was Edward s , Lawrence Ables,
centered with a three-tiered Mary Congo and Mrs. Roger
wedding cake topped with the Staats, all of Racine; and Mr.
traditional miniature bride and and Mrs. Bert Grueser and
groom. The gift table was also Lori, Rick and Diane Ables,
covered with white and s1lver Mrs. Alice White, Mrs. Ivy
wedding bells. Hostesses were Stewart, Mrs. William Rizer
Mrs. Patsy Spires, Mrs. Marie and Mrs . Don Roush, all of
SPires and Mrs. Clara Mcln- Minersville.

lace and waist-length tulle
enhaned the full train. The
bridal bouquet was an
arrangement of white carnations, blue-tinted baby's
breath and greenery. Her only
jewelry was a small gold pin
which had also been the bridal
jewelry of her paternal
g randmother , greatgrandmother and great-greatgrandmother.
Martha McCall Dowell was
her sister's maid of honor and
only attendant. She wore a blue
and white dacron gown with
small embroidered flowers.
She carried a cascade of spring
flowers.
Lawrence E . Williams was
best man for his son and the
ushers were Randy Taylor and
Jimmy Grice.
Immediately following the
ceremony, a reception was
held in the church dining room.
Serving as hostesses were
Mrs. John A. Healy, Jr., Mrs.
Randy Taylor, Mrs . Donald .
Hester and Mrs. Michael
Boots.
Following their wedding trip,
the couple will reside in Villa
Armada Apartments,
Jacksonville. The new Mrs.
Williams is associated with
Universal Films and Williams
is a senior at the University of
North Florida.
Mrs. Williams is the grand-.
daughter of Mrs. Carrie
Boster, and has visited in the
home of her uncle and aunt,
Mr. and Mrs. George Boster,
Mill Creek Rd., Gallipolis.

BEATER
BAR
POWERMATE

BLOOMING

PANSY
PLANTS
79$doz.

(" '16

Was $104.95

• Removes rug-ruining grit s uction alone
can' t budge with its motorized
beater-bar-brush
• Powerful suction draws up dirt ...
motor develops .70 VCMA, operating
horsepower
• Complete set of attachn1ents.
Stores on cleaner

Canister Vac
SAVE '9.00

$4895

WAS

$57.95

• t' ull 2.0 HP (pe a k oul ·
put ) or .70 VCMA,
operati ng horse po wE-r
for &amp;t ronl{ s u c tio n ,
great cleaning pow e r
• Aut omatic rl!wind on
20·ft. cord
• Tool5 t b du1t , clea n
crevices, do olh tH
vacuuming. Stores
o n canisle r

c

.

'

Susie's Greenhouse
Rl. sa•

,.·'.'

AND sAvE
'
'

~

Sears

417

~c~nd A~e­

MIDDLEPORT
The
McGuffey Readers and the
morals they taught were
discussed by Mrs. Emerson
Joni'S, program leader at a
meetipg of Class 12, Thursday
night at the Heath United
Methodist Church.
Mrs. Jones read several
poems from the McGuffey
Readers pointing out the lesson
taught by each one and
remarking on the difference in
substance from today's
readers. Among the poems she
read were "The Shepherd
Boy" which teaches that all
must have imagination, "The
Little Bird's Song," an admonition on enthusiasm and
patience, and "The Sampler,"
a plea lor endearing personal .
heritage. Mrs. Jones concluded
with a version of Psalm 23.
" It is No Secret What God

•

-.·
•

CHESTER -Special Lenten
Evangelistic Services will be
held at the Chester United
Methodist Church, March 27
through March 31, Wednesday
through Sunday, at 7:30 each
evening.
On Wednesday evening the
Rev. Walter A. Frost, Belpre,
will be speaker; on Thursday,
the Rev. Howard Shiveley,
Racine, will speak; Friday, the
Rev.
Richard
Jarvis,
Syracuse, will speak and the
speaker ror Saturday and
Sunday will be announced
iater.
Special music will be
provided each night. Friday
evening the Syracuse Choir
will be on hand to present the
music. The public Is cordially
invited to attend the services
by the Rev. Carl Hicks, pastor
of the Chester Church.

A Style Show!
Sponsored by the Emblem Club

Thursday, March 28 - Elks

8 P.M.
Tickets from any member
or at PJ's
11.50
--~

&amp;tc. 0

Gallipolis, Ohio

BY BARWICK
REGULAR '9.95

MARCH 24 THRU 30

For Easy Pickup Call 446-2682
Your Order Will Be WaHing

g,~akt ~qnppr
"THAT OLD. FASHIONED GOODNESS"

2nd &amp; OLIVE ST.

GAWPOLIS, OHIO

2·YEAR
PARTS AND LABOR

Philco 25" '''"""
Color TV with
100% Solid
State Chassis

for hours.

Save! 100% sond state modular chassis w1th easily replaceable modules • "Hands-Off" tumng • Super
Black Matrix picture tube • Philco Picture Guard ~ys­
tem • Instant play for picture and sound • Beautilul
Contemporary cabinet, finished to match Walnut

SALI PRICED

Save $1.00 on Bras
Slyle 11'20-Stretch Straps-34·36A 32--428 .
32-42C: 32-420.' 32 -4600" Reg $6.50 NOW

1$.50
Style #'21-Translucent Cups - Tricot Straps-

We a Iways have hundreds of
carpet values and your job will
be completed in 1 to 2 weeks. No
long waiting period .

3&lt;4-36A. 32-429. 32· U C, 32-440,• Reg. $6.50

NOWU.50

Style 11'201-Front Closure Longt1ne- Tncot
Straos-3ot·428. 3-4-44C. 34-460.• Reg 11050

NOWit.SO
,Style lf220-Lon;line w1th Streich · Straps-

GUARANTEE
"For two years
after delivery, .
we'll tix anything that's our
fault."

5·6 995LIMITE~

34-428. 34...(4C. 34-•40.' 34--4600,' Reg. $950

o. "

NOW 18.50

SPECIAL!

I'D. DD-11 .00 More)

Sa we 12.00 on Glrdlet (S1w.11 .00on Briel)

Ncwavai/abl~ ;,; siZe$ up to XXXXL - m se/ecred
sly/os
Brltf-XS lo XL-A~ . S9.95 NOW 11.11•
Sllol'tie.- XS to XL -R~ $11.95 NOW U .t5•
A11er8ge Leg- S fo XXL - Reg. S12.60 NOW
110.50•
Long Leg-S to XXXXL - RSQ·. 113.95 NOW
511.15•
Girdle-S to XXXXI.-Aeg. 111.95 NOW U .t5•
High Waist A~~triQt Leg-S to XXXXL- Reg
115.60 NOW 513.50•
High Waist Long Leg-S toXXXX L-A8Q. 115.95

1 ROLL CANDY STRIPE
With rubber back. Nice for
bedrooms, kitchens: dens. etc.

$3.99-Sq. Yd

NOW 113.15"
High ·waisl Girdle- S to XXXXl - Reg . 113.95

Rutland Furniture

TIME ONLY!

·FCREMA,N &amp; ·ABBOTT

tene''1 .00()111

TALK TO WENDELL GRATE
PH. 742-4211

.

The famous nrm control girdles and
supptXI bras that are comlottabii!J

Price incl~des installation and
free padding. Talk to Wendell
Grate, carpet consultant.

eFRENCH FRIES
eDRINK

No Subt.
No l;oupons · No Limit

11

CHOICE OF '-VI~u•&lt;~

{Regular Size)

..

-c
0~ .... . ,

YARD

eHOl DOG

TO GO OR EAT HERE

~!!tfl\DL£5

SQUARE

LUNCH . TIME GOODIE
. . ..

~#B
.... __ _

will also be appearances by
)\en Beatty, Paul Wigal, Miss
~elpre Rochelle Logston, Miss
Belpre Jaycee Jan Mendenhall
and Miss DeMolay Sweetheart
Jenny Berry

GALUPOUS - A special
honor has been accorded Judy
Cole and Tom Morgan, who
received an invitation to attend
the Twenty-Eighth Annual
World Affairs Institute in
Cincinnati April 5 and 6. The
announcement of the selection
was made by O!arles Adkins,
President of the Galllpolis
Rotary Club. As a public
service, the Rotary Club will
defray expenses for the local
participants.
One thousand selected
students from Indiana, Kenlucky, Ohio and West Virginia
will participate in the two-day
meeting, as guests of their
local Rotary Clubs. The .topic
for the 1974 institute is "The
Soviet Union: 1974 and
Beyond".
Ranking European and
American. authorities will
speak,take part in discussions,
and enllalle in informal

NOWI1US•

I Social
f~·

·.

I

.. . ... ··. . ~ .I " ~ ,.,.

confirmation reception for this

" Baptism in the Spi rit. "

spring. The committee appointed to plan the reception
includes Mrs. Andrew Mul a to,
Mrs. Herman Koby and Mrs.
Charles Bittner.

B"ptism in the spirit was
desc ribed as a growin g
process, a walk with the Lord.
A discuss ion foll owed the
presentation .

Second Avenu~

,

;
,

Denim and Madras
6 - 16

L.

I

--- &amp;tc. ~

1Gallil!olis, Ohio ..., __ ...--·-·•

'

caIen dar:,
:

SUNDAY
RACINE Chapter 134, OES,
will hold a practice session at 2
p.m.
J. B. and the Tiny Trio,
singing group from Vienna, W.
Va., will be at the Eagle Ridge
Church, at 2 p. m. Public invited.
REV. JOHN Ellswick will he
evangelist for revival services
starting Sunday at the Boring
Chapel UB Church on County
Road 43CnearVales Mills, 7:30
p. m , each evening.
THE REV. David Gee,
director of Camp Co-tu-bic
near
Bellefontaine
is
evangelist at the Mt. Hermon
UB Church near Chester for
revival meetings, 7:30 each ·
evening through March 31.

JUST IN TIME FOR EASTER SEWING. SAVE 50% TO 60%.

ONE WEEK ONLY!
THOUSANDS OF YARDS DRESS DESIGNER LENGTHS
-

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DOORBUSTER!

One to two yd. lengths . .Thousands of
yards .

WHITE SALE

-100 Pet. Polyester
-Polyester &amp; Silk
-Sweater Knit Double Knits
-Color Co-ordinated Knits
-Solids - Plaids - Fancies - Prints Checks - Stripes
-All New Spring and Easter Ideas.

social rooms of the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric,
Middleport.

CHAPTER
I 7,
Ohio
Association of Public School
Employes will meet at 7:30
p.m. Monday in the Meigs
Junior High School cafeteria at
Middleport.

Beautiful white Polyester Double Knits ill'
dress designer fabrics .

100 PCT. POLYESTER
POLYESTER &amp; SILK
SWEATER KNITS

CULTURAL Arts Fair, 7 to 8
p.m. at the Pomer~y ,
Elementary School.
JUNIOR American Legion
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, 6:30p.m. at th~ hall.
TiJESDA\'

SOUTHERN Band Boosters
monthly meeting, 7:30p.m. at
high school in Racine.
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
p.m. at the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
Middleport.
RACINE Post American
Legion Auxiliary, 7:30p.m. at
hall.
WEDNESDAY
AMERICAN
Legion

WHITE
PELLON

('XL, XXL-$1 .00 Mort. X.XXL. XJOO:L S2 .00

More)

..

SALE ENDS APRIL 13, 1174

DAVI~SHULER
412-414 ·SECOND AVE .
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

RUTLAND,O.
C1 ltlt

~,

,,,.,MtiO&lt;Ofl ".,,.. C-rtut~

Post
with
Meeting at 7:30 p.m.
FEENEY- BEINNE:TT '~t
128, American Legion,
p.m. at the hall.

... . . -- . - ·

--- --r-.
I.

•

rummage sale April 5 and 6 in served and Mr. and Mrs.
James Madden presented an
the church basement.
program
on
Discussion was held on a interesting

~:

·•

.-

REVIVAL OPENS
RODNEY - The Rodney
United Metl1odist Church will
begin revival services tonight
at 7:30 featuring John Wesley
Caldwell as guest eva ngelist.
Special music will be provided
by Jamie and the Gospel
Sounds, Belpre . The public is
invited.

business

'
· question periods
with the
students.
The institute
provides an unique op(Xlrlunity
for outstanding students to
understand an area important
to our country, and the relating
(Xllicy questions facing our
nation.
Participants and their adult
leaders, in addition to a
comprehensive program of
vital information about an
im(Xlrtant area of international
concern, will be afforded an
op(Xlrtunity to tour educational
and cultural institutions , iit
Cincinnati. The social highlight
of the meeting will be a dance
in the ballroom of the SheratonGibson Hotel.
The World Affairs Institute is
organized and S(Xlnsored by the
Rotary Club of Clncilutati, and
the Cincinnati Councll on
World Affairs, with the
cooperation of the Avco
Broadcasting Corporation.

meeting.
. Meeting at
/4~:~~~~:~~to~ follow

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY

{Small Size)
of your choice

RITA GARLAND

th e

GA students chosen
to attend seminar

MEIGS County Senior Citizens Choir at Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church, 7:30
tonight.
MONDAY
OH KAN Coin Club me~ting.
Election of olflcers. Social hour
and tradins session starting at
7 p.m. will precede meeting
when out of town coin dealers
will be
to buy, sell and
trade.
for March
31
to be named ' and

501 Nylo

GALLIPOLIS
The
Catholic Women's Club of St.
Louis Ca tholic Church held il&lt;
monthly meeting March 18 at
7:30 p.m. in · the church
basemen t. Mrs. Bill Young
presented the devotions.
The possibility of a spring
skating party for the children
of the parish was presented .
Mrs. Neal Prendergast, Mrs.
John Carty and Mrs. Young
were appointed to formulate
plans for the party. It was
announced that the Catholic
Women's Club will sponsor a

Followi ng

meeting , refreshments were

·r nanra··~ ~.::::::~~

plans seroices

...

TRUCKLOAD SAVINGS

CARPETING

Can Do" was the prelude
selection by Mrs. Jones with
Mrs. Mary Rinehart reading a
poem, "My All and All."
Devotions were by Mrs. L. W.
McComas who took her
comments from a devotional
booklet published in 1904. The
theme was "A Duty Waiting
Without." She stressed the
importance of telling others
when a blessing !l'om pod is
received, and of the need to
exemplify Christ in daily lives
since others look to Christians
for help and strength.
During the busini'Ss meeting,
plans were made to place
flowers on the altar for the
Easter services. Those wanting to order flowers are asked
to contact Mrs. Jones .
An arrangement of forsythia
and daffodils decorated the
table with refreshments of
sherbet, coffee and decorated
cookies being served by Miss
Nellie Zerkle, Mrs. Norman
Wayland and Mrs. Perry
Mitch.

Chester church

has-

Galhpohs, Ohio
Ph. 446-2770

SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO.

Tina will perform a jazz dance fral ernily ,
a
national
for her talent presentation .
honorary . Beth would .like to
Rita, daughter of Capt. and continue her education at
Mrs . Howard E. Garland, Brooklyn College . or Boston
'Gallipolis, is a junior at Rio University in retail field. She
Grande College. Rita is vice- was River Festiv.al Queen in ·
president of her sorority, 1971 and first runner-up to the
Lambda Omicron Psi. She Parade of Hills Queen in 1971.
would like to further her Beth's talent presentittion will
schooling at the University of be a song and tap routine to
Cincinnati in the field of speech ''Honey BWl" from "South
therapy for children.
Pacific.''
Rita was Gallipolis River · The pageant wilt be SaturRec: eation Festival Queen . day, March 30 at 8 p.m. in the
For her talent presentation she Lawton Building Auditorium.
will give a dramatic reading. Tickets are now on sale at
Beth Bastiani, also of David Ward's Shoes, Dairy
Gallipolis, is the daughter of Isle, and Rex all Pharmacy in
Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence Belpre and at Fremar's in
Bastiani. She graduated in 1969 Beverly as well as at the
from Gallia Academy and is chamber office and from all
presently a junior at Ohio chamber members.
University where she is a
The pageant will also feature
member of Pi Upsilon Omicron entertainment by the Belpre
High School Stage Band and
the Madrigal Singers . There

Class 12 has meeting

Shoes from Carl 's

Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money R.ad..

SHOP AT SEARS

BELPRE - Tina Locke,
Belpre, Rita Garland and Beth
Bastiani, both of Gallipolis, are
the latest entries into the Miss
Southern Ohio Scholarship
Pageant.
Tina is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. William D. Locke,
Belpre. She is a honor-roll
senior at Belpre High School in
,the college pr~paratory
program .
Tina would like to pursue a
career in Respiratory Therapy
at either Sinclair Community
College in Dayton or Allegheny
Community College in Pittsburgh. Her many school activities include drum majorette
for the Golden Eagle Marching
Band, GAA, Pep Club; and a
member of the girls' softball
team. She has had special
training in dance and judo.

-·•'

Price• Are &lt;..:ata log Prices

Use Sears Easy Payment Plan

Catholic women meet, set party

."

j

.. . . .

�I

8- The Sund11v Timi'S-lientinel, SUn~ay,March 24, 1974

~ - TheSundavTimes-Sentinei,Sunday, M~rch 24, 1974

Nurses will meet Monday
GALLIPOLIS - Licensed
, Practical Nurses of the Gallia- ,
Lawrence Unit of Division 14
are invited to meet in West Hall
of the Gallipolis State Institute,
Monday, March 25 at 7:30p.m.
An interesting program has
been planned featuring Uoyd
Turvey,
LPN.AO
Labor

·

Gallia countians enter contest

Relations
Arbitration
Specialist, who will ~nswer any
questions regarding labor
negotiations.
. ·
Special guests. w11l be M_rs .
Mildred H. Smtih, executt~e
secretary of LPNAO, and Mlss
Eliza M. Lounsbury, LPNAO
consultant.

Sears
BETH BASTIAN!

enntot•e Vae SAIAE

COURSE ANNOUNCED
MASON, W. Va. - James
Lavender, Chief of the Mason
Emergency Squad, Saturday
announced a First Aid Course
will begin Friday, March 29, at
the Mason Fire Station. The
classes will be lor 5 to 6 weeks
and will begin at 7:30p.m. and
continue until 10:30 p.m. The
classes are being conducted for
interested or
potential
members for the Mason Squad.
Persons interested are asked to
get in contact with Chief
Lavender or Chief of Police
John Harrah.

1.6 HP
( peak o utput)

VAC

With Cord
Ree l and Set
of Attachments

Miss
Robyn
•
M. Mills

Mr. and Mrs. James K. Ables

Michael G.
Boring

Exchange wedding vows
POMEROY - Miss Rhonda
Elaine Bales became the bride
of James Keith Ables, Monday,
Jan. 14, at 7:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Seventh-Day Adventist Church. The double
ring ceremony was performed
by the Rev. Robert Kuhn with
Pastor Herbert C. Morgan
assisting.
The new Mrs. Ables is the
daughter of Mrs. Irma D.
Bales, Rt. 1, Cheshire, and
Mayo R. Bales, Carrsville,
Va. The groom Is the son of
Mrs. Martha Grueser, Minersville and the late Dana M.

ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Mills, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, announce the engagement of their
daughter, Robyn Marlene, to Michael Grant Boring, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Grant Boring, Reedsville. Miss Mills is a senior
at Ohio University, majoring lil elementary education and
will graduate in June. She is a member of Kappa Della Pi, a
national honorary for education. Her fiance is a junior at
Ohio University majoring in secondary education. He is a
cadet major in the Air Force ROTC and a member of the
Saber and Blade and Arnold Air Society. A June wedding is
being planned.

Peddler 's Pantry

1)\)

I

Nuptial music was presented
by Mrs. Joseph W. White, Jr.,
pianist, whose selections ineluded "Whispering Hope," "I
Love You More Today" and "I
Can 'I Help Falling In Love
With You." Joseph W. While,
Jr., was soloist and sang "The
Tweifth of Never" and "Love
Me Tender " accompanied by
his wife. '
White satin bows marked the
.GALLIPOLIS, OHIO ...J family pews.
The bride wore a gown of
while polyester crepe with a
front and back v-neckline, an
empire waist, long fitted
sleeves with ruffles at the
wrists and a chapel length
detachable train. The bodice
and sleeves were of white
georgette embossed with silver
over crepe. While satin buttons
were sewn down the front from
the neckline to the waistline.
Her elbow length veil of illusion
was of double tiered tulle
caught to a headband with
BlACK rosebuds fashioned with
white crepe matching the ·
&amp;
gown. Her only jewelry was a
WHITE white gold encircled cross
pendant, a gift from the groom.
BROWN Attending the bride as
matron of honor was Mrs.
&amp;
Debbie Rizer Raclqe. She
WHITE wore a dress' of royal blue
polyester crepe featuring an
empire waist line a low round
neckline and long, full sleeves
elasticized at the wrists. The
PLAZA
bodice was overlaid with
matching late and had front

has

GRUMBACHER
ART SUPPLIES

l

L

STATE &amp; THIRD

-

-"

Able~.

!

l

Sunday Special
LADIES

SPECTATOR PUMPS
SIZES

f?orrP/11
SILVER BRIDGE

self-covered buttons or crepe.
Her short double tiered veil
was of royal blue tulle, held 10
place by a triple bow or ~he
same fabnc as the dress. She
wore a white gold cross pendant, a gift from the bride, a.nd
camed a smgle whtte carnation with greenery and white
satin streamers.
.
Bridesmaids were M1ss
Diana Lynn Spires, Rt. . I,
Chesh1re, cousm of the bnde
and Mtss Dtane LoUise Ables,
Minersville, sister of the
groom. They wore dresses and
veils made identically to that of

Mrs. Lawrence E. Williams

+

Vows exchanged
JA CKSON VII.l.E: , Fla. MISs Juli a Kathleen Dowell,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Walter B. Dowell, Jr., and
Lawrence Edwin Williams , Jr. ,

son of Mr. and Mrs . Lawrence
E. Williams, were united in
marria ge by the Rev. Donald
Jones in a double ring
ceremony at the Epperson
Uni ted MethodiSt Church
March 16 at 6 p.m.
White flowers with accents of
blue, native gree nery and
candelabra accented the altar
setting in the church.
the matron of honor in medium
Preceding the ceremony , a
blue and pale. blu~, respec- seleetion of traditional wed·
lively, and earned smgle white ding music was presented by
carnattons wtth greenery and Mrs. Hugh Elmer, organist.
blue satin streamers matchmg
The brid e, givtn in marriage
their dresses. They also wore by her father, wore a gown of
white gold pendants, gi rts of white silk organza featuring a
the bride.
_
_
bod ice and app liques of
Kenneth Ri zer, Racm e, chantilly lace. Her headpiece
served the groom as best man . was a julie t cap of chantilly
Ushers were Rick Ables,
Minersville, brother of the
groom, Ralph Bales, brother of ty i".
The new Mrs. Ables attended
the bride.- and Rodney Spires,
Kyge
r Creek High School.
Jr., cousm of the bnde, both
Ables is a 1972 graduate of
Rt. I, Cheshire. ,
.
For her daughters weddmg, Southern High School. They
Mrs. Bales wore a lime green are residing in Racine.
Guests attending the weddress of polyester double kmt
with long sleeves or matchmg ding were Mrs. and Mrs .
chiffon. Her corsage was of BW'dell Black, Pomeroy; Mrs.
Bessie Athey and Alice Euler,
white carnations.
Mrs. Grueser, mother of the Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Bob
groom, wore a dre~s of . blue Lipsc omb, Eyria , Robert,
polyester double kmt, wtth a Daniel and William, New
contrasting blue bodice and Ha ven, W. Va.; Mrs. George
long sleeves. She also wore Lemley. Debbie, and Chris, .
white carnations.
. Mr . and Mrs . Rodney Spires,
The wedding gown and v~ Il, Rodn ey Jr., Diana , and
the dresses and veils of M1ss Timmy , Mrs. Denny M. Spires,
Spires and M1ss Ables, the veil Denise and Julie, Mrs. Irma D.
of Mrs. Rtzer and the dress or Bales, Mr . and Mrs. Joseph W.
Mrs. Joseph Wh1te, Jr., were White, .Jr., and Ralph Bales, all
fashioned by Mrs. Irma Bales, of Cheshire; Miss Linda
Jenkins, Bidwell: Mr. and Mrs.
as was her own dress.
Mrs. Phyllis Edwards, Louis Bush , Sheryl and Shawn,
Racine, registered the guests. Chester; Mrs. Patty Bentz,
Following "the wedding. a Denise, Dana and James Jr.,
reception was held in the Pomeroy ; Mrs. Eber Pickens,
fellowship room of the church Elizabe t h Rice and Vicky
basement. The. bride's table Rizer , Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs.
featured a whtle cover w1th Kenneth Rizer, Mrs. Phyllis
silver wedding bells and was Edward s , Lawrence Ables,
centered with a three-tiered Mary Congo and Mrs. Roger
wedding cake topped with the Staats, all of Racine; and Mr.
traditional miniature bride and and Mrs. Bert Grueser and
groom. The gift table was also Lori, Rick and Diane Ables,
covered with white and s1lver Mrs. Alice White, Mrs. Ivy
wedding bells. Hostesses were Stewart, Mrs. William Rizer
Mrs. Patsy Spires, Mrs. Marie and Mrs . Don Roush, all of
SPires and Mrs. Clara Mcln- Minersville.

lace and waist-length tulle
enhaned the full train. The
bridal bouquet was an
arrangement of white carnations, blue-tinted baby's
breath and greenery. Her only
jewelry was a small gold pin
which had also been the bridal
jewelry of her paternal
g randmother , greatgrandmother and great-greatgrandmother.
Martha McCall Dowell was
her sister's maid of honor and
only attendant. She wore a blue
and white dacron gown with
small embroidered flowers.
She carried a cascade of spring
flowers.
Lawrence E . Williams was
best man for his son and the
ushers were Randy Taylor and
Jimmy Grice.
Immediately following the
ceremony, a reception was
held in the church dining room.
Serving as hostesses were
Mrs. John A. Healy, Jr., Mrs.
Randy Taylor, Mrs . Donald .
Hester and Mrs. Michael
Boots.
Following their wedding trip,
the couple will reside in Villa
Armada Apartments,
Jacksonville. The new Mrs.
Williams is associated with
Universal Films and Williams
is a senior at the University of
North Florida.
Mrs. Williams is the grand-.
daughter of Mrs. Carrie
Boster, and has visited in the
home of her uncle and aunt,
Mr. and Mrs. George Boster,
Mill Creek Rd., Gallipolis.

BEATER
BAR
POWERMATE

BLOOMING

PANSY
PLANTS
79$doz.

(" '16

Was $104.95

• Removes rug-ruining grit s uction alone
can' t budge with its motorized
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• Powerful suction draws up dirt ...
motor develops .70 VCMA, operating
horsepower
• Complete set of attachn1ents.
Stores on cleaner

Canister Vac
SAVE '9.00

$4895

WAS

$57.95

• t' ull 2.0 HP (pe a k oul ·
put ) or .70 VCMA,
operati ng horse po wE-r
for &amp;t ronl{ s u c tio n ,
great cleaning pow e r
• Aut omatic rl!wind on
20·ft. cord
• Tool5 t b du1t , clea n
crevices, do olh tH
vacuuming. Stores
o n canisle r

c

.

'

Susie's Greenhouse
Rl. sa•

,.·'.'

AND sAvE
'
'

~

Sears

417

~c~nd A~e­

MIDDLEPORT
The
McGuffey Readers and the
morals they taught were
discussed by Mrs. Emerson
Joni'S, program leader at a
meetipg of Class 12, Thursday
night at the Heath United
Methodist Church.
Mrs. Jones read several
poems from the McGuffey
Readers pointing out the lesson
taught by each one and
remarking on the difference in
substance from today's
readers. Among the poems she
read were "The Shepherd
Boy" which teaches that all
must have imagination, "The
Little Bird's Song," an admonition on enthusiasm and
patience, and "The Sampler,"
a plea lor endearing personal .
heritage. Mrs. Jones concluded
with a version of Psalm 23.
" It is No Secret What God

•

-.·
•

CHESTER -Special Lenten
Evangelistic Services will be
held at the Chester United
Methodist Church, March 27
through March 31, Wednesday
through Sunday, at 7:30 each
evening.
On Wednesday evening the
Rev. Walter A. Frost, Belpre,
will be speaker; on Thursday,
the Rev. Howard Shiveley,
Racine, will speak; Friday, the
Rev.
Richard
Jarvis,
Syracuse, will speak and the
speaker ror Saturday and
Sunday will be announced
iater.
Special music will be
provided each night. Friday
evening the Syracuse Choir
will be on hand to present the
music. The public Is cordially
invited to attend the services
by the Rev. Carl Hicks, pastor
of the Chester Church.

A Style Show!
Sponsored by the Emblem Club

Thursday, March 28 - Elks

8 P.M.
Tickets from any member
or at PJ's
11.50
--~

&amp;tc. 0

Gallipolis, Ohio

BY BARWICK
REGULAR '9.95

MARCH 24 THRU 30

For Easy Pickup Call 446-2682
Your Order Will Be WaHing

g,~akt ~qnppr
"THAT OLD. FASHIONED GOODNESS"

2nd &amp; OLIVE ST.

GAWPOLIS, OHIO

2·YEAR
PARTS AND LABOR

Philco 25" '''"""
Color TV with
100% Solid
State Chassis

for hours.

Save! 100% sond state modular chassis w1th easily replaceable modules • "Hands-Off" tumng • Super
Black Matrix picture tube • Philco Picture Guard ~ys­
tem • Instant play for picture and sound • Beautilul
Contemporary cabinet, finished to match Walnut

SALI PRICED

Save $1.00 on Bras
Slyle 11'20-Stretch Straps-34·36A 32--428 .
32-42C: 32-420.' 32 -4600" Reg $6.50 NOW

1$.50
Style #'21-Translucent Cups - Tricot Straps-

We a Iways have hundreds of
carpet values and your job will
be completed in 1 to 2 weeks. No
long waiting period .

3&lt;4-36A. 32-429. 32· U C, 32-440,• Reg. $6.50

NOWU.50

Style 11'201-Front Closure Longt1ne- Tncot
Straos-3ot·428. 3-4-44C. 34-460.• Reg 11050

NOWit.SO
,Style lf220-Lon;line w1th Streich · Straps-

GUARANTEE
"For two years
after delivery, .
we'll tix anything that's our
fault."

5·6 995LIMITE~

34-428. 34...(4C. 34-•40.' 34--4600,' Reg. $950

o. "

NOW 18.50

SPECIAL!

I'D. DD-11 .00 More)

Sa we 12.00 on Glrdlet (S1w.11 .00on Briel)

Ncwavai/abl~ ;,; siZe$ up to XXXXL - m se/ecred
sly/os
Brltf-XS lo XL-A~ . S9.95 NOW 11.11•
Sllol'tie.- XS to XL -R~ $11.95 NOW U .t5•
A11er8ge Leg- S fo XXL - Reg. S12.60 NOW
110.50•
Long Leg-S to XXXXL - RSQ·. 113.95 NOW
511.15•
Girdle-S to XXXXI.-Aeg. 111.95 NOW U .t5•
High Waist A~~triQt Leg-S to XXXXL- Reg
115.60 NOW 513.50•
High Waist Long Leg-S toXXXX L-A8Q. 115.95

1 ROLL CANDY STRIPE
With rubber back. Nice for
bedrooms, kitchens: dens. etc.

$3.99-Sq. Yd

NOW 113.15"
High ·waisl Girdle- S to XXXXl - Reg . 113.95

Rutland Furniture

TIME ONLY!

·FCREMA,N &amp; ·ABBOTT

tene''1 .00()111

TALK TO WENDELL GRATE
PH. 742-4211

.

The famous nrm control girdles and
supptXI bras that are comlottabii!J

Price incl~des installation and
free padding. Talk to Wendell
Grate, carpet consultant.

eFRENCH FRIES
eDRINK

No Subt.
No l;oupons · No Limit

11

CHOICE OF '-VI~u•&lt;~

{Regular Size)

..

-c
0~ .... . ,

YARD

eHOl DOG

TO GO OR EAT HERE

~!!tfl\DL£5

SQUARE

LUNCH . TIME GOODIE
. . ..

~#B
.... __ _

will also be appearances by
)\en Beatty, Paul Wigal, Miss
~elpre Rochelle Logston, Miss
Belpre Jaycee Jan Mendenhall
and Miss DeMolay Sweetheart
Jenny Berry

GALUPOUS - A special
honor has been accorded Judy
Cole and Tom Morgan, who
received an invitation to attend
the Twenty-Eighth Annual
World Affairs Institute in
Cincinnati April 5 and 6. The
announcement of the selection
was made by O!arles Adkins,
President of the Galllpolis
Rotary Club. As a public
service, the Rotary Club will
defray expenses for the local
participants.
One thousand selected
students from Indiana, Kenlucky, Ohio and West Virginia
will participate in the two-day
meeting, as guests of their
local Rotary Clubs. The .topic
for the 1974 institute is "The
Soviet Union: 1974 and
Beyond".
Ranking European and
American. authorities will
speak,take part in discussions,
and enllalle in informal

NOWI1US•

I Social
f~·

·.

I

.. . ... ··. . ~ .I " ~ ,.,.

confirmation reception for this

" Baptism in the Spi rit. "

spring. The committee appointed to plan the reception
includes Mrs. Andrew Mul a to,
Mrs. Herman Koby and Mrs.
Charles Bittner.

B"ptism in the spirit was
desc ribed as a growin g
process, a walk with the Lord.
A discuss ion foll owed the
presentation .

Second Avenu~

,

;
,

Denim and Madras
6 - 16

L.

I

--- &amp;tc. ~

1Gallil!olis, Ohio ..., __ ...--·-·•

'

caIen dar:,
:

SUNDAY
RACINE Chapter 134, OES,
will hold a practice session at 2
p.m.
J. B. and the Tiny Trio,
singing group from Vienna, W.
Va., will be at the Eagle Ridge
Church, at 2 p. m. Public invited.
REV. JOHN Ellswick will he
evangelist for revival services
starting Sunday at the Boring
Chapel UB Church on County
Road 43CnearVales Mills, 7:30
p. m , each evening.
THE REV. David Gee,
director of Camp Co-tu-bic
near
Bellefontaine
is
evangelist at the Mt. Hermon
UB Church near Chester for
revival meetings, 7:30 each ·
evening through March 31.

JUST IN TIME FOR EASTER SEWING. SAVE 50% TO 60%.

ONE WEEK ONLY!
THOUSANDS OF YARDS DRESS DESIGNER LENGTHS
-

1 TO 2 YRD. LENGTHS.

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DOORBUSTER!

One to two yd. lengths . .Thousands of
yards .

WHITE SALE

-100 Pet. Polyester
-Polyester &amp; Silk
-Sweater Knit Double Knits
-Color Co-ordinated Knits
-Solids - Plaids - Fancies - Prints Checks - Stripes
-All New Spring and Easter Ideas.

social rooms of the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric,
Middleport.

CHAPTER
I 7,
Ohio
Association of Public School
Employes will meet at 7:30
p.m. Monday in the Meigs
Junior High School cafeteria at
Middleport.

Beautiful white Polyester Double Knits ill'
dress designer fabrics .

100 PCT. POLYESTER
POLYESTER &amp; SILK
SWEATER KNITS

CULTURAL Arts Fair, 7 to 8
p.m. at the Pomer~y ,
Elementary School.
JUNIOR American Legion
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, 6:30p.m. at th~ hall.
TiJESDA\'

SOUTHERN Band Boosters
monthly meeting, 7:30p.m. at
high school in Racine.
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
p.m. at the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.,
Middleport.
RACINE Post American
Legion Auxiliary, 7:30p.m. at
hall.
WEDNESDAY
AMERICAN
Legion

WHITE
PELLON

('XL, XXL-$1 .00 Mort. X.XXL. XJOO:L S2 .00

More)

..

SALE ENDS APRIL 13, 1174

DAVI~SHULER
412-414 ·SECOND AVE .
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

RUTLAND,O.
C1 ltlt

~,

,,,.,MtiO&lt;Ofl ".,,.. C-rtut~

Post
with
Meeting at 7:30 p.m.
FEENEY- BEINNE:TT '~t
128, American Legion,
p.m. at the hall.

... . . -- . - ·

--- --r-.
I.

•

rummage sale April 5 and 6 in served and Mr. and Mrs.
James Madden presented an
the church basement.
program
on
Discussion was held on a interesting

~:

·•

.-

REVIVAL OPENS
RODNEY - The Rodney
United Metl1odist Church will
begin revival services tonight
at 7:30 featuring John Wesley
Caldwell as guest eva ngelist.
Special music will be provided
by Jamie and the Gospel
Sounds, Belpre . The public is
invited.

business

'
· question periods
with the
students.
The institute
provides an unique op(Xlrlunity
for outstanding students to
understand an area important
to our country, and the relating
(Xllicy questions facing our
nation.
Participants and their adult
leaders, in addition to a
comprehensive program of
vital information about an
im(Xlrtant area of international
concern, will be afforded an
op(Xlrtunity to tour educational
and cultural institutions , iit
Cincinnati. The social highlight
of the meeting will be a dance
in the ballroom of the SheratonGibson Hotel.
The World Affairs Institute is
organized and S(Xlnsored by the
Rotary Club of Clncilutati, and
the Cincinnati Councll on
World Affairs, with the
cooperation of the Avco
Broadcasting Corporation.

meeting.
. Meeting at
/4~:~~~~:~~to~ follow

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY

{Small Size)
of your choice

RITA GARLAND

th e

GA students chosen
to attend seminar

MEIGS County Senior Citizens Choir at Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church, 7:30
tonight.
MONDAY
OH KAN Coin Club me~ting.
Election of olflcers. Social hour
and tradins session starting at
7 p.m. will precede meeting
when out of town coin dealers
will be
to buy, sell and
trade.
for March
31
to be named ' and

501 Nylo

GALLIPOLIS
The
Catholic Women's Club of St.
Louis Ca tholic Church held il&lt;
monthly meeting March 18 at
7:30 p.m. in · the church
basemen t. Mrs. Bill Young
presented the devotions.
The possibility of a spring
skating party for the children
of the parish was presented .
Mrs. Neal Prendergast, Mrs.
John Carty and Mrs. Young
were appointed to formulate
plans for the party. It was
announced that the Catholic
Women's Club will sponsor a

Followi ng

meeting , refreshments were

·r nanra··~ ~.::::::~~

plans seroices

...

TRUCKLOAD SAVINGS

CARPETING

Can Do" was the prelude
selection by Mrs. Jones with
Mrs. Mary Rinehart reading a
poem, "My All and All."
Devotions were by Mrs. L. W.
McComas who took her
comments from a devotional
booklet published in 1904. The
theme was "A Duty Waiting
Without." She stressed the
importance of telling others
when a blessing !l'om pod is
received, and of the need to
exemplify Christ in daily lives
since others look to Christians
for help and strength.
During the busini'Ss meeting,
plans were made to place
flowers on the altar for the
Easter services. Those wanting to order flowers are asked
to contact Mrs. Jones .
An arrangement of forsythia
and daffodils decorated the
table with refreshments of
sherbet, coffee and decorated
cookies being served by Miss
Nellie Zerkle, Mrs. Norman
Wayland and Mrs. Perry
Mitch.

Chester church

has-

Galhpohs, Ohio
Ph. 446-2770

SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO.

Tina will perform a jazz dance fral ernily ,
a
national
for her talent presentation .
honorary . Beth would .like to
Rita, daughter of Capt. and continue her education at
Mrs . Howard E. Garland, Brooklyn College . or Boston
'Gallipolis, is a junior at Rio University in retail field. She
Grande College. Rita is vice- was River Festiv.al Queen in ·
president of her sorority, 1971 and first runner-up to the
Lambda Omicron Psi. She Parade of Hills Queen in 1971.
would like to further her Beth's talent presentittion will
schooling at the University of be a song and tap routine to
Cincinnati in the field of speech ''Honey BWl" from "South
therapy for children.
Pacific.''
Rita was Gallipolis River · The pageant wilt be SaturRec: eation Festival Queen . day, March 30 at 8 p.m. in the
For her talent presentation she Lawton Building Auditorium.
will give a dramatic reading. Tickets are now on sale at
Beth Bastiani, also of David Ward's Shoes, Dairy
Gallipolis, is the daughter of Isle, and Rex all Pharmacy in
Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence Belpre and at Fremar's in
Bastiani. She graduated in 1969 Beverly as well as at the
from Gallia Academy and is chamber office and from all
presently a junior at Ohio chamber members.
University where she is a
The pageant will also feature
member of Pi Upsilon Omicron entertainment by the Belpre
High School Stage Band and
the Madrigal Singers . There

Class 12 has meeting

Shoes from Carl 's

Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money R.ad..

SHOP AT SEARS

BELPRE - Tina Locke,
Belpre, Rita Garland and Beth
Bastiani, both of Gallipolis, are
the latest entries into the Miss
Southern Ohio Scholarship
Pageant.
Tina is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. William D. Locke,
Belpre. She is a honor-roll
senior at Belpre High School in
,the college pr~paratory
program .
Tina would like to pursue a
career in Respiratory Therapy
at either Sinclair Community
College in Dayton or Allegheny
Community College in Pittsburgh. Her many school activities include drum majorette
for the Golden Eagle Marching
Band, GAA, Pep Club; and a
member of the girls' softball
team. She has had special
training in dance and judo.

-·•'

Price• Are &lt;..:ata log Prices

Use Sears Easy Payment Plan

Catholic women meet, set party

."

j

.. . . .

�I '

I

II

·'

' . J

r:ttTit'&lt;l whit{• baskPI.o; uf \\'hi 1L'

and red ca rnation pda ls.

Master Grant Turner wH s lhe

ring bearer and he

ca rri~d

a

Dzst;y"ct 14 nurses meet ,
•

•

f /1

NJ•;I.SONVILLE - District
of the Ohoo Nurses
A~socbliur1 held its Mar~ h
was Ste.vc Dailey, Columbus, meeting Thursday evening at
and the ushers were Gene Nelsonville Children's Center.
Turner, St. Paris ; Ron Turner, Following a brief business
Wapakoneta: and Howard sf'ssion, association . members
and guests heard a presenErvin, Jr .. Racine.
Acolytes were Joel Minter. tation on "The Psychiatric
nephew of the groom, and Nurse as Moth er in a
Herbert Erv in , brother of the Children's Hospital" by
brid e. Rice bags were Kenneth M. Calestro, Director
distributed by the sister of the of the Residen tial Treatment
Program at Ne lsonv ille
bride, Tamara Ervin.
For her daughter's wedding, Children's Center.
~~ Mrs.
Erv in wore a red
Calestro emphasized that the
polyester knit dress with a red nurse in a children's
rose corsage accented with psychiatric faci li ty has a
gol d velvet ribbon. The unique opportunity to help the
bridegroom's mother chose a child work throug h conflicts in
cream colored lace and crepe the context of a maternal
dress with gold accents and she relationship. " II is of vital
th at
the
wore a red rose corsage with importance
psychiatric nurse provide the
red velvet ribbons.
A reception honorin g the child with warm, ge nuine incouple was held in the church teractions - both outside and
socuu fV'-1111 . The bride 's table within the realm of traditional
featured a four tiered ca ke nursing ca re . Thus, it is im...._w!th column dividers. The ca ke
"Was decorated in red, green
and gold Hnd topped with a
miniature bride and groom
RACINE - In a double ring waist. The only jewelry she beneath a hea r~sha ped arch.
•
Placed to either side of the
ceremony at the Wesleyan sore was a cameo necklace,
large cake were round layer
United Methodist Church at gift from the groom .
For her wedding the bride cakes decorated with hearts
Racine, Miss Sharon Lynn
Ervin and Rick L. Turner carried a colonial bouquet of and inscribed with the names
white carnations centered with of the bride and groom.
exchanged wedding vows.
A
large
Christmas
The wedding was an event of a red rosebud corsage. She also
arrangement
used
in
the table
2:30p.m., Dec. 23 with the Rev. carried two yellow rose buds,
decorations
was
flanked
by
MASON - The Bend Area
Howard Shiveley officiating. one which she presented to her
five
branch
brass
candelabra
Senior
Citizens met at the
The bride is the daughter of mother on the way to the altar
with
red
tapers.
Registering
Mason
center
for their regular
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ervin, and the other which she
Rt. I, Racine, and the presented to the groom 's the guests were Miss Teresa Thursday meeting. Mrs. Clara
bridegroom is the son of Wayne motner on her way from the Ervin, Racine , and Mi ss Staats, president, announced a
quilt for sale and another quilt
Turner, Waynesfield, and Mrs. altar following the ceremony. Gwynn Minter, Kenton . ·
Serving at the table were was put in the frames for
The bride's attendants were
Ed Yeosting, Massillon.
Mrs.
Joann Minter and Miss quilting.
Music was provided by Mrs. Mrs .
Rhonda
Dailey ,
Lois
Lunch· was served with
Garrett Circle, organist, with Columbus, sister of the bride, groom.Turner, sisters of the prayer
by Maxine Arnold and
her selections including matron of honor, wearing gold
For a wedding trip to Burr plans were made for rug
"Where Do I Begin" from velvet; Miss Beth Luc,
Oak
Lodge, the bride changed making and aprons to be made
"Love Story", and "Hawaiian Fremont, the maid of honor, in
Wedding Song. " Miss Nancy green velvet, and Miss Kristy into a navy and white polyester for sale.
After lunch Rev. and Mrs.
Roush sang "I Love You, Sura, Ketterin g and Miss knit dress with navy accessories
and
wore
the
rosebud
Ira
Wellman, Kananga , who
Truly and " Because". Red Beverly Ervin, sister of the
corsage
from
her
bridal
have
sponsored several trips to
ve lvet bows and greenery bride, bridesmaids in red
bouquet.
the
Holy
Land, came and
decorated the two seven- velvet gowns. The gowns were
The couple resides at 834 showed slides of their travels.
branch candelabra, and red princess style with ecru lace
Thurber
Drive,
West, It was a most enjoyable and
poinsettias were used on each edging down the front seams,
Columbus.
informative program as Rev.
end of the altar railing. The around the neckline and also
The bride is a junior at Ohio Welhnan opened the program
window arrangements were of around the circular sleeve
State
University, College of with prayer and used Bible
red candles and pine, and the ruffles on the long straight
Education,
majoring in interpretation during his
pews were marked with gold sleeves . Each wore a cameo
velvet bows and white poin· pin and earrings, gifts of the mathematics. She is employed showing of the slides.
Mrs. Wellman explained how
se ttias.
bride. Their headpieces were in the library there. Turner is a
student
at
the
Ohio
Institute
of
the
tour was conducted and
Given in marriage by her double velvet bows to match
father, the bride was attired in their dresses with ecru circular Technology, Columbus, and is that another tour is being
an empire waist gown of white illusion veiling. They each employed at United Parcel planned for October. Rev .
Service .
Welhnan is available for in·
velvet with satin and lace carried small nosegays of red
Out-of-town
guests
at
the
formation
at the parsonage at
bodice. It was fashioned with carnations tied with velvet
long sleeves of lace fastened ribbon streamers to match wedding were Mr. and Mrs. Ed 413 Fourth Ave., Kanauga.
Mrs . Pauline Marshall,
Yeosting
and
Donnie,
with pearl buttons . The chapel their gowns.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Gene
coordinator
of the Mason
Massillon;
The flower girls were Miss
length lace train was.attached
Action
Group,
at the waist. The bride wore a Marty Turner and Miss Turner and Jeanie, St. Paris; County
which
Mrs.
Hazel
Minter,
Belle
arranged
the
program
satin and lace juliet cap with a Jeannie Turner and they wore
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Jerry
was
enjoyed
by
all
present.
center;
bridal illusion edged in lace gowns of green velvet trimm"!!
Attending were Hazel Smith,
falling over the shoulders to the with the ecru lace edging. They Van Douseloor, Reynoldsburg ;
Eric L. Grieser, Columbus; Pearl Roush, Frances Stewart,
Marta Steele, John P. Prose, Zelma Hunter, Clara Roush,
Gallipolis;
Mrs.
Philip Bertha Hall, Emma Ryan,
Sheppard, Philo, Wayne Mary Aumiller, Maxine Ar·
Turner, Waynesfield; Mr. and nold, Helen Elias, Katherine
Mrs. Roland Turner and Raynes, Goldie Smith, Wilda
family, Wapakonets; Mr. and Coleman, Clara Staats, Phyllis
Mrs. Donn Minter and family, McCarty, aide, Pauline
Kenton; Miss Lois Turner, Marshall, coordinator, and
Rev. and Mrs. Welhnan.
Massillon; Mr. and Mrs. John
• 2 Pc. Chicken
Buckley, Proctorville ; Mr. and
• Slaw
Mrs. Merrill Geer, Wellston.
• Mashed
Mr. and Mrs. Yoesting and
Potatoes
Mr. and Mrs. Minter planned
&amp; Gravy
and served a buffet dinner at
• Roll
the Legion Hall in Racine
immediately following the
afternoon rehearsal for the
wedding. Members of the
wedding party and their
familles were guests. Tables
were decorated with gold, red,
Visit
and green ta bleclothes and
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. - The
COLPNEl SANDERS' RECIPE
large red candle centerpieces. Executive Committee of the
New Haven First Church of
God
Woman's Missionary
WILL MEET
POMEROY- The Wildwood Society held their quarterly
Garden Club will meet at 7:30 meeting at the church. Delores
p.m. Wednesday at the home of Taylor opened the meeting
with the devotion. Bonnie
Mrs. Karl Grueser.
Fields led in prayer.
The budget for the past year
was reviewed to see what
remained to be paid. The
treasurer, Fay Carpenter,
reported that most items had
been paid.
The hostesses for the new
year were appointed and
tentative plans were set up for
the year. It was decided to
Its smooth, unbroken ceramic cooking
continue with the blessing
su rf ace lets you clean up most soil with th e
cups, flower fund, coupons,
swipe of a damp c loth. Spill-Saver top keeps
subscriptions for MISSIONS,
drlbt.les and boil-overs on the top of the range
prayer partners, parties, for
where they' re easier to wipe up. Hot Surface
patients at Lakin State
Signal Light glows whe n ilny cooking area is too
Hospital, and to order new
hot t_o touch {approx. 1~s· F) ... even after all .
yearbooks.
heall_ng ll nits are turned Off. There's no need for
spec1al cookware so you can probably use the
SEveral money • making
pots and pans you already have. Underneath,
projects were discussed and it
~n Electri ~c lean oven c leans itself automatwas decided to hold a·
Ically. For effortless cleaning and contemporary
demonstration
Thursday,
beauty, put a Frigidaire Ceramatop Range
March
28,
with
Roberta
In your kitchen today.
Maynard serving as the guest
·demonstrator.
1
Plans were made for Guest
Nile to be observed for the
April meeting. .
RCDE3
Roberta Maynard was aj&gt;PDinted to serve as the
Membership Olalrman. Iva
Capehart will assist her.
The meeting adjourned with
prayer led by Iva Capehart.
Those . attending were Fay
Carpenter, Roberta Maynard,
Sue Erwin, Becky Reed, Iva
Capehart, Bonnie Fields,
Sarah Gibbs, Delores Taylor
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
and Orpha Fields.
· white velve t pillow t:.'&lt;lgcd with
lace.
Best man ror the bridegrOom

14

Mr. and Mrs. Rick L. Turner

Racine is wedding scene

Bend area

senzors
have meet

II

SNACK. BOX
SPECIAL
.......... '~

ONLY

99c

the Colonel

perative that the nurse be

eurnfortablc with her role as an
adult so she · ea11 ~rovidc an
"lmnsphere where the child
ran ~a in support, protection,
and strength when his own
resources fail him ," he said.
Members were greeted by
Mabel Lee, th e evenin g's
hostess, who is a reg istered
nurse at Nelsonv ille Children's
Center. Refreshments were
served after the presentation
and discussion.
The purpose of the Ohio
Nurses Association is to encourage discussion of issues
relevant to nursing, as well as

to provide education on
modern nurs in g techniques

Chapter attends meet

"

at the conference was. Mrs.
Phyllis Schlafiy, an authority
on national d~eruie, a noted
author, and a frequent speaker
on national TV programs. Mrs.
Schlafly· stressed the need for
constant vigilance for the
preservation of the United
States of America. Her latest
book, "The Selling of

POMEROY - The Return
·and philos ophies . Previous
Jonathan Meigs Chapter was
District 14 meetings have dealt represented by five of its
with such topics as therapeutic members at the Seventy-fifth
se ttings, new drug techniques, Annual Conference, Ohio
and legal standards for nurses. Society, Daughters of the
Program Director for District American Revolution, at the
14 is Viola Marks, R.N ., Neil House, Columbus, March
Assistant Direc tor of th e 18, 19 and 20.
Mrs. Thereon Johnson , vice
Student Nurse Affiliation
regent,
and a delegate, was America," warns against an
Program at Athens Mental
chairwoman of one of the internal convulsion of a
Health Center.
The Ohio NU)seS Associa tion hostess committees. Mrs. violently destructive type that
Ewing
(Heidi could lead to the loss of that ·
District 14 includes Gallia, Thomas
Meigs, Hockin g, and Athens Milhoan) was one of 23 pages Independence won so painfully
cow1ties. Any registered nurse · selected for the conference. in 1776.
A highlight of the conference
working in a public, priva te, Mrs. Norman DeMent, state
specialized, or general hospital regent, chose Mrs. Ewing as was an address at the DAR
her perso nal page. Others Schools Luncheon by Dr. Inez
. or clinic se tting is eligible for
membership
in
th e attendirig' were Mrs. Edward Henry, Director of the Martha
Foster , registrar; Mrs. Nan Berry Museum at Berry
Association .
Moore and Miss Lucille Smith, College . Sbe entered Berry
School at the age of 13 with a
regent.
Among outstanding speakers DAR scholarship and 40 cents
in her pocket. Sbe has been
associated with the school ever
since and helped it grow from a
Rena Johnson, Delores Taylor,
tiny spot in the hills of Georgia
Pansy Fry, Sue Erwin, Fay
to a fully accredited four-year
Carpenter, Roberta Maynard,
IN HOSPITAL
college with a campus of 30,000
Susie· Smith, Grace CunSYRACUSE Russell acres . She praised the
ningham and Eleanor Davis . Zwilling, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Daughters of the American
Refreslunents were served by
Woodrow Zwilling, Syracuse, is Revolution for their scholar·
the hostesses using the Saint
PatriCk theme . Delores Taylor a patient at the St. Mary's and ships and contributions to
Elizabeth Hospital, Bluegrass schools. Dr. Henry stressed the
won the door prize.
Ave., Louisville, Ky . Mr. and importance of teaching young
Mrs. Zwilling and Mr. and Mrs. people appreciation of past
Randy Adkins went yesterday events that have made
to visit him there.
America great.
~

Woman 's

Missionary

So

ciet y of the New Have n Firs t Church of God
held their March meeting at
the Missionary Building with
Orpha Fields, Lucille Powell
and Iva Capehart serving as
hostes ses . Devotions were

given by Delores Taylor taken
from John 20 :21. Sarah Gibbs
led in prayer. Blessing cups
were turned in and roll call was
answered by naming a
spiritual blessing .
Members were reminded to
bring items to their next
meeting for patients at Lakin
State Hospital.
Anna Johnson , Sarah Gibbs,
Fay Carpenter and Orpha
Fields will serve on the Budget
Committee for the new year.
The nominating committee
presented the ballot for the
election of Group I officers.
Elected were president, Orpha
Fields ; parliamentarian, Sue

Betrothal
announced

ALBANY - Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Haning, Rt. 2,
Albany, are announcing the
engagement of their daughter,
Barbara, to Steven Cotterill,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Cotterill, Harrisonville.
The bride-elect is a student
at Meigs High School. Her
fiance is a 1972 graduate of
Meigs High School and is
Erwin; historian, · Bonnie
employed in the oil field. The
Fields ; stewardship director, wedding is planned for April27.
Becky Reed; finance com:
mittee, Anna Johnson and
Sarah Gibbs; publications,
Rena Johnson and Pansy Fry.
Hostesses for the April meeting
will be Fay Carpenter and
Connie Aeiker.
The program was presented
by Mrs. Fields on the third
study on Brazil intended to
alert women to the Latin
America of today - its
problems, needs, potential,
future, and relationship to the
church; to indicate those areas
of Latin America where the
Church of God is making
notable progress in the expansion of the church, with
special attention to the pioneer
missionary work in Amazonia.
Members assisting with the
program were Becky Reed,
Bonnie Fields and Sarah
Gibbs .
Attending the meeting were
Bonnie Fields, Iva Capehart,
Sarah Gibbs, Lucille Powell,
Orpha Fields, Becky Reed,

CLUB TO MEET
POMEROY - The Bend o'•
the River Garden Club will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday at
the home .of Mrs. Andrew
Cross.

I

...
I 'll

STARTS MONDAY AT 10 AM

.

SINCE Osborne assumed tbe head basketball coaching job at
GAHS, his teams have won 68 games and lost 38. Inside the
SEOAL, his squads have compiled a 48-24 record. During the past
two years, GAHS hlis also won two sectional tournament titles
and one district crown. From !be looks of things, Osborne has
good prospects coming all the way down the line.

+++

FOR A
"

.,

•

•CATALINA
i
•CODDINGTON ·'~_,.~
I

.,

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

"

..

,

.

'
, ...

.
••
""

h~ri~cige house
,

...'

. .---------.....-----------1·"
• I

•i

··'

Life span of 200
longer than coold be accomplished by curing the three
major killers, vascular lesions,
cancer and heart disease."
Scientists plan to use the
drug to "switch off the human
thermostat" so that body
temperatures may be lowered
to slow the process of growing
old, he said.
E~periments already have
proved that files live much
longer at a lower body temperature, he said.
Now, the drug, which Rosenberg would not name, will be
used to carry the experiments
to mice and rats which, like
humans, are warm-blooded
animals with a temperature
thermostat.
If the experiments prove
success(ul, tests could begin on
humans within 10 years,
Rosenberg said.
Rosenberg, who directs the
project with Dr. Garbor Kemeny, said, "We know from
thermodynamics that the
aging and death processes are
very temperature-dependent.
By slowing down tl.\e aging
rate, you slow down the onset
of agirelated diSeases."
"The. relationship of the
raising and lowering of temperature with Q1e lengthening
and shortening of life of insects
Is sufficiently significant for
tests to be done on much higher
animals·. "

'

. Rosenberg said II was not yet
kriown what, if any, side effects
there would be with the use of
ihe "therrilostat-stopping"
!lrug in humans.
He said if theories were
correct, the drug would not
simply stop a man from dying
wben he reached normal age.
Instead, the entire life process
would be lengthened.
"II would slow down the
actual aging rate," he said.
"There ill no point in decreasing mortality if J)eople ar~ just
going to grow older. We want to
proiong life in the same way
you stretch a rubber bandequally, at all timl!:i."

Heck's Reg. '1.38
Automotive

Automotive

REGENT

CUB PUP TENT

BALL
__GLOVE

$999

$133

" a&amp;((-0 VITA BWE

$899

•. !

Heck's Reg. '2.49

Heck's Reg. 111.99
l:rv~rt,ina Dept.

'I .

· Automotive

'1''

'GOLF BALLS

1 Piece 5 Ft.

Pkg. of Three

Solid Rod

Heck's Reg. •2.49
·sports

Sporting Goods Dept.

9" TWIN PAK .

Heck's Reg. 89'

2 fOR$}00

ROLLER REFILLS

HOT LATHER
DISPENSER

•1999
HECK'S REG. •25.88

HECK'S REG. 13.88
Jewelry Dept.

JEWELRY DEPT.

27 OZ. KLEAR
3714" x 6' White

FLOOR
WAX

On~

e
Housewares
99

HECK'S REG. $1.59

HECK'S REG. 17'
.Housewares

Dept.

Housewares Dept.

oz.

HECK'S REG. 11.38
24 oz.

Gillette 7 oz.
THE DRY LOOK

NOXZ.EMA
SHAVE CREAM

BIG WALLY
WALL CLEANER

Regular or Extra Hold

Reg. • Menthol · Lime

Heck's Reg.
$1.19

Heck's Reg.

88'

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1
1.46

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$119

Housewares

Cosmetic

Cosmetic

CLAIROL
HERBAL ESSENCE

SHAMPOO
I

7 oz.

8 oz. Reg, or Oi~

PEPSODENT TOOTHPASTE

Heck's Reg. •39.88
Housewares Dept.

HECK'S

RADIO
1

BAB-0
CLEANER

•2644

$1 00Hardware Dept.

MEN's ·SHAVER

•999

$11 99

8

FOR

TOOT-A·

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Heck's Reg.
114.96
Jewelry Dept.

12'

SUNBEAM

PANASONIC

SCD-1
GE

X

DROP
CLOTHS

Heck's Reg. 11.92

HECK'S REG. 11.99

GRANDFATHER
CLOCK

9'

PAN &amp; ROLLER SET
$}00

PAINT BRUSH
SET
$100

11

Hack's Reg. •3.29

91NCH

1" . 2" . 3"

SPINCAST
ROD

$229

$149

Heck's Reg. •2.99

Housewares Dept.

South Bend

WILSON BLUE RIDGE

REGENT BASEBALL

years in future?
EAST LANSING, Mich.
(UP!) - Michigan State
University researchers are
stepping up research on a drug
which tbey say could enable
humans to live as long as 200
years.
The drug might triple man's
life span by cooling things
specifically the human body.
Such long life might cause
problems, the scientists warned. Married couples might
find that much time together
Intolerable. Marathon marriages might also lead to a
population explosion.
But Dr. Barnett Rosenberg,
a professor of biophysics at
Michigan State and coleader of
the research team, told UPI,
"It is time the pubUc became
aware of the implications of
such preUminary studies of
aging.
"Longer life spans are
inevitable. It's coming because.
people want to live long.''
The drug Sj!effiS to work on
such lower forms of life as
rues, Rosenberg said. Next will
come mice. Humans may
follow .
"If our theories are correct,
then we could speculate on a
life span of even 200 years,"
Rosenberg said.
The research team is experi·
mentlng with a drug which
cools . the body temperature
and, at the same time, slows
the basie aging process.
Prellininary tests indicate
. IIIII! of the drug-not a new drug ·
but never previvously used for
.. Ibis purpose-to reduce the
nonnal body temperature from
98.6 to about 86 degrees could
lncl'ease life expectancy.
"Just small changes in
temperatures can produce tremendous.changes in life~
tancy," RQseriberg said. .
"If such- temperature-agmg
relationships hold true for
humans it may be possible
IIIWering the temperature just
a few degr,eM to prolong life by
10me 11 years-&lt;~nd that Is

$100

FOR

LUG
WRENCH

TWENTY YEARS AGO from the files of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallia Times ... Georgia Lee King, sophomore from
Jackson named 1954 Rio Grande College May Day Queen ... Dr.
Charles E. Davis resigns as president of Rio Grande College ...
John A. Epling named administrative assistant at Rio Grande
College ... Miss Anne G. Hill named official hostess for 63rd DAR
opening In Washington ... M. M. Kerr estate valued at $88,830 ...
Mrs.' Dwight C. Wetherholt named winner of scholarship contest
at HolZer Hospital ... Rio Grande's bsskelhaU ace Clarence
(Bevo) Francis named First Team All-Ohio by United Press.

•

,.__.l_

3WAY

+++
TUESDAY'S cage banquet is open to the public. Admission
will be a covered dish. Let's make it a night Coach Osborne and
his Blue Devils will remember for years to come. See you at the
banquet!

Middleport, Ohio

..

'100

Heck's Reg. 49•

----A-ut•o•m-o.tl•v•e•D•e..;p;.t••_ _ _

THAT was five short years ago. The rest is history. Tuesday,
Gallipolis Blue Devil basketball fans will have the privilege of
honoring the school's first Southeastern Ohio League championship team in 15 years. The annual Blue Devils cage banquet
will be held in the GAHSvarsity gym (potluck style ) beginning at
6:30p.m.

+++

'

"Your Thnm MeAn Store"

Heck's Reg. '1.5 9

+++

.·

GREASE ·

3

"THAT'S what it is going to take to rebuild basketball fortunesatGAHS. In closing, Coach Osborne said : 'You can always
have an off-night in shooting from the field. You should never
have an off-night on defense.' "

PLAYTEX
18 HOUR SALE

WRENCH

Frts Cartridge Type Gun

+++

PLAZA

CAP TYPE OIL FILTER

MULTI-PURPOSE

With Applicator

+++

.,

14 OZ. TUBES

.CREAM WAX

"CONTINUED OSBORNE, 'Players must first have a great
desire to win. Secondly, they must be willing to make their best
contributions for the good of the team. Skills are only third on my
list. A young man may be an excellent shooter and hall handler,
but without the first two qualities, he can never be a consistent
winner.' "

SILVER
BRIDGE

WtiiT~%

14 OZ. RALLY

+++

effective overnight - GAHS has been a run and shoot team for
the past 10 years - with little success (53-136) . Osborne has
issured orders to tbe reserve, freshman, eighth, seventh and
Rinky-Dink coaches - defensive fundamentals come first.

OPEN SUNDAY
1 PM TIL 7 PM

SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY, MARCH 24 &amp; 25

''OSBORNE'S coaching philosophy is simple: You have to be
ready mentally and physically to play 32 minutes of hard heads·
up baskethall. You have to be convinced that you are going to
score when you have tbe hall and that you are going to hold the
opponent scoreless when he has it.

THE article continued: ''Osborne's style of play won't be

.

- ··~

~.

+++

The beautiful new look of total
cleanabllltv. The Frltldaire
Ceramatop Range .

BAKER FURNITU,RE

By Hobart Wilson Jr.

1

+++

Executive
committee,..----------....;..,.----....... ..
has meet

•15.99

Gallia

I

"MAYBE not a championship team this year, or even next
year. But after that, watch out .'New head coach Jim Osborne is a
24-year-&lt;~ld prototype of players and coaches he has been
associated with the past six years. (Ray Mears and Eldon Miller,
WIIU!nberg University) .

BOB EVANS DRIVE-IN

$549

!

+++

BAHR CLOTHIERS

The dynamite sight of white at a
price that's quite inviting ...
what more could anyone need!
Match these soft open -air
feelings with every fashion look
you've got and you'll breeze
through Spring with ease. "Joy"
also in navy or shiny black .

I Dateline

THE following article appeared in the Wednesdsy, Nov. 19,
1969 edition of the Daily Tribune: "Southeastern Ohio League
hardwood teams beware ! A 'new era' of basketball is underway
at GAHS.

COMPLETE LINE OF LADIES
SPORTSWEAR

eLORI LYNN

I

BACK in November, 1969, when this year's crop of GAHS
sophomores, juniors and seniors were.sixth, seventh and eighth
graders, a change was about to take ·place in the basketball
program at Gallia Academy High School.

VISIT BAHR CLOTHIERS

•JANTZEN

r-------------------------,

I

I

Society has meet
NEW HAVEN, W. Va.- The

II - The Sunday Tim_"!· Sentinel, Sunday, MarcJl24, 1974

I

~fritd&amp;ldekta.

I

. I

49~

Heck's Reg.
. 7!1

Heck's Reg. 11.24

..
~

... '

•

•

1

1

......

~

..

•·

...

�I '

I

II

·'

' . J

r:ttTit'&lt;l whit{• baskPI.o; uf \\'hi 1L'

and red ca rnation pda ls.

Master Grant Turner wH s lhe

ring bearer and he

ca rri~d

a

Dzst;y"ct 14 nurses meet ,
•

•

f /1

NJ•;I.SONVILLE - District
of the Ohoo Nurses
A~socbliur1 held its Mar~ h
was Ste.vc Dailey, Columbus, meeting Thursday evening at
and the ushers were Gene Nelsonville Children's Center.
Turner, St. Paris ; Ron Turner, Following a brief business
Wapakoneta: and Howard sf'ssion, association . members
and guests heard a presenErvin, Jr .. Racine.
Acolytes were Joel Minter. tation on "The Psychiatric
nephew of the groom, and Nurse as Moth er in a
Herbert Erv in , brother of the Children's Hospital" by
brid e. Rice bags were Kenneth M. Calestro, Director
distributed by the sister of the of the Residen tial Treatment
Program at Ne lsonv ille
bride, Tamara Ervin.
For her daughter's wedding, Children's Center.
~~ Mrs.
Erv in wore a red
Calestro emphasized that the
polyester knit dress with a red nurse in a children's
rose corsage accented with psychiatric faci li ty has a
gol d velvet ribbon. The unique opportunity to help the
bridegroom's mother chose a child work throug h conflicts in
cream colored lace and crepe the context of a maternal
dress with gold accents and she relationship. " II is of vital
th at
the
wore a red rose corsage with importance
psychiatric nurse provide the
red velvet ribbons.
A reception honorin g the child with warm, ge nuine incouple was held in the church teractions - both outside and
socuu fV'-1111 . The bride 's table within the realm of traditional
featured a four tiered ca ke nursing ca re . Thus, it is im...._w!th column dividers. The ca ke
"Was decorated in red, green
and gold Hnd topped with a
miniature bride and groom
RACINE - In a double ring waist. The only jewelry she beneath a hea r~sha ped arch.
•
Placed to either side of the
ceremony at the Wesleyan sore was a cameo necklace,
large cake were round layer
United Methodist Church at gift from the groom .
For her wedding the bride cakes decorated with hearts
Racine, Miss Sharon Lynn
Ervin and Rick L. Turner carried a colonial bouquet of and inscribed with the names
white carnations centered with of the bride and groom.
exchanged wedding vows.
A
large
Christmas
The wedding was an event of a red rosebud corsage. She also
arrangement
used
in
the table
2:30p.m., Dec. 23 with the Rev. carried two yellow rose buds,
decorations
was
flanked
by
MASON - The Bend Area
Howard Shiveley officiating. one which she presented to her
five
branch
brass
candelabra
Senior
Citizens met at the
The bride is the daughter of mother on the way to the altar
with
red
tapers.
Registering
Mason
center
for their regular
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ervin, and the other which she
Rt. I, Racine, and the presented to the groom 's the guests were Miss Teresa Thursday meeting. Mrs. Clara
bridegroom is the son of Wayne motner on her way from the Ervin, Racine , and Mi ss Staats, president, announced a
quilt for sale and another quilt
Turner, Waynesfield, and Mrs. altar following the ceremony. Gwynn Minter, Kenton . ·
Serving at the table were was put in the frames for
The bride's attendants were
Ed Yeosting, Massillon.
Mrs.
Joann Minter and Miss quilting.
Music was provided by Mrs. Mrs .
Rhonda
Dailey ,
Lois
Lunch· was served with
Garrett Circle, organist, with Columbus, sister of the bride, groom.Turner, sisters of the prayer
by Maxine Arnold and
her selections including matron of honor, wearing gold
For a wedding trip to Burr plans were made for rug
"Where Do I Begin" from velvet; Miss Beth Luc,
Oak
Lodge, the bride changed making and aprons to be made
"Love Story", and "Hawaiian Fremont, the maid of honor, in
Wedding Song. " Miss Nancy green velvet, and Miss Kristy into a navy and white polyester for sale.
After lunch Rev. and Mrs.
Roush sang "I Love You, Sura, Ketterin g and Miss knit dress with navy accessories
and
wore
the
rosebud
Ira
Wellman, Kananga , who
Truly and " Because". Red Beverly Ervin, sister of the
corsage
from
her
bridal
have
sponsored several trips to
ve lvet bows and greenery bride, bridesmaids in red
bouquet.
the
Holy
Land, came and
decorated the two seven- velvet gowns. The gowns were
The couple resides at 834 showed slides of their travels.
branch candelabra, and red princess style with ecru lace
Thurber
Drive,
West, It was a most enjoyable and
poinsettias were used on each edging down the front seams,
Columbus.
informative program as Rev.
end of the altar railing. The around the neckline and also
The bride is a junior at Ohio Welhnan opened the program
window arrangements were of around the circular sleeve
State
University, College of with prayer and used Bible
red candles and pine, and the ruffles on the long straight
Education,
majoring in interpretation during his
pews were marked with gold sleeves . Each wore a cameo
velvet bows and white poin· pin and earrings, gifts of the mathematics. She is employed showing of the slides.
Mrs. Wellman explained how
se ttias.
bride. Their headpieces were in the library there. Turner is a
student
at
the
Ohio
Institute
of
the
tour was conducted and
Given in marriage by her double velvet bows to match
father, the bride was attired in their dresses with ecru circular Technology, Columbus, and is that another tour is being
an empire waist gown of white illusion veiling. They each employed at United Parcel planned for October. Rev .
Service .
Welhnan is available for in·
velvet with satin and lace carried small nosegays of red
Out-of-town
guests
at
the
formation
at the parsonage at
bodice. It was fashioned with carnations tied with velvet
long sleeves of lace fastened ribbon streamers to match wedding were Mr. and Mrs. Ed 413 Fourth Ave., Kanauga.
Mrs . Pauline Marshall,
Yeosting
and
Donnie,
with pearl buttons . The chapel their gowns.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Gene
coordinator
of the Mason
Massillon;
The flower girls were Miss
length lace train was.attached
Action
Group,
at the waist. The bride wore a Marty Turner and Miss Turner and Jeanie, St. Paris; County
which
Mrs.
Hazel
Minter,
Belle
arranged
the
program
satin and lace juliet cap with a Jeannie Turner and they wore
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Jerry
was
enjoyed
by
all
present.
center;
bridal illusion edged in lace gowns of green velvet trimm"!!
Attending were Hazel Smith,
falling over the shoulders to the with the ecru lace edging. They Van Douseloor, Reynoldsburg ;
Eric L. Grieser, Columbus; Pearl Roush, Frances Stewart,
Marta Steele, John P. Prose, Zelma Hunter, Clara Roush,
Gallipolis;
Mrs.
Philip Bertha Hall, Emma Ryan,
Sheppard, Philo, Wayne Mary Aumiller, Maxine Ar·
Turner, Waynesfield; Mr. and nold, Helen Elias, Katherine
Mrs. Roland Turner and Raynes, Goldie Smith, Wilda
family, Wapakonets; Mr. and Coleman, Clara Staats, Phyllis
Mrs. Donn Minter and family, McCarty, aide, Pauline
Kenton; Miss Lois Turner, Marshall, coordinator, and
Rev. and Mrs. Welhnan.
Massillon; Mr. and Mrs. John
• 2 Pc. Chicken
Buckley, Proctorville ; Mr. and
• Slaw
Mrs. Merrill Geer, Wellston.
• Mashed
Mr. and Mrs. Yoesting and
Potatoes
Mr. and Mrs. Minter planned
&amp; Gravy
and served a buffet dinner at
• Roll
the Legion Hall in Racine
immediately following the
afternoon rehearsal for the
wedding. Members of the
wedding party and their
familles were guests. Tables
were decorated with gold, red,
Visit
and green ta bleclothes and
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. - The
COLPNEl SANDERS' RECIPE
large red candle centerpieces. Executive Committee of the
New Haven First Church of
God
Woman's Missionary
WILL MEET
POMEROY- The Wildwood Society held their quarterly
Garden Club will meet at 7:30 meeting at the church. Delores
p.m. Wednesday at the home of Taylor opened the meeting
with the devotion. Bonnie
Mrs. Karl Grueser.
Fields led in prayer.
The budget for the past year
was reviewed to see what
remained to be paid. The
treasurer, Fay Carpenter,
reported that most items had
been paid.
The hostesses for the new
year were appointed and
tentative plans were set up for
the year. It was decided to
Its smooth, unbroken ceramic cooking
continue with the blessing
su rf ace lets you clean up most soil with th e
cups, flower fund, coupons,
swipe of a damp c loth. Spill-Saver top keeps
subscriptions for MISSIONS,
drlbt.les and boil-overs on the top of the range
prayer partners, parties, for
where they' re easier to wipe up. Hot Surface
patients at Lakin State
Signal Light glows whe n ilny cooking area is too
Hospital, and to order new
hot t_o touch {approx. 1~s· F) ... even after all .
yearbooks.
heall_ng ll nits are turned Off. There's no need for
spec1al cookware so you can probably use the
SEveral money • making
pots and pans you already have. Underneath,
projects were discussed and it
~n Electri ~c lean oven c leans itself automatwas decided to hold a·
Ically. For effortless cleaning and contemporary
demonstration
Thursday,
beauty, put a Frigidaire Ceramatop Range
March
28,
with
Roberta
In your kitchen today.
Maynard serving as the guest
·demonstrator.
1
Plans were made for Guest
Nile to be observed for the
April meeting. .
RCDE3
Roberta Maynard was aj&gt;PDinted to serve as the
Membership Olalrman. Iva
Capehart will assist her.
The meeting adjourned with
prayer led by Iva Capehart.
Those . attending were Fay
Carpenter, Roberta Maynard,
Sue Erwin, Becky Reed, Iva
Capehart, Bonnie Fields,
Sarah Gibbs, Delores Taylor
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
and Orpha Fields.
· white velve t pillow t:.'&lt;lgcd with
lace.
Best man ror the bridegrOom

14

Mr. and Mrs. Rick L. Turner

Racine is wedding scene

Bend area

senzors
have meet

II

SNACK. BOX
SPECIAL
.......... '~

ONLY

99c

the Colonel

perative that the nurse be

eurnfortablc with her role as an
adult so she · ea11 ~rovidc an
"lmnsphere where the child
ran ~a in support, protection,
and strength when his own
resources fail him ," he said.
Members were greeted by
Mabel Lee, th e evenin g's
hostess, who is a reg istered
nurse at Nelsonv ille Children's
Center. Refreshments were
served after the presentation
and discussion.
The purpose of the Ohio
Nurses Association is to encourage discussion of issues
relevant to nursing, as well as

to provide education on
modern nurs in g techniques

Chapter attends meet

"

at the conference was. Mrs.
Phyllis Schlafiy, an authority
on national d~eruie, a noted
author, and a frequent speaker
on national TV programs. Mrs.
Schlafly· stressed the need for
constant vigilance for the
preservation of the United
States of America. Her latest
book, "The Selling of

POMEROY - The Return
·and philos ophies . Previous
Jonathan Meigs Chapter was
District 14 meetings have dealt represented by five of its
with such topics as therapeutic members at the Seventy-fifth
se ttings, new drug techniques, Annual Conference, Ohio
and legal standards for nurses. Society, Daughters of the
Program Director for District American Revolution, at the
14 is Viola Marks, R.N ., Neil House, Columbus, March
Assistant Direc tor of th e 18, 19 and 20.
Mrs. Thereon Johnson , vice
Student Nurse Affiliation
regent,
and a delegate, was America," warns against an
Program at Athens Mental
chairwoman of one of the internal convulsion of a
Health Center.
The Ohio NU)seS Associa tion hostess committees. Mrs. violently destructive type that
Ewing
(Heidi could lead to the loss of that ·
District 14 includes Gallia, Thomas
Meigs, Hockin g, and Athens Milhoan) was one of 23 pages Independence won so painfully
cow1ties. Any registered nurse · selected for the conference. in 1776.
A highlight of the conference
working in a public, priva te, Mrs. Norman DeMent, state
specialized, or general hospital regent, chose Mrs. Ewing as was an address at the DAR
her perso nal page. Others Schools Luncheon by Dr. Inez
. or clinic se tting is eligible for
membership
in
th e attendirig' were Mrs. Edward Henry, Director of the Martha
Foster , registrar; Mrs. Nan Berry Museum at Berry
Association .
Moore and Miss Lucille Smith, College . Sbe entered Berry
School at the age of 13 with a
regent.
Among outstanding speakers DAR scholarship and 40 cents
in her pocket. Sbe has been
associated with the school ever
since and helped it grow from a
Rena Johnson, Delores Taylor,
tiny spot in the hills of Georgia
Pansy Fry, Sue Erwin, Fay
to a fully accredited four-year
Carpenter, Roberta Maynard,
IN HOSPITAL
college with a campus of 30,000
Susie· Smith, Grace CunSYRACUSE Russell acres . She praised the
ningham and Eleanor Davis . Zwilling, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Daughters of the American
Refreslunents were served by
Woodrow Zwilling, Syracuse, is Revolution for their scholar·
the hostesses using the Saint
PatriCk theme . Delores Taylor a patient at the St. Mary's and ships and contributions to
Elizabeth Hospital, Bluegrass schools. Dr. Henry stressed the
won the door prize.
Ave., Louisville, Ky . Mr. and importance of teaching young
Mrs. Zwilling and Mr. and Mrs. people appreciation of past
Randy Adkins went yesterday events that have made
to visit him there.
America great.
~

Woman 's

Missionary

So

ciet y of the New Have n Firs t Church of God
held their March meeting at
the Missionary Building with
Orpha Fields, Lucille Powell
and Iva Capehart serving as
hostes ses . Devotions were

given by Delores Taylor taken
from John 20 :21. Sarah Gibbs
led in prayer. Blessing cups
were turned in and roll call was
answered by naming a
spiritual blessing .
Members were reminded to
bring items to their next
meeting for patients at Lakin
State Hospital.
Anna Johnson , Sarah Gibbs,
Fay Carpenter and Orpha
Fields will serve on the Budget
Committee for the new year.
The nominating committee
presented the ballot for the
election of Group I officers.
Elected were president, Orpha
Fields ; parliamentarian, Sue

Betrothal
announced

ALBANY - Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Haning, Rt. 2,
Albany, are announcing the
engagement of their daughter,
Barbara, to Steven Cotterill,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Cotterill, Harrisonville.
The bride-elect is a student
at Meigs High School. Her
fiance is a 1972 graduate of
Meigs High School and is
Erwin; historian, · Bonnie
employed in the oil field. The
Fields ; stewardship director, wedding is planned for April27.
Becky Reed; finance com:
mittee, Anna Johnson and
Sarah Gibbs; publications,
Rena Johnson and Pansy Fry.
Hostesses for the April meeting
will be Fay Carpenter and
Connie Aeiker.
The program was presented
by Mrs. Fields on the third
study on Brazil intended to
alert women to the Latin
America of today - its
problems, needs, potential,
future, and relationship to the
church; to indicate those areas
of Latin America where the
Church of God is making
notable progress in the expansion of the church, with
special attention to the pioneer
missionary work in Amazonia.
Members assisting with the
program were Becky Reed,
Bonnie Fields and Sarah
Gibbs .
Attending the meeting were
Bonnie Fields, Iva Capehart,
Sarah Gibbs, Lucille Powell,
Orpha Fields, Becky Reed,

CLUB TO MEET
POMEROY - The Bend o'•
the River Garden Club will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday at
the home .of Mrs. Andrew
Cross.

I

...
I 'll

STARTS MONDAY AT 10 AM

.

SINCE Osborne assumed tbe head basketball coaching job at
GAHS, his teams have won 68 games and lost 38. Inside the
SEOAL, his squads have compiled a 48-24 record. During the past
two years, GAHS hlis also won two sectional tournament titles
and one district crown. From !be looks of things, Osborne has
good prospects coming all the way down the line.

+++

FOR A
"

.,

•

•CATALINA
i
•CODDINGTON ·'~_,.~
I

.,

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

"

..

,

.

'
, ...

.
••
""

h~ri~cige house
,

...'

. .---------.....-----------1·"
• I

•i

··'

Life span of 200
longer than coold be accomplished by curing the three
major killers, vascular lesions,
cancer and heart disease."
Scientists plan to use the
drug to "switch off the human
thermostat" so that body
temperatures may be lowered
to slow the process of growing
old, he said.
E~periments already have
proved that files live much
longer at a lower body temperature, he said.
Now, the drug, which Rosenberg would not name, will be
used to carry the experiments
to mice and rats which, like
humans, are warm-blooded
animals with a temperature
thermostat.
If the experiments prove
success(ul, tests could begin on
humans within 10 years,
Rosenberg said.
Rosenberg, who directs the
project with Dr. Garbor Kemeny, said, "We know from
thermodynamics that the
aging and death processes are
very temperature-dependent.
By slowing down tl.\e aging
rate, you slow down the onset
of agirelated diSeases."
"The. relationship of the
raising and lowering of temperature with Q1e lengthening
and shortening of life of insects
Is sufficiently significant for
tests to be done on much higher
animals·. "

'

. Rosenberg said II was not yet
kriown what, if any, side effects
there would be with the use of
ihe "therrilostat-stopping"
!lrug in humans.
He said if theories were
correct, the drug would not
simply stop a man from dying
wben he reached normal age.
Instead, the entire life process
would be lengthened.
"II would slow down the
actual aging rate," he said.
"There ill no point in decreasing mortality if J)eople ar~ just
going to grow older. We want to
proiong life in the same way
you stretch a rubber bandequally, at all timl!:i."

Heck's Reg. '1.38
Automotive

Automotive

REGENT

CUB PUP TENT

BALL
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$999

$133

" a&amp;((-0 VITA BWE

$899

•. !

Heck's Reg. '2.49

Heck's Reg. 111.99
l:rv~rt,ina Dept.

'I .

· Automotive

'1''

'GOLF BALLS

1 Piece 5 Ft.

Pkg. of Three

Solid Rod

Heck's Reg. •2.49
·sports

Sporting Goods Dept.

9" TWIN PAK .

Heck's Reg. 89'

2 fOR$}00

ROLLER REFILLS

HOT LATHER
DISPENSER

•1999
HECK'S REG. •25.88

HECK'S REG. 13.88
Jewelry Dept.

JEWELRY DEPT.

27 OZ. KLEAR
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FLOOR
WAX

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Housewares
99

HECK'S REG. $1.59

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Dept.

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oz.

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24 oz.

Gillette 7 oz.
THE DRY LOOK

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Regular or Extra Hold

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HECK'S

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9'

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PAINT BRUSH
SET
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11

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$229

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Heck's Reg. •2.99

Housewares Dept.

South Bend

WILSON BLUE RIDGE

REGENT BASEBALL

years in future?
EAST LANSING, Mich.
(UP!) - Michigan State
University researchers are
stepping up research on a drug
which tbey say could enable
humans to live as long as 200
years.
The drug might triple man's
life span by cooling things
specifically the human body.
Such long life might cause
problems, the scientists warned. Married couples might
find that much time together
Intolerable. Marathon marriages might also lead to a
population explosion.
But Dr. Barnett Rosenberg,
a professor of biophysics at
Michigan State and coleader of
the research team, told UPI,
"It is time the pubUc became
aware of the implications of
such preUminary studies of
aging.
"Longer life spans are
inevitable. It's coming because.
people want to live long.''
The drug Sj!effiS to work on
such lower forms of life as
rues, Rosenberg said. Next will
come mice. Humans may
follow .
"If our theories are correct,
then we could speculate on a
life span of even 200 years,"
Rosenberg said.
The research team is experi·
mentlng with a drug which
cools . the body temperature
and, at the same time, slows
the basie aging process.
Prellininary tests indicate
. IIIII! of the drug-not a new drug ·
but never previvously used for
.. Ibis purpose-to reduce the
nonnal body temperature from
98.6 to about 86 degrees could
lncl'ease life expectancy.
"Just small changes in
temperatures can produce tremendous.changes in life~
tancy," RQseriberg said. .
"If such- temperature-agmg
relationships hold true for
humans it may be possible
IIIWering the temperature just
a few degr,eM to prolong life by
10me 11 years-&lt;~nd that Is

$100

FOR

LUG
WRENCH

TWENTY YEARS AGO from the files of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallia Times ... Georgia Lee King, sophomore from
Jackson named 1954 Rio Grande College May Day Queen ... Dr.
Charles E. Davis resigns as president of Rio Grande College ...
John A. Epling named administrative assistant at Rio Grande
College ... Miss Anne G. Hill named official hostess for 63rd DAR
opening In Washington ... M. M. Kerr estate valued at $88,830 ...
Mrs.' Dwight C. Wetherholt named winner of scholarship contest
at HolZer Hospital ... Rio Grande's bsskelhaU ace Clarence
(Bevo) Francis named First Team All-Ohio by United Press.

•

,.__.l_

3WAY

+++
TUESDAY'S cage banquet is open to the public. Admission
will be a covered dish. Let's make it a night Coach Osborne and
his Blue Devils will remember for years to come. See you at the
banquet!

Middleport, Ohio

..

'100

Heck's Reg. 49•

----A-ut•o•m-o.tl•v•e•D•e..;p;.t••_ _ _

THAT was five short years ago. The rest is history. Tuesday,
Gallipolis Blue Devil basketball fans will have the privilege of
honoring the school's first Southeastern Ohio League championship team in 15 years. The annual Blue Devils cage banquet
will be held in the GAHSvarsity gym (potluck style ) beginning at
6:30p.m.

+++

'

"Your Thnm MeAn Store"

Heck's Reg. '1.5 9

+++

.·

GREASE ·

3

"THAT'S what it is going to take to rebuild basketball fortunesatGAHS. In closing, Coach Osborne said : 'You can always
have an off-night in shooting from the field. You should never
have an off-night on defense.' "

PLAYTEX
18 HOUR SALE

WRENCH

Frts Cartridge Type Gun

+++

PLAZA

CAP TYPE OIL FILTER

MULTI-PURPOSE

With Applicator

+++

.,

14 OZ. TUBES

.CREAM WAX

"CONTINUED OSBORNE, 'Players must first have a great
desire to win. Secondly, they must be willing to make their best
contributions for the good of the team. Skills are only third on my
list. A young man may be an excellent shooter and hall handler,
but without the first two qualities, he can never be a consistent
winner.' "

SILVER
BRIDGE

WtiiT~%

14 OZ. RALLY

+++

effective overnight - GAHS has been a run and shoot team for
the past 10 years - with little success (53-136) . Osborne has
issured orders to tbe reserve, freshman, eighth, seventh and
Rinky-Dink coaches - defensive fundamentals come first.

OPEN SUNDAY
1 PM TIL 7 PM

SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY, MARCH 24 &amp; 25

''OSBORNE'S coaching philosophy is simple: You have to be
ready mentally and physically to play 32 minutes of hard heads·
up baskethall. You have to be convinced that you are going to
score when you have tbe hall and that you are going to hold the
opponent scoreless when he has it.

THE article continued: ''Osborne's style of play won't be

.

- ··~

~.

+++

The beautiful new look of total
cleanabllltv. The Frltldaire
Ceramatop Range .

BAKER FURNITU,RE

By Hobart Wilson Jr.

1

+++

Executive
committee,..----------....;..,.----....... ..
has meet

•15.99

Gallia

I

"MAYBE not a championship team this year, or even next
year. But after that, watch out .'New head coach Jim Osborne is a
24-year-&lt;~ld prototype of players and coaches he has been
associated with the past six years. (Ray Mears and Eldon Miller,
WIIU!nberg University) .

BOB EVANS DRIVE-IN

$549

!

+++

BAHR CLOTHIERS

The dynamite sight of white at a
price that's quite inviting ...
what more could anyone need!
Match these soft open -air
feelings with every fashion look
you've got and you'll breeze
through Spring with ease. "Joy"
also in navy or shiny black .

I Dateline

THE following article appeared in the Wednesdsy, Nov. 19,
1969 edition of the Daily Tribune: "Southeastern Ohio League
hardwood teams beware ! A 'new era' of basketball is underway
at GAHS.

COMPLETE LINE OF LADIES
SPORTSWEAR

eLORI LYNN

I

BACK in November, 1969, when this year's crop of GAHS
sophomores, juniors and seniors were.sixth, seventh and eighth
graders, a change was about to take ·place in the basketball
program at Gallia Academy High School.

VISIT BAHR CLOTHIERS

•JANTZEN

r-------------------------,

I

I

Society has meet
NEW HAVEN, W. Va.- The

II - The Sunday Tim_"!· Sentinel, Sunday, MarcJl24, 1974

I

~fritd&amp;ldekta.

I

. I

49~

Heck's Reg.
. 7!1

Heck's Reg. 11.24

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r:ttTit'&lt;l whit{• baskPI.o; uf \\'hi 1L'

and red ca rnation pda ls.

Master Grant Turner wH s lhe

ring bearer and he

ca rri~d

a

Dzst;y"ct 14 nurses meet ,
•

•

f /1

NJ•;I.SONVILLE - District
of the Ohoo Nurses
A~socbliur1 held its Mar~ h
was Ste.vc Dailey, Columbus, meeting Thursday evening at
and the ushers were Gene Nelsonville Children's Center.
Turner, St. Paris ; Ron Turner, Following a brief business
Wapakoneta: and Howard sf'ssion, association . members
and guests heard a presenErvin, Jr .. Racine.
Acolytes were Joel Minter. tation on "The Psychiatric
nephew of the groom, and Nurse as Moth er in a
Herbert Erv in , brother of the Children's Hospital" by
brid e. Rice bags were Kenneth M. Calestro, Director
distributed by the sister of the of the Residen tial Treatment
Program at Ne lsonv ille
bride, Tamara Ervin.
For her daughter's wedding, Children's Center.
~~ Mrs.
Erv in wore a red
Calestro emphasized that the
polyester knit dress with a red nurse in a children's
rose corsage accented with psychiatric faci li ty has a
gol d velvet ribbon. The unique opportunity to help the
bridegroom's mother chose a child work throug h conflicts in
cream colored lace and crepe the context of a maternal
dress with gold accents and she relationship. " II is of vital
th at
the
wore a red rose corsage with importance
psychiatric nurse provide the
red velvet ribbons.
A reception honorin g the child with warm, ge nuine incouple was held in the church teractions - both outside and
socuu fV'-1111 . The bride 's table within the realm of traditional
featured a four tiered ca ke nursing ca re . Thus, it is im...._w!th column dividers. The ca ke
"Was decorated in red, green
and gold Hnd topped with a
miniature bride and groom
RACINE - In a double ring waist. The only jewelry she beneath a hea r~sha ped arch.
•
Placed to either side of the
ceremony at the Wesleyan sore was a cameo necklace,
large cake were round layer
United Methodist Church at gift from the groom .
For her wedding the bride cakes decorated with hearts
Racine, Miss Sharon Lynn
Ervin and Rick L. Turner carried a colonial bouquet of and inscribed with the names
white carnations centered with of the bride and groom.
exchanged wedding vows.
A
large
Christmas
The wedding was an event of a red rosebud corsage. She also
arrangement
used
in
the table
2:30p.m., Dec. 23 with the Rev. carried two yellow rose buds,
decorations
was
flanked
by
MASON - The Bend Area
Howard Shiveley officiating. one which she presented to her
five
branch
brass
candelabra
Senior
Citizens met at the
The bride is the daughter of mother on the way to the altar
with
red
tapers.
Registering
Mason
center
for their regular
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ervin, and the other which she
Rt. I, Racine, and the presented to the groom 's the guests were Miss Teresa Thursday meeting. Mrs. Clara
bridegroom is the son of Wayne motner on her way from the Ervin, Racine , and Mi ss Staats, president, announced a
quilt for sale and another quilt
Turner, Waynesfield, and Mrs. altar following the ceremony. Gwynn Minter, Kenton . ·
Serving at the table were was put in the frames for
The bride's attendants were
Ed Yeosting, Massillon.
Mrs.
Joann Minter and Miss quilting.
Music was provided by Mrs. Mrs .
Rhonda
Dailey ,
Lois
Lunch· was served with
Garrett Circle, organist, with Columbus, sister of the bride, groom.Turner, sisters of the prayer
by Maxine Arnold and
her selections including matron of honor, wearing gold
For a wedding trip to Burr plans were made for rug
"Where Do I Begin" from velvet; Miss Beth Luc,
Oak
Lodge, the bride changed making and aprons to be made
"Love Story", and "Hawaiian Fremont, the maid of honor, in
Wedding Song. " Miss Nancy green velvet, and Miss Kristy into a navy and white polyester for sale.
After lunch Rev. and Mrs.
Roush sang "I Love You, Sura, Ketterin g and Miss knit dress with navy accessories
and
wore
the
rosebud
Ira
Wellman, Kananga , who
Truly and " Because". Red Beverly Ervin, sister of the
corsage
from
her
bridal
have
sponsored several trips to
ve lvet bows and greenery bride, bridesmaids in red
bouquet.
the
Holy
Land, came and
decorated the two seven- velvet gowns. The gowns were
The couple resides at 834 showed slides of their travels.
branch candelabra, and red princess style with ecru lace
Thurber
Drive,
West, It was a most enjoyable and
poinsettias were used on each edging down the front seams,
Columbus.
informative program as Rev.
end of the altar railing. The around the neckline and also
The bride is a junior at Ohio Welhnan opened the program
window arrangements were of around the circular sleeve
State
University, College of with prayer and used Bible
red candles and pine, and the ruffles on the long straight
Education,
majoring in interpretation during his
pews were marked with gold sleeves . Each wore a cameo
velvet bows and white poin· pin and earrings, gifts of the mathematics. She is employed showing of the slides.
Mrs. Wellman explained how
se ttias.
bride. Their headpieces were in the library there. Turner is a
student
at
the
Ohio
Institute
of
the
tour was conducted and
Given in marriage by her double velvet bows to match
father, the bride was attired in their dresses with ecru circular Technology, Columbus, and is that another tour is being
an empire waist gown of white illusion veiling. They each employed at United Parcel planned for October. Rev .
Service .
Welhnan is available for in·
velvet with satin and lace carried small nosegays of red
Out-of-town
guests
at
the
formation
at the parsonage at
bodice. It was fashioned with carnations tied with velvet
long sleeves of lace fastened ribbon streamers to match wedding were Mr. and Mrs. Ed 413 Fourth Ave., Kanauga.
Mrs . Pauline Marshall,
Yeosting
and
Donnie,
with pearl buttons . The chapel their gowns.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Gene
coordinator
of the Mason
Massillon;
The flower girls were Miss
length lace train was.attached
Action
Group,
at the waist. The bride wore a Marty Turner and Miss Turner and Jeanie, St. Paris; County
which
Mrs.
Hazel
Minter,
Belle
arranged
the
program
satin and lace juliet cap with a Jeannie Turner and they wore
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Jerry
was
enjoyed
by
all
present.
center;
bridal illusion edged in lace gowns of green velvet trimm"!!
Attending were Hazel Smith,
falling over the shoulders to the with the ecru lace edging. They Van Douseloor, Reynoldsburg ;
Eric L. Grieser, Columbus; Pearl Roush, Frances Stewart,
Marta Steele, John P. Prose, Zelma Hunter, Clara Roush,
Gallipolis;
Mrs.
Philip Bertha Hall, Emma Ryan,
Sheppard, Philo, Wayne Mary Aumiller, Maxine Ar·
Turner, Waynesfield; Mr. and nold, Helen Elias, Katherine
Mrs. Roland Turner and Raynes, Goldie Smith, Wilda
family, Wapakonets; Mr. and Coleman, Clara Staats, Phyllis
Mrs. Donn Minter and family, McCarty, aide, Pauline
Kenton; Miss Lois Turner, Marshall, coordinator, and
Rev. and Mrs. Welhnan.
Massillon; Mr. and Mrs. John
• 2 Pc. Chicken
Buckley, Proctorville ; Mr. and
• Slaw
Mrs. Merrill Geer, Wellston.
• Mashed
Mr. and Mrs. Yoesting and
Potatoes
Mr. and Mrs. Minter planned
&amp; Gravy
and served a buffet dinner at
• Roll
the Legion Hall in Racine
immediately following the
afternoon rehearsal for the
wedding. Members of the
wedding party and their
familles were guests. Tables
were decorated with gold, red,
Visit
and green ta bleclothes and
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. - The
COLPNEl SANDERS' RECIPE
large red candle centerpieces. Executive Committee of the
New Haven First Church of
God
Woman's Missionary
WILL MEET
POMEROY- The Wildwood Society held their quarterly
Garden Club will meet at 7:30 meeting at the church. Delores
p.m. Wednesday at the home of Taylor opened the meeting
with the devotion. Bonnie
Mrs. Karl Grueser.
Fields led in prayer.
The budget for the past year
was reviewed to see what
remained to be paid. The
treasurer, Fay Carpenter,
reported that most items had
been paid.
The hostesses for the new
year were appointed and
tentative plans were set up for
the year. It was decided to
Its smooth, unbroken ceramic cooking
continue with the blessing
su rf ace lets you clean up most soil with th e
cups, flower fund, coupons,
swipe of a damp c loth. Spill-Saver top keeps
subscriptions for MISSIONS,
drlbt.les and boil-overs on the top of the range
prayer partners, parties, for
where they' re easier to wipe up. Hot Surface
patients at Lakin State
Signal Light glows whe n ilny cooking area is too
Hospital, and to order new
hot t_o touch {approx. 1~s· F) ... even after all .
yearbooks.
heall_ng ll nits are turned Off. There's no need for
spec1al cookware so you can probably use the
SEveral money • making
pots and pans you already have. Underneath,
projects were discussed and it
~n Electri ~c lean oven c leans itself automatwas decided to hold a·
Ically. For effortless cleaning and contemporary
demonstration
Thursday,
beauty, put a Frigidaire Ceramatop Range
March
28,
with
Roberta
In your kitchen today.
Maynard serving as the guest
·demonstrator.
1
Plans were made for Guest
Nile to be observed for the
April meeting. .
RCDE3
Roberta Maynard was aj&gt;PDinted to serve as the
Membership Olalrman. Iva
Capehart will assist her.
The meeting adjourned with
prayer led by Iva Capehart.
Those . attending were Fay
Carpenter, Roberta Maynard,
Sue Erwin, Becky Reed, Iva
Capehart, Bonnie Fields,
Sarah Gibbs, Delores Taylor
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
and Orpha Fields.
· white velve t pillow t:.'&lt;lgcd with
lace.
Best man ror the bridegrOom

14

Mr. and Mrs. Rick L. Turner

Racine is wedding scene

Bend area

senzors
have meet

II

SNACK. BOX
SPECIAL
.......... '~

ONLY

99c

the Colonel

perative that the nurse be

eurnfortablc with her role as an
adult so she · ea11 ~rovidc an
"lmnsphere where the child
ran ~a in support, protection,
and strength when his own
resources fail him ," he said.
Members were greeted by
Mabel Lee, th e evenin g's
hostess, who is a reg istered
nurse at Nelsonv ille Children's
Center. Refreshments were
served after the presentation
and discussion.
The purpose of the Ohio
Nurses Association is to encourage discussion of issues
relevant to nursing, as well as

to provide education on
modern nurs in g techniques

Chapter attends meet

"

at the conference was. Mrs.
Phyllis Schlafiy, an authority
on national d~eruie, a noted
author, and a frequent speaker
on national TV programs. Mrs.
Schlafly· stressed the need for
constant vigilance for the
preservation of the United
States of America. Her latest
book, "The Selling of

POMEROY - The Return
·and philos ophies . Previous
Jonathan Meigs Chapter was
District 14 meetings have dealt represented by five of its
with such topics as therapeutic members at the Seventy-fifth
se ttings, new drug techniques, Annual Conference, Ohio
and legal standards for nurses. Society, Daughters of the
Program Director for District American Revolution, at the
14 is Viola Marks, R.N ., Neil House, Columbus, March
Assistant Direc tor of th e 18, 19 and 20.
Mrs. Thereon Johnson , vice
Student Nurse Affiliation
regent,
and a delegate, was America," warns against an
Program at Athens Mental
chairwoman of one of the internal convulsion of a
Health Center.
The Ohio NU)seS Associa tion hostess committees. Mrs. violently destructive type that
Ewing
(Heidi could lead to the loss of that ·
District 14 includes Gallia, Thomas
Meigs, Hockin g, and Athens Milhoan) was one of 23 pages Independence won so painfully
cow1ties. Any registered nurse · selected for the conference. in 1776.
A highlight of the conference
working in a public, priva te, Mrs. Norman DeMent, state
specialized, or general hospital regent, chose Mrs. Ewing as was an address at the DAR
her perso nal page. Others Schools Luncheon by Dr. Inez
. or clinic se tting is eligible for
membership
in
th e attendirig' were Mrs. Edward Henry, Director of the Martha
Foster , registrar; Mrs. Nan Berry Museum at Berry
Association .
Moore and Miss Lucille Smith, College . Sbe entered Berry
School at the age of 13 with a
regent.
Among outstanding speakers DAR scholarship and 40 cents
in her pocket. Sbe has been
associated with the school ever
since and helped it grow from a
Rena Johnson, Delores Taylor,
tiny spot in the hills of Georgia
Pansy Fry, Sue Erwin, Fay
to a fully accredited four-year
Carpenter, Roberta Maynard,
IN HOSPITAL
college with a campus of 30,000
Susie· Smith, Grace CunSYRACUSE Russell acres . She praised the
ningham and Eleanor Davis . Zwilling, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Daughters of the American
Refreslunents were served by
Woodrow Zwilling, Syracuse, is Revolution for their scholar·
the hostesses using the Saint
PatriCk theme . Delores Taylor a patient at the St. Mary's and ships and contributions to
Elizabeth Hospital, Bluegrass schools. Dr. Henry stressed the
won the door prize.
Ave., Louisville, Ky . Mr. and importance of teaching young
Mrs. Zwilling and Mr. and Mrs. people appreciation of past
Randy Adkins went yesterday events that have made
to visit him there.
America great.
~

Woman 's

Missionary

So

ciet y of the New Have n Firs t Church of God
held their March meeting at
the Missionary Building with
Orpha Fields, Lucille Powell
and Iva Capehart serving as
hostes ses . Devotions were

given by Delores Taylor taken
from John 20 :21. Sarah Gibbs
led in prayer. Blessing cups
were turned in and roll call was
answered by naming a
spiritual blessing .
Members were reminded to
bring items to their next
meeting for patients at Lakin
State Hospital.
Anna Johnson , Sarah Gibbs,
Fay Carpenter and Orpha
Fields will serve on the Budget
Committee for the new year.
The nominating committee
presented the ballot for the
election of Group I officers.
Elected were president, Orpha
Fields ; parliamentarian, Sue

Betrothal
announced

ALBANY - Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Haning, Rt. 2,
Albany, are announcing the
engagement of their daughter,
Barbara, to Steven Cotterill,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Cotterill, Harrisonville.
The bride-elect is a student
at Meigs High School. Her
fiance is a 1972 graduate of
Meigs High School and is
Erwin; historian, · Bonnie
employed in the oil field. The
Fields ; stewardship director, wedding is planned for April27.
Becky Reed; finance com:
mittee, Anna Johnson and
Sarah Gibbs; publications,
Rena Johnson and Pansy Fry.
Hostesses for the April meeting
will be Fay Carpenter and
Connie Aeiker.
The program was presented
by Mrs. Fields on the third
study on Brazil intended to
alert women to the Latin
America of today - its
problems, needs, potential,
future, and relationship to the
church; to indicate those areas
of Latin America where the
Church of God is making
notable progress in the expansion of the church, with
special attention to the pioneer
missionary work in Amazonia.
Members assisting with the
program were Becky Reed,
Bonnie Fields and Sarah
Gibbs .
Attending the meeting were
Bonnie Fields, Iva Capehart,
Sarah Gibbs, Lucille Powell,
Orpha Fields, Becky Reed,

CLUB TO MEET
POMEROY - The Bend o'•
the River Garden Club will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday at
the home .of Mrs. Andrew
Cross.

I

...
I 'll

STARTS MONDAY AT 10 AM

.

SINCE Osborne assumed tbe head basketball coaching job at
GAHS, his teams have won 68 games and lost 38. Inside the
SEOAL, his squads have compiled a 48-24 record. During the past
two years, GAHS hlis also won two sectional tournament titles
and one district crown. From !be looks of things, Osborne has
good prospects coming all the way down the line.

+++

FOR A
"

.,

•

•CATALINA
i
•CODDINGTON ·'~_,.~
I

.,

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

"

..

,

.

'
, ...

.
••
""

h~ri~cige house
,

...'

. .---------.....-----------1·"
• I

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Life span of 200
longer than coold be accomplished by curing the three
major killers, vascular lesions,
cancer and heart disease."
Scientists plan to use the
drug to "switch off the human
thermostat" so that body
temperatures may be lowered
to slow the process of growing
old, he said.
E~periments already have
proved that files live much
longer at a lower body temperature, he said.
Now, the drug, which Rosenberg would not name, will be
used to carry the experiments
to mice and rats which, like
humans, are warm-blooded
animals with a temperature
thermostat.
If the experiments prove
success(ul, tests could begin on
humans within 10 years,
Rosenberg said.
Rosenberg, who directs the
project with Dr. Garbor Kemeny, said, "We know from
thermodynamics that the
aging and death processes are
very temperature-dependent.
By slowing down tl.\e aging
rate, you slow down the onset
of agirelated diSeases."
"The. relationship of the
raising and lowering of temperature with Q1e lengthening
and shortening of life of insects
Is sufficiently significant for
tests to be done on much higher
animals·. "

'

. Rosenberg said II was not yet
kriown what, if any, side effects
there would be with the use of
ihe "therrilostat-stopping"
!lrug in humans.
He said if theories were
correct, the drug would not
simply stop a man from dying
wben he reached normal age.
Instead, the entire life process
would be lengthened.
"II would slow down the
actual aging rate," he said.
"There ill no point in decreasing mortality if J)eople ar~ just
going to grow older. We want to
proiong life in the same way
you stretch a rubber bandequally, at all timl!:i."

Heck's Reg. '1.38
Automotive

Automotive

REGENT

CUB PUP TENT

BALL
__GLOVE

$999

$133

" a&amp;((-0 VITA BWE

$899

•. !

Heck's Reg. '2.49

Heck's Reg. 111.99
l:rv~rt,ina Dept.

'I .

· Automotive

'1''

'GOLF BALLS

1 Piece 5 Ft.

Pkg. of Three

Solid Rod

Heck's Reg. •2.49
·sports

Sporting Goods Dept.

9" TWIN PAK .

Heck's Reg. 89'

2 fOR$}00

ROLLER REFILLS

HOT LATHER
DISPENSER

•1999
HECK'S REG. •25.88

HECK'S REG. 13.88
Jewelry Dept.

JEWELRY DEPT.

27 OZ. KLEAR
3714" x 6' White

FLOOR
WAX

On~

e
Housewares
99

HECK'S REG. $1.59

HECK'S REG. 17'
.Housewares

Dept.

Housewares Dept.

oz.

HECK'S REG. 11.38
24 oz.

Gillette 7 oz.
THE DRY LOOK

NOXZ.EMA
SHAVE CREAM

BIG WALLY
WALL CLEANER

Regular or Extra Hold

Reg. • Menthol · Lime

Heck's Reg.
$1.19

Heck's Reg.

88'

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1.46

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Housewares

Cosmetic

Cosmetic

CLAIROL
HERBAL ESSENCE

SHAMPOO
I

7 oz.

8 oz. Reg, or Oi~

PEPSODENT TOOTHPASTE

Heck's Reg. •39.88
Housewares Dept.

HECK'S

RADIO
1

BAB-0
CLEANER

•2644

$1 00Hardware Dept.

MEN's ·SHAVER

•999

$11 99

8

FOR

TOOT-A·

LOOP

Heck's Reg.
114.96
Jewelry Dept.

12'

SUNBEAM

PANASONIC

SCD-1
GE

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DROP
CLOTHS

Heck's Reg. 11.92

HECK'S REG. 11.99

GRANDFATHER
CLOCK

9'

PAN &amp; ROLLER SET
$}00

PAINT BRUSH
SET
$100

11

Hack's Reg. •3.29

91NCH

1" . 2" . 3"

SPINCAST
ROD

$229

$149

Heck's Reg. •2.99

Housewares Dept.

South Bend

WILSON BLUE RIDGE

REGENT BASEBALL

years in future?
EAST LANSING, Mich.
(UP!) - Michigan State
University researchers are
stepping up research on a drug
which tbey say could enable
humans to live as long as 200
years.
The drug might triple man's
life span by cooling things
specifically the human body.
Such long life might cause
problems, the scientists warned. Married couples might
find that much time together
Intolerable. Marathon marriages might also lead to a
population explosion.
But Dr. Barnett Rosenberg,
a professor of biophysics at
Michigan State and coleader of
the research team, told UPI,
"It is time the pubUc became
aware of the implications of
such preUminary studies of
aging.
"Longer life spans are
inevitable. It's coming because.
people want to live long.''
The drug Sj!effiS to work on
such lower forms of life as
rues, Rosenberg said. Next will
come mice. Humans may
follow .
"If our theories are correct,
then we could speculate on a
life span of even 200 years,"
Rosenberg said.
The research team is experi·
mentlng with a drug which
cools . the body temperature
and, at the same time, slows
the basie aging process.
Prellininary tests indicate
. IIIII! of the drug-not a new drug ·
but never previvously used for
.. Ibis purpose-to reduce the
nonnal body temperature from
98.6 to about 86 degrees could
lncl'ease life expectancy.
"Just small changes in
temperatures can produce tremendous.changes in life~
tancy," RQseriberg said. .
"If such- temperature-agmg
relationships hold true for
humans it may be possible
IIIWering the temperature just
a few degr,eM to prolong life by
10me 11 years-&lt;~nd that Is

$100

FOR

LUG
WRENCH

TWENTY YEARS AGO from the files of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallia Times ... Georgia Lee King, sophomore from
Jackson named 1954 Rio Grande College May Day Queen ... Dr.
Charles E. Davis resigns as president of Rio Grande College ...
John A. Epling named administrative assistant at Rio Grande
College ... Miss Anne G. Hill named official hostess for 63rd DAR
opening In Washington ... M. M. Kerr estate valued at $88,830 ...
Mrs.' Dwight C. Wetherholt named winner of scholarship contest
at HolZer Hospital ... Rio Grande's bsskelhaU ace Clarence
(Bevo) Francis named First Team All-Ohio by United Press.

•

,.__.l_

3WAY

+++
TUESDAY'S cage banquet is open to the public. Admission
will be a covered dish. Let's make it a night Coach Osborne and
his Blue Devils will remember for years to come. See you at the
banquet!

Middleport, Ohio

..

'100

Heck's Reg. 49•

----A-ut•o•m-o.tl•v•e•D•e..;p;.t••_ _ _

THAT was five short years ago. The rest is history. Tuesday,
Gallipolis Blue Devil basketball fans will have the privilege of
honoring the school's first Southeastern Ohio League championship team in 15 years. The annual Blue Devils cage banquet
will be held in the GAHSvarsity gym (potluck style ) beginning at
6:30p.m.

+++

'

"Your Thnm MeAn Store"

Heck's Reg. '1.5 9

+++

.·

GREASE ·

3

"THAT'S what it is going to take to rebuild basketball fortunesatGAHS. In closing, Coach Osborne said : 'You can always
have an off-night in shooting from the field. You should never
have an off-night on defense.' "

PLAYTEX
18 HOUR SALE

WRENCH

Frts Cartridge Type Gun

+++

PLAZA

CAP TYPE OIL FILTER

MULTI-PURPOSE

With Applicator

+++

.,

14 OZ. TUBES

.CREAM WAX

"CONTINUED OSBORNE, 'Players must first have a great
desire to win. Secondly, they must be willing to make their best
contributions for the good of the team. Skills are only third on my
list. A young man may be an excellent shooter and hall handler,
but without the first two qualities, he can never be a consistent
winner.' "

SILVER
BRIDGE

WtiiT~%

14 OZ. RALLY

+++

effective overnight - GAHS has been a run and shoot team for
the past 10 years - with little success (53-136) . Osborne has
issured orders to tbe reserve, freshman, eighth, seventh and
Rinky-Dink coaches - defensive fundamentals come first.

OPEN SUNDAY
1 PM TIL 7 PM

SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY, MARCH 24 &amp; 25

''OSBORNE'S coaching philosophy is simple: You have to be
ready mentally and physically to play 32 minutes of hard heads·
up baskethall. You have to be convinced that you are going to
score when you have tbe hall and that you are going to hold the
opponent scoreless when he has it.

THE article continued: ''Osborne's style of play won't be

.

- ··~

~.

+++

The beautiful new look of total
cleanabllltv. The Frltldaire
Ceramatop Range .

BAKER FURNITU,RE

By Hobart Wilson Jr.

1

+++

Executive
committee,..----------....;..,.----....... ..
has meet

•15.99

Gallia

I

"MAYBE not a championship team this year, or even next
year. But after that, watch out .'New head coach Jim Osborne is a
24-year-&lt;~ld prototype of players and coaches he has been
associated with the past six years. (Ray Mears and Eldon Miller,
WIIU!nberg University) .

BOB EVANS DRIVE-IN

$549

!

+++

BAHR CLOTHIERS

The dynamite sight of white at a
price that's quite inviting ...
what more could anyone need!
Match these soft open -air
feelings with every fashion look
you've got and you'll breeze
through Spring with ease. "Joy"
also in navy or shiny black .

I Dateline

THE following article appeared in the Wednesdsy, Nov. 19,
1969 edition of the Daily Tribune: "Southeastern Ohio League
hardwood teams beware ! A 'new era' of basketball is underway
at GAHS.

COMPLETE LINE OF LADIES
SPORTSWEAR

eLORI LYNN

I

BACK in November, 1969, when this year's crop of GAHS
sophomores, juniors and seniors were.sixth, seventh and eighth
graders, a change was about to take ·place in the basketball
program at Gallia Academy High School.

VISIT BAHR CLOTHIERS

•JANTZEN

r-------------------------,

I

I

Society has meet
NEW HAVEN, W. Va.- The

II - The Sunday Tim_"!· Sentinel, Sunday, MarcJl24, 1974

I

~fritd&amp;ldekta.

I

. I

49~

Heck's Reg.
. 7!1

Heck's Reg. 11.24

..
~

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•

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..

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r:ttTit'&lt;l whit{• baskPI.o; uf \\'hi 1L'

and red ca rnation pda ls.

Master Grant Turner wH s lhe

ring bearer and he

ca rri~d

a

Dzst;y"ct 14 nurses meet ,
•

•

f /1

NJ•;I.SONVILLE - District
of the Ohoo Nurses
A~socbliur1 held its Mar~ h
was Ste.vc Dailey, Columbus, meeting Thursday evening at
and the ushers were Gene Nelsonville Children's Center.
Turner, St. Paris ; Ron Turner, Following a brief business
Wapakoneta: and Howard sf'ssion, association . members
and guests heard a presenErvin, Jr .. Racine.
Acolytes were Joel Minter. tation on "The Psychiatric
nephew of the groom, and Nurse as Moth er in a
Herbert Erv in , brother of the Children's Hospital" by
brid e. Rice bags were Kenneth M. Calestro, Director
distributed by the sister of the of the Residen tial Treatment
Program at Ne lsonv ille
bride, Tamara Ervin.
For her daughter's wedding, Children's Center.
~~ Mrs.
Erv in wore a red
Calestro emphasized that the
polyester knit dress with a red nurse in a children's
rose corsage accented with psychiatric faci li ty has a
gol d velvet ribbon. The unique opportunity to help the
bridegroom's mother chose a child work throug h conflicts in
cream colored lace and crepe the context of a maternal
dress with gold accents and she relationship. " II is of vital
th at
the
wore a red rose corsage with importance
psychiatric nurse provide the
red velvet ribbons.
A reception honorin g the child with warm, ge nuine incouple was held in the church teractions - both outside and
socuu fV'-1111 . The bride 's table within the realm of traditional
featured a four tiered ca ke nursing ca re . Thus, it is im...._w!th column dividers. The ca ke
"Was decorated in red, green
and gold Hnd topped with a
miniature bride and groom
RACINE - In a double ring waist. The only jewelry she beneath a hea r~sha ped arch.
•
Placed to either side of the
ceremony at the Wesleyan sore was a cameo necklace,
large cake were round layer
United Methodist Church at gift from the groom .
For her wedding the bride cakes decorated with hearts
Racine, Miss Sharon Lynn
Ervin and Rick L. Turner carried a colonial bouquet of and inscribed with the names
white carnations centered with of the bride and groom.
exchanged wedding vows.
A
large
Christmas
The wedding was an event of a red rosebud corsage. She also
arrangement
used
in
the table
2:30p.m., Dec. 23 with the Rev. carried two yellow rose buds,
decorations
was
flanked
by
MASON - The Bend Area
Howard Shiveley officiating. one which she presented to her
five
branch
brass
candelabra
Senior
Citizens met at the
The bride is the daughter of mother on the way to the altar
with
red
tapers.
Registering
Mason
center
for their regular
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ervin, and the other which she
Rt. I, Racine, and the presented to the groom 's the guests were Miss Teresa Thursday meeting. Mrs. Clara
bridegroom is the son of Wayne motner on her way from the Ervin, Racine , and Mi ss Staats, president, announced a
quilt for sale and another quilt
Turner, Waynesfield, and Mrs. altar following the ceremony. Gwynn Minter, Kenton . ·
Serving at the table were was put in the frames for
The bride's attendants were
Ed Yeosting, Massillon.
Mrs.
Joann Minter and Miss quilting.
Music was provided by Mrs. Mrs .
Rhonda
Dailey ,
Lois
Lunch· was served with
Garrett Circle, organist, with Columbus, sister of the bride, groom.Turner, sisters of the prayer
by Maxine Arnold and
her selections including matron of honor, wearing gold
For a wedding trip to Burr plans were made for rug
"Where Do I Begin" from velvet; Miss Beth Luc,
Oak
Lodge, the bride changed making and aprons to be made
"Love Story", and "Hawaiian Fremont, the maid of honor, in
Wedding Song. " Miss Nancy green velvet, and Miss Kristy into a navy and white polyester for sale.
After lunch Rev. and Mrs.
Roush sang "I Love You, Sura, Ketterin g and Miss knit dress with navy accessories
and
wore
the
rosebud
Ira
Wellman, Kananga , who
Truly and " Because". Red Beverly Ervin, sister of the
corsage
from
her
bridal
have
sponsored several trips to
ve lvet bows and greenery bride, bridesmaids in red
bouquet.
the
Holy
Land, came and
decorated the two seven- velvet gowns. The gowns were
The couple resides at 834 showed slides of their travels.
branch candelabra, and red princess style with ecru lace
Thurber
Drive,
West, It was a most enjoyable and
poinsettias were used on each edging down the front seams,
Columbus.
informative program as Rev.
end of the altar railing. The around the neckline and also
The bride is a junior at Ohio Welhnan opened the program
window arrangements were of around the circular sleeve
State
University, College of with prayer and used Bible
red candles and pine, and the ruffles on the long straight
Education,
majoring in interpretation during his
pews were marked with gold sleeves . Each wore a cameo
velvet bows and white poin· pin and earrings, gifts of the mathematics. She is employed showing of the slides.
Mrs. Wellman explained how
se ttias.
bride. Their headpieces were in the library there. Turner is a
student
at
the
Ohio
Institute
of
the
tour was conducted and
Given in marriage by her double velvet bows to match
father, the bride was attired in their dresses with ecru circular Technology, Columbus, and is that another tour is being
an empire waist gown of white illusion veiling. They each employed at United Parcel planned for October. Rev .
Service .
Welhnan is available for in·
velvet with satin and lace carried small nosegays of red
Out-of-town
guests
at
the
formation
at the parsonage at
bodice. It was fashioned with carnations tied with velvet
long sleeves of lace fastened ribbon streamers to match wedding were Mr. and Mrs. Ed 413 Fourth Ave., Kanauga.
Mrs . Pauline Marshall,
Yeosting
and
Donnie,
with pearl buttons . The chapel their gowns.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Gene
coordinator
of the Mason
Massillon;
The flower girls were Miss
length lace train was.attached
Action
Group,
at the waist. The bride wore a Marty Turner and Miss Turner and Jeanie, St. Paris; County
which
Mrs.
Hazel
Minter,
Belle
arranged
the
program
satin and lace juliet cap with a Jeannie Turner and they wore
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Jerry
was
enjoyed
by
all
present.
center;
bridal illusion edged in lace gowns of green velvet trimm"!!
Attending were Hazel Smith,
falling over the shoulders to the with the ecru lace edging. They Van Douseloor, Reynoldsburg ;
Eric L. Grieser, Columbus; Pearl Roush, Frances Stewart,
Marta Steele, John P. Prose, Zelma Hunter, Clara Roush,
Gallipolis;
Mrs.
Philip Bertha Hall, Emma Ryan,
Sheppard, Philo, Wayne Mary Aumiller, Maxine Ar·
Turner, Waynesfield; Mr. and nold, Helen Elias, Katherine
Mrs. Roland Turner and Raynes, Goldie Smith, Wilda
family, Wapakonets; Mr. and Coleman, Clara Staats, Phyllis
Mrs. Donn Minter and family, McCarty, aide, Pauline
Kenton; Miss Lois Turner, Marshall, coordinator, and
Rev. and Mrs. Welhnan.
Massillon; Mr. and Mrs. John
• 2 Pc. Chicken
Buckley, Proctorville ; Mr. and
• Slaw
Mrs. Merrill Geer, Wellston.
• Mashed
Mr. and Mrs. Yoesting and
Potatoes
Mr. and Mrs. Minter planned
&amp; Gravy
and served a buffet dinner at
• Roll
the Legion Hall in Racine
immediately following the
afternoon rehearsal for the
wedding. Members of the
wedding party and their
familles were guests. Tables
were decorated with gold, red,
Visit
and green ta bleclothes and
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. - The
COLPNEl SANDERS' RECIPE
large red candle centerpieces. Executive Committee of the
New Haven First Church of
God
Woman's Missionary
WILL MEET
POMEROY- The Wildwood Society held their quarterly
Garden Club will meet at 7:30 meeting at the church. Delores
p.m. Wednesday at the home of Taylor opened the meeting
with the devotion. Bonnie
Mrs. Karl Grueser.
Fields led in prayer.
The budget for the past year
was reviewed to see what
remained to be paid. The
treasurer, Fay Carpenter,
reported that most items had
been paid.
The hostesses for the new
year were appointed and
tentative plans were set up for
the year. It was decided to
Its smooth, unbroken ceramic cooking
continue with the blessing
su rf ace lets you clean up most soil with th e
cups, flower fund, coupons,
swipe of a damp c loth. Spill-Saver top keeps
subscriptions for MISSIONS,
drlbt.les and boil-overs on the top of the range
prayer partners, parties, for
where they' re easier to wipe up. Hot Surface
patients at Lakin State
Signal Light glows whe n ilny cooking area is too
Hospital, and to order new
hot t_o touch {approx. 1~s· F) ... even after all .
yearbooks.
heall_ng ll nits are turned Off. There's no need for
spec1al cookware so you can probably use the
SEveral money • making
pots and pans you already have. Underneath,
projects were discussed and it
~n Electri ~c lean oven c leans itself automatwas decided to hold a·
Ically. For effortless cleaning and contemporary
demonstration
Thursday,
beauty, put a Frigidaire Ceramatop Range
March
28,
with
Roberta
In your kitchen today.
Maynard serving as the guest
·demonstrator.
1
Plans were made for Guest
Nile to be observed for the
April meeting. .
RCDE3
Roberta Maynard was aj&gt;PDinted to serve as the
Membership Olalrman. Iva
Capehart will assist her.
The meeting adjourned with
prayer led by Iva Capehart.
Those . attending were Fay
Carpenter, Roberta Maynard,
Sue Erwin, Becky Reed, Iva
Capehart, Bonnie Fields,
Sarah Gibbs, Delores Taylor
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
and Orpha Fields.
· white velve t pillow t:.'&lt;lgcd with
lace.
Best man ror the bridegrOom

14

Mr. and Mrs. Rick L. Turner

Racine is wedding scene

Bend area

senzors
have meet

II

SNACK. BOX
SPECIAL
.......... '~

ONLY

99c

the Colonel

perative that the nurse be

eurnfortablc with her role as an
adult so she · ea11 ~rovidc an
"lmnsphere where the child
ran ~a in support, protection,
and strength when his own
resources fail him ," he said.
Members were greeted by
Mabel Lee, th e evenin g's
hostess, who is a reg istered
nurse at Nelsonv ille Children's
Center. Refreshments were
served after the presentation
and discussion.
The purpose of the Ohio
Nurses Association is to encourage discussion of issues
relevant to nursing, as well as

to provide education on
modern nurs in g techniques

Chapter attends meet

"

at the conference was. Mrs.
Phyllis Schlafiy, an authority
on national d~eruie, a noted
author, and a frequent speaker
on national TV programs. Mrs.
Schlafly· stressed the need for
constant vigilance for the
preservation of the United
States of America. Her latest
book, "The Selling of

POMEROY - The Return
·and philos ophies . Previous
Jonathan Meigs Chapter was
District 14 meetings have dealt represented by five of its
with such topics as therapeutic members at the Seventy-fifth
se ttings, new drug techniques, Annual Conference, Ohio
and legal standards for nurses. Society, Daughters of the
Program Director for District American Revolution, at the
14 is Viola Marks, R.N ., Neil House, Columbus, March
Assistant Direc tor of th e 18, 19 and 20.
Mrs. Thereon Johnson , vice
Student Nurse Affiliation
regent,
and a delegate, was America," warns against an
Program at Athens Mental
chairwoman of one of the internal convulsion of a
Health Center.
The Ohio NU)seS Associa tion hostess committees. Mrs. violently destructive type that
Ewing
(Heidi could lead to the loss of that ·
District 14 includes Gallia, Thomas
Meigs, Hockin g, and Athens Milhoan) was one of 23 pages Independence won so painfully
cow1ties. Any registered nurse · selected for the conference. in 1776.
A highlight of the conference
working in a public, priva te, Mrs. Norman DeMent, state
specialized, or general hospital regent, chose Mrs. Ewing as was an address at the DAR
her perso nal page. Others Schools Luncheon by Dr. Inez
. or clinic se tting is eligible for
membership
in
th e attendirig' were Mrs. Edward Henry, Director of the Martha
Foster , registrar; Mrs. Nan Berry Museum at Berry
Association .
Moore and Miss Lucille Smith, College . Sbe entered Berry
School at the age of 13 with a
regent.
Among outstanding speakers DAR scholarship and 40 cents
in her pocket. Sbe has been
associated with the school ever
since and helped it grow from a
Rena Johnson, Delores Taylor,
tiny spot in the hills of Georgia
Pansy Fry, Sue Erwin, Fay
to a fully accredited four-year
Carpenter, Roberta Maynard,
IN HOSPITAL
college with a campus of 30,000
Susie· Smith, Grace CunSYRACUSE Russell acres . She praised the
ningham and Eleanor Davis . Zwilling, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Daughters of the American
Refreslunents were served by
Woodrow Zwilling, Syracuse, is Revolution for their scholar·
the hostesses using the Saint
PatriCk theme . Delores Taylor a patient at the St. Mary's and ships and contributions to
Elizabeth Hospital, Bluegrass schools. Dr. Henry stressed the
won the door prize.
Ave., Louisville, Ky . Mr. and importance of teaching young
Mrs. Zwilling and Mr. and Mrs. people appreciation of past
Randy Adkins went yesterday events that have made
to visit him there.
America great.
~

Woman 's

Missionary

So

ciet y of the New Have n Firs t Church of God
held their March meeting at
the Missionary Building with
Orpha Fields, Lucille Powell
and Iva Capehart serving as
hostes ses . Devotions were

given by Delores Taylor taken
from John 20 :21. Sarah Gibbs
led in prayer. Blessing cups
were turned in and roll call was
answered by naming a
spiritual blessing .
Members were reminded to
bring items to their next
meeting for patients at Lakin
State Hospital.
Anna Johnson , Sarah Gibbs,
Fay Carpenter and Orpha
Fields will serve on the Budget
Committee for the new year.
The nominating committee
presented the ballot for the
election of Group I officers.
Elected were president, Orpha
Fields ; parliamentarian, Sue

Betrothal
announced

ALBANY - Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Haning, Rt. 2,
Albany, are announcing the
engagement of their daughter,
Barbara, to Steven Cotterill,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Cotterill, Harrisonville.
The bride-elect is a student
at Meigs High School. Her
fiance is a 1972 graduate of
Meigs High School and is
Erwin; historian, · Bonnie
employed in the oil field. The
Fields ; stewardship director, wedding is planned for April27.
Becky Reed; finance com:
mittee, Anna Johnson and
Sarah Gibbs; publications,
Rena Johnson and Pansy Fry.
Hostesses for the April meeting
will be Fay Carpenter and
Connie Aeiker.
The program was presented
by Mrs. Fields on the third
study on Brazil intended to
alert women to the Latin
America of today - its
problems, needs, potential,
future, and relationship to the
church; to indicate those areas
of Latin America where the
Church of God is making
notable progress in the expansion of the church, with
special attention to the pioneer
missionary work in Amazonia.
Members assisting with the
program were Becky Reed,
Bonnie Fields and Sarah
Gibbs .
Attending the meeting were
Bonnie Fields, Iva Capehart,
Sarah Gibbs, Lucille Powell,
Orpha Fields, Becky Reed,

CLUB TO MEET
POMEROY - The Bend o'•
the River Garden Club will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday at
the home .of Mrs. Andrew
Cross.

I

...
I 'll

STARTS MONDAY AT 10 AM

.

SINCE Osborne assumed tbe head basketball coaching job at
GAHS, his teams have won 68 games and lost 38. Inside the
SEOAL, his squads have compiled a 48-24 record. During the past
two years, GAHS hlis also won two sectional tournament titles
and one district crown. From !be looks of things, Osborne has
good prospects coming all the way down the line.

+++

FOR A
"

.,

•

•CATALINA
i
•CODDINGTON ·'~_,.~
I

.,

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

"

..

,

.

'
, ...

.
••
""

h~ri~cige house
,

...'

. .---------.....-----------1·"
• I

•i

··'

Life span of 200
longer than coold be accomplished by curing the three
major killers, vascular lesions,
cancer and heart disease."
Scientists plan to use the
drug to "switch off the human
thermostat" so that body
temperatures may be lowered
to slow the process of growing
old, he said.
E~periments already have
proved that files live much
longer at a lower body temperature, he said.
Now, the drug, which Rosenberg would not name, will be
used to carry the experiments
to mice and rats which, like
humans, are warm-blooded
animals with a temperature
thermostat.
If the experiments prove
success(ul, tests could begin on
humans within 10 years,
Rosenberg said.
Rosenberg, who directs the
project with Dr. Garbor Kemeny, said, "We know from
thermodynamics that the
aging and death processes are
very temperature-dependent.
By slowing down tl.\e aging
rate, you slow down the onset
of agirelated diSeases."
"The. relationship of the
raising and lowering of temperature with Q1e lengthening
and shortening of life of insects
Is sufficiently significant for
tests to be done on much higher
animals·. "

'

. Rosenberg said II was not yet
kriown what, if any, side effects
there would be with the use of
ihe "therrilostat-stopping"
!lrug in humans.
He said if theories were
correct, the drug would not
simply stop a man from dying
wben he reached normal age.
Instead, the entire life process
would be lengthened.
"II would slow down the
actual aging rate," he said.
"There ill no point in decreasing mortality if J)eople ar~ just
going to grow older. We want to
proiong life in the same way
you stretch a rubber bandequally, at all timl!:i."

Heck's Reg. '1.38
Automotive

Automotive

REGENT

CUB PUP TENT

BALL
__GLOVE

$999

$133

" a&amp;((-0 VITA BWE

$899

•. !

Heck's Reg. '2.49

Heck's Reg. 111.99
l:rv~rt,ina Dept.

'I .

· Automotive

'1''

'GOLF BALLS

1 Piece 5 Ft.

Pkg. of Three

Solid Rod

Heck's Reg. •2.49
·sports

Sporting Goods Dept.

9" TWIN PAK .

Heck's Reg. 89'

2 fOR$}00

ROLLER REFILLS

HOT LATHER
DISPENSER

•1999
HECK'S REG. •25.88

HECK'S REG. 13.88
Jewelry Dept.

JEWELRY DEPT.

27 OZ. KLEAR
3714" x 6' White

FLOOR
WAX

On~

e
Housewares
99

HECK'S REG. $1.59

HECK'S REG. 17'
.Housewares

Dept.

Housewares Dept.

oz.

HECK'S REG. 11.38
24 oz.

Gillette 7 oz.
THE DRY LOOK

NOXZ.EMA
SHAVE CREAM

BIG WALLY
WALL CLEANER

Regular or Extra Hold

Reg. • Menthol · Lime

Heck's Reg.
$1.19

Heck's Reg.

88'

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1.46

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$119

Housewares

Cosmetic

Cosmetic

CLAIROL
HERBAL ESSENCE

SHAMPOO
I

7 oz.

8 oz. Reg, or Oi~

PEPSODENT TOOTHPASTE

Heck's Reg. •39.88
Housewares Dept.

HECK'S

RADIO
1

BAB-0
CLEANER

•2644

$1 00Hardware Dept.

MEN's ·SHAVER

•999

$11 99

8

FOR

TOOT-A·

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Heck's Reg.
114.96
Jewelry Dept.

12'

SUNBEAM

PANASONIC

SCD-1
GE

X

DROP
CLOTHS

Heck's Reg. 11.92

HECK'S REG. 11.99

GRANDFATHER
CLOCK

9'

PAN &amp; ROLLER SET
$}00

PAINT BRUSH
SET
$100

11

Hack's Reg. •3.29

91NCH

1" . 2" . 3"

SPINCAST
ROD

$229

$149

Heck's Reg. •2.99

Housewares Dept.

South Bend

WILSON BLUE RIDGE

REGENT BASEBALL

years in future?
EAST LANSING, Mich.
(UP!) - Michigan State
University researchers are
stepping up research on a drug
which tbey say could enable
humans to live as long as 200
years.
The drug might triple man's
life span by cooling things
specifically the human body.
Such long life might cause
problems, the scientists warned. Married couples might
find that much time together
Intolerable. Marathon marriages might also lead to a
population explosion.
But Dr. Barnett Rosenberg,
a professor of biophysics at
Michigan State and coleader of
the research team, told UPI,
"It is time the pubUc became
aware of the implications of
such preUminary studies of
aging.
"Longer life spans are
inevitable. It's coming because.
people want to live long.''
The drug Sj!effiS to work on
such lower forms of life as
rues, Rosenberg said. Next will
come mice. Humans may
follow .
"If our theories are correct,
then we could speculate on a
life span of even 200 years,"
Rosenberg said.
The research team is experi·
mentlng with a drug which
cools . the body temperature
and, at the same time, slows
the basie aging process.
Prellininary tests indicate
. IIIII! of the drug-not a new drug ·
but never previvously used for
.. Ibis purpose-to reduce the
nonnal body temperature from
98.6 to about 86 degrees could
lncl'ease life expectancy.
"Just small changes in
temperatures can produce tremendous.changes in life~
tancy," RQseriberg said. .
"If such- temperature-agmg
relationships hold true for
humans it may be possible
IIIWering the temperature just
a few degr,eM to prolong life by
10me 11 years-&lt;~nd that Is

$100

FOR

LUG
WRENCH

TWENTY YEARS AGO from the files of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Gallia Times ... Georgia Lee King, sophomore from
Jackson named 1954 Rio Grande College May Day Queen ... Dr.
Charles E. Davis resigns as president of Rio Grande College ...
John A. Epling named administrative assistant at Rio Grande
College ... Miss Anne G. Hill named official hostess for 63rd DAR
opening In Washington ... M. M. Kerr estate valued at $88,830 ...
Mrs.' Dwight C. Wetherholt named winner of scholarship contest
at HolZer Hospital ... Rio Grande's bsskelhaU ace Clarence
(Bevo) Francis named First Team All-Ohio by United Press.

•

,.__.l_

3WAY

+++
TUESDAY'S cage banquet is open to the public. Admission
will be a covered dish. Let's make it a night Coach Osborne and
his Blue Devils will remember for years to come. See you at the
banquet!

Middleport, Ohio

..

'100

Heck's Reg. 49•

----A-ut•o•m-o.tl•v•e•D•e..;p;.t••_ _ _

THAT was five short years ago. The rest is history. Tuesday,
Gallipolis Blue Devil basketball fans will have the privilege of
honoring the school's first Southeastern Ohio League championship team in 15 years. The annual Blue Devils cage banquet
will be held in the GAHSvarsity gym (potluck style ) beginning at
6:30p.m.

+++

'

"Your Thnm MeAn Store"

Heck's Reg. '1.5 9

+++

.·

GREASE ·

3

"THAT'S what it is going to take to rebuild basketball fortunesatGAHS. In closing, Coach Osborne said : 'You can always
have an off-night in shooting from the field. You should never
have an off-night on defense.' "

PLAYTEX
18 HOUR SALE

WRENCH

Frts Cartridge Type Gun

+++

PLAZA

CAP TYPE OIL FILTER

MULTI-PURPOSE

With Applicator

+++

.,

14 OZ. TUBES

.CREAM WAX

"CONTINUED OSBORNE, 'Players must first have a great
desire to win. Secondly, they must be willing to make their best
contributions for the good of the team. Skills are only third on my
list. A young man may be an excellent shooter and hall handler,
but without the first two qualities, he can never be a consistent
winner.' "

SILVER
BRIDGE

WtiiT~%

14 OZ. RALLY

+++

effective overnight - GAHS has been a run and shoot team for
the past 10 years - with little success (53-136) . Osborne has
issured orders to tbe reserve, freshman, eighth, seventh and
Rinky-Dink coaches - defensive fundamentals come first.

OPEN SUNDAY
1 PM TIL 7 PM

SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY, MARCH 24 &amp; 25

''OSBORNE'S coaching philosophy is simple: You have to be
ready mentally and physically to play 32 minutes of hard heads·
up baskethall. You have to be convinced that you are going to
score when you have tbe hall and that you are going to hold the
opponent scoreless when he has it.

THE article continued: ''Osborne's style of play won't be

.

- ··~

~.

+++

The beautiful new look of total
cleanabllltv. The Frltldaire
Ceramatop Range .

BAKER FURNITU,RE

By Hobart Wilson Jr.

1

+++

Executive
committee,..----------....;..,.----....... ..
has meet

•15.99

Gallia

I

"MAYBE not a championship team this year, or even next
year. But after that, watch out .'New head coach Jim Osborne is a
24-year-&lt;~ld prototype of players and coaches he has been
associated with the past six years. (Ray Mears and Eldon Miller,
WIIU!nberg University) .

BOB EVANS DRIVE-IN

$549

!

+++

BAHR CLOTHIERS

The dynamite sight of white at a
price that's quite inviting ...
what more could anyone need!
Match these soft open -air
feelings with every fashion look
you've got and you'll breeze
through Spring with ease. "Joy"
also in navy or shiny black .

I Dateline

THE following article appeared in the Wednesdsy, Nov. 19,
1969 edition of the Daily Tribune: "Southeastern Ohio League
hardwood teams beware ! A 'new era' of basketball is underway
at GAHS.

COMPLETE LINE OF LADIES
SPORTSWEAR

eLORI LYNN

I

BACK in November, 1969, when this year's crop of GAHS
sophomores, juniors and seniors were.sixth, seventh and eighth
graders, a change was about to take ·place in the basketball
program at Gallia Academy High School.

VISIT BAHR CLOTHIERS

•JANTZEN

r-------------------------,

I

I

Society has meet
NEW HAVEN, W. Va.- The

II - The Sunday Tim_"!· Sentinel, Sunday, MarcJl24, 1974

I

~fritd&amp;ldekta.

I

. I

49~

Heck's Reg.
. 7!1

Heck's Reg. 11.24

..
~

... '

•

•

1

1

......

~

..

•·

...

�Diplomas
•
commg
Saturday

~~~~.:~s~=~~~=~=:::::::::::~::::::~~~=:::::~::::::::~..::~..::=:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Swedish couple sets record
llORLAENGE. Sweden (UPI) - F.dith, 97, and Ivan

s: Historical Society report:
j

~
w

~

Sandstrom, 99, l~clcbralcd thl•ir 78th wedding anniversary ::~
Friday, a Swedish record for matrimonial bliss.
~

"We quarreled and argued the first couple of years but ~
later on we sort of grew together,'' Ivan said. He will be 100 ~·
011

~~~:~er sailor, Ivan stopped smoking when he was 831·

but confessed he slill likes au occasional schnapps. " No

GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis Business College will
hold its annual graduation
exercise at 7:30p.m. Salurday,
March 30, at lhe Grace United
Methodist Church . The public
is invited.
As a new part of the annual
graduation, recognition is to be
made and an award presented

to a past GBC grad uate for
outstanding accomplishment
in his field . Nominations or
suggestions may be made by
anyone who knows a past GBC
gradua te who has achieved

noteworthy accomplishments
in his field of endeavor.
Business Adm inistration

'x brandy lor me today, bull'll have a glass on my next birth-

I: : ~: :,~: : ,:~:~: : : ,: :,: :~ : :~: : , : : : : :~: ,J
diplomas are to be awa rded to
Edna Aline Allison, Route 3,
Gallipolis: Thomas A. Crisp,
Rt. I, La ngsvi lle ; John Alden
Hudson, 518 Third Avenue.
Gallipolis; Norman Vance
Rey nolds, Maple Street,
Mason, W. Va., and Mary
Louise Thornton. 51 Chill ico the
Road , Gallipolis.
Executive

Secre t a ri al ·

diplomas are to be awarded to
Mrs. Deborah McDaniel Cox.

New plaza store

Route 1, Poin t Pleasan t, and
Linda Kay Jeffers, Route 2,

Crow n City.
Secretarial diplomas are to
be awa rded to Alma Jean
Bartley, Kanauga : Debra Ann
Hunt, Route I, Leon, W. Va.:
Kathryn !son, Route 2, Point
Pleasa nt
Junior Accounting diplomas

are to be awarded to Judith
Ann Rayburn, Mineral, Va.;
Gene ral Office diplomas to
Almeda Kay Abbott, Point
Pleasant; Deborah Lynn
Banks, Vinton ; Sharon Long
Hatfi eld , Point Plea sa nt;
Susan Ellen Schuldt, Patriot,
and Beverly l.ieving Schultz,
Point Pleasant.

Ohio'searly Indians knew about coal
burtal mounds built by Ohio's

COLU MBUS - Prehtstoric
Ohio Indians carved cannel
coal in to ornaments and
figures. A beautiful gorge t, or
neck ornament, made of coal is
displayed at the Oh io

furnished fuel to Indians before

prehistoric Indian ·c ultures.

the white man arrived.
Petroleum also was known

Just one piece mc.~de from
coal, a gorget, was found in

much earlier than it was used.
remains of the Glacia l Kame Neither Indian nor white man
people who lived in nor- found much use for it until
Historical Society's Indian Art thwestern Ohio about 2500 B.C . about a century ago. Then we
Museum located at the Mound The few other coal objects are used it prodigally and now we
Builders State Memorial, from the later Fort Ancient worry about its sca rcity.
culture .around 1000 A.D.
Newark.
An old Frenc h map on
Si tes of prehistoric houses disp lay in the Rutherford
But there is no evidence that
the prehistoric Indians of Ohio and camps yield much char- B. Ha yes State Museum at
ever burned coal, says Dr. coat left from wood fires. But Fremont dated 1755 shows
Ra ymond S. Baby, socie ty apparently no Indian eve r streams, portages, Indian
thought to toss a piece of the tra ils, and few early forts. A
archeologist.
"We find a few pendants and glittering black "stone" onto a cross near the prese nt site of
effigy fig ures - ornaments in fire . Indian huts or caves could Steu ben vi lle is marked
the form of an imals - carved have been much warmer on "Pe tr oleum. " The word
from coal. But on ly a few. The frigi mter nig hts if tlley had meaning " roc k oil " has been in
coa l may have been brought bur e_d coal. Indians smoked use since the 1300s.
from other places, just as Ohio tab ceo in carved stone pipes .
Indians must have kn own of
Indians used copper from Lake A coal pipe mi ghl have oil seeps as they kn ew of coat
Superior, obsidian from revealed the great secret of outcrops. They may ha ve used
Yellowstone, mica from· the coal combustion - as Isaac it as paint base, salve or stuff
Carolinas, and sea shells from Newton's le gendary apple of magic. But Dr. Ba by has no
the Gulf of Mexico. Ohio's falling on his head taug ht him evidence they ever put it to
famous Flint Ridge flint about gravity . But what one useful purposes.
traveled just as far to other never has ha d, he never
Strangely, none of the
misses.
places."
peoples living in the Americas
Many natural outcrops of before Columbus used the
Things made of these imports have been fo und in many coal in Ohio easily could have wheel. But they had it. The

Maya fashioned toy alligators
of ceramic, with four ceramiC
wheels, so the toy could be
pulled along by a string; but a
wheelbarrow, useful despite
the lack of draft animals,
apparen tly never was made.
As our 1974 culture worries
about n~ w sources bf energy,
we can wonder what we may be
overlooking. Perhaps it's the
thermal power of the earth just
beneath our feet, or the rays of

a

REPORTED
POMEROY - January 1974
sales of Series E &amp; H United
States Savings Bonds in Ohio
were $40.9 million. At the eilltof
January, the State attained 9.7
pet. of its 1974 sales goal of
$421.2 million. Theodore T.
Reed , Jr., Meigs County
Volunteer Savings Bonds
Chairman, has reported
January sales of Savings
Bonds in the County were
$38,773. The County achieved
11.5 pet. of its annual sales goal
of $336,960 on January 31.

opening in April
GALLIPOLIS- A new store
opening in mid April in the
Silver Bridge Shopping Plaza
near Gallipolis is the ABC
Kiddie Shop, according to Mr.
Michael Davis, owner.
The new store will specialize
in quality name-brand fashions
. for boys and girls from infancy
to 12 years of age. Davis will be
associated with ABC Kiddie
Shops of America, Inc., which
has 62 franchised stores in 22
states. Five new stores are
scheduled to open this spring.
Started in Billings, Montana
in 1940 with a single store, the
ABC system bases its growth
concept on quality merchandise and personalized
customer service, said Davis.
"We think quality-conscious

attend the first meeting,
Wednesday, March 27 at 7 p.m.
in the large classroom of the
Davis Hall Nursing Dormitory
in Gallipolis. The cost is $110.
Bring two checks to the first
meeting, one for tuition, and
the other for your textbook.
One need not have been
enrolled in any previous
college classes to take this
course. If not been a previous
student at Ohio University,
there is an additional $10
.registration fee.
Those who wish to attend,
call Mrs. Barsotti at the Davis
Hall office. 446-0264, so the
correct number of textbooks
can be ordered in advance of

the first class.

Volunteers helping out
HUNTINGTON - Adult Bevans. Jr .; surveying of
volun leers are the real heart of .property lines, Howard Pyle, ·
Scouting, and at this lime and repairs of sewage treatmany of the Tri..State Area ment plant, Carl Miller of the
Council, Boy Scouts of Huntington Sl&gt;1bee unit.
America, Scouters and friends
Other miscellaneous projects
are lending their talents to help will be done on May 18, which is
ready Camp Arrowhead the annual Work Bee Day.
located near Ona, W. \'a. for its
Some 35 Scout troops have
6-week summer season made firm reservations to date
beginning June 16.
and many others are expected
Dr. Richard McCray , to do so in order to give their
Council Camp Chairman, Scouts a highlight summer
would like to announce the camp experience. The camp is
following people who are prepared to handle some 800
giving direction to their Scout campers during the 6respective projects: painting week period .
at the swimming pool, AI
.Mead; res.hingling of equipment building roof, Dick
Smarr; ·electrical repairs , Director Willis

EXTRA
SPECIAL

platforms,

Charles

Reasonable rules
in schools stand

Cleeland Ray Willis, director
of Willis Funeral Home at
Garfield Ave., and Portsmouth
Road (the old home of The
Church of Christ) is a graduate
of the Cincinnati College of
Mortuary Science and of the
University of Cincinnati
Cooperative Program.
While in school he won
recognition for his restorative
ability. He is married to the
former Wanda Saunders. They
have two children, .Lou Ann, a
student at Galli a Academy.
and Matthew, sixth grader at
Clay Elementary.
Willis completed his· apprenticeship at Miller's Home
for Funerals in Gallipolis. The
Willises bought F. L. Sievers
Funeral Home at Mercerville.
The public is invited to see the
remodeling that has taken ·
place. An open house will he

..

•

:pressure for it that there was a
=:;roonth ago."
==~ A month ago, the Arab oil
~ blockade was going full blast,
. . there was no sign of a let-up in
,..
"' gas station closings and the
: public was aroused about the
: '·energy crisis."
,.,
... Ideas Submitted

.
•

·•
·~
""
::
::;
•
"'
;,:
:
:

is .

~

50 LB.
BAG

The administration of Gov.

John J. Gilligan and leacrers
from both parties submitted
their ideas for making plans to
deal with energy emergencies.
The gove rnor proposed a
special agency with sweeping
powers to step into the private
·sector with emergency regulalions in the event of a fuel cris-

~

·•
w

He gave himself virtual
~ "Czarist" powers for 60 days,
"• and provided the legislative
branch with little input.
Senate President Pro Tempore Theodore M. Gray, R, ,Columbus, taking advantage of
. discontent from legislators in
",; "both parties , came in with a bill
:,:,placing lawmakers in control
;c"bf an emergency agency and

50 LB.
BAG

FRYERS

""WTe
ducin g
4....-..

the

governor's

~~ wers.

.'.•:" Sen. Michael J. Maloney, R; ';l:Incinnatl , proposed an alter..;"Jjative which is now being stud;~l~d. He would htlve the EEC be
"'"merely a planning and inlor:':iilation ga thering body, whose
·
of an energy crisis

(WHOLE)

would trigger a special legistali ve session to deal with II.
Democrats have complained
assigning
the
General
Assembly to deal with an
emergency would be like
sending a turtle to put out a
fire.
"Can't Sit And Walt"
"If there's a gaso line emergency, we can't sit around and
wait for tile legislature to act,"
Lancione .s:aid. "Somebody's
got to do something."
The latest Democratic
proposal calls for the governor
to be able to amend directives
of the EEC and declare
emergencies in specific
counties when the need arises.
It also authorizes the commission to issue rules with the
full force of law for 60 days
unless rescinded by the
governor, and to amend or
suspend state and local
government laws and ordinances.
"I don't think there's any

ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla .
(UP!) -Researchers warned
Friday that a recent discovery
that vinyl chloride may cause
liver cancer a'Pong chemical
workers suggests that other
substances eaten and inhaled
by humans may also produce
cancer.
Drs. E. Cuyler Hammond of
the American Cancer Society
and Irving Selikoff of the
Mount Sinai School of Medicine
in New York said there is an
urgent need to search for
agents which may be causing
cancers that will show up years
from now.
"OUr world is changing and,
especially in the past 40 years,
the environment in which we
live has been altered to an
extraordinary extent," they
said in a paper prepared for a
science writers seminar sponsored by the cancer society.
"The air we breathe contains
gases and particles that never
before entered the human lung.
OUr food has chemicals designed to improve its taste,
freshness, appearance, but
which are strange to our intestines, livers, kidneys, blood.
We touch, inhale, absorb an
ever-Increasing number of
synthetic materials and, in
other circumstances, agents
which may have existed on
ea rth but were never part of
the lnunediate human environ-

_,...-·'

COCOANUT
OR
FRUIT &amp; NUT

GIANT

HEAVY GLASS
ASH TRAYS

GLASSES

ANCHOR HOCKING

OVENWARE

ONLY

DISCOVER
HOW EASY IT IS
TO INSTALL AN

3-D PICTURES

STUFFED
EASTER
BUNNIES
&gt;

WITH LIGHT

•7••

LARGE
•
MILK
CROCKS

most noticeable home improvements you can
make ... and so economical when you do it

yourse lf. Come in and see our large selection of
cei ling tile .
as low as

111h c

per sq .

ft .

=carolina Lumber &amp;,Supply Co.

--

2 312 6th St.
-

I

yolive got lt.
(USE IT.)

Phone 675•1160 Point Pleasant

itemized monthly statement. If you've got it, you've
probably got Master Charge, too. So ... use i

The Cammeraiel
&amp; Sav
Bank

Shopping Plazr•

THALER FORD SALES
417 Second Ave.

74's

Gallipolis, Ohio

ARE HEREI

HLargest Selection Ever"
Complete
Selection
Of

Ford
Trucks I

®®hllmv
THE SOLID liTTLE ECONOMY C.&lt;\11

Torino
'
VOTE DONATION
RACINE , Racine
.~merican Legion Post 602
voted to donate $200 to the
"Gift for the Yanks who Gave"
at a meeting Thursday night.
The program is t~esigned to
provide remembrancer !or
hospitalized veterans. A
chicken dinner w8.s served
following the mee!Jpg.

Court St.
Gallipolis
Silver Bridg"'

..

We'll show you how, ste p by step, to inslall
an Armstro ng Cei ling. It' s one of the easiest and

$10~

.

EPA h eanngs
.
announced

Atmlltong C•iling

EACH

'.

J.···~·~=

©@

REG.
.

j)~-

MlltiiY

1 LB PKG.
REG. $rs

14% OZ. BOX

way the Senate will buy that," 1 requeol, names will be disclosed. !.ellen sboald be Ia lood
1
said Maloney, "but I would like
to See if we can get some kind I, taste, addreas.lng Issues, not pentoaalltles.
of compromise."
Democrats Adamant
Democrats seem adamant
POMEROY - Dr. John J. week, beginning at 10;05 each worked full time.
Following a nwnber of years
about their plan to give the
light, president of the Hocking morning.
I Technical
governor and the commission I
in
the Navy and working In the
A resident of Logan, Dr.
College at Nelson1 ville, will delivery the keynote Light began his college construction Industry, Dr .
some authority to act in emer- 1
gencies, but they also are will- Blood banking explained
address at 10:115 a.m. Monday training at the age of 29. He Light became a vocational and
March
21,1974
ing to talk.
at Melgs High School when the received his bachelor of adult education teacher in the
Eu. Note: The following information is in explanation of an sixth annual Vocational science degree and his master New Philadelphia schoola in
"We're going to sit down and
see if we can work something article which appeared in the Daily Tribune and Daily Sentinel Conference Week gets un- of arL• degree from Kent State 1965. In 1966, he became intern
out," said Rep. Thomas J . Car- last week titled "Your hospital reports ... BLOOD BANKING." It derway.
University earning his PH. D. dorector at the Chandler
is
to
further
inform
the
publiC
as
to
the
need
of
the
volunteer
ney, D-Youngstown, carrier of
The conference, which will at Ohio State in 1973. All three Technical School at Willoughby
the administra lion proposal donor, according to Joyce Snider of the TriState Red Cross Blood feature
speakers
from of his college degrees were and was named director of the
"We are not going to pick up all Center.
numerous professions and earned at night and during the Hocking Valley Technical
our marbles and go home."
trades will extend through the summer while Dr . Light College in 1967. He became vice
Dear
Sirs:
president in 1969 and president
But It will be after the May
The TriState Red Cross Blood Center ,located in Huntington,
in 1971.
primary before anything is
He has received the natiooal
W. Va ., furnishes the blood needs for 34 chapters or counties
done.
located
in
parts
of
West
Virginia,
Ohio,
and
Kentucky
tlu'ough
the
scholarship
award fr&lt;m Iota
" I don't foresee any energy
ho;pitals
in
these
areas.
The
blood
used
by
patient~~
in
these
Lambda Sigma , industrial
crisis in the next three or four
education
fraternity and was
months," Maloney said. "I hospitals is approximately 200 pints daily. The Bloodmobile unit
COLUMBUS - The Ohio Street, Ironton , Ohio, at 10 co-founder and past president
think we ought to take our time is sept to these 34 counties on a regular basis each month to
Environmental Protection a.m., April 23, in Ironton City of the Ohio Organization of
provide the blood needs of each community.
and do the job right."
Hall, Council Chambers, 4th
This continuous blood collection process enables the Red Agency (Ohio EPS) announced and Railroad. The purpose of Technical Colleges. Currently,
By then, the pressure for a
Cross to provide blood needed in your community. When you give Friday it has scheduled a the meeting is to consider Dr . Light is the only adbill may be completely off.
a blood donation to Red Cross it may be sent to a hospital in any public meeting on the air evidence, written or oral, from ministrator of a two year
of the 34 counties and when blood is needed it may come from a pollution application for any person, on compliance college acting as a member of
donor in some distant county. This is possible because the Red Ironton Coke, 3312 South Third schedules of the company.
the Ohio Citizens Task Force
Cross is a licensed agent enabling them to transport blood to
on
Higher Education and is a
As required by state
other areas and across state lines.
member
of the governor's
regulations, this company's
Hospital blood banks, although accredited, do not have this available at modest cost - a request for an air pollution Vocational - Technical Inlicense to transport blood interstate. The license requires blood fraction of commercial food variance has been ac- formation Program's Informal
. be collected, processed and distributed through Red Cross and lodging prices - during companied by a schedule of advisory group.
procedures and by Red Cross staff.
popular vacation and holi,day compliance , indicating in
Therefore, when the Red Cross furnishes blood to patients in · periods, and in many In - detail what steps will be taken
Hammond and Selikoff
ON COMMITI'EE
pointed out that it is believed 85 your local hospital the Red Cross asks that persons replace the stances, the year round.
to achieve compliance with
COLUMBUS- Slate Senator
per cent of all ca ncer is derived blood supply through the Bloodmobile visits, because if b.)ood is
The rates for Rio Grande regulations. In&lt;lividuals unable
from environmental sourees. replaced at the hospital it cannot be credited to Red Cross. Blood College are listed as $3.50 per to attend the meeting may Harry L. Armstrong (R-17th
They said new agents are being replaced provides Red Cross the capability of furnlshing person per day, plus $1 for submit written testimony to the District) has been appointed to
rapidly being spread among the blood needs for your community through a continuous circle linens, and the available dates Hearing Clerk, Ohio EPA, 361 the Advisory Committee lor
Midwestern
Entens of millions of people of donating, processing and dispersing to those in need.
are June 1 through AugUBI 11. E . Broad St ., Box 1049, . th e
Many do not realize that the Red Cross provides sizeable Advance reservations are Columbus, Ohio 43216 until the vironmental
Protection
without pretesting to see if they
cause cancer or other diseases. amounts of blood to their hospitals. In most areas over 70 pet. of required.
Conference.
date of the meeting.
"A useful chemical or an blood needed comes from volunteer donors through the Red
efficient plastic soon per- Cross. Some hospitals are totally supplied by the Red Cross to
meates a nation, or large part meet the needs of their patients. In Gallia County alone, over n
of the world. There is literally pet. of the blood IISed by Holzer Hospital is furnished by Red
no place to hide."
Cross.
The vinyl chloride problem
In addition to this, sometimes Red Cross donors are sent
to.Holzer when an emergency may arise. Also Red Crosa
directly
surfaced in January when
officials of the B.F . Goodrich blood is sent to hospitals outside the area for Gallla County
Co. in Louisville, Ky., reported residents being hospitalized elsewhere.
two fatalllver cancers among
The Red Cross Blood Program could not exist if it were not
workers at the company 'a vinyl for volunteer donors. For this reason we ask you to respond !Vhen
chloride plant. Five more the Bloodmobile unit is in yoW' area. Continue to help in the
cases were found at the plant saving of lives by your blood donations.
and since then other cases have
been found among vinyl work- Open Letter to the Establ~lrment
ers in New York, Texas and
Qren letter to Gallipolis City Commissioners, Oty Manager,
West Virginia.
That type of cancer had been ' City Police, parents and dealers involved :
We the people who live in the vicinity of 5th Ave. and Spruce
rare and Hammond and Sellkoff said it was only because of St. would like to invite you over most any evening after school to
its rarlty that the vinyl chloride listen with us to the mini and motor bike problems which we have
link was found. An Ametican to put up with in our area. I am sure some of the language we
Cancer Society research hear was never taught these youngsters in school or church.
If you cannot come now, perhaps when school is out you will
project is now trying to
find
time as it will be going on seven days a week from dayllght
detennine If workers in factories which manufactW'e vinyl until long after dark.
I wonder how a person working the afternoon midnight shift
plastics are endangered, or if
is
expected
to get any rest? Some do work this shift.
consumer products containing
How
long
would any of you folks put up with this U you had to
traces of vinyl chloride are
hear this loud irritating noise seven days a week. Not for long, I
hazardous.
assure you.
I have waited over slx months for a solution to this problem
and I know others have complained about It the past-week.
Master Charge, the card used to help manage your
Are we forgotten folks' How about some results, gentlemen?
Frank Hill.
money and keep track of -purchases with one

is advising veterans not to
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande describes 145 vacation and
allow loss of a birth certificate College this year is listed in a travel bargains on college
or marriage license to deter new publication entitled campuses. The guide describes
them from applying for "Mort's New and Original the facilities of m colleges In
benefits.
Guide to Low-Cost Vacations the United States and Canada
L. M. Merritt, director of the and Lodgings on College which, in the past, have been
VA Regional Office in Campuses." This book boasts enjoyed mostly by students,
--::; &gt;&lt;j Cleveland, cited a regulation in
that you can still vacation in but are now open to travelers.
effect since October 1971 under America on $5 a day, and it
College facilities
are
which less formal proof of
marriage and birth are acceptable in establishing claims
for higher benefits.
A veteran's or widow 's
certified
statement
of
marriage is sufficient on applications for compensation
and education benefits for
veterans, widows , and or~
phaned children , provided
neither he nor his wife has been
IT'S LIKI! NOBODY ELSE'S CAR
married before , and VA has no
contradictory information on
file, the director explained.
It was noted that a certified
statement now is acceptable
regarding birth of a child, of a
veteran's marriage, and as
proof of age and relationship in
disability cases. Before the
regulation change , Merritt
pointed out, VA required all
Courteous Salesmen
statements of marriages and
births to be supported by
To Assist You
formaliz ed documentary
evidence.
Certified statements also are
sufficient in death cases where
a claimant's statements
corroborate those of a veteran
in connection with a claim for
any VA benefit, the director
..
added.

EASTER EGGS

Cheese
Pizza

Dr. Light will keynote
IMeigs' vocational week

Loopholes
available
New guide lists college
to veterans
The Veterans Administration for low-cost vacations

ment."

~---..... __

JENO

I-----~--------------------,
Letteq of opilllon are welcomed. They llht•lld he 1I
I !ban :soo ,.ordsloag (or be subject to redacuoa by the I
editor) 811f1 must be signed wllb lbe alpet'a addreu.
(
1 N~ may be wllbbtld upoa pabllcaUoa. However, 011 1

Search widens for
causes of cancer

(l' . .. .

•'

·,

any Ohio emergency energy
low at all.
The two parties are enough'
at odds over what form a bill
. sho uld take that by tile time
they get things ironed out they
' may discover there is no need
for one.
" I don't think there's any
need for one now ," said House
' Majority Leader Barney Quilter, D-Toledo, last week as
Democrats tried ;utd failed to
increase the governor,s powers
under tile legislation being
studied in a joint Senate-House
energy committee.
· .. "A tot ~f people see that
Congress hasn't done anything
about the energy problem,"
agreed House Speaker A. G.
Lancione, D-Bellaire . "They
say why should we do

COUPLE ELECfED
REEDSVILLE - James and
Ethel Connor, Reedsville, has
been elected to membership in
the
American
Angus
Association at St. Joseph,
Missouri.

LISH

"©

CERTIFIED
KENNEBEC
SEED
POTATOES

is coUege grad

COLUMBUS (UPI )..-Lowering of the age of
majority to 18 will not affect
school rules establlshed by
boards of education, according
to Martin Essex, superintendent of public instruction.
Essex made the comment in
response to inquiries from
school officials across the
state. He said local school
districts have a statutory duty
to formulate reasonable rules
to govern pupils and students
have the responsibility to
follow these rules . "The courts
have traditionally held that
rules of the boards of education
will be sustained as long as
they are reasonable and not
arbilfary or capricous," Essex
sald.
announced.

...

Ohio politics

NO QNE HURT
GALLIPOLIS - No one was
cited or injured in a minor two
vehicle accident at 12:50 p.m.
Friday on Court St. and Third
Ave. According to city police
officers, a truck driven by
O'Dell M. Whittaker, Rt. 2,
Patriot, struck a 1J3rked car
owned by Donald Taylor of Rt.
2, Crown City.

U. S. NO. 1 TAGGED

Dave Conway; construction of

tent

Recent squabbling in Columbus between Republicans and
Democrats over the powers of
a proposed Energy Emergency
· · C'A&gt;mmission (EEC) can be
·-interpreted to mean there will
' be no emergency energy law
' enacted by the time the leg isla. · tors take a spring recess ea rly
· next month. ·
In fact, there might not be

the sun, long known to be a
great energy source, but never
harnessed.
Future
archeologists may some day look
back on our society and scratch
their heads over why we waited
so long to make these "obvious" discoveries that today
remain unimaginable.

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER • MIDDLEPORT

mothers in the Gallipolis area
will be very pleased with the
special service and £ine
children's wear that we will
have in our store. That's one
big reason why we decided to
open an ABC shop," Davis
said.
Davis was associated with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dean
Davis of Gallipolis, in the
operation of the Davis..Shuler
Co. 10 years until the sale of the
business in April of 1970. Since
that time Davis has been
employed by Matthews and
Edelbtute Gulf Oil Distributors
in Pt. Pleasant. Davis will be
joined in the operation of the
new store by his wife, Elva,
and daughter, Robin.

course in psychology

I

SAL~Ql

By United Press International

::anything? There 1 S no t the

Nursing school offers
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Medical Center's School of
Nursing is offering a course in
social psychology to all people
who wish to enroll from this
community, March 27 to June
7, through the Psychology
Department of Ohio University.
Social psychology describes
the behaviour of man as influenced by his association in a
group. It emphasizes the in. dividual's interaction as the
basis for change of his motives,
attitudes and personality. The
course will be taught by Dr.
Jack Arbuthnot, Assistant
Professor of Psychology at
Ohio University.
If in teres ted in enrolling,

•
..E nergy Iaw.·' C.h ances
. dlffi I
1:1 - The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, March 24, 1974

12 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, M·a rrh 24, 1974

Large Selection
Of Big Fords
and Mercurys

In StoCk!

-Montego
,. • ..·

-

.

�Diplomas
•
commg
Saturday

~~~~.:~s~=~~~=~=:::::::::::~::::::~~~=:::::~::::::::~..::~..::=:=:=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Swedish couple sets record
llORLAENGE. Sweden (UPI) - F.dith, 97, and Ivan

s: Historical Society report:
j

~
w

~

Sandstrom, 99, l~clcbralcd thl•ir 78th wedding anniversary ::~
Friday, a Swedish record for matrimonial bliss.
~

"We quarreled and argued the first couple of years but ~
later on we sort of grew together,'' Ivan said. He will be 100 ~·
011

~~~:~er sailor, Ivan stopped smoking when he was 831·

but confessed he slill likes au occasional schnapps. " No

GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis Business College will
hold its annual graduation
exercise at 7:30p.m. Salurday,
March 30, at lhe Grace United
Methodist Church . The public
is invited.
As a new part of the annual
graduation, recognition is to be
made and an award presented

to a past GBC grad uate for
outstanding accomplishment
in his field . Nominations or
suggestions may be made by
anyone who knows a past GBC
gradua te who has achieved

noteworthy accomplishments
in his field of endeavor.
Business Adm inistration

'x brandy lor me today, bull'll have a glass on my next birth-

I: : ~: :,~: : ,:~:~: : : ,: :,: :~ : :~: : , : : : : :~: ,J
diplomas are to be awa rded to
Edna Aline Allison, Route 3,
Gallipolis: Thomas A. Crisp,
Rt. I, La ngsvi lle ; John Alden
Hudson, 518 Third Avenue.
Gallipolis; Norman Vance
Rey nolds, Maple Street,
Mason, W. Va., and Mary
Louise Thornton. 51 Chill ico the
Road , Gallipolis.
Executive

Secre t a ri al ·

diplomas are to be awarded to
Mrs. Deborah McDaniel Cox.

New plaza store

Route 1, Poin t Pleasan t, and
Linda Kay Jeffers, Route 2,

Crow n City.
Secretarial diplomas are to
be awa rded to Alma Jean
Bartley, Kanauga : Debra Ann
Hunt, Route I, Leon, W. Va.:
Kathryn !son, Route 2, Point
Pleasa nt
Junior Accounting diplomas

are to be awarded to Judith
Ann Rayburn, Mineral, Va.;
Gene ral Office diplomas to
Almeda Kay Abbott, Point
Pleasant; Deborah Lynn
Banks, Vinton ; Sharon Long
Hatfi eld , Point Plea sa nt;
Susan Ellen Schuldt, Patriot,
and Beverly l.ieving Schultz,
Point Pleasant.

Ohio'searly Indians knew about coal
burtal mounds built by Ohio's

COLU MBUS - Prehtstoric
Ohio Indians carved cannel
coal in to ornaments and
figures. A beautiful gorge t, or
neck ornament, made of coal is
displayed at the Oh io

furnished fuel to Indians before

prehistoric Indian ·c ultures.

the white man arrived.
Petroleum also was known

Just one piece mc.~de from
coal, a gorget, was found in

much earlier than it was used.
remains of the Glacia l Kame Neither Indian nor white man
people who lived in nor- found much use for it until
Historical Society's Indian Art thwestern Ohio about 2500 B.C . about a century ago. Then we
Museum located at the Mound The few other coal objects are used it prodigally and now we
Builders State Memorial, from the later Fort Ancient worry about its sca rcity.
culture .around 1000 A.D.
Newark.
An old Frenc h map on
Si tes of prehistoric houses disp lay in the Rutherford
But there is no evidence that
the prehistoric Indians of Ohio and camps yield much char- B. Ha yes State Museum at
ever burned coal, says Dr. coat left from wood fires. But Fremont dated 1755 shows
Ra ymond S. Baby, socie ty apparently no Indian eve r streams, portages, Indian
thought to toss a piece of the tra ils, and few early forts. A
archeologist.
"We find a few pendants and glittering black "stone" onto a cross near the prese nt site of
effigy fig ures - ornaments in fire . Indian huts or caves could Steu ben vi lle is marked
the form of an imals - carved have been much warmer on "Pe tr oleum. " The word
from coal. But on ly a few. The frigi mter nig hts if tlley had meaning " roc k oil " has been in
coa l may have been brought bur e_d coal. Indians smoked use since the 1300s.
from other places, just as Ohio tab ceo in carved stone pipes .
Indians must have kn own of
Indians used copper from Lake A coal pipe mi ghl have oil seeps as they kn ew of coat
Superior, obsidian from revealed the great secret of outcrops. They may ha ve used
Yellowstone, mica from· the coal combustion - as Isaac it as paint base, salve or stuff
Carolinas, and sea shells from Newton's le gendary apple of magic. But Dr. Ba by has no
the Gulf of Mexico. Ohio's falling on his head taug ht him evidence they ever put it to
famous Flint Ridge flint about gravity . But what one useful purposes.
traveled just as far to other never has ha d, he never
Strangely, none of the
misses.
places."
peoples living in the Americas
Many natural outcrops of before Columbus used the
Things made of these imports have been fo und in many coal in Ohio easily could have wheel. But they had it. The

Maya fashioned toy alligators
of ceramic, with four ceramiC
wheels, so the toy could be
pulled along by a string; but a
wheelbarrow, useful despite
the lack of draft animals,
apparen tly never was made.
As our 1974 culture worries
about n~ w sources bf energy,
we can wonder what we may be
overlooking. Perhaps it's the
thermal power of the earth just
beneath our feet, or the rays of

a

REPORTED
POMEROY - January 1974
sales of Series E &amp; H United
States Savings Bonds in Ohio
were $40.9 million. At the eilltof
January, the State attained 9.7
pet. of its 1974 sales goal of
$421.2 million. Theodore T.
Reed , Jr., Meigs County
Volunteer Savings Bonds
Chairman, has reported
January sales of Savings
Bonds in the County were
$38,773. The County achieved
11.5 pet. of its annual sales goal
of $336,960 on January 31.

opening in April
GALLIPOLIS- A new store
opening in mid April in the
Silver Bridge Shopping Plaza
near Gallipolis is the ABC
Kiddie Shop, according to Mr.
Michael Davis, owner.
The new store will specialize
in quality name-brand fashions
. for boys and girls from infancy
to 12 years of age. Davis will be
associated with ABC Kiddie
Shops of America, Inc., which
has 62 franchised stores in 22
states. Five new stores are
scheduled to open this spring.
Started in Billings, Montana
in 1940 with a single store, the
ABC system bases its growth
concept on quality merchandise and personalized
customer service, said Davis.
"We think quality-conscious

attend the first meeting,
Wednesday, March 27 at 7 p.m.
in the large classroom of the
Davis Hall Nursing Dormitory
in Gallipolis. The cost is $110.
Bring two checks to the first
meeting, one for tuition, and
the other for your textbook.
One need not have been
enrolled in any previous
college classes to take this
course. If not been a previous
student at Ohio University,
there is an additional $10
.registration fee.
Those who wish to attend,
call Mrs. Barsotti at the Davis
Hall office. 446-0264, so the
correct number of textbooks
can be ordered in advance of

the first class.

Volunteers helping out
HUNTINGTON - Adult Bevans. Jr .; surveying of
volun leers are the real heart of .property lines, Howard Pyle, ·
Scouting, and at this lime and repairs of sewage treatmany of the Tri..State Area ment plant, Carl Miller of the
Council, Boy Scouts of Huntington Sl&gt;1bee unit.
America, Scouters and friends
Other miscellaneous projects
are lending their talents to help will be done on May 18, which is
ready Camp Arrowhead the annual Work Bee Day.
located near Ona, W. \'a. for its
Some 35 Scout troops have
6-week summer season made firm reservations to date
beginning June 16.
and many others are expected
Dr. Richard McCray , to do so in order to give their
Council Camp Chairman, Scouts a highlight summer
would like to announce the camp experience. The camp is
following people who are prepared to handle some 800
giving direction to their Scout campers during the 6respective projects: painting week period .
at the swimming pool, AI
.Mead; res.hingling of equipment building roof, Dick
Smarr; ·electrical repairs , Director Willis

EXTRA
SPECIAL

platforms,

Charles

Reasonable rules
in schools stand

Cleeland Ray Willis, director
of Willis Funeral Home at
Garfield Ave., and Portsmouth
Road (the old home of The
Church of Christ) is a graduate
of the Cincinnati College of
Mortuary Science and of the
University of Cincinnati
Cooperative Program.
While in school he won
recognition for his restorative
ability. He is married to the
former Wanda Saunders. They
have two children, .Lou Ann, a
student at Galli a Academy.
and Matthew, sixth grader at
Clay Elementary.
Willis completed his· apprenticeship at Miller's Home
for Funerals in Gallipolis. The
Willises bought F. L. Sievers
Funeral Home at Mercerville.
The public is invited to see the
remodeling that has taken ·
place. An open house will he

..

•

:pressure for it that there was a
=:;roonth ago."
==~ A month ago, the Arab oil
~ blockade was going full blast,
. . there was no sign of a let-up in
,..
"' gas station closings and the
: public was aroused about the
: '·energy crisis."
,.,
... Ideas Submitted

.
•

·•
·~
""
::
::;
•
"'
;,:
:
:

is .

~

50 LB.
BAG

The administration of Gov.

John J. Gilligan and leacrers
from both parties submitted
their ideas for making plans to
deal with energy emergencies.
The gove rnor proposed a
special agency with sweeping
powers to step into the private
·sector with emergency regulalions in the event of a fuel cris-

~

·•
w

He gave himself virtual
~ "Czarist" powers for 60 days,
"• and provided the legislative
branch with little input.
Senate President Pro Tempore Theodore M. Gray, R, ,Columbus, taking advantage of
. discontent from legislators in
",; "both parties , came in with a bill
:,:,placing lawmakers in control
;c"bf an emergency agency and

50 LB.
BAG

FRYERS

""WTe
ducin g
4....-..

the

governor's

~~ wers.

.'.•:" Sen. Michael J. Maloney, R; ';l:Incinnatl , proposed an alter..;"Jjative which is now being stud;~l~d. He would htlve the EEC be
"'"merely a planning and inlor:':iilation ga thering body, whose
·
of an energy crisis

(WHOLE)

would trigger a special legistali ve session to deal with II.
Democrats have complained
assigning
the
General
Assembly to deal with an
emergency would be like
sending a turtle to put out a
fire.
"Can't Sit And Walt"
"If there's a gaso line emergency, we can't sit around and
wait for tile legislature to act,"
Lancione .s:aid. "Somebody's
got to do something."
The latest Democratic
proposal calls for the governor
to be able to amend directives
of the EEC and declare
emergencies in specific
counties when the need arises.
It also authorizes the commission to issue rules with the
full force of law for 60 days
unless rescinded by the
governor, and to amend or
suspend state and local
government laws and ordinances.
"I don't think there's any

ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla .
(UP!) -Researchers warned
Friday that a recent discovery
that vinyl chloride may cause
liver cancer a'Pong chemical
workers suggests that other
substances eaten and inhaled
by humans may also produce
cancer.
Drs. E. Cuyler Hammond of
the American Cancer Society
and Irving Selikoff of the
Mount Sinai School of Medicine
in New York said there is an
urgent need to search for
agents which may be causing
cancers that will show up years
from now.
"OUr world is changing and,
especially in the past 40 years,
the environment in which we
live has been altered to an
extraordinary extent," they
said in a paper prepared for a
science writers seminar sponsored by the cancer society.
"The air we breathe contains
gases and particles that never
before entered the human lung.
OUr food has chemicals designed to improve its taste,
freshness, appearance, but
which are strange to our intestines, livers, kidneys, blood.
We touch, inhale, absorb an
ever-Increasing number of
synthetic materials and, in
other circumstances, agents
which may have existed on
ea rth but were never part of
the lnunediate human environ-

_,...-·'

COCOANUT
OR
FRUIT &amp; NUT

GIANT

HEAVY GLASS
ASH TRAYS

GLASSES

ANCHOR HOCKING

OVENWARE

ONLY

DISCOVER
HOW EASY IT IS
TO INSTALL AN

3-D PICTURES

STUFFED
EASTER
BUNNIES
&gt;

WITH LIGHT

•7••

LARGE
•
MILK
CROCKS

most noticeable home improvements you can
make ... and so economical when you do it

yourse lf. Come in and see our large selection of
cei ling tile .
as low as

111h c

per sq .

ft .

=carolina Lumber &amp;,Supply Co.

--

2 312 6th St.
-

I

yolive got lt.
(USE IT.)

Phone 675•1160 Point Pleasant

itemized monthly statement. If you've got it, you've
probably got Master Charge, too. So ... use i

The Cammeraiel
&amp; Sav
Bank

Shopping Plazr•

THALER FORD SALES
417 Second Ave.

74's

Gallipolis, Ohio

ARE HEREI

HLargest Selection Ever"
Complete
Selection
Of

Ford
Trucks I

®®hllmv
THE SOLID liTTLE ECONOMY C.&lt;\11

Torino
'
VOTE DONATION
RACINE , Racine
.~merican Legion Post 602
voted to donate $200 to the
"Gift for the Yanks who Gave"
at a meeting Thursday night.
The program is t~esigned to
provide remembrancer !or
hospitalized veterans. A
chicken dinner w8.s served
following the mee!Jpg.

Court St.
Gallipolis
Silver Bridg"'

..

We'll show you how, ste p by step, to inslall
an Armstro ng Cei ling. It' s one of the easiest and

$10~

.

EPA h eanngs
.
announced

Atmlltong C•iling

EACH

'.

J.···~·~=

©@

REG.
.

j)~-

MlltiiY

1 LB PKG.
REG. $rs

14% OZ. BOX

way the Senate will buy that," 1 requeol, names will be disclosed. !.ellen sboald be Ia lood
1
said Maloney, "but I would like
to See if we can get some kind I, taste, addreas.lng Issues, not pentoaalltles.
of compromise."
Democrats Adamant
Democrats seem adamant
POMEROY - Dr. John J. week, beginning at 10;05 each worked full time.
Following a nwnber of years
about their plan to give the
light, president of the Hocking morning.
I Technical
governor and the commission I
in
the Navy and working In the
A resident of Logan, Dr.
College at Nelson1 ville, will delivery the keynote Light began his college construction Industry, Dr .
some authority to act in emer- 1
gencies, but they also are will- Blood banking explained
address at 10:115 a.m. Monday training at the age of 29. He Light became a vocational and
March
21,1974
ing to talk.
at Melgs High School when the received his bachelor of adult education teacher in the
Eu. Note: The following information is in explanation of an sixth annual Vocational science degree and his master New Philadelphia schoola in
"We're going to sit down and
see if we can work something article which appeared in the Daily Tribune and Daily Sentinel Conference Week gets un- of arL• degree from Kent State 1965. In 1966, he became intern
out," said Rep. Thomas J . Car- last week titled "Your hospital reports ... BLOOD BANKING." It derway.
University earning his PH. D. dorector at the Chandler
is
to
further
inform
the
publiC
as
to
the
need
of
the
volunteer
ney, D-Youngstown, carrier of
The conference, which will at Ohio State in 1973. All three Technical School at Willoughby
the administra lion proposal donor, according to Joyce Snider of the TriState Red Cross Blood feature
speakers
from of his college degrees were and was named director of the
"We are not going to pick up all Center.
numerous professions and earned at night and during the Hocking Valley Technical
our marbles and go home."
trades will extend through the summer while Dr . Light College in 1967. He became vice
Dear
Sirs:
president in 1969 and president
But It will be after the May
The TriState Red Cross Blood Center ,located in Huntington,
in 1971.
primary before anything is
He has received the natiooal
W. Va ., furnishes the blood needs for 34 chapters or counties
done.
located
in
parts
of
West
Virginia,
Ohio,
and
Kentucky
tlu'ough
the
scholarship
award fr&lt;m Iota
" I don't foresee any energy
ho;pitals
in
these
areas.
The
blood
used
by
patient~~
in
these
Lambda Sigma , industrial
crisis in the next three or four
education
fraternity and was
months," Maloney said. "I hospitals is approximately 200 pints daily. The Bloodmobile unit
COLUMBUS - The Ohio Street, Ironton , Ohio, at 10 co-founder and past president
think we ought to take our time is sept to these 34 counties on a regular basis each month to
Environmental Protection a.m., April 23, in Ironton City of the Ohio Organization of
provide the blood needs of each community.
and do the job right."
Hall, Council Chambers, 4th
This continuous blood collection process enables the Red Agency (Ohio EPS) announced and Railroad. The purpose of Technical Colleges. Currently,
By then, the pressure for a
Cross to provide blood needed in your community. When you give Friday it has scheduled a the meeting is to consider Dr . Light is the only adbill may be completely off.
a blood donation to Red Cross it may be sent to a hospital in any public meeting on the air evidence, written or oral, from ministrator of a two year
of the 34 counties and when blood is needed it may come from a pollution application for any person, on compliance college acting as a member of
donor in some distant county. This is possible because the Red Ironton Coke, 3312 South Third schedules of the company.
the Ohio Citizens Task Force
Cross is a licensed agent enabling them to transport blood to
on
Higher Education and is a
As required by state
other areas and across state lines.
member
of the governor's
regulations, this company's
Hospital blood banks, although accredited, do not have this available at modest cost - a request for an air pollution Vocational - Technical Inlicense to transport blood interstate. The license requires blood fraction of commercial food variance has been ac- formation Program's Informal
. be collected, processed and distributed through Red Cross and lodging prices - during companied by a schedule of advisory group.
procedures and by Red Cross staff.
popular vacation and holi,day compliance , indicating in
Therefore, when the Red Cross furnishes blood to patients in · periods, and in many In - detail what steps will be taken
Hammond and Selikoff
ON COMMITI'EE
pointed out that it is believed 85 your local hospital the Red Cross asks that persons replace the stances, the year round.
to achieve compliance with
COLUMBUS- Slate Senator
per cent of all ca ncer is derived blood supply through the Bloodmobile visits, because if b.)ood is
The rates for Rio Grande regulations. In&lt;lividuals unable
from environmental sourees. replaced at the hospital it cannot be credited to Red Cross. Blood College are listed as $3.50 per to attend the meeting may Harry L. Armstrong (R-17th
They said new agents are being replaced provides Red Cross the capability of furnlshing person per day, plus $1 for submit written testimony to the District) has been appointed to
rapidly being spread among the blood needs for your community through a continuous circle linens, and the available dates Hearing Clerk, Ohio EPA, 361 the Advisory Committee lor
Midwestern
Entens of millions of people of donating, processing and dispersing to those in need.
are June 1 through AugUBI 11. E . Broad St ., Box 1049, . th e
Many do not realize that the Red Cross provides sizeable Advance reservations are Columbus, Ohio 43216 until the vironmental
Protection
without pretesting to see if they
cause cancer or other diseases. amounts of blood to their hospitals. In most areas over 70 pet. of required.
Conference.
date of the meeting.
"A useful chemical or an blood needed comes from volunteer donors through the Red
efficient plastic soon per- Cross. Some hospitals are totally supplied by the Red Cross to
meates a nation, or large part meet the needs of their patients. In Gallia County alone, over n
of the world. There is literally pet. of the blood IISed by Holzer Hospital is furnished by Red
no place to hide."
Cross.
The vinyl chloride problem
In addition to this, sometimes Red Cross donors are sent
to.Holzer when an emergency may arise. Also Red Crosa
directly
surfaced in January when
officials of the B.F . Goodrich blood is sent to hospitals outside the area for Gallla County
Co. in Louisville, Ky., reported residents being hospitalized elsewhere.
two fatalllver cancers among
The Red Cross Blood Program could not exist if it were not
workers at the company 'a vinyl for volunteer donors. For this reason we ask you to respond !Vhen
chloride plant. Five more the Bloodmobile unit is in yoW' area. Continue to help in the
cases were found at the plant saving of lives by your blood donations.
and since then other cases have
been found among vinyl work- Open Letter to the Establ~lrment
ers in New York, Texas and
Qren letter to Gallipolis City Commissioners, Oty Manager,
West Virginia.
That type of cancer had been ' City Police, parents and dealers involved :
We the people who live in the vicinity of 5th Ave. and Spruce
rare and Hammond and Sellkoff said it was only because of St. would like to invite you over most any evening after school to
its rarlty that the vinyl chloride listen with us to the mini and motor bike problems which we have
link was found. An Ametican to put up with in our area. I am sure some of the language we
Cancer Society research hear was never taught these youngsters in school or church.
If you cannot come now, perhaps when school is out you will
project is now trying to
find
time as it will be going on seven days a week from dayllght
detennine If workers in factories which manufactW'e vinyl until long after dark.
I wonder how a person working the afternoon midnight shift
plastics are endangered, or if
is
expected
to get any rest? Some do work this shift.
consumer products containing
How
long
would any of you folks put up with this U you had to
traces of vinyl chloride are
hear this loud irritating noise seven days a week. Not for long, I
hazardous.
assure you.
I have waited over slx months for a solution to this problem
and I know others have complained about It the past-week.
Master Charge, the card used to help manage your
Are we forgotten folks' How about some results, gentlemen?
Frank Hill.
money and keep track of -purchases with one

is advising veterans not to
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande describes 145 vacation and
allow loss of a birth certificate College this year is listed in a travel bargains on college
or marriage license to deter new publication entitled campuses. The guide describes
them from applying for "Mort's New and Original the facilities of m colleges In
benefits.
Guide to Low-Cost Vacations the United States and Canada
L. M. Merritt, director of the and Lodgings on College which, in the past, have been
VA Regional Office in Campuses." This book boasts enjoyed mostly by students,
--::; &gt;&lt;j Cleveland, cited a regulation in
that you can still vacation in but are now open to travelers.
effect since October 1971 under America on $5 a day, and it
College facilities
are
which less formal proof of
marriage and birth are acceptable in establishing claims
for higher benefits.
A veteran's or widow 's
certified
statement
of
marriage is sufficient on applications for compensation
and education benefits for
veterans, widows , and or~
phaned children , provided
neither he nor his wife has been
IT'S LIKI! NOBODY ELSE'S CAR
married before , and VA has no
contradictory information on
file, the director explained.
It was noted that a certified
statement now is acceptable
regarding birth of a child, of a
veteran's marriage, and as
proof of age and relationship in
disability cases. Before the
regulation change , Merritt
pointed out, VA required all
Courteous Salesmen
statements of marriages and
births to be supported by
To Assist You
formaliz ed documentary
evidence.
Certified statements also are
sufficient in death cases where
a claimant's statements
corroborate those of a veteran
in connection with a claim for
any VA benefit, the director
..
added.

EASTER EGGS

Cheese
Pizza

Dr. Light will keynote
IMeigs' vocational week

Loopholes
available
New guide lists college
to veterans
The Veterans Administration for low-cost vacations

ment."

~---..... __

JENO

I-----~--------------------,
Letteq of opilllon are welcomed. They llht•lld he 1I
I !ban :soo ,.ordsloag (or be subject to redacuoa by the I
editor) 811f1 must be signed wllb lbe alpet'a addreu.
(
1 N~ may be wllbbtld upoa pabllcaUoa. However, 011 1

Search widens for
causes of cancer

(l' . .. .

•'

·,

any Ohio emergency energy
low at all.
The two parties are enough'
at odds over what form a bill
. sho uld take that by tile time
they get things ironed out they
' may discover there is no need
for one.
" I don't think there's any
need for one now ," said House
' Majority Leader Barney Quilter, D-Toledo, last week as
Democrats tried ;utd failed to
increase the governor,s powers
under tile legislation being
studied in a joint Senate-House
energy committee.
· .. "A tot ~f people see that
Congress hasn't done anything
about the energy problem,"
agreed House Speaker A. G.
Lancione, D-Bellaire . "They
say why should we do

COUPLE ELECfED
REEDSVILLE - James and
Ethel Connor, Reedsville, has
been elected to membership in
the
American
Angus
Association at St. Joseph,
Missouri.

LISH

"©

CERTIFIED
KENNEBEC
SEED
POTATOES

is coUege grad

COLUMBUS (UPI )..-Lowering of the age of
majority to 18 will not affect
school rules establlshed by
boards of education, according
to Martin Essex, superintendent of public instruction.
Essex made the comment in
response to inquiries from
school officials across the
state. He said local school
districts have a statutory duty
to formulate reasonable rules
to govern pupils and students
have the responsibility to
follow these rules . "The courts
have traditionally held that
rules of the boards of education
will be sustained as long as
they are reasonable and not
arbilfary or capricous," Essex
sald.
announced.

...

Ohio politics

NO QNE HURT
GALLIPOLIS - No one was
cited or injured in a minor two
vehicle accident at 12:50 p.m.
Friday on Court St. and Third
Ave. According to city police
officers, a truck driven by
O'Dell M. Whittaker, Rt. 2,
Patriot, struck a 1J3rked car
owned by Donald Taylor of Rt.
2, Crown City.

U. S. NO. 1 TAGGED

Dave Conway; construction of

tent

Recent squabbling in Columbus between Republicans and
Democrats over the powers of
a proposed Energy Emergency
· · C'A&gt;mmission (EEC) can be
·-interpreted to mean there will
' be no emergency energy law
' enacted by the time the leg isla. · tors take a spring recess ea rly
· next month. ·
In fact, there might not be

the sun, long known to be a
great energy source, but never
harnessed.
Future
archeologists may some day look
back on our society and scratch
their heads over why we waited
so long to make these "obvious" discoveries that today
remain unimaginable.

M&amp;R SHOPPING CENTER • MIDDLEPORT

mothers in the Gallipolis area
will be very pleased with the
special service and £ine
children's wear that we will
have in our store. That's one
big reason why we decided to
open an ABC shop," Davis
said.
Davis was associated with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dean
Davis of Gallipolis, in the
operation of the Davis..Shuler
Co. 10 years until the sale of the
business in April of 1970. Since
that time Davis has been
employed by Matthews and
Edelbtute Gulf Oil Distributors
in Pt. Pleasant. Davis will be
joined in the operation of the
new store by his wife, Elva,
and daughter, Robin.

course in psychology

I

SAL~Ql

By United Press International

::anything? There 1 S no t the

Nursing school offers
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Medical Center's School of
Nursing is offering a course in
social psychology to all people
who wish to enroll from this
community, March 27 to June
7, through the Psychology
Department of Ohio University.
Social psychology describes
the behaviour of man as influenced by his association in a
group. It emphasizes the in. dividual's interaction as the
basis for change of his motives,
attitudes and personality. The
course will be taught by Dr.
Jack Arbuthnot, Assistant
Professor of Psychology at
Ohio University.
If in teres ted in enrolling,

•
..E nergy Iaw.·' C.h ances
. dlffi I
1:1 - The Sunday Times -Sentinel, Sunday, March 24, 1974

12 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, M·a rrh 24, 1974

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Of Big Fords
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•

:••
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$126 million went to four candidates
By ROBERT GORUON
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
four
biggest-spending
presidential hopefuls in 1972
collected more than $126

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the embarrassed flounderings
of someone who urged his
colleagues to undertake a
lengthy and expensive investigalion, only to discover that the
expenditures by the government were justified and for
valid security reasons."
Zeigler had said the figures
were inflated by including
costs for communications,
salaries and support costs, and
that Brooks tried to leave the
in:pression the money was
spent on construction and
improvements at the homes.
"Only about $205,000 has
been spent for installations in
the homes, and that lor
security devices such as
bulletproof glass, smoke

the truth.
GSA Administrator Arthur
F. Sampson accused Rep. Jack
Brooks ,
D-Tex.,
of
manipulating numbers to get
the $17 million figure, and
called it "the most recent in a
series of Congressman Brooks'
efforts to purposely mislead
the public."
The White House Friday
sharply criticized news reports
of a supposedly secret study of
federal spending at the Nixon
homes said to 'show that more
than $17 million had gone in the
past five years on Improvements, salaries, support
WNOON (UP!) - As Prinfaciliifes · and Security at the
cess
Anne's royal parents new
homes in San Clemente, Calif.,
home
Saturday under the
and Key Biscayne, Fla.
This was about $7 million strictest royal security. meas·
more than previous estimates. ures ever seen, the hair-raising
Brooks, cbainnan of a House story emerged of how her
Government Affairs subcom· husband saved the princess in a
mittee that investigated the grim tng of war with the
govenunent spending, called gunman trying to kidnap her.
the report adopted 6-4 on a her.
The gunman got close enough
p11rty line vote Thursday ''fair
in
his kidnap attempt outside
and objective." But White
House Press Secretary Ronald Buckingham Palace Wednesday
Zeigler damned the report as a night to seize her arm while
partisan effort to mislead the her husband, Capt. Mark
Phillips, hauled her back by the
public.
other.
Phillips won.
Sampson said "Mr. Brooks
In
the
shocked aftermath of
has manufactured a $17million
the
attempt,
Anne's' parents,
figure for total government
Queen Elizbeth and Prince
e~:penditures, and bas attempted to document It by con- Phillip, arrived from an official
necting It to costs of personnel visit to fndonesia at an airport
assigned to government in- sealed off by soldiers and
stallations In support of the security police who guarded
President which he estimates every foot of their drive
home to nearby Windsor
at $7 million."
Sampson said all the GSA casUe. Police in charge Of royal
personnel costs were included security said it was the
in material sent to the sub- heaviest mounted in Britain for
committee in Octobec, and the Queen or any member of
"the conclusioos appear to be the royal family.

detectors, etc.," Sampon said.
He said the · presidential
protection Ia w signed by
President Johnson on the day
of the death of Sen. Robert F.
Kennedy, D-N.Y., " dictates
maximum security for the
President. This is the congressional mandate we follow ."
Sampson said the report had
not been approved by the full
committee, and that body,
under Rep. Chet Holifield, DCalif., should now "provide the
soiler evaluation which has
been so sorely missed."
He said. the committee
should consider the spendi11g in
terms of the congressional
mandate for protectin~ a
(Continued on page 16)

abolished across the nation
with a minimum of busing, and
"excessive forced busing is
neither necessary nor desirable."

Nixon said that in recent
decades there has been a
tendency to concentrate power
in Washington, and added,
"this does not make good
sense."

The aid to education bill
awaitiag House action does not
incorporate all the revisions he
bad suggested, Nixon said, hut
h&amp; urged its support.
"The federal government
has a role to play in

world has ever seen," and

urged Congress to ensure that
"the future of the system
amply fulfills the promise of
the past."

Phillips saved his princess

between
mittees.

campaign

com-

GAO officials, in a briefing
on the report, said Nixon's reelection campaign collected at
least $43,287,435, plus about
$5.6 million from . transfers,
during the period after the law
requiring reports on contributions went into efect on April 7,

Students
may get
•
vacation

By United Press International
Fresh rounds of talks were
·'-""'
called
for the weekend in efSimilar strict security meas- Palace, he ran to the back and
forts to end strikes of teacher
ures surrounded Princess Anne started shooting.
unions
that will give 139,000
and Phillips as they particpated Anne's personal bodyguard
students
in San Francisco and
in a country horse show where police, Detective Inspector
Kansas
City
an unexpected
Anne took a fall.
James Beaton 30 fired back
vacation
if
no
settlement is
It was Phillips, who married aiming betw;en ' Anne and
Anne last November, who won Phillips on the back seat, she reached by Monday.
A compromise proposal was
the gr1m tug-of-war Wedneaday said. But Beaton 's gun, a
being
studied in San Francisco
and managed to lock the door Walther PP380 automatic, jamSaturday in hopes it would .
of the maroon royal limousine med .
in which they were riding .
Anne told Scott-Dunn the avert a walkout by teachers
The struggle helped stall the gunman ran to the front of the Monday that would shut down
gunman's plan to abduct the car and shot and wounded the city's 76,0110&lt;!tudent public
princess long enough for police Beaton and chauffeur Alex school system. The proposal
would give every teacher in the
reinforcements to arrive and Callender.
system
a $1,QOO.a-year raise.
one to bring down the fleeing Then, she said, he grabbed
The
Kansas
City, Mo., school
gunman with a footbball tackle. her by the arm and tried to pull
Four persons were wounded . her out of the car. Phillips held district and striking teachers
the gunbattle for possession her by the other arm. The Saturday agreed to resume
of Anne, including her personal gunman told Phillips to let go discussions that could lead to
bodyguard. Police have or "he would be next," she formal contract negotiations to
end a walkout that has crippled
charged Ian Ball, a 26-year-&lt;&gt;ld said.
Londoner, with his attempted Phillips managed to pull her the city's 63,0110&lt;!tudent system
back in and slam and lock the for a week.
murder.
Spokesmen for both sides
The next day Anne told a door. The gunman raced to ther
announced plans for a weekend
friend, veterinarian Peter Scott- door. The gunman raced to the
meeting intended to end the
Dunn, at her Sandhurst home the door handle when police
strike by about 80 per cent of
that after the gunman stopped reinforcements arrived, Anne the 2,600 teachers in the city's
her car in the Mall, a broad , said.
98 schools.
busy Avenue leading to the "I thought we were dead,"
School superintendent
front gates of Buckingham Scott-Dunn quoted Anne.
Robert Medcalf said he was
considering
closing schools for
~888!=:t8'11m~m~::::
••=:--::::::::::::::::::::--..:".::::::::::::x-..-::-.::::::::::::::::::::::&gt;.:~:::~:w..a-~::3":::&amp;~:~~:!~~wot-:-.:;r..:;:;:::::--:=:;:r.«~~=-«;:;.::::;;:::=::::::;::-~:::;:::::::~~::::::;:::::::::::=:=:::::::::::::::::::::-.:;:;~.
'
~ the duration of the strike, but a
final decision would · he made
%
~ during the weekend based on
.~••. an assessment of programs
~~l
1Continued on page 16)
:$:

::j:
::::
'9.

.

cumulating about half the
money, a federal report said
Saturday.
The General Accounting Office issued its final report on
the 1972 election camP.,igns,
acknowledging that it was far
from complete because it
covered only part of the year
and because it was hard to
keep track of money transfers

1972.
The Committee for the Reelection of the President, in an
earlier response to a suit filed
by Common Cause, reported,
education," he said, ~~but that contributions of $19.9 million
role must never place federal before April 7, bringing the
employes in the role of master total for the campaign to about
social planners. Instead, $68,850,585.
Washington should use 1ts
GAO said the Nixoq canlresources to help you and your paign reported spending
teachers do a better job of $49 ,072,062, not including
educating your children."
money paid out before the
Nixon said school boards in April 7 deadline .
need of federal aid have to
Sen. George McGovern 's
check for the program that campaign, the GAO said,
comes closest to meeting their collected $48,931,783 after April
needs, find out how to apply, 7; plus about $3.2 million
then wait months for an an- transferred from other comswer .
mittees, for a total of about
He said he wants, instead, to $52,182,007. Some $45,002,742 in
consolidate funding for local expenses was listed.
school districts and let them
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey,
decide how to spend the money. D-Minn., collected $4,267,777,
He said many boards do not the GAO said, not including
know until the middle of a term about $87,600 from other
bow much federal money will campaign committees . The
be available, and urged Con- spending totaled $4,838,794.
gress to provide an aid
Gov. George C. Wallace of
program which will let them Alabama, the only other candi·
know a year in advance how date to collect more than $1
much they will receive.
Nixon said the nation bas the
"best education system the

Veteran banker, diplomat George Ball says
Kissinger is tired, Nixon tricking Europe

1-4 Piece Singer 1-4 Piece Riverside 13 Pc. Group Special.

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WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
head of the General Services
Administration said Saturday
a congressional subcommittee
report that $17 million was
spent at President Nixon's
estates in California and
Florida was a deliberately
"manufactured" distortion of

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re-election juggernaut ac-

PAGE 15

$17 million figure off
target says GSO head

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SUNDAY, MARCH 24, 1974

CAMPDAVID,Md. (UPI)- school officials.
"Bureaucrats in Washington
President Nixon Saturday
He pledged to veto any cannot educate your child," he
urged Congress to pass anti- legislation that makes it even said. "Your children can only
busing legislation this year and more difficult lor local school pe educated by you in your
new laws to simplify the officials to obtain fed eral homes, and by their teachers in
their schools."
system of federal aid for local education aid.
schools.
Nixon urged Co11gress to
"Parents know that the
From his Camp David appropriate $1 .3 billion this education of their children can
retreat on a sunny and crisp year to fund a program already most effectively be carried out
in neiighborhood schools." he
first weekend of spring, Nixon enacted--but not financedin a national radio broadcast providing maximum $1 ,400 said.
"They are naturally conendorsed the bill coming up for grants to students to continue
debate in the House next week education beyond high school. cerned when the courts, acting
which would extend federal
Nixon said that in 1972 he on the basis of complicated
education aid to the nation's proposed legislation to limit plans drawn up by bureauschools another three years. busing, and "today I urge creats far away off in
But he was sharply critical of favorable consideration o! an Washington, D. C., order
a pending Senate version of the antibusing amendment, such children bused out of their
measure, saying it would as the amendment now being neighborhoods."
11
The President said dual
create
8
bureaucratic sponsored by Congressman
nighbnare hopelessly bound up Marvin L. Esch (R·Mich. )." school systems have been
in miles of red tape," for local

'

BEDR

VOL 9 NO.8

Nixon wants no-bus law

OVER 50 SUITES ON SALEI

FANTASTIC

million, with President Nixon's

BRUSSElS (UP!) - George Ball says
that Henry A. Kisslqger is tired and
shows it. Richard Nixon is using Europe
to distract attentlon from Watergate.
And neither really wants a united
Europe.
' George Ball, Investment banker,
former Undersecretary of State, "devils
advocate'.' in the Johnson goverrunent
and, is at 64 one of the most respected of
the "Atlanticists" who have devoted
years to U.S.-European relations.
"Neithel" Nixon nor (Secretary 01
State) Kissinger bas been fundamentally
sympatheUc to the idea · of a united
Europe," he said. "Jio!h 8fi! Gaullists.
The thrust of Kissinger's foreign policy
has been away from alliances toward
maneuver, toward manipulation. And
one of Nixon's first acts in office was to
go to Paris, to express his adulation of de
Gaulle."
· To say, aa Nixoo has, that the
Europeans are "I!JIIgingup" on America
"is DOJIIeiiSe," Ball said. "He is saying
that when we manipulate, it's okay.
Wh!!n they do It, its ganging up."
1n the cloolng years of the Johnson
admb)istratlon, Ball occupied an un. comfortablecbail: as an official dlsllenter
011 Vietnam. He is out of government

now, but remains one of the influential
band of men who bounce between
goverrunent, b~sine)!S and academic life.
Ball was in Brussels one recent morning while stranded by fog on his way to
lunch in Geneva and dinner in London.
With nowhere to go until the fog lifted, be
bad his third airport breakfast of the
day- orange juice, no coffee--and talked
about what ails the alliance.
The immediate problem, he said,
began when the United States topk over
leadership in the Middle East from the
Europeans, while Europe ~emalned
much more dependent than America on
Arab oil. After the six-(iay war ,in 11167,
the Americans failed to compel an Israeli
troop withdrawal: and "so the October
war was inevitable."
During that war, the United States
began an arms airlift to Israel without
consulting the 'Europeans, then complalned when the Europeans, "scared to
death" about their oil, refused to help,
Ball S.ld. Then America ''behaved
naUonalistically and anmunced It will
try for self-sufficiency in eDergy."
"So the" Europeans watched us preempt their leadership, then watched this
leadership misused by tllelr standards,
saw the American policies cause an (oil)

embargo," he said. "So there's a natural (
tendency for the Europeans to get back in ~
the political act," which they did by ;~
announcing plans for a mass meeting ;i!i
·~
with the Arab states.
-~
And so the stage was set for the Nixon- ~
Kissinger verbal attacks on Europe fl!
which brought the dispute to its head. !ji
"I can understand Kissinger being ~
upset, " Ball laid. " It threatens our -~
Middle East strategy."
;;j
"But instead of trying to sort it out .with :~
the Europeans, he reacted with public :
denunciations, which I think are ex- ·
cessive."
And this, said Ball, is the key to the
problem--that the American Gaullists,
instead of working quietly and effectively
through existing diplomatic channels -~
carry · out policy through surprise and
public thunderbolt.
,
"We have no institutionalized foreign
policy·now," he said. "Nobody talks to~·
people. There's no preparation.
"This system of surprise an-~&gt;
nouncemenls was borrowed from de ~
Gaulle. It made sen!!&lt;! for Ill!' general, as
the leader of a small power, to keep the ·
world off balance. But it is inappropriate
· for a great power, which must want to
establlsh II .;eputatlon for steadfastness ~~
above all."
· ~:;

million, reported donations of
--Sen. Edmund S. Muskie,
$1,600,303, plus about $1,718 in D-Main, collected $722,911,
transferred funds. Expenses . plus about $12,000 in committee
were $1,603,465.
transfer s. Expense s were
•'red Thompson, director of $1,503,398 .
the GAO's Office of Elections,
- Rep ..Shirley Chisholm, D·
said the report was also in- N.Y., reported taking in $95,346
complete because it was and spending $114,163.
almost impossible to calculaU!
--Sen. Henry M. Jackson, [).
· the amount of tlle contributiorui Wash., reported taking in
and expenses of the political $209,725 and spending $364,961.
parties on the presidential
- Rep. Wilbur Mills, D·
races.
Ark .,took in $398,506 and spent
Thompson said changes in $469,580,
the law were needed to "have
- Duke University President
these (campaign) conunittees Terry Sanford took in $470,348
report abnost continuollsly to plus about $14,000 in transfers,
us. The notion of a new cam- and spent $1,086,629.
paign start every four years ia
- Rep. John M. Ashbrook, R·
very hard to deal with."
Ohio., look in $204,575, and
Among the other candidates: spent $215,683.

Tension up
in mid-east
BY UNITED PRESS INTER·
NATIONAL
Israel said Saturday it
expected the United Nations to
take action against an alleged
Egyptian attempt to move
more heavy artillery across the
Suez Canal with additional
heavy artillery in violation of
th eir
disengagement
agreement. In the embattled
Golan Heights, Syrian and
Israeli guns dueled for the 12th

whose Mt Hermon perimeter

points like a dagger at
Damascus, less than 30 miles
away .

The Israeli military command sa id both sides dueled
With cannon and tank fire in
barrages that ran Cor more

Federal sources who have
heard the tape recording of the
Watergate "hush OlQney" conversation between President
Nixon and John Dean say it is
"explosive" and clearly proves
Dean told the trnth about the
conversation and the President
did not, the Los Angeles Times
reported today.
The White House, informed
of the report, stands by its
position that the tape is
" ambiguous " and open to

GA LLIPOLIS - Dan C.
Black, a native of Gallipolis,
has been promoted to Vice
President of Personnel and
Store Supervision for Th e
Jones Boys stores.
Black is a graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and was
associated for over 20 years
with the A &amp; P Tea Company,
managing stores in bo th
Huntington and Charleston,
West Virginia. He was a store
manager for Big Star Markets
in Charleston, West Virginia,
for two years. Mr. Black was
the first store manager of The
Jones Boys Store, Pomeroy,
and in September 1973, he was
promoted to District Manager
for both tl1e Gallipolis and

I

~

Snow, cold

headed east

Service warned, '"This stonn is

Man dies in hotel fire
WELI.SVIT.LE; Ohio (UP!)
- One elderly person was
killed Saturday when fire
swept through the old Aztec
Hotel and Lounge in the
downtown area of this Ohio
River community.
Authorities said Antonio
Sinisgalli, 77, a retired railroad
worker and resident caretaker
at the hotel, was found dead in
his room on the top floor of the
three-story brick building.
"We've accounted for all
other persons," said Fire Chief
Robert Uoyd . "Originally
there were three people we
could not account for, but we
later found the other two."

Uoyd said there were about

still in Its developing stages
and is expected to intensify this
afternoon and tonight and
15 people in the hotel at the move into the Ohio Valley and
time of the fire but all of them Lower Great Lakes by early
fled to safety.
Sunday morning ."
A fireman suffered minor
Temperatures fell to the
facial burns. There were no
occasion. The Weather Service
other injuries.
said "low temperatures typical
of mid January or lower are
The blaze started on the top expected."
floor of the 45-year-old bote!,
Cold wave warnings were out
causing the roof to collapse. for Nebraska and Iowa into
Policeman Wayne Clutter said northern and central Illinois.
he spot ted the flames about 3 Frost and freezing alerts were
a.m. The fire was brought posted for southern Illinois,
under control about three Ohio, Delaware, Maryland,
hours later.
northern and western Virginia
Uoyd said the fire started on and northwest South Carolina.
the third noor but the cause has
The high temperature at
not yet been determined . Devil'sLake, N.D., Friday was
Damage was estimated at
(Continued on page 16)
$150,000.

Hush money tape
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -

Black promoted
by Jones Boys

tnan six hours and lasted until
dark.
Syrian gunners hit all along
the front in the rain-sodden
successive day .
Israeli, the command said. The
The Israeli command report- sporadic bombardments came
ed two soldiers wounded along in two waves wi th a 90-minute
the Golan front lines, raising to midafternoon lull between
64 the number of Israeli them.
casualties- 13 of them deathsThe Syricm command said its
since the Oct. 24 cease-fire that big guns silenced 19 Israe li Pomeroy s tores.
formally ended the 1973 Middle ar tillery and mortar batteries
Black is married to the
East war . A Syrian woman was and destroyed three tanks and former Charl ene Robinson ,
also killed.
other material in the day's also a native of Gallipolis. They
In a dispatch from Washing- clashes. Israeli officers have have two sons, John, 16 and
ton, Israeli National Radio said called the Golan fighting a Robbie, 12. They reside in
Prime Minister Golda Meir's "wtit- of attrition" and one Gallipolis.
government had informed U.S. Israeli orricial Friday warned
Secretary of State Henry A. that continued aggression might
Kissinger of Cairo's introduchinder indirect disengagement
tion of excess weaponry on the talks set to begin in Washington
Suez East Bank but said Israel next week .
was not asking for American U.S. Navy Rear Adm. Brian
intervention . It said it expected McCauley, accompanied by
the United Nations to take up Navy and Army experts, has
the complaint, the first such arrived in Cairo to consult with
public charge of violations Egyptian authorities on mine- By United Press International
since the disengagement proc- sweeping operations in the Suez
A snow storm and cold wave
ess was completed Marh 5..
worthy of mid-January moved
Canal.
Lt. Gen. Ensio ·slllasvuo,
The United Stales and Britain across the nation's midlands on
Finnish commander of the U.N. ag reed to assist Egypt in the third full day of spring
Emergency Force (UNEF ), clearing the mines and other Saturday.
mel for 35 minutes with Egypt's explosives from the 101-mileThe storm center rallied its
chief of staff, Mohammed long waterway, which has been forces alollg a cold front over
Gamassy, and a U.N. spokes- blocked since the 1967 Middle Arkansas and aimed its shaft
man told newsmen afterwards,
through Kansas and on to
East Six-Day war.
"I assume the Israeli complaint The sweeping operations were Missouri, Illinois, Indiana and
was discussed .''
expected to begin in about two beyond.
The Cairo government has weeks , assisted by 500 AmeriBy early morning, there was
made no comment on the can military personnel under three to six inches of snow
charge.
the command of Adm. Daniel across northern and central
Israel said the latest Golan Murphy, commander of the Kansas and three to lour inches
fighting was one of the longest U.S. 6th Fleet in the Mediter- in central Missouri.
series of artillery clashes since ranean.
The National Weather

confirmed that he delivered the
warning to presidential counsel
James D. St. Clair, the Times
reported.
Scott said be told St. Clair the
President \'would be impeached in the House" for
defiance unless be turns over
the tapes , "I gave a clear
message," the newspaper
quoted him as saying.
The Times said "a source in
Congress and another In the
executive branch" who have

heard the •.ape of the talk
between "former White House
Counsel Dean and Nixon on
March 21, 197~ter of a
vital conflict in the Watergate
controversy~id that ''there
could be only one logical interpretation, and It was explosive for the Pr-esident.:... that
is, the President did not
disapprove of hush money

conflicting interpretations, the
Times said.
The newspaper also reported
that Nixon · is ready to
surreQder 42 more tapes to the
House Judiciary Committee
next week, following. an ul·
timatum from the top Republican leadership in Congress that
Nixon would be impeached if
be continues defiance of the payments."
Nixon has inaintalned that
committee's demands.
Senate Minority Leader those who hear the conversa'Hu~h Scott of Pennsylvania lion may misunderstand it, bot
that what he meant was that
ltllllltltllliiMII1111111FftiltltllliiiWI!Itii8118111WI!I!illlllllllit111111t111111M111111111~~~·SO"ml=..:ra1::::::;:::-.::::::~:=~:::::::."::::-.::::::::~::~::s;..~:?.r~~:~:~:~:=:~::~s•:::;-;:~:;s;:!:;:§:;:::;:::::&amp;.».::::::::::::::::::~!·

I'

the Oc tober war m the the 325.squ are-miiP Israeli-held bulge

DAN C. BLACK

'I

•

lS

'explosive'

payment of hush money would remarks, and said the White
House will not comment fur·
be "wrollg ."
Dean testified to the Senate ther on the story.
Warren said the White House
Watergate Committee that
when he told Nixon it would bad expected "this type of
take $1 million to keep the story ... to be planted. We knew
Watergate burglars, then in it would come sooner or later.
jall, from revealing their links The fact is the tape may be
to the President's re-election read different ways by dif.
campaign, Nixon replied that ferent people with different
motives, as we have pointed
would be "no problem."
The Times quoted one of the out."
It was in reference to this
sources as saying:
"When you hear the tape, tape that Nixon said at his
you have a lot more respect for news conference March,6:
"Any individual who wants
Dean's integrity and what he
told the Senate Watergate to, can take any one statement
Committee. It is that explosive. and interpret it any way he
wants. What I say is that I
It is not ambiguous.
"The President has given know what I said, I know what I
different versions of the March meant, and I know what l did."
21 meetillg and the tape teils
Nixon said that folloWing the
wh~t the real story is. If it had conversation, involving hush
not been for the tape, we would money and the pot!SibWty . of
· have never known the real presidential clemency for the
story."
burglars, he told Dean it would
The Times said Deputy Press be ''wrong," by which he
Secretary Gerald Warren stood meant uthe whole transaction
by the President's earlier was wrong."

"·

I '

'.

�,.

•

:••
•
•
'•

$126 million went to four candidates
By ROBERT GORUON
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
four
biggest-spending
presidential hopefuls in 1972
collected more than $126

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the embarrassed flounderings
of someone who urged his
colleagues to undertake a
lengthy and expensive investigalion, only to discover that the
expenditures by the government were justified and for
valid security reasons."
Zeigler had said the figures
were inflated by including
costs for communications,
salaries and support costs, and
that Brooks tried to leave the
in:pression the money was
spent on construction and
improvements at the homes.
"Only about $205,000 has
been spent for installations in
the homes, and that lor
security devices such as
bulletproof glass, smoke

the truth.
GSA Administrator Arthur
F. Sampson accused Rep. Jack
Brooks ,
D-Tex.,
of
manipulating numbers to get
the $17 million figure, and
called it "the most recent in a
series of Congressman Brooks'
efforts to purposely mislead
the public."
The White House Friday
sharply criticized news reports
of a supposedly secret study of
federal spending at the Nixon
homes said to 'show that more
than $17 million had gone in the
past five years on Improvements, salaries, support
WNOON (UP!) - As Prinfaciliifes · and Security at the
cess
Anne's royal parents new
homes in San Clemente, Calif.,
home
Saturday under the
and Key Biscayne, Fla.
This was about $7 million strictest royal security. meas·
more than previous estimates. ures ever seen, the hair-raising
Brooks, cbainnan of a House story emerged of how her
Government Affairs subcom· husband saved the princess in a
mittee that investigated the grim tng of war with the
govenunent spending, called gunman trying to kidnap her.
the report adopted 6-4 on a her.
The gunman got close enough
p11rty line vote Thursday ''fair
in
his kidnap attempt outside
and objective." But White
House Press Secretary Ronald Buckingham Palace Wednesday
Zeigler damned the report as a night to seize her arm while
partisan effort to mislead the her husband, Capt. Mark
Phillips, hauled her back by the
public.
other.
Phillips won.
Sampson said "Mr. Brooks
In
the
shocked aftermath of
has manufactured a $17million
the
attempt,
Anne's' parents,
figure for total government
Queen Elizbeth and Prince
e~:penditures, and bas attempted to document It by con- Phillip, arrived from an official
necting It to costs of personnel visit to fndonesia at an airport
assigned to government in- sealed off by soldiers and
stallations In support of the security police who guarded
President which he estimates every foot of their drive
home to nearby Windsor
at $7 million."
Sampson said all the GSA casUe. Police in charge Of royal
personnel costs were included security said it was the
in material sent to the sub- heaviest mounted in Britain for
committee in Octobec, and the Queen or any member of
"the conclusioos appear to be the royal family.

detectors, etc.," Sampon said.
He said the · presidential
protection Ia w signed by
President Johnson on the day
of the death of Sen. Robert F.
Kennedy, D-N.Y., " dictates
maximum security for the
President. This is the congressional mandate we follow ."
Sampson said the report had
not been approved by the full
committee, and that body,
under Rep. Chet Holifield, DCalif., should now "provide the
soiler evaluation which has
been so sorely missed."
He said. the committee
should consider the spendi11g in
terms of the congressional
mandate for protectin~ a
(Continued on page 16)

abolished across the nation
with a minimum of busing, and
"excessive forced busing is
neither necessary nor desirable."

Nixon said that in recent
decades there has been a
tendency to concentrate power
in Washington, and added,
"this does not make good
sense."

The aid to education bill
awaitiag House action does not
incorporate all the revisions he
bad suggested, Nixon said, hut
h&amp; urged its support.
"The federal government
has a role to play in

world has ever seen," and

urged Congress to ensure that
"the future of the system
amply fulfills the promise of
the past."

Phillips saved his princess

between
mittees.

campaign

com-

GAO officials, in a briefing
on the report, said Nixon's reelection campaign collected at
least $43,287,435, plus about
$5.6 million from . transfers,
during the period after the law
requiring reports on contributions went into efect on April 7,

Students
may get
•
vacation

By United Press International
Fresh rounds of talks were
·'-""'
called
for the weekend in efSimilar strict security meas- Palace, he ran to the back and
forts to end strikes of teacher
ures surrounded Princess Anne started shooting.
unions
that will give 139,000
and Phillips as they particpated Anne's personal bodyguard
students
in San Francisco and
in a country horse show where police, Detective Inspector
Kansas
City
an unexpected
Anne took a fall.
James Beaton 30 fired back
vacation
if
no
settlement is
It was Phillips, who married aiming betw;en ' Anne and
Anne last November, who won Phillips on the back seat, she reached by Monday.
A compromise proposal was
the gr1m tug-of-war Wedneaday said. But Beaton 's gun, a
being
studied in San Francisco
and managed to lock the door Walther PP380 automatic, jamSaturday in hopes it would .
of the maroon royal limousine med .
in which they were riding .
Anne told Scott-Dunn the avert a walkout by teachers
The struggle helped stall the gunman ran to the front of the Monday that would shut down
gunman's plan to abduct the car and shot and wounded the city's 76,0110&lt;!tudent public
princess long enough for police Beaton and chauffeur Alex school system. The proposal
would give every teacher in the
reinforcements to arrive and Callender.
system
a $1,QOO.a-year raise.
one to bring down the fleeing Then, she said, he grabbed
The
Kansas
City, Mo., school
gunman with a footbball tackle. her by the arm and tried to pull
Four persons were wounded . her out of the car. Phillips held district and striking teachers
the gunbattle for possession her by the other arm. The Saturday agreed to resume
of Anne, including her personal gunman told Phillips to let go discussions that could lead to
bodyguard. Police have or "he would be next," she formal contract negotiations to
end a walkout that has crippled
charged Ian Ball, a 26-year-&lt;&gt;ld said.
Londoner, with his attempted Phillips managed to pull her the city's 63,0110&lt;!tudent system
back in and slam and lock the for a week.
murder.
Spokesmen for both sides
The next day Anne told a door. The gunman raced to ther
announced plans for a weekend
friend, veterinarian Peter Scott- door. The gunman raced to the
meeting intended to end the
Dunn, at her Sandhurst home the door handle when police
strike by about 80 per cent of
that after the gunman stopped reinforcements arrived, Anne the 2,600 teachers in the city's
her car in the Mall, a broad , said.
98 schools.
busy Avenue leading to the "I thought we were dead,"
School superintendent
front gates of Buckingham Scott-Dunn quoted Anne.
Robert Medcalf said he was
considering
closing schools for
~888!=:t8'11m~m~::::
••=:--::::::::::::::::::::--..:".::::::::::::x-..-::-.::::::::::::::::::::::&gt;.:~:::~:w..a-~::3":::&amp;~:~~:!~~wot-:-.:;r..:;:;:::::--:=:;:r.«~~=-«;:;.::::;;:::=::::::;::-~:::;:::::::~~::::::;:::::::::::=:=:::::::::::::::::::::-.:;:;~.
'
~ the duration of the strike, but a
final decision would · he made
%
~ during the weekend based on
.~••. an assessment of programs
~~l
1Continued on page 16)
:$:

::j:
::::
'9.

.

cumulating about half the
money, a federal report said
Saturday.
The General Accounting Office issued its final report on
the 1972 election camP.,igns,
acknowledging that it was far
from complete because it
covered only part of the year
and because it was hard to
keep track of money transfers

1972.
The Committee for the Reelection of the President, in an
earlier response to a suit filed
by Common Cause, reported,
education," he said, ~~but that contributions of $19.9 million
role must never place federal before April 7, bringing the
employes in the role of master total for the campaign to about
social planners. Instead, $68,850,585.
Washington should use 1ts
GAO said the Nixoq canlresources to help you and your paign reported spending
teachers do a better job of $49 ,072,062, not including
educating your children."
money paid out before the
Nixon said school boards in April 7 deadline .
need of federal aid have to
Sen. George McGovern 's
check for the program that campaign, the GAO said,
comes closest to meeting their collected $48,931,783 after April
needs, find out how to apply, 7; plus about $3.2 million
then wait months for an an- transferred from other comswer .
mittees, for a total of about
He said he wants, instead, to $52,182,007. Some $45,002,742 in
consolidate funding for local expenses was listed.
school districts and let them
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey,
decide how to spend the money. D-Minn., collected $4,267,777,
He said many boards do not the GAO said, not including
know until the middle of a term about $87,600 from other
bow much federal money will campaign committees . The
be available, and urged Con- spending totaled $4,838,794.
gress to provide an aid
Gov. George C. Wallace of
program which will let them Alabama, the only other candi·
know a year in advance how date to collect more than $1
much they will receive.
Nixon said the nation bas the
"best education system the

Veteran banker, diplomat George Ball says
Kissinger is tired, Nixon tricking Europe

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WASHINGTON (UPI)- The
head of the General Services
Administration said Saturday
a congressional subcommittee
report that $17 million was
spent at President Nixon's
estates in California and
Florida was a deliberately
"manufactured" distortion of

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re-election juggernaut ac-

PAGE 15

$17 million figure off
target says GSO head

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SUNDAY, MARCH 24, 1974

CAMPDAVID,Md. (UPI)- school officials.
"Bureaucrats in Washington
President Nixon Saturday
He pledged to veto any cannot educate your child," he
urged Congress to pass anti- legislation that makes it even said. "Your children can only
busing legislation this year and more difficult lor local school pe educated by you in your
new laws to simplify the officials to obtain fed eral homes, and by their teachers in
their schools."
system of federal aid for local education aid.
schools.
Nixon urged Co11gress to
"Parents know that the
From his Camp David appropriate $1 .3 billion this education of their children can
retreat on a sunny and crisp year to fund a program already most effectively be carried out
in neiighborhood schools." he
first weekend of spring, Nixon enacted--but not financedin a national radio broadcast providing maximum $1 ,400 said.
"They are naturally conendorsed the bill coming up for grants to students to continue
debate in the House next week education beyond high school. cerned when the courts, acting
which would extend federal
Nixon said that in 1972 he on the basis of complicated
education aid to the nation's proposed legislation to limit plans drawn up by bureauschools another three years. busing, and "today I urge creats far away off in
But he was sharply critical of favorable consideration o! an Washington, D. C., order
a pending Senate version of the antibusing amendment, such children bused out of their
measure, saying it would as the amendment now being neighborhoods."
11
The President said dual
create
8
bureaucratic sponsored by Congressman
nighbnare hopelessly bound up Marvin L. Esch (R·Mich. )." school systems have been
in miles of red tape," for local

'

BEDR

VOL 9 NO.8

Nixon wants no-bus law

OVER 50 SUITES ON SALEI

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million, with President Nixon's

BRUSSElS (UP!) - George Ball says
that Henry A. Kisslqger is tired and
shows it. Richard Nixon is using Europe
to distract attentlon from Watergate.
And neither really wants a united
Europe.
' George Ball, Investment banker,
former Undersecretary of State, "devils
advocate'.' in the Johnson goverrunent
and, is at 64 one of the most respected of
the "Atlanticists" who have devoted
years to U.S.-European relations.
"Neithel" Nixon nor (Secretary 01
State) Kissinger bas been fundamentally
sympatheUc to the idea · of a united
Europe," he said. "Jio!h 8fi! Gaullists.
The thrust of Kissinger's foreign policy
has been away from alliances toward
maneuver, toward manipulation. And
one of Nixon's first acts in office was to
go to Paris, to express his adulation of de
Gaulle."
· To say, aa Nixoo has, that the
Europeans are "I!JIIgingup" on America
"is DOJIIeiiSe," Ball said. "He is saying
that when we manipulate, it's okay.
Wh!!n they do It, its ganging up."
1n the cloolng years of the Johnson
admb)istratlon, Ball occupied an un. comfortablecbail: as an official dlsllenter
011 Vietnam. He is out of government

now, but remains one of the influential
band of men who bounce between
goverrunent, b~sine)!S and academic life.
Ball was in Brussels one recent morning while stranded by fog on his way to
lunch in Geneva and dinner in London.
With nowhere to go until the fog lifted, be
bad his third airport breakfast of the
day- orange juice, no coffee--and talked
about what ails the alliance.
The immediate problem, he said,
began when the United States topk over
leadership in the Middle East from the
Europeans, while Europe ~emalned
much more dependent than America on
Arab oil. After the six-(iay war ,in 11167,
the Americans failed to compel an Israeli
troop withdrawal: and "so the October
war was inevitable."
During that war, the United States
began an arms airlift to Israel without
consulting the 'Europeans, then complalned when the Europeans, "scared to
death" about their oil, refused to help,
Ball S.ld. Then America ''behaved
naUonalistically and anmunced It will
try for self-sufficiency in eDergy."
"So the" Europeans watched us preempt their leadership, then watched this
leadership misused by tllelr standards,
saw the American policies cause an (oil)

embargo," he said. "So there's a natural (
tendency for the Europeans to get back in ~
the political act," which they did by ;~
announcing plans for a mass meeting ;i!i
·~
with the Arab states.
-~
And so the stage was set for the Nixon- ~
Kissinger verbal attacks on Europe fl!
which brought the dispute to its head. !ji
"I can understand Kissinger being ~
upset, " Ball laid. " It threatens our -~
Middle East strategy."
;;j
"But instead of trying to sort it out .with :~
the Europeans, he reacted with public :
denunciations, which I think are ex- ·
cessive."
And this, said Ball, is the key to the
problem--that the American Gaullists,
instead of working quietly and effectively
through existing diplomatic channels -~
carry · out policy through surprise and
public thunderbolt.
,
"We have no institutionalized foreign
policy·now," he said. "Nobody talks to~·
people. There's no preparation.
"This system of surprise an-~&gt;
nouncemenls was borrowed from de ~
Gaulle. It made sen!!&lt;! for Ill!' general, as
the leader of a small power, to keep the ·
world off balance. But it is inappropriate
· for a great power, which must want to
establlsh II .;eputatlon for steadfastness ~~
above all."
· ~:;

million, reported donations of
--Sen. Edmund S. Muskie,
$1,600,303, plus about $1,718 in D-Main, collected $722,911,
transferred funds. Expenses . plus about $12,000 in committee
were $1,603,465.
transfer s. Expense s were
•'red Thompson, director of $1,503,398 .
the GAO's Office of Elections,
- Rep ..Shirley Chisholm, D·
said the report was also in- N.Y., reported taking in $95,346
complete because it was and spending $114,163.
almost impossible to calculaU!
--Sen. Henry M. Jackson, [).
· the amount of tlle contributiorui Wash., reported taking in
and expenses of the political $209,725 and spending $364,961.
parties on the presidential
- Rep. Wilbur Mills, D·
races.
Ark .,took in $398,506 and spent
Thompson said changes in $469,580,
the law were needed to "have
- Duke University President
these (campaign) conunittees Terry Sanford took in $470,348
report abnost continuollsly to plus about $14,000 in transfers,
us. The notion of a new cam- and spent $1,086,629.
paign start every four years ia
- Rep. John M. Ashbrook, R·
very hard to deal with."
Ohio., look in $204,575, and
Among the other candidates: spent $215,683.

Tension up
in mid-east
BY UNITED PRESS INTER·
NATIONAL
Israel said Saturday it
expected the United Nations to
take action against an alleged
Egyptian attempt to move
more heavy artillery across the
Suez Canal with additional
heavy artillery in violation of
th eir
disengagement
agreement. In the embattled
Golan Heights, Syrian and
Israeli guns dueled for the 12th

whose Mt Hermon perimeter

points like a dagger at
Damascus, less than 30 miles
away .

The Israeli military command sa id both sides dueled
With cannon and tank fire in
barrages that ran Cor more

Federal sources who have
heard the tape recording of the
Watergate "hush OlQney" conversation between President
Nixon and John Dean say it is
"explosive" and clearly proves
Dean told the trnth about the
conversation and the President
did not, the Los Angeles Times
reported today.
The White House, informed
of the report, stands by its
position that the tape is
" ambiguous " and open to

GA LLIPOLIS - Dan C.
Black, a native of Gallipolis,
has been promoted to Vice
President of Personnel and
Store Supervision for Th e
Jones Boys stores.
Black is a graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and was
associated for over 20 years
with the A &amp; P Tea Company,
managing stores in bo th
Huntington and Charleston,
West Virginia. He was a store
manager for Big Star Markets
in Charleston, West Virginia,
for two years. Mr. Black was
the first store manager of The
Jones Boys Store, Pomeroy,
and in September 1973, he was
promoted to District Manager
for both tl1e Gallipolis and

I

~

Snow, cold

headed east

Service warned, '"This stonn is

Man dies in hotel fire
WELI.SVIT.LE; Ohio (UP!)
- One elderly person was
killed Saturday when fire
swept through the old Aztec
Hotel and Lounge in the
downtown area of this Ohio
River community.
Authorities said Antonio
Sinisgalli, 77, a retired railroad
worker and resident caretaker
at the hotel, was found dead in
his room on the top floor of the
three-story brick building.
"We've accounted for all
other persons," said Fire Chief
Robert Uoyd . "Originally
there were three people we
could not account for, but we
later found the other two."

Uoyd said there were about

still in Its developing stages
and is expected to intensify this
afternoon and tonight and
15 people in the hotel at the move into the Ohio Valley and
time of the fire but all of them Lower Great Lakes by early
fled to safety.
Sunday morning ."
A fireman suffered minor
Temperatures fell to the
facial burns. There were no
occasion. The Weather Service
other injuries.
said "low temperatures typical
of mid January or lower are
The blaze started on the top expected."
floor of the 45-year-old bote!,
Cold wave warnings were out
causing the roof to collapse. for Nebraska and Iowa into
Policeman Wayne Clutter said northern and central Illinois.
he spot ted the flames about 3 Frost and freezing alerts were
a.m. The fire was brought posted for southern Illinois,
under control about three Ohio, Delaware, Maryland,
hours later.
northern and western Virginia
Uoyd said the fire started on and northwest South Carolina.
the third noor but the cause has
The high temperature at
not yet been determined . Devil'sLake, N.D., Friday was
Damage was estimated at
(Continued on page 16)
$150,000.

Hush money tape
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -

Black promoted
by Jones Boys

tnan six hours and lasted until
dark.
Syrian gunners hit all along
the front in the rain-sodden
successive day .
Israeli, the command said. The
The Israeli command report- sporadic bombardments came
ed two soldiers wounded along in two waves wi th a 90-minute
the Golan front lines, raising to midafternoon lull between
64 the number of Israeli them.
casualties- 13 of them deathsThe Syricm command said its
since the Oct. 24 cease-fire that big guns silenced 19 Israe li Pomeroy s tores.
formally ended the 1973 Middle ar tillery and mortar batteries
Black is married to the
East war . A Syrian woman was and destroyed three tanks and former Charl ene Robinson ,
also killed.
other material in the day's also a native of Gallipolis. They
In a dispatch from Washing- clashes. Israeli officers have have two sons, John, 16 and
ton, Israeli National Radio said called the Golan fighting a Robbie, 12. They reside in
Prime Minister Golda Meir's "wtit- of attrition" and one Gallipolis.
government had informed U.S. Israeli orricial Friday warned
Secretary of State Henry A. that continued aggression might
Kissinger of Cairo's introduchinder indirect disengagement
tion of excess weaponry on the talks set to begin in Washington
Suez East Bank but said Israel next week .
was not asking for American U.S. Navy Rear Adm. Brian
intervention . It said it expected McCauley, accompanied by
the United Nations to take up Navy and Army experts, has
the complaint, the first such arrived in Cairo to consult with
public charge of violations Egyptian authorities on mine- By United Press International
since the disengagement proc- sweeping operations in the Suez
A snow storm and cold wave
ess was completed Marh 5..
worthy of mid-January moved
Canal.
Lt. Gen. Ensio ·slllasvuo,
The United Stales and Britain across the nation's midlands on
Finnish commander of the U.N. ag reed to assist Egypt in the third full day of spring
Emergency Force (UNEF ), clearing the mines and other Saturday.
mel for 35 minutes with Egypt's explosives from the 101-mileThe storm center rallied its
chief of staff, Mohammed long waterway, which has been forces alollg a cold front over
Gamassy, and a U.N. spokes- blocked since the 1967 Middle Arkansas and aimed its shaft
man told newsmen afterwards,
through Kansas and on to
East Six-Day war.
"I assume the Israeli complaint The sweeping operations were Missouri, Illinois, Indiana and
was discussed .''
expected to begin in about two beyond.
The Cairo government has weeks , assisted by 500 AmeriBy early morning, there was
made no comment on the can military personnel under three to six inches of snow
charge.
the command of Adm. Daniel across northern and central
Israel said the latest Golan Murphy, commander of the Kansas and three to lour inches
fighting was one of the longest U.S. 6th Fleet in the Mediter- in central Missouri.
series of artillery clashes since ranean.
The National Weather

confirmed that he delivered the
warning to presidential counsel
James D. St. Clair, the Times
reported.
Scott said be told St. Clair the
President \'would be impeached in the House" for
defiance unless be turns over
the tapes , "I gave a clear
message," the newspaper
quoted him as saying.
The Times said "a source in
Congress and another In the
executive branch" who have

heard the •.ape of the talk
between "former White House
Counsel Dean and Nixon on
March 21, 197~ter of a
vital conflict in the Watergate
controversy~id that ''there
could be only one logical interpretation, and It was explosive for the Pr-esident.:... that
is, the President did not
disapprove of hush money

conflicting interpretations, the
Times said.
The newspaper also reported
that Nixon · is ready to
surreQder 42 more tapes to the
House Judiciary Committee
next week, following. an ul·
timatum from the top Republican leadership in Congress that
Nixon would be impeached if
be continues defiance of the payments."
Nixon has inaintalned that
committee's demands.
Senate Minority Leader those who hear the conversa'Hu~h Scott of Pennsylvania lion may misunderstand it, bot
that what he meant was that
ltllllltltllliiMII1111111FftiltltllliiiWI!Itii8118111WI!I!illlllllllit111111t111111M111111111~~~·SO"ml=..:ra1::::::;:::-.::::::~:=~:::::::."::::-.::::::::~::~::s;..~:?.r~~:~:~:~:=:~::~s•:::;-;:~:;s;:!:;:§:;:::;:::::&amp;.».::::::::::::::::::~!·

I'

the Oc tober war m the the 325.squ are-miiP Israeli-held bulge

DAN C. BLACK

'I

•

lS

'explosive'

payment of hush money would remarks, and said the White
House will not comment fur·
be "wrollg ."
Dean testified to the Senate ther on the story.
Warren said the White House
Watergate Committee that
when he told Nixon it would bad expected "this type of
take $1 million to keep the story ... to be planted. We knew
Watergate burglars, then in it would come sooner or later.
jall, from revealing their links The fact is the tape may be
to the President's re-election read different ways by dif.
campaign, Nixon replied that ferent people with different
motives, as we have pointed
would be "no problem."
The Times quoted one of the out."
It was in reference to this
sources as saying:
"When you hear the tape, tape that Nixon said at his
you have a lot more respect for news conference March,6:
"Any individual who wants
Dean's integrity and what he
told the Senate Watergate to, can take any one statement
Committee. It is that explosive. and interpret it any way he
wants. What I say is that I
It is not ambiguous.
"The President has given know what I said, I know what I
different versions of the March meant, and I know what l did."
21 meetillg and the tape teils
Nixon said that folloWing the
wh~t the real story is. If it had conversation, involving hush
not been for the tape, we would money and the pot!SibWty . of
· have never known the real presidential clemency for the
story."
burglars, he told Dean it would
The Times said Deputy Press be ''wrong," by which he
Secretary Gerald Warren stood meant uthe whole transaction
by the President's earlier was wrong."

"·

I '

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�, I

I

·,

I

&lt;·

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16-The Sunday Times . Sentinel. Swlday, March 24, 1974

'.

NEW TACK bas been
dlsclooed by Presideoi Nlllon
in bil efforts to recapture
public trust . Tbe cbief
executive said be wW use lbe
press to relay biB messace w
lbe American people rather
than radio llDd television as
wu hil practice. The new
campaign II believed to be a
recuneillatory one by tbe
White HoWie In hopes of
improving press relations.

Students ·

Pearson man to beat
in Atlanta 500 race

Revson accident traced to
suspen to suspension failure

.,
JOHANNESBURG,
South
·,' Africa (UPI ) - A suspension
~ failure on his British Ford UOP
Shadow caused the crash
which ktlled
American
millionaire racing driver Peter
Revson , officials said Saturday.
"The car jackknifed and left
flle track," said Francis Tucker. chairman of the South
African Motor Racing Oub. " It
was the car's suspension tha t
failed."
The burned and broken body
of the 35-year-old Revson,
nephew of the fo&gt;!"'d"': of
Revlon cosmetics, lay an a
Johannesburg mortuary. Officials said an autopsy would be
held before it is shipped back to
the United States.
Doctors said Revson was
wearing a gold locket from
dethroned Miss World Marjorie Wallace insaibed, "If
Not For Me- Marji," when his
car crashed into a guard rail at
Kyalami rac;etrack Friday.
Miss Wallace's sister said
she was to have left the United
States for Johannesburg this
weekend to visii Revson.
Miss Wallace, :m, of Indianapolis, was dethroned by
pageant officials this month
because of "unfavorable publicity " involving former

(Continued from page 15)
offered during the first week of
Ute first teacher strike in the
city's history.
Parenta and some civic
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
groups have complained that
the district's 62,000 students Transportation Director J.
are receiving UtUe more than Phillip Richley said Friday
daytime supervision from the fllat the Federal Railroad
non-«riking school personnel. Administration (FRA) has
In San Francisco, the Class- given reasonable assurances to
room Teachers Association Ohio that railroad abanvoted Thursday tO walk out on donments in the slate will be
Monday If there is no progress less than originally anticipated.
toward a settlement.
1
The FRA, in a report issued
' 1 think we can settle on it, "
said cr A President Jerry De Feb. I, 1974, proposed a 4 per
Ryan of the new :&gt;lan, offered cent reduction in train carloads
by the San Francisco Labor for Ohio . Richley said,
however, that as a result of a
CouncU leader.
13 in
It came aa teachers and the meeting March
school district were stalemated Washington between state and
in setUement efforts. The
teachers have been demanding
a 15 per cent pay raise, while ,
the school district has offered
(Continued from page 15)
6.5 per cent.
5
below zero.
District negotiators said they
It waa the second wintry
like the plan becaUBe it would
storm
w roll out of Ute Southactually oost less than Uteir 6.5
per cent proposal. Teachers west since Spring's debut
said the plan showed promise WI!OOesday. Earlier, a oold
becaUBe It would mean bigger front sent tornadoes ripping
percentage raises for teachers through the Southland, killing
at the lower end of the pay five, and plastered the Norscale. Teachers' wages range theast with snow.
The Weather Service looked
from S9,400 to $17,115 a year.
The Cl'A Is the second union for four inches of snow or more
to authorize a strike, Members through southern portions of
of the rival American Federa- Missouri, Illinois and Indiana,
lion of Teachers h8ve been off Travelers' warnings were isthe job for two weeks, but sued from northeastern Ok·
schools have remained open on lahoma and northern Arkansas
half-day schedules. About 70 to northern Kentucky.
per cent of the teachers and
half the studenis have remained in classes ,
San Franclml parents have
(Continued from page 15)
asked for state lntervenlion to
avoid a shutdown. Parent- president and ''within this
Teachers Association leaders contelll, I believe that Ute
sent a telegram to CalHornia's committee's report will be the
Superintendent of Public In- objective and balanced study
struction, Wtlson Riles, ap- indicated by the evidence
pealing to blm to setUe the presented at the October
·hearings."
strike.

British soccer star George
Best .
Officials said th e So uth
African Grand Prix, for which
Revson was practicing when he
was killed , will g&lt;&gt; ahead as
scheduled March 30.
Revson was ranked among
the favorites w win the Formula I event in which he was
fWlnerup last year w Jackie
Stewart of Scotland .
It was the first fatality on the
Kyalami co urse, considered
one of the safest on the international Formula 1 circuit.
Fellow drivers including former world champion Grahan1
Hill tugged Revson 's body
from the blazing wreck after
his car careened into the rails

at " Barbecue Bend," flle first
difficult curve on the 2 'r&lt;-milc
track .
Rev son

wa s

driver

the FRA report, includin g 53
train stations scheduled for
abandonment which are
currently being operated at a
profit.

1V conlomc&gt;ofiiY otylod in walnut
orllft finllh on hlrdboord. lnoii-MIIIc
ono bunon color luning. Long-Nit
COinPGMnll on plug-In
mini-circuit Plftols raptlc. oil lout

lolld--

• - tuba. SlldiiCtion color
-~ Automllic fine tuning.
~lomiUc chromo control. Motorola
)riGht color picture tube.

J

J

"

sma ller eng ines.

Am ong others expected to
cha ll enge Pearson are Char!Je
Glotzbach, Benny Parsons,
Cale Ya rboro ugh, Donn ie and
Bobby All ison m Chev rotcts;
Buddy Saker and Richard
Petty in Dod ges and Ford
dnvers Jodey Ridl ey and
Richie Panch.

I
FLOATING PEACEFULLY down the Kiu!Wlg River in
Fukien Province, China, are enormous bamboo shipments
guided by handlers who steer it to waterfront factories . The
bam boo is then processed and used in construction.
FIRST GOOD LOOK
PASADENA, Ca lif. (UP! ) Mariner 1'0 started its final
approach to the little-knownabout planet Mercury Saturday witl1 television ·cameras
sending back the first of a
series of pictures to earth after
a space voyage of five months .
Two TV cameras aboard flle
crafl were set to begin transmitting the first of more than
2,000 pictures revealing for the
fir st time just what the planet
nearest the sun looks like.
NUDES SHOT AT
SAN JUAN, P.R. (UP!)
Three young males, strea king
nude through San Juan's main
tourist hotel district, were fired
upon Thursday by police. No
one was hurt.

FIRM INDICTED
COLUMBUS (UP)) - Ohio
Co mmerce Departm e nt
Director Dennis Shaul said
Friday the depariment has
filed suit against Exciting Life,
Inc. for selling unregistered
securities and violating other
sections of Ohio fa w. Shaul said
Exciting Life purports to be a
"travel and success " club but
is active only in selling
memberships to executives for
$4,500.
CARTOONIST DIF.S
COLUMBUS (UP)) - Alber t
"AI" Getchell, 71, editorial
cartoonist for the Colwnbus
Citi&gt;en.Journal for 28 years,
died at his home here Friday.
He had been ailing since
retiring in 1967.

Stand ings tor the Tuesday
Morning Bowling League for
the week o f Ma r ch 19. 1974 are ·
Team
Won L ost
Larry 's Ways ide Furn . 74
6
Peoples Ban k
60 20
Citizen s Nat . Ban K
52 28
F r ench City Build
so 30
Wallac e Canst .
45 35
Schl itz
44 30
Jaymars
39 41
City lee &amp; Fue l
n 47
32 48
Vi lla ge Pizza Inn
Keith Goble Mob Hms
J2 4 8
G illingham Drug
28 52
Emp ir e F urn
27 53
La Mar ce Bty . ShOppe
24 56
K&amp;K Mobile Homes
20 60
Sharon Hayes bowled 194 -547
for Larry 's Wayside Furniture .
For Peoples Bank Wanda
Scarberry had 192 -49 9. Fr ona
Cal l rol led 159 -420 for Citizens
National B ank
For French
Ci ty Bui ld ers Helen Canaday
had high game 168 and Betty
Copl ey h igh ser ies 440 . Bar bara Smith bowled 186-51 4 for
Wallace Construction
For
Sch litz Doma H ern had h igh
gam e 191 an d Shir l ey Spea r s
high series 51..:1 Peg Tho mas
r olle d 182-497 f or Ja ymars .
Phylli s Ferguson 's 179-480
was high for Ci ty tee &amp; Fuel.
For Village P1zza Inn J mny
Will iam s had 207 .49•1 L inda
Stewar t was high ior Ke it h
Goble Mob ile Hom es with 170
425. For Gil li ngham •Drug
Pea rl Porter bowled 150-400.
Pam Niber t had 157 -450 and
Pat Harr is rolled 450 for
Empi r e Furn i ture . MaKine
Kinnaird's 168 -477 was high for
LaMa rce Beauty Shoppe . For
K&amp;K Mobile Ho mes Carole
Roush (sub ) bowl ed 142 -377 .
Jennifer Ha rris was h igh to r
their regu la r bowlers with 132 33 1.
Schli t z ro ll ed high lea-n
game th i s week 922 and Em pire Fu rn it ure h i gh t e am
se ries 2661 Several spl i1s wer e
p icked up . F r ank ie Duncan
pi cke d up th e S -7 , A nlla
T hompson 5 -10. Ruth M iller 5-7,
Frona Ca ll 5- 10 , Carme n
Curran 4-10 , Doma Hern 5 -10,
Diane Pa tr ick 5-7, and Edna
Thompson 2-7 -10.

Call .your
local specialist:

1
1

il
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high blood pressure (which is
well under control).
DEAR READER - That is a
low count. Usually we consider
anything below 5000 as too low.
There are indi vidual exceptions, and it is possible tha t
your coun t is normal for you.
Such a fin din g certa inly
warrants careful in vestigation.
Your doc tor knows about vour

Twenty -five
experie nc e.

years

Diles Hearing
1 Aid Center
Riv e r s ide

1 Tel.

.......

j
1

Profe ss ional/1

Bldg. , 444 West Un ion St .,

591-62381 .
Athens, Ohoo 45 701

I
i

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

Clearview A
COLUMBUS &lt;UPI)- Lorain Clearview's thirdranked Clippers, paced by Player of the Year Larry
Harris with 30 points, staged a mighty fourth
quarter comeback to defeat Franklin Monroe, 74-69,
and win the Class A State High School Basketball
Tournament here Saturday.
. Coach Bob Walfh's ClearVIew squad lost the lead at the
ou~t of the .sec~nd pe~iod and
dldn t regaan tt Wltil John
Szalay's driving five foot field
goal with 3:_52 left in the game
toputtheClippersahead,64~2.
The Nwnber 10 .Jets of
Frankhn Monroe !ted the
score, 69-69, with 1:47
remaining when all-Ohioan
Mike Cross sank a hook shot in
Ute lane, but coach Phil Dubbs'
Charg~rs ,were shut out by
Oearvtews zone defense the
rest of the way.
Substitute Sam Hitchens
sankafre~throw,DanHatfield
dropped m a field goal and
Harris swjshed a pair of foul
shots in the last 1:26 of the
gam~ to close out Clearvlew's
scormg.
The 'victory game Clearview
a 22-2 record and its first state
.
1
lite.
Fran kl m
Monroe
departed with a 24-4 record.
Harris connected on 12 of 26
field goal attempts and hit six
.
.
of etght free throws despite a
tough zone defense by Franklin
Monroe. Five-eight guard Buss
Wallace matched up with the&amp;6 Harris man-to-man on
defense leaving the Oearview
'
standout
under
double

coverage the entire game.
Randy Dlugosz, a 6-5 forward, scored 14 points for
Clearview and grabbed 12
rebounds Teammate and cocaptain ~rry Fortner dropped
in seven field goals for 14
points. Cross led the Jets with
28 points and 13 rebounds.
Randy SpiUer sank five of six
free throws and had 17
Franklin Monroe points and
ll'i-captain Brian Jones had 10
points.
Lorain Clearview
outrebounded Franklin Monroe
43-38. The Jets had 28 of 60
shots from the floor for 46 per
cent accuracy. The Clippers
conn.lcted on 32 of 72 for a 44
percentmark.Bothtearnshad
17 personal fouls.
Class A Championship
LORAIN CLEARVIEW 1741
- Hatlield 4 0-0 8; Harris 12 6-8
30 ; Fortner 7 0-0 14; Dlugosz 6
2-2t4;Szalay31 -27;Hitchenso
1-2 1. Totals 32 J0-14 74.
FRANKLIN MONROE 1691
- R. Spitler 6 5-6 17; Cross 13 23 28; Jones 3 4-6 10; Rlesley 3 23 8; Wallace 10-0 2; Myers o0-0
O; T. Splitter 2 0-0 4. Totals 28
13
-J.\'0~:-by Quarters:
,
L. Clearvlew
16 18 14 26-74
Frank lin Mon. 12 26 14 17-69
Technical fools: Non_e. Total
fouls : Lorain Clearv1ew 17,
Franklin Monroe 17. A- 13,878.

Manchester
•
AA wznner

G:t
!GUll-

LENDER

Ohio Valley Bank
'·'·"

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r.~c·tcJdCJf' ltl:w :1pproval 111 ilS little as a week'

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of I
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Ohi o Valley Bank has always bee n a leader tn real es late
mortgage loan s. We have the money avatlab le. We want to see
11 in circulation because we 're co nvinced this 1s the kind of
activ tt y on our pari thai slimulates th e residential co nstructton
and rea l estate business. in Ga lli poli s and the surroundtng -Ohto
Valley area . And that's good for everyone

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I
1

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l for an appointment :
}

If you 've been putting off buytng or build ing a new home
bec~use the interest rates are loo ht gh wa tt no long er Ohio
Valley Bank makes buytng a home aff ordable again at an .tnterest
rate that makes your tn vestment att rac tive and prac l tca l rega rd less of the size of your mortgage

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ter m s.

~ortgage rates

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Full line of th e latest
electronic
hearing
ai ds .

Ohio Valley Bank
offers
residential

stress, a nd am on medicine £or

1

Thorough testing .1
follo we d
by
a p- 1
propri ate m edical or 1
clinica I referral.
1

Low white cell count
red blood cells and other findmgs which may help him
kn ow just how important the
finding is on your case ,
Sometimes the splee n is
overactive and literally digests
too many while blood cells.
Usually in this case the spleen
can be felt on physical
examination. Often it destroys
an excess amoWlt of red blood
celts too, but not always.
In ofller instances the blood
form ing org an s just quit
produci ng enough cells. You
can tell more about this by
s pecial tests, such as
examina tion of the bone
marrow and looking at lymph
glands with a mi croscope .
Some medicines do affect the
number of blood cells formed ,
and it is possible that one of flle
medicines you are laking for
blood pressure could be affecting this.
If you are worried about this,
ask the doctor to get a consultation with a specialist in
hema tology and let him
eva luate the possible causes of
your problem.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have
arthri tis - which began in my
finger joints - so far not
spread to other joints.
I always thought lots of
orange juice and other fresh
fruits were advisable, and then
a doctor out of state told an
acquaintance that she should
never drink orange juice. Her
finger joints are showing the
swelling and sti&gt;fness. Can this
be right? I'd like your opinion .
It should be of help to all so
afflicted.
DEAR READER - Utter
nonsense. There is no reason
why patients with arthritis
can't drink all the orange juice
they want. The only exception
would be if flley had an additional problem, like an acid
stomach, an ulcer or ·similar
problems.
While I favor using orange
juice and, fresh fruits in the
diet, I must add that they do
not cure arthritis, but merely
help anyone to have a good
nutritious diet.
·
For more information on
arthritus you might like to send
. for "There's Help for 'Ar·
thritis," a book I. co-wrote wifll
LaRue Stone. Send $1 plus 25
· cents postage and handling to
"Arthritis," in care of this
newspaper, P. 0 : Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New York,
N. Y. 10019.

64-51 victory over Kansas in the ...
first semifinal game.
BiU Walton of UCLA, wlio
scored 29 points and captured
18 rebo"nds, sparked the
Bruins to a 7~7lead with 3:27
left in the second five minute
overtime period and , at fllat
point, it appeared the Wolfpack
was dead.
But David Thompson, who
tallied 28 points, rallied N. C.
State and UCLA collapsed
trying to handle the hall.
After two free t)lrows by
little Monte Towe, with 3:23 to

l PROBLEM? ! champion

l~'s a FacJ!

else to do and, if I fee l all right,
to not worry about the low
coun t.
Is this your opinion? Is it an
indication of anything else? Wha t do you think causes such
a low count? I take about four
aspirin a day for occasional
aches and pa ins or muscul ar

QUEENSBORO, N.C. (UP!)
- Top-ranked North Catolina
State, downed seven points
with 3:27 to go in the second
overtime, stwmed seven-time
defending champion UCLA
with a 13-point .spree and
conquered the Bruins 8().77
Saturday in the semifinals of
the NCAA basketball tournament.
Six-foot sophomore guard,
Uoyd Walton, fired Marquette
to a nine-point spree early in
the second half, leading__ flle
Warriors into the final with a

en

r--HEARING-l

DR. LA WHENCE E. Lamb

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - For a
nwnber of years I have shown
an extremely low white cell
count in my yearly check-up such as 3200 compared to 7000,
which I Wlderstand is norma l.
Usually I am given the six B-12
and calciwn shots for a "buildup/ ' but, even so, the count
does not go up.
I am very healthy (age 69 )
and extremely resistant to
disease such as the common
cold, flu , infection, etc. I understand the low count in. dicates non-resistance to such
illnesses, but in my case this is
not so.
My doctor said last year tha t
he frankly does not know what

.u· ...... (m..ourld diogonally)
au..u··-. in • dr-· ColO&lt;

def ending

Local Bowling

Fogle, Barnes
are honored

ROYALTY LEAVES
SINGAPORE (UP! I
Queen Eli~abe th II and her
husband, Prince Philip, left
Singapore for London Friday
night after a brief stopover.

the

1s

champion in this run over the
hig h-banked , one-mile Atlanta
tra~k . He' ll be driv ing a

again this year .

WOP AT REELECTED
~ARION Robert M.
Wopat of Marion was elected among those who have been
president of General Te leph one selected to Eastern College
Co. of Ohio for lhe tenth con- Athletic Conferen ce's 1973-74
secutive year at the annual Division 1 All-East Basketball
board and sha reown ers Squad.
meetings held here Thursday .
Announ cement of the 11-man
Other offi cers and boa r d learn was made Saturday by
members also were reelec ted. Richard W. Colman, athl etic
Wopat, who also was renamed director at Mtddlebury College
to th e board , has been and chairman of the ECAC's
president since 1964.
· Awards Committee.
Barnes, Providence's &amp;-foot-9
center. is a repeater fr om last
seaso n's
s qu ad.
Oth e r
repeaters a re Dennis Duva l of
federal official s. Oh io has Syracuse and Btlly Knight of
received ass ura nce
th e Pittsburgh. Providence also
reduction will be less fllan 1 per placed Kevin Slacom on .the
squad.
cent.
John Engels of Pennsylvania
The possible abandonmenls
was
named Rooke of the Year.
have been the subject of 16
Others named to the squad
public heari.ngs in midwest and
were
Billy Cam pi on of
northeastern states covered in
Manhattan
; J ere
No lan,
the FRA report. The hearings
were held by flle Interstate Boston College, Ron Sellers,
Rutgers;
AI
Skinn er,
Corrunerce Commission.
Massachusetts,
and
Mel
Utley,
Richley said state officials
pointed out several errors in St. John's.

SALE PRICE

...

!Y-at SWlday when 36 stock ca rs
roar past the green fla t in the
$113,500 Atlanta 500.
"It might be a close race if
Pearson will go somewhe re
else Sunday afternoon ,"
laughed rival bud dy Baker.
"He's in a class by himself. "
The Spa rtanbu r g, S. C.,

NEW YORK (UP! 1 - Larry
Fogle of Canisius, the nation's
leading scorer. and Marv in
Barn es of Providence, R. L
the leading rebound er, are

Snow, cold

i

•

among the five best drivers in
the world-o ne of a few
Americans to challenge U1e
long-time European-Latin
domina tio n of Formula I
racing.
He won two 1973 grand prix
events and fin ished second in
1971 in America's top race, flle
Indianapolis 500, in which he
was sched uled to compete

Rail abandonment plan revised

$17 million

business so he's the man to

numbered

' ac

Mercury prepar ~ d by the
Meti cu lous Wood Brothers
team.
Pearson ran away with the
pole posi tion with an averagl;!
speed of 159.242 miles per hour
on qualifyin g day - more than
three mph faster than Gary
Bettenhau sen and the rest of
UJC crowd .
Bettenhausen will start on
the outside row in an American
Molors Matauor. The Hoger
Penske-preapred ca r is r unning und er new Nascar rules
allow ing larger carburetors in

ATLANTA (UP[) - David
Pearson has the fastest car and
the best support crew in the

.
ruins

17 - The SWlday Times · Sentinel, SWlday, March 24, 1974

..

-

·S

go, Thompson drilled a tip shot
and North Carolina· State was
back within four points at 75-71
with three minutes left.
Then 7-foot-'1 Tom Burleson
hammered in a tip with 2: 16 to
go. UCLA turned the ball over
again and Burleson was fouled
at the 1:38 mark. He made the
first of a one-and-&lt;Jne free
throw, but missed the second.
Dave Meyers of UCLA was
fouled with 1: 13 remaining but
missed his free throw and
Thompson rebounded. then hH

omination

'

the go-ahead bucket with 53
seconds left . ,
Thompson added two more
free ·throws with 34 seconds to
go and N. C. State was home
free.
Each team scored only two

points in the first overtime.
Burleson hit with 4:0ll left,
Wheeling around Walton .
UCLA's Greg Lee popped in a
20-footer at the 3: 48 mark,
tying the game.
The Pack stalled the last
fllree minutes, but Burleson

missed an inside shot , fll e ball
rollin g off the rim with three
seconds to go.
The regulation game ended
at ~5 after N. C. State roared
back from an 11-point defi cit
that UCLA built in the first 4%
minutes of the second half.
Led by Walton , the Bruins
outscored the Wolfpack, 14-3,
for a 49-38 lead with 15:38
remaining.
But N. C. State, with the
partisan crowd roaring, didn't
quit, fin ally ca tching up on a

•

three-point play by Thompson
for a 63~1 lead 4:58 from the
end of regulation time .
Both tea ms missed good
shots in the last minute, Walton
failed with 50 seconds left on a
close-in shot and Tim Stoddard, after the Wolfpack ran
the clock down, missed from
the corner with five seconds to
go.
UCLA resc ued a 35-35
halftime score when Meyers

sank a 35-foot shot a t flle

buzzer.

In the opening game of the
doubl e header ,
almost
forgotten here in the excilement over the heralded
showdown between State ond
UCLA, Kansas had a le••' of 2926 with 18:01 to pla y wheJio.
Marquette's Warriors turn£"'
the game aroWld with an unbroken string of nine points.
Kansas never seemed to
recover from that blow and
Marquette built a 53-39 with
4:25 left an~ eruised home.
Lucas
led
Maurice

Marquette with 18 points while
Marcus Washin gton had 16.
Rick Suttle of Kansas took
game honors with 19 points.
Marqu ette had taken an
earl y 21-14 lead but the n
Kansas, champion of the Big
Eight, went on an 10-2 tear to
go ahead and the Jayhawks led
by 24-23 at the half.
Marquette will be making its
first-ever appearance in the
NCAA finals . Kansas and
UCLA will meet in a thirdplace game.

•

arrzors gazn NCAA inals
GREENSBORO, N.C. (UPI )
- Sophomo~e guard Looyd
Walton, playing with three
foul s, inspired a nine-point
burst early in the second half
Saturday , propelling
Marquette to a 64-51 victory
over Kansas in the semi-linals
of the NCAA Basketball
Tournament.
Wallop, the Warriors' play-

maker. and leader of th e
swarming press, left the game
with ll :Oll remaining with four
personal fouls . But, by then
Marquette had the game in
hand, 41-33.
Kansas led, 29-26, when the
Warriors started their spree
with 18:0lleft on a bucket by
Earl Tatwn . Then came the big
play. Walton stole an in-bounds

Norton at secret
hideaway resting
for Tuesday bout
CARACAS
(UP!)
Heavyweight Ken Norton was
at a secret hideaway Saturday,
resting for his championship
challenge Tuesday against
Wlbeaten George Foreman.
The 211-year-&lt;Jld ex-Marine
left the Hotel Tamanaco late
Friday to get away from the
attention of hotel guests,
tourists and fans who besieged
him whenever he left his room.
The promoters said Norton
had "gone to the mountains"
until Monday, but it was
believed he moved to the plush
Military Officers' Club in the
capital,
"I don't even know where he
went," said John Norton of
Jacksonville,
Ill.,
the
challenger's father. "He didn't
even tell us."
Norton finished sparring two
days ago, limiting his training
to jogging and calisthenics.
Foreman sparred Saturday
at the Poliedro for the benefit

of fans who don 't have tickets
to the fight.
" George is just jivin g,
sweating and dancing, " said
trainer Dick Sadler _
Oregon
heavywe ig ht
champion Terry Hinke, who
was a f'oreman sparring partner for his winning title fight
against Joe Frazier and his
first defense against Joe
(King) Roman. said the 25year-&lt;Jld champion is more
relaxed than he's ever seen
him.
" His concentration can be

broken now to the extend he'll
crack a smile,'' said Hinke, one
of five sparring partners with
Foreman in Venezuela.
Foreman stayed at the Hotel
Avila,
a
colonial-s tyle
establishment
in
the
residential district, He's been
able to sit, undisturbed, at
poolside for several hours ea ch
day.

McGuire reminds fans
title game is Monday

GREENSBORO, N.C. (UP!)
Marquette Coach Al
McGuire had just watched his
team register a 64-51 victory
over Kansas to get into lhe
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Massive Mike .Phillips NCAA finals, but he realized
poured in 38 points here Saturday to lead·the top- that the big interest wasn't
ranked and unbeaten Akron Manchester Panthers really on his game.
"Here I was on national TV
to a 72·52 win over Columbus Bishop Hartley in the
and
glowing, and the other two
finals of the Class AJ\State High School Basketball
teams come out and that was
Tournament.
Utat," McGuire said .
The 11other two teams" were
Lorain Oearview earlier in 75 shots. Coach Dick Geyer's
the day stopped Franklin Hartley team canned only 25 of North Carolina State and
Monroe, 7~9, to win the Class 63 from the floor for a 40 per UCLA. The Greensboro
Colisewn erupted into bedlam
A championship. Cincinnati cent shooting mark.
Elder played Canton McKinley
Manchester went four of 14 when the Wolfpack took the
for the Classs AAA title from the free throw line and floor for their warm-up and
Bishop Hartley was two for' McGuire was forced to cut the
Saturday night.
interview short.
Philll[18, UPI's Class AA five .
A grinning McGuire told
Player of the Year, was unClass AA Championship
newsmen
in a post-game inAKRON
MANCHESTER
stoppable the entire game. The
(72)- Neff 50-0 10; Thom~son terview that he would make his
6-11, 24ii-pound center, tallied 7 1-3 15; Phillips 18 2-7 . 38;
12 points in the first quarter, 10 Sliger 2 1-2 5; Roberts 2 0-0 4; comments brief "so you can
in the second and had a 16-polnt Eckert 0 0-0 0; Arnold 0 0-0 0; get out and watch them play
Edwards 0 0-0 0; Schier 0 0-0 0;
last half as the Panthers would Simmons, 0 0.0 0; Dover 0 0-0 0. the championship game,"
Most of the publicity building
up a perfect 26-0 season .
Totals 34 4-14 72.
COLUMBUS
BISHOP up to the NCAA tournament
Manchester was never
HARTLEY
152)
Boone
3 1-4 semi-finals has been focused on
threatened, opening up It-point 7; White 30-06; Profera 3 D-0
6;
leads twice in the first quarter Gilliland 121 -1 25; Jones 3 0-0 6; the UCLA-North Carolina State
and a 17-point spread In the Mark McNalley 0 0-0 O; Wile o game with many persons
0; Mike McNalley 0 0-0 0; forgetting that the final will be
second. In the third quarter the 0.0
Bender 1 0-0 2; Long 0 0-0 0. held Monday night.
Panthers pulled ahead by 21 Totals 25 2-5 52.
Marquette had to overcome a
By Quarters:
points and in the fourth period
Manchester 21 t2 18 21- 72 shoddy first half which saw the
Manchester led by as many as A.
Bishop Hartley 12 t8 8 22-52 Warriors shoot only 32.1 pet.
27 points, 65-38.
Technfal fouls: None. Total
Hartley's unranked Hawks fouls: Akron Manchester 7, from the floor and blow their
made a courageous effort to Bishop Hartley U . A-13,670. lead in the last minute-and-akeep the AA ·crown in · the
capital city a third straight
year, but Akron's physical
dominance of the game proved
too much for them.
Philllps banged · in 18 of 28 ,
field . oat attempts and pulled . HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S. Miller con tlnued to dominate
down g
me high of 22 C. (UP!) - Johnny Miller the marshy harbour town
rebounc:'s. ~:,Thompson, a II- added insult to injury with a layout on this AUantic coastal
f ard scored 15 Man- hole i9 one Saturday and island.
8 orw ;
·opened a IO&lt;!troke lead over
chester pomls and grabbed 14 ·the field midway through the
Miller had identical 4-underreboWids, and teammate Tim
.
the
· par 67's in the two opening
000
Neff scored 10 pointsthtr~ ro~d of
$200,
Bishop Hartley, going home Rentage Golf Classic.
,, roWlds and held a six-stroke
with a 26-G record, was paced
Miller, already the year~ lead over Wadkins and Allen
$-IO ard Mike GUilland ·leading money wmner at 1 Miller going into the third ·
by
~
$109,106, aced the 187-yard, roWld,
Johnny Miller, who said
wi~: (IOin~kr~n
·team par-three seventh hole with a
outrebounded the Hawks 56-36. four iron and made Ute turn earlier that he was playing " 10
th I b were cold on 12 four-under-par to go 12-undef times better" than he dld when
Bo c u s
for the tournament.
• ·he won this tournamenl back In
~;~!hers dropped in 45 ''Tom Kite arid , Lanny :1972, seemed a cinch to collect
t of their field goal Wadkins were leading the pack the $40,000 first prize money
=-~:~ making good on 34 of in distant .second place while today.

Miller has 'hole-in-one'

half to go into intermission
trailing, 24-23.
Marquette came out hot in
the second period and quickly
regained its poise and beg~n
pulling away fr om the
Jayhawks.
McGuire,'asked what he had
talked about during the halftime intermission, replied he
had discussed "a. couple of
things I didn't like."
" It really didn ' t hav e
anything to do with. basketball, " he said .
Whatever it was, McGuire
inust have made his point
clear.
" It seemed like it was going
to blow up in here,' ' said
Maurice Lucas, who led the
Warriors' attack with 18 points.
"There could've been a bomb. "
. McGuire said he is willing to
" wlerate anything" with his
team as long as it wins.
"But I let them know that
I'm the dictator," he added.
"When It gels down to driving
the bus, I'm the driver."
McGuire stayed around
for
the
first
half
·of the North Carolina
State-UCLA games but only
because he had a television
commitment at half-time . He
said he doesn't like to watch
games he's not playing.
"All of a sudden you are not
watching enjoyment, you are
watching work," he said.

RAINF.D OUT
Saturday's
exhibition
baseball games between Pittsburgh and St. Louis at
Bradenton, Fla. , and Detroit
and Boston at Winterhaven,
Fla. , were rained out.

'college Basketball Results
By United Press International
NCAA Tourn., Semifinals
Marquette 64 Kansas ST
No. Carolina St. 80 UCLA 77
(OLB overtime)
National tnv.

Tournament, Semifinals :
Purdue 78 Jackson vil le 63

Utah 117 Boston College 93

i

pass and turned it into a layup
for a 3().29 Marquette lead with
16:34 to go.
That see med to stun the
Warriors into actio n a~d
Marcus Washin gton pumped in
a fielder , while Maurice Ellis
con nee ted with a fre e throw
and Walton finished the blitz

with another steal and layup
for a 35-29 lead with 14 :32
remaining.
Marquette's pr ess in g
defense did the best, building a
53-39 margin with 4:25 left.
Maurice
Lucas
led
Marquette with 18 points, while
Marcus Washingwn added 16
and Tatum 14. Rick Suttle
tallied 19 for Kansas and Roger
Moringstar got 10.
The Jayhawks took a 24-23
lead to flle dressing room at

&amp;:~:::::~":::::::::::..-.::..""=:=:::~:::::::

John C. Wickline, Rio
Grande, president of the
Southeastern District ol the
Ohio Stale Board ol Control,
Ohio High School Athletic
Association, presented
Lorain Clearvlew the 1974
Class A stale championship
basketball trophy following
Saturday's Class A finals at
St. John Arena, Columbus.
Wickline, former Rio
Grande, Oak Hill and Kyger
Creek High School cage
mentor whose cage teams
won more than 300 games in
the 1930s, 40s, and 50s and
60s,
a Iso
presented
Columbus Bishop Hartley
the Regional AA championship trophy at th e
Convocation Center, Athens,
on March 16.

halftime, after trailing most of
the first 20 minutes.
The Big Eight champions
outscored Marquette, 1().2, in
the lasl6 :04 after the Warriors
built a 21-14lead. In the last six
minutes, however, Marquette's
lone points came on a bucket
by Maurice Lucas with :55
seconds left.
Norm Cook started the
Kansas comeback with a pair
of free throws . Suttle added two

Purdue rolls by
Dolphins, 78-63
qualified to meet the winner of
Purdue' s
Boil e rm a ker s the second semi-final between
became the first Big Ten tea m utah and Boston in the
to reach the finals . of the Nationally -televised final
National Invitation Basketball round this afternoon.
Held to a 36-36 tie at the half,
Tournament Saturday by
Purdue
came to back to rid&lt;)le
trouncing Jacksonville 78-63 in
a semi-final at Madison Square the Dolphin defense with
perfectly executed pa ttern
Boilermakers thus plays, clicking off a !~oint
burst that gave them a 12-point
margin with eight minutes left
in the game.
The dolphins never really
got going in the second half.
They made only 10 of 48 field
goals attem9ts in that half for a
20 pet. shooting average and
coach Bob Gottlieb later said
that his was a ~~very tired
NEW

~:&gt;.::-«-:N:~~~:*-&amp;&amp;:::-:::::=~~=~:::::::::::-;:::::.

YORK

( UPI)

DodgerS G~~=n.

humble
Expos
VERO BEACfj, Fla. (UP!)
- Los Angeles is on a hitting
binge and their opponents are
in a fieldin g nightmare. First it
was the Yankees and Saturday
it was the turn of Montrea l to
commit seven errors as the
Dodgers beat the . Expos 15-li.
The Dodgers have scored 29
runs in two days. This latest
victory was their se venth
straight and gave them a
grapefruit record of 9-and-o.
It was no contest after the
first inning when the Dodgers
combined five hits with four
Montreal mistakes for nine
fWlS . Highlight of the inning
was a three-run homer by Tom
Paciorek for the last three
runs. Pitching to Jim Winn, the
next batter up , Balor Moore,
narrowly missed his helmet
with a fa st ball and for a few
moments it appeared there
might be a brawl as players
rushed from both benches. No
blows were struck .
Winn hit a home run over the
right field bank in his next turn
at bat and Moore was removed
from the gh.me midway
through the fourth inning.

'

White Sox in .

7-4 triumph
over Phillies
SARASOTA, Fla . (UP! ) Ken Henderson hit his fourth
homer of the spring and Ron
Santo slugged his first in a
White Sox uniform Saturday
leading Chicago to a 7-'1 rainabbreviated victory over the
Philadelphia Phillies .
The game was halted after
6'h minutes.
·
Henderson, who is batting
.424 and leads the team in
homers and RB!s with 11 ,
cracked a 400 foot two-run
homer over los~r Dick Ruthven
in the fourth. Santo connected
orr Ruthven in flle second.
Jerry Hairston, who leads
the White Sox with a .464
average, had a single and
double and drove in two runs.
Wilbur Wood permitted only
three singles and one unearned
run over the first five innings to
gain the victory . Jim
McGlothlin was touched for the
final three Phillis runs in Ute
seventh on Jim Essian's tworun s_ingle and a double play
that scored Tommy Hutton.

more free shots with 5: 15 left
and Moringstar and Suttle
canned buckets to give Kansas
its first lead with 1:38 to go.
After Lucas' two-pointer
Moringstar hit with :28 seconds
left for flle halftime margin.
The victory propelled
Marquette into the finals for
the first time with a 26-4 record
while Kansas will play for third
place Monday with a 23~
mark.

Rangers
edge NY

Yankees

POMPANO BEACH, Fla .
(UP! )- Tom Grieve slammed
a two-out ninth inning pinch
homer to give the Texas
Rangers a 9-8 vicwry over the
New York Yankees Saturday.
Grieve's blow followed Don
Castle's single w left center
and made a winner out of Jim
Shellenback and a loser out of
Roger Hambright.
Jeff Burroughs, continuing
his hot hand, drove in six rWls
for the Rangers, two on a flllrd
inning triple off Yankee starter
Doc Medich and the others on a
seventh inning grand slam off
reliver Wayne Granger.
Burroughs now has four
homers, 16 RBI's and a .441
hatting average this spring .
Down 7~ after Burroughs'
homer, the Yankees took an 8-7
advantage in the eighth when
Mike Hegan hit a two-run inside-the-park homer that was
set up by a collision between
Ran ge r outfielders Cesar
Tovar and Joe Lovitto In left
center. Neither outfielder was
injured although Tovar left the
game.

basketball team ."
Purdue controlled both
boards in the second half and
combined its fast running and
shooting games with precision
passing while looking for good
percentage shots. J ohn
Garrett, flle Boilermakers' &amp;foot-11 center, was high man on
the court with 21 points: His
teammates Bruce Parkinson
and Frank Kendrick each
scored 15. Leon Benbow led flle
Dolphins with 20.
The Boilermakers reached
the finals by beating tournament favorite North Crolina,
82-71, ln the first roWld and
beating Hawaii 85-72 in flle
quarter-final round.

Globetrotters at
Athens on Apr. 11
ATil ENS - The Harlem
Globetrotters, the world's
greatest family entertainers,
will visit Athens next month.
The Trotters will perform
their basketball magic at Ohio
University 's
Convocation
Center on April 11, starting at
7:30 p.m. Ticket prices are
$3.50 and $4.50. For additional
ticket information call (614)
594-3471.
Globetrotters
'74
will
highlight the hilarious antics of
the all Trotter favorites, including Clown Prince Geese
Ausbie .
Also featured will be
Globetrotter player coach
Marques Haynes ; former
Loyola of Chicago star Pablo
Rober tson; rebounding ace
Jerry Venable and Trotter

veteran Mel Davis.
The Globetrotters have now
performed their basketball
magic in 94 different countries,
playing before more than 70
million people.
In
addition
to
the
· Globetrotter game, fans will
also see an all-new, all-star,
, all-family variety show
• presented during halftime.
The Trotters are coming off
the best year in their history,
with new attendance records
established in nearly every city
from New York wOakland and
from Minneapolis to Atlanta.
Rounding
out
the
Globetrotter lineup for April
ll 's game will be Frank
Streety, Dallas Thorton, John
Smith and Thoedis Lee .

Yankees buy
Texas player
for $40,000
POMPANO !lEACH, Fla .
(UP!) -Right-handed hitting
outfielder Elliott Maddox was
sold to the New York Yankees
by the Texas Rangers Saturday for an estimated ~0.000 .
Maddox: ·25, carrie lo the
Texas organization in the
Denny McClain deal after the
1910se!lson. A resident of Vaux
"H'all;-N. J ., he batted .238 in 100
games for the Rangers last
season and had one homer and
17 runs batted in.
To make room for Maddox
and Walt Williams, another
outfielder obtained from
Cleveland Thursday, the
Yankees out-righted outfielder
Rick Bladt and pitcher Lowell
Palmer to Syracuse of the
International League.
Infielder George Zeber also
was optained to Syracuse and
Juan Bernhardt, another infielder , to West Haven of the
Eastern League. Non-roster
players Jerry Kenney and
Tippy Martinez were assigned
to the · Yankees' Hollywood
Minor League camp.

1ft
PERSOn I
Thur., Apr. 11, 7:30 pm

Ohio University Convocation Center
TiCKETS •4.50

'3.50

Available at Memorial
Auditorium. Box Office ·
Phone 614-594-3471.
Order By Mail: Send
money order or check
with
self-addressed
stam. ped envelope to:
Memorial Auditorium,
Ohio Univ ., Athens ,
Ohio 45701.

�, I

I

·,

I

&lt;·

I

J

'

16-The Sunday Times . Sentinel. Swlday, March 24, 1974

'.

NEW TACK bas been
dlsclooed by Presideoi Nlllon
in bil efforts to recapture
public trust . Tbe cbief
executive said be wW use lbe
press to relay biB messace w
lbe American people rather
than radio llDd television as
wu hil practice. The new
campaign II believed to be a
recuneillatory one by tbe
White HoWie In hopes of
improving press relations.

Students ·

Pearson man to beat
in Atlanta 500 race

Revson accident traced to
suspen to suspension failure

.,
JOHANNESBURG,
South
·,' Africa (UPI ) - A suspension
~ failure on his British Ford UOP
Shadow caused the crash
which ktlled
American
millionaire racing driver Peter
Revson , officials said Saturday.
"The car jackknifed and left
flle track," said Francis Tucker. chairman of the South
African Motor Racing Oub. " It
was the car's suspension tha t
failed."
The burned and broken body
of the 35-year-old Revson,
nephew of the fo&gt;!"'d"': of
Revlon cosmetics, lay an a
Johannesburg mortuary. Officials said an autopsy would be
held before it is shipped back to
the United States.
Doctors said Revson was
wearing a gold locket from
dethroned Miss World Marjorie Wallace insaibed, "If
Not For Me- Marji," when his
car crashed into a guard rail at
Kyalami rac;etrack Friday.
Miss Wallace's sister said
she was to have left the United
States for Johannesburg this
weekend to visii Revson.
Miss Wallace, :m, of Indianapolis, was dethroned by
pageant officials this month
because of "unfavorable publicity " involving former

(Continued from page 15)
offered during the first week of
Ute first teacher strike in the
city's history.
Parenta and some civic
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
groups have complained that
the district's 62,000 students Transportation Director J.
are receiving UtUe more than Phillip Richley said Friday
daytime supervision from the fllat the Federal Railroad
non-«riking school personnel. Administration (FRA) has
In San Francisco, the Class- given reasonable assurances to
room Teachers Association Ohio that railroad abanvoted Thursday tO walk out on donments in the slate will be
Monday If there is no progress less than originally anticipated.
toward a settlement.
1
The FRA, in a report issued
' 1 think we can settle on it, "
said cr A President Jerry De Feb. I, 1974, proposed a 4 per
Ryan of the new :&gt;lan, offered cent reduction in train carloads
by the San Francisco Labor for Ohio . Richley said,
however, that as a result of a
CouncU leader.
13 in
It came aa teachers and the meeting March
school district were stalemated Washington between state and
in setUement efforts. The
teachers have been demanding
a 15 per cent pay raise, while ,
the school district has offered
(Continued from page 15)
6.5 per cent.
5
below zero.
District negotiators said they
It waa the second wintry
like the plan becaUBe it would
storm
w roll out of Ute Southactually oost less than Uteir 6.5
per cent proposal. Teachers west since Spring's debut
said the plan showed promise WI!OOesday. Earlier, a oold
becaUBe It would mean bigger front sent tornadoes ripping
percentage raises for teachers through the Southland, killing
at the lower end of the pay five, and plastered the Norscale. Teachers' wages range theast with snow.
The Weather Service looked
from S9,400 to $17,115 a year.
The Cl'A Is the second union for four inches of snow or more
to authorize a strike, Members through southern portions of
of the rival American Federa- Missouri, Illinois and Indiana,
lion of Teachers h8ve been off Travelers' warnings were isthe job for two weeks, but sued from northeastern Ok·
schools have remained open on lahoma and northern Arkansas
half-day schedules. About 70 to northern Kentucky.
per cent of the teachers and
half the studenis have remained in classes ,
San Franclml parents have
(Continued from page 15)
asked for state lntervenlion to
avoid a shutdown. Parent- president and ''within this
Teachers Association leaders contelll, I believe that Ute
sent a telegram to CalHornia's committee's report will be the
Superintendent of Public In- objective and balanced study
struction, Wtlson Riles, ap- indicated by the evidence
pealing to blm to setUe the presented at the October
·hearings."
strike.

British soccer star George
Best .
Officials said th e So uth
African Grand Prix, for which
Revson was practicing when he
was killed , will g&lt;&gt; ahead as
scheduled March 30.
Revson was ranked among
the favorites w win the Formula I event in which he was
fWlnerup last year w Jackie
Stewart of Scotland .
It was the first fatality on the
Kyalami co urse, considered
one of the safest on the international Formula 1 circuit.
Fellow drivers including former world champion Grahan1
Hill tugged Revson 's body
from the blazing wreck after
his car careened into the rails

at " Barbecue Bend," flle first
difficult curve on the 2 'r&lt;-milc
track .
Rev son

wa s

driver

the FRA report, includin g 53
train stations scheduled for
abandonment which are
currently being operated at a
profit.

1V conlomc&gt;ofiiY otylod in walnut
orllft finllh on hlrdboord. lnoii-MIIIc
ono bunon color luning. Long-Nit
COinPGMnll on plug-In
mini-circuit Plftols raptlc. oil lout

lolld--

• - tuba. SlldiiCtion color
-~ Automllic fine tuning.
~lomiUc chromo control. Motorola
)riGht color picture tube.

J

J

"

sma ller eng ines.

Am ong others expected to
cha ll enge Pearson are Char!Je
Glotzbach, Benny Parsons,
Cale Ya rboro ugh, Donn ie and
Bobby All ison m Chev rotcts;
Buddy Saker and Richard
Petty in Dod ges and Ford
dnvers Jodey Ridl ey and
Richie Panch.

I
FLOATING PEACEFULLY down the Kiu!Wlg River in
Fukien Province, China, are enormous bamboo shipments
guided by handlers who steer it to waterfront factories . The
bam boo is then processed and used in construction.
FIRST GOOD LOOK
PASADENA, Ca lif. (UP! ) Mariner 1'0 started its final
approach to the little-knownabout planet Mercury Saturday witl1 television ·cameras
sending back the first of a
series of pictures to earth after
a space voyage of five months .
Two TV cameras aboard flle
crafl were set to begin transmitting the first of more than
2,000 pictures revealing for the
fir st time just what the planet
nearest the sun looks like.
NUDES SHOT AT
SAN JUAN, P.R. (UP!)
Three young males, strea king
nude through San Juan's main
tourist hotel district, were fired
upon Thursday by police. No
one was hurt.

FIRM INDICTED
COLUMBUS (UP)) - Ohio
Co mmerce Departm e nt
Director Dennis Shaul said
Friday the depariment has
filed suit against Exciting Life,
Inc. for selling unregistered
securities and violating other
sections of Ohio fa w. Shaul said
Exciting Life purports to be a
"travel and success " club but
is active only in selling
memberships to executives for
$4,500.
CARTOONIST DIF.S
COLUMBUS (UP)) - Alber t
"AI" Getchell, 71, editorial
cartoonist for the Colwnbus
Citi&gt;en.Journal for 28 years,
died at his home here Friday.
He had been ailing since
retiring in 1967.

Stand ings tor the Tuesday
Morning Bowling League for
the week o f Ma r ch 19. 1974 are ·
Team
Won L ost
Larry 's Ways ide Furn . 74
6
Peoples Ban k
60 20
Citizen s Nat . Ban K
52 28
F r ench City Build
so 30
Wallac e Canst .
45 35
Schl itz
44 30
Jaymars
39 41
City lee &amp; Fue l
n 47
32 48
Vi lla ge Pizza Inn
Keith Goble Mob Hms
J2 4 8
G illingham Drug
28 52
Emp ir e F urn
27 53
La Mar ce Bty . ShOppe
24 56
K&amp;K Mobile Homes
20 60
Sharon Hayes bowled 194 -547
for Larry 's Wayside Furniture .
For Peoples Bank Wanda
Scarberry had 192 -49 9. Fr ona
Cal l rol led 159 -420 for Citizens
National B ank
For French
Ci ty Bui ld ers Helen Canaday
had high game 168 and Betty
Copl ey h igh ser ies 440 . Bar bara Smith bowled 186-51 4 for
Wallace Construction
For
Sch litz Doma H ern had h igh
gam e 191 an d Shir l ey Spea r s
high series 51..:1 Peg Tho mas
r olle d 182-497 f or Ja ymars .
Phylli s Ferguson 's 179-480
was high for Ci ty tee &amp; Fuel.
For Village P1zza Inn J mny
Will iam s had 207 .49•1 L inda
Stewar t was high ior Ke it h
Goble Mob ile Hom es with 170
425. For Gil li ngham •Drug
Pea rl Porter bowled 150-400.
Pam Niber t had 157 -450 and
Pat Harr is rolled 450 for
Empi r e Furn i ture . MaKine
Kinnaird's 168 -477 was high for
LaMa rce Beauty Shoppe . For
K&amp;K Mobile Ho mes Carole
Roush (sub ) bowl ed 142 -377 .
Jennifer Ha rris was h igh to r
their regu la r bowlers with 132 33 1.
Schli t z ro ll ed high lea-n
game th i s week 922 and Em pire Fu rn it ure h i gh t e am
se ries 2661 Several spl i1s wer e
p icked up . F r ank ie Duncan
pi cke d up th e S -7 , A nlla
T hompson 5 -10. Ruth M iller 5-7,
Frona Ca ll 5- 10 , Carme n
Curran 4-10 , Doma Hern 5 -10,
Diane Pa tr ick 5-7, and Edna
Thompson 2-7 -10.

Call .your
local specialist:

1
1

il
I

high blood pressure (which is
well under control).
DEAR READER - That is a
low count. Usually we consider
anything below 5000 as too low.
There are indi vidual exceptions, and it is possible tha t
your coun t is normal for you.
Such a fin din g certa inly
warrants careful in vestigation.
Your doc tor knows about vour

Twenty -five
experie nc e.

years

Diles Hearing
1 Aid Center
Riv e r s ide

1 Tel.

.......

j
1

Profe ss ional/1

Bldg. , 444 West Un ion St .,

591-62381 .
Athens, Ohoo 45 701

I
i

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

Clearview A
COLUMBUS &lt;UPI)- Lorain Clearview's thirdranked Clippers, paced by Player of the Year Larry
Harris with 30 points, staged a mighty fourth
quarter comeback to defeat Franklin Monroe, 74-69,
and win the Class A State High School Basketball
Tournament here Saturday.
. Coach Bob Walfh's ClearVIew squad lost the lead at the
ou~t of the .sec~nd pe~iod and
dldn t regaan tt Wltil John
Szalay's driving five foot field
goal with 3:_52 left in the game
toputtheClippersahead,64~2.
The Nwnber 10 .Jets of
Frankhn Monroe !ted the
score, 69-69, with 1:47
remaining when all-Ohioan
Mike Cross sank a hook shot in
Ute lane, but coach Phil Dubbs'
Charg~rs ,were shut out by
Oearvtews zone defense the
rest of the way.
Substitute Sam Hitchens
sankafre~throw,DanHatfield
dropped m a field goal and
Harris swjshed a pair of foul
shots in the last 1:26 of the
gam~ to close out Clearvlew's
scormg.
The 'victory game Clearview
a 22-2 record and its first state
.
1
lite.
Fran kl m
Monroe
departed with a 24-4 record.
Harris connected on 12 of 26
field goal attempts and hit six
.
.
of etght free throws despite a
tough zone defense by Franklin
Monroe. Five-eight guard Buss
Wallace matched up with the&amp;6 Harris man-to-man on
defense leaving the Oearview
'
standout
under
double

coverage the entire game.
Randy Dlugosz, a 6-5 forward, scored 14 points for
Clearview and grabbed 12
rebounds Teammate and cocaptain ~rry Fortner dropped
in seven field goals for 14
points. Cross led the Jets with
28 points and 13 rebounds.
Randy SpiUer sank five of six
free throws and had 17
Franklin Monroe points and
ll'i-captain Brian Jones had 10
points.
Lorain Clearview
outrebounded Franklin Monroe
43-38. The Jets had 28 of 60
shots from the floor for 46 per
cent accuracy. The Clippers
conn.lcted on 32 of 72 for a 44
percentmark.Bothtearnshad
17 personal fouls.
Class A Championship
LORAIN CLEARVIEW 1741
- Hatlield 4 0-0 8; Harris 12 6-8
30 ; Fortner 7 0-0 14; Dlugosz 6
2-2t4;Szalay31 -27;Hitchenso
1-2 1. Totals 32 J0-14 74.
FRANKLIN MONROE 1691
- R. Spitler 6 5-6 17; Cross 13 23 28; Jones 3 4-6 10; Rlesley 3 23 8; Wallace 10-0 2; Myers o0-0
O; T. Splitter 2 0-0 4. Totals 28
13
-J.\'0~:-by Quarters:
,
L. Clearvlew
16 18 14 26-74
Frank lin Mon. 12 26 14 17-69
Technical fools: Non_e. Total
fouls : Lorain Clearv1ew 17,
Franklin Monroe 17. A- 13,878.

Manchester
•
AA wznner

G:t
!GUll-

LENDER

Ohio Valley Bank
'·'·"

,.

'

r.~c·tcJdCJf' ltl:w :1pproval 111 ilS little as a week'

I

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~
I
of I
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!

Ohi o Valley Bank has always bee n a leader tn real es late
mortgage loan s. We have the money avatlab le. We want to see
11 in circulation because we 're co nvinced this 1s the kind of
activ tt y on our pari thai slimulates th e residential co nstructton
and rea l estate business. in Ga lli poli s and the surroundtng -Ohto
Valley area . And that's good for everyone

.

I
1

l W r ite for information or ca l l i
l for an appointment :
}

If you 've been putting off buytng or build ing a new home
bec~use the interest rates are loo ht gh wa tt no long er Ohio
Valley Bank makes buytng a home aff ordable again at an .tnterest
rate that makes your tn vestment att rac tive and prac l tca l rega rd less of the size of your mortgage

'

1

Renla I plan or budget
ter m s.

~ortgage rates

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!

Full line of th e latest
electronic
hearing
ai ds .

Ohio Valley Bank
offers
residential

stress, a nd am on medicine £or

1

Thorough testing .1
follo we d
by
a p- 1
propri ate m edical or 1
clinica I referral.
1

Low white cell count
red blood cells and other findmgs which may help him
kn ow just how important the
finding is on your case ,
Sometimes the splee n is
overactive and literally digests
too many while blood cells.
Usually in this case the spleen
can be felt on physical
examination. Often it destroys
an excess amoWlt of red blood
celts too, but not always.
In ofller instances the blood
form ing org an s just quit
produci ng enough cells. You
can tell more about this by
s pecial tests, such as
examina tion of the bone
marrow and looking at lymph
glands with a mi croscope .
Some medicines do affect the
number of blood cells formed ,
and it is possible that one of flle
medicines you are laking for
blood pressure could be affecting this.
If you are worried about this,
ask the doctor to get a consultation with a specialist in
hema tology and let him
eva luate the possible causes of
your problem.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have
arthri tis - which began in my
finger joints - so far not
spread to other joints.
I always thought lots of
orange juice and other fresh
fruits were advisable, and then
a doctor out of state told an
acquaintance that she should
never drink orange juice. Her
finger joints are showing the
swelling and sti&gt;fness. Can this
be right? I'd like your opinion .
It should be of help to all so
afflicted.
DEAR READER - Utter
nonsense. There is no reason
why patients with arthritis
can't drink all the orange juice
they want. The only exception
would be if flley had an additional problem, like an acid
stomach, an ulcer or ·similar
problems.
While I favor using orange
juice and, fresh fruits in the
diet, I must add that they do
not cure arthritis, but merely
help anyone to have a good
nutritious diet.
·
For more information on
arthritus you might like to send
. for "There's Help for 'Ar·
thritis," a book I. co-wrote wifll
LaRue Stone. Send $1 plus 25
· cents postage and handling to
"Arthritis," in care of this
newspaper, P. 0 : Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New York,
N. Y. 10019.

64-51 victory over Kansas in the ...
first semifinal game.
BiU Walton of UCLA, wlio
scored 29 points and captured
18 rebo"nds, sparked the
Bruins to a 7~7lead with 3:27
left in the second five minute
overtime period and , at fllat
point, it appeared the Wolfpack
was dead.
But David Thompson, who
tallied 28 points, rallied N. C.
State and UCLA collapsed
trying to handle the hall.
After two free t)lrows by
little Monte Towe, with 3:23 to

l PROBLEM? ! champion

l~'s a FacJ!

else to do and, if I fee l all right,
to not worry about the low
coun t.
Is this your opinion? Is it an
indication of anything else? Wha t do you think causes such
a low count? I take about four
aspirin a day for occasional
aches and pa ins or muscul ar

QUEENSBORO, N.C. (UP!)
- Top-ranked North Catolina
State, downed seven points
with 3:27 to go in the second
overtime, stwmed seven-time
defending champion UCLA
with a 13-point .spree and
conquered the Bruins 8().77
Saturday in the semifinals of
the NCAA basketball tournament.
Six-foot sophomore guard,
Uoyd Walton, fired Marquette
to a nine-point spree early in
the second half, leading__ flle
Warriors into the final with a

en

r--HEARING-l

DR. LA WHENCE E. Lamb

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - For a
nwnber of years I have shown
an extremely low white cell
count in my yearly check-up such as 3200 compared to 7000,
which I Wlderstand is norma l.
Usually I am given the six B-12
and calciwn shots for a "buildup/ ' but, even so, the count
does not go up.
I am very healthy (age 69 )
and extremely resistant to
disease such as the common
cold, flu , infection, etc. I understand the low count in. dicates non-resistance to such
illnesses, but in my case this is
not so.
My doctor said last year tha t
he frankly does not know what

.u· ...... (m..ourld diogonally)
au..u··-. in • dr-· ColO&lt;

def ending

Local Bowling

Fogle, Barnes
are honored

ROYALTY LEAVES
SINGAPORE (UP! I
Queen Eli~abe th II and her
husband, Prince Philip, left
Singapore for London Friday
night after a brief stopover.

the

1s

champion in this run over the
hig h-banked , one-mile Atlanta
tra~k . He' ll be driv ing a

again this year .

WOP AT REELECTED
~ARION Robert M.
Wopat of Marion was elected among those who have been
president of General Te leph one selected to Eastern College
Co. of Ohio for lhe tenth con- Athletic Conferen ce's 1973-74
secutive year at the annual Division 1 All-East Basketball
board and sha reown ers Squad.
meetings held here Thursday .
Announ cement of the 11-man
Other offi cers and boa r d learn was made Saturday by
members also were reelec ted. Richard W. Colman, athl etic
Wopat, who also was renamed director at Mtddlebury College
to th e board , has been and chairman of the ECAC's
president since 1964.
· Awards Committee.
Barnes, Providence's &amp;-foot-9
center. is a repeater fr om last
seaso n's
s qu ad.
Oth e r
repeaters a re Dennis Duva l of
federal official s. Oh io has Syracuse and Btlly Knight of
received ass ura nce
th e Pittsburgh. Providence also
reduction will be less fllan 1 per placed Kevin Slacom on .the
squad.
cent.
John Engels of Pennsylvania
The possible abandonmenls
was
named Rooke of the Year.
have been the subject of 16
Others named to the squad
public heari.ngs in midwest and
were
Billy Cam pi on of
northeastern states covered in
Manhattan
; J ere
No lan,
the FRA report. The hearings
were held by flle Interstate Boston College, Ron Sellers,
Rutgers;
AI
Skinn er,
Corrunerce Commission.
Massachusetts,
and
Mel
Utley,
Richley said state officials
pointed out several errors in St. John's.

SALE PRICE

...

!Y-at SWlday when 36 stock ca rs
roar past the green fla t in the
$113,500 Atlanta 500.
"It might be a close race if
Pearson will go somewhe re
else Sunday afternoon ,"
laughed rival bud dy Baker.
"He's in a class by himself. "
The Spa rtanbu r g, S. C.,

NEW YORK (UP! 1 - Larry
Fogle of Canisius, the nation's
leading scorer. and Marv in
Barn es of Providence, R. L
the leading rebound er, are

Snow, cold

i

•

among the five best drivers in
the world-o ne of a few
Americans to challenge U1e
long-time European-Latin
domina tio n of Formula I
racing.
He won two 1973 grand prix
events and fin ished second in
1971 in America's top race, flle
Indianapolis 500, in which he
was sched uled to compete

Rail abandonment plan revised

$17 million

business so he's the man to

numbered

' ac

Mercury prepar ~ d by the
Meti cu lous Wood Brothers
team.
Pearson ran away with the
pole posi tion with an averagl;!
speed of 159.242 miles per hour
on qualifyin g day - more than
three mph faster than Gary
Bettenhau sen and the rest of
UJC crowd .
Bettenhausen will start on
the outside row in an American
Molors Matauor. The Hoger
Penske-preapred ca r is r unning und er new Nascar rules
allow ing larger carburetors in

ATLANTA (UP[) - David
Pearson has the fastest car and
the best support crew in the

.
ruins

17 - The SWlday Times · Sentinel, SWlday, March 24, 1974

..

-

·S

go, Thompson drilled a tip shot
and North Carolina· State was
back within four points at 75-71
with three minutes left.
Then 7-foot-'1 Tom Burleson
hammered in a tip with 2: 16 to
go. UCLA turned the ball over
again and Burleson was fouled
at the 1:38 mark. He made the
first of a one-and-&lt;Jne free
throw, but missed the second.
Dave Meyers of UCLA was
fouled with 1: 13 remaining but
missed his free throw and
Thompson rebounded. then hH

omination

'

the go-ahead bucket with 53
seconds left . ,
Thompson added two more
free ·throws with 34 seconds to
go and N. C. State was home
free.
Each team scored only two

points in the first overtime.
Burleson hit with 4:0ll left,
Wheeling around Walton .
UCLA's Greg Lee popped in a
20-footer at the 3: 48 mark,
tying the game.
The Pack stalled the last
fllree minutes, but Burleson

missed an inside shot , fll e ball
rollin g off the rim with three
seconds to go.
The regulation game ended
at ~5 after N. C. State roared
back from an 11-point defi cit
that UCLA built in the first 4%
minutes of the second half.
Led by Walton , the Bruins
outscored the Wolfpack, 14-3,
for a 49-38 lead with 15:38
remaining.
But N. C. State, with the
partisan crowd roaring, didn't
quit, fin ally ca tching up on a

•

three-point play by Thompson
for a 63~1 lead 4:58 from the
end of regulation time .
Both tea ms missed good
shots in the last minute, Walton
failed with 50 seconds left on a
close-in shot and Tim Stoddard, after the Wolfpack ran
the clock down, missed from
the corner with five seconds to
go.
UCLA resc ued a 35-35
halftime score when Meyers

sank a 35-foot shot a t flle

buzzer.

In the opening game of the
doubl e header ,
almost
forgotten here in the excilement over the heralded
showdown between State ond
UCLA, Kansas had a le••' of 2926 with 18:01 to pla y wheJio.
Marquette's Warriors turn£"'
the game aroWld with an unbroken string of nine points.
Kansas never seemed to
recover from that blow and
Marquette built a 53-39 with
4:25 left an~ eruised home.
Lucas
led
Maurice

Marquette with 18 points while
Marcus Washin gton had 16.
Rick Suttle of Kansas took
game honors with 19 points.
Marqu ette had taken an
earl y 21-14 lead but the n
Kansas, champion of the Big
Eight, went on an 10-2 tear to
go ahead and the Jayhawks led
by 24-23 at the half.
Marquette will be making its
first-ever appearance in the
NCAA finals . Kansas and
UCLA will meet in a thirdplace game.

•

arrzors gazn NCAA inals
GREENSBORO, N.C. (UPI )
- Sophomo~e guard Looyd
Walton, playing with three
foul s, inspired a nine-point
burst early in the second half
Saturday , propelling
Marquette to a 64-51 victory
over Kansas in the semi-linals
of the NCAA Basketball
Tournament.
Wallop, the Warriors' play-

maker. and leader of th e
swarming press, left the game
with ll :Oll remaining with four
personal fouls . But, by then
Marquette had the game in
hand, 41-33.
Kansas led, 29-26, when the
Warriors started their spree
with 18:0lleft on a bucket by
Earl Tatwn . Then came the big
play. Walton stole an in-bounds

Norton at secret
hideaway resting
for Tuesday bout
CARACAS
(UP!)
Heavyweight Ken Norton was
at a secret hideaway Saturday,
resting for his championship
challenge Tuesday against
Wlbeaten George Foreman.
The 211-year-&lt;Jld ex-Marine
left the Hotel Tamanaco late
Friday to get away from the
attention of hotel guests,
tourists and fans who besieged
him whenever he left his room.
The promoters said Norton
had "gone to the mountains"
until Monday, but it was
believed he moved to the plush
Military Officers' Club in the
capital,
"I don't even know where he
went," said John Norton of
Jacksonville,
Ill.,
the
challenger's father. "He didn't
even tell us."
Norton finished sparring two
days ago, limiting his training
to jogging and calisthenics.
Foreman sparred Saturday
at the Poliedro for the benefit

of fans who don 't have tickets
to the fight.
" George is just jivin g,
sweating and dancing, " said
trainer Dick Sadler _
Oregon
heavywe ig ht
champion Terry Hinke, who
was a f'oreman sparring partner for his winning title fight
against Joe Frazier and his
first defense against Joe
(King) Roman. said the 25year-&lt;Jld champion is more
relaxed than he's ever seen
him.
" His concentration can be

broken now to the extend he'll
crack a smile,'' said Hinke, one
of five sparring partners with
Foreman in Venezuela.
Foreman stayed at the Hotel
Avila,
a
colonial-s tyle
establishment
in
the
residential district, He's been
able to sit, undisturbed, at
poolside for several hours ea ch
day.

McGuire reminds fans
title game is Monday

GREENSBORO, N.C. (UP!)
Marquette Coach Al
McGuire had just watched his
team register a 64-51 victory
over Kansas to get into lhe
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Massive Mike .Phillips NCAA finals, but he realized
poured in 38 points here Saturday to lead·the top- that the big interest wasn't
ranked and unbeaten Akron Manchester Panthers really on his game.
"Here I was on national TV
to a 72·52 win over Columbus Bishop Hartley in the
and
glowing, and the other two
finals of the Class AJ\State High School Basketball
teams come out and that was
Tournament.
Utat," McGuire said .
The 11other two teams" were
Lorain Oearview earlier in 75 shots. Coach Dick Geyer's
the day stopped Franklin Hartley team canned only 25 of North Carolina State and
Monroe, 7~9, to win the Class 63 from the floor for a 40 per UCLA. The Greensboro
Colisewn erupted into bedlam
A championship. Cincinnati cent shooting mark.
Elder played Canton McKinley
Manchester went four of 14 when the Wolfpack took the
for the Classs AAA title from the free throw line and floor for their warm-up and
Bishop Hartley was two for' McGuire was forced to cut the
Saturday night.
interview short.
Philll[18, UPI's Class AA five .
A grinning McGuire told
Player of the Year, was unClass AA Championship
newsmen
in a post-game inAKRON
MANCHESTER
stoppable the entire game. The
(72)- Neff 50-0 10; Thom~son terview that he would make his
6-11, 24ii-pound center, tallied 7 1-3 15; Phillips 18 2-7 . 38;
12 points in the first quarter, 10 Sliger 2 1-2 5; Roberts 2 0-0 4; comments brief "so you can
in the second and had a 16-polnt Eckert 0 0-0 0; Arnold 0 0-0 0; get out and watch them play
Edwards 0 0-0 0; Schier 0 0-0 0;
last half as the Panthers would Simmons, 0 0.0 0; Dover 0 0-0 0. the championship game,"
Most of the publicity building
up a perfect 26-0 season .
Totals 34 4-14 72.
COLUMBUS
BISHOP up to the NCAA tournament
Manchester was never
HARTLEY
152)
Boone
3 1-4 semi-finals has been focused on
threatened, opening up It-point 7; White 30-06; Profera 3 D-0
6;
leads twice in the first quarter Gilliland 121 -1 25; Jones 3 0-0 6; the UCLA-North Carolina State
and a 17-point spread In the Mark McNalley 0 0-0 O; Wile o game with many persons
0; Mike McNalley 0 0-0 0; forgetting that the final will be
second. In the third quarter the 0.0
Bender 1 0-0 2; Long 0 0-0 0. held Monday night.
Panthers pulled ahead by 21 Totals 25 2-5 52.
Marquette had to overcome a
By Quarters:
points and in the fourth period
Manchester 21 t2 18 21- 72 shoddy first half which saw the
Manchester led by as many as A.
Bishop Hartley 12 t8 8 22-52 Warriors shoot only 32.1 pet.
27 points, 65-38.
Technfal fouls: None. Total
Hartley's unranked Hawks fouls: Akron Manchester 7, from the floor and blow their
made a courageous effort to Bishop Hartley U . A-13,670. lead in the last minute-and-akeep the AA ·crown in · the
capital city a third straight
year, but Akron's physical
dominance of the game proved
too much for them.
Philllps banged · in 18 of 28 ,
field . oat attempts and pulled . HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S. Miller con tlnued to dominate
down g
me high of 22 C. (UP!) - Johnny Miller the marshy harbour town
rebounc:'s. ~:,Thompson, a II- added insult to injury with a layout on this AUantic coastal
f ard scored 15 Man- hole i9 one Saturday and island.
8 orw ;
·opened a IO&lt;!troke lead over
chester pomls and grabbed 14 ·the field midway through the
Miller had identical 4-underreboWids, and teammate Tim
.
the
· par 67's in the two opening
000
Neff scored 10 pointsthtr~ ro~d of
$200,
Bishop Hartley, going home Rentage Golf Classic.
,, roWlds and held a six-stroke
with a 26-G record, was paced
Miller, already the year~ lead over Wadkins and Allen
$-IO ard Mike GUilland ·leading money wmner at 1 Miller going into the third ·
by
~
$109,106, aced the 187-yard, roWld,
Johnny Miller, who said
wi~: (IOin~kr~n
·team par-three seventh hole with a
outrebounded the Hawks 56-36. four iron and made Ute turn earlier that he was playing " 10
th I b were cold on 12 four-under-par to go 12-undef times better" than he dld when
Bo c u s
for the tournament.
• ·he won this tournamenl back In
~;~!hers dropped in 45 ''Tom Kite arid , Lanny :1972, seemed a cinch to collect
t of their field goal Wadkins were leading the pack the $40,000 first prize money
=-~:~ making good on 34 of in distant .second place while today.

Miller has 'hole-in-one'

half to go into intermission
trailing, 24-23.
Marquette came out hot in
the second period and quickly
regained its poise and beg~n
pulling away fr om the
Jayhawks.
McGuire,'asked what he had
talked about during the halftime intermission, replied he
had discussed "a. couple of
things I didn't like."
" It really didn ' t hav e
anything to do with. basketball, " he said .
Whatever it was, McGuire
inust have made his point
clear.
" It seemed like it was going
to blow up in here,' ' said
Maurice Lucas, who led the
Warriors' attack with 18 points.
"There could've been a bomb. "
. McGuire said he is willing to
" wlerate anything" with his
team as long as it wins.
"But I let them know that
I'm the dictator," he added.
"When It gels down to driving
the bus, I'm the driver."
McGuire stayed around
for
the
first
half
·of the North Carolina
State-UCLA games but only
because he had a television
commitment at half-time . He
said he doesn't like to watch
games he's not playing.
"All of a sudden you are not
watching enjoyment, you are
watching work," he said.

RAINF.D OUT
Saturday's
exhibition
baseball games between Pittsburgh and St. Louis at
Bradenton, Fla. , and Detroit
and Boston at Winterhaven,
Fla. , were rained out.

'college Basketball Results
By United Press International
NCAA Tourn., Semifinals
Marquette 64 Kansas ST
No. Carolina St. 80 UCLA 77
(OLB overtime)
National tnv.

Tournament, Semifinals :
Purdue 78 Jackson vil le 63

Utah 117 Boston College 93

i

pass and turned it into a layup
for a 3().29 Marquette lead with
16:34 to go.
That see med to stun the
Warriors into actio n a~d
Marcus Washin gton pumped in
a fielder , while Maurice Ellis
con nee ted with a fre e throw
and Walton finished the blitz

with another steal and layup
for a 35-29 lead with 14 :32
remaining.
Marquette's pr ess in g
defense did the best, building a
53-39 margin with 4:25 left.
Maurice
Lucas
led
Marquette with 18 points, while
Marcus Washingwn added 16
and Tatum 14. Rick Suttle
tallied 19 for Kansas and Roger
Moringstar got 10.
The Jayhawks took a 24-23
lead to flle dressing room at

&amp;:~:::::~":::::::::::..-.::..""=:=:::~:::::::

John C. Wickline, Rio
Grande, president of the
Southeastern District ol the
Ohio Stale Board ol Control,
Ohio High School Athletic
Association, presented
Lorain Clearvlew the 1974
Class A stale championship
basketball trophy following
Saturday's Class A finals at
St. John Arena, Columbus.
Wickline, former Rio
Grande, Oak Hill and Kyger
Creek High School cage
mentor whose cage teams
won more than 300 games in
the 1930s, 40s, and 50s and
60s,
a Iso
presented
Columbus Bishop Hartley
the Regional AA championship trophy at th e
Convocation Center, Athens,
on March 16.

halftime, after trailing most of
the first 20 minutes.
The Big Eight champions
outscored Marquette, 1().2, in
the lasl6 :04 after the Warriors
built a 21-14lead. In the last six
minutes, however, Marquette's
lone points came on a bucket
by Maurice Lucas with :55
seconds left.
Norm Cook started the
Kansas comeback with a pair
of free throws . Suttle added two

Purdue rolls by
Dolphins, 78-63
qualified to meet the winner of
Purdue' s
Boil e rm a ker s the second semi-final between
became the first Big Ten tea m utah and Boston in the
to reach the finals . of the Nationally -televised final
National Invitation Basketball round this afternoon.
Held to a 36-36 tie at the half,
Tournament Saturday by
Purdue
came to back to rid&lt;)le
trouncing Jacksonville 78-63 in
a semi-final at Madison Square the Dolphin defense with
perfectly executed pa ttern
Boilermakers thus plays, clicking off a !~oint
burst that gave them a 12-point
margin with eight minutes left
in the game.
The dolphins never really
got going in the second half.
They made only 10 of 48 field
goals attem9ts in that half for a
20 pet. shooting average and
coach Bob Gottlieb later said
that his was a ~~very tired
NEW

~:&gt;.::-«-:N:~~~:*-&amp;&amp;:::-:::::=~~=~:::::::::::-;:::::.

YORK

( UPI)

DodgerS G~~=n.

humble
Expos
VERO BEACfj, Fla. (UP!)
- Los Angeles is on a hitting
binge and their opponents are
in a fieldin g nightmare. First it
was the Yankees and Saturday
it was the turn of Montrea l to
commit seven errors as the
Dodgers beat the . Expos 15-li.
The Dodgers have scored 29
runs in two days. This latest
victory was their se venth
straight and gave them a
grapefruit record of 9-and-o.
It was no contest after the
first inning when the Dodgers
combined five hits with four
Montreal mistakes for nine
fWlS . Highlight of the inning
was a three-run homer by Tom
Paciorek for the last three
runs. Pitching to Jim Winn, the
next batter up , Balor Moore,
narrowly missed his helmet
with a fa st ball and for a few
moments it appeared there
might be a brawl as players
rushed from both benches. No
blows were struck .
Winn hit a home run over the
right field bank in his next turn
at bat and Moore was removed
from the gh.me midway
through the fourth inning.

'

White Sox in .

7-4 triumph
over Phillies
SARASOTA, Fla . (UP! ) Ken Henderson hit his fourth
homer of the spring and Ron
Santo slugged his first in a
White Sox uniform Saturday
leading Chicago to a 7-'1 rainabbreviated victory over the
Philadelphia Phillies .
The game was halted after
6'h minutes.
·
Henderson, who is batting
.424 and leads the team in
homers and RB!s with 11 ,
cracked a 400 foot two-run
homer over los~r Dick Ruthven
in the fourth. Santo connected
orr Ruthven in flle second.
Jerry Hairston, who leads
the White Sox with a .464
average, had a single and
double and drove in two runs.
Wilbur Wood permitted only
three singles and one unearned
run over the first five innings to
gain the victory . Jim
McGlothlin was touched for the
final three Phillis runs in Ute
seventh on Jim Essian's tworun s_ingle and a double play
that scored Tommy Hutton.

more free shots with 5: 15 left
and Moringstar and Suttle
canned buckets to give Kansas
its first lead with 1:38 to go.
After Lucas' two-pointer
Moringstar hit with :28 seconds
left for flle halftime margin.
The victory propelled
Marquette into the finals for
the first time with a 26-4 record
while Kansas will play for third
place Monday with a 23~
mark.

Rangers
edge NY

Yankees

POMPANO BEACH, Fla .
(UP! )- Tom Grieve slammed
a two-out ninth inning pinch
homer to give the Texas
Rangers a 9-8 vicwry over the
New York Yankees Saturday.
Grieve's blow followed Don
Castle's single w left center
and made a winner out of Jim
Shellenback and a loser out of
Roger Hambright.
Jeff Burroughs, continuing
his hot hand, drove in six rWls
for the Rangers, two on a flllrd
inning triple off Yankee starter
Doc Medich and the others on a
seventh inning grand slam off
reliver Wayne Granger.
Burroughs now has four
homers, 16 RBI's and a .441
hatting average this spring .
Down 7~ after Burroughs'
homer, the Yankees took an 8-7
advantage in the eighth when
Mike Hegan hit a two-run inside-the-park homer that was
set up by a collision between
Ran ge r outfielders Cesar
Tovar and Joe Lovitto In left
center. Neither outfielder was
injured although Tovar left the
game.

basketball team ."
Purdue controlled both
boards in the second half and
combined its fast running and
shooting games with precision
passing while looking for good
percentage shots. J ohn
Garrett, flle Boilermakers' &amp;foot-11 center, was high man on
the court with 21 points: His
teammates Bruce Parkinson
and Frank Kendrick each
scored 15. Leon Benbow led flle
Dolphins with 20.
The Boilermakers reached
the finals by beating tournament favorite North Crolina,
82-71, ln the first roWld and
beating Hawaii 85-72 in flle
quarter-final round.

Globetrotters at
Athens on Apr. 11
ATil ENS - The Harlem
Globetrotters, the world's
greatest family entertainers,
will visit Athens next month.
The Trotters will perform
their basketball magic at Ohio
University 's
Convocation
Center on April 11, starting at
7:30 p.m. Ticket prices are
$3.50 and $4.50. For additional
ticket information call (614)
594-3471.
Globetrotters
'74
will
highlight the hilarious antics of
the all Trotter favorites, including Clown Prince Geese
Ausbie .
Also featured will be
Globetrotter player coach
Marques Haynes ; former
Loyola of Chicago star Pablo
Rober tson; rebounding ace
Jerry Venable and Trotter

veteran Mel Davis.
The Globetrotters have now
performed their basketball
magic in 94 different countries,
playing before more than 70
million people.
In
addition
to
the
· Globetrotter game, fans will
also see an all-new, all-star,
, all-family variety show
• presented during halftime.
The Trotters are coming off
the best year in their history,
with new attendance records
established in nearly every city
from New York wOakland and
from Minneapolis to Atlanta.
Rounding
out
the
Globetrotter lineup for April
ll 's game will be Frank
Streety, Dallas Thorton, John
Smith and Thoedis Lee .

Yankees buy
Texas player
for $40,000
POMPANO !lEACH, Fla .
(UP!) -Right-handed hitting
outfielder Elliott Maddox was
sold to the New York Yankees
by the Texas Rangers Saturday for an estimated ~0.000 .
Maddox: ·25, carrie lo the
Texas organization in the
Denny McClain deal after the
1910se!lson. A resident of Vaux
"H'all;-N. J ., he batted .238 in 100
games for the Rangers last
season and had one homer and
17 runs batted in.
To make room for Maddox
and Walt Williams, another
outfielder obtained from
Cleveland Thursday, the
Yankees out-righted outfielder
Rick Bladt and pitcher Lowell
Palmer to Syracuse of the
International League.
Infielder George Zeber also
was optained to Syracuse and
Juan Bernhardt, another infielder , to West Haven of the
Eastern League. Non-roster
players Jerry Kenney and
Tippy Martinez were assigned
to the · Yankees' Hollywood
Minor League camp.

1ft
PERSOn I
Thur., Apr. 11, 7:30 pm

Ohio University Convocation Center
TiCKETS •4.50

'3.50

Available at Memorial
Auditorium. Box Office ·
Phone 614-594-3471.
Order By Mail: Send
money order or check
with
self-addressed
stam. ped envelope to:
Memorial Auditorium,
Ohio Univ ., Athens ,
Ohio 45701.

�.'

I

Bulldogs and Panthers still
unbeaten after Friday wins
'·

Canton McKinley
given big scare
by Toledo Scott
COLUMBUS 1UP!l - Cincinnati Elder, Canton
McKinley, Akron Manchester. Colu mbus Hartley,
Franklin Monroe and Lorain Clearview advanced to
Saturday's championship games in the 1974 Ohio
High School Athletic Association's annual Class
AAA, AA and A Tournaments at Ohio State
University's St. John Arena following semifinal
triumphs here Thursda y and Friday.
Cmcinnat1 Elder displayed a
tenacious defense in destroying
:1\t. Vernon 60-36 in Friday's
first Class AAA semi-fina l.
The Panthers erupted for
20 unanswered points to open
the second half alter taking a
23·14 lead into th e locker
room at halftime and pushed
their margin to 42-14 before
ice-cold Mt. Ycrnon was able
to score.
Bill Eorly. a sharpsh ooting
lefty. and smooth 6-6 center
Rick Apke paced Elder with 17
and 16 points respectively,
while all-state Ted Williams
was the only Mt. Vernon player
to score in double fig" res with
18 markers.
Elder carried a 22.J record
into Saturday's championship
game, while Mt. Vernon
finished the season with a 19-5
mark.
Ca nton McKin ley rallled
from an eight-point halftime
deficit to take a 46-34lead early
in the fina l stanza but had to
fight off an inspired Toledo
Scott rally to win the other
Class AAA semifinal by a mere
two points, 56-54.
The Bulldogs were paced by
Frank Ridley with 19 points ,
while Phil Hub ba rd contributed 11 and Lester Brown
and Stan Hall added 10 each.
McKinley is now 25-0 for the
season.
Scott ended its season with a
22.J record and had the game's
leading scorer in Truma n
Claytor with 22 points.

•

Manchester
unleashed its ty,·o giants,
Mike Phillips and Tom
Thompson, to !overpower
Cincinnati McNicholas 1S-58
a nd earn a spot in the Class
AA final s.
Phillips. a 6-11, 2fiO.poun d
senior center. pumped in 26
points and snared 19 rebounds,
wh ile Th ompson. at 6-6 and 195pounds, added 24 points and
grabbed nine rebounds. Tim
Phillips added 10 points for
Manchester. 2!i-O for the
season.
McNicholas. bow ing out with
a 19-7 record, was led by Greg
Tabler and Randy Haefner
wilh 16 points each.
Colwnbus Hartley scorched
the nets at a 47 pet. pace to roll
over sluggish Genoa and gain
the other spot in the Class AA
final.
Ron White flipped In 21
points fo r Hartl ey to lead all
scorers, while Doug Jones
added 16 and Mike Gilliland
had 15. The Columbus team
carried a 20-S mark into the
championship game.
Genoa made on ly 21 of 72
shots for a 29 pet. average in
the game despite having

Rio to host
independent

A Pregnant
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....Never Happen

RIO GRANDE - The Fi rst
Annual Rio Grande College
Ind ependen t Basketball
Tournament will be conducted
at Lync Center gymnasiwn on
the campus of Rio Grande
College on April 5, 6, 7, 13 and
14. This will be a 16-team
single-elimination tmU"nament.
The entry fee will be $30 per
team.
If interested, contact the
following individuals for more
information: Arthur W.
Lanham (Business 1 245-5353 or
Rio Granr:e, Ohio rHome 1 24!i·
!i141: Phil Skidmore I Home 1
446-3993 , Gallipolis, Ohio 1after
6 p.m.).

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to right - AI Macker, Gene Myers, Rick Roberts , John
Tipton, Chris Staten, Scott Soper , Jim Bennett, and Paul
Albanese : second row , left to ri~ht - Jim Johnston, Rick Van

Metre, Dave Miller, Gary Swinehart, AI Smith, Dave Elick,
Mike Lewis, and Warren Schleupner; third row,left to right
- Jeff Lenigar, John Dudek, Stan Perry, Mike Prater , Dan
Wisecarver, Steve Jenkins, and Coach Nonn Persin.

Redmen have six regulars
back from '73 squad; Open
1974 season Monday

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36 36 4 76
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GAHS

racing sanctioning
orga nization ln the world ,

headquartered in paris.
The 33 ca rs have , by
tradition. started in II rows of
thr ee - which many people
consider too dangerous on a
narrow track built lor the 100miles per hour speeds of 50
years ago·.
' 'I would prefer to have them
start two abreast." Binford
tenni~ said , "bul it can be done with
three if we're care£ul. " How;
ever, there is little chance, he
sa id . that the starting lineup

•

team drops
opener, 4-1

CHILLICOTHE - Coach
Larry Prater's GAHS tennis
U,a m opened its 1974 campaign
with a 4-l loss at Chillicothe
Friday evening.
r.a llipolis' lone point ca me
when Don Car ter and Gil Price
ca·ptured 6-1 and 6-1 triumphs
( best two out of three) over the
Class IIAA Cavaliers in doubles
&lt;lction.
Coach Prater has six lettermen returning from last
year 's squad. They are : Gil
Price, Jim Singer, Ken Will
and David Thomas, seniors;
Don Car ter and Scott Epling
juni ors.
Other members of the teiuh
are Greg Thomas, John Groth,
Craig Ellis, Kent Epling and
Wayne Davis.
The Blue Devils next outing
is Tuesday , at horne aga inst
visiting Wellston .
Ga ll i a Academy's remaining
schedu l e fo l lows
Mar 26 - We ll s ton
Home
Ma r 28 - Jackson
Home
Apr ') - Logan
Away
Apr . 16- Ja c kson
Away
Apr 16- lronton
Home
Apr . 26 - Cil il li co th c
Home
Apr . 30 - Logan
Home
May 7- lro n lo n
Away
May a- We llston
Away
May 10 - ln vi t al iona l
Rio
Gra nde
May 19- DisT r i c t Tournament
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Indy drivers must be

would he changed this year.
Binford plans kl find a high ;
vantage point, perhaps atop
the main scoring tower, from
where he can survey the field
Of cars as they come out of the
fourth turn and down the
straightaway toward the startfinish line.

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INDIANAPOI.IS. Ind . ! UPI I
- If the 33 drivers in this
yeur's 500-mile a uto race are
not in their proper positiOns
when they roar down the main
straightaway for the start. they
won't be given the green flag .
"U anybody is out of posi tion,
we will wave them on for
another lap-a nd another if
necessary - until ttley are
r ight. TI1e drivers should not be
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UPI) long time ago."
He
would
rather
he
seen
in
surprised
if this happens,"
- Handsome Peter Revson
came from New York's high greasy overalls than in flashy warned Tom Binford, the new
chief steward fo r the Memorial
society, but it was as a race sports clothes.
He was accepted as a Day classic.
driver that he wanted to make
"regular guy " by the closelyWith fue l consumption a
his mark.
His dream was to win the knit "500" racing fraternity critical factor in th is year's
Indianapolis "500." He com- and considered as a real comer race, those extra rew laps
peted here five times, placing at the Speedway. When he co uld s pell the differe nce
second to winner AI Unser in finished second three years between winning the llon's
1971, when he was the fastest ago, he trailed Unser by just 23 share of a million-dollar purse
and running out of ruel somequalifier to start from the pole seconds.
As
a
Speedway
rookie
in
1969,
where aroun d lhe 21o mile
position after smashing the
he placed fifth. Last year he track. The cars will he limited
qualifying records.
a lot
of to 280 ga llons of melhanol,
Last year he was eliminated experienced
after just three laps when he mechanical problems and considerably less Uum the 350
never really got his British- gallons allotted last year.
spun out.
The start of last year's rainHe walked away unhurt, but made McLaren going to his
he confided if he dido 't win the liking . He started in the fourth plagued race was marred by a
million-dollar race within the row but never had a chance to first~ap accident which nearly
took the life of driver David
next couple of years, he might challenge for the lead .
"He was popular with "Salt" Walter, seriously ingive it aU up.
"I'd like to win this race " he everybody," said an aide to jured several spectators with
'
Speedway
owner
Tony burning fu el and knocked
said. "racing is a chaUenge,
with the results written down in Hulman. "He was talented and · se ver al cars out of com·
black and white for everyone to easy going. This sure came as petition. Binford is determined
this won 't happen again.
see. I enjoy the competition." a shock."
Revson
actually
preferred
Though he refu ses to criticize
When he first came to the
gpeedway as a driver in 1969, road racing to the closed· his predecessor- Harlan Fenhe resented the fact he was course events such as the gler, a controve rsial fi gure
looked upon as ''that rich kid" "500." Challenging for the who was chief steward for the
whose family owned the Fonnula I World Grand Prix last 16 Indianapolis SODsRevlon cosmetics enterprises. title was his other major racing Binford said, "There have been
some mlstakes made in the
He wanted to make it on his dream.
He
succeeded
the
retired
past. Some changes are needed
own.
"Maybe I was born with a Dan Gurney as this country's and we will make them and
silver spoon in my mouth, " he foremost international racing build on them."
" No one man m::1de it bad,"
said, "But it was extracted a star.
he said, "and no one man wiU
make it good. Harlan Fengler
May 2
Sou t hweste r n
was a dignified and dedicated
May J
Symmes Valley
May 6
At Southern
person, a credit to the sport. I
May 7
At We ll s ton
have only admiration for him ."
Binford, a pipe.,.moking In~=j i3
Al ""~~·;r~~~
May 16
A t Sym mes Val l ey
dianapolis businessman, is no
stranger to auto racing. He was
NBA Sfa nd;ng s
By Untied Press International
NEW YORK (UP!) - Good- last month.
Eastern Conferenc e
looking, affluent Peter•Revson
Revson always felt he wasn't
Atlantic Divis i on
w 1 pet. g.b . personified The Man Who Had racing as much as he would
Everything except perhaps the have really liked to, and
one thing he wanted most although he generaUy was
~~~~,I &amp;
Phi l adelphia 23 56 .. 29 1 31
inner,
deep
down
peace
within
even-&lt;lispositloned,
he would
Central Divi siOn
w I pet. g.b. himself.
get upset when anybody
@
x Capital
44 34
564
Th e fact the 35-year-old suggested that as The Man
A tl an ta
34 45 .430 101 •7
@
Houston
31 48 .392 13 1 2 bachelor was one of the heirs to
Who Had Everything, he didn 'I
Cleve l and
28 52 .350 17
the
Revson
Cosmetics
Empire,
actuaUy
have to keep risking
Western Conference
Midw es l Division
had all the money he'd ever be his neck out on the track as
We're in it together ... and
w I pet. g . b.
we can solve it together! Your
able to use, scores of beautiful frequently as he did.
Milwaukee
57 23 .713
AAA Club encourages you to take
Chicago
52 ~8 .65 0 5
women flocking after him and
"People keep saying I was
Detroit
51 29 .638
51 1,
voluntary ac tion to reduce fuel
time
enough
to
pursue
born
with a silver spoon in my
1
KC -Omaha
32 48 . 400 24 1
consumption. Keep your car
Pacific Division
whichever life style that suited mouUt," he'd say, then come
tuned. Plan your driving to re·
· w t pet. 9. b.
his fancy, never really brought right back: "Mayhe I .was, but
Los Angeles
46 34 .575
duce needless trips arou nd town.
Golden
State
43
35
.55
1
2
the
unpretentious Revson the when I turned 21 it was pulled
Carpool if you can.
Sea lll e
34 .:14 .436 12
complete
satisfaction for which out. I remember when I made
Phoe n ix
29 51 363 17
Port l and
26 53 .329 19';~ he seemed to be searching.
my decision to go racing. Most
x c lin c h ed divi sio n trt~. ~
He enjoyed automobile people in my family said I
ABA Standings
racing about as much as he did didn't have enough of my own
B y United Press International
anything
else but there were money and I'd soon be back
East
A great idea
w 1 pet . g . b.
drawbacks even in that. The working in the business. But I
52 29 642
N ew York
for over 70 years
continuous cross-continent felt like I could make a living
50 29 .633
Ken tu ck y
.:16 34 .575
51h
Ca
r
olina
commuting
frequently threw a racing and wanted to prove it."
••• now more than ever! Vi r g in i a
26 54 .325 25 1'1
monkey
wrench
into Revson's
Peter Revson proved it and
19 61 . 238 J21h
Memohis
West
U.S. driving plans and left him then some.
Ca II or visit
w 1 pet. g . b .
what he himself once described
Acknowledged as the leading
so 30 . 625
U t ah
44 37 .5 43
6
In d iana
"a jet set wreck."
road racing driver in the
44 37 . 543
6
San A nton io
"It leaves little room for United States and one of the
35 45 . 438 14 11~
San Diego
35 45 .43R 141.'? concentration," he said, and foremost drivers in the world,
Denver
Frid
ay's
r esults
33 Court St.
ironically his words were never the affable, easyi{oing Revson
Denver 105 Ulah 103
Phone 446-0699
New Yo r k lll San Diego 106
more borne out than in his won both the British and
Phone 992-2590, Pomeroy
only gaJllCS sc hedul ed
tragic death in Johannesburg, Canadian Grands Prix in 1973
South Africa, Friday where he -no small accomplishment in
was competing in qualifying ltsell -and the year previous
trials for this weekend's South he finished fifth the world
African Fonnula I Grand Prix, drivers' championship ranking
SEE THE ...
a race originally cancelled behind only Emerson Fithecause of the fuel crisis and tlpaldi, Jackie Stewart, Dennis
only reinstated on the calender Hulme and Jacky lela.

melitUIIE

OPEN MONDAY
TIL 8:00P.M.

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\

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CE NTER SC HEDUL E

DATE- GYM NAS IU M

Mrt r( h / 11
Mar ch ?q.

CHESHII\E - With just four rightha nder Steve Baird, and
retu r ning lettermen, Coach in £iclcters. Bria r1 Lucas and
J im Sprague enters his second Mi tch Salem.
year as head baseball cocu:h at
Hudson. a ri ghty, hit .288 and
Kyger Cr eek, with an inex- led the team in RBI's in 1973
perienced team.
with l!i. He pitched in 24 inSprague , a gradu ate of nin gs permitting nine earned
Belpre H1gh Schoo l and runs and had a 2.62 ERA.
Glenville State College, has an
Bruce Arne tt. the regular
19 man squad composed of Jou r third sacker in 1973. compiled a
seniors, seven juniors. fiv e .243 ba tting average. Blazer,
sophomores and three fresh- wh ile serving as a backup first
men .
baseman. hit .200. He pitched
The 1973 Bobcats compiled a I I innings, won two games and
15-4 record, the best in the had a 3.18 ERA.
school's history. Kyger Cree k.
Los t via gra duation were
however, finished in a second several heavy hitters during
place tie wi lh Southern in the the las t two years. Gone are
league's championship race John Roush, the team's top
hehi od the powerfu l Symmes hitter a year ago with a .404
Valley Vikings.
avera~e : outfielder Marshall
In the SVAC, Symmes Vallev French and his .373 avera~e;_
was 11-1 whi le the Bobcats and firs t
basema n
Orland
Tornadoes finished with 9-3 Cre means who hit .341; leftslates.
fi elder Greg McCarty, a .349
Return ing lettermen include hitter; pitcher-shortstop John
seniors, Clay Hudson. cat· Baird. a .291 hitler .and outcher:pitcher and Ron Roush. fi elder Vinton Rankin who hit
third baseman-ou lfielcter ;. .272.
Bruce Arnett, juni or third
Ba ird was the Bobcats• top
baseman and Terry Lu cas , pitcher . He had a 7-3 record
junior shortstop-pitcher.
1.49 ERA.
Others obtaining valuable
Pitching, as usual. will be the
experience last vea r were Jeff key to the Bobcat tea m.
Neal, senior se~ond basema n;
Coach Sprague will lean
Ben Arnett, sophomore cat- heavily on the hurlin g of
cher-outfielder and Jeff Hudson, Lucas, Blazer, and
Blazer, sophomore southpaw rookie Steve Baird.
first baseman.
In addition to the 12 league
Others attempting to crack games. the Bobcats will play
tlle starting lineup are senior several non-league opponents.
outfielder Lawrence Tabor;
Bobcat Sc hedule
26
A t Wahama
junior catc her-outfielder. Dave March
Ma r c h 28
A t Wahama
Wise; Steve Harrison, a cat- Apri l 2
Wahama
At Ha nn an Tr ace
cher-outfielder ; Jeff Hill and Apri l 4
Apri l 8
At So uthwestern
Wendell Baylor. all juniors.
Apri l 10
We ll s t on
l 11
Southern
Other sophomore candidates Apri
April15
A t Eastern
are infielder Tim Lucas and Apri l l7
At GI()USter
North Ga l l ia
outfielders, Tim Fife and Jim Apri l1 8
Apri l 23
GI()USter
Armbruster.
Apri l 29
Hannan T race
Me igs
Freshmen players a re May 1

THE

"For That Personal &amp; Professional Touch"
FEATURING

e24 New AMF Lanes
eSnack Bar and
Captain's Lounge

L lt'&gt;lt:

M.1rc h 'J .~
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Ashort message
about

SELECTION OF BRIGHT
NEW COLORS:
MAIZE-BEIGE-NAVY·
RED-LT. BLUE

l ~,~ge .!.~,.~~e

Four letterm.e n

J&amp;&amp;l:C .•;.sa..:m~~"&gt;~~~~»;.~ .eunou •••_M

Good -looking Revson

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.

Box scores of Ohio
semifinal contests

Let A Computer Do
Your Payroll The Fast
Economical Way.

W H A St andi ng s
By Unit ed Pr ess International

RIO GRANDE - More depth Wisecarver and John Tipton .
Pitching carried Rio last
and six returning regulars Wisecarver, a sophomore spring ; and currenUy Person is
anchor the 1974 Rio Grande shortstop, paced the Redmen searching for at least two more
baseball team of second year hitters last spring with an starters. Johnslon and Rick
Coach Norm Persin . Twenty- average of .400. Tipton, a sure VanMatre are assured of
three year old Persin , a player- handed second baseman, adds starting assignments. Vancoach last spring, directed the consistent hi tting to the Matre, from Meigs High School
Redmen to their best season Redmen attack.
in Pomeroy, is a lanky 6'3"
ever with a 13-11 mark and a
Gone from the 1973 squad are junior. Rick had a record of 1-0
post season play-&lt;&gt;ff posi tion in Persin. who caught; ceo- las t spring and was parthe NAIA District No. 22. Rio terfielder Stan Redd, and third ticularly effective down the
will open its season Monday at basem an Dal e Thompson . stretch.
West Virginia State, beginning Person will be replaced by
Persin lost hurlers Dave
at
I p.m.
Mike Prater, a righthanded Swann of Jackson, who
super ior hei~ht.
Top returnees include ver- hittin g sophomore. John dropped out of school; and
Ron Hammyc, Genoa's 6-10
cenU,r, tossed in 11 points and satile Jim Johnston. who was Dudek, Rick Roherts,and Mike hard throwing Mike Rose. Rose
guard Jeff Shaneck added 10 named the Most Valuable . Lewis return to patrol the played both baseball and
more . The loss was only the Player last year. The 6'!i" " outfield for Rio to take up the basketball as a freshman ;
second ln 24 games for Genoa senior cracked two home runs slack left by the departure of however, a serious motorcycle
Newcomer
Paul accident caused him to miss
this seaso n, snapp ing th e and won fiv e decisions pitching Redd.
while
losing
none.
Supporting
Albanese
and
Scott
Soper
are school this year.
Cowets 22-game winning
Johnston will be the double battling for the starting nod at
streak.
Persin is looking at four
play
combination
of
Danny
third
base.
other youngsters to step into
,.
the pitching rotation. Former
Gallia Academy ace, Stan
'
•'
Perry is a candidate along with
freshman Jene Myers of
Symmes Valley High School.
Jeff Lenigar, a junior righthander, was hampered by a
sore ann last year and Persin
CLASS AAA SEMIFINALS
parlayed the pitching of rightThe score remained 2-1 until is observing his progress. Gary
{C lass AAA Semifinals)
AKRON
MANCHESTER
CINCINNATI ELDER ( 1!.0)
bander Rick Hesson and a the bottom hall of the sixth Swinehart, from Crooksville
{75) Neff 3 &lt;l -5 10; T.
- Apke 7 2-2 16 ; Ea r ley 6 S-6
High School, reported late
Th om pson 10 4-5 2.4; Phill ips 12
17; Apro 2 2-4 6 : Niemey er 1 Q.O leaky defense by visiting when Wahama knotted the
2·2 26; Sl iger 1 3-4 5; Rob erts 4
2; Brown 3 2·2 8; Ste nger 2 3-3
Kyger Creek into a 3-2 victory score after Mike Lewis singled, because he was playing varsity
0-1 8; Ec h art 0 2-2 2; Ar nold 0 0 7; Bl oemker 10-12: McCa r t hy
0 0: Simmons 0 0-0 0; B.
here Friday afternoon .
stole second and third and was basketball and his pitching
1 0-0 2; Dwyer 0 0-0 0 ; Watson 0
Thompson 0 0-0 0; Dover 0 0 -0 0
0-0 0 :
Kemper 0 0-0 0 ;
ann is just rounding into
The
win
was
the
fourth
balked home by Hudson.
Totals : JO lS-19-75.
Dinkelacker 0 0-0 0. Totals '23
shape.
CINCINNATI McNICHOLA S
straight for Coach Grant
With two outs in the seventh
14 - 18- 60 .
(581 - K lu s 1 2-2 4; Haefner 6 4
MT . VERNON ( 361 - Coon I
Persin feels the only question
Barnette's
White
Falcons.
inning
and leadoff hitter Don
5 16 ; Do noho e 2 0-0 4; Rom a 1 5- 0-0 2; Kelly l 0 -0 2; Wi llia ms !I 2is the pitching departmark
87; P. Tabler 32 -S IL Bow ensO
Coach
Jim
Sprague's
Bobcats
Gardner
on
third
,
Bobca
t
218; Peppers40 -08; McDona ld
0-00 ; G. Tabler 5 6-8 16 ; Deisch
20 - 0 ~ ; Braddock 0 0-00 ; Simon
ment;
he is confident the
Ben
Arnett
were . making their first ap- leftfielder
01 -21; F innigan00-00 ; Kn ight
0 0 -0 0; P touls 0 0-0 0 ; Lawson 0
hitting
will
he hetter and·knows
0 2 -2 2; Callat1an 0 0 -0 0; Con misplayed a fly ball allowing
0-00 ; Green 0 2-2 2; D us t in o 0-0 pearance of the season.
naughton 0 0-0 o . Totals 18 220; H ouston 0 0-0 0: Green 0 2-2
Hesson, owner of three of the the winning run to cross the his team has additional depth
32- SB .
2; Dustin 0 0-0 0. Hous ton 0 0 -0
from a year ago.
By Quarte r s:
four White Falcon triwnphs, plate.
Q_ Total s 16 4- 4- 36 .
Manchester
18 19 11 27 - 75
By Quarters :
Wahama collected four hits
fanned IS batters in his route
McNic hol as
12 14 13 19 - 58
E lde r
q 14 22 15-60
. 1914 Spring
Fo uled out: T . Thompson.
goin g performance.
against the slants of Hudson .
Mt . Vernon
4 10 6 16- 36
Ba
5eball5chedule
Haefner, G . Tab le r . Tech nical
Fouled out: None . Technica l
Wahama 's Danny Gardner Lewis had two singles, GardRio Grande
Fou l : Rom a . Total f ouls Akron
foul : None . Tota l touls. E ld er
College R edmen
Manc h este r 23, Cincinnati
led off the game with a long ner tripled and Goldsberry Date-Opponent
9, Mt . Vernon 16 . A- 13. 877 .
Place
McNic hola s 19. A: 12,84 7.
(Class AAA Semifina l s)
blast which was good for three singled .
Mar . 25- W . Va . Sta te
Away
( Class AA Semitinals)
CANTON McKINLEY (56 ) ar . 10- Tiffin Un l v .
Home
GENOA (4S) Br own 2 0-0
bases. Gardner raced home
Ri dley 6 7-8 19 ; B r own~ 2-3 10;
Hudson had two of the M
Apr
.
1-W.
Va
.
State
Home
4; N :e haus J J-1 6; Hammye S 1
Hubbard 2 7-8 11, H all 3 4·8 JO;
and was ruled out at the plate, Bobcats ' three hits. Terry Apr . 3- Urbana
Away
1 11; Feck l ey J 0 -0 6 ; Shaneck 5
Ca llas 2 2-J 6; Ellis 0 0-0 0 ;
Ap r . 6-Ma lon e
Home
0-1 10; Diekmann 0 0-0 0 ;
but Bobcat catcher Dave Wise Lucas also singled.
Sh ipp 0 0-0 0; Greene 0 0-0 0.
Apr. 9~ Cedarville
Away
McGuire 1 0 -0 2; San chez 0 0-0
Total s 17 22-30- 56.
·
Hudson fanned 10 batters and Apr. 11 -C entral Stat e Home
dropped the ball in the colllsion
0 ; Brooks o 2-2 2; Marko 1 0 -0 2:
TOLEDO SCOTT CS4l Apr. 13- 0hlo Domin ican Home
N isse n 1 0-0 2; Spurg eon 0 0-0 0
at the plate.
iss ued four walks. Hesson Apr.
Stee le 1 2-3 4: Ly les 0 0-0 0 ;
17- W . va . Tech
Home
Totals 21 J-S-4S .
D umas 2 2-4 6 : Clay tor 11 0-0
Kyger Creek scored in .the· walked three Bobcats.
Ap r . 20- Tiff!n Un!v.
Away
COLUMBUS HARTLEY (72)
22 ; Aikins 4 2-3 10: Roge r s o 0 -0
23-Pikeville
Away
- Boone 0 0-0 0; Whi te 101 -2 21;
fourth inning on a walk to
Kyger Creek will play at Apr.
0: Hunt 5 2 ·4 12; Catlin 0 0 -0 0;
Apr . 2-4 - Urbana
Home
Profera 6 1-3 13 ; Gil l iland 7 1-1
Thomas o0-0 o. Totals 2J 8-1 4leadoff hitU,r Lawrence Tabor. Wahama on Tuesday and Apr. 27 - 0hio Dominica n Away
15 ; Jones 8 0-1 16 ; Wi le 1 1-2 3;
54:
May 1- M alone
Away
M ike McNally 1 0-0 2; Be rid er 0
Tabor came across on singles Thursday.
By Quarters:
May 2- Akron Univ .
Away
2-3 2; Long 0 0-0 0 ; Mark Mc McKinley
8 10 26 12- 56 by shortstop Terry Lucas and
Linescore :
May 4- Cedarville
Ho.me
Nally 0 0-0 0. Totals 33 6-12 - 72.
scot t
10 16 a 20-S-4
coach : Norman Persin ;
By Quarters :
losing pitcher Clay Hudsorr. Kyger Creek 000 200 0-2 3 4 Manager
Foul ed out: St ee l e. Technical
: Waren Schleupner .
Genoa •
8 11 14 12- 45
foul
None . Total
fou l s :
The Bobcats moved into a 2-1 Wahama
100 001 1-3 4 1
A ll games are
Hartley
16 22 14 20- 72
M cK inley 15 , Scott 21. AFoul ed out : None . Technical
lead when Lucas scored on an
13.925
..
Hudson (LP ) and Wise. doubleheaders . Starting time:
1 p.m.
foul · Feckl e y . Total loui s:
Hesson (WP) and Lewis.
Genoa 13. Hartley 8. A-13,567.

.

'

19 - The SwJday Times_. Sentinel. ~undal'. Ma rch 24 1974

18 - The Sunday Times- Sentine.l, Sunday. March 24. 1914

t

BAUM'S TRUE VALUE STORE
CHESTER, 0 .

MOBILE .HOME SALES
" See Jim Sta.atsor Joe Giles
Upper Rt. 7 Next Door to Auto. Auction ·
Phone 446-934Y
Ga Ilipolis, Ohio

'•

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llliilWHEEL HORSE
~lawn&amp; garden tractor!&gt;
SALES &amp; SERVI
(

'

'

�.'

I

Bulldogs and Panthers still
unbeaten after Friday wins
'·

Canton McKinley
given big scare
by Toledo Scott
COLUMBUS 1UP!l - Cincinnati Elder, Canton
McKinley, Akron Manchester. Colu mbus Hartley,
Franklin Monroe and Lorain Clearview advanced to
Saturday's championship games in the 1974 Ohio
High School Athletic Association's annual Class
AAA, AA and A Tournaments at Ohio State
University's St. John Arena following semifinal
triumphs here Thursda y and Friday.
Cmcinnat1 Elder displayed a
tenacious defense in destroying
:1\t. Vernon 60-36 in Friday's
first Class AAA semi-fina l.
The Panthers erupted for
20 unanswered points to open
the second half alter taking a
23·14 lead into th e locker
room at halftime and pushed
their margin to 42-14 before
ice-cold Mt. Ycrnon was able
to score.
Bill Eorly. a sharpsh ooting
lefty. and smooth 6-6 center
Rick Apke paced Elder with 17
and 16 points respectively,
while all-state Ted Williams
was the only Mt. Vernon player
to score in double fig" res with
18 markers.
Elder carried a 22.J record
into Saturday's championship
game, while Mt. Vernon
finished the season with a 19-5
mark.
Ca nton McKin ley rallled
from an eight-point halftime
deficit to take a 46-34lead early
in the fina l stanza but had to
fight off an inspired Toledo
Scott rally to win the other
Class AAA semifinal by a mere
two points, 56-54.
The Bulldogs were paced by
Frank Ridley with 19 points ,
while Phil Hub ba rd contributed 11 and Lester Brown
and Stan Hall added 10 each.
McKinley is now 25-0 for the
season.
Scott ended its season with a
22.J record and had the game's
leading scorer in Truma n
Claytor with 22 points.

•

Manchester
unleashed its ty,·o giants,
Mike Phillips and Tom
Thompson, to !overpower
Cincinnati McNicholas 1S-58
a nd earn a spot in the Class
AA final s.
Phillips. a 6-11, 2fiO.poun d
senior center. pumped in 26
points and snared 19 rebounds,
wh ile Th ompson. at 6-6 and 195pounds, added 24 points and
grabbed nine rebounds. Tim
Phillips added 10 points for
Manchester. 2!i-O for the
season.
McNicholas. bow ing out with
a 19-7 record, was led by Greg
Tabler and Randy Haefner
wilh 16 points each.
Colwnbus Hartley scorched
the nets at a 47 pet. pace to roll
over sluggish Genoa and gain
the other spot in the Class AA
final.
Ron White flipped In 21
points fo r Hartl ey to lead all
scorers, while Doug Jones
added 16 and Mike Gilliland
had 15. The Columbus team
carried a 20-S mark into the
championship game.
Genoa made on ly 21 of 72
shots for a 29 pet. average in
the game despite having

Rio to host
independent

A Pregnant
Computer?

cage event

....Never Happen

RIO GRANDE - The Fi rst
Annual Rio Grande College
Ind ependen t Basketball
Tournament will be conducted
at Lync Center gymnasiwn on
the campus of Rio Grande
College on April 5, 6, 7, 13 and
14. This will be a 16-team
single-elimination tmU"nament.
The entry fee will be $30 per
team.
If interested, contact the
following individuals for more
information: Arthur W.
Lanham (Business 1 245-5353 or
Rio Granr:e, Ohio rHome 1 24!i·
!i141: Phil Skidmore I Home 1
446-3993 , Gallipolis, Ohio 1after
6 p.m.).

..

Eas t
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1974 RIO GRANDE CoUege basebaU team- Members of
the 1974 Rio Grande CoUege basebaU team are: first row, left
to right - AI Macker, Gene Myers, Rick Roberts , John
Tipton, Chris Staten, Scott Soper , Jim Bennett, and Paul
Albanese : second row , left to ri~ht - Jim Johnston, Rick Van

Metre, Dave Miller, Gary Swinehart, AI Smith, Dave Elick,
Mike Lewis, and Warren Schleupner; third row,left to right
- Jeff Lenigar, John Dudek, Stan Perry, Mike Prater , Dan
Wisecarver, Steve Jenkins, and Coach Nonn Persin.

Redmen have six regulars
back from '73 squad; Open
1974 season Monday

40 29 4 84
36 36 4 76
35 33 4 74

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34 33 4 72
32 36 4 68
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28d 259
280 261
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Revson's dream:
to win Indy 500

y

had everything--almost

.

~~~:fgrk

•

• •

zn ·posztzon .at start
pres1dent of th e United States
Auto Club for II years, and
currently is president of the
Automobile Competition Committee for the United States
( ACCUS I and is the ACCUS
delegate
to
the
FIA
(Federation Internationale de
L ' Automobil e), the ma jor

GAHS

racing sanctioning
orga nization ln the world ,

headquartered in paris.
The 33 ca rs have , by
tradition. started in II rows of
thr ee - which many people
consider too dangerous on a
narrow track built lor the 100miles per hour speeds of 50
years ago·.
' 'I would prefer to have them
start two abreast." Binford
tenni~ said , "bul it can be done with
three if we're care£ul. " How;
ever, there is little chance, he
sa id . that the starting lineup

•

team drops
opener, 4-1

CHILLICOTHE - Coach
Larry Prater's GAHS tennis
U,a m opened its 1974 campaign
with a 4-l loss at Chillicothe
Friday evening.
r.a llipolis' lone point ca me
when Don Car ter and Gil Price
ca·ptured 6-1 and 6-1 triumphs
( best two out of three) over the
Class IIAA Cavaliers in doubles
&lt;lction.
Coach Prater has six lettermen returning from last
year 's squad. They are : Gil
Price, Jim Singer, Ken Will
and David Thomas, seniors;
Don Car ter and Scott Epling
juni ors.
Other members of the teiuh
are Greg Thomas, John Groth,
Craig Ellis, Kent Epling and
Wayne Davis.
The Blue Devils next outing
is Tuesday , at horne aga inst
visiting Wellston .
Ga ll i a Academy's remaining
schedu l e fo l lows
Mar 26 - We ll s ton
Home
Ma r 28 - Jackson
Home
Apr ') - Logan
Away
Apr . 16- Ja c kson
Away
Apr 16- lronton
Home
Apr . 26 - Cil il li co th c
Home
Apr . 30 - Logan
Home
May 7- lro n lo n
Away
May a- We llston
Away
May 10 - ln vi t al iona l
Rio
Gra nde
May 19- DisT r i c t Tournament
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Indy drivers must be

would he changed this year.
Binford plans kl find a high ;
vantage point, perhaps atop
the main scoring tower, from
where he can survey the field
Of cars as they come out of the
fourth turn and down the
straightaway toward the startfinish line.

(R~s~s

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CHURCH GROUPS
PARTIES. STUDENTS.

POOL

INDIANAPOI.IS. Ind . ! UPI I
- If the 33 drivers in this
yeur's 500-mile a uto race are
not in their proper positiOns
when they roar down the main
straightaway for the start. they
won't be given the green flag .
"U anybody is out of posi tion,
we will wave them on for
another lap-a nd another if
necessary - until ttley are
r ight. TI1e drivers should not be
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UPI) long time ago."
He
would
rather
he
seen
in
surprised
if this happens,"
- Handsome Peter Revson
came from New York's high greasy overalls than in flashy warned Tom Binford, the new
chief steward fo r the Memorial
society, but it was as a race sports clothes.
He was accepted as a Day classic.
driver that he wanted to make
"regular guy " by the closelyWith fue l consumption a
his mark.
His dream was to win the knit "500" racing fraternity critical factor in th is year's
Indianapolis "500." He com- and considered as a real comer race, those extra rew laps
peted here five times, placing at the Speedway. When he co uld s pell the differe nce
second to winner AI Unser in finished second three years between winning the llon's
1971, when he was the fastest ago, he trailed Unser by just 23 share of a million-dollar purse
and running out of ruel somequalifier to start from the pole seconds.
As
a
Speedway
rookie
in
1969,
where aroun d lhe 21o mile
position after smashing the
he placed fifth. Last year he track. The cars will he limited
qualifying records.
a lot
of to 280 ga llons of melhanol,
Last year he was eliminated experienced
after just three laps when he mechanical problems and considerably less Uum the 350
never really got his British- gallons allotted last year.
spun out.
The start of last year's rainHe walked away unhurt, but made McLaren going to his
he confided if he dido 't win the liking . He started in the fourth plagued race was marred by a
million-dollar race within the row but never had a chance to first~ap accident which nearly
took the life of driver David
next couple of years, he might challenge for the lead .
"He was popular with "Salt" Walter, seriously ingive it aU up.
"I'd like to win this race " he everybody," said an aide to jured several spectators with
'
Speedway
owner
Tony burning fu el and knocked
said. "racing is a chaUenge,
with the results written down in Hulman. "He was talented and · se ver al cars out of com·
black and white for everyone to easy going. This sure came as petition. Binford is determined
this won 't happen again.
see. I enjoy the competition." a shock."
Revson
actually
preferred
Though he refu ses to criticize
When he first came to the
gpeedway as a driver in 1969, road racing to the closed· his predecessor- Harlan Fenhe resented the fact he was course events such as the gler, a controve rsial fi gure
looked upon as ''that rich kid" "500." Challenging for the who was chief steward for the
whose family owned the Fonnula I World Grand Prix last 16 Indianapolis SODsRevlon cosmetics enterprises. title was his other major racing Binford said, "There have been
some mlstakes made in the
He wanted to make it on his dream.
He
succeeded
the
retired
past. Some changes are needed
own.
"Maybe I was born with a Dan Gurney as this country's and we will make them and
silver spoon in my mouth, " he foremost international racing build on them."
" No one man m::1de it bad,"
said, "But it was extracted a star.
he said, "and no one man wiU
make it good. Harlan Fengler
May 2
Sou t hweste r n
was a dignified and dedicated
May J
Symmes Valley
May 6
At Southern
person, a credit to the sport. I
May 7
At We ll s ton
have only admiration for him ."
Binford, a pipe.,.moking In~=j i3
Al ""~~·;r~~~
May 16
A t Sym mes Val l ey
dianapolis businessman, is no
stranger to auto racing. He was
NBA Sfa nd;ng s
By Untied Press International
NEW YORK (UP!) - Good- last month.
Eastern Conferenc e
looking, affluent Peter•Revson
Revson always felt he wasn't
Atlantic Divis i on
w 1 pet. g.b . personified The Man Who Had racing as much as he would
Everything except perhaps the have really liked to, and
one thing he wanted most although he generaUy was
~~~~,I &amp;
Phi l adelphia 23 56 .. 29 1 31
inner,
deep
down
peace
within
even-&lt;lispositloned,
he would
Central Divi siOn
w I pet. g.b. himself.
get upset when anybody
@
x Capital
44 34
564
Th e fact the 35-year-old suggested that as The Man
A tl an ta
34 45 .430 101 •7
@
Houston
31 48 .392 13 1 2 bachelor was one of the heirs to
Who Had Everything, he didn 'I
Cleve l and
28 52 .350 17
the
Revson
Cosmetics
Empire,
actuaUy
have to keep risking
Western Conference
Midw es l Division
had all the money he'd ever be his neck out on the track as
We're in it together ... and
w I pet. g . b.
we can solve it together! Your
able to use, scores of beautiful frequently as he did.
Milwaukee
57 23 .713
AAA Club encourages you to take
Chicago
52 ~8 .65 0 5
women flocking after him and
"People keep saying I was
Detroit
51 29 .638
51 1,
voluntary ac tion to reduce fuel
time
enough
to
pursue
born
with a silver spoon in my
1
KC -Omaha
32 48 . 400 24 1
consumption. Keep your car
Pacific Division
whichever life style that suited mouUt," he'd say, then come
tuned. Plan your driving to re·
· w t pet. 9. b.
his fancy, never really brought right back: "Mayhe I .was, but
Los Angeles
46 34 .575
duce needless trips arou nd town.
Golden
State
43
35
.55
1
2
the
unpretentious Revson the when I turned 21 it was pulled
Carpool if you can.
Sea lll e
34 .:14 .436 12
complete
satisfaction for which out. I remember when I made
Phoe n ix
29 51 363 17
Port l and
26 53 .329 19';~ he seemed to be searching.
my decision to go racing. Most
x c lin c h ed divi sio n trt~. ~
He enjoyed automobile people in my family said I
ABA Standings
racing about as much as he did didn't have enough of my own
B y United Press International
anything
else but there were money and I'd soon be back
East
A great idea
w 1 pet . g . b.
drawbacks even in that. The working in the business. But I
52 29 642
N ew York
for over 70 years
continuous cross-continent felt like I could make a living
50 29 .633
Ken tu ck y
.:16 34 .575
51h
Ca
r
olina
commuting
frequently threw a racing and wanted to prove it."
••• now more than ever! Vi r g in i a
26 54 .325 25 1'1
monkey
wrench
into Revson's
Peter Revson proved it and
19 61 . 238 J21h
Memohis
West
U.S. driving plans and left him then some.
Ca II or visit
w 1 pet. g . b .
what he himself once described
Acknowledged as the leading
so 30 . 625
U t ah
44 37 .5 43
6
In d iana
"a jet set wreck."
road racing driver in the
44 37 . 543
6
San A nton io
"It leaves little room for United States and one of the
35 45 . 438 14 11~
San Diego
35 45 .43R 141.'? concentration," he said, and foremost drivers in the world,
Denver
Frid
ay's
r esults
33 Court St.
ironically his words were never the affable, easyi{oing Revson
Denver 105 Ulah 103
Phone 446-0699
New Yo r k lll San Diego 106
more borne out than in his won both the British and
Phone 992-2590, Pomeroy
only gaJllCS sc hedul ed
tragic death in Johannesburg, Canadian Grands Prix in 1973
South Africa, Friday where he -no small accomplishment in
was competing in qualifying ltsell -and the year previous
trials for this weekend's South he finished fifth the world
African Fonnula I Grand Prix, drivers' championship ranking
SEE THE ...
a race originally cancelled behind only Emerson Fithecause of the fuel crisis and tlpaldi, Jackie Stewart, Dennis
only reinstated on the calender Hulme and Jacky lela.

melitUIIE

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TIL 8:00P.M.

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\

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CE NTER SC HEDUL E

DATE- GYM NAS IU M

Mrt r( h / 11
Mar ch ?q.

CHESHII\E - With just four rightha nder Steve Baird, and
retu r ning lettermen, Coach in £iclcters. Bria r1 Lucas and
J im Sprague enters his second Mi tch Salem.
year as head baseball cocu:h at
Hudson. a ri ghty, hit .288 and
Kyger Cr eek, with an inex- led the team in RBI's in 1973
perienced team.
with l!i. He pitched in 24 inSprague , a gradu ate of nin gs permitting nine earned
Belpre H1gh Schoo l and runs and had a 2.62 ERA.
Glenville State College, has an
Bruce Arne tt. the regular
19 man squad composed of Jou r third sacker in 1973. compiled a
seniors, seven juniors. fiv e .243 ba tting average. Blazer,
sophomores and three fresh- wh ile serving as a backup first
men .
baseman. hit .200. He pitched
The 1973 Bobcats compiled a I I innings, won two games and
15-4 record, the best in the had a 3.18 ERA.
school's history. Kyger Cree k.
Los t via gra duation were
however, finished in a second several heavy hitters during
place tie wi lh Southern in the the las t two years. Gone are
league's championship race John Roush, the team's top
hehi od the powerfu l Symmes hitter a year ago with a .404
Valley Vikings.
avera~e : outfielder Marshall
In the SVAC, Symmes Vallev French and his .373 avera~e;_
was 11-1 whi le the Bobcats and firs t
basema n
Orland
Tornadoes finished with 9-3 Cre means who hit .341; leftslates.
fi elder Greg McCarty, a .349
Return ing lettermen include hitter; pitcher-shortstop John
seniors, Clay Hudson. cat· Baird. a .291 hitler .and outcher:pitcher and Ron Roush. fi elder Vinton Rankin who hit
third baseman-ou lfielcter ;. .272.
Bruce Arnett, juni or third
Ba ird was the Bobcats• top
baseman and Terry Lu cas , pitcher . He had a 7-3 record
junior shortstop-pitcher.
1.49 ERA.
Others obtaining valuable
Pitching, as usual. will be the
experience last vea r were Jeff key to the Bobcat tea m.
Neal, senior se~ond basema n;
Coach Sprague will lean
Ben Arnett, sophomore cat- heavily on the hurlin g of
cher-outfielder and Jeff Hudson, Lucas, Blazer, and
Blazer, sophomore southpaw rookie Steve Baird.
first baseman.
In addition to the 12 league
Others attempting to crack games. the Bobcats will play
tlle starting lineup are senior several non-league opponents.
outfielder Lawrence Tabor;
Bobcat Sc hedule
26
A t Wahama
junior catc her-outfielder. Dave March
Ma r c h 28
A t Wahama
Wise; Steve Harrison, a cat- Apri l 2
Wahama
At Ha nn an Tr ace
cher-outfielder ; Jeff Hill and Apri l 4
Apri l 8
At So uthwestern
Wendell Baylor. all juniors.
Apri l 10
We ll s t on
l 11
Southern
Other sophomore candidates Apri
April15
A t Eastern
are infielder Tim Lucas and Apri l l7
At GI()USter
North Ga l l ia
outfielders, Tim Fife and Jim Apri l1 8
Apri l 23
GI()USter
Armbruster.
Apri l 29
Hannan T race
Me igs
Freshmen players a re May 1

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W H A St andi ng s
By Unit ed Pr ess International

RIO GRANDE - More depth Wisecarver and John Tipton .
Pitching carried Rio last
and six returning regulars Wisecarver, a sophomore spring ; and currenUy Person is
anchor the 1974 Rio Grande shortstop, paced the Redmen searching for at least two more
baseball team of second year hitters last spring with an starters. Johnslon and Rick
Coach Norm Persin . Twenty- average of .400. Tipton, a sure VanMatre are assured of
three year old Persin , a player- handed second baseman, adds starting assignments. Vancoach last spring, directed the consistent hi tting to the Matre, from Meigs High School
Redmen to their best season Redmen attack.
in Pomeroy, is a lanky 6'3"
ever with a 13-11 mark and a
Gone from the 1973 squad are junior. Rick had a record of 1-0
post season play-&lt;&gt;ff posi tion in Persin. who caught; ceo- las t spring and was parthe NAIA District No. 22. Rio terfielder Stan Redd, and third ticularly effective down the
will open its season Monday at basem an Dal e Thompson . stretch.
West Virginia State, beginning Person will be replaced by
Persin lost hurlers Dave
at
I p.m.
Mike Prater, a righthanded Swann of Jackson, who
super ior hei~ht.
Top returnees include ver- hittin g sophomore. John dropped out of school; and
Ron Hammyc, Genoa's 6-10
cenU,r, tossed in 11 points and satile Jim Johnston. who was Dudek, Rick Roherts,and Mike hard throwing Mike Rose. Rose
guard Jeff Shaneck added 10 named the Most Valuable . Lewis return to patrol the played both baseball and
more . The loss was only the Player last year. The 6'!i" " outfield for Rio to take up the basketball as a freshman ;
second ln 24 games for Genoa senior cracked two home runs slack left by the departure of however, a serious motorcycle
Newcomer
Paul accident caused him to miss
this seaso n, snapp ing th e and won fiv e decisions pitching Redd.
while
losing
none.
Supporting
Albanese
and
Scott
Soper
are school this year.
Cowets 22-game winning
Johnston will be the double battling for the starting nod at
streak.
Persin is looking at four
play
combination
of
Danny
third
base.
other youngsters to step into
,.
the pitching rotation. Former
Gallia Academy ace, Stan
'
•'
Perry is a candidate along with
freshman Jene Myers of
Symmes Valley High School.
Jeff Lenigar, a junior righthander, was hampered by a
sore ann last year and Persin
CLASS AAA SEMIFINALS
parlayed the pitching of rightThe score remained 2-1 until is observing his progress. Gary
{C lass AAA Semifinals)
AKRON
MANCHESTER
CINCINNATI ELDER ( 1!.0)
bander Rick Hesson and a the bottom hall of the sixth Swinehart, from Crooksville
{75) Neff 3 &lt;l -5 10; T.
- Apke 7 2-2 16 ; Ea r ley 6 S-6
High School, reported late
Th om pson 10 4-5 2.4; Phill ips 12
17; Apro 2 2-4 6 : Niemey er 1 Q.O leaky defense by visiting when Wahama knotted the
2·2 26; Sl iger 1 3-4 5; Rob erts 4
2; Brown 3 2·2 8; Ste nger 2 3-3
Kyger Creek into a 3-2 victory score after Mike Lewis singled, because he was playing varsity
0-1 8; Ec h art 0 2-2 2; Ar nold 0 0 7; Bl oemker 10-12: McCa r t hy
0 0: Simmons 0 0-0 0; B.
here Friday afternoon .
stole second and third and was basketball and his pitching
1 0-0 2; Dwyer 0 0-0 0 ; Watson 0
Thompson 0 0-0 0; Dover 0 0 -0 0
0-0 0 :
Kemper 0 0-0 0 ;
ann is just rounding into
The
win
was
the
fourth
balked home by Hudson.
Totals : JO lS-19-75.
Dinkelacker 0 0-0 0. Totals '23
shape.
CINCINNATI McNICHOLA S
straight for Coach Grant
With two outs in the seventh
14 - 18- 60 .
(581 - K lu s 1 2-2 4; Haefner 6 4
MT . VERNON ( 361 - Coon I
Persin feels the only question
Barnette's
White
Falcons.
inning
and leadoff hitter Don
5 16 ; Do noho e 2 0-0 4; Rom a 1 5- 0-0 2; Kelly l 0 -0 2; Wi llia ms !I 2is the pitching departmark
87; P. Tabler 32 -S IL Bow ensO
Coach
Jim
Sprague's
Bobcats
Gardner
on
third
,
Bobca
t
218; Peppers40 -08; McDona ld
0-00 ; G. Tabler 5 6-8 16 ; Deisch
20 - 0 ~ ; Braddock 0 0-00 ; Simon
ment;
he is confident the
Ben
Arnett
were . making their first ap- leftfielder
01 -21; F innigan00-00 ; Kn ight
0 0 -0 0; P touls 0 0-0 0 ; Lawson 0
hitting
will
he hetter and·knows
0 2 -2 2; Callat1an 0 0 -0 0; Con misplayed a fly ball allowing
0-00 ; Green 0 2-2 2; D us t in o 0-0 pearance of the season.
naughton 0 0-0 o . Totals 18 220; H ouston 0 0-0 0: Green 0 2-2
Hesson, owner of three of the the winning run to cross the his team has additional depth
32- SB .
2; Dustin 0 0-0 0. Hous ton 0 0 -0
from a year ago.
By Quarte r s:
four White Falcon triwnphs, plate.
Q_ Total s 16 4- 4- 36 .
Manchester
18 19 11 27 - 75
By Quarters :
Wahama collected four hits
fanned IS batters in his route
McNic hol as
12 14 13 19 - 58
E lde r
q 14 22 15-60
. 1914 Spring
Fo uled out: T . Thompson.
goin g performance.
against the slants of Hudson .
Mt . Vernon
4 10 6 16- 36
Ba
5eball5chedule
Haefner, G . Tab le r . Tech nical
Fouled out: None . Technica l
Wahama 's Danny Gardner Lewis had two singles, GardRio Grande
Fou l : Rom a . Total f ouls Akron
foul : None . Tota l touls. E ld er
College R edmen
Manc h este r 23, Cincinnati
led off the game with a long ner tripled and Goldsberry Date-Opponent
9, Mt . Vernon 16 . A- 13. 877 .
Place
McNic hola s 19. A: 12,84 7.
(Class AAA Semifina l s)
blast which was good for three singled .
Mar . 25- W . Va . Sta te
Away
( Class AA Semitinals)
CANTON McKINLEY (56 ) ar . 10- Tiffin Un l v .
Home
GENOA (4S) Br own 2 0-0
bases. Gardner raced home
Ri dley 6 7-8 19 ; B r own~ 2-3 10;
Hudson had two of the M
Apr
.
1-W.
Va
.
State
Home
4; N :e haus J J-1 6; Hammye S 1
Hubbard 2 7-8 11, H all 3 4·8 JO;
and was ruled out at the plate, Bobcats ' three hits. Terry Apr . 3- Urbana
Away
1 11; Feck l ey J 0 -0 6 ; Shaneck 5
Ca llas 2 2-J 6; Ellis 0 0-0 0 ;
Ap r . 6-Ma lon e
Home
0-1 10; Diekmann 0 0-0 0 ;
but Bobcat catcher Dave Wise Lucas also singled.
Sh ipp 0 0-0 0; Greene 0 0-0 0.
Apr. 9~ Cedarville
Away
McGuire 1 0 -0 2; San chez 0 0-0
Total s 17 22-30- 56.
·
Hudson fanned 10 batters and Apr. 11 -C entral Stat e Home
dropped the ball in the colllsion
0 ; Brooks o 2-2 2; Marko 1 0 -0 2:
TOLEDO SCOTT CS4l Apr. 13- 0hlo Domin ican Home
N isse n 1 0-0 2; Spurg eon 0 0-0 0
at the plate.
iss ued four walks. Hesson Apr.
Stee le 1 2-3 4: Ly les 0 0-0 0 ;
17- W . va . Tech
Home
Totals 21 J-S-4S .
D umas 2 2-4 6 : Clay tor 11 0-0
Kyger Creek scored in .the· walked three Bobcats.
Ap r . 20- Tiff!n Un!v.
Away
COLUMBUS HARTLEY (72)
22 ; Aikins 4 2-3 10: Roge r s o 0 -0
23-Pikeville
Away
- Boone 0 0-0 0; Whi te 101 -2 21;
fourth inning on a walk to
Kyger Creek will play at Apr.
0: Hunt 5 2 ·4 12; Catlin 0 0 -0 0;
Apr . 2-4 - Urbana
Home
Profera 6 1-3 13 ; Gil l iland 7 1-1
Thomas o0-0 o. Totals 2J 8-1 4leadoff hitU,r Lawrence Tabor. Wahama on Tuesday and Apr. 27 - 0hio Dominica n Away
15 ; Jones 8 0-1 16 ; Wi le 1 1-2 3;
54:
May 1- M alone
Away
M ike McNally 1 0-0 2; Be rid er 0
Tabor came across on singles Thursday.
By Quarters:
May 2- Akron Univ .
Away
2-3 2; Long 0 0-0 0 ; Mark Mc McKinley
8 10 26 12- 56 by shortstop Terry Lucas and
Linescore :
May 4- Cedarville
Ho.me
Nally 0 0-0 0. Totals 33 6-12 - 72.
scot t
10 16 a 20-S-4
coach : Norman Persin ;
By Quarters :
losing pitcher Clay Hudsorr. Kyger Creek 000 200 0-2 3 4 Manager
Foul ed out: St ee l e. Technical
: Waren Schleupner .
Genoa •
8 11 14 12- 45
foul
None . Total
fou l s :
The Bobcats moved into a 2-1 Wahama
100 001 1-3 4 1
A ll games are
Hartley
16 22 14 20- 72
M cK inley 15 , Scott 21. AFoul ed out : None . Technical
lead when Lucas scored on an
13.925
..
Hudson (LP ) and Wise. doubleheaders . Starting time:
1 p.m.
foul · Feckl e y . Total loui s:
Hesson (WP) and Lewis.
Genoa 13. Hartley 8. A-13,567.

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19 - The SwJday Times_. Sentinel. ~undal'. Ma rch 24 1974

18 - The Sunday Times- Sentine.l, Sunday. March 24. 1914

t

BAUM'S TRUE VALUE STORE
CHESTER, 0 .

MOBILE .HOME SALES
" See Jim Sta.atsor Joe Giles
Upper Rt. 7 Next Door to Auto. Auction ·
Phone 446-934Y
Ga Ilipolis, Ohio

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llliilWHEEL HORSE
~lawn&amp; garden tractor!&gt;
SALES &amp; SERVI
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20- The Sanday Times- Sentinel. Sunday, March 24. 1974

Butz agrees .times
good for farmers
By BERNARD BRENNER
WASHINGTON (UP!) ~
Most cattle feeders are losing
money, hog producers are in
trouble and dairy farmers are
going out of business, but
President Nixon generally was
correct that "fanners never
had it so good, " says
Agriculture Secretary Earl
Butz.
Nixon was correct "in the
aggregate" when he said
agriculture is doing well, Butz
said, because "the plain truth
is that last year net farm income was at a record of over
$25 billion, which was up $6
billion from the year before."
Bul Butz conceded Wednesday "some individual parts of
agriculture are in trouble, "
and acknowledged concern by
the House Republican Caucus
about adverse farmer reaction
to Nixon's remarks Tuesday
night in Houston. Rep. Wiley
Mayne, R-Iowa, told Butz he
received 20 telephone calls .
"The cattle feeder is losing
money and is discouraged
about expanding ... aod hog producers are in trouble," Butz
said.

Some dairy farmers , hard
pressed by rising feed costs,
have been going out of business
and "this is serious and has to
he reversed, " Butz said.
In Hawarden, Iowa, leaders

of lhe Sioux County Cattlemen' s Association , ih a

protest telegram to the White
House, challenged Nixon to
come to Iowa to see if farmers
there ''never had it so good."
"We 're losing $150 to $200 a
head, resulting in many cattle
feeders being forced out of
business and this is not, in our
opinion, having it so -good," a
spokesman for the group said
in a telephone interview.
Harlan Hanunel, the Swux
County spokesman, said the
group had asked for an "urgent
meeting" to discuss their
plight with White House aides.
Butz said food retailers, in
response to pleas from him and
from cattlemen, have began a
widespread wave of price cuts
on beef by lowering their
margins. He predicted the
result would be increased sales
to help move out a current
supply glut which bas depressed live cattle prices.

Enterprise study
program launched

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RIO GRANDE ~ Three Rio
.....crande College professors
have begun an American
Private Enterprise Study
Program sponsored by the
Jackson Production Credit
Association of Gallipolis. The
program is a special seminar
on the American private enterprise system for 20 selected
high school janiors and seniors
from southeastern Ohio.
Sam Smith, assistant dean
for social and administrative
sciences; John Reynolds,
of
associate
professor
business, and Bob Rogers,
assistant professor of social
scienCes, spoke to the group
Wednesday night on "Government Relation to Private
Business" and HWays to
Organize a Private Business."
Federal, state, and local
government legislation,
regulation, support, and
taxation of business was the
topic of the two-hour session.
Wednesday's program was one
of a 10-week series developed
by the Jackson Production
Credit Association to give the
selected high school studen~ a
better insight to the establishment and operation of a private
business.
At one of the other sessions
during this 10-week series, the
group toured the Meade Paper
Plant in Chillicothe, and on
April 18, they will tour Rio
Grande College to gain insight
into the business sYStem of the
college.
The program started
February 13 and will end May
I, with a banquet at Rio Grande
College where awards for

completion will be presented,
and local businesses and industry will be recognized for
their support of the project.
Additionally, in June, there
will be a competition at Ohio
State University in Columbus,
where these students will
compete for college scholarships and cash awards based
on the work they have completed in the program.
David (Rick 1 Altizer,
assistant office manager at the
Gallipolis Production Credit
Association, coordinating the
program, said two of the
students who complete the
study will be selected to attend
the American Institute on
Cooperatives in Kansas next
August.

Registration set
at Racine school
-

RACINE ~ Kindergarten
registration for the next school
year in the Southern Local
School District will be held
Friday at the school in Racine.
Registration will be from
8:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. and
from 12:30 to 2:30p.m. Paren~
are to take the birth certificate
immunization records in:
eluding DPT series and
boosters, combined measles,
polio vaccine and boosters and
TB skin test.

FFA's second
banquet is held ·
POMEROY - The Meigs
High School Future Farmers of
America held their second
annual Parent-Son Banquet
Tuesday night at the school
cafeteria.
Dave
Barrett,
the
Southeastern Sectional vice
president, guest speaker,
emphasized that agriculture is
the largest business for Ohio
and that for each person on the
farm six others are needed in
the agriculture business.
Barrett encouraged parents,
teachers ll!ld others to give
their support to the "budding"
yoang farmers making up the
organization.
Everett Holcomb and Aaron
Sayre, advisors, presented
green hand degree awards to
Charles Miller, Paul Jones,
Mark Pierce, Steve Hauber,
Kenneth White, Danny Good,
Fred Eichinger, Brian Wiildon,
Lester Parker, David Wa~on.
Benny Upton, Darrel Drake,
Mark Grosnlckel, Bill Snyder,
Mark Richmond, Mike Pierce,
Steve McCune, Dan Yost,
Roger Cottrill, Bobby Johnson,
Robert Lemley, Ken Smith,
Mike Swick, Carl Sargent,
Randy Wood, Bill Rucker,
Rodney White.
The bronze medal winning
team
members
in
parliamentary procedure were
'Joel M~ue, Danny Walker,
Robert Coancil, Glen Kennedy,
Rick MaComber, Steve,
Peyton, Mark Mora, ' Robert
Council, Paul Jones and Steve -

Hauber.
Paul Jones was presented
the star green hand and
leadership award, a trip to
FFA Camp, sponsored by
Landmark, and Robert Coancil
received a leadership award to
FFA Camp, sponsored by the
Jackson Production Credit
Association. Danny Good also
received a scholarship to FFA
Camp for being_the most improved member, sponsored by
The Farmers Bank and
Savings Co.
Rick MaComber won in
livestock production, Kenneth
Madden
in
agriculture
mechanics, Frank Colwell in
crop production, Pearl Smith
in dairy production and Mark
Pierce in agriculture business.
SoU judging awards went to
Joe Maue, Rick MaComber,
Steve Peyton, Glen Kennedy, a
team that won first in · the
district and 18th in the state.
Chapter farmer ,d~gree
winners were Rick ]11aC&lt;imber,
Danny Walker, Randy Wood,
Ken Madden, Carl Davidson
and Robert•Coancil.
New officers introduced
were
Robert
Council,
president; Mark Mora, vice
president; Steve Haul;ler,
treasurer; Danny Walker,
reporter; Danny Good, sentinel;
Carl
Davidson, .
secretary; Joel Maue, parliamentarian, ' and Dave Shuler,
student advisor.
· John Riebel and Charles
Swogger, superintendent and

Farm-City cooperation advanced in late sixties
Development Corporation with an industrial site brochure,. .
In 1968 the Technical Action Panel asststed m re-organtzmg
and expanding the Meigs Coanty Regional Planning Commission
which requested state and federal lands for a Comprehenstve
Planning Program. Work was still being done towards con'truction of a county museum and office building. Work was also
done in assisting the Ohio Depariment of Development to contact
influentials to approve Meigs County's participation in the Upper
Ohio Valley Economic Region (now Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Valley Regional Development District) . Harold Carnahan,
Bernard Fultz, and Theodore Reed were named coanty
representatives. The report says : "Action is stalled at the
moment because of lack of funds ."
PLANNING FOR THE Resource Development Seminar for
the spring of 1970 was part of the work in 1969. Work with the Big
Bend Regatta was also mentioned. The museum-office building
proposal was killed in 1969.
The 100 Bushel Corn Club, started in 1964, ~ut seven of its 12
entries ov&lt;r the 100 bushel mark. They were Virgil King, Rex
Shenefield, Edison Hollon, Lauren Hoffman, Dale Kautz,
Starting Massar, and George Wells .
}
ByT. Allao Wolter,
by duty at Vesuvius. Knowing that our proceeded to the battle . Fire line con- ;:;:
Seventy-four sheep flocks with 2,346 sheep were visited by
;:;:
District Ranger
conditions would be worse at 2 p.m. when struction and burning out became the ;:;: Emmet Douglas, local sheep inspector in the federal-state sheep
![![
IRONTON ~ This week's article was the regular fire weather reading would order of the day.
;![l scabies mntrol program. Robert Mather, vice president in
!;!; written by District Fire Control Ofl'icer be taken, additional people were alerted
The reinforcements arrived and it :[~ charge of sales for the Surge organization, was secured as
[;!; Tom Williams.
·
for possible standby duty.
soon became apparent that our forces :;!( speaker for the annual Dairy Service Unit after several local
;:;;
Saturday afternoon, 2 p.m. , Ohio
At 2:15 p.m. I received the official were adequate for an early victory. Both [![! diarymen and the coanty agent had attended the Surge school in
![![ University battling Marquette in the fire weather reading for the day and fires displayed moments of resistance :[:! 1965.
[:[: regional NCAA basketball tournament. realized immediately that we were un- and in two instances escaped our control i[!
The Extension five-year program was started in 1968, but
~:; This was the first of two games to be der-manned to handle a fire should one line . Quick action averted a larger ftre . :::: other events sidetracked it before the five years were completed.
!!!! telecast this particular day and I settled start. Three more men were put on duty
By 8 p.m. both fires were controlled . i!j
Uoyd Blackwood was reported the first Meigs Coanty beef
!;~ down prepared to watch both of them. and additional people alerted for possible Quick action kept acreage burned and ;:;: herd owner to place his herd in the production testing 'program.
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What kind of day was it' It was a action .
damage to a mtmmum.
:;:;
The real start of large scale turkey production in the co11nty
;;:; Saturday like anv other Saturday only it
I focused my attention on the
What caused these fires' The case of :;:: came in 1967 with 50,000 birds produced. One cage layer record
was a Saturday d-uring fire season, a time basketball game. Ohio University was a name growing out of nowhere to ignite :j keeper averaged 244eggs per hen on 6,000 birda.
:;:: when people connected wtth ftre control struggling unsuccessfully to stay in the a forest and burn perhaps hundreds of !&lt;:
David Koblentz was named an "Efficient Dairyman of the
[![! activities are pre-occupied with tern- game. The thought crossed my mind that acres is not black magic, but the result of ;!;! Year" by the Meigs County Dairy Service Unit and was rurmer:;:; perature wind humidity rain and their chances of victory over Marquette carelessness by people, or in some cases ;:;: up in the Southceniral District.
[[[[ people. '
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were similar to our chances of an early delibe1ate setting by incendiarists. An [![!
The 1967 Extension report stated that the number of farms
!;!;
The wea ther variables were known. victory over a fire which might occur on incendiarist is a murderer, as deadly and ;!;! selling milk and cream declined from 459 in 1959 to 265 according
:;:; A reading taken at noon told us con- this particular afternoon. I had a feeling I destructive as a killer with a gan . He can ~!. to the 1964 Census. The Udder Health and Milk Secretion School
r:: ditions were optimum for fire to burn, wouldn't see the end of the game.
destroy trees that take two lifetimes to
was well received in 1967.
![![ The only question concerned people.
At approximately 4 p.m. I received a replace, wildlife by the thousands and!;!;
Participants in the 100 Bushel Corn Club in 1967 were Dale
!;~ Would they provide the spark'
call from the sheriff's office telling me to habitat sorely needed in a day when!;[( Kautz, Thereon Johnson, Harold Roush, Virgil King, Dan Smith,
~;
FIGHTING FIRE can be compared contact our fire crew by radio. I talked to human population pressures are so :!;!; Edison Hollon, and Roy Holter. Apparently interest waned in
!!! to an athletic contest. In order to gain the Russ Mallow who informed me that we great. In an area as populated as ours is, ![[![ 1968 as only four were listed.
::~ upper hand you need to have scouted all had two fires going and additional many people could be left homeless as a ;:;:;
The establishment of two year..-ound grazing farms was the
*i the advance informati~n possible. One's manpower was needed immediately. I result of an ince~diarist's action.s .
'li!' outstanding event listed in 1968. This was a cooperative venture
~ degree of readiness ts based on the contacted the District Ranger and asked
We can provtde the motlvatwn and;.:; with SCS, ASCS, and Extension, working with Horace Karr and
![[[ potential of the adversary . This deter- that he mobilize another crew. I then education to help people prevent fires
Charles Stock.
!;:; mines the amoant of effort necessary for proceeded to the fire area.
caused by carelessness but what can we;:;:
Over 100 attended the Hereford Clinic held here. Rex
~ victory.
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On arrival I learned that a local do to stop the loss of life and property ![![ Shenefield carried out an alfalla weevil control demonstration,
;~
Based on our noon weather in- volunteer fire department was working through willful fire setting? It's obvious[![! using methyl-parathion. The Agronomy Clinic, Esj!ite Planning
ij formation, three men were put on stand- on one fire and our forces on another. we need your help to stop this senseless[![! and Transfer School, and Dairy Profit School stilnulated considerable interest in 1968.
The year 1969 marked the completion of 50 years of Extension
work in Meigs County. The report that year stated:
"It is impossible to list in one place all of the activities or to
producer.
measure
in dollars and cents, or in human values, or the changes
However, Ashbrook is
raising the only true American that have been brought about in whole or in part, because this has
breed of goats, called the La been an informal, out-of-school educational program carried out
Mancha, which bas extremely through the cooperation of the Meigs County Commissioners, the
short ears. The breed was just Ohio State University, and the United States Department of
Agriculture."
recently introduced.
Probably no one person has used all of the tools of Extension,
"We call them gopher ears.
It apparently started out as a SCS, and ASCS better than Edson Roush who was selected as the
mutation, but the short ears Efficient Dairyman Award winner for Southcentral Ohio in
COLUMBUS (UP!) ~ Old ple who for some reason cannot you inside," Ashbrook said.
are
linked to several desireable April, 1966,
MacDonald's goats are digest cow milk."
And no, Ashbrook quickly characteristics - hardiness,
Following this, Mr . and Mrs. Roush had the privilege of
nudging their way into the
Ashbrook, president of the adds, goats do not eat tin cans temperment and high-butterfat joining the Good Will mission to Russia with a group of dairy
barnyards of Ohio, taking their American Dairy Goat Associa- and wash off the clothes tine.
farmers led by Dr. Ely, chairman of the dairy department at
milk," Ashbrook said.
place alongside cows in the tion, said there are several ad"Part of this is the goat's inOhio State University. Mr. Roush worked with George KreiUer,
"But
the
La
Mancha
goat
dairy industry.
vantages to raising goats quisitiveness. He has to test takes some getting used to as Wesley Green, and the recently retired agent as well as all of the
Ohio boasts the largest popu- rather than cows and dispelled everything by mouth. But on
lation of milk goats in the mid- the myth of the smelly, tin can- the other hand,a goat won't eat far as looks go," he added. "I specialists in agronomy and dairy science at O.S.U. For the last
west and commercial dairy eating goat obsessed with anything that is dirty," he said. get asked a handred times a several years Mr. Roush has had the highest producing Guernsey
day when I have the goa~ at herd in Ohio.
goat farms in the state are bucking people in a prone
"Actually, when you see a the county fairs why I cut off
In 1969 Roman Warmke joined the Karr and Stock farms in
growing by "leaps and position.
goat with a tin can, be's eating their ears."
the
year..-ound grazing program so that now round bales for
boands," according to Rev.
"You care for a goat as you the label and glue. He'll eat
winter
pasture are a mmmon sight. No-till method of planting
Ah
yes,
Ashbrook
mused,
Paul Ashbrook, who raises do a cow, but goats do not re.. anything that is a wood prodmore than 100 milk goats on his quire as much housing, can get uct. A goat can digest up to 32 goats and cows - the Mutt and co;n was started this year with Albert Parker planting his own
corn and fields on the Dale Kautz and Earl Dean farms.
Jeff of the dairy industry.
Zanesville farm.
along on brushy hillsides or per cent wood fiber in his stom"The back-to-the-land and less sophisticated pastures, ach, much llke a deer that can
natural foods movements seem produce more milk on the live off twigs and the bark of
to have accoanted for the tre- amoant of feed invested and trees.
mendous rise in popularity of have a tremendous per"I've had more dairy records
goa~." Ashbrook said. "Goat
sonality," Ashbrook said.
eaten right off the side of my
milk and byproducts are no
"Seven good goats will out- barn," Ashbrook quipped.
longer specialty items for peo- produce ·one cow. You get an
Only the buck has an odor,
average of four quarts of milk and that is just several months
each day for 10 months from
principal, respectively, of the one goat," he explained. "And each year during the breeding
season.
Eastern Local District, were you know how it is with a cow
"Unsmelly Goat"
presented honorary chapter ~you either have enough milk
"The buck has scent glands
farm awards and James Diehl, to take a bath or you have
just Ilke wild animals, which
Meigs
Principal,
was none."
are designed to attract the fepresented a past honorary
Goats Are Gentle
male," he said. "You can re.
chapter farmer award.
Goa~ are extremely gentle, move the glands, but I've
Holcomb, the advisor, was affectionate, ihq ui siti ve known does who refused to
awarded the 'honorary chapter animals.
breed to an ansmelly goat."
farmer.
"They have the best barnThe nubian goat, which proAdvisory
committee yard personality of all the ani- duces a high butterfat milk, is
members introduced were mals I've worked with," Ash- the most popular goat in Ohio,
John Rice, new coanty ex- . brook said. ;'While goats are a
tension agent; Roy Holter, H. herd anlnu!l and Ilke to run especially for breeding and
Tbe nubian has long,
E. Shields, Tom Wolfe, David with other dairy goa~. one showing.
noppy ears, a Roman nose and
Perry and John Colwell. Others goat gets along very well if he "Oriental grace," Ashbrook
introduced were Mr. and Mrs. gets affection and attention
said.
Clyde Kuhn and Mr. and Mrs. from people.
Commercial dairy farmers
Dorsel Larkins of the Eastern
"Goats are very people- generally raise the dish-face
District. The ham dinner was oriented. If you open the door goat depicted in story books
served by Meigs Local cooks. to your house, a goat will follow because it is a heavier milk
journeyed by train to Meigs County. Local sponsorship was
through the Chamhers of Commerce. The same year the Paul
Carnahan Appreciation Day and Dinner provided an efrective
tool for getting over 300 Meigs Coanty people working together in
Farm-City observance.
Many agencies in the coanty cooperated with individuals and
· groups in community development work which saw the Tuppers
the NEW in FARMJNl;
Plains-Chester Water System begin in 1966.
"Meigs County, A Look Ahead ", in September, 1965. Over 200
The Technical Action Panel (ASCS, SCS, Extension, FHA )
copies of this plan were circulated to leaders and received
and Resource Development Committees and Regional Planning
widespread favorable comment.
Commission saw County Bookmobile Service, Comprehensive
The year 1965 also saw 125 Meigs County people providing
Water and Sewer Plan, Route 7 by-pass and Route 33 im"courtesy cars" for the Fall Folia ~e Tour when 900 oeopie provements underway in 1967. Extension assisted Southern
By C. E.lilakeslee
County Ext. Agent, Emeritus
POMEROY ~ The plat book publication in 1969 was in
reality the outgrowth of resource development programs
characterized by a "leadership identification" study in the mid60s and the publication of the long-term Meigs County program.

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4

$239 SHEET

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
87 OLIVE ST.

STORE H()URS
Mon .-Fri. 7:30 A.M.-5 P.M.
Saturday 7:30 A.M.-4 P.M.

DON'T WAIT • BUY YOURS NOW!

PH'ONE 446-4464

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

CASH

SinJplieilq

&amp;CARRY

ROTICUL TILLERS

3, 5, 8 HORSE POWER
We Advise An Early Purchase!

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.

CENTRAL SOYA

of Ohio, Inc.,

'

PH.

Gallipolis,.Ohio

'

~92·2176

POMEROY

•

,,

r-- -- .

' .

•6.39
'6.79
•6.79
•7.69
'6.95
•6.95
•7.29
•8.50

SAVE

8, 10, 12
and 14 HP

TIME

•3.99

1

SAVE

Ul

©lliJ oo ©L%riD rn Lr

CORN

Regular Sale

WOOD

INTERNATIONAr

IT'S
SEED

VANITY

Colordal Cros1 - Buck

•
I

.

.

Your Wayne National Forest

...

~I

•

colors

14.95

1

�I
'I

'

20- The Sanday Times- Sentinel. Sunday, March 24. 1974

Butz agrees .times
good for farmers
By BERNARD BRENNER
WASHINGTON (UP!) ~
Most cattle feeders are losing
money, hog producers are in
trouble and dairy farmers are
going out of business, but
President Nixon generally was
correct that "fanners never
had it so good, " says
Agriculture Secretary Earl
Butz.
Nixon was correct "in the
aggregate" when he said
agriculture is doing well, Butz
said, because "the plain truth
is that last year net farm income was at a record of over
$25 billion, which was up $6
billion from the year before."
Bul Butz conceded Wednesday "some individual parts of
agriculture are in trouble, "
and acknowledged concern by
the House Republican Caucus
about adverse farmer reaction
to Nixon's remarks Tuesday
night in Houston. Rep. Wiley
Mayne, R-Iowa, told Butz he
received 20 telephone calls .
"The cattle feeder is losing
money and is discouraged
about expanding ... aod hog producers are in trouble," Butz
said.

Some dairy farmers , hard
pressed by rising feed costs,
have been going out of business
and "this is serious and has to
he reversed, " Butz said.
In Hawarden, Iowa, leaders

of lhe Sioux County Cattlemen' s Association , ih a

protest telegram to the White
House, challenged Nixon to
come to Iowa to see if farmers
there ''never had it so good."
"We 're losing $150 to $200 a
head, resulting in many cattle
feeders being forced out of
business and this is not, in our
opinion, having it so -good," a
spokesman for the group said
in a telephone interview.
Harlan Hanunel, the Swux
County spokesman, said the
group had asked for an "urgent
meeting" to discuss their
plight with White House aides.
Butz said food retailers, in
response to pleas from him and
from cattlemen, have began a
widespread wave of price cuts
on beef by lowering their
margins. He predicted the
result would be increased sales
to help move out a current
supply glut which bas depressed live cattle prices.

Enterprise study
program launched

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RIO GRANDE ~ Three Rio
.....crande College professors
have begun an American
Private Enterprise Study
Program sponsored by the
Jackson Production Credit
Association of Gallipolis. The
program is a special seminar
on the American private enterprise system for 20 selected
high school janiors and seniors
from southeastern Ohio.
Sam Smith, assistant dean
for social and administrative
sciences; John Reynolds,
of
associate
professor
business, and Bob Rogers,
assistant professor of social
scienCes, spoke to the group
Wednesday night on "Government Relation to Private
Business" and HWays to
Organize a Private Business."
Federal, state, and local
government legislation,
regulation, support, and
taxation of business was the
topic of the two-hour session.
Wednesday's program was one
of a 10-week series developed
by the Jackson Production
Credit Association to give the
selected high school studen~ a
better insight to the establishment and operation of a private
business.
At one of the other sessions
during this 10-week series, the
group toured the Meade Paper
Plant in Chillicothe, and on
April 18, they will tour Rio
Grande College to gain insight
into the business sYStem of the
college.
The program started
February 13 and will end May
I, with a banquet at Rio Grande
College where awards for

completion will be presented,
and local businesses and industry will be recognized for
their support of the project.
Additionally, in June, there
will be a competition at Ohio
State University in Columbus,
where these students will
compete for college scholarships and cash awards based
on the work they have completed in the program.
David (Rick 1 Altizer,
assistant office manager at the
Gallipolis Production Credit
Association, coordinating the
program, said two of the
students who complete the
study will be selected to attend
the American Institute on
Cooperatives in Kansas next
August.

Registration set
at Racine school
-

RACINE ~ Kindergarten
registration for the next school
year in the Southern Local
School District will be held
Friday at the school in Racine.
Registration will be from
8:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. and
from 12:30 to 2:30p.m. Paren~
are to take the birth certificate
immunization records in:
eluding DPT series and
boosters, combined measles,
polio vaccine and boosters and
TB skin test.

FFA's second
banquet is held ·
POMEROY - The Meigs
High School Future Farmers of
America held their second
annual Parent-Son Banquet
Tuesday night at the school
cafeteria.
Dave
Barrett,
the
Southeastern Sectional vice
president, guest speaker,
emphasized that agriculture is
the largest business for Ohio
and that for each person on the
farm six others are needed in
the agriculture business.
Barrett encouraged parents,
teachers ll!ld others to give
their support to the "budding"
yoang farmers making up the
organization.
Everett Holcomb and Aaron
Sayre, advisors, presented
green hand degree awards to
Charles Miller, Paul Jones,
Mark Pierce, Steve Hauber,
Kenneth White, Danny Good,
Fred Eichinger, Brian Wiildon,
Lester Parker, David Wa~on.
Benny Upton, Darrel Drake,
Mark Grosnlckel, Bill Snyder,
Mark Richmond, Mike Pierce,
Steve McCune, Dan Yost,
Roger Cottrill, Bobby Johnson,
Robert Lemley, Ken Smith,
Mike Swick, Carl Sargent,
Randy Wood, Bill Rucker,
Rodney White.
The bronze medal winning
team
members
in
parliamentary procedure were
'Joel M~ue, Danny Walker,
Robert Coancil, Glen Kennedy,
Rick MaComber, Steve,
Peyton, Mark Mora, ' Robert
Council, Paul Jones and Steve -

Hauber.
Paul Jones was presented
the star green hand and
leadership award, a trip to
FFA Camp, sponsored by
Landmark, and Robert Coancil
received a leadership award to
FFA Camp, sponsored by the
Jackson Production Credit
Association. Danny Good also
received a scholarship to FFA
Camp for being_the most improved member, sponsored by
The Farmers Bank and
Savings Co.
Rick MaComber won in
livestock production, Kenneth
Madden
in
agriculture
mechanics, Frank Colwell in
crop production, Pearl Smith
in dairy production and Mark
Pierce in agriculture business.
SoU judging awards went to
Joe Maue, Rick MaComber,
Steve Peyton, Glen Kennedy, a
team that won first in · the
district and 18th in the state.
Chapter farmer ,d~gree
winners were Rick ]11aC&lt;imber,
Danny Walker, Randy Wood,
Ken Madden, Carl Davidson
and Robert•Coancil.
New officers introduced
were
Robert
Council,
president; Mark Mora, vice
president; Steve Haul;ler,
treasurer; Danny Walker,
reporter; Danny Good, sentinel;
Carl
Davidson, .
secretary; Joel Maue, parliamentarian, ' and Dave Shuler,
student advisor.
· John Riebel and Charles
Swogger, superintendent and

Farm-City cooperation advanced in late sixties
Development Corporation with an industrial site brochure,. .
In 1968 the Technical Action Panel asststed m re-organtzmg
and expanding the Meigs Coanty Regional Planning Commission
which requested state and federal lands for a Comprehenstve
Planning Program. Work was still being done towards con'truction of a county museum and office building. Work was also
done in assisting the Ohio Depariment of Development to contact
influentials to approve Meigs County's participation in the Upper
Ohio Valley Economic Region (now Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Valley Regional Development District) . Harold Carnahan,
Bernard Fultz, and Theodore Reed were named coanty
representatives. The report says : "Action is stalled at the
moment because of lack of funds ."
PLANNING FOR THE Resource Development Seminar for
the spring of 1970 was part of the work in 1969. Work with the Big
Bend Regatta was also mentioned. The museum-office building
proposal was killed in 1969.
The 100 Bushel Corn Club, started in 1964, ~ut seven of its 12
entries ov&lt;r the 100 bushel mark. They were Virgil King, Rex
Shenefield, Edison Hollon, Lauren Hoffman, Dale Kautz,
Starting Massar, and George Wells .
}
ByT. Allao Wolter,
by duty at Vesuvius. Knowing that our proceeded to the battle . Fire line con- ;:;:
Seventy-four sheep flocks with 2,346 sheep were visited by
;:;:
District Ranger
conditions would be worse at 2 p.m. when struction and burning out became the ;:;: Emmet Douglas, local sheep inspector in the federal-state sheep
![![
IRONTON ~ This week's article was the regular fire weather reading would order of the day.
;![l scabies mntrol program. Robert Mather, vice president in
!;!; written by District Fire Control Ofl'icer be taken, additional people were alerted
The reinforcements arrived and it :[~ charge of sales for the Surge organization, was secured as
[;!; Tom Williams.
·
for possible standby duty.
soon became apparent that our forces :;!( speaker for the annual Dairy Service Unit after several local
;:;;
Saturday afternoon, 2 p.m. , Ohio
At 2:15 p.m. I received the official were adequate for an early victory. Both [![! diarymen and the coanty agent had attended the Surge school in
![![ University battling Marquette in the fire weather reading for the day and fires displayed moments of resistance :[:! 1965.
[:[: regional NCAA basketball tournament. realized immediately that we were un- and in two instances escaped our control i[!
The Extension five-year program was started in 1968, but
~:; This was the first of two games to be der-manned to handle a fire should one line . Quick action averted a larger ftre . :::: other events sidetracked it before the five years were completed.
!!!! telecast this particular day and I settled start. Three more men were put on duty
By 8 p.m. both fires were controlled . i!j
Uoyd Blackwood was reported the first Meigs Coanty beef
!;~ down prepared to watch both of them. and additional people alerted for possible Quick action kept acreage burned and ;:;: herd owner to place his herd in the production testing 'program.
. .
•'•'
;:;:
What kind of day was it' It was a action .
damage to a mtmmum.
:;:;
The real start of large scale turkey production in the co11nty
;;:; Saturday like anv other Saturday only it
I focused my attention on the
What caused these fires' The case of :;:: came in 1967 with 50,000 birds produced. One cage layer record
was a Saturday d-uring fire season, a time basketball game. Ohio University was a name growing out of nowhere to ignite :j keeper averaged 244eggs per hen on 6,000 birda.
:;:: when people connected wtth ftre control struggling unsuccessfully to stay in the a forest and burn perhaps hundreds of !&lt;:
David Koblentz was named an "Efficient Dairyman of the
[![! activities are pre-occupied with tern- game. The thought crossed my mind that acres is not black magic, but the result of ;!;! Year" by the Meigs County Dairy Service Unit and was rurmer:;:; perature wind humidity rain and their chances of victory over Marquette carelessness by people, or in some cases ;:;: up in the Southceniral District.
[[[[ people. '
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were similar to our chances of an early delibe1ate setting by incendiarists. An [![!
The 1967 Extension report stated that the number of farms
!;!;
The wea ther variables were known. victory over a fire which might occur on incendiarist is a murderer, as deadly and ;!;! selling milk and cream declined from 459 in 1959 to 265 according
:;:; A reading taken at noon told us con- this particular afternoon. I had a feeling I destructive as a killer with a gan . He can ~!. to the 1964 Census. The Udder Health and Milk Secretion School
r:: ditions were optimum for fire to burn, wouldn't see the end of the game.
destroy trees that take two lifetimes to
was well received in 1967.
![![ The only question concerned people.
At approximately 4 p.m. I received a replace, wildlife by the thousands and!;!;
Participants in the 100 Bushel Corn Club in 1967 were Dale
!;~ Would they provide the spark'
call from the sheriff's office telling me to habitat sorely needed in a day when!;[( Kautz, Thereon Johnson, Harold Roush, Virgil King, Dan Smith,
~;
FIGHTING FIRE can be compared contact our fire crew by radio. I talked to human population pressures are so :!;!; Edison Hollon, and Roy Holter. Apparently interest waned in
!!! to an athletic contest. In order to gain the Russ Mallow who informed me that we great. In an area as populated as ours is, ![[![ 1968 as only four were listed.
::~ upper hand you need to have scouted all had two fires going and additional many people could be left homeless as a ;:;:;
The establishment of two year..-ound grazing farms was the
*i the advance informati~n possible. One's manpower was needed immediately. I result of an ince~diarist's action.s .
'li!' outstanding event listed in 1968. This was a cooperative venture
~ degree of readiness ts based on the contacted the District Ranger and asked
We can provtde the motlvatwn and;.:; with SCS, ASCS, and Extension, working with Horace Karr and
![[[ potential of the adversary . This deter- that he mobilize another crew. I then education to help people prevent fires
Charles Stock.
!;:; mines the amoant of effort necessary for proceeded to the fire area.
caused by carelessness but what can we;:;:
Over 100 attended the Hereford Clinic held here. Rex
~ victory.
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On arrival I learned that a local do to stop the loss of life and property ![![ Shenefield carried out an alfalla weevil control demonstration,
;~
Based on our noon weather in- volunteer fire department was working through willful fire setting? It's obvious[![! using methyl-parathion. The Agronomy Clinic, Esj!ite Planning
ij formation, three men were put on stand- on one fire and our forces on another. we need your help to stop this senseless[![! and Transfer School, and Dairy Profit School stilnulated considerable interest in 1968.
The year 1969 marked the completion of 50 years of Extension
work in Meigs County. The report that year stated:
"It is impossible to list in one place all of the activities or to
producer.
measure
in dollars and cents, or in human values, or the changes
However, Ashbrook is
raising the only true American that have been brought about in whole or in part, because this has
breed of goats, called the La been an informal, out-of-school educational program carried out
Mancha, which bas extremely through the cooperation of the Meigs County Commissioners, the
short ears. The breed was just Ohio State University, and the United States Department of
Agriculture."
recently introduced.
Probably no one person has used all of the tools of Extension,
"We call them gopher ears.
It apparently started out as a SCS, and ASCS better than Edson Roush who was selected as the
mutation, but the short ears Efficient Dairyman Award winner for Southcentral Ohio in
COLUMBUS (UP!) ~ Old ple who for some reason cannot you inside," Ashbrook said.
are
linked to several desireable April, 1966,
MacDonald's goats are digest cow milk."
And no, Ashbrook quickly characteristics - hardiness,
Following this, Mr . and Mrs. Roush had the privilege of
nudging their way into the
Ashbrook, president of the adds, goats do not eat tin cans temperment and high-butterfat joining the Good Will mission to Russia with a group of dairy
barnyards of Ohio, taking their American Dairy Goat Associa- and wash off the clothes tine.
farmers led by Dr. Ely, chairman of the dairy department at
milk," Ashbrook said.
place alongside cows in the tion, said there are several ad"Part of this is the goat's inOhio State University. Mr. Roush worked with George KreiUer,
"But
the
La
Mancha
goat
dairy industry.
vantages to raising goats quisitiveness. He has to test takes some getting used to as Wesley Green, and the recently retired agent as well as all of the
Ohio boasts the largest popu- rather than cows and dispelled everything by mouth. But on
lation of milk goats in the mid- the myth of the smelly, tin can- the other hand,a goat won't eat far as looks go," he added. "I specialists in agronomy and dairy science at O.S.U. For the last
west and commercial dairy eating goat obsessed with anything that is dirty," he said. get asked a handred times a several years Mr. Roush has had the highest producing Guernsey
day when I have the goa~ at herd in Ohio.
goat farms in the state are bucking people in a prone
"Actually, when you see a the county fairs why I cut off
In 1969 Roman Warmke joined the Karr and Stock farms in
growing by "leaps and position.
goat with a tin can, be's eating their ears."
the
year..-ound grazing program so that now round bales for
boands," according to Rev.
"You care for a goat as you the label and glue. He'll eat
winter
pasture are a mmmon sight. No-till method of planting
Ah
yes,
Ashbrook
mused,
Paul Ashbrook, who raises do a cow, but goats do not re.. anything that is a wood prodmore than 100 milk goats on his quire as much housing, can get uct. A goat can digest up to 32 goats and cows - the Mutt and co;n was started this year with Albert Parker planting his own
corn and fields on the Dale Kautz and Earl Dean farms.
Jeff of the dairy industry.
Zanesville farm.
along on brushy hillsides or per cent wood fiber in his stom"The back-to-the-land and less sophisticated pastures, ach, much llke a deer that can
natural foods movements seem produce more milk on the live off twigs and the bark of
to have accoanted for the tre- amoant of feed invested and trees.
mendous rise in popularity of have a tremendous per"I've had more dairy records
goa~." Ashbrook said. "Goat
sonality," Ashbrook said.
eaten right off the side of my
milk and byproducts are no
"Seven good goats will out- barn," Ashbrook quipped.
longer specialty items for peo- produce ·one cow. You get an
Only the buck has an odor,
average of four quarts of milk and that is just several months
each day for 10 months from
principal, respectively, of the one goat," he explained. "And each year during the breeding
season.
Eastern Local District, were you know how it is with a cow
"Unsmelly Goat"
presented honorary chapter ~you either have enough milk
"The buck has scent glands
farm awards and James Diehl, to take a bath or you have
just Ilke wild animals, which
Meigs
Principal,
was none."
are designed to attract the fepresented a past honorary
Goats Are Gentle
male," he said. "You can re.
chapter farmer award.
Goa~ are extremely gentle, move the glands, but I've
Holcomb, the advisor, was affectionate, ihq ui siti ve known does who refused to
awarded the 'honorary chapter animals.
breed to an ansmelly goat."
farmer.
"They have the best barnThe nubian goat, which proAdvisory
committee yard personality of all the ani- duces a high butterfat milk, is
members introduced were mals I've worked with," Ash- the most popular goat in Ohio,
John Rice, new coanty ex- . brook said. ;'While goats are a
tension agent; Roy Holter, H. herd anlnu!l and Ilke to run especially for breeding and
Tbe nubian has long,
E. Shields, Tom Wolfe, David with other dairy goa~. one showing.
noppy ears, a Roman nose and
Perry and John Colwell. Others goat gets along very well if he "Oriental grace," Ashbrook
introduced were Mr. and Mrs. gets affection and attention
said.
Clyde Kuhn and Mr. and Mrs. from people.
Commercial dairy farmers
Dorsel Larkins of the Eastern
"Goats are very people- generally raise the dish-face
District. The ham dinner was oriented. If you open the door goat depicted in story books
served by Meigs Local cooks. to your house, a goat will follow because it is a heavier milk
journeyed by train to Meigs County. Local sponsorship was
through the Chamhers of Commerce. The same year the Paul
Carnahan Appreciation Day and Dinner provided an efrective
tool for getting over 300 Meigs Coanty people working together in
Farm-City observance.
Many agencies in the coanty cooperated with individuals and
· groups in community development work which saw the Tuppers
the NEW in FARMJNl;
Plains-Chester Water System begin in 1966.
"Meigs County, A Look Ahead ", in September, 1965. Over 200
The Technical Action Panel (ASCS, SCS, Extension, FHA )
copies of this plan were circulated to leaders and received
and Resource Development Committees and Regional Planning
widespread favorable comment.
Commission saw County Bookmobile Service, Comprehensive
The year 1965 also saw 125 Meigs County people providing
Water and Sewer Plan, Route 7 by-pass and Route 33 im"courtesy cars" for the Fall Folia ~e Tour when 900 oeopie provements underway in 1967. Extension assisted Southern
By C. E.lilakeslee
County Ext. Agent, Emeritus
POMEROY ~ The plat book publication in 1969 was in
reality the outgrowth of resource development programs
characterized by a "leadership identification" study in the mid60s and the publication of the long-term Meigs County program.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

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MARCH 25 - 26 - 27 - 28 - 29 - 30-APRIL 1 - 2- 3 - 4 - 5 &amp; 6

STOP IN AND REGISTER
FOR DOOR PRIZES
PURCHASE _r.I~CESSARY TO REGISTER

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$77.90 VALU
SECOND PRIZE-VANITY RETAIL $74.

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Commercial dairy goat

WHITE
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farms on rise in Ohio

Description

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3.99

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.,&gt;c

5.99
16.99
16.99
17.79

2/8 l 6/8 l 3/0 X 6/8
All Ceiling Tile

In Stock on Sale Save Now.

SPECIAL
EACH

$3995

$4995

-----------ALL VANITY$

Carter &amp; Evans, Inc. "Building Supplies". A
Name Familiar To AIL Stop and See the Friendly
Ones. They Will Welcome You.

"We Appreciate

WITH TOP AND
BOWL AND FAUCET
SPECIAL

L1 MITElJ QUANTITY

Slor1 Mlnftw

Hlrllll Dlvl1

30%
OFF
During Sale
ON LIGHT FIXTURES

35% OFF

16.99 •6.29

1/4

LIST PRICE

Prices Good While
Quantities Last!

1/4

NATURAL STONE - WHITE
STONE- RED BRICK
VINYL COVERED ETIOLE
and VILLAGE GREEN-BROWN

Oue To Increasing Prices
We Will Not Be Able To
Re-Order At Sale Prices
On All Sale Items!

Gold lace

STYLE BOARD

SPECIAL

TUB KITS

4

$239 SHEET

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
87 OLIVE ST.

STORE H()URS
Mon .-Fri. 7:30 A.M.-5 P.M.
Saturday 7:30 A.M.-4 P.M.

DON'T WAIT • BUY YOURS NOW!

PH'ONE 446-4464

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

CASH

SinJplieilq

&amp;CARRY

ROTICUL TILLERS

3, 5, 8 HORSE POWER
We Advise An Early Purchase!

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.

CENTRAL SOYA

of Ohio, Inc.,

'

PH.

Gallipolis,.Ohio

'

~92·2176

POMEROY

•

,,

r-- -- .

' .

•6.39
'6.79
•6.79
•7.69
'6.95
•6.95
•7.29
•8.50

SAVE

8, 10, 12
and 14 HP

TIME

•3.99

1

SAVE

Ul

©lliJ oo ©L%riD rn Lr

CORN

Regular Sale

WOOD

INTERNATIONAr

IT'S
SEED

VANITY

Colordal Cros1 - Buck

•
I

.

.

Your Wayne National Forest

...

~I

•

colors

14.95

1

�.' -

•I '

•

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,.

•

•

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•
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23 - !he Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, March 24, 1974

22- The Sunday Times -Sentinel. SWlday, March 24, .1974

Democrats will
he heard Tuesday

Businessmen elected to hoard

GALI.IPOLIS - The pubt'ic
is invited to an open meeting
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. to meet
Democrat candidates for local
·and slate offices in the com·
man pleas courtroom in the
courtMmse.
Local candidates and slate
and district candidates, or
their representatives, will he
given the opportunity to speak
briefly and answer questions.

'

PI'. PLEASANT - Two Pt.
Pleasant ·businessmen, John
.R. Felker ancl Charles L.
Brown Jr., have been named
to the board of directors of
Peoples Bank of Pt. Pleasant,
President Vitus Hartley, Jr.
ljllnounced.
Both new members have
already been seated on the
board of the bank.
"Both Mr. Brown and Mr.
Felker are experienced and
competent businessmen in the
area, and are well-respected.
We expect them to be valuable
B embe)-s of the hoard as
: fi!opleJ Bank continues its
steady land rapid rate of
growih," Hartley said.
Felker is general manager
of Point Distributing Co. in Pt.
Pleasant, and is president of
the Harle! Corp.
A resident of Gallipolis, he
also is associated with real
estate and other business
interests in the Mason - Gallia
area.

Felker is a World War D
veteran of the U.S. Navy, and
a graduate of Denison
University.

He is married to the former
Freda Gilmore of Gallipolis,
and they have two children:
Fay, a graduate of the Morris
. Harvey College School of
Nursing

and

an

active

registered nurse, and John D, _
a freshman at Morehead Slate
University in KentuckY.
His civic and fraternal in ..

leresis include membership in
the Elks, Masonic orders and
Kappa Sigma Fraternity.

company's progress.

Brown's Drive.. In , and also
has interests in real estate and

JOHN R. FELKER

CHARLES BROWN JR .

Pleasant and they are the
parents of two children:
Charles lll, 5, and Charla

Jean, 2.
Brown is active in the Elks
Lodge and Kiwanis.

Goodyear's Lintala honored
PT .
PLEASANT
Goodyear, the company named
for one of history 's greatest
inventors, Charles Goodyear,
has honored some 680 spiritual
descendants of that man whose

Porter plans to vary from the
conventional type of history.
He wants the book to be more
readable, especially to people
who have never heard of Rio
Grande College. For example,
he will list the names of
professors, ou Islanding
alumni, and financial reports
in an appendix.
Three student assistants are
helping him research the
college books and newspapers.
Gary Feurer is researching the
years 1875-1910; Dean Kozlo,
1911-1940, and Steve Slaughter,
1941-1973. They are reviewing .

HeM...

citizens being sought

.•

~
•

JAMES S. PORTER
curricula,

.
'

SPEAKJNG OF illSTORICAL MA'ITERS, Mrs. Agnes Hill
of Tuppers Plains will be serving as the collector of items of
historical significimce on behalf of the Meigs County Bi·
Centennial Commission.
The articles will he published and who knows, maybe even a
new printed volume of Meigs County history will evolve. Mrs.
Hill will travel to any home in Meigs County w pick up material
which contributors feel might be interesting. She will also personally return the material alter copies have been made.
If you have material which you think would make interesting
reading write Mrs. Hill at P. 0. Box 172, Tuppers Plains 45783.
She'll get in touch. However, do keep in mind that Mrs. Hill
works in a grocery at Coolville for five and a half days a week
and will have to be calling for the material in the evenings.
HAVE YOU MET JAY? Jay is the German shorthaired
pointer of the Rev . Father John Nadzam who has arrived in
Pomeroy to become the pastor at Sacred Heart Church . Jay
closes his eyes and bows his head when Father John gives him
the conunand ''pray." Real cute!

mrs MYERS KELTON

WRITES in reference to a recent
letter from Ruby Myers wbo wrote us about cemetery In·
scriptions at Beech Grove Cemetery.
The teller is self explanatory and does pertain w family
history. It reads:
"Read the article in the paper from Ruby Myers and how
surprised I was to learn that John U. Myers was her greatgrandfather too. He was my lather's grandfather and was a
brilliant attorney in Mason and Meigs.
"He built the big Myers house on Mulberry, and his law of.
lice was in the three rooms toward the Parkers, and I was born
there. When he lived in Mason, the big home, first on the left as
you go up from the boat ramp, there were 11 children. His law
office was beside the house -the foundation's still there.
"His father, Charles Myers, came from Germany and first
settled in Lancaster, Pa., then carne to Lancaster, Ohio. Thus
John came on down into Mason and Meigs. My grandfather, of
course, was Oscar Myers. Don Collins, Annette Knight and Ula
Matlack are also great-grandchildren.
Five of the children went West and all did well. Grandpa
Oscar stayed here and was in business for 63 years -first livery
stable, then feed store - two girls stayed in Mason, one stayed
here and one boy settled in Virginia so l guess there are MferS
everywhere."
·
Mrs. Kelton has written Mrs. Myers who li11es in the Grove
City area.

'

-

'!_ •

POMEROY - Action is taking place at the Meigs Museum in
Pomeroy in the hope of getting things rolling there so that the
museum can really be functionaL
Amini -theater is presently being built in a garage at the rear
of the slructure and this theater room has been designed by
Gerard Hilferty so that it can serve several purposes. The
county's historical society is beginning to work on the annual
heritage day program which has been a smash during the past
couple of years as a part of Big Bend Regatta Weekend. lncidenlally, the society is also going to open a fWld drive in the
near future so that some money can be gotten together for
converting the museum building from just a building into a
functional museum.

presidents,

athletics, and students.
SOME OF the research
already acco!flplished has been
interviews on tape cassettes of
prominent persons . These
include Dr. Charles A. Weed,
whose father's memory and his
own personal memory goes
back to the College's first
president and first commenc8"'enl; Francis Burdell,
longest conttnuous faculty
member; Elizabeth Davis,
widow of Boyd Davis, a longtime trustee and for a dozen
years board president; Wilbur
Galveston Scarberry, and a
speech given by Robert Leith,
current history faculty
member.
Porter plans to obtain more
personal interviews, especially
from Jack Stiffler and Dr.
Francis Shane, who are the
oldest members of the present
board of trustees.
CPA reports will be included
in the book revealing that for
only a scattered 13 years, the
college operated In the red.
Auditor's reports go back to
1929, excepting during W.W. 11.
Another source that he has
contacted is the alumni
particularly the classes of 1926
and 1951, 25 years apart.
Another letter will be sent
early in 1975.
Porter, 66, was born · in
Gallipolis, in a house where the
old Holzer Hospital is now
located, and educated in
Lexington, Ky.
The president of Rio
Grande College, the late Rev.
R. Lloyd Pobst, and Rev. Don
Hobbs officiated at his wedding
in ,1942. He and his wife, a
registered nurse at Holzer
Medical Center Clinic, have
two sons, David, captain in the
army, and Jim, Columbus, a
member of the Gilligan ad-

ministration , and four grandchildren.
He received his M A degree
in 1941. from the University of
Kentucky and came to Rio
Grande as a professor of
English
and
Publicity
Director. He has been
associated with the college
either as an employee or
journalist for a span of 34
years, over a third of the
college's existence.
Two ye.ars later, Porter

entered journalism and for 11
years was a reporter and
sports editor (Jaspey) for the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune and a
stringer for the Columbus
Dispatch. He then worked for a
short time, simultaneously, for
both the Athens Messenger and
the Gallipolis radio station, and
in 1956, joined the radio station
as news director. ·
In 1958, he was elected to the
Ohio Slate Senate and served
four years as the only
Democrat ever from distri ct 7·
8 which is now part of 17. His
issue was the "Right to Work
Amendment" with a majority
in seven counties voting
against the issue and many for
Porter.
While he was senator, he
worked on the weekends for the
Gallipolis radio station. During
this time he became a favorite
to the radio audiences as
"Uncle Jim." He read the
funnies to his 11nieces and
nephews" audience every

Sunday until 1962.
Porter returned to Rio
Grande College in the
department
of
College
Relations, and Admissions and
Records for three years; then
after a heart attack he became
a faculty member teaching
English and Pollical Science,
and is now the college
histo~ian .

BY JAN COUNTRYMAN
GALLIPOLIS - A future
home for the Gallia County
Senior Citizens Center was the
major topic of discussion at the
Thursday afternoon meeting of
U1e Gallia County Council on
Aging, Inc.
George Bush, chairman of
the committee to locate a home
for the group , reported he had
talked to Robert Fanning, vice
president of personnel al the
Holzer Medical Center Feb. 28
concerning quarters for the
senior citizens organization.
The Holzer Hospital Foun-

cards for the organization. The
oldest member is Mrs. Stella
Booten, 99, who is now a
resident of the Arcadia Nur·
sing !lome at Coolville . Mrs.
Roush reported that several
(olks have turned 90 since the
ceremonies. They will be
honored at a later date.
Anne White reported on
money making projects of the
group, announcing a rummage
sale and an auction. The group
needs $653 by the end of March
to meet Its matching funds
commitments.

dation has asked the senior
citizens to vacate their

discussed revenue sharing
funds which the group has
access to, and it was agreed to
purchase a projector and
screen for the center from
these monies.
In other financial transactions, the group authorized
payment of routine hills, including one for the purchase of
a new public address system
for the center.
It was announced that there
will he no poiluck dinner in
April due to the OOAD nutrition
and multi-phasic . health
programs. The council
changed its meeting lo April 25
due to conflict with another
center program on the regular
meeting day.
The Olde Tyme Town
meeting will be April 5 at the
Washington SchooL The public
is invited to this session when
various state and local officials
will be present to answer
questions concerning the statewide senior citizens programs.
Council members are invited to
dinner prior to the meeting at
the center at 6 p.m. Reservations are $3 per plate. The
meeting-will begin at 7:30p.m.
Rev. Hughes Price gave the
invocation and Ethel Robinson
read the minutes of the
previous meeting.
Hems purchased for the
center were reported on and it
was noted that federal funds
had been expended for the
purchase of kiln for ceramics.

quarters in the old Holzer
Hospital Building at Cedar and
First Ave., by Sept. I this year,
since due to ·the cost of
operating the building, it will
he closed.
In a co nversation with
Gallipolis City Manager Paul
Willer March 5, Bush learned
that Willer is preparing a
petition to the state housing
commission asking establishment of a Gallia County
Metropolitan
Housing
Authority which would be
interested in purchase of the
old hospital building for a lowcost apartment program. In
this case, Willer believes, the
authority would be inclined to
allow the center to remain in
the building.
This eventuality depends on
the passage of numerous
requests on various levels and
will take time, but Willer expressed optimism, according

to Bush, that the petition may
reach the initial stages of
completion at the state level as
early as the end of ApriL
In the event that the center is
·allowed to remain In the
building, there will still he a
period of time when another
building will he needed while
remodeling of the hospital is
completed. Bush advised the
council to he on the lookout for
at least temporary facilities for
the group .
. In other business, Maye
Roush reported that membership in the Gallia County
Senior Citizens organization
has now reached 556 with 30 of
these persons 90 years or older.
The Retired Senior Volunteers
recently honored the residents
of the county who rank in the 90
or above bracket, with the
presentation of yellow roses
and honorary membership

Jean Niday, center director,

FORMAL OPENING

w~ "'TtllfiC:I(I!O

NTU. SHr

r---

PoL

HIL~!

oomeroy
rullond

..--~,1

Ready Nowl

Susie's Greenhouse
446-4610

WINNIE WINKLE

tied!
and
shining patent

PUBLIC NOTICE
1 am offering for sate the
residence of the late Betty Cl ine
located at 224 Walnut Street.
Middleport. Ohio . House in nice
residential dis t rict . Asking
price $15.000.00. Sa le subject to
the approval of the Probilte
Court. Meigs County, Ohio . tt
Interested . please contact the
undersigned .

· ONE A DMI RAL se ll def ro 5ting
ref r 1gerator and one bed for
sale . Phone 992 .5779
J-21 Jtc
- - ------------H &amp; N day Ol d or started
Leghorn pullets . Both floor or
cage
grown
availab l e
Pou ltr y
hou s in g
&amp;
au toma ti on . Modern Poullry ,
399 W Main , Pom eroy , 992
2164 .
3 14 1t c
------------GOOD quality hay . Al so, 2
Register ed Beagles . Call 992
1201 aft er 5 P-IT\,.
l ·24 12 tc
--- - ADMIRA L Re fr igerator , 16 cu.
feet . no def r ost. Fr ee1.e r in
to p .
Cadi
Do r othy
Winebrenner . 992 ·398 2.
3.24 Jt c

OLD furnitur e ,' oak table s,
clocks. Ice bo xes, brass bed s ,
dishes. desks, or complete
households . Write M . _D
M i ller . Rl. 4, Pomeroy , Ohio,
ca ll 992 -7760 .
5-13-tf c

con dit ion . Paying $10 cash .
Write, give directions · l o
WI TTE N PIANO CO ., P . 0 .
BOX 18 , Sardis, Ohio 4394t..
3-l3 -30tc

LET US sel l it for you at auc tion . Will buy all furn iture or
hou se h o ld goods. Polly'S
Auction House. Open 9: 30 to
5 :30daily . Phone 992 -3509. 537
• High St.. Middleport . Ohio .
2·26 -JOtc

I he

expert craftsmanship, 1he fine fit
and finish of Poll· Parrot.

Mobile Homes For Sale

FOR SUNDAY_.
March 24, 1974

$1099
Hartley 's Shoes
In The Middle of the Upper Block
Pomeroy, Ohio
Open All Day Thursdays-Friday Night Til9

ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 1 g) Erneslly make amends today for a
situation that provoked a problem
between you and a friend. Be the
one who apologi ~es.

WE'RE MASTERS AT

TAURUS (April 20·Moy 20)

To-

day you can play an Important role
in helping another get something
that's needed. Don 't hesitate to go
to bat for a pal.

Have

GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20)

LOWERING THE
BOOM ON
HIGH FOOD

faith In your new ideas. or else
you 'll have no reason for others to
believe in what you offer . If you

act positively, tlley'lltollow.

CANCER (Juno 21·Jutr 22)

Keep your go~la to yourself but

make them such that they'll later
bring credit to you. Otllers will ap -

preciate why you acted as you

did.

LEO (.ltjiJ 23-Aug. 22) Make

your outlook one of selnessness.
Be sure your plans protect those
involved with you , as wen as your ~

self.

YtRQO lAue- 23-lept. 22) Today you can expect benefits from

PRICES!

BERRY -M IL L ER Mobile 'Hom e
Sa les has a lot to offer when
you start shopping for your
Mobile Home . You can beat
the high dep rec ia tion you ' ll
have on your hom e the fir st
two years by st1opping for a
la te mod el used Mobile Home .
Here are some every day low
pri ces:
Super Spec ial of th e Week new 65xl2
Detroiter.
3
bedroom. 1 1!~ baths, redu ce d
$1,000.00 to $6,495 .00 . (T hi s
Mobile Home is loaded with
extras) .
1971 64xl2 Cham p i on. 2
bedroom , 1'11 bath , e)(tra good
buy at $4,995 .00 .
60x l2 Champion . 2 bedroom ,
$4,495.00 .
60xl2 Globemaster. l bedroom ,
gla ss s liding doors. only
$4,495.00 .
60)( 12
Hom e tte ,
exce ll ent
condit ion , 54,495.00.
60xl2 Liberty , deluxe, 54,995.00 .
60x 12 P M C, 2 - bedroom,
$4,995 .00 .
60xl2 Elco na Custo m , cos t
$7,995.00, n ew. now only
$5,795.00 .
.
Weal so have a oood selection of
6 and 10 wtde Mobile Homes in
stock .
These are mos tly all la te model
homes and th e pri ces include
your deliv er y and comp lete
set .up . So for an honest to
goodness good dea l, stop in
today at Berry -M ill er Mobile
Homes Sales, 705 Farson
Street, Belpre, OhiO. Phone
423 -9531, closed Sunday .
3-22 -6tc

folks for the way they
save my food budget!

*CONVENTIONAL·BANK FINANCING
*NO
. - WAITING PERIOD *NOT FHA OR VA F_INANCING

pomeroy
.n ational
bank

'

~

298

'

ROWELL'S

Who ha8 never noticed you before
Is very complimentary.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 111)
Take a more active rote in doing
for one In your· charge something

tlley're atraid to attllflllt on thalr
own.

•

•

Custom
packaged power
for your
workload.

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

EXCELS IOR Salt Works, E .
Main St ., Pomeroy . All kinds
of salt water pellets, water
nuggets. block salt and own
Ohio River Sa lt . Phone 9923891.
6-5·tf&lt;.;
SI NGER sew ing machines 1972
model In beautiful walnut
cabinet . Makes design stit ·
ches, zig zag , buttonholes,
blind hems , etc . Like new .
Only $89 .95 . Call Ravenswood
273 .9521 or 273 -9893 after 5:00.
f2 .7.tfc
A M . fM stereo -radio 8 tra ck
tape player , 4 speaker sound
system . Bal ance 5109.46 or
use our budget terms . Cal l
992 ·3965 .
3·18 -tfc
1971 4 WHEEL drive, J;~ ton·
Fo rd pickup tru ck. $20,600
mites . 10 1h ft
ca b over
ca mp er , sel f contained . Also
top per . Will se ll seoarate lv .
Call 985 -3554 after 6 p .m .
weekdays . H aro ld Bre:w er . Long Bottom. Ohio .
3·15-tfc

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

ONE 2 room and ba th furni shed
apartment, utiliti es paid. One
3 room s, shower , apartment.
utilities furnished in Mason ,
W. Va . Reynolds Apar tm ents
Phone 1 (304) 773 ·5147 on Rt .
33, Mason
3·24 -6tp
APARTMENT Corner of Lin ·
coin Street an d Second
A\le nu e
in
Middleport
Pr i vate entrance b e~room
and bath . Men only . No one
upstairs . Availab l e after 24 th
of March . Phone 992 -5508 .
3-24 -3t c

Choose a rugged 14 horse hydrostati c tractor or a
tough 14 horse gear drive tractor. Bolh overhead
valve engines. Both with qu ick "plug-in lock-pin"
attachment systems. Electric starting . 42" mower
cut And both with day -long stamina and year round
versatility. Proven performers in a variety of jobs.
. Toughest job In front of you is choosing the one
you want Bolens.. A good yard ahead .
~MC consumer

"T'

Third &amp; Court

manage

your

Second
Street

barl&lt;er would handle them..Con-

centrate on facts. not flgtion .

MOWERS
20" Push

'5295

COMIN(; SOON TO POMEROY~

· Morch 24, 11174 .

In your affairs this year. Travel is
like.ly In months ahead - and so is
a new romance.

Turf~ Till ro t a ry . Ve rtical
sha ft . worm gear.

3 117 h.p 12" tines .
With Rever se

K.D .

2 · BEDROOM mobile hom·; ·,
also . I t ra i ler space . Phone
949 -2261 '
3-20 ·6tp

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

Plenty of
BULK

GARDEN
SEEDS

for rent, 2
bedrooms . Phone 992-5908.
J-19 -6lc

POMEROY
LANDMARK-

12

X 50 MOBILE home , 2
bedrooms . utiliti es pa id . Ren t
by week or month . Ca ll 742 ·
5980 .

3· 24 - 3tc"~

New oontacta will ploy a big rote

TILLER

3-11 -tfc

TRAILER lot in Ra cine. Call
992 -2.429 or 992 -2838 .
'•

Ph. 446-3314

SHOP OUR SPRING SPECIALS

PISCES (Feb. 20·Mirch 20) APARTMENT
to

Gallipolis

Turf Trim MOWERS
Turf Til TILLERS

oflended.

Continue

Products

CHUCK COLLIER
SERVICE STORE

SMALL FARM, 20 acres at
Bi'adbury . Phone 992 -7275 .
3·21 -4tc
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 1g)
.Yesterday you aatd all the wrong SMALL Furnished I bed room
th inga. Today you're Just the op · house , large yard. all utilities
posite. Get in touch with one you
paid . Phone 992 -7.494 .
may have unintentionally
3-21 -4tc

resources the way a competent

t=- O A M to fil l vour ol d co uch and
c ha ir cushions as low a s
$ 10 95. Upho l 5lery boo k. s onl y
50c, 4 1nch cover ed foam
man resses lo r 5t anda rd size
$29 95
Pome rnv
b ed,
Re cover y. 11 22 E Ma in St r ee t
Pomeroy , Oh io Phone 992 '
7 55 4.
) 5 261 (

E L EC T RO L UX
Vacuum
Cleaners comp let e w ith at
tachments , co rdwind er and
paint spray . u sed but in l i ke
new con d it ion . Pay $34 .45
cash or budget plan a\lailable
Phone 992 ·2653 .

You may · have to work a little
unfurnished
apartments .
Phone 9'12 -5434 .
harder thail planned in order to
4-12 -tl c
help someone toward whom you
leal protecllve. It Wm be Worth the
PRIVATE meet ing room for
effort.
an y organization; phone 992 -'
SAQtnARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec.
3975.

Your sex appeal Is glowing
today. Don't be surprised it ono

Angus .heife r s .
500 lb
ave r age
Pho n e
Th orn as Say re . Great Be nes ,
Por tland , 8~ 3 24 9 1
3-22 3tp

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

SCORPIO lOci. 24-Nov. 22) 3 ·~ANIJ i ROOM furnished and

21)

8 YEARL ING

2653.

someone you went out on a -timb
for. An old debl owed you will be 60x12 ALL electric Hillcres t
mobile t1om e with lot . Water
repaid.
tap paid . Phone 742 ·3123.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct 23) This
3-21 -6tc
is not the time to be reluctant
aboul asking advice from one you ----~-&gt;&lt;;; --------feel is more experienced. The talk

Love those friendly

WE HAVE all your uphol ster y
needs ,
burlap ,
denim ,
cambric , foam glue , zipper s.
tacking strips. spr ings and
cl 1p s, chipboard , button
tw ine, sewing thread , legs .
upho l stery book s, dacron ,
w ebbing, "spring twine . ta cks ,
we lt cord , c otton sw i v e l
base s, foam . l oam , foam .
Pom eroy Re covery, 622 E .
Main St, Pomeroy, Ohio,
phone 99'2 .75 5&lt;1 .
J-5 26 tC

SEW ING Machines . Br and N ew
Zig -Zag in ni ce wa lnut table
In original ca rtons . Never
used. Clearance on ' 74
Models .
(On ly
a
f ew
available) . S63. 40 cash or
t erm s a11ailable . Phone 992·

--------·
L-----2 BEDROOM trailer , 5 minu tes

from Middleport . Phone 992 ·

2297 .

.

~

Sprh1g Headquarters

Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181
ser¥ing Meigs. Gai·u~ &amp; ,Masoft Counti~~·.

3--2d -3tc

•

r r

.,

'I

-~-

-----------

-------------- -OLD Up right pianos . Any For Rent

Both shining, both beautiful., .
great co mbination for a little girl's
llressiest occasion! She'll love the
"real" heel, too, while Moth er approves

Building for sate or tease .
Phone 773 -5618 from 8 : 30p .m .
to 10 p.m tor appointme·n t
3-20 tf c

-~----------- -­

Wanted To Buy

WITH
NO DOWN PAYMENT

I he bonk 'of
the century
·estobti shed IB72

•

"N"
TOI.O
TO YOV

' LJ'L ABNER

TO QUALIFY: 2 YEARS ON TME JOB AND GOOD CREDIT.

PATRONS OF THE SILVER SLIPPER SALOON on Aprll20 .
In the Pomeroy JW&gt;ior High School _will.be given a "apeclal" on
the program. Some six members of Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will be dancing the can~an as a part
of the Big Bend Minstrel Association's mini-musical which will
be stago;&lt;l three times during the evening.
·
l

11\IU. TIM

AN' Til' #IYr.P'
Ua TO CDI"'I

CABBAGE
PLANTS

•

•

.!.)~&gt;.

PIDP. 8~E.~/It! WI FOI) f'IO

•

Frost· Proof

Rt. 588

""

will be enectlve.

and

I'

IH' CiA~ U$ TW' i"',.E'f
SO THin'S WH~T HN'PlNID

NOW YOU CAN BUY A MOBILE HOME

' '.

OONGRATULATIONS TO Mrs. D. J. (Edna) Morgan who
observed her 84th birthday on March 12 at her Flatwoods home.
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Gaul, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Gaul and children
Lisa and Victor, Jr., and Mrs. Perry Riggs, laking ice cream
cake, went to the Morgan home for a party. Mrs. Morgan's
granddaughter, Mrs. Larry Clay, of Ann Arbor, Mich., phoned
her congratulations. Incidentally, Mr. Morgan will be 88 on June

8.

was Donald Linlala, technical
superintendent, at Goodyear's
Point' Pleasant chemical plant
for patents he received in 1956
and 1969.
In 1956 Linlala developed a
composition of matter in the
field of rubber chamicals to
alleviate the handling of dusty
materials. He later developed
a process for the manufacture
of polyviny I chloride for which
he received a second patent.
The plaques, each engraved
wiih the inventor's name and
the numbers of his or her
patents, were presented to
active Goodyearites whose
inventions were awarded U. S.
patients.
The inventors, with a total of

For Sale

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

~~ RO_C_E_
R; ~bu ·,,· n·~
.,~-;0-, -s;l e .

.

T RUCK topper for 8 f1. bed 'l P I N E T CO N SOL E PIAN O,
F actor y mad e. Phone 992
Wa nt ed · Rl}s pomib le par t y to
713 2.
Pu r chase spinet p iano on tow
J 19 61c
mon thl y pa ym ents Can be
5et-n locally Wr i t e Manag er .
1973 MA SSE Y · Fe r g uson ridin g
P .o Box 176, Shel byville .
la wn mo tor ..34" mow er . 7 h .p
lnd1ana 4617ii
Phone 1 {30&lt;1 ) 77 3-51 61.
3 22 2t p
J 19 51p

NIC E SPRINT mini bik e 4 '&lt;
horsepower . good condition
Ca ll 992 -25Ql
3...2 1.3tc

3·20 -10tc CALL Polly's Auct ion or stop by
to get rid of those unwanted
items. Se ll i t the auction way .
537 High Street. Middleport.
992 -3509 . Open 9 a .m . to 5 p .m .
Monda y , Wednesday, Thur s day , Frida y until noon .
BID
3-13-30 1c
The V illage of Vinton , Ga llla
County, Vinton, Ohio is ac .
cepting bids for the fo llow ing : CASt:t paid for all makes and
models of mobile homes.
1. Remove and dispose of
Phone area code 614 -423-9531.
present slate roofing on Town
4-lJ .Ifc
Hall.
2. Make minor repairs to r oof
structure where needE&gt;d .
f'OLLY'S Auction Hou se , 537
3. Replace approximately
High St r eet. Middleport for
5-,300 sq . ft. of 240 lbs. self .
retail and consignments 9 : 30
Sealing Shingle in btuish .gray
to 5:30 daily . Phone 992 -3509.
slate color . Bids for both
2·26 .30tc
regu l ar and hex:agon st yle
shingle requested .
A. Contractor shall furnish all
materials, labor and equipment
needed to c omplete the above ANTIQUE QuillS and jewel ry .
lob and shall remove all debris
Also, Inter es t ed in furniture
lrom the area and leave th e
and d is hes . Call 992 · 5262
work area in a near and ord erly
evenings or mornings .
manner .
2-20-lfc
Coun c il reserves th e right to
reject any or all bids .
NO . I copper , 80c, ra diator s.
Bidders may Inspect presen t
35c. r ed brass , 40C , batteries ,
Town Halt roof by contacting
51. 20 . M . A. Hai L Reedsv ill e.
Mayor Ludena Stolllnqs , 388·
Ohio. Phone 378 -6249.
8545 for appointment.
3-24 lf c
Bids should be submitted to
the VIllage Clerk, Phylli s JUNK
AUTOS
complete.
Mulhotand. not later than 12
deliver ed to our yard . We pick
noon March 30, 1974 , when bids
up auto bOdies and buy all
will be opened and publicly read
kinds of scr ap m etals and
at Vinton Town Hall.
iron . Riders' Sa lvage, StMe
Route 124, Route A, Pomeroy.
Mar ch 17, 24
Ohio Phone 992 -5468 .
3· 14 -12tp

producing stronger, more

reliable tire cord; a major
improvement in the banbury
rotor used for mixing rubber
ingredients; an advanced tire
building machine and basic
. patents for Polyglas and Steel.gard tires.

A N T IQU E bedroom s ui t e,
eHe ll en l condi tion . Phon e
992 5621 or 992 5947
3· 21 Jtc

welcom e.

AND UP TO 12 YEARS TO PAY

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discoveries are the foundation
of the rubber industry.
Among the employes who
received Goodyear Patent
Awards as part of National
Inventor's Recognition Day

.Future home for senior

~ Of the -B end b_· )..
By Bob Hoeflich

The significa nce is evident in
the range of esse nti al
materials and important
products for which Good·
yearites have been awarded
patents. The hundreds of inventions include Natsyn, the
synthetic that duplicates
natural rubber; the commercial process for producing
isoprene; polyester for tire
cord and many other fabric.
uses ; the 3-T process for

PATENT HOLDER -Donald Lintala (left), technical superintendent at Goodyear's Point
Pleasant chemical plant, was presented a plaque by Plant Manager Michael T. Bucci recently
1n observance of National Inventor's Recognition Day.

Porter engaged
to write book
By Juanita Dalley
Communications Student
RIO GRANDE- Rio Grande
College historian and former
State Senator James Sherman
Porter has been chosen by Dr.
A. R. Christensen, president of
Rio Grande College, to write
the definitive history of the
college for the 1976 Bi·
Centennial celebration.
Porter began his research
last September and expects the
work to continue into September, 1975. The manuscript
will be sent to the publishers
for release in January, 1976.

SH OOT ING MAT C H. corn AUCTIO N , Saturday, Mard• J:J ,
10 : 30 a .m . The following
Hollow Gun Clu b, turn first
~tersonat prop erty of the la t e
right after Mites Ce metery,
Mr. and Mrs . Mason Spencer
Rutland . Factory c ho ked
will be sol d at th e home on
guns only . Su nda y, March 24.
Eas t Vine St . in Racine , Ohio
l p. m .
2 r ef t- igera tors ( Hotpoint and
3·21·3tc
Col d Spot J, Tr ue Cold Upri ght
F reezer ,
Kenmore
Ga s
RUMMAGE
Sa l e. Monday
Rai ge , Kenmore Wringer
through Saturda y, 10 till 3.
Washer , 2 kitchen cab in ets,
Som e th ing dillerent every
Base cabin et. buffet , small
day. Fry Building, Mid ·
dropleaf table and chair s. 6
dleport . Phone 992 ·5335.
dining room Chitirs , wash
·
3·24 -6t c
sta nd , Dishes and cook. ing
utensils, l ib rar y tab l e, T .V ..
KO.SCOT
KOSMET I CS
&amp;
radio, 3 lawn cha irs . 3 t an5 , 2
WIGS : For a good lin e of
hal l trees. sweeper . lamps.
Cosm et ics , friendly service
couch. 2 rec liners , swi\lel
and someone to chat with ,
rocker . living room chair ,
g ive me a ca ll . H elen Jane
severa l
old
ro ckers.
2
Brown , 992 -51 13 .
dressers , 2 chests of drawers.
3· 19 .1fc
roll -i!IWitY bed, 3 me ta l beds
and bedding, rugs,l"picture
SHOOTIN G MATCH, FORKED
fram es, g litss Iars , hand tools,
RUN SPORTSMAN CL UB ,
lawn mower , step lad ders.
NOON SU NDAY . FACTORY
lawn cart , drill press , plat CHOKED GUNS ONLY .
form sca l es , coa t gra t es and
3·22 ·2tc
buckets, lan terns , potato
crates . A to t of articl es not
BASEMENT Sale , Monday ,
li s t ed . Sig ned , Jean L indsey ,
Tue sday , Wednesday , on
Term s cash . Not responsible
Route 1.43 , I mite oft Route 7.
tor acc i dents . The Bradford
Phone 992-7287 .
Auction Company , A . C.
3-22 -3t c
Bradford . Manager , C
C.
Bradford , Auc ti oneer , Lunch
A FULL gospel r eviva l w ill be
served .
held at the Meigs Jun i or High ,
3-24 -ltc
M iddlepo rt , Ohi o March 29,
30 . and 31 at 7: 30p .m . each
evening and Sunday at - BIG l i~o~ ing room sale , 618 Sout h
Th ird Avenue. Midd l epor t .
terQ,90r•. 2 p .m. Evangelist
Sta rt ing Wednesday, March
Chester Estep, Chillicothe,
20 till so ld out . Every day 10
Oh io . Special singing each
a.m . ti ll 7 p.m .
evening by Gos pel Tones and
3-19 .6fp
other si ngers . Everybody

more than 1,800 patents to their
credit, also were saluted in a
message from Goodyear .
President Charles' ~- Pilliod,
Jr. for their ingenuity and
creativity that have con·
tributed significantly to the

For Sale

For Sale

Notice

Notice

THE PHANTOM

Brown, who at 31 becomes
one of the area's youngest
bank directors, has a variety
of interests in ' 'the Mason
County area.
·He is president of B&amp;S Sales
Inc., operator of Charlie
land holdings.
Although born in Holden, W.
Va., Brown has spent most of
his life in Pt. Pleasant, and is
a gradui'te of Pt. Pleasant
High SchooL He attended Rio
Grande College.
He and his wile, Barbara
Jean,
live
at
2942
Meadowbrook Dr. in Pt.

For Fast Results Use The Sunday ' Times-Sentin~l Classifieds

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23 - !he Sunday Times· Sentinel, Sunday, March 24, 1974

22- The Sunday Times -Sentinel. SWlday, March 24, .1974

Democrats will
he heard Tuesday

Businessmen elected to hoard

GALI.IPOLIS - The pubt'ic
is invited to an open meeting
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. to meet
Democrat candidates for local
·and slate offices in the com·
man pleas courtroom in the
courtMmse.
Local candidates and slate
and district candidates, or
their representatives, will he
given the opportunity to speak
briefly and answer questions.

'

PI'. PLEASANT - Two Pt.
Pleasant ·businessmen, John
.R. Felker ancl Charles L.
Brown Jr., have been named
to the board of directors of
Peoples Bank of Pt. Pleasant,
President Vitus Hartley, Jr.
ljllnounced.
Both new members have
already been seated on the
board of the bank.
"Both Mr. Brown and Mr.
Felker are experienced and
competent businessmen in the
area, and are well-respected.
We expect them to be valuable
B embe)-s of the hoard as
: fi!opleJ Bank continues its
steady land rapid rate of
growih," Hartley said.
Felker is general manager
of Point Distributing Co. in Pt.
Pleasant, and is president of
the Harle! Corp.
A resident of Gallipolis, he
also is associated with real
estate and other business
interests in the Mason - Gallia
area.

Felker is a World War D
veteran of the U.S. Navy, and
a graduate of Denison
University.

He is married to the former
Freda Gilmore of Gallipolis,
and they have two children:
Fay, a graduate of the Morris
. Harvey College School of
Nursing

and

an

active

registered nurse, and John D, _
a freshman at Morehead Slate
University in KentuckY.
His civic and fraternal in ..

leresis include membership in
the Elks, Masonic orders and
Kappa Sigma Fraternity.

company's progress.

Brown's Drive.. In , and also
has interests in real estate and

JOHN R. FELKER

CHARLES BROWN JR .

Pleasant and they are the
parents of two children:
Charles lll, 5, and Charla

Jean, 2.
Brown is active in the Elks
Lodge and Kiwanis.

Goodyear's Lintala honored
PT .
PLEASANT
Goodyear, the company named
for one of history 's greatest
inventors, Charles Goodyear,
has honored some 680 spiritual
descendants of that man whose

Porter plans to vary from the
conventional type of history.
He wants the book to be more
readable, especially to people
who have never heard of Rio
Grande College. For example,
he will list the names of
professors, ou Islanding
alumni, and financial reports
in an appendix.
Three student assistants are
helping him research the
college books and newspapers.
Gary Feurer is researching the
years 1875-1910; Dean Kozlo,
1911-1940, and Steve Slaughter,
1941-1973. They are reviewing .

HeM...

citizens being sought

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JAMES S. PORTER
curricula,

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SPEAKJNG OF illSTORICAL MA'ITERS, Mrs. Agnes Hill
of Tuppers Plains will be serving as the collector of items of
historical significimce on behalf of the Meigs County Bi·
Centennial Commission.
The articles will he published and who knows, maybe even a
new printed volume of Meigs County history will evolve. Mrs.
Hill will travel to any home in Meigs County w pick up material
which contributors feel might be interesting. She will also personally return the material alter copies have been made.
If you have material which you think would make interesting
reading write Mrs. Hill at P. 0. Box 172, Tuppers Plains 45783.
She'll get in touch. However, do keep in mind that Mrs. Hill
works in a grocery at Coolville for five and a half days a week
and will have to be calling for the material in the evenings.
HAVE YOU MET JAY? Jay is the German shorthaired
pointer of the Rev . Father John Nadzam who has arrived in
Pomeroy to become the pastor at Sacred Heart Church . Jay
closes his eyes and bows his head when Father John gives him
the conunand ''pray." Real cute!

mrs MYERS KELTON

WRITES in reference to a recent
letter from Ruby Myers wbo wrote us about cemetery In·
scriptions at Beech Grove Cemetery.
The teller is self explanatory and does pertain w family
history. It reads:
"Read the article in the paper from Ruby Myers and how
surprised I was to learn that John U. Myers was her greatgrandfather too. He was my lather's grandfather and was a
brilliant attorney in Mason and Meigs.
"He built the big Myers house on Mulberry, and his law of.
lice was in the three rooms toward the Parkers, and I was born
there. When he lived in Mason, the big home, first on the left as
you go up from the boat ramp, there were 11 children. His law
office was beside the house -the foundation's still there.
"His father, Charles Myers, came from Germany and first
settled in Lancaster, Pa., then carne to Lancaster, Ohio. Thus
John came on down into Mason and Meigs. My grandfather, of
course, was Oscar Myers. Don Collins, Annette Knight and Ula
Matlack are also great-grandchildren.
Five of the children went West and all did well. Grandpa
Oscar stayed here and was in business for 63 years -first livery
stable, then feed store - two girls stayed in Mason, one stayed
here and one boy settled in Virginia so l guess there are MferS
everywhere."
·
Mrs. Kelton has written Mrs. Myers who li11es in the Grove
City area.

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POMEROY - Action is taking place at the Meigs Museum in
Pomeroy in the hope of getting things rolling there so that the
museum can really be functionaL
Amini -theater is presently being built in a garage at the rear
of the slructure and this theater room has been designed by
Gerard Hilferty so that it can serve several purposes. The
county's historical society is beginning to work on the annual
heritage day program which has been a smash during the past
couple of years as a part of Big Bend Regatta Weekend. lncidenlally, the society is also going to open a fWld drive in the
near future so that some money can be gotten together for
converting the museum building from just a building into a
functional museum.

presidents,

athletics, and students.
SOME OF the research
already acco!flplished has been
interviews on tape cassettes of
prominent persons . These
include Dr. Charles A. Weed,
whose father's memory and his
own personal memory goes
back to the College's first
president and first commenc8"'enl; Francis Burdell,
longest conttnuous faculty
member; Elizabeth Davis,
widow of Boyd Davis, a longtime trustee and for a dozen
years board president; Wilbur
Galveston Scarberry, and a
speech given by Robert Leith,
current history faculty
member.
Porter plans to obtain more
personal interviews, especially
from Jack Stiffler and Dr.
Francis Shane, who are the
oldest members of the present
board of trustees.
CPA reports will be included
in the book revealing that for
only a scattered 13 years, the
college operated In the red.
Auditor's reports go back to
1929, excepting during W.W. 11.
Another source that he has
contacted is the alumni
particularly the classes of 1926
and 1951, 25 years apart.
Another letter will be sent
early in 1975.
Porter, 66, was born · in
Gallipolis, in a house where the
old Holzer Hospital is now
located, and educated in
Lexington, Ky.
The president of Rio
Grande College, the late Rev.
R. Lloyd Pobst, and Rev. Don
Hobbs officiated at his wedding
in ,1942. He and his wife, a
registered nurse at Holzer
Medical Center Clinic, have
two sons, David, captain in the
army, and Jim, Columbus, a
member of the Gilligan ad-

ministration , and four grandchildren.
He received his M A degree
in 1941. from the University of
Kentucky and came to Rio
Grande as a professor of
English
and
Publicity
Director. He has been
associated with the college
either as an employee or
journalist for a span of 34
years, over a third of the
college's existence.
Two ye.ars later, Porter

entered journalism and for 11
years was a reporter and
sports editor (Jaspey) for the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune and a
stringer for the Columbus
Dispatch. He then worked for a
short time, simultaneously, for
both the Athens Messenger and
the Gallipolis radio station, and
in 1956, joined the radio station
as news director. ·
In 1958, he was elected to the
Ohio Slate Senate and served
four years as the only
Democrat ever from distri ct 7·
8 which is now part of 17. His
issue was the "Right to Work
Amendment" with a majority
in seven counties voting
against the issue and many for
Porter.
While he was senator, he
worked on the weekends for the
Gallipolis radio station. During
this time he became a favorite
to the radio audiences as
"Uncle Jim." He read the
funnies to his 11nieces and
nephews" audience every

Sunday until 1962.
Porter returned to Rio
Grande College in the
department
of
College
Relations, and Admissions and
Records for three years; then
after a heart attack he became
a faculty member teaching
English and Pollical Science,
and is now the college
histo~ian .

BY JAN COUNTRYMAN
GALLIPOLIS - A future
home for the Gallia County
Senior Citizens Center was the
major topic of discussion at the
Thursday afternoon meeting of
U1e Gallia County Council on
Aging, Inc.
George Bush, chairman of
the committee to locate a home
for the group , reported he had
talked to Robert Fanning, vice
president of personnel al the
Holzer Medical Center Feb. 28
concerning quarters for the
senior citizens organization.
The Holzer Hospital Foun-

cards for the organization. The
oldest member is Mrs. Stella
Booten, 99, who is now a
resident of the Arcadia Nur·
sing !lome at Coolville . Mrs.
Roush reported that several
(olks have turned 90 since the
ceremonies. They will be
honored at a later date.
Anne White reported on
money making projects of the
group, announcing a rummage
sale and an auction. The group
needs $653 by the end of March
to meet Its matching funds
commitments.

dation has asked the senior
citizens to vacate their

discussed revenue sharing
funds which the group has
access to, and it was agreed to
purchase a projector and
screen for the center from
these monies.
In other financial transactions, the group authorized
payment of routine hills, including one for the purchase of
a new public address system
for the center.
It was announced that there
will he no poiluck dinner in
April due to the OOAD nutrition
and multi-phasic . health
programs. The council
changed its meeting lo April 25
due to conflict with another
center program on the regular
meeting day.
The Olde Tyme Town
meeting will be April 5 at the
Washington SchooL The public
is invited to this session when
various state and local officials
will be present to answer
questions concerning the statewide senior citizens programs.
Council members are invited to
dinner prior to the meeting at
the center at 6 p.m. Reservations are $3 per plate. The
meeting-will begin at 7:30p.m.
Rev. Hughes Price gave the
invocation and Ethel Robinson
read the minutes of the
previous meeting.
Hems purchased for the
center were reported on and it
was noted that federal funds
had been expended for the
purchase of kiln for ceramics.

quarters in the old Holzer
Hospital Building at Cedar and
First Ave., by Sept. I this year,
since due to ·the cost of
operating the building, it will
he closed.
In a co nversation with
Gallipolis City Manager Paul
Willer March 5, Bush learned
that Willer is preparing a
petition to the state housing
commission asking establishment of a Gallia County
Metropolitan
Housing
Authority which would be
interested in purchase of the
old hospital building for a lowcost apartment program. In
this case, Willer believes, the
authority would be inclined to
allow the center to remain in
the building.
This eventuality depends on
the passage of numerous
requests on various levels and
will take time, but Willer expressed optimism, according

to Bush, that the petition may
reach the initial stages of
completion at the state level as
early as the end of ApriL
In the event that the center is
·allowed to remain In the
building, there will still he a
period of time when another
building will he needed while
remodeling of the hospital is
completed. Bush advised the
council to he on the lookout for
at least temporary facilities for
the group .
. In other business, Maye
Roush reported that membership in the Gallia County
Senior Citizens organization
has now reached 556 with 30 of
these persons 90 years or older.
The Retired Senior Volunteers
recently honored the residents
of the county who rank in the 90
or above bracket, with the
presentation of yellow roses
and honorary membership

Jean Niday, center director,

FORMAL OPENING

w~ "'TtllfiC:I(I!O

NTU. SHr

r---

PoL

HIL~!

oomeroy
rullond

..--~,1

Ready Nowl

Susie's Greenhouse
446-4610

WINNIE WINKLE

tied!
and
shining patent

PUBLIC NOTICE
1 am offering for sate the
residence of the late Betty Cl ine
located at 224 Walnut Street.
Middleport. Ohio . House in nice
residential dis t rict . Asking
price $15.000.00. Sa le subject to
the approval of the Probilte
Court. Meigs County, Ohio . tt
Interested . please contact the
undersigned .

· ONE A DMI RAL se ll def ro 5ting
ref r 1gerator and one bed for
sale . Phone 992 .5779
J-21 Jtc
- - ------------H &amp; N day Ol d or started
Leghorn pullets . Both floor or
cage
grown
availab l e
Pou ltr y
hou s in g
&amp;
au toma ti on . Modern Poullry ,
399 W Main , Pom eroy , 992
2164 .
3 14 1t c
------------GOOD quality hay . Al so, 2
Register ed Beagles . Call 992
1201 aft er 5 P-IT\,.
l ·24 12 tc
--- - ADMIRA L Re fr igerator , 16 cu.
feet . no def r ost. Fr ee1.e r in
to p .
Cadi
Do r othy
Winebrenner . 992 ·398 2.
3.24 Jt c

OLD furnitur e ,' oak table s,
clocks. Ice bo xes, brass bed s ,
dishes. desks, or complete
households . Write M . _D
M i ller . Rl. 4, Pomeroy , Ohio,
ca ll 992 -7760 .
5-13-tf c

con dit ion . Paying $10 cash .
Write, give directions · l o
WI TTE N PIANO CO ., P . 0 .
BOX 18 , Sardis, Ohio 4394t..
3-l3 -30tc

LET US sel l it for you at auc tion . Will buy all furn iture or
hou se h o ld goods. Polly'S
Auction House. Open 9: 30 to
5 :30daily . Phone 992 -3509. 537
• High St.. Middleport . Ohio .
2·26 -JOtc

I he

expert craftsmanship, 1he fine fit
and finish of Poll· Parrot.

Mobile Homes For Sale

FOR SUNDAY_.
March 24, 1974

$1099
Hartley 's Shoes
In The Middle of the Upper Block
Pomeroy, Ohio
Open All Day Thursdays-Friday Night Til9

ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 1 g) Erneslly make amends today for a
situation that provoked a problem
between you and a friend. Be the
one who apologi ~es.

WE'RE MASTERS AT

TAURUS (April 20·Moy 20)

To-

day you can play an Important role
in helping another get something
that's needed. Don 't hesitate to go
to bat for a pal.

Have

GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20)

LOWERING THE
BOOM ON
HIGH FOOD

faith In your new ideas. or else
you 'll have no reason for others to
believe in what you offer . If you

act positively, tlley'lltollow.

CANCER (Juno 21·Jutr 22)

Keep your go~la to yourself but

make them such that they'll later
bring credit to you. Otllers will ap -

preciate why you acted as you

did.

LEO (.ltjiJ 23-Aug. 22) Make

your outlook one of selnessness.
Be sure your plans protect those
involved with you , as wen as your ~

self.

YtRQO lAue- 23-lept. 22) Today you can expect benefits from

PRICES!

BERRY -M IL L ER Mobile 'Hom e
Sa les has a lot to offer when
you start shopping for your
Mobile Home . You can beat
the high dep rec ia tion you ' ll
have on your hom e the fir st
two years by st1opping for a
la te mod el used Mobile Home .
Here are some every day low
pri ces:
Super Spec ial of th e Week new 65xl2
Detroiter.
3
bedroom. 1 1!~ baths, redu ce d
$1,000.00 to $6,495 .00 . (T hi s
Mobile Home is loaded with
extras) .
1971 64xl2 Cham p i on. 2
bedroom , 1'11 bath , e)(tra good
buy at $4,995 .00 .
60x l2 Champion . 2 bedroom ,
$4,495.00 .
60xl2 Globemaster. l bedroom ,
gla ss s liding doors. only
$4,495.00 .
60)( 12
Hom e tte ,
exce ll ent
condit ion , 54,495.00.
60xl2 Liberty , deluxe, 54,995.00 .
60x 12 P M C, 2 - bedroom,
$4,995 .00 .
60xl2 Elco na Custo m , cos t
$7,995.00, n ew. now only
$5,795.00 .
.
Weal so have a oood selection of
6 and 10 wtde Mobile Homes in
stock .
These are mos tly all la te model
homes and th e pri ces include
your deliv er y and comp lete
set .up . So for an honest to
goodness good dea l, stop in
today at Berry -M ill er Mobile
Homes Sales, 705 Farson
Street, Belpre, OhiO. Phone
423 -9531, closed Sunday .
3-22 -6tc

folks for the way they
save my food budget!

*CONVENTIONAL·BANK FINANCING
*NO
. - WAITING PERIOD *NOT FHA OR VA F_INANCING

pomeroy
.n ational
bank

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ROWELL'S

Who ha8 never noticed you before
Is very complimentary.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 111)
Take a more active rote in doing
for one In your· charge something

tlley're atraid to attllflllt on thalr
own.

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Custom
packaged power
for your
workload.

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EXCELS IOR Salt Works, E .
Main St ., Pomeroy . All kinds
of salt water pellets, water
nuggets. block salt and own
Ohio River Sa lt . Phone 9923891.
6-5·tf&lt;.;
SI NGER sew ing machines 1972
model In beautiful walnut
cabinet . Makes design stit ·
ches, zig zag , buttonholes,
blind hems , etc . Like new .
Only $89 .95 . Call Ravenswood
273 .9521 or 273 -9893 after 5:00.
f2 .7.tfc
A M . fM stereo -radio 8 tra ck
tape player , 4 speaker sound
system . Bal ance 5109.46 or
use our budget terms . Cal l
992 ·3965 .
3·18 -tfc
1971 4 WHEEL drive, J;~ ton·
Fo rd pickup tru ck. $20,600
mites . 10 1h ft
ca b over
ca mp er , sel f contained . Also
top per . Will se ll seoarate lv .
Call 985 -3554 after 6 p .m .
weekdays . H aro ld Bre:w er . Long Bottom. Ohio .
3·15-tfc

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ONE 2 room and ba th furni shed
apartment, utiliti es paid. One
3 room s, shower , apartment.
utilities furnished in Mason ,
W. Va . Reynolds Apar tm ents
Phone 1 (304) 773 ·5147 on Rt .
33, Mason
3·24 -6tp
APARTMENT Corner of Lin ·
coin Street an d Second
A\le nu e
in
Middleport
Pr i vate entrance b e~room
and bath . Men only . No one
upstairs . Availab l e after 24 th
of March . Phone 992 -5508 .
3-24 -3t c

Choose a rugged 14 horse hydrostati c tractor or a
tough 14 horse gear drive tractor. Bolh overhead
valve engines. Both with qu ick "plug-in lock-pin"
attachment systems. Electric starting . 42" mower
cut And both with day -long stamina and year round
versatility. Proven performers in a variety of jobs.
. Toughest job In front of you is choosing the one
you want Bolens.. A good yard ahead .
~MC consumer

"T'

Third &amp; Court

manage

your

Second
Street

barl&lt;er would handle them..Con-

centrate on facts. not flgtion .

MOWERS
20" Push

'5295

COMIN(; SOON TO POMEROY~

· Morch 24, 11174 .

In your affairs this year. Travel is
like.ly In months ahead - and so is
a new romance.

Turf~ Till ro t a ry . Ve rtical
sha ft . worm gear.

3 117 h.p 12" tines .
With Rever se

K.D .

2 · BEDROOM mobile hom·; ·,
also . I t ra i ler space . Phone
949 -2261 '
3-20 ·6tp

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

Plenty of
BULK

GARDEN
SEEDS

for rent, 2
bedrooms . Phone 992-5908.
J-19 -6lc

POMEROY
LANDMARK-

12

X 50 MOBILE home , 2
bedrooms . utiliti es pa id . Ren t
by week or month . Ca ll 742 ·
5980 .

3· 24 - 3tc"~

New oontacta will ploy a big rote

TILLER

3-11 -tfc

TRAILER lot in Ra cine. Call
992 -2.429 or 992 -2838 .
'•

Ph. 446-3314

SHOP OUR SPRING SPECIALS

PISCES (Feb. 20·Mirch 20) APARTMENT
to

Gallipolis

Turf Trim MOWERS
Turf Til TILLERS

oflended.

Continue

Products

CHUCK COLLIER
SERVICE STORE

SMALL FARM, 20 acres at
Bi'adbury . Phone 992 -7275 .
3·21 -4tc
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 1g)
.Yesterday you aatd all the wrong SMALL Furnished I bed room
th inga. Today you're Just the op · house , large yard. all utilities
posite. Get in touch with one you
paid . Phone 992 -7.494 .
may have unintentionally
3-21 -4tc

resources the way a competent

t=- O A M to fil l vour ol d co uch and
c ha ir cushions as low a s
$ 10 95. Upho l 5lery boo k. s onl y
50c, 4 1nch cover ed foam
man resses lo r 5t anda rd size
$29 95
Pome rnv
b ed,
Re cover y. 11 22 E Ma in St r ee t
Pomeroy , Oh io Phone 992 '
7 55 4.
) 5 261 (

E L EC T RO L UX
Vacuum
Cleaners comp let e w ith at
tachments , co rdwind er and
paint spray . u sed but in l i ke
new con d it ion . Pay $34 .45
cash or budget plan a\lailable
Phone 992 ·2653 .

You may · have to work a little
unfurnished
apartments .
Phone 9'12 -5434 .
harder thail planned in order to
4-12 -tl c
help someone toward whom you
leal protecllve. It Wm be Worth the
PRIVATE meet ing room for
effort.
an y organization; phone 992 -'
SAQtnARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec.
3975.

Your sex appeal Is glowing
today. Don't be surprised it ono

Angus .heife r s .
500 lb
ave r age
Pho n e
Th orn as Say re . Great Be nes ,
Por tland , 8~ 3 24 9 1
3-22 3tp

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

SCORPIO lOci. 24-Nov. 22) 3 ·~ANIJ i ROOM furnished and

21)

8 YEARL ING

2653.

someone you went out on a -timb
for. An old debl owed you will be 60x12 ALL electric Hillcres t
mobile t1om e with lot . Water
repaid.
tap paid . Phone 742 ·3123.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct 23) This
3-21 -6tc
is not the time to be reluctant
aboul asking advice from one you ----~-&gt;&lt;;; --------feel is more experienced. The talk

Love those friendly

WE HAVE all your uphol ster y
needs ,
burlap ,
denim ,
cambric , foam glue , zipper s.
tacking strips. spr ings and
cl 1p s, chipboard , button
tw ine, sewing thread , legs .
upho l stery book s, dacron ,
w ebbing, "spring twine . ta cks ,
we lt cord , c otton sw i v e l
base s, foam . l oam , foam .
Pom eroy Re covery, 622 E .
Main St, Pomeroy, Ohio,
phone 99'2 .75 5&lt;1 .
J-5 26 tC

SEW ING Machines . Br and N ew
Zig -Zag in ni ce wa lnut table
In original ca rtons . Never
used. Clearance on ' 74
Models .
(On ly
a
f ew
available) . S63. 40 cash or
t erm s a11ailable . Phone 992·

--------·
L-----2 BEDROOM trailer , 5 minu tes

from Middleport . Phone 992 ·

2297 .

.

~

Sprh1g Headquarters

Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181
ser¥ing Meigs. Gai·u~ &amp; ,Masoft Counti~~·.

3--2d -3tc

•

r r

.,

'I

-~-

-----------

-------------- -OLD Up right pianos . Any For Rent

Both shining, both beautiful., .
great co mbination for a little girl's
llressiest occasion! She'll love the
"real" heel, too, while Moth er approves

Building for sate or tease .
Phone 773 -5618 from 8 : 30p .m .
to 10 p.m tor appointme·n t
3-20 tf c

-~----------- -­

Wanted To Buy

WITH
NO DOWN PAYMENT

I he bonk 'of
the century
·estobti shed IB72

•

"N"
TOI.O
TO YOV

' LJ'L ABNER

TO QUALIFY: 2 YEARS ON TME JOB AND GOOD CREDIT.

PATRONS OF THE SILVER SLIPPER SALOON on Aprll20 .
In the Pomeroy JW&gt;ior High School _will.be given a "apeclal" on
the program. Some six members of Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will be dancing the can~an as a part
of the Big Bend Minstrel Association's mini-musical which will
be stago;&lt;l three times during the evening.
·
l

11\IU. TIM

AN' Til' #IYr.P'
Ua TO CDI"'I

CABBAGE
PLANTS

•

•

.!.)~&gt;.

PIDP. 8~E.~/It! WI FOI) f'IO

•

Frost· Proof

Rt. 588

""

will be enectlve.

and

I'

IH' CiA~ U$ TW' i"',.E'f
SO THin'S WH~T HN'PlNID

NOW YOU CAN BUY A MOBILE HOME

' '.

OONGRATULATIONS TO Mrs. D. J. (Edna) Morgan who
observed her 84th birthday on March 12 at her Flatwoods home.
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Gaul, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Gaul and children
Lisa and Victor, Jr., and Mrs. Perry Riggs, laking ice cream
cake, went to the Morgan home for a party. Mrs. Morgan's
granddaughter, Mrs. Larry Clay, of Ann Arbor, Mich., phoned
her congratulations. Incidentally, Mr. Morgan will be 88 on June

8.

was Donald Linlala, technical
superintendent, at Goodyear's
Point' Pleasant chemical plant
for patents he received in 1956
and 1969.
In 1956 Linlala developed a
composition of matter in the
field of rubber chamicals to
alleviate the handling of dusty
materials. He later developed
a process for the manufacture
of polyviny I chloride for which
he received a second patent.
The plaques, each engraved
wiih the inventor's name and
the numbers of his or her
patents, were presented to
active Goodyearites whose
inventions were awarded U. S.
patients.
The inventors, with a total of

For Sale

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

~~ RO_C_E_
R; ~bu ·,,· n·~
.,~-;0-, -s;l e .

.

T RUCK topper for 8 f1. bed 'l P I N E T CO N SOL E PIAN O,
F actor y mad e. Phone 992
Wa nt ed · Rl}s pomib le par t y to
713 2.
Pu r chase spinet p iano on tow
J 19 61c
mon thl y pa ym ents Can be
5et-n locally Wr i t e Manag er .
1973 MA SSE Y · Fe r g uson ridin g
P .o Box 176, Shel byville .
la wn mo tor ..34" mow er . 7 h .p
lnd1ana 4617ii
Phone 1 {30&lt;1 ) 77 3-51 61.
3 22 2t p
J 19 51p

NIC E SPRINT mini bik e 4 '&lt;
horsepower . good condition
Ca ll 992 -25Ql
3...2 1.3tc

3·20 -10tc CALL Polly's Auct ion or stop by
to get rid of those unwanted
items. Se ll i t the auction way .
537 High Street. Middleport.
992 -3509 . Open 9 a .m . to 5 p .m .
Monda y , Wednesday, Thur s day , Frida y until noon .
BID
3-13-30 1c
The V illage of Vinton , Ga llla
County, Vinton, Ohio is ac .
cepting bids for the fo llow ing : CASt:t paid for all makes and
models of mobile homes.
1. Remove and dispose of
Phone area code 614 -423-9531.
present slate roofing on Town
4-lJ .Ifc
Hall.
2. Make minor repairs to r oof
structure where needE&gt;d .
f'OLLY'S Auction Hou se , 537
3. Replace approximately
High St r eet. Middleport for
5-,300 sq . ft. of 240 lbs. self .
retail and consignments 9 : 30
Sealing Shingle in btuish .gray
to 5:30 daily . Phone 992 -3509.
slate color . Bids for both
2·26 .30tc
regu l ar and hex:agon st yle
shingle requested .
A. Contractor shall furnish all
materials, labor and equipment
needed to c omplete the above ANTIQUE QuillS and jewel ry .
lob and shall remove all debris
Also, Inter es t ed in furniture
lrom the area and leave th e
and d is hes . Call 992 · 5262
work area in a near and ord erly
evenings or mornings .
manner .
2-20-lfc
Coun c il reserves th e right to
reject any or all bids .
NO . I copper , 80c, ra diator s.
Bidders may Inspect presen t
35c. r ed brass , 40C , batteries ,
Town Halt roof by contacting
51. 20 . M . A. Hai L Reedsv ill e.
Mayor Ludena Stolllnqs , 388·
Ohio. Phone 378 -6249.
8545 for appointment.
3-24 lf c
Bids should be submitted to
the VIllage Clerk, Phylli s JUNK
AUTOS
complete.
Mulhotand. not later than 12
deliver ed to our yard . We pick
noon March 30, 1974 , when bids
up auto bOdies and buy all
will be opened and publicly read
kinds of scr ap m etals and
at Vinton Town Hall.
iron . Riders' Sa lvage, StMe
Route 124, Route A, Pomeroy.
Mar ch 17, 24
Ohio Phone 992 -5468 .
3· 14 -12tp

producing stronger, more

reliable tire cord; a major
improvement in the banbury
rotor used for mixing rubber
ingredients; an advanced tire
building machine and basic
. patents for Polyglas and Steel.gard tires.

A N T IQU E bedroom s ui t e,
eHe ll en l condi tion . Phon e
992 5621 or 992 5947
3· 21 Jtc

welcom e.

AND UP TO 12 YEARS TO PAY

•

\

discoveries are the foundation
of the rubber industry.
Among the employes who
received Goodyear Patent
Awards as part of National
Inventor's Recognition Day

.Future home for senior

~ Of the -B end b_· )..
By Bob Hoeflich

The significa nce is evident in
the range of esse nti al
materials and important
products for which Good·
yearites have been awarded
patents. The hundreds of inventions include Natsyn, the
synthetic that duplicates
natural rubber; the commercial process for producing
isoprene; polyester for tire
cord and many other fabric.
uses ; the 3-T process for

PATENT HOLDER -Donald Lintala (left), technical superintendent at Goodyear's Point
Pleasant chemical plant, was presented a plaque by Plant Manager Michael T. Bucci recently
1n observance of National Inventor's Recognition Day.

Porter engaged
to write book
By Juanita Dalley
Communications Student
RIO GRANDE- Rio Grande
College historian and former
State Senator James Sherman
Porter has been chosen by Dr.
A. R. Christensen, president of
Rio Grande College, to write
the definitive history of the
college for the 1976 Bi·
Centennial celebration.
Porter began his research
last September and expects the
work to continue into September, 1975. The manuscript
will be sent to the publishers
for release in January, 1976.

SH OOT ING MAT C H. corn AUCTIO N , Saturday, Mard• J:J ,
10 : 30 a .m . The following
Hollow Gun Clu b, turn first
~tersonat prop erty of the la t e
right after Mites Ce metery,
Mr. and Mrs . Mason Spencer
Rutland . Factory c ho ked
will be sol d at th e home on
guns only . Su nda y, March 24.
Eas t Vine St . in Racine , Ohio
l p. m .
2 r ef t- igera tors ( Hotpoint and
3·21·3tc
Col d Spot J, Tr ue Cold Upri ght
F reezer ,
Kenmore
Ga s
RUMMAGE
Sa l e. Monday
Rai ge , Kenmore Wringer
through Saturda y, 10 till 3.
Washer , 2 kitchen cab in ets,
Som e th ing dillerent every
Base cabin et. buffet , small
day. Fry Building, Mid ·
dropleaf table and chair s. 6
dleport . Phone 992 ·5335.
dining room Chitirs , wash
·
3·24 -6t c
sta nd , Dishes and cook. ing
utensils, l ib rar y tab l e, T .V ..
KO.SCOT
KOSMET I CS
&amp;
radio, 3 lawn cha irs . 3 t an5 , 2
WIGS : For a good lin e of
hal l trees. sweeper . lamps.
Cosm et ics , friendly service
couch. 2 rec liners , swi\lel
and someone to chat with ,
rocker . living room chair ,
g ive me a ca ll . H elen Jane
severa l
old
ro ckers.
2
Brown , 992 -51 13 .
dressers , 2 chests of drawers.
3· 19 .1fc
roll -i!IWitY bed, 3 me ta l beds
and bedding, rugs,l"picture
SHOOTIN G MATCH, FORKED
fram es, g litss Iars , hand tools,
RUN SPORTSMAN CL UB ,
lawn mower , step lad ders.
NOON SU NDAY . FACTORY
lawn cart , drill press , plat CHOKED GUNS ONLY .
form sca l es , coa t gra t es and
3·22 ·2tc
buckets, lan terns , potato
crates . A to t of articl es not
BASEMENT Sale , Monday ,
li s t ed . Sig ned , Jean L indsey ,
Tue sday , Wednesday , on
Term s cash . Not responsible
Route 1.43 , I mite oft Route 7.
tor acc i dents . The Bradford
Phone 992-7287 .
Auction Company , A . C.
3-22 -3t c
Bradford . Manager , C
C.
Bradford , Auc ti oneer , Lunch
A FULL gospel r eviva l w ill be
served .
held at the Meigs Jun i or High ,
3-24 -ltc
M iddlepo rt , Ohi o March 29,
30 . and 31 at 7: 30p .m . each
evening and Sunday at - BIG l i~o~ ing room sale , 618 Sout h
Th ird Avenue. Midd l epor t .
terQ,90r•. 2 p .m. Evangelist
Sta rt ing Wednesday, March
Chester Estep, Chillicothe,
20 till so ld out . Every day 10
Oh io . Special singing each
a.m . ti ll 7 p.m .
evening by Gos pel Tones and
3-19 .6fp
other si ngers . Everybody

more than 1,800 patents to their
credit, also were saluted in a
message from Goodyear .
President Charles' ~- Pilliod,
Jr. for their ingenuity and
creativity that have con·
tributed significantly to the

For Sale

For Sale

Notice

Notice

THE PHANTOM

Brown, who at 31 becomes
one of the area's youngest
bank directors, has a variety
of interests in ' 'the Mason
County area.
·He is president of B&amp;S Sales
Inc., operator of Charlie
land holdings.
Although born in Holden, W.
Va., Brown has spent most of
his life in Pt. Pleasant, and is
a gradui'te of Pt. Pleasant
High SchooL He attended Rio
Grande College.
He and his wile, Barbara
Jean,
live
at
2942
Meadowbrook Dr. in Pt.

For Fast Results Use The Sunday ' Times-Sentin~l Classifieds

'

.,

~.

�U-F-;;; F';;,("'R';sults Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Business Services

5 P M Day Before Pub ca on
Monday Oeadl ne 9 a m

Cancel at on -

Co ec ons

or

Wll be accepted unt 9 a m
Day of P.J.~b cal on
REGULATIONS

The Publ sher reserves

he

EXPERIENCED

r Oht to ed t or relect any ads
deemed~ ob ect ona

Th e
pub lsher ~ 1 not be respon
s bh~ for more han one n

correc

nse

t

on

RATES

F om the Ia gest Truck o

For Want Ad Service

~cents

per Word one nse.:l on
M n m um Charge Sl 00
1-4 cents ••r wo d
h ee

I

consecu ve nse lion s
~6 cents per word s
secutlve nsert ons

&gt;~

con

25 Per Cent D scoun on pa d

ads and ads pa d w h n 0
days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$2 00 fo
50 word m n

mum

the

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Pomeroy

Ph 992 2174

WOOD TRUSSF.S
¢\"&gt;- ...
Sutlf to Your Specs
Del vered to Job S1te

Gene's
Body Shop
Ph 992 5271
808 W Ma n Pomc oy

Pambng A Specialty

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Area s Most
Rea so nable Pnce s

MATERIALS CO
l73 5554
Mason W Va

All work guaranteed

Each add tonal wo d

3c

BLIND ADS
Add 1 ana

25c

Cha ge pe

Adver sement
OFFICE HOURS
830am oSOOpm Oa y
8 Jll a m
o
2 00 Noon

se1u

Bu ldozer Rad afor to
sma l est Heate Core
Nathan Btggs
Radiator Spec al sf

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

day

In Memorv

POMEROY
JfOME &amp; AUTO
992 2094
606 E Mam Pomero

OFFICE SUPPLIES

N l OV NG memo y ot 0 an
Goodw n who d ed Ma ch JO
970 Sad y m ssed by am y
and fr ends
3 24 fp
--~--~--~ ------ --- -

Card of Thanks
W SH o thank a
those who
sent ca ds
I ewers
and
p ayers
du ng
my
hosp a za on n he Ho ze
Med ca Cente Thanks o he
oca m n s ers of he area
the Happv Ha 'lieS e s C ass
and
he n n y Me hod s
Chu ch of Pomerov Spec a
thanks o my ch d en who
ope at ed my bus ness du ng
my !ness Kath een Francs
3 24 1 c

EXPERT
Wheel A11gnment
•5.55
On Most Amencan Cars

and

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094

FURNITURE

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Stop In and See Our
Floor D1splay

Busmess Opportumbes

Open 8 T1l S
Monday thru Saturday
606 E Mam Pomeroy 0

Real Estate For Sale

DITCHING SERVICE
Water L nes and Power
L1nes All work done by the
foot or contract Also dozer
work and sept c tanks n
stalled

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 7089
N1ghl 992 3525
or 992 5232
READY M X
CONCRETE
de ve ed
gh
to
your
p o ect Fas and easy F ee
es rna es Phone 992 328d
Goeg en Ready M x Co
M dd epo
Oh o
6 30 f c

N
OV NG memory o my
mo her M s Ve da W ams
who passed away Ma ch 25
957 and my father Wade
W
ams on De
23 910
God sees when he ools eps
fa e
When he pa hway has grown
oo s eep
Then He
ouches he wea y
eye ds
And g ves H s dea ones seep
Sad y m ssed by daugh er
M s
ames Ga ne
Ne son
and a
he ta m y
70
NG memo y o
R M e who passed
Ma ch 24 970
a he w h
Ou
hea s s
sad ness
Sec e tea s s
I ow
wna
mean o ose you no
on e w
eve know
When days a e da k and d ea v
and eve yth ng goes wrong
We seem o hea vou wh spe
Chee up and ca y on
Each t me we see you p c ure
You se em o sm e and say
Don cry
am on y s eep ng
We w
mee aga n some day
Sad y m ssed by he am y
0

-- --

Card of Thanks

HOARD NG sud se \1 ce AKC TRA LER Chesh e 367 7512
10 3
pupp es K&amp;P Kennels 388
-----82 4
1tf F URN SHED apartmen
u
t es pa d
adults on y
Phone 446 9523
and
REo S
Barber Shop
70 tf
books or.e
0 am to 1 pm
~-c
~~
R-o'~o
~
M
cs'-~w
eeky
Buy se I o
rade
54 f
Cen ra Hote
306 If
C U STOM
sew ng
and
a e a ons on al type s of COACHMAN Travel Traf er
Moto
Homes
h v,'tlee
Fu s a so
Re
c oth ng
Truck campers Apple C ty
weav ng
of
damaged
Auto Sa es R 35 N Jackson
ma era Ph d46 7520 or 4-46
Oh o Phone 286 5700
10 If
43 36
-----~

s

~

uss s

GLASS Se v ce glass
lo all needs spec at z ng n
w ndshe Ids
m
or s
plex glass rescreen 7134 P ne
R o G an de 245 5048
00 If

DAY CARE
SU N VALLEY Nursery Schools
1 censed by Sta e of Oh o I
m es west o new hosp ta
577 Sun Valley 0
Ph 446
3657 Day care tha says we
ca e
Madge Hauldren
Owne
Lored h and John
Hau dren Operata s
4 If
po s
S a e St eel Buy and Se
S Cons 446 18-42

M T S Co ns ot Ga

WE W SH

o hank our many
ends and ne ghbo s
or
her k ndness shown du ng
he
ness and dea h of our
dea mo her Ou
hanks to
Re\1 w 1&lt;. n s who
s ed h er
and comforted us n our m e
of sor ow w e w sh o thank
members of SEOEMS and
hose who a ded a Ho zer
Med ca Cenfer Ou hanks to
McCoy Moo e Fune a Home
to he k ndness and serv ce
g ven We are g a e u to hP
hea tie wo ds of sy mpathy
ca ds f owe s and food ca s
Your
k ndness
and
hough fulnes s w
a ways be
remembered
The F am ly o
Kattl vn
Wood

•

2

SLEEP
Hate

ooms

Gall

- - - - - -·-

a

--------

ToNO WAY F&lt;!ad OS Sa es &amp;
Se \1 ce New and used DB s
po ce mon tors an ennas
e c Bob s a t ten Band R ad o
Equ p
Georges c eek Rd
Ga po s Oh o t1d6 -45 7
2 2 tf
SWEEPER Repar s pa s
5
sup pies 446 0294 o am
p m Dav s Vacuum C eane
ore Geo ges Creek Road
nex t o Bobs CB Rad o Sa es
293 If

ROOF NG and gut er work
A so bu It up roof ng 388 8507
220 tf

4 ROOM house

w h garden
our m es from Ga I po s
Phone 446 33 4
69 6

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

UNFURN t SHED4rm andba h
apa tm en
a \Ia ab le af er
Ma ch 24 Ph 446 0444 afte 6
pm
65 6
SLEEP NG room s week y
a es free garage park ng
L bby Ho e
241

Quail Creek
Mob1le Commumty
&amp; Sales

ROOF NG AND SPOUT NG
Sh ngles "S d ng and buildup
ho roots Free Estimates 26
years ex:pe ence
James
Marcum
v nton Oh o 388
9940
247 f

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

Central A r Condit onlng
&amp; Heating
Free Esf mate.
Stewart s Hardware
V nton Oh10
144 tt

CLOSE
TO
S~R NG
VALLEY PLAZA
Beau ful
3 BR
anch has above
average features such as 2
f replaces 1
ba hs
den
aundry
m
d n ng rm
carport and a ge andscaped
Ol
4 BR BR CK W TH ACREAGE
- WE HAVE 2
One s on
the Kemper He low Rd and
one on the L tie Bu sk n Rd
Each has f replaces HW
floors
basemen s
and
garages

Semces Offered

0

Plumb1ng &amp; Heating

GRANDV EW ESTATES
W I trade
3 BR 2 baths
lam y
m
f ep ace
laundry garage and cent a r
Modern 3 BR
B OWELL
home arge L R &amp; k t c hen fu
basemen
PORTER
1yr odbr ck WW
carpe
at e ec
basemen
garage and 4 acres

Notice

EUREKA
Remade ed 2 sto y
home 4 BR forma d n ng
room f eplace basement
and garage

Card of Thanks

GREEN ACRES
New 3 BR
home w h Nat gas hea WW
carpe
ut ty
oom and
garage

----

Help Wanted

NEW BR CK &amp; FRAME- Th s
at electr c beauty s located
1
m off U S 35 and offers a
compete k tchen
formal
d n ng
m
ut I ty
m
2
baths WW carpet garage -4
x 23LR and 25ft f ontage on
a BT rd Move n any time

Real Estate for Sale

FARMS
NEAR COR: A
MODERN 3 BR
home w th HW floors modern
k tchen 2 ca garage and
over .42 acres of ro ng
pasture and wood and Ther e
sn t many fa m homes
ke
th s one around

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

Lost

WISEMAN

04 A
SPRINGFIELD TWP
da ry 7 rm home 8 cow
parlor tree stall barn 2 silos
2 ponds ob base

AGEN&lt;.:Y

--

Help Wanted

MORGAN TWP
83 A new
fences ba n pond and 7 rm
home

DON'T TAKE, ;;:;,;.,e:~
OUR WORD.::::;
FOR IT

CLOSE TO V NTON 3 A
Sta e Route t60 - S3 200

WANTED

PAPER CARRIER

~--- - ~--c--

Q.IFfON, W. VA.
PHONE 992·2156
THE DAILY
SENTINEL

Safest Buy-At An,

GOODYEAR

For Sale or Trade

Notice

MANAGEMENT

Wanted

"BIU." Mlu.ER

Auto Sales

-----

1

·--~-----

PHONE

992 7295

For Sale

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

For Rent

9923509

PUBLIC SALE
MACHINERY CONSIGNMENT
APRIL 6, 1974 • 12 NOON

Real Estate For Sale

MORGAN TWP
mos y t actor and

84

A

ADD SON TWP

$4 000

-- -----

------,--,----

Or can

---~------

I

.,..

~----·- -------

balhs modern
k1tchen large fam1ly room laundry room
garage and large paho Fully carpeted excDpt
k1lchen bath &amp; entry
Central Air-Large Corner Lot

RANCHO

REALTORS
AUCT ONEERS
446 0001
Lot on SR 554 Idea to mob e
home We
sep c
ank
ready to hook. up
FIVE m nu es from Gav n
Remade ed
wo bed oom
hom e L \1 ng room fam y
room
k tchen
ba h and
po ch Ove an ac e U nde
$ 0 000
175 A
COMMERC AL and
de\le opment and Located U
s 35
NEW homes $20 000 o $50 000
OHIO R 'ller o w th Qua y
mob e home A so your own
p vale boat dock

S ACRES
pad

R

2 8

wa e

ap

REMODELED home n V nton
6
ooms and ba h
n e
ocal on
THREE ac es sou h o
Ro
Grande
Fran age on
wo
oads Dr I ed we I Con c e e
ce Ia
Sept c
200 A Ra oon C eek farm new
barn o d ba n and equ p
bldg Th ee or four BR home
a ge
I v ng
room
and
f rep ace A f ne farm and
p ced r ght
LARGE b ck home on Second
Ave Fou een rooms pus
h ee
ba hs
Tas ef u y
decorated
w th
qua ty
wal pape wood panel ng and
ca pet ng Large o runs o
at ev
1972 2 X 60 Freedom f ont
k tchen a r owne
bought
new home Must se I
Col Jay Sheppard 446 0001
Cot Red H gtey 446 0002

m
LJ::!I
REA

Prlde n e1pec:llo
h• p o~rty o Ametfc•

OR

For Sale
bou BLI::

w de mob e
and
o
cent at a
d on ng Located a
Ph d46 1502

home
con
Ke
62 I

Tr State Mob e
Home Sales
Ph 446 7572
12x50 966 L berty
12x50 963 Lakewood
2x52 1970 F eetwood
8x35 1957 Ma te e
OXS-4 1959 Etcar
Ox50 1965 Star AI E ec c
8x45 1954 Vagabond
Ox45 960 Magno a
8x27 1953 Trotwood
958 S y e Mas er
955 E car
955 Westwood
955 S ar ne
962 W ndsor Ox:5S 3 bd m
39

T'F; 'fOU a e bu ld ng d new
home or embdel ng see us
we a e bu lders D s r bu or
for Hotpo nt App ances
AsonEecrc
154 t

og

JACK'S AWNING
SALES &amp;SERVICE
AWNINGS
STORM WINDOWS
&amp; DOORS

FOR

FREE ESTIMATE
CAll 675-3094
JACK L WOODRUFF

~

a

•
•
•

~

L

•
•••
•

•••
••

SOUTHEASTERN
POLLED HEREFORD SALE
FRIDAY, MARDi 29th-7:00 P.M •
Rock Spnngs Fairgrounds Pomeroy, Oh10

•

••
••
•

2

••

•

For Information:
Mrs. Virginia Anderson
Rt 2

"

~

•

••

••
•
'

•
rt
••

MASSIE
Realty 32 State St
Tel 4461998

ADD SON
4 bd m
arne
Ra n h on a a gc a o Has
eve y h ng a I carpe o e
H W
cen a
F P n ec
m
\1
m 5 x 26 and a
k.
hen heM s w
o e A
h s or $32 soo

For sa e an a I b ck home w thaI n shed tam ly room n
tle t ul base nent Has J spac ous bedrooms A fourth
bed oom or wo kshop could be n th e basement A I
elect c w th cent a a r cond ton ng two ca r ga age w h
elect c doo
e y a ac 'lie k tchen w th ange d sh
was 2 d sposa d n ng a ea opens on o a a ge pa o
ba hs beau t u ca pe t ng Th s hovse s on a lla o n a
n ce co mmun y

RUSSEL~

WOOD
REALTOR

4461066

~

l]:ll !2l
~ t rJ;/hDIIfi/JIL

: ),lt ~~~~~I"~·
1l

Oak Hill, Oh10 456Ss

"We've Got The Better Of The Best"

Split Levels
(we have2)
BEAUT FUL 3 BEDROOM
W TH
BATHS CE N
TRAL
A R
COM
PLETELY
BU LT N
2
CAR
K TCHEN
GARAGE
FAM LY
ROOM EVERYT H NG A
FAM LY NEEDS AND
PR: CEO SO YOU CA N
AFFORT T

We Have
The Homes
A
YOU NEED
S A
GOOD
JOB
GOO D
CRED
AND A DOWN
PAYMENT
COME
N
AND SEE US
PR CES
W LL NEVER BE TH S
LOW AGA N

OHIO RIVER
Realty

BEAT THE FUE CR S S
N
TH S
LARGE
4
BEDROOM HOM E W TH 2
WOOD
BURN NG
F REPLACES 2 BA HS 2
CAR GARAGE 2 LOTS
HUGE FA M LY ROOM
W FE
APPROVED
K TCHEN
W
H G E
APP
ANCES
FULL
BA S EMENT
THE
OWNER OF TH S BR CK
HOME MUST SELL M
MED ATELY PR CEO N
MD FORTES

us

35
(New L1stmgl
E XC E L

E NT

PUBLIC
AUCTION
THURS, APR 4

11 AM
Completed spersa l of da ry
herd farm mac h ne y da ry
equ pment

DARRELL PARSONS
3

BEDROOM BR CK HOME
W TH HUGE BU L
N
K
C H EN
ALL
AP
P
A N CES BU
T
N
ARGE LV NG ROOM
W TH
WOODBURN N G
F REPLACE
FULL
BA EME NT
OVELY
PANE EO WALLS PLUS
2 CAR GARAGE
A ND
OVER I ACRE OF LAND
OWNE R MOV NG
TO
M CH GAN
TH S ONE
WON
LAST LONG AT
!1.
450 DO
DOWN
PAYMEN

Porter brook
EXCE LEN
BU D NG
LOT
20x 80
OWNER
VERY
ANX OUS
TO

SE

West Co umb a W Va
John McNe 1-Auct
Full I st ng n next Sundays
Ed I on

TARA

DEVEWPMENT
CORP.

NEW
HOMES
FOR SALE
Bu ld ng
snes
Ava lable K ngsberry
Homes bu It to f t any
spec f cat1ons
All
Underground

Utli t es

Prov ded

-----------For lnformahon
Or Appomtment

PHONE
367-7250
AddiSOn

0

TARA
Townhouse
Apartments
2 Bedroom

Townhouses
Ph Baths

HOUSE IN CITY

Pay Only One
Uhhty
Add1son Ohio

-------For lnformahon
Call Shirley Adkms

367-7250

For Sale

PUBLIC AUCTION

ST RT
d near 3 A
S m
house w th ba h and fu
hea
Good ga den ng and
and on y 4 m
f om own
$ 3 500
Any hr 4&lt;tfl '1911

sell anyth ng for
a_nyb&lt;Hiy at our Auction
Barn or tn your home For
mformahon and pickup
servtce call 256 6967 after 5

pm

PENNSVILLE, OHIO
SAW MILL EQUIPMENT, TRACTORS,
TRUCKS, LOADERS, ETC.
SATURDAY, MARCH 30 AT 12:30 PM
10 M1les Southwest of McConnelsville Oh10
towards Chesterhill on 51 Rt 377'" Pennsville
by the Embree Park
D scontmu1ng our sawm1ll IDgg ng and
lumber operat ons W II sell complete m
ventory of equ pment Most of th s equ pment
1s n good work ng cond ton Br on t me Not
many small tems to be sold Sale held
regardless of weather No I unch served
Pos1t1ve I D Terms- Cash day of Sale Not
respons ble for ace dents

Every Saturday Noght

Box 169

HERES A L ARGE NEW 3
BEDROOM HOME ON
ACR:E
W W
CARPET
THROUGHOUT
N CE
LARGE
BATH
P US
FU L BASEMENT AND
GARAGE 52500 DOWN 30
YRS TO PAY $ 69 PER
MO PR CE $24 900 00

Sprmg Valley
&lt;New Llstmg)

Of 446 2674
In Town
Luc te Brannon
Eve 446 1226o 446 2674
(New
L1stmg)
CENTE NARY
New 3 bd l1 The syn pa e
ne ghbo
NEW L STING
b ck and
ame an h a
MODERN
3 BEDROOM
app cached he fa me who ONE a e o w t1 a 2 de uxe
carpe
a
e ec w h hea
HOME
W TH
ARGE
was
busy
w
t1
hamme
and
mob l e home
,. x 65
pumpand en a
\1 m 3
K TCHEN W TH LOTS OF
saw
H ear your w e
s
39 Acres
B R 2 ba h s w w shag
x B
equ pped k chen a
CAB NET S
ARGE
fu n shed w ndow a
paneled
ba hs and you
LVNG
ROOM
SC HO OL
N
C TV
d
one
u
a
wa
e
can
have
mmed a e
CERAM C BATH AND
A VERY
D S R CT
DIAL YOUR
possess on
F=ULL
BASEMENT
W
TH
4
F
NE
HOME
OWN WEATHER
C
O
SE
TO
GO F
BEDROOMS
N TH S beau fu a
e ec r c
ST RT
60
N ew 5 ms 'l
COURSE
OWNER HA S
BEAUT FUL NEW W F=E
k
anch
home
3
BR:
b
baths aund y m and b g 2
MOVED
A ND
N
APPROVED
K TCHEN
ba h
de uxe k chen w h
ca
ga
h s hou se
a
TERESTED
N QU CK
APPL ANCES BU L T N
sposa
d
shwa
he
oven
d
e ec
a
c a pe
R us
SALE
EXCELLENT
2 BATHS
and ange w w ca pe u
y
s a ned wood s d ng and
NE GHBORHOOO
AND
263 Acres
oom
u
bas men
'1 ca
oca ed on a
A
o Good
CLO SE
TO
GOOD
ga age w h e ec c doo s
house good o a on and n
L1sllngl
(New
F SH N G
S TO
8 A
Deep
o
90
x
235
good buy
T
LLABLE
BALA
NC
E
pe and
Reasonab e down pay men
U ST 3 M LES FROM
PAS TURE AND WOODS
owne w
he p n an e
GAL
POL S
W TH
V NTON 4 ms and bath A
g on ba c k o o
FARM
NEARLY 2 M LE O F
pane ed and a peed
has
40 ACRES eve
and 25 A
ROAD FRO NTA GE MOS
a um s d ng and new roo
6 M1les Out
Racoon bot om obacco base
AL
TH S LA ND
S
Th s house has been
om
a ge o a 32 Ga e d A en e
a ge ba n and au bu d ngs
DEVELOPABLE
FOR
pee y emode ed
a ge o
&lt;New
L1stmgl
Th
s
h
ee
bed
oom
hom
e
has
a m pond we wa e Good
RES DENT AL USE
00
80ll9hf to $ 4 00
ha dwood
oo s
u
wo sto y 4 BR home w h
A
T LLABLE
20 A
OOK
NG
FOR
A
GREAT
ba eme n
k tchen
w h
bah P ce$30 OOOand on y 0
TY
Upper 4 hAve 6 ms
PASTURE
AND
AP
HOME
HERES A 5
cab ne s and b eak as a ea
m es I om own
a ge ba h and aund y oom
PROX MATEL Y 40 A OF
BEDROOM
HOME
Sx 5 \1 ng oom S25 000
ACREAGE
P enty new cab ne s n k
T MBER ONE OF THE
THAT
S
U ST
20ACRES Anexe en fam
hen ga age and a ge o
LARGEST TRACKS OF
BEAUT
FUL
LARGE
Va an and on Ceo ge s C eek
to
t wo
am es w h
wo
Bough or s 7 000
LAND AVA LABLE TH S
L
\1
NG
FORMAL
Road
F om one a e
o
a ge modern homes
00
CLOSE
TO
TOWN
Sf ~T 7 5
NE::W 5 rm
DIN
NG
COMPLETELY
seven y ac es P ck ou wha
a r es good
mber
60 A
PR CEO AT SS65 PER
BULT
N
KTCHEN
2
am e and b
k
ba hs a
you need and we nego a a
abe ba an e n pas ure 3
ACRE
BATHS HUGE FAM LY
E ec
a ca pet fu
base
p ce
a
ge ba rn s p en y wa er
doub e ca po and oc a ed on
ROOM
2
CAR
GARAGE
ss o;no
OWNER TRANSFERRED
:J
ac e o Th s house has Coun y Home 4 m es
ON A LARGE FLAT LOT
FRAME RANCHER
om
MUST se
nearly new
4
328 sq 1
a ea and an
N R:ELAXEO CO UNTRY
c y on 2 H
Bed oom 1 a me
BR
bah
ea
n
k
chen
ATMOSPHERE
bedroom
2 bath
tam y
be bough fo $25 000
w th 2 ba hs 2 acres and
cen ra a
gas FA furna ce
room 2 ca garaoe cen ra
$33 000
a ge e\le o near hasp a
a
538 900
ow down
TYCOON LAKE
Bus ness
Pr ce S26 000
paymen
w h v qua e s p u s J m
- 30 Acres
5 AC es
5
abe
nca
S ACRES
ATTENTION
hou se and found a on o h d
C TY SC HOOL D ST
Ty coon Lake w h a
9 2 LARGE wo soy home 4 BR
BARGAIN HUNTER
house 3 ac e o The bund e
VERY GOOD 3 OR 4
Eskew Mob e Ho me 4x72 3
bath w w a pet ng a ge
4 BEDROOM
ba hs am y
fo $27 000
BEDROOM HOME NEW
bed ooms and
ba h
ea
n
k chen
carpo
room den beau fu k hen
ROOF
NEW
A
UM
sp ng wa e
sep
ank
$
000 w
blly
h s n e
a ached ga age
arge fa
ST RT 35
NEW S ms
S D NG
VERY
N CE
$ 0 000
coun y home ove ook ng the
o
Exce len
cond on
ba hs fu base 2 ca ga
K TCHEN
F REPLACE
ve
$24 000
arge f a t o Th s hou se s no
NEW
FURNACE
I
3 Aed oom mod e n b ck hom e
2 ACRES
PRICE REDUCED
bough
as s fo
n shed
BATHS
W W
CAR
0
ac
es
F
n
shed
J
BR anche
Beau
tu
de
uxe
OWNER must se
h s a
$21 500 F nan ng a\la abe
PET
NG
TH
S
I
S
A
hea ed garage
k chen and d n ng a ea
coun y
home
s
n
VERY
GOOD
HOME(
3
a r ond on ng A
m !e o own S2 000
beau
fu
cond
ton
Yo
u
mus
SMA LL OUT BU LD NGS
0
IN TOWN
beau u nome oca ed on
see
6 ac e 1 a o F s
AND A LARGE BARN
ms
k R dg e Road $4 500
6 ROOMS and bah n own
reasonab e offer buys
arpe a
a ge
am y
oom w h
81 Levels
Ve y n e 2 bed oom b c k
ep ace
ea n k chen
Ga t a Co s La gest Rea
mode n k chen
ep ace
aund y and sew ng room
Estate Sales Agency
&lt;wehave3)
a ge ga age ou bu d ngs
basemen
and
ga age
Off ce 446 36~3
oca ed n c y $26 000
oca ed on a ge orne
o
Evenings Ca I
VERY N CE d BEDROOM
S2d 000
FUL Y
CARPETED
Ike
W
seman 446 3796
N TOWN n 000
F arne home on
ac e 3
VERY N CE K TCHEN
E N W seman 446 3~
ooms
bah
Kyge
c
eek
bed
A
ARGE
S
he
ncudng4
CROUSE BECK RD
T
HUGE FAM LV ROOM 2
S hoo D s
On Bu a
e
BR an
{).1{) H S pa
Bud McGhee 446 1255
L eve 6 rm s
ba hs 2
BATHS 2 CAR GARAGE
basemen
'
"
&amp;.
42
X 180
6
m
e
om
Ga
po
Road
ysod HW
oos
A o
deep o A ea nves men
I
00
Th s sa good house a d ou d
p
ope y
oca ed on Th d
o he ask ng n C own C y
no be bu
A e
bed oom
p c.e oday $32 000
BR: CK &amp; FRAME
am e
ba h
f ep a e
NEAR new 3 B R a
e ec r c
a por and u y u n shed
BUHL MORTON R D
yr
$22 000
home w w arpe
n ce k t
o d a me b k
m 5 rms
3 Bdrm
b&lt;ltk
paneled
chen w th nea by ut
y
baths a ca pe a e e
0 F F C E 446 066
basement
fenced
1n
oom
po
h
ga
age
a
ge
Oscar Ba rd
pat o
cove ed
Th s s a
EVEN NGS
e'lle o
00 x 230 S22 000
backyard
carport w1th
Russe I Wood 446 46 8
Doug Weatherho t
be all y On y S2bt800
L STINGS
Brokers
Ron Canaday 446 3636
storage raom w w carpet
WANTED
OFFICE 446 343~
John I R cha ds 446 0280
9M DOWN RVER
2so Y
Ga
po .s Golf Course
n
NOW s he
me o s you
BERGER AVE
N ce frame
br ck base a ca pet
v
p
ope
y
lo
ea
y
Sp
ng
rear
1108
Sunset
Dr
Priced
home w h lu
basement
rm
S x 36 w th F P A SO
LOT S n Pan z 5 bd \1 son
sa e
Ca
he BRA NNON
tn 20 s 446 952J or 446 1443
a mos
new na u a
gas
has 2nd house w th 4 rms 2 A
Phone46 0390
REALTY
oday
T
W
LL
u na e
o a ted on a n ce
R \le v ew o $45 ooo
68
PAY
WE SELL BE TER
e\le ot P ced at S S SOO
L
V
NG
EVERGREEN
5 ms and
Buy d reef from owner lots
OTS
50 x 209
on good
SPR NG VALLEY
Lovely
bath u heat s o m d s and
m the c tv or country or
J
b a k op oad u a wa e
an
de
an h home th ee bed ooms
wn$4000
m es rom own 4 6 2586
acreage
Co111pare
a ge fam y oom cen ra a r
69
3
68
3
COUNTRY ARES ATES
anywhere look at the rest
basemen
ond 1 on ng fu
y o d b ck and a um 3 b g
w th wo ca ga age
then buy the best 2 large
bdrms
baths a ca rp et
08 ACRES mod e n home w o
houses for sale n the c ty
huge 2 ca gar and a a ge
w ca pe
exce en
3 BR
STATE RT 588
Ve y n ce
Rob erl
A
Quel!lo
1026
a ot S36 900
ond on Pho e 256 65 0
h ee bedroom home one and
Second Ave 446 o-.8
66 6
one half baths fu y ca peted
GARF ELD AVE
5 m
one ca r garage w th concre e
am e w h ba e
A um
d \le Located on an ce a ge
s d ng s orm dr s and w n
o and pr ced r ght a S24 000
Nea
new gas
u
P
e
5 500
BE LOW GAL L POL S
Good
A L
TYPES
of
bu d ng
h ee bed oom home
two
80 A S OCt\
a m on S Rt
m!!l eras b o k b ck sewe
ba hs basemen n ce lo
a
5 40 A
abe ba
n
p pes w ndows
n e s e
ea good buy or S 7 SOD
pas u e
Ba n 60
x
A
C au de W n e s R o G ande
Cone e e s o 6 x so w h
0 P:tlone
245 5 2 a er 523 f
972 New Moon
.,
Good B m house
un loa de
67 6 B DWELL
2x60 beau fu mob e home
and othe ou b dgs Th s arm
u y ca peted county water
s c ean has good
en es
3
BEDROOM
n ce
o
o a ed on a a g e eve lo A
pond and has been med and
Cathed a
e ng one
a
barga n a S8 500
le
ed A good buy lo
garage C ose o new hosp a
FOR SALE
$d) 000
Phorle d46 324
FOURTH AVE
Large four
1966 Ponl ac Execut ve 2 dr
6 ACRE Baby fa m on Dav s
bed oom home bath to ced
hard lop excellent cond ton
Rd barn ob base f u and
a fv nace good ocC!t on on C!
s ROOM house w h ba h n
be
es Good 6 m house
newt es I ke new $795 Ph
deep o
W
rade o he p
uppe end o Sy acuse Ph
w h ba h Good ba n and
nance
f
446 2448
367 7 36
f enc es P ce 5 3 500
638 EUREKA
Good I amehome
27 A Sou h of Cadmus on St R
tour bed ooms bath large
Mos s ean and t abe
me at ga age oca ed on a.
2 houses and me a ba n
n ce !eve
o
P ced at
$ A 000
p ce reduced o S 6 000
JO ACRES
Vacant ground
th s s a rea good fa m w h
SO A Southeas t of A bany
DO
for y acres crop and ba ance
A t abe good arm home 2
n pas ure
and and
wo
b g ba n s 2 ca L ck gar
ponds Located on Bu av I e
meta c band o her ou bldgs
Po e Rd
A good buv a S37 500

57 LOTS OF TOP PROSPECTS

--~-----~-

CARNAHAN AUCTION

25 A

HOUSE 3 bedroom and ba h
ce tar outbu ld ng on 6 A of
and
good we 1 clos~
o
sa em Center
Fo
mo e
nforma on ca I 4A6 0607
66 6

~~~9~~~-CIO.

0

A

ln'9'estment Properf'f
4 FAMILY dwe I ng located on a
larg~
ot on Second Ave
Pror)trtv s n good cond on
ca
today for an
ap
polntment
Ole Phone 446 16t4
Even ngs
Charles M Neal 446 1546
J Michael Neal446 1503
Sam Neal 446 7358

1

Wanted To Buy

Wanted To Do

Bi level three bedrooms 1

'Heal Realty

NEW

--~--::_:c --:-,----~---

42

NEAR OAK H LL
128 A
cab n $10 000
Ranny Blackburn
Branch Manager

1

Real Estate For Sale

HAR R SON TWP
woodland S6 700

TYCOO LAKE- 4S A w th a
late
odel mob e home
$2() 000

GENERAL MECHANIC
INDUSTRIAL ELECTRICAL REPAIR

O'DELL TERMITE

on

C TY SCHOOL D ST
30 A
good farm
and
can be
bough on a and contract

INDUSTRIAL MAINTENANCE

The Goodyear T1re
Rubber Com
pany's Pt Pleasant Chemacal Plant
located at Apple Grove m Mason Co 1s
seekmg qualified applicants for the
followmg pos1tlons

J WH TE RD
3 new
homes - 1 sp t toye and 2
ranches Each s ful y car
peted and otal e ec r c w h
factory k tchens 2 baths and
ga ages These are Qual y
bu homes and p ced o se I

C1ty School D1sl

GREEN ACRES SUBDIVISION

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

BIDWELL $ 2 500
Bagan
priced 2 story home fea u es
rms and bah n ce aund y
eel ar and garage Low down
payment f you qua ty

TH S LARGE
0 ROOM
HOME
S
N AN EX
CELLENT
NE GH
BORHOOD A ND N VERY
GOOD CO ND TON YOU
MUST SEE
T TO AP
PREC ATE
T
NO
REASONABLE
OFFER
W
L
BE
REFUSED
PR CEO AT $29 500
MAKE OFF=ER

FOR SALE BY OWNER
"33,000

PHONE 446-3791

--------~-

THE

Setond Ave

$23 000
3
m
basemen

~

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

AGENCY

EVANS HE GHTS
A sma l
down paymen w f
et you
move nto h s va can home
with .t BRs ca peed LR and
d n ng
m
fu
basemen
with fam ly rm
aund y rm
and wo kshop
Fut
p ce
$19 500

M&amp;M
ROOF NG &amp; Spout ng Sh ngle
&amp; Bu dup roof Hot &amp; Co d
process Home mprovement
n
genera
For
free
est mates
phone Robert
Meade 388 81 4 Bidwell
Oh o
230 If

Cal
C K Snowden
Ph 446 4290

WISEMAN

HOLCOMB H LL
Love y 2
story
home
w h
full
base ment has room o spa e
The modern k tchen nc udes
a d sp d shwasher eye I eve
oven and lots of cab ne s
Other features a e 4 BRs 2
balhS breakfast rm
fo rna
fam y m
ec
d n ng rm
rm
2 W B f ep aces ho
water heat pat o and ga age

THOMAS Fal:"' Exte m nat ng
co Term e and Pest Contra
Wheelersburg Ohio
233 If

s

11IE

"World's Largest

you mob te home
DOWN ANCHORS
Sk dmo e 446 756
m

We rent mob le home lot~~
DON 'f R EAO TH SAD
UNLESS you mean bLIS ness
S ROOM house and ba h
wo
not 1ust a place to park your
We &amp; e now cons de ng
ca ga age 2 sto y on Ca r son
home We have more to offer
qua t ed app ca n s n you
Road
n Mason
Co n a
thar't any mob le communtty
SEPT C TANKS CLEANED
a ea o become a wo k ng
773 5606
Russe Ba
n Southeastern Oh10
DEAD STOCK
pa
of ou
Nat on a
Ho
REASONABLE ra es Ph 446
3 2 f
TERMITE PEST CONTROL
W LL remove at a reason ab e
Food
o st bu or Sys em
4782 Gal pol s John R usse
FREE nspecton Cal 4463245
charge Cat 2d5 5514
You a e not app y ng o a
Owne and Ope a o
Merr II 0 Oe I Operator by
2 2 f
ob You are app y ng for a
o ACRES ot pasture land on
5 12 tfc
70
Exte minal Term te Service
WE w SH o exp ess ou hanks
'lie y h gh p o
bus ness o
U S Rou e 33 $300 pe ac e
o Be mont Dr
o eve yone who was so k nd
your own NO EX PER ENCE
AROBIC
No bu d ngs Fo add on a SEPT C TANKS
267 If
w SH o express my ap
BURLILE HEATING
and
hough fu
du ng
he
NECE SSARY
NO
nto ma on phone 992 2 20
D P Ma t n &amp; Son Water
SEWAGE
SYS TEMS
p ec at on o the docto s and
AND COOLING
!ness and dea h of Be ty
SEL L NG INVO LVED Th s
3 24 3
CLEANED
REPA RED
Del very
Serv ce
Your STEWART E ectr cal Serv ce
nu ses who a ended to my o L Gas and electr c sa es and
Jean Pa ker We espec a y
bus ness can be s ar ed par
patronage
w 1
be
ap
M LLER
SA N TAT ON
needs du ng my ong s ay a
R:epe r
house wir ng
serv ce 24 hour se \1 ce 7 o 5
w sh o hank those send ng
me
no need to qv you
STEWART OH 0 PH 662
p eciated Ph 446 0463
Ho zer
Med cal
Center
electric heating Phone 4.46
4116 41 9 after 5 446 2519
f o a offer ngs food ca ds
A be
ob Can be expanded ful
3035
2 If
Spec a
hanks to at
my
63 If
4561
a
he v s tors
Wa ker
mew h company f nanc ng
3 20 6 p
10 4 tfc
27 If
eat ves ar~d f ends for he
~ une a
Home pa bearers
we need peep e we can
v s s
owe s
ards and
docto s and the nurs ng staff
TOOL
sharpen ng
saws
SE PT C
TA NK S c eaned
depend on Our produ s a e 2 BEDROOM house n M d
p ayers
SEPTIC TANKS
on the second f oo ol Ho ze
sc sso s shears home and
TRAIN WITH
Modern San ta on 992 3954 o
nat on a y famous
Ho
d epor Se by owne pr ced
M s van Grove
Cleaned a[ld nstalled
Med ca Center Rev Lloyd
ga den too s
s ~arp
Shop
992 7349
Food
ems We have O\le 36
Phone 949 3832
FULL PAY
70
R uuell s Plumb ng 446 4782
0 se
A ley rear 147 Second
Grimm for h s canso ng
\lar et es of Ho Soups and Ho
3 20 6
0 23 fc
297 If
words
p an s
8 Pnda
2
6
If
mmed a e
open ngs
for
t::ntrees such as Bee S ew
WE W SH to exp ess our s n
Bolin
Janet
Bot n
spec a tra n ng n Meehan ca1
Ch cken &amp; DumpIngs Ch
&amp;
e e hanks to Ho zer Med ca
Margarel Edwa ds
oan
C B~AOFONU Auct onee
NVESTMENT PROPERTY
Elec ron cs
Av at on and STEVERS Truck Serv ce an
Beans
and
on
and
on
We
Center
and
staff
Med
ca
Fetty Mar e L tt e who
Comp e e Se v ce
nounces the open ng of 2.4 hour
0 acres o
and n Rock
c er ca f elds n he U S Navy
have
a
of
Arne cas
P
aza
and
staff
f
ends
and
are members of the R ~nrt
Phone 949 382 o 949 3 6
oad serv ce n Gal po s and
Sp ng s Oh o Th s and s
Pay
starts
a
S326
per
monfh
favor es A
hese de c ous
ne Qhbors
a so Rev Ron rom f rst day - We turn sh
Fr endly Gardeners C ub for
RacneOho
su rounding area Located on
par of an a ea subd \1 ded lo
produc s a e sold f om the
Pe ry and s ngers M cCoy &amp;
GENE PLANTS &amp; SDN
her help at home membe s
C
B adfo d
Fa f eld
Church
Road
new houses but due to the
quarters food and e oth ng
ates
n aut om at c \lend ng
Moo e Funera Home fo
he
PLUMB NG
Heat ng
Ar
of the Me gs County Sher ff s
Ga I po s We are on ca I 2d
Me gs
Coun y
Plann ng
Sc hool gua an ees before you
equ pment Your route w I be
f ne ca e and he p tha was
Conalt on ng 300 Fourth Ave
Department and Ru and
hou
s
a
day
1
days
a
week
Comm
ss
on
egu
at
ons
and
s
gn
up
es ab shed and ns a ed bv
shown to us n our mothe s
Ph 446 1637
Marsha
Bruce Dav s we
EX AVAT NG dozer
Ph 614 4d6 9329 or on you C B
my heal h
mus set
w
BE SOMEONE SPEC AL
us You age s no a la c o
f
ness and death Mrs Anna
48 tf
s ncere y hank everyone who
and
backhoe
wo
k
ad o
ca
B g
Daddv
sel a I o any part B
W e
N THE NEW NAVY
you quat fy Perfecl to an ce
M Knox
helped n anyway Husband
----- ----~ ------anks nsta led dump
Rock Spr ngs 992 2 89
Fo
more
nfo
cal
o
v
s
t
your
coup e o opera e as a fam y
Channel
D
The Knox Fam y
CARTERS PLUMB NG
Homer Parker daughter Mr
and o boys for h e w
hau
3 24 8 c
bus ness
CASH
N
10 1 Navyman at
AND HEATING
and Mrs
ames Carpenter
f
d
top
so
I
mes
one
RALPH
RODEHAVER
VESTMENT REQU RED
---Cor Fourth &amp; P ne
paren s M
and Mrs Roy
and gravel ca Bob o Roger
57 II
Ch ef Mach n s s Ma e ss
PART T ME
NEW 3 bed oom home
bah
Pr.one 446 3888 or 446 4477
Snowden
etters day phone 992 7089
Te ephone 6 &lt;I 593 3566PLAN ONE
$2 285 00
garage basement on Grave
3 24 c PLAN TWO
165 If
n gh phone 992 3525 o 992
To Free 8013 282 1288
GILLENWATr::R !!:;,EPT C
3 86 00
H I M dd epo I Na tura gas
5232
N&amp;vyRec utngSaton
TANK
CLEAN NG
AND
PLAN THREE
7 7 9 00
a ready
n
Phone Da e
RUSSELL 5
ftc BETTER JOBS a e ava able
2
22 Co umbus Road
R EPA R
ALSO
HOUSE
FULL T ME
Dutton 992 3369 even ngs
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
for GBC graduates
En o
Athens Oh o 4570
WRECK NG Ph 446 9499
992 2534
PLAN FO UR
Sll 279 00
Gall polls U6 4712
now
for
nex
qua e
E s abl shed n 940
PL AN F VE
8 998 00
7 ttc DOZER wo k and c ear ng by
Ga pol s Bus ness Col ege
29711
the ac e hou ly o con ract
ouR: hear te thanks tot ends PLANS X
69 f
)6 798 00
51 No 71 02 00328
ta m ponds oads e c Large
and ne ghbors fo the r many FOR fu th er nfo ma on o a
FUL new homes now
DEW TT S PLUMBING
so 90
doze and operator w h over
exp ess ons of sympathy a
ALBERT EHMAN
pe sonal
nte v ew
send BEAUT
unde canst uc on n pr me
AND HEATING
20 yea s expe ence Pu n s
the death of ou dea
ather
Water De very Serv ce
Name Add ess and Phone
oca on on c y wate and
Route 160at Evergreen
Ex:cava ng Pome oy Oh o
and husband Spec a hanks
Pa rotS a Rt Gall po s
Numbe o Nor h Ame can
sewer Cho ce of des gns Wa
Phone 446 2735
Phone 992 2478
REE home demonst at ons of
to the m n ste s M
C to d
D s
bu ng Co p Ho Food
Ph 379 2 33
ca pe ng and a r
o wal
48 If
87 tf
E ect o u x produc s Cal 675
Sm h and Mr John Amstu z
2 19 ttc
243
D v sons
8828 N
Cent a
co nd ton ng
ncluded
W
- - - - - -- 3490 be ween 9 and 0 a m We
to Mrs Edna Ams u z and
~------A\lenue Pt1oen x A zona
help
ar ange
f nanc ng
STANDARO
DOLl:. I( and back hoe work
also
have
E ec o ux CALL Polys Autt on or sop by
Ge a d
Powell
for
he
BANKS TREE SERVICE
85020
convent on a loans w th down
P umblng &amp; Heating
ponds and sept
anks d
C eane s 569 75 and up ~u
beaut tul mus c he Pome oy
3 24
p
FREE
es
maes
ab
tv
n
o
ge
d
of
hose
llr}wanted
paymen ow as 5 pet 0 he
2 4Th rd Ave .t46 3782
op so I f I
gua an ee
ch ng se \1 ce
Emergency Squad and he
surance Prun ng tr mming
ems Set t the auct on way
new homes ava tab e
o
187 If
dr
mesone
B&amp;K Ex
If
Ew ng Fun era
Home We
and ca v y work I ee and
537
H
gh
s
M
dd
epor
992
qua fed buyers w h NO
cavat ng Phone 992 5367 o
apprec a e the tende care
stump
emova
Ph
446
4953
3509
Open
9
5
Monday
DOWN PAYMENT
Ca
g ven at the Elmwood Nur
992 386
13 tf
Wednesday
Thursday
co eel 6 4 837 6540 o 239 0785
9 1 fc
s ng Home and by the nu ses LADY o ve n Phone 992 2936
Fr day t I noon
PAY
at
eas
pie
face
\lalue
o
w
e
G
ea
Arne
ca
n
3 24 J c
at Holze Hosp tal and Or
6 30 SA NDY &amp; BEAVER nsurance
for U s s lver co ns $4 each
Hom es nc P 0 Box: 687
W L L TRIM or Cll
rees and
Harder and Or
Brubake
-:-.--c-:c-:c-=- --- - - --,-- -,-Co has offered serv ces to
fo
s
I
'lie
do
a
s
a
he
Co
n
Pome
oy
Oh
o
45769
shrubbe y A so c ean ou
The congrega ons of he SOMEONE o s !!IY
N SURANCE for a your needs
F re nsu ance coverage n
Show a Ga 1 po s Hot day
3
fc
Ca t 992 3439 to
basements at cs etc Ca I
Pomeroy Church of Chr s
Ray Hawk d.46 2300
Ga 1 a County for almost a
nn Sunday March 3
974
forma on
949 l22 0 742 d44
and the Bradford Church of
60 tf
Century Farms homes and
Co
n
exchange
Ga
y
Wolfe
3
24
3
c
Chr s we e wonderful to us
3 4 261C
pe sona property coverage
10
1
We sha I never to ge
he --,-~-:c-:c~c-c-:c~--~~N•~c'~o:~
ME
a e ava abe to meet n
k ndnesses extended o us by
SEWING MACH N ES Repa r
d v dua needs Contact your
o ul
me
so many The He ber M le
serv ce a makes 992 2284
ne ghbor and agent
Don
o
supply
Company
4
BALES
of
tw
neon
R
7
near
Fam ly
The Fab c Shop Pomeroy :»OR RY
w I no anger serv ce
Pamer
es ab shed accounts w h
3 24 c
Chesh
re
Owne
would
ap
Au hor zed S nger Sales and
mach nes f not sold by
61 6
R:CA CBS D sney Reco ds
p ec a e re u n w th no
- - - - ------Serv ce We Sha pen Sc ssors
S mmons Ptg
&amp;
Off ce
ncome poss b t es up to
ques ens asked Return to
WE WOULD ke o thank a of
Equ pment We serv ce only
3 29 tfc
Gallipol s
S 000 pe mon h w h on y
Tom Van co Ph 2d5 5652
our fr ends for the k nd
what we set
$3 500 equ red fo
nven ory
70 1
nesses
shown
us
upon
OPEN Roger Hyse Is Garage
57 If
INCOME PROPERTY
and t an ng Ca COLLECT
-----------~-----he
death
of
our
nea C oss cad s on St Route
-------Exc1hng
$8011
00 month renlor In
for M
ames (21d 661 9208
mother Mrs Maude Sco
124 8 30 o 6 p m Monday
3 24 4 p
Spec a
hanks
o Rev
eluding
Frosty Freeze 2
New Home
hrough satu day PhOne 992
Robert Bumgarner for h s
5682
dr
992
7 21
acres
of
land across from
1
n
Apply
person
help and con sol ng words To CAR HOPS
YOU
WONT BEL EVE
222
26c
.
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House
S
eak
Crow
s
boat
club
In
Ga Ill!&gt;&lt;&gt; lis A real
or J J Oav s M ddlepo t
YOUR EYES WHEN YOU
Pomeroy
nvestment with $800 00
Dr
Ty er and nurses of
DON
T
fUSS
uon
t
cuss
turn
We
Say
EXTERMITAL
s
Termite
STEP INS DE TH S NEW
3 24 61C
Ho zer
Med cal
Cen er
your unk automob les over to
monthly Income See It
SPL T
LEVEL
HUGE
&amp; Pest Control Service Is Your
Max ne and Char ey Gask
us R vers de Auto Wreck ng
3 LARGE BEDROOMS
L V NG ROOM WITH A
Raw ngs coats
Funeral
Phone (304) 773 5890
&amp;
Price!
LOVELY BALCONY EF
Nice
brick home nice large
Home c ass 2 of he Un ted
3 7 26 c
FECT GONG TO THE 3
Methods Church Beulah
andscaped
fenced In yard
You en ask eny of ou muy 111 sf eel
~-~ :R:-t~c=-E
= -~ ~c'="'o=No:s:o.T?R:--cu:-:C.~T: -~-=o N
LARGE
BEDROOMS
Strauss
Bob McE h nny
C en I n r&lt;!U I Ill WI
lfad )' IUp
wood fireplace and gas
ack w a burn and at who
BEAUTIFUL
BU L T N
Roof ng
spout ng
k tchens
PlY he nimH on equul) about
forced
air
furnace
sen he beaut fu cards and
OAK
CAB NETS
W TH
and bathrooms Complete
EXTERM TAl S lObi preted on p en
wh
h no on y dt you PfOPift)' of
tru
The daughters Es he
Breezeway porch By !self
emodet
ng
Phone
742
6273
QUAL TY
APPL ANCES
For
te m et but lito I IS a 5 WU lUI
(Sco y
S mpson
and
BU LT N t:OMPLETELY
12 3 fc
off of Rl 35 appro• one m le
ufle n w 1na: be ked by • comb ned
Do o hy Jean wa ke
CARPETED FOR: DAD
A
cnh
111rve
of
0\'1
m
an
da
Ia
1
to hosp This house and lot
3 24 lie
LARGE 2 CAR GARAGE
tpecl ons and w Hen
In excellent condition Must
IPOrts-t 1t one ow cost o }'Oil
WITH WORKSHOP PLUS 2
ou R s nee e thankS for he
w h e111 pe~ment te mt IYI tb 1
see to appreciate
ACRES
TO
PUTTER
many k ndnesses extended
3 20 6tc
( Bulav111et
AROUNO
ON
LOCATED
N
CALL
TODAY
FOR
A
FREE
ESTIMATE
Qualified
applicants
may
apply
at
the
Dept
of
ctur ng the ness and dea h of
RUTLAND
YOU
MUST
Beautiful
new trl level brick
our
son
and
bro he
I-\U1 Orv uo Lt:: nsurance oeen
Employment Secunty 1n PI Pleasant
SEE THE INSIDE OF THIS
Law ence Harr son Spec a
hom,e, over J 1100 sq It living
cance ed?
Lost
your
ONE TO APPRECIATE T
thanks o the staff of Veterans
Charleston Huntmgton or Gallipolis Ohio or
ope ato s I cense Ca
992
~~:.:.,4 bedrooms 3 baths
Memor a
Hosp ta
Hotze
7d28
by
wr1llng
to
Personnel
Dept
a pane doors and
Med ca
Cen er
D
John
OFFICE 446 3643
Pomeroy Ohio
wil1dows . Electric heat
R dgway
Dr
Neal Pen
The Goodyear T1re &amp; Rubber Co
EVENINGS
dergas Rev Noel He mann
air conditioned
Bud McGhee-446 1255
P 0 Box9
Rev
Ron Moyer for
he EDP Oa a Entry Ope a o
ng Fo
E M
Ike W seman-446
I ' R:ur~!lwatersystems 2112
consol ng
words
he
992 3903
Pt Pleasant W Va 25550
Keypunch) s ar ng sala y
3796
garage
shown by
pa lbea e s a d he many
$2 88 hour Hou s from 4 p m
Area
Code
304
576
2041
who sen flowers
ood and
pomtment
only
1 I m dn gh
Ca
anet
cards and remembe ed us
Ext
280
Barnett
Oh o Un ve s ty
lBEDROOM
dur ng our be eavemen
n
Pe son ne Off ce 594 5387
In Gallipolis modern frame
othe
ways M
and M s
EQua Opportun y Emp oye
wayne Har son and M s
forced air furnace
3 22 3tc
(An equal op rtumty employer)
AI ce W
ams
rdwood
floors It s nice
3 24 c
It must sell
RELIABLE person nterested
4BEDROOM
In going to Lake and area n
F o da Cal 446 0-4 4
~~:~ kitchen
1 :a acres
large
Refngerator
Air
Guns
70 3 FOR SALE or trade
gas tur
HARRISON S TV and Se v ce
R:em 1 00 2 gauge 30 fu I
Cond1f1omng
Heatmg
basement paneled
c:a Is Phone 992 2522
Rem 700 30 06 Mossburg
2 22 261C
of shade trees garden
Repa1r
Appliance
model 800V 243 s&amp;w Mode
WANTED TO RENT a 2 o 3
0 38 sp
o he guns Cal
bedroom home or apar men
Asking
only
at er S 30 446 9583
LOVELY
BRICK
Ranch
turn shed or unturn shed to a
co ec
69 6
MIDttLEPORT
5
bedrooms
type 3 BR Bath 0 nong R
mldd e aged coup e Must
69 6
gas
furnace
n ce
full
HAVE BUYER WITH
973 MGB cOn\le tbe 7500
have washer and dry&amp;r and
K tchen has 24 ft cab nets
952 CHEVY Must see to ap
DB A P&amp;J Heatmg &amp; IMONio~ TO SPENO WE
ml es ots of extras Cal 1
basement
2
full
baths
2
ai cond I on ng Can p ov de
sta nless steel range oven
prec
ate
W
t
sa
eo
trade
for
304 773 5323
eferences
Phone 992 579
porches and garage Now only
Cooling
p c k up 1968 Ch ys e many
and s k 0 n ng area and
EED PROPERTY FOR
3 18 6tc
3 2 dip
$20 000 00
ex as A so new ha
dryer
bar Hardwood I oors ca r
LE LIST NOW WITH US
24
hours
serv1ce
TUPPERS PLAINS
Neat 2
520 ca 367 7240
JUNK Au 0 and s ap on Ph
1957 Cl'fEV':RcO
·,--L-E
- -Tc--·cE:x-c-el en I
peted Basement Garage 1
WE ALSO BUY
WANTED o ent a turn shed
69 6
45760
388 8176
Middleport
bed ooms
arge bath
out
evel acre w th p enty of
cond on Ca 992 2967 after S
SELL or TRADE
tra
ler
or
sma
I
house
n
he
63
2
bu1
d
ngs
and
bock
garage
pm
garden space E Ieel c heat
Ca II B1ll or Joe for fast
coun ry n Pome oy Ru and
GOOD
et rement fa m
4
Ask ng 1ust $8500 00
3 20 7tc
S2J SOO 00
a ea Contact D Jn Sch ock
serv1ce
courteous
acres
obacco base house
BLOCK BUILDING - 72x 20
,-------------BUY OF THE YEAR Hunt s Tra er Pa k ackson
barn
and
other
bu
d
ngs
w th stee trusses Hu r cane
912 VW bus exce tent con
Ranch type J B R Bath
Oh o
Vacant W I ake houset a fer
304
d t on 52695 00 Phone
fenced yard w th 2nd bu ldmg POS TION Vo(ented Young
3 20 6tp
Lovely k tchen
lots of
on trade Ph 256 6930
173 5867
26x72 and stee mono a I for
worn an seeks secretar at
cab nets and range Ut ty
70 6
32 6 c
cereal
poston
n
he
load ng The main bu ld ng s
R
Carport
Carpeted
-----~-- ------------ - Ga pot s area Seven years
one large room w th no posts
2 AcREs of and located off
acre $17 000 00
969 DODGE Charge
Phone
exper ence GQod references
Add son Bu av le Rd Price
SMALL
DOWN
PAYMENT
742 3722
FOR MOBILE HOMES or
Cal
446 0782 af e
5 p m
$5 500 150ga bu k m k ank
3 bedroom ranch type home
3 2 6tp
HOMES
Gas water and
weekdays
Pr ce $100 367 7238
Closets
natura
gas
furnace
69 3
e ectr c on 1 acres 200 ft
10 3
STEREO
Walnu
AM
~M
910 MALIBU Chevrol&amp;
n
ce
k
tchen
I
v
ng
room
12x19
ex
frontage
n
Pome oy
Rad
o
8
track
tape
com
ce tent shape Phone 992 562
Copper plumb ng large garage WALL PAPER: NG and nte lor
$3 000 00
b nat on Ba ance St o 73 o
or 992 5947
.and n ce lot Ask ng S19 500 00
pa nt ng Ph 446 9865
terms
ava
lab
e
Phone
992
CLOSE
TO
MINE
NO
3
J2 3c
45 ACRES In Rutland
3965
60 tf
About 2 acre'S 2 storr, frame
~-Townsh p at only $125 00 per
SEVERAL mob le homes total
2 14 fc
4 BR 1;, baths 0 nlng R
RESIDENTIAL
o
commerc
al
196o
CHEVELLE
283
etectr c et Kerr Oh o Sl25
acre
Porches
2
garages
Con
e
ect
ca
w
ng
Service
One m1le east of Racme Oh1o ori State Route
automat c excellen con
per mo Call 446 0175 or 446
IF YOU HESITATE
YOU
c
ct
e
hock
storage
bldg
ca s D
Elect c Ph d46
d tlon Phone Larry H I 985
1934
OWE
ANOTHER
MONTHS
124
Severa l1tems m now more needed before
43 13
Rcc n y
renovated
3335
273 If
RENT MAKE YOUR MONEY
3 24 6tc
10 3
sale
day Your 1tems welcome an)11me
SIO
SOO
00
!) ROv~
house w lh bath n
COUNT BY BUYING
~uk.M apartmen 1 ke urand
DON
T
WASTE
PRECIOUS
For more mformat1on call or wr.te
upper end of Syracuse Phone
1970 .,FO RD Custome p ckup
new downtown s 10 per
T ME TO BUY OR SELL
992 31 6
truck ong bed and 6 cylinder
month
Cal
446
3643
The
CONTACT OUR OFFICE
3 15 8 c
w seman Agency
cal 949 2815
10 6
3 24 3 c
10 If
HENRY E CLELAND
CONCRETE bJock roof ng and --r:~-- ---2 BEDROOM house n M d
Rt 1 Racine Ohio 45771
BROKER
paint ng by contrac or hour d RoOM hOuse In Thurman 545
1913 MG8 Convert be 7 5()0
New k tchen and
d epor
A
work guaranteed
Free
mt es Lots of ext res Ca I
bath app ances ncluded
pel\ month Mus
fUrrllsh
992 ~259
Jnti Carnahan ,14 949 2708 or Dan
Co 992 5310
est n1!11eS Ph 367 0295
refe'r'enceS Ph 245 5643
(30&lt;i 773 5323
If
no
answer
992
2568
J 24 ltc
70 II
Smtih
10 3
3 9 26tc

Real Estate For Sale

ON STATE ROUTE 35

THE LEADER SINCE 1900 IR
SERVING THE NATION 5
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
Ph 046 0008

HOLLEY Bros Construct on
bu dozing back hoe work
d ch ng under roaQ.J bor ng
Phone 245 50 8 or 245 5()06
18 If

Contact Newt Jones
Rodney Cora Rd
""d ney Oh10
Ph 245 9374-245 5021

Real Estate For Sale

REAlTY

WASHER
dryer
and
refr gerator
repa r
No
c ha ge fo serv ce ca
f we
can t f x you app lance Ph
675 4242
254 tf
PROTECT
w th T E
ca 1 Ron
af e 3 p

Real Estate For Sale

STROUT

46 tf

94 If

u
66 f

m

Sunday March 24 1974

Real Estate For Sale

GA:RDENS plowed In vlcln ty of
Ga po s Call 446 9355 after S
P

Sentinel

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Serv1ces Offered

For Rent

Not1ce

In Memory

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
• DEADLINES

2S- The Sunday Tunes

At7p m

SWAIN

AUCTION SERVICE
Cornor Third &amp; Ohve

Owners H1ll and Groah Lumber- Phone 559
2012
Auctioneer

B1ll Janes

33 ACRES
Vacan ground
good bv d ng s e oca ed on
Thom pson Rd off St Rt 160
WE HAVE a good se eel on of
o s and other prope ty fo
sa e ca 1 Oh o R ver Rea y
to nform at on
Even ngs Call446 4244
John Fuller 446 4327

AUCTION
SERVICE
"SELL THE
AUCTION WAY"

JIMME SAYRE
AUCTIONEER

PH.

WE'RE BUILDING YOUR
HOME TODAY••••

And we mv1te you to look us over You should
know how your home IS bu11t The c;loser you
look the better we look You select your lot
your house and the colors $20 000 Ranch $290
down $155 per month At Rodney Vtllage II
We are open da1ly One hll Dark for your m
specllon 245 5303 - 446 0001

RANCHO REALTORS
"the home folks"

I

�U-F-;;; F';;,("'R';sults Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Business Services

5 P M Day Before Pub ca on
Monday Oeadl ne 9 a m

Cancel at on -

Co ec ons

or

Wll be accepted unt 9 a m
Day of P.J.~b cal on
REGULATIONS

The Publ sher reserves

he

EXPERIENCED

r Oht to ed t or relect any ads
deemed~ ob ect ona

Th e
pub lsher ~ 1 not be respon
s bh~ for more han one n

correc

nse

t

on

RATES

F om the Ia gest Truck o

For Want Ad Service

~cents

per Word one nse.:l on
M n m um Charge Sl 00
1-4 cents ••r wo d
h ee

I

consecu ve nse lion s
~6 cents per word s
secutlve nsert ons

&gt;~

con

25 Per Cent D scoun on pa d

ads and ads pa d w h n 0
days
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$2 00 fo
50 word m n

mum

the

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Pomeroy

Ph 992 2174

WOOD TRUSSF.S
¢\"&gt;- ...
Sutlf to Your Specs
Del vered to Job S1te

Gene's
Body Shop
Ph 992 5271
808 W Ma n Pomc oy

Pambng A Specialty

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

Area s Most
Rea so nable Pnce s

MATERIALS CO
l73 5554
Mason W Va

All work guaranteed

Each add tonal wo d

3c

BLIND ADS
Add 1 ana

25c

Cha ge pe

Adver sement
OFFICE HOURS
830am oSOOpm Oa y
8 Jll a m
o
2 00 Noon

se1u

Bu ldozer Rad afor to
sma l est Heate Core
Nathan Btggs
Radiator Spec al sf

ASK US ABOUT
PRE FABRICATED

day

In Memorv

POMEROY
JfOME &amp; AUTO
992 2094
606 E Mam Pomero

OFFICE SUPPLIES

N l OV NG memo y ot 0 an
Goodw n who d ed Ma ch JO
970 Sad y m ssed by am y
and fr ends
3 24 fp
--~--~--~ ------ --- -

Card of Thanks
W SH o thank a
those who
sent ca ds
I ewers
and
p ayers
du ng
my
hosp a za on n he Ho ze
Med ca Cente Thanks o he
oca m n s ers of he area
the Happv Ha 'lieS e s C ass
and
he n n y Me hod s
Chu ch of Pomerov Spec a
thanks o my ch d en who
ope at ed my bus ness du ng
my !ness Kath een Francs
3 24 1 c

EXPERT
Wheel A11gnment
•5.55
On Most Amencan Cars

and

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094

FURNITURE

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Stop In and See Our
Floor D1splay

Busmess Opportumbes

Open 8 T1l S
Monday thru Saturday
606 E Mam Pomeroy 0

Real Estate For Sale

DITCHING SERVICE
Water L nes and Power
L1nes All work done by the
foot or contract Also dozer
work and sept c tanks n
stalled

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 7089
N1ghl 992 3525
or 992 5232
READY M X
CONCRETE
de ve ed
gh
to
your
p o ect Fas and easy F ee
es rna es Phone 992 328d
Goeg en Ready M x Co
M dd epo
Oh o
6 30 f c

N
OV NG memory o my
mo her M s Ve da W ams
who passed away Ma ch 25
957 and my father Wade
W
ams on De
23 910
God sees when he ools eps
fa e
When he pa hway has grown
oo s eep
Then He
ouches he wea y
eye ds
And g ves H s dea ones seep
Sad y m ssed by daugh er
M s
ames Ga ne
Ne son
and a
he ta m y
70
NG memo y o
R M e who passed
Ma ch 24 970
a he w h
Ou
hea s s
sad ness
Sec e tea s s
I ow
wna
mean o ose you no
on e w
eve know
When days a e da k and d ea v
and eve yth ng goes wrong
We seem o hea vou wh spe
Chee up and ca y on
Each t me we see you p c ure
You se em o sm e and say
Don cry
am on y s eep ng
We w
mee aga n some day
Sad y m ssed by he am y
0

-- --

Card of Thanks

HOARD NG sud se \1 ce AKC TRA LER Chesh e 367 7512
10 3
pupp es K&amp;P Kennels 388
-----82 4
1tf F URN SHED apartmen
u
t es pa d
adults on y
Phone 446 9523
and
REo S
Barber Shop
70 tf
books or.e
0 am to 1 pm
~-c
~~
R-o'~o
~
M
cs'-~w
eeky
Buy se I o
rade
54 f
Cen ra Hote
306 If
C U STOM
sew ng
and
a e a ons on al type s of COACHMAN Travel Traf er
Moto
Homes
h v,'tlee
Fu s a so
Re
c oth ng
Truck campers Apple C ty
weav ng
of
damaged
Auto Sa es R 35 N Jackson
ma era Ph d46 7520 or 4-46
Oh o Phone 286 5700
10 If
43 36
-----~

s

~

uss s

GLASS Se v ce glass
lo all needs spec at z ng n
w ndshe Ids
m
or s
plex glass rescreen 7134 P ne
R o G an de 245 5048
00 If

DAY CARE
SU N VALLEY Nursery Schools
1 censed by Sta e of Oh o I
m es west o new hosp ta
577 Sun Valley 0
Ph 446
3657 Day care tha says we
ca e
Madge Hauldren
Owne
Lored h and John
Hau dren Operata s
4 If
po s
S a e St eel Buy and Se
S Cons 446 18-42

M T S Co ns ot Ga

WE W SH

o hank our many
ends and ne ghbo s
or
her k ndness shown du ng
he
ness and dea h of our
dea mo her Ou
hanks to
Re\1 w 1&lt;. n s who
s ed h er
and comforted us n our m e
of sor ow w e w sh o thank
members of SEOEMS and
hose who a ded a Ho zer
Med ca Cenfer Ou hanks to
McCoy Moo e Fune a Home
to he k ndness and serv ce
g ven We are g a e u to hP
hea tie wo ds of sy mpathy
ca ds f owe s and food ca s
Your
k ndness
and
hough fulnes s w
a ways be
remembered
The F am ly o
Kattl vn
Wood

•

2

SLEEP
Hate

ooms

Gall

- - - - - -·-

a

--------

ToNO WAY F&lt;!ad OS Sa es &amp;
Se \1 ce New and used DB s
po ce mon tors an ennas
e c Bob s a t ten Band R ad o
Equ p
Georges c eek Rd
Ga po s Oh o t1d6 -45 7
2 2 tf
SWEEPER Repar s pa s
5
sup pies 446 0294 o am
p m Dav s Vacuum C eane
ore Geo ges Creek Road
nex t o Bobs CB Rad o Sa es
293 If

ROOF NG and gut er work
A so bu It up roof ng 388 8507
220 tf

4 ROOM house

w h garden
our m es from Ga I po s
Phone 446 33 4
69 6

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

UNFURN t SHED4rm andba h
apa tm en
a \Ia ab le af er
Ma ch 24 Ph 446 0444 afte 6
pm
65 6
SLEEP NG room s week y
a es free garage park ng
L bby Ho e
241

Quail Creek
Mob1le Commumty
&amp; Sales

ROOF NG AND SPOUT NG
Sh ngles "S d ng and buildup
ho roots Free Estimates 26
years ex:pe ence
James
Marcum
v nton Oh o 388
9940
247 f

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

Central A r Condit onlng
&amp; Heating
Free Esf mate.
Stewart s Hardware
V nton Oh10
144 tt

CLOSE
TO
S~R NG
VALLEY PLAZA
Beau ful
3 BR
anch has above
average features such as 2
f replaces 1
ba hs
den
aundry
m
d n ng rm
carport and a ge andscaped
Ol
4 BR BR CK W TH ACREAGE
- WE HAVE 2
One s on
the Kemper He low Rd and
one on the L tie Bu sk n Rd
Each has f replaces HW
floors
basemen s
and
garages

Semces Offered

0

Plumb1ng &amp; Heating

GRANDV EW ESTATES
W I trade
3 BR 2 baths
lam y
m
f ep ace
laundry garage and cent a r
Modern 3 BR
B OWELL
home arge L R &amp; k t c hen fu
basemen
PORTER
1yr odbr ck WW
carpe
at e ec
basemen
garage and 4 acres

Notice

EUREKA
Remade ed 2 sto y
home 4 BR forma d n ng
room f eplace basement
and garage

Card of Thanks

GREEN ACRES
New 3 BR
home w h Nat gas hea WW
carpe
ut ty
oom and
garage

----

Help Wanted

NEW BR CK &amp; FRAME- Th s
at electr c beauty s located
1
m off U S 35 and offers a
compete k tchen
formal
d n ng
m
ut I ty
m
2
baths WW carpet garage -4
x 23LR and 25ft f ontage on
a BT rd Move n any time

Real Estate for Sale

FARMS
NEAR COR: A
MODERN 3 BR
home w th HW floors modern
k tchen 2 ca garage and
over .42 acres of ro ng
pasture and wood and Ther e
sn t many fa m homes
ke
th s one around

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

Lost

WISEMAN

04 A
SPRINGFIELD TWP
da ry 7 rm home 8 cow
parlor tree stall barn 2 silos
2 ponds ob base

AGEN&lt;.:Y

--

Help Wanted

MORGAN TWP
83 A new
fences ba n pond and 7 rm
home

DON'T TAKE, ;;:;,;.,e:~
OUR WORD.::::;
FOR IT

CLOSE TO V NTON 3 A
Sta e Route t60 - S3 200

WANTED

PAPER CARRIER

~--- - ~--c--

Q.IFfON, W. VA.
PHONE 992·2156
THE DAILY
SENTINEL

Safest Buy-At An,

GOODYEAR

For Sale or Trade

Notice

MANAGEMENT

Wanted

"BIU." Mlu.ER

Auto Sales

-----

1

·--~-----

PHONE

992 7295

For Sale

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

For Rent

9923509

PUBLIC SALE
MACHINERY CONSIGNMENT
APRIL 6, 1974 • 12 NOON

Real Estate For Sale

MORGAN TWP
mos y t actor and

84

A

ADD SON TWP

$4 000

-- -----

------,--,----

Or can

---~------

I

.,..

~----·- -------

balhs modern
k1tchen large fam1ly room laundry room
garage and large paho Fully carpeted excDpt
k1lchen bath &amp; entry
Central Air-Large Corner Lot

RANCHO

REALTORS
AUCT ONEERS
446 0001
Lot on SR 554 Idea to mob e
home We
sep c
ank
ready to hook. up
FIVE m nu es from Gav n
Remade ed
wo bed oom
hom e L \1 ng room fam y
room
k tchen
ba h and
po ch Ove an ac e U nde
$ 0 000
175 A
COMMERC AL and
de\le opment and Located U
s 35
NEW homes $20 000 o $50 000
OHIO R 'ller o w th Qua y
mob e home A so your own
p vale boat dock

S ACRES
pad

R

2 8

wa e

ap

REMODELED home n V nton
6
ooms and ba h
n e
ocal on
THREE ac es sou h o
Ro
Grande
Fran age on
wo
oads Dr I ed we I Con c e e
ce Ia
Sept c
200 A Ra oon C eek farm new
barn o d ba n and equ p
bldg Th ee or four BR home
a ge
I v ng
room
and
f rep ace A f ne farm and
p ced r ght
LARGE b ck home on Second
Ave Fou een rooms pus
h ee
ba hs
Tas ef u y
decorated
w th
qua ty
wal pape wood panel ng and
ca pet ng Large o runs o
at ev
1972 2 X 60 Freedom f ont
k tchen a r owne
bought
new home Must se I
Col Jay Sheppard 446 0001
Cot Red H gtey 446 0002

m
LJ::!I
REA

Prlde n e1pec:llo
h• p o~rty o Ametfc•

OR

For Sale
bou BLI::

w de mob e
and
o
cent at a
d on ng Located a
Ph d46 1502

home
con
Ke
62 I

Tr State Mob e
Home Sales
Ph 446 7572
12x50 966 L berty
12x50 963 Lakewood
2x52 1970 F eetwood
8x35 1957 Ma te e
OXS-4 1959 Etcar
Ox50 1965 Star AI E ec c
8x45 1954 Vagabond
Ox45 960 Magno a
8x27 1953 Trotwood
958 S y e Mas er
955 E car
955 Westwood
955 S ar ne
962 W ndsor Ox:5S 3 bd m
39

T'F; 'fOU a e bu ld ng d new
home or embdel ng see us
we a e bu lders D s r bu or
for Hotpo nt App ances
AsonEecrc
154 t

og

JACK'S AWNING
SALES &amp;SERVICE
AWNINGS
STORM WINDOWS
&amp; DOORS

FOR

FREE ESTIMATE
CAll 675-3094
JACK L WOODRUFF

~

a

•
•
•

~

L

•
•••
•

•••
••

SOUTHEASTERN
POLLED HEREFORD SALE
FRIDAY, MARDi 29th-7:00 P.M •
Rock Spnngs Fairgrounds Pomeroy, Oh10

•

••
••
•

2

••

•

For Information:
Mrs. Virginia Anderson
Rt 2

"

~

•

••

••
•
'

•
rt
••

MASSIE
Realty 32 State St
Tel 4461998

ADD SON
4 bd m
arne
Ra n h on a a gc a o Has
eve y h ng a I carpe o e
H W
cen a
F P n ec
m
\1
m 5 x 26 and a
k.
hen heM s w
o e A
h s or $32 soo

For sa e an a I b ck home w thaI n shed tam ly room n
tle t ul base nent Has J spac ous bedrooms A fourth
bed oom or wo kshop could be n th e basement A I
elect c w th cent a a r cond ton ng two ca r ga age w h
elect c doo
e y a ac 'lie k tchen w th ange d sh
was 2 d sposa d n ng a ea opens on o a a ge pa o
ba hs beau t u ca pe t ng Th s hovse s on a lla o n a
n ce co mmun y

RUSSEL~

WOOD
REALTOR

4461066

~

l]:ll !2l
~ t rJ;/hDIIfi/JIL

: ),lt ~~~~~I"~·
1l

Oak Hill, Oh10 456Ss

"We've Got The Better Of The Best"

Split Levels
(we have2)
BEAUT FUL 3 BEDROOM
W TH
BATHS CE N
TRAL
A R
COM
PLETELY
BU LT N
2
CAR
K TCHEN
GARAGE
FAM LY
ROOM EVERYT H NG A
FAM LY NEEDS AND
PR: CEO SO YOU CA N
AFFORT T

We Have
The Homes
A
YOU NEED
S A
GOOD
JOB
GOO D
CRED
AND A DOWN
PAYMENT
COME
N
AND SEE US
PR CES
W LL NEVER BE TH S
LOW AGA N

OHIO RIVER
Realty

BEAT THE FUE CR S S
N
TH S
LARGE
4
BEDROOM HOM E W TH 2
WOOD
BURN NG
F REPLACES 2 BA HS 2
CAR GARAGE 2 LOTS
HUGE FA M LY ROOM
W FE
APPROVED
K TCHEN
W
H G E
APP
ANCES
FULL
BA S EMENT
THE
OWNER OF TH S BR CK
HOME MUST SELL M
MED ATELY PR CEO N
MD FORTES

us

35
(New L1stmgl
E XC E L

E NT

PUBLIC
AUCTION
THURS, APR 4

11 AM
Completed spersa l of da ry
herd farm mac h ne y da ry
equ pment

DARRELL PARSONS
3

BEDROOM BR CK HOME
W TH HUGE BU L
N
K
C H EN
ALL
AP
P
A N CES BU
T
N
ARGE LV NG ROOM
W TH
WOODBURN N G
F REPLACE
FULL
BA EME NT
OVELY
PANE EO WALLS PLUS
2 CAR GARAGE
A ND
OVER I ACRE OF LAND
OWNE R MOV NG
TO
M CH GAN
TH S ONE
WON
LAST LONG AT
!1.
450 DO
DOWN
PAYMEN

Porter brook
EXCE LEN
BU D NG
LOT
20x 80
OWNER
VERY
ANX OUS
TO

SE

West Co umb a W Va
John McNe 1-Auct
Full I st ng n next Sundays
Ed I on

TARA

DEVEWPMENT
CORP.

NEW
HOMES
FOR SALE
Bu ld ng
snes
Ava lable K ngsberry
Homes bu It to f t any
spec f cat1ons
All
Underground

Utli t es

Prov ded

-----------For lnformahon
Or Appomtment

PHONE
367-7250
AddiSOn

0

TARA
Townhouse
Apartments
2 Bedroom

Townhouses
Ph Baths

HOUSE IN CITY

Pay Only One
Uhhty
Add1son Ohio

-------For lnformahon
Call Shirley Adkms

367-7250

For Sale

PUBLIC AUCTION

ST RT
d near 3 A
S m
house w th ba h and fu
hea
Good ga den ng and
and on y 4 m
f om own
$ 3 500
Any hr 4&lt;tfl '1911

sell anyth ng for
a_nyb&lt;Hiy at our Auction
Barn or tn your home For
mformahon and pickup
servtce call 256 6967 after 5

pm

PENNSVILLE, OHIO
SAW MILL EQUIPMENT, TRACTORS,
TRUCKS, LOADERS, ETC.
SATURDAY, MARCH 30 AT 12:30 PM
10 M1les Southwest of McConnelsville Oh10
towards Chesterhill on 51 Rt 377'" Pennsville
by the Embree Park
D scontmu1ng our sawm1ll IDgg ng and
lumber operat ons W II sell complete m
ventory of equ pment Most of th s equ pment
1s n good work ng cond ton Br on t me Not
many small tems to be sold Sale held
regardless of weather No I unch served
Pos1t1ve I D Terms- Cash day of Sale Not
respons ble for ace dents

Every Saturday Noght

Box 169

HERES A L ARGE NEW 3
BEDROOM HOME ON
ACR:E
W W
CARPET
THROUGHOUT
N CE
LARGE
BATH
P US
FU L BASEMENT AND
GARAGE 52500 DOWN 30
YRS TO PAY $ 69 PER
MO PR CE $24 900 00

Sprmg Valley
&lt;New Llstmg)

Of 446 2674
In Town
Luc te Brannon
Eve 446 1226o 446 2674
(New
L1stmg)
CENTE NARY
New 3 bd l1 The syn pa e
ne ghbo
NEW L STING
b ck and
ame an h a
MODERN
3 BEDROOM
app cached he fa me who ONE a e o w t1 a 2 de uxe
carpe
a
e ec w h hea
HOME
W TH
ARGE
was
busy
w
t1
hamme
and
mob l e home
,. x 65
pumpand en a
\1 m 3
K TCHEN W TH LOTS OF
saw
H ear your w e
s
39 Acres
B R 2 ba h s w w shag
x B
equ pped k chen a
CAB NET S
ARGE
fu n shed w ndow a
paneled
ba hs and you
LVNG
ROOM
SC HO OL
N
C TV
d
one
u
a
wa
e
can
have
mmed a e
CERAM C BATH AND
A VERY
D S R CT
DIAL YOUR
possess on
F=ULL
BASEMENT
W
TH
4
F
NE
HOME
OWN WEATHER
C
O
SE
TO
GO F
BEDROOMS
N TH S beau fu a
e ec r c
ST RT
60
N ew 5 ms 'l
COURSE
OWNER HA S
BEAUT FUL NEW W F=E
k
anch
home
3
BR:
b
baths aund y m and b g 2
MOVED
A ND
N
APPROVED
K TCHEN
ba h
de uxe k chen w h
ca
ga
h s hou se
a
TERESTED
N QU CK
APPL ANCES BU L T N
sposa
d
shwa
he
oven
d
e ec
a
c a pe
R us
SALE
EXCELLENT
2 BATHS
and ange w w ca pe u
y
s a ned wood s d ng and
NE GHBORHOOO
AND
263 Acres
oom
u
bas men
'1 ca
oca ed on a
A
o Good
CLO SE
TO
GOOD
ga age w h e ec c doo s
house good o a on and n
L1sllngl
(New
F SH N G
S TO
8 A
Deep
o
90
x
235
good buy
T
LLABLE
BALA
NC
E
pe and
Reasonab e down pay men
U ST 3 M LES FROM
PAS TURE AND WOODS
owne w
he p n an e
GAL
POL S
W TH
V NTON 4 ms and bath A
g on ba c k o o
FARM
NEARLY 2 M LE O F
pane ed and a peed
has
40 ACRES eve
and 25 A
ROAD FRO NTA GE MOS
a um s d ng and new roo
6 M1les Out
Racoon bot om obacco base
AL
TH S LA ND
S
Th s house has been
om
a ge o a 32 Ga e d A en e
a ge ba n and au bu d ngs
DEVELOPABLE
FOR
pee y emode ed
a ge o
&lt;New
L1stmgl
Th
s
h
ee
bed
oom
hom
e
has
a m pond we wa e Good
RES DENT AL USE
00
80ll9hf to $ 4 00
ha dwood
oo s
u
wo sto y 4 BR home w h
A
T LLABLE
20 A
OOK
NG
FOR
A
GREAT
ba eme n
k tchen
w h
bah P ce$30 OOOand on y 0
TY
Upper 4 hAve 6 ms
PASTURE
AND
AP
HOME
HERES A 5
cab ne s and b eak as a ea
m es I om own
a ge ba h and aund y oom
PROX MATEL Y 40 A OF
BEDROOM
HOME
Sx 5 \1 ng oom S25 000
ACREAGE
P enty new cab ne s n k
T MBER ONE OF THE
THAT
S
U ST
20ACRES Anexe en fam
hen ga age and a ge o
LARGEST TRACKS OF
BEAUT
FUL
LARGE
Va an and on Ceo ge s C eek
to
t wo
am es w h
wo
Bough or s 7 000
LAND AVA LABLE TH S
L
\1
NG
FORMAL
Road
F om one a e
o
a ge modern homes
00
CLOSE
TO
TOWN
Sf ~T 7 5
NE::W 5 rm
DIN
NG
COMPLETELY
seven y ac es P ck ou wha
a r es good
mber
60 A
PR CEO AT SS65 PER
BULT
N
KTCHEN
2
am e and b
k
ba hs a
you need and we nego a a
abe ba an e n pas ure 3
ACRE
BATHS HUGE FAM LY
E ec
a ca pet fu
base
p ce
a
ge ba rn s p en y wa er
doub e ca po and oc a ed on
ROOM
2
CAR
GARAGE
ss o;no
OWNER TRANSFERRED
:J
ac e o Th s house has Coun y Home 4 m es
ON A LARGE FLAT LOT
FRAME RANCHER
om
MUST se
nearly new
4
328 sq 1
a ea and an
N R:ELAXEO CO UNTRY
c y on 2 H
Bed oom 1 a me
BR
bah
ea
n
k
chen
ATMOSPHERE
bedroom
2 bath
tam y
be bough fo $25 000
w th 2 ba hs 2 acres and
cen ra a
gas FA furna ce
room 2 ca garaoe cen ra
$33 000
a ge e\le o near hasp a
a
538 900
ow down
TYCOON LAKE
Bus ness
Pr ce S26 000
paymen
w h v qua e s p u s J m
- 30 Acres
5 AC es
5
abe
nca
S ACRES
ATTENTION
hou se and found a on o h d
C TY SC HOOL D ST
Ty coon Lake w h a
9 2 LARGE wo soy home 4 BR
BARGAIN HUNTER
house 3 ac e o The bund e
VERY GOOD 3 OR 4
Eskew Mob e Ho me 4x72 3
bath w w a pet ng a ge
4 BEDROOM
ba hs am y
fo $27 000
BEDROOM HOME NEW
bed ooms and
ba h
ea
n
k chen
carpo
room den beau fu k hen
ROOF
NEW
A
UM
sp ng wa e
sep
ank
$
000 w
blly
h s n e
a ached ga age
arge fa
ST RT 35
NEW S ms
S D NG
VERY
N CE
$ 0 000
coun y home ove ook ng the
o
Exce len
cond on
ba hs fu base 2 ca ga
K TCHEN
F REPLACE
ve
$24 000
arge f a t o Th s hou se s no
NEW
FURNACE
I
3 Aed oom mod e n b ck hom e
2 ACRES
PRICE REDUCED
bough
as s fo
n shed
BATHS
W W
CAR
0
ac
es
F
n
shed
J
BR anche
Beau
tu
de
uxe
OWNER must se
h s a
$21 500 F nan ng a\la abe
PET
NG
TH
S
I
S
A
hea ed garage
k chen and d n ng a ea
coun y
home
s
n
VERY
GOOD
HOME(
3
a r ond on ng A
m !e o own S2 000
beau
fu
cond
ton
Yo
u
mus
SMA LL OUT BU LD NGS
0
IN TOWN
beau u nome oca ed on
see
6 ac e 1 a o F s
AND A LARGE BARN
ms
k R dg e Road $4 500
6 ROOMS and bah n own
reasonab e offer buys
arpe a
a ge
am y
oom w h
81 Levels
Ve y n e 2 bed oom b c k
ep ace
ea n k chen
Ga t a Co s La gest Rea
mode n k chen
ep ace
aund y and sew ng room
Estate Sales Agency
&lt;wehave3)
a ge ga age ou bu d ngs
basemen
and
ga age
Off ce 446 36~3
oca ed n c y $26 000
oca ed on a ge orne
o
Evenings Ca I
VERY N CE d BEDROOM
S2d 000
FUL Y
CARPETED
Ike
W
seman 446 3796
N TOWN n 000
F arne home on
ac e 3
VERY N CE K TCHEN
E N W seman 446 3~
ooms
bah
Kyge
c
eek
bed
A
ARGE
S
he
ncudng4
CROUSE BECK RD
T
HUGE FAM LV ROOM 2
S hoo D s
On Bu a
e
BR an
{).1{) H S pa
Bud McGhee 446 1255
L eve 6 rm s
ba hs 2
BATHS 2 CAR GARAGE
basemen
'
"
&amp;.
42
X 180
6
m
e
om
Ga
po
Road
ysod HW
oos
A o
deep o A ea nves men
I
00
Th s sa good house a d ou d
p
ope y
oca ed on Th d
o he ask ng n C own C y
no be bu
A e
bed oom
p c.e oday $32 000
BR: CK &amp; FRAME
am e
ba h
f ep a e
NEAR new 3 B R a
e ec r c
a por and u y u n shed
BUHL MORTON R D
yr
$22 000
home w w arpe
n ce k t
o d a me b k
m 5 rms
3 Bdrm
b&lt;ltk
paneled
chen w th nea by ut
y
baths a ca pe a e e
0 F F C E 446 066
basement
fenced
1n
oom
po
h
ga
age
a
ge
Oscar Ba rd
pat o
cove ed
Th s s a
EVEN NGS
e'lle o
00 x 230 S22 000
backyard
carport w1th
Russe I Wood 446 46 8
Doug Weatherho t
be all y On y S2bt800
L STINGS
Brokers
Ron Canaday 446 3636
storage raom w w carpet
WANTED
OFFICE 446 343~
John I R cha ds 446 0280
9M DOWN RVER
2so Y
Ga
po .s Golf Course
n
NOW s he
me o s you
BERGER AVE
N ce frame
br ck base a ca pet
v
p
ope
y
lo
ea
y
Sp
ng
rear
1108
Sunset
Dr
Priced
home w h lu
basement
rm
S x 36 w th F P A SO
LOT S n Pan z 5 bd \1 son
sa e
Ca
he BRA NNON
tn 20 s 446 952J or 446 1443
a mos
new na u a
gas
has 2nd house w th 4 rms 2 A
Phone46 0390
REALTY
oday
T
W
LL
u na e
o a ted on a n ce
R \le v ew o $45 ooo
68
PAY
WE SELL BE TER
e\le ot P ced at S S SOO
L
V
NG
EVERGREEN
5 ms and
Buy d reef from owner lots
OTS
50 x 209
on good
SPR NG VALLEY
Lovely
bath u heat s o m d s and
m the c tv or country or
J
b a k op oad u a wa e
an
de
an h home th ee bed ooms
wn$4000
m es rom own 4 6 2586
acreage
Co111pare
a ge fam y oom cen ra a r
69
3
68
3
COUNTRY ARES ATES
anywhere look at the rest
basemen
ond 1 on ng fu
y o d b ck and a um 3 b g
w th wo ca ga age
then buy the best 2 large
bdrms
baths a ca rp et
08 ACRES mod e n home w o
houses for sale n the c ty
huge 2 ca gar and a a ge
w ca pe
exce en
3 BR
STATE RT 588
Ve y n ce
Rob erl
A
Quel!lo
1026
a ot S36 900
ond on Pho e 256 65 0
h ee bedroom home one and
Second Ave 446 o-.8
66 6
one half baths fu y ca peted
GARF ELD AVE
5 m
one ca r garage w th concre e
am e w h ba e
A um
d \le Located on an ce a ge
s d ng s orm dr s and w n
o and pr ced r ght a S24 000
Nea
new gas
u
P
e
5 500
BE LOW GAL L POL S
Good
A L
TYPES
of
bu d ng
h ee bed oom home
two
80 A S OCt\
a m on S Rt
m!!l eras b o k b ck sewe
ba hs basemen n ce lo
a
5 40 A
abe ba
n
p pes w ndows
n e s e
ea good buy or S 7 SOD
pas u e
Ba n 60
x
A
C au de W n e s R o G ande
Cone e e s o 6 x so w h
0 P:tlone
245 5 2 a er 523 f
972 New Moon
.,
Good B m house
un loa de
67 6 B DWELL
2x60 beau fu mob e home
and othe ou b dgs Th s arm
u y ca peted county water
s c ean has good
en es
3
BEDROOM
n ce
o
o a ed on a a g e eve lo A
pond and has been med and
Cathed a
e ng one
a
barga n a S8 500
le
ed A good buy lo
garage C ose o new hosp a
FOR SALE
$d) 000
Phorle d46 324
FOURTH AVE
Large four
1966 Ponl ac Execut ve 2 dr
6 ACRE Baby fa m on Dav s
bed oom home bath to ced
hard lop excellent cond ton
Rd barn ob base f u and
a fv nace good ocC!t on on C!
s ROOM house w h ba h n
be
es Good 6 m house
newt es I ke new $795 Ph
deep o
W
rade o he p
uppe end o Sy acuse Ph
w h ba h Good ba n and
nance
f
446 2448
367 7 36
f enc es P ce 5 3 500
638 EUREKA
Good I amehome
27 A Sou h of Cadmus on St R
tour bed ooms bath large
Mos s ean and t abe
me at ga age oca ed on a.
2 houses and me a ba n
n ce !eve
o
P ced at
$ A 000
p ce reduced o S 6 000
JO ACRES
Vacant ground
th s s a rea good fa m w h
SO A Southeas t of A bany
DO
for y acres crop and ba ance
A t abe good arm home 2
n pas ure
and and
wo
b g ba n s 2 ca L ck gar
ponds Located on Bu av I e
meta c band o her ou bldgs
Po e Rd
A good buv a S37 500

57 LOTS OF TOP PROSPECTS

--~-----~-

CARNAHAN AUCTION

25 A

HOUSE 3 bedroom and ba h
ce tar outbu ld ng on 6 A of
and
good we 1 clos~
o
sa em Center
Fo
mo e
nforma on ca I 4A6 0607
66 6

~~~9~~~-CIO.

0

A

ln'9'estment Properf'f
4 FAMILY dwe I ng located on a
larg~
ot on Second Ave
Pror)trtv s n good cond on
ca
today for an
ap
polntment
Ole Phone 446 16t4
Even ngs
Charles M Neal 446 1546
J Michael Neal446 1503
Sam Neal 446 7358

1

Wanted To Buy

Wanted To Do

Bi level three bedrooms 1

'Heal Realty

NEW

--~--::_:c --:-,----~---

42

NEAR OAK H LL
128 A
cab n $10 000
Ranny Blackburn
Branch Manager

1

Real Estate For Sale

HAR R SON TWP
woodland S6 700

TYCOO LAKE- 4S A w th a
late
odel mob e home
$2() 000

GENERAL MECHANIC
INDUSTRIAL ELECTRICAL REPAIR

O'DELL TERMITE

on

C TY SCHOOL D ST
30 A
good farm
and
can be
bough on a and contract

INDUSTRIAL MAINTENANCE

The Goodyear T1re
Rubber Com
pany's Pt Pleasant Chemacal Plant
located at Apple Grove m Mason Co 1s
seekmg qualified applicants for the
followmg pos1tlons

J WH TE RD
3 new
homes - 1 sp t toye and 2
ranches Each s ful y car
peted and otal e ec r c w h
factory k tchens 2 baths and
ga ages These are Qual y
bu homes and p ced o se I

C1ty School D1sl

GREEN ACRES SUBDIVISION

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

BIDWELL $ 2 500
Bagan
priced 2 story home fea u es
rms and bah n ce aund y
eel ar and garage Low down
payment f you qua ty

TH S LARGE
0 ROOM
HOME
S
N AN EX
CELLENT
NE GH
BORHOOD A ND N VERY
GOOD CO ND TON YOU
MUST SEE
T TO AP
PREC ATE
T
NO
REASONABLE
OFFER
W
L
BE
REFUSED
PR CEO AT $29 500
MAKE OFF=ER

FOR SALE BY OWNER
"33,000

PHONE 446-3791

--------~-

THE

Setond Ave

$23 000
3
m
basemen

~

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

AGENCY

EVANS HE GHTS
A sma l
down paymen w f
et you
move nto h s va can home
with .t BRs ca peed LR and
d n ng
m
fu
basemen
with fam ly rm
aund y rm
and wo kshop
Fut
p ce
$19 500

M&amp;M
ROOF NG &amp; Spout ng Sh ngle
&amp; Bu dup roof Hot &amp; Co d
process Home mprovement
n
genera
For
free
est mates
phone Robert
Meade 388 81 4 Bidwell
Oh o
230 If

Cal
C K Snowden
Ph 446 4290

WISEMAN

HOLCOMB H LL
Love y 2
story
home
w h
full
base ment has room o spa e
The modern k tchen nc udes
a d sp d shwasher eye I eve
oven and lots of cab ne s
Other features a e 4 BRs 2
balhS breakfast rm
fo rna
fam y m
ec
d n ng rm
rm
2 W B f ep aces ho
water heat pat o and ga age

THOMAS Fal:"' Exte m nat ng
co Term e and Pest Contra
Wheelersburg Ohio
233 If

s

11IE

"World's Largest

you mob te home
DOWN ANCHORS
Sk dmo e 446 756
m

We rent mob le home lot~~
DON 'f R EAO TH SAD
UNLESS you mean bLIS ness
S ROOM house and ba h
wo
not 1ust a place to park your
We &amp; e now cons de ng
ca ga age 2 sto y on Ca r son
home We have more to offer
qua t ed app ca n s n you
Road
n Mason
Co n a
thar't any mob le communtty
SEPT C TANKS CLEANED
a ea o become a wo k ng
773 5606
Russe Ba
n Southeastern Oh10
DEAD STOCK
pa
of ou
Nat on a
Ho
REASONABLE ra es Ph 446
3 2 f
TERMITE PEST CONTROL
W LL remove at a reason ab e
Food
o st bu or Sys em
4782 Gal pol s John R usse
FREE nspecton Cal 4463245
charge Cat 2d5 5514
You a e not app y ng o a
Owne and Ope a o
Merr II 0 Oe I Operator by
2 2 f
ob You are app y ng for a
o ACRES ot pasture land on
5 12 tfc
70
Exte minal Term te Service
WE w SH o exp ess ou hanks
'lie y h gh p o
bus ness o
U S Rou e 33 $300 pe ac e
o Be mont Dr
o eve yone who was so k nd
your own NO EX PER ENCE
AROBIC
No bu d ngs Fo add on a SEPT C TANKS
267 If
w SH o express my ap
BURLILE HEATING
and
hough fu
du ng
he
NECE SSARY
NO
nto ma on phone 992 2 20
D P Ma t n &amp; Son Water
SEWAGE
SYS TEMS
p ec at on o the docto s and
AND COOLING
!ness and dea h of Be ty
SEL L NG INVO LVED Th s
3 24 3
CLEANED
REPA RED
Del very
Serv ce
Your STEWART E ectr cal Serv ce
nu ses who a ended to my o L Gas and electr c sa es and
Jean Pa ker We espec a y
bus ness can be s ar ed par
patronage
w 1
be
ap
M LLER
SA N TAT ON
needs du ng my ong s ay a
R:epe r
house wir ng
serv ce 24 hour se \1 ce 7 o 5
w sh o hank those send ng
me
no need to qv you
STEWART OH 0 PH 662
p eciated Ph 446 0463
Ho zer
Med cal
Center
electric heating Phone 4.46
4116 41 9 after 5 446 2519
f o a offer ngs food ca ds
A be
ob Can be expanded ful
3035
2 If
Spec a
hanks to at
my
63 If
4561
a
he v s tors
Wa ker
mew h company f nanc ng
3 20 6 p
10 4 tfc
27 If
eat ves ar~d f ends for he
~ une a
Home pa bearers
we need peep e we can
v s s
owe s
ards and
docto s and the nurs ng staff
TOOL
sharpen ng
saws
SE PT C
TA NK S c eaned
depend on Our produ s a e 2 BEDROOM house n M d
p ayers
SEPTIC TANKS
on the second f oo ol Ho ze
sc sso s shears home and
TRAIN WITH
Modern San ta on 992 3954 o
nat on a y famous
Ho
d epor Se by owne pr ced
M s van Grove
Cleaned a[ld nstalled
Med ca Center Rev Lloyd
ga den too s
s ~arp
Shop
992 7349
Food
ems We have O\le 36
Phone 949 3832
FULL PAY
70
R uuell s Plumb ng 446 4782
0 se
A ley rear 147 Second
Grimm for h s canso ng
\lar et es of Ho Soups and Ho
3 20 6
0 23 fc
297 If
words
p an s
8 Pnda
2
6
If
mmed a e
open ngs
for
t::ntrees such as Bee S ew
WE W SH to exp ess our s n
Bolin
Janet
Bot n
spec a tra n ng n Meehan ca1
Ch cken &amp; DumpIngs Ch
&amp;
e e hanks to Ho zer Med ca
Margarel Edwa ds
oan
C B~AOFONU Auct onee
NVESTMENT PROPERTY
Elec ron cs
Av at on and STEVERS Truck Serv ce an
Beans
and
on
and
on
We
Center
and
staff
Med
ca
Fetty Mar e L tt e who
Comp e e Se v ce
nounces the open ng of 2.4 hour
0 acres o
and n Rock
c er ca f elds n he U S Navy
have
a
of
Arne cas
P
aza
and
staff
f
ends
and
are members of the R ~nrt
Phone 949 382 o 949 3 6
oad serv ce n Gal po s and
Sp ng s Oh o Th s and s
Pay
starts
a
S326
per
monfh
favor es A
hese de c ous
ne Qhbors
a so Rev Ron rom f rst day - We turn sh
Fr endly Gardeners C ub for
RacneOho
su rounding area Located on
par of an a ea subd \1 ded lo
produc s a e sold f om the
Pe ry and s ngers M cCoy &amp;
GENE PLANTS &amp; SDN
her help at home membe s
C
B adfo d
Fa f eld
Church
Road
new houses but due to the
quarters food and e oth ng
ates
n aut om at c \lend ng
Moo e Funera Home fo
he
PLUMB NG
Heat ng
Ar
of the Me gs County Sher ff s
Ga I po s We are on ca I 2d
Me gs
Coun y
Plann ng
Sc hool gua an ees before you
equ pment Your route w I be
f ne ca e and he p tha was
Conalt on ng 300 Fourth Ave
Department and Ru and
hou
s
a
day
1
days
a
week
Comm
ss
on
egu
at
ons
and
s
gn
up
es ab shed and ns a ed bv
shown to us n our mothe s
Ph 446 1637
Marsha
Bruce Dav s we
EX AVAT NG dozer
Ph 614 4d6 9329 or on you C B
my heal h
mus set
w
BE SOMEONE SPEC AL
us You age s no a la c o
f
ness and death Mrs Anna
48 tf
s ncere y hank everyone who
and
backhoe
wo
k
ad o
ca
B g
Daddv
sel a I o any part B
W e
N THE NEW NAVY
you quat fy Perfecl to an ce
M Knox
helped n anyway Husband
----- ----~ ------anks nsta led dump
Rock Spr ngs 992 2 89
Fo
more
nfo
cal
o
v
s
t
your
coup e o opera e as a fam y
Channel
D
The Knox Fam y
CARTERS PLUMB NG
Homer Parker daughter Mr
and o boys for h e w
hau
3 24 8 c
bus ness
CASH
N
10 1 Navyman at
AND HEATING
and Mrs
ames Carpenter
f
d
top
so
I
mes
one
RALPH
RODEHAVER
VESTMENT REQU RED
---Cor Fourth &amp; P ne
paren s M
and Mrs Roy
and gravel ca Bob o Roger
57 II
Ch ef Mach n s s Ma e ss
PART T ME
NEW 3 bed oom home
bah
Pr.one 446 3888 or 446 4477
Snowden
etters day phone 992 7089
Te ephone 6 &lt;I 593 3566PLAN ONE
$2 285 00
garage basement on Grave
3 24 c PLAN TWO
165 If
n gh phone 992 3525 o 992
To Free 8013 282 1288
GILLENWATr::R !!:;,EPT C
3 86 00
H I M dd epo I Na tura gas
5232
N&amp;vyRec utngSaton
TANK
CLEAN NG
AND
PLAN THREE
7 7 9 00
a ready
n
Phone Da e
RUSSELL 5
ftc BETTER JOBS a e ava able
2
22 Co umbus Road
R EPA R
ALSO
HOUSE
FULL T ME
Dutton 992 3369 even ngs
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
for GBC graduates
En o
Athens Oh o 4570
WRECK NG Ph 446 9499
992 2534
PLAN FO UR
Sll 279 00
Gall polls U6 4712
now
for
nex
qua e
E s abl shed n 940
PL AN F VE
8 998 00
7 ttc DOZER wo k and c ear ng by
Ga pol s Bus ness Col ege
29711
the ac e hou ly o con ract
ouR: hear te thanks tot ends PLANS X
69 f
)6 798 00
51 No 71 02 00328
ta m ponds oads e c Large
and ne ghbors fo the r many FOR fu th er nfo ma on o a
FUL new homes now
DEW TT S PLUMBING
so 90
doze and operator w h over
exp ess ons of sympathy a
ALBERT EHMAN
pe sonal
nte v ew
send BEAUT
unde canst uc on n pr me
AND HEATING
20 yea s expe ence Pu n s
the death of ou dea
ather
Water De very Serv ce
Name Add ess and Phone
oca on on c y wate and
Route 160at Evergreen
Ex:cava ng Pome oy Oh o
and husband Spec a hanks
Pa rotS a Rt Gall po s
Numbe o Nor h Ame can
sewer Cho ce of des gns Wa
Phone 446 2735
Phone 992 2478
REE home demonst at ons of
to the m n ste s M
C to d
D s
bu ng Co p Ho Food
Ph 379 2 33
ca pe ng and a r
o wal
48 If
87 tf
E ect o u x produc s Cal 675
Sm h and Mr John Amstu z
2 19 ttc
243
D v sons
8828 N
Cent a
co nd ton ng
ncluded
W
- - - - - -- 3490 be ween 9 and 0 a m We
to Mrs Edna Ams u z and
~------A\lenue Pt1oen x A zona
help
ar ange
f nanc ng
STANDARO
DOLl:. I( and back hoe work
also
have
E ec o ux CALL Polys Autt on or sop by
Ge a d
Powell
for
he
BANKS TREE SERVICE
85020
convent on a loans w th down
P umblng &amp; Heating
ponds and sept
anks d
C eane s 569 75 and up ~u
beaut tul mus c he Pome oy
3 24
p
FREE
es
maes
ab
tv
n
o
ge
d
of
hose
llr}wanted
paymen ow as 5 pet 0 he
2 4Th rd Ave .t46 3782
op so I f I
gua an ee
ch ng se \1 ce
Emergency Squad and he
surance Prun ng tr mming
ems Set t the auct on way
new homes ava tab e
o
187 If
dr
mesone
B&amp;K Ex
If
Ew ng Fun era
Home We
and ca v y work I ee and
537
H
gh
s
M
dd
epor
992
qua fed buyers w h NO
cavat ng Phone 992 5367 o
apprec a e the tende care
stump
emova
Ph
446
4953
3509
Open
9
5
Monday
DOWN PAYMENT
Ca
g ven at the Elmwood Nur
992 386
13 tf
Wednesday
Thursday
co eel 6 4 837 6540 o 239 0785
9 1 fc
s ng Home and by the nu ses LADY o ve n Phone 992 2936
Fr day t I noon
PAY
at
eas
pie
face
\lalue
o
w
e
G
ea
Arne
ca
n
3 24 J c
at Holze Hosp tal and Or
6 30 SA NDY &amp; BEAVER nsurance
for U s s lver co ns $4 each
Hom es nc P 0 Box: 687
W L L TRIM or Cll
rees and
Harder and Or
Brubake
-:-.--c-:c-:c-=- --- - - --,-- -,-Co has offered serv ces to
fo
s
I
'lie
do
a
s
a
he
Co
n
Pome
oy
Oh
o
45769
shrubbe y A so c ean ou
The congrega ons of he SOMEONE o s !!IY
N SURANCE for a your needs
F re nsu ance coverage n
Show a Ga 1 po s Hot day
3
fc
Ca t 992 3439 to
basements at cs etc Ca I
Pomeroy Church of Chr s
Ray Hawk d.46 2300
Ga 1 a County for almost a
nn Sunday March 3
974
forma on
949 l22 0 742 d44
and the Bradford Church of
60 tf
Century Farms homes and
Co
n
exchange
Ga
y
Wolfe
3
24
3
c
Chr s we e wonderful to us
3 4 261C
pe sona property coverage
10
1
We sha I never to ge
he --,-~-:c-:c~c-c-:c~--~~N•~c'~o:~
ME
a e ava abe to meet n
k ndnesses extended o us by
SEWING MACH N ES Repa r
d v dua needs Contact your
o ul
me
so many The He ber M le
serv ce a makes 992 2284
ne ghbor and agent
Don
o
supply
Company
4
BALES
of
tw
neon
R
7
near
Fam ly
The Fab c Shop Pomeroy :»OR RY
w I no anger serv ce
Pamer
es ab shed accounts w h
3 24 c
Chesh
re
Owne
would
ap
Au hor zed S nger Sales and
mach nes f not sold by
61 6
R:CA CBS D sney Reco ds
p ec a e re u n w th no
- - - - ------Serv ce We Sha pen Sc ssors
S mmons Ptg
&amp;
Off ce
ncome poss b t es up to
ques ens asked Return to
WE WOULD ke o thank a of
Equ pment We serv ce only
3 29 tfc
Gallipol s
S 000 pe mon h w h on y
Tom Van co Ph 2d5 5652
our fr ends for the k nd
what we set
$3 500 equ red fo
nven ory
70 1
nesses
shown
us
upon
OPEN Roger Hyse Is Garage
57 If
INCOME PROPERTY
and t an ng Ca COLLECT
-----------~-----he
death
of
our
nea C oss cad s on St Route
-------Exc1hng
$8011
00 month renlor In
for M
ames (21d 661 9208
mother Mrs Maude Sco
124 8 30 o 6 p m Monday
3 24 4 p
Spec a
hanks
o Rev
eluding
Frosty Freeze 2
New Home
hrough satu day PhOne 992
Robert Bumgarner for h s
5682
dr
992
7 21
acres
of
land across from
1
n
Apply
person
help and con sol ng words To CAR HOPS
YOU
WONT BEL EVE
222
26c
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
~
.
.
.
.
.
.
~
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.
.
.
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.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
House
S
eak
Crow
s
boat
club
In
Ga Ill!&gt;&lt;&gt; lis A real
or J J Oav s M ddlepo t
YOUR EYES WHEN YOU
Pomeroy
nvestment with $800 00
Dr
Ty er and nurses of
DON
T
fUSS
uon
t
cuss
turn
We
Say
EXTERMITAL
s
Termite
STEP INS DE TH S NEW
3 24 61C
Ho zer
Med cal
Cen er
your unk automob les over to
monthly Income See It
SPL T
LEVEL
HUGE
&amp; Pest Control Service Is Your
Max ne and Char ey Gask
us R vers de Auto Wreck ng
3 LARGE BEDROOMS
L V NG ROOM WITH A
Raw ngs coats
Funeral
Phone (304) 773 5890
&amp;
Price!
LOVELY BALCONY EF
Nice
brick home nice large
Home c ass 2 of he Un ted
3 7 26 c
FECT GONG TO THE 3
Methods Church Beulah
andscaped
fenced In yard
You en ask eny of ou muy 111 sf eel
~-~ :R:-t~c=-E
= -~ ~c'="'o=No:s:o.T?R:--cu:-:C.~T: -~-=o N
LARGE
BEDROOMS
Strauss
Bob McE h nny
C en I n r&lt;!U I Ill WI
lfad )' IUp
wood fireplace and gas
ack w a burn and at who
BEAUTIFUL
BU L T N
Roof ng
spout ng
k tchens
PlY he nimH on equul) about
forced
air
furnace
sen he beaut fu cards and
OAK
CAB NETS
W TH
and bathrooms Complete
EXTERM TAl S lObi preted on p en
wh
h no on y dt you PfOPift)' of
tru
The daughters Es he
Breezeway porch By !self
emodet
ng
Phone
742
6273
QUAL TY
APPL ANCES
For
te m et but lito I IS a 5 WU lUI
(Sco y
S mpson
and
BU LT N t:OMPLETELY
12 3 fc
off of Rl 35 appro• one m le
ufle n w 1na: be ked by • comb ned
Do o hy Jean wa ke
CARPETED FOR: DAD
A
cnh
111rve
of
0\'1
m
an
da
Ia
1
to hosp This house and lot
3 24 lie
LARGE 2 CAR GARAGE
tpecl ons and w Hen
In excellent condition Must
IPOrts-t 1t one ow cost o }'Oil
WITH WORKSHOP PLUS 2
ou R s nee e thankS for he
w h e111 pe~ment te mt IYI tb 1
see to appreciate
ACRES
TO
PUTTER
many k ndnesses extended
3 20 6tc
( Bulav111et
AROUNO
ON
LOCATED
N
CALL
TODAY
FOR
A
FREE
ESTIMATE
Qualified
applicants
may
apply
at
the
Dept
of
ctur ng the ness and dea h of
RUTLAND
YOU
MUST
Beautiful
new trl level brick
our
son
and
bro he
I-\U1 Orv uo Lt:: nsurance oeen
Employment Secunty 1n PI Pleasant
SEE THE INSIDE OF THIS
Law ence Harr son Spec a
hom,e, over J 1100 sq It living
cance ed?
Lost
your
ONE TO APPRECIATE T
thanks o the staff of Veterans
Charleston Huntmgton or Gallipolis Ohio or
ope ato s I cense Ca
992
~~:.:.,4 bedrooms 3 baths
Memor a
Hosp ta
Hotze
7d28
by
wr1llng
to
Personnel
Dept
a pane doors and
Med ca
Cen er
D
John
OFFICE 446 3643
Pomeroy Ohio
wil1dows . Electric heat
R dgway
Dr
Neal Pen
The Goodyear T1re &amp; Rubber Co
EVENINGS
dergas Rev Noel He mann
air conditioned
Bud McGhee-446 1255
P 0 Box9
Rev
Ron Moyer for
he EDP Oa a Entry Ope a o
ng Fo
E M
Ike W seman-446
I ' R:ur~!lwatersystems 2112
consol ng
words
he
992 3903
Pt Pleasant W Va 25550
Keypunch) s ar ng sala y
3796
garage
shown by
pa lbea e s a d he many
$2 88 hour Hou s from 4 p m
Area
Code
304
576
2041
who sen flowers
ood and
pomtment
only
1 I m dn gh
Ca
anet
cards and remembe ed us
Ext
280
Barnett
Oh o Un ve s ty
lBEDROOM
dur ng our be eavemen
n
Pe son ne Off ce 594 5387
In Gallipolis modern frame
othe
ways M
and M s
EQua Opportun y Emp oye
wayne Har son and M s
forced air furnace
3 22 3tc
(An equal op rtumty employer)
AI ce W
ams
rdwood
floors It s nice
3 24 c
It must sell
RELIABLE person nterested
4BEDROOM
In going to Lake and area n
F o da Cal 446 0-4 4
~~:~ kitchen
1 :a acres
large
Refngerator
Air
Guns
70 3 FOR SALE or trade
gas tur
HARRISON S TV and Se v ce
R:em 1 00 2 gauge 30 fu I
Cond1f1omng
Heatmg
basement paneled
c:a Is Phone 992 2522
Rem 700 30 06 Mossburg
2 22 261C
of shade trees garden
Repa1r
Appliance
model 800V 243 s&amp;w Mode
WANTED TO RENT a 2 o 3
0 38 sp
o he guns Cal
bedroom home or apar men
Asking
only
at er S 30 446 9583
LOVELY
BRICK
Ranch
turn shed or unturn shed to a
co ec
69 6
MIDttLEPORT
5
bedrooms
type 3 BR Bath 0 nong R
mldd e aged coup e Must
69 6
gas
furnace
n ce
full
HAVE BUYER WITH
973 MGB cOn\le tbe 7500
have washer and dry&amp;r and
K tchen has 24 ft cab nets
952 CHEVY Must see to ap
DB A P&amp;J Heatmg &amp; IMONio~ TO SPENO WE
ml es ots of extras Cal 1
basement
2
full
baths
2
ai cond I on ng Can p ov de
sta nless steel range oven
prec
ate
W
t
sa
eo
trade
for
304 773 5323
eferences
Phone 992 579
porches and garage Now only
Cooling
p c k up 1968 Ch ys e many
and s k 0 n ng area and
EED PROPERTY FOR
3 18 6tc
3 2 dip
$20 000 00
ex as A so new ha
dryer
bar Hardwood I oors ca r
LE LIST NOW WITH US
24
hours
serv1ce
TUPPERS PLAINS
Neat 2
520 ca 367 7240
JUNK Au 0 and s ap on Ph
1957 Cl'fEV':RcO
·,--L-E
- -Tc--·cE:x-c-el en I
peted Basement Garage 1
WE ALSO BUY
WANTED o ent a turn shed
69 6
45760
388 8176
Middleport
bed ooms
arge bath
out
evel acre w th p enty of
cond on Ca 992 2967 after S
SELL or TRADE
tra
ler
or
sma
I
house
n
he
63
2
bu1
d
ngs
and
bock
garage
pm
garden space E Ieel c heat
Ca II B1ll or Joe for fast
coun ry n Pome oy Ru and
GOOD
et rement fa m
4
Ask ng 1ust $8500 00
3 20 7tc
S2J SOO 00
a ea Contact D Jn Sch ock
serv1ce
courteous
acres
obacco base house
BLOCK BUILDING - 72x 20
,-------------BUY OF THE YEAR Hunt s Tra er Pa k ackson
barn
and
other
bu
d
ngs
w th stee trusses Hu r cane
912 VW bus exce tent con
Ranch type J B R Bath
Oh o
Vacant W I ake houset a fer
304
d t on 52695 00 Phone
fenced yard w th 2nd bu ldmg POS TION Vo(ented Young
3 20 6tp
Lovely k tchen
lots of
on trade Ph 256 6930
173 5867
26x72 and stee mono a I for
worn an seeks secretar at
cab nets and range Ut ty
70 6
32 6 c
cereal
poston
n
he
load ng The main bu ld ng s
R
Carport
Carpeted
-----~-- ------------ - Ga pot s area Seven years
one large room w th no posts
2 AcREs of and located off
acre $17 000 00
969 DODGE Charge
Phone
exper ence GQod references
Add son Bu av le Rd Price
SMALL
DOWN
PAYMENT
742 3722
FOR MOBILE HOMES or
Cal
446 0782 af e
5 p m
$5 500 150ga bu k m k ank
3 bedroom ranch type home
3 2 6tp
HOMES
Gas water and
weekdays
Pr ce $100 367 7238
Closets
natura
gas
furnace
69 3
e ectr c on 1 acres 200 ft
10 3
STEREO
Walnu
AM
~M
910 MALIBU Chevrol&amp;
n
ce
k
tchen
I
v
ng
room
12x19
ex
frontage
n
Pome oy
Rad
o
8
track
tape
com
ce tent shape Phone 992 562
Copper plumb ng large garage WALL PAPER: NG and nte lor
$3 000 00
b nat on Ba ance St o 73 o
or 992 5947
.and n ce lot Ask ng S19 500 00
pa nt ng Ph 446 9865
terms
ava
lab
e
Phone
992
CLOSE
TO
MINE
NO
3
J2 3c
45 ACRES In Rutland
3965
60 tf
About 2 acre'S 2 storr, frame
~-Townsh p at only $125 00 per
SEVERAL mob le homes total
2 14 fc
4 BR 1;, baths 0 nlng R
RESIDENTIAL
o
commerc
al
196o
CHEVELLE
283
etectr c et Kerr Oh o Sl25
acre
Porches
2
garages
Con
e
ect
ca
w
ng
Service
One m1le east of Racme Oh1o ori State Route
automat c excellen con
per mo Call 446 0175 or 446
IF YOU HESITATE
YOU
c
ct
e
hock
storage
bldg
ca s D
Elect c Ph d46
d tlon Phone Larry H I 985
1934
OWE
ANOTHER
MONTHS
124
Severa l1tems m now more needed before
43 13
Rcc n y
renovated
3335
273 If
RENT MAKE YOUR MONEY
3 24 6tc
10 3
sale
day Your 1tems welcome an)11me
SIO
SOO
00
!) ROv~
house w lh bath n
COUNT BY BUYING
~uk.M apartmen 1 ke urand
DON
T
WASTE
PRECIOUS
For more mformat1on call or wr.te
upper end of Syracuse Phone
1970 .,FO RD Custome p ckup
new downtown s 10 per
T ME TO BUY OR SELL
992 31 6
truck ong bed and 6 cylinder
month
Cal
446
3643
The
CONTACT OUR OFFICE
3 15 8 c
w seman Agency
cal 949 2815
10 6
3 24 3 c
10 If
HENRY E CLELAND
CONCRETE bJock roof ng and --r:~-- ---2 BEDROOM house n M d
Rt 1 Racine Ohio 45771
BROKER
paint ng by contrac or hour d RoOM hOuse In Thurman 545
1913 MG8 Convert be 7 5()0
New k tchen and
d epor
A
work guaranteed
Free
mt es Lots of ext res Ca I
bath app ances ncluded
pel\ month Mus
fUrrllsh
992 ~259
Jnti Carnahan ,14 949 2708 or Dan
Co 992 5310
est n1!11eS Ph 367 0295
refe'r'enceS Ph 245 5643
(30&lt;i 773 5323
If
no
answer
992
2568
J 24 ltc
70 II
Smtih
10 3
3 9 26tc

Real Estate For Sale

ON STATE ROUTE 35

THE LEADER SINCE 1900 IR
SERVING THE NATION 5
BUYERS &amp; SELLERS
Ph 046 0008

HOLLEY Bros Construct on
bu dozing back hoe work
d ch ng under roaQ.J bor ng
Phone 245 50 8 or 245 5()06
18 If

Contact Newt Jones
Rodney Cora Rd
""d ney Oh10
Ph 245 9374-245 5021

Real Estate For Sale

REAlTY

WASHER
dryer
and
refr gerator
repa r
No
c ha ge fo serv ce ca
f we
can t f x you app lance Ph
675 4242
254 tf
PROTECT
w th T E
ca 1 Ron
af e 3 p

Real Estate For Sale

STROUT

46 tf

94 If

u
66 f

m

Sunday March 24 1974

Real Estate For Sale

GA:RDENS plowed In vlcln ty of
Ga po s Call 446 9355 after S
P

Sentinel

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Serv1ces Offered

For Rent

Not1ce

In Memory

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
• DEADLINES

2S- The Sunday Tunes

At7p m

SWAIN

AUCTION SERVICE
Cornor Third &amp; Ohve

Owners H1ll and Groah Lumber- Phone 559
2012
Auctioneer

B1ll Janes

33 ACRES
Vacan ground
good bv d ng s e oca ed on
Thom pson Rd off St Rt 160
WE HAVE a good se eel on of
o s and other prope ty fo
sa e ca 1 Oh o R ver Rea y
to nform at on
Even ngs Call446 4244
John Fuller 446 4327

AUCTION
SERVICE
"SELL THE
AUCTION WAY"

JIMME SAYRE
AUCTIONEER

PH.

WE'RE BUILDING YOUR
HOME TODAY••••

And we mv1te you to look us over You should
know how your home IS bu11t The c;loser you
look the better we look You select your lot
your house and the colors $20 000 Ranch $290
down $155 per month At Rodney Vtllage II
We are open da1ly One hll Dark for your m
specllon 245 5303 - 446 0001

RANCHO REALTORS
"the home folks"

I

�..

'·

'

.. .

'

.

I
27.- The Sunday Times -1Sentinel, SIUiday, Marcli 24 _1974 •

26-The Sunpav Tirnes-Se~tinel,Sunday, M•reh 24. 1974

We're Wheelin' and Dealin'

SMITH
.

. &amp;at~
~

SOO E. MAIN

•

1

2

8' Fleetside, white over blue fin ., std . tran s, rndio, good
w -s-w tires, wh eel covers. rear step bumper . A ni ce one .

1970 atEVROLET BEL AIR .........11395

KARR &amp; VANZANDT

1295

1

4-door. V-8 automatic , power steeri ng , radio. good tires .
blue fin ish, spot less inter ior

992 -5342

" You'll Like Our Quality Way of Do ing Business'

automatic tran sm ission,

See one of these courteous salesmen :
Pete Burris
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaugh

1973 atEVROLET CAPRICE 4 DOOR
Fa ctory air, tinted glass, deluxe bel is, side protective
mldgs .. w -w tires, bumper guards, std. V-8 engine,
power steering &amp; disc brakes , automa tic. AM radio &amp;
ta pe, low mileage with bal. of new car warranty, color
wh1te with beige vinyl top.

WIN AT BRIDGE

Ace player sets new record
NORTH

• A3
' A 84
+ 8 7 52

ONLY A FEW NEW '73 PASSENGER CARS LEFT!
CHECK OUR CLOSE-OUT PRICES

ofol08 64

WEST

EAST

•+

-

'

"We MJn averv s1mote busm~

.10 9764

' KQ6

'JI0 9752
H3

NE SELL &amp; SERVICE CHEVROLET CARS &amp; TRUCK~.

•

• Q 10 9

"'Q

K J 53
SOUTH

9

ID&gt;

• KQJB52

'J

+ A K6

of&gt; A72

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

Both vulnerabl e

"Your Chevy Dealer"
992-2126 Open Eves Till 8 POMEROY

I.

West

North

l:":ast

South

Pa s!i

1!\".T.

Pass
Pass

4•

Pas:;
Pass

3•
P&lt;iss

Opening l ead ~ 'fJ

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • By Oswald &amp; James J acoby
There is an old saying
" Marry in haste, repent al
le_isure." We don't go a long
w1th that at all . The older
Jacubys, who married one
Wee k after meeting haven't
star ted repenting yet.
However, we can assure
For over 71 years-since model" A" days.
bridge players who pla y in
haste tha t they are likely to
spend a lot of valuable tim e
PINTO, weight 2443, 122 &amp; 140 cu. 4 cyl. engine,
repentmg .
94.2 wheelbase.
Priced from $2442
We don't know what the
MUSTANG II, 274:fweight, 140" 4 cyl. &amp; 170 V-6 record for the play of two
aces is, but South must hav e
eng me, 96.2 wheelbase.
Priced from $2895
co
me c lose toil in his pl ay of
MAVERICK. 2879 weight. 200" &amp; 250" 6 cyl. and
dummy 's ace of hearts at
302 V-8 engine, 103 &amp; 109.9" wheelbase.
Priced
trick one and ace spades a t
from $2591
trick two.
The hand looked like a
TORINO, 3886 weight , 302 V-8, 351 V-8, 400 V-8 &amp;
but West was unkind
pianola,
460 V-8engine, 114" &amp; 118" wheelbase.
Priced
enough
to
s how out on tha t
from $2976.

'.

4 Or . H. T ., fa ctory air, vinyl

SMALL CAR
HEADQUARTERS

or

first spade lead and p lay
g round to a sickening halt.
When play commenc ed aga in
it was at a. snail 's pace, bul
the boat had sailed and So uth
wound up one tric k short.
. If Sou th had just stopped to
th 1nk befor e leadi ng to tnck
two he wou ld have noled the
poss ibil ity of a bad trump
break. Suits do brea k 5-0
Then he wo uld have seen a
way lo guard against it. All
he had to do would be to ruff
a heart at tnck two . Then he
would lead a !rump to dummy's ace and find out aboul
the bad break.
This wouldn'l bother him at
a ll. He would sim ply ruff
dummy's lasl heart for h is
four th tr ick and slill have
enough winners in his hand to
give him game and rubber.
li'if~ WSP ,, l't~ H

West

North

East

Pass
Pass
Pas.s
Pass

2+

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

JN.T.

4'

3 ..
4+

I I

.,

t

r

~-

1 I

1

Radio City Stat1on. New York
NYI0019

l'etlnd•y'a

(An1weu Monclayi

I

JulnioJ.,, PIETY FOYER SICKEN FACADE
.
Anower: You ha.. lo rlolhi• on a &lt;allle boot-STEER

SUNDAY. MARCH 24, 1974

'6695

13 1 Word of

ancient Celts
70 German canal
71 Occurrence

sorrow
132 Possessive
pronoun
133 French income
135 Deface
136 Likely
139 Island of
Ireland
140 Anglo -Saxon
money
141 Poetic word
142 Compass
point
143 Thai is (abbr.)
144 It was (contr.)
145 "Musical drama
147 lslandin
Mediterranean
149 Greek lett er
150 At no time ·
152 Islam's sacred
scripture
154 Madame de
-----.French
writer
156 Bovine animal
156 Attempt
159 Poinl of view
160 Varielies
16 1 Young salmon

!archaic)
72 Part of circle
74 Just clear of

78 The Wise Men
outburst

84 Old musical
instruments
85 Hebrew month

86 Disturbance
88 Congress
(abbr.)
89 Slav in Saxony

90 Slate inS. W.
Germany
92 International

economic
pool
94 Unique

98 West Coast
university
(init.l
99 Sma ll children

89 Season
90 Explode
91 Intense
19 Make last
92 Grain
20 Stupefies
93 Deposited
27 Musical
95 Flesh
instrument
96 Depart
!colloq.)
97 Chemical
29 God llalinl
compound
31 German spa
99 Pedal digils
36 Shower
101 Whinnies
37 Robin food
105 Greek letter
39 Aborigine of
106 Soaks up
Yucatan
107 Condescending
40 Pain
loo k
41 Devastation
111 Partot
42 Arctic plai n
fireplace
43 Hawai ian
loodstu ff (pi I 112 Drinks slowly
113 Hind pari
44 Musical
115 Memorandum
· instrument
116 Tiny particle
46 Baronet
118 Beer
labbr I
ingredient
48 Scott ish
119 Plot
philosopher
49 Having shOes 121 Scoffed
50 Bovine animal 123 Conjunction
125 A state
51 Girl 's name
52 City in Egypt 126 Heavenly
body
53 Newspaper
121 Rests on the
executive
knees
55 Judge
56 Leak lhro ugh 129 A state
130 Fencing
57 Likeness
swords
58 Pith helmels
131 Macaw
61 A. M . (poet.)
132 Girl's name
63 Female
134 Explosive
relati ve
1
(abbr.)
64 Baked c lay
136
Showy flower
68 Chem ical
137 Harvests
lerlilizer
139 Askew
70 Pulling along
by the anchor 140 Semiprecious
7 1 Close (t.wo
stone
words)
144 Aflernoon
/3 Baby's bed
party
74 Mohammedan
145 Organization
calli a prayer
(abbr.)
75 Coup les
146 Inquire
77 Ohio Senator
147 Container
( 1637· 1904)
148 Extrasensory
76 Talk ing bird "
perceplion
80 Mental image
!abbr.)
61 Parcel of land
149 Without end
83 French for
(poet.)
"king ··
151 Versus (abbr.)
84 Native ol
153 Preposition
Latv ia
155 Note at scale
67 Place fo r
157 Exclamation
wor sh ip

DOWN

104 Regret
1 Young hog
2 Puerto Rican
limestone
3 Native metal
4 Parent
(colloq.)
5 Guido 's high
note
6 Extreme sun
lover
7 First
8 Insect egg
9 Lat in
conjunction
10 Ocean
11 Aroma
12 Policeman
(slang)
13 Wheel track
14 Aoove
~5 H'appen
16 Proceeds
17 Shoemaker's
tool

105 Uninteresting

person
106 Sales pitch
(colloq I
108 Ship channel

109 Near
110 Saint (abbr .)
111 Obser\led
112 Army man
114' Number
116 Hail!

1 17 lures
119 Metal tube
120 Turns to the
right
122 List
124 Architects·
association
(abb•.l
125 Mounl8ins of
Europe
126 Decreased
128 Also
129 Liquefy

•

•

'

·' .•

\

..

. '.

·.

~

.'

.

'

'

1

.•

•

. JUST taken in, 1Q7J 8 track
Stereo in w alnut Console. Pay
balance of $114.56 or terms
. can be arranged. Call 446·
0255
42-tf

1971
1967
1968
1968
1966
1969
_1912

o"

I

!

,

•

0

'

•

~

586 Locust St.
992-7004
Middleport
Open 8 to 6 Mon. thru Sat.
O!&gt;en Daily 8 to 6, (Closed Sundays). Open anytime by Appomtment . Contact Dan Thompson or Tom lavender.

11

For Sale

Mobile Hames
10 x 55 2 bdrm . Gardner
10 x so 2 bdrm . Champion
10 )( so 2 bdrm . Vagabond
12 x 60 2 bdrm . Schult
8 ,.; 42 1 bdrm . Schult '
12 x SO 2 bdrm , Bristol
B&amp;S Mobile Horrte.Sales
Pt. Pleasant, W. va .

60 -lf

GOOD Timpthy hay . Call 245"':"
5652 . .
66-6
1971 .PO~TIAC Catalina , 2 dr.,
A .C., excellent condition .
Phone 446-3933.

ELECTROLUX
Vacuum
Cleaners complete with at tashments, cordwinder and
pamt spray. Used but in like
new condition. Pay S3 4 . 45
cash or budget plan ava ilable
Phone 446-2460.
·
66-6
--------8 E'!" IN G Mac~ rne;,brandnew

Zlg-za9 !n n1ce walnut table.
In orrg1nal cartons. · Never
used , Clearance on • 74
Mode l s.
(Only
a
feW
available . ) $63 ..40 cash Or
~~~s ava i lable. Phone 446 _

.,

66 -6 - - - - -- - - - - -- -

6&lt;1-6

- -- -- - - - - - - - - CONSERVE FUEL
'68 CORVETTE $2,000. Fair USE your fireplace for e:ktrli
co nd it ion . 367 -0140 .
h~at. We have good .._Wes~
66-6 V~r-glnla chunk and egg coal.
- - - - - - - - -- - - - H1gh in BTU , low nh , atso
stoker and Oh to tum ,
Gallipolis Block and Coal c~··
SPINET-CONSOLE PIANO
Ph . Ai6-2783.
'
WANTED : · Responsible party
36-tf
to purchase spinet piano on - - - - - -- - ---:-:-:-"-low monthly payments . Can 1971 KAWASAKI, 25~ cc, d'irt
be seen toclltly . Write
bike. Fair condition
$.4.00
Manager , . P. o . Bo• 276,
Contact William aarnette '
Shelbyville, Indiana 46176 .
Quail Creek• Mob i le Homes '
69 -2 • Roaney, Ohio.
'
68-3
150 YOUNG laying pullets .
Fresh eggs.
1965 Ford ~T~se;i~V-atu-; inu;b;t
Fa ir-lane 500. Phone 245-5522 .
~6~~-er and 2 motors . Ph . '.u6:
. 69-3
....;.
.
68-3

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

_________ ____

1H8 VOLKSWAGEN Fastback . Very good shape , Call
256-6753 .
69 -6

.

~

'

.

112

1/:1

Vl
1h

12

1

T . Ford PU
Ton GMC pickup
ton GMC pickup
Ton Ch~vy Pickup
T . GMC
ton GMC Picku p ·
ton Ford Pickup

For Sale
1966 PONT!At Catalina, 7 door
hardtop, P .B, P S., good
shape . S495 . Ph. 446 -0294 .
61 -tf
MARCH Specia.ls - 15 Pel . off
on
Reese
hitches,
r efr igerators , and furnaces .
10 pet . off on Awn -o-matlc
awn ings, spare tire kits ; 20
tt . trailer
$4,250
for
$3,350; 24ft . $5,059 for \3,965 ;
21 11 . \3,770 for $2,999; fO ld
downs start at $1,350 .
Camp Conley Starcraft
Rt. 62 Nor-th of
Pt. Pleasant
Bettind Red Cilrpellnn
55 -tf

DISCOUNT

•CATALINAS
eBONNEVILLES
•GRANVIUES

TRADE-INS ACCEPTED!
GMAC AND BANK FINANCING

Parson'
1415 Eastern Ave.

USED FURNITURE

1CJ71 GMC Suburban
HAS plenty of good used Fur NEW tires Winter tread : Sizes
niture . Refrigerators $19.95
7.7Sx14 , 8.'2Sxl4, 8.5Sx 14, $18
and up ; couches $10 and up ;
each . Cash .&amp;nd carry while
good used color' T .v .; Stoves
supply last~.
- elec . and gas. $10 and up ;
SOMMERS G.M.C.
twin and full s iz e beds ;
TRUCKS, INC.
bed room sul les; chairs ; and
Ill Pine St.
dinette sets . Good used
446-2S32
merchandise arriving
43-tf
weekly. New store hours for
;;;;--,....--------- ---the 1415 Eastern Ave . store
are : 8-8 Mon .-Thurs ..
Fr iday -Sa tu r day 9-5.
58-tf

RICE'S
FURNITURE

1968 CHEVROLE T Impala 4
door hardtop, 60,000 miles.
very clean . 19.66 Fold -dow"n
Camper, custom &amp; Scamper.
hardtop , good condition . Call
446-4050 after 4: 30p.m. ~
65 -6

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

LIMESTONE for driveways.
Curl Winters . Ph . 2~5 - 5115 .
10-tf

'

LUMP Coal. Jay.11ar Coal Co .,
Meig s and Gallia line, St . Rt . 7
at Chesh!r..:o, 7 a .m . to 6:30
p.m . 5 days a week . 992 ·5693.
272 -tf
1 4 ~ tf - - - -- - -- - - - - - - 854 Second
- - ---- ---- ------ AKC Tov Poodle oupp l es.
(Across from Texaco Statlonl
Kenn els of Calhoun, 575.
446-9573
FOAM to till vour old couctl and
Ph . 256 - 62~7.
chair cus~ions as low as
67 -26
$10.95. Upholstery book only
··50c . 4" covered foam ma ttr esses lor standard size bed F OR SA LE : Owner b e ing
529.95 . Pomeroy Recovery ,
transferr ed. Beautiful split
622 E Ma ill 51. , Pomeroy ,
level near hospital . Central
NEW 2 pc . living room suites.
Ohio . Phone 992 -7554 .
Air, kitchell : Electric stove,
tr i mm ed In maple w ith 100
&lt;l i shwasner, disposal ; L ·
Pet . nylon covers . $239 .95 .
67 . tf
shaped d ining , living room .
Three bedrooms. bath . Down
two bedrooms, bath, large
family room. Elect . f ! r-~plece .
Hardwood floors . Attached
garage. Large corner lot . Call
446 -9353 after 6:00.

~~:o

446-3273

For Sale

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

SIOO DOWN
3 or 4 bedroom on your lot .
. Clark Rl"dge Home s, 1 to 5
Daily . Ph. 446-9774 .

Why pay outrageous
prices. Shop Rice's
and save.

Price, Product,
Service

Goble Mobile Homes

B&amp;S
1962
1963
1961
1967
1956
1969

J/,.
112

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

PARE

NOW

For Sale

PONTIAC

MAKE YOUR OWN DEAL ON ANY FULL SIZE
CAR IN STOCK. 20% DISCOUNT FROM THE
RETAIL PRICE STICKER ON THE WINDOW.
NOTHING ELSE TO ADD.

1967 CHEVY. 2 dr s4oo Ph
388·9905.
.,
·
one

- - ---------- -- 66-6

IT MAKES THE DIFFERENCE"·

IXJC

"'Spring Has Sprung,

·sMITII
SAYS

The Grass Has Riz,

The Good Buys lz."

Air cond., P. windows, P. seat. 6040 seal, Cruiser Control, extra
nice.

Air cond., vinyl top, Radial tires,
12.000 miles, like new.

'4595

•3795

68 -J

COMBINATION Funeral car .
Model, 1964 Cadillac. Would
make excellent camper . very
good condition . Air con diHonlng (front and rear ).
Good rubber and will sell
cheap. Box 16, Wellston, Ohio,
or call 18.4 -6521.
68 -3

1973 atEVEUE
4 DR.
Air cond., auto., P.S., P. B., vinyl
lop, 15,000 miles, new Pontiac
Firebird trade.

HONDA 70, 4 sreed, low
mil eage, exce llen cond. Call
146-2673 .
70-3

•3295

AT St u.d , Reg. Tenness~~
Walk ing
horse .
Malor
Greater Glory, 658497 by
Midn ig ht MaJor , si r e of world
Champion B Major Wilson.
standing in Gallia Co . Fe~
private treaty . Phone 388 -9991
or 367-7481 .
70 -3

1970 BUICK
RIVIERA
Aztec green, black vinyl top, air
cond., new Prem tires, extra
sharp.

70 -tf

I

BEFORE YOU IUYI STEP UP TO
DODGE DART, DART SPORT,
CORONET CHARGER OR MONACO.

TREAT rugs r ight , they'll b~ a
delight If cleaned with Blue
Lustre .
Rent
electric
Sflampoo~r
Sl.
Central

1

Supplv .

Co.

70-6

1972 BUICK
ESTATE WAGON
Air cond., custom Interior, Prem
li res . Was $3695.00.

1971 DODGE
CORONET

Air cond., small V-8, auto.. p,
steering,'30,000 miles, new Buick
Electra trade by retired school
teacher.

•2295

•2095

1970 PLYMOUJH

30 MORE TO
CHOOSE FROM
UP TO 36

DUSTER nJOOR

70-6

BLUE Lustre not only rids
carpets of soli but leav~s pile
sOft and lofty . Rent electric
shampooer $1 . G. c. Murphy

1973 atEV.
MONTE CARLD

1973 BUICK ELECTRA
4 DR. HARDTOP

135 MASSEY Ferguson tractor .
56 hours . I set of turning
plows , 1 brush hog . Ph . 245 ·
5163 after 9 p. m .

HAY . Call 367 -74.81 or 388 ·9991.

SEE CARROLL NORRIS
DODGE
'

This Is Where

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

68 -6

lmalh .. abbr .)

(pi .I.

100 Mate
102 Concerning
103 Affirmative

r

1968
T. GMC PU
1967 112 T. GMC PU
1
1967 / z T , GMC PU
\969 112 Ton GM C PU

For Sale

For Sale

18 Straight line

69 Priest of

Ga IIi polis

ton Chevy pickup

112

Gallipolis·Chrysler-Plymouth
1639 Eastern Ave.

1f1

1968 lfz T . GMC Pickuo
1969 112 T . GMC PU

DODGE CORNET 4 DOOR
CHEVROLET BELAIR 4 DOOR
DODGE CORNET 2 DR. HDTP.
FORD CUSTOM 4 DOOR
FORD RANCH WAGON
LINCOLN 4 DOOR
VOLKSWAGEN BUS
YOUR CHOICE

Front kitchen, house type door, all gas. fully
carpeted. deluxe furnishings, 30 gal . water
heater, glass sliding patio doors, storms &amp;
screens.
Delivered and set up. Financing Available .

WAS

79 Across
62 Angry

'

to .form·the surprise antwer ....

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

77 Succor

··'

Now arrange tho &lt;lrcled lotion

I ~ ..--.. I D "t I I I H I I 1"

sea bottom
76 Emmet

..

65
65
66
68
68
65
59

Example of Values:
12x60 Van Dyke 2 BR.

:::::~:==::h==~==-=;-J-;:::~- sun..ted by the abo•• cartoon.

th1s new spa per). P.O. Box 489

I

1_967

s299 SALE

·Sal 'til 5 p.m.
Service 'Til 12
On Saturday

GOLDEN EMPRESS, HALLMARK

K~U~T:_:'B:::'E;;.::C1J--.---,---,

··w in ar Bndge. ·· (c/o

.,

Open .Evenings
'Til 7 p.m. &amp;

RICHARDSON, HILLCREST, VAN DYKE,

(J

j

WHA'T 50\\ E. P60Pl.5
EXPECT 10 FIND IN
A CAa&amp;&gt;.~ET.

TODAY'S QUESTION

~

$1595

t•
2'

on your bidding .

ACROSS

ONLY

New GMC
Truck Headquarters
1968 1!2 ton GMC Dickup
1966 1f2 T. Ford Pickup
. lCJ65 112 T . GMC Pickup
1969 1f2 T. GMC PU
1969 Chevrolet 112 ton pickup
1967 1h ton Chev .
1969 112 T. Ford PU
101.0 nnrlo~ Station Wagon

South

You hold the same hand . East
opens one club. What do you do?

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PH. 992-2196

........-

A-Pass. Your partner should
have figured you ror 5-5-J-0 dis-

See Fred Blaettnar, Danny Thompson,
or Keith Goble

Only 23,000 actua l
mil es .

For Sale

. ,~
"'''"'''"""~-

23

%
•PONTIAC GRAN
PRIX EXCLUDED
eOHIO
SALES TAX
EXTRA

$2495

'

What do you do now?

tribution

4 Dr. hardtop, 350 cu. in. V-8 engine, beige
finish with vinyl lop &amp; match ing inter ior,
radio, auto. trans., P.. steering, P. brakes, fac.
air cond. EXTRA NICE!

UnsCramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

You. South. hold:
•10 8 6 5 4 .. A K Q B6 +A J 5 · -

book to

KEITH GOBLE FORD, IN
r'

3.

72 Chevrolet Impala

EASTERN AVE.

71 VEGA
2 DOOR

hy HEN A I A R N O l D , u H I AOO l F£

u:e:w,!&amp;Nft!l

eELECTRAS
eleSABRE
WXUS
eleSABRES

WOOD MOTOR SALES

71 OPEL
STATION WAGON

~t!l.JW§!1rn® /Jrai -'1.1.-J ,_.

Sen d$ 1 lor JA COBY M ODERN

Above prices are plus freight and with std. accessories . Even
our lar-gest l TO has been certified with over 18.8 miles per
gat. For~ seems to have solved the energy crisis by building a
car easter on gas and more efficient in spite of emission
co~trot. That is why they ar-e becoming incr-easingly popular.
Dnve one today and see for your~elf.

~I

500 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio

E NTEIIPH ISE 1\SSN 1

The bidding has been:

sed ., only 47,600 miles.

®s

992-2174

BUICKS

•2695

runs perfect ,

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

DATSON Phone 592-4463

automatic.

Remember We Service What We Sell

almost four per t:ent of tht:!
time.

MALIBU
2 DOOR HARDTOP

4 wheel drive, only 33,000 miles.

Your s for only

We Built Our
Business on Service
and now Service is
Building Our Business.

ON ALL 1974 FULL SIZE BUICK$
AND PONTIAC$ IN STOCK

L&amp;M Phone 592-4491

72 FORD BRONCO

One of the cleanest 66's
4

72 atEVEUE

$1695

Factory air, good car, vinyl top.

Sale Price •3895

...,
..

Pomeroy

15 DOWN AND 10 MORE TO GOI

eCAPR! eDATSUN eSUBARU eCOUGAR

70 CHEVY
NOVA
2 DOOR
Sharp,
6
cyl.,

6 cyl. , automatic

While wi lh black vi nyl lop, air, nice car .

Open Eves. Til 6-Til 5 P.M. Sat.

1970 FORD FAIRLANE 500 ......... 1895

Ret:~~ 3 ;ist

Cadillac . Oldsrnobile
GMAC Financing Available

EXTENDED TO MARCH 30th

ONLY

72 PLYMOUTH
GOLD DUSTER
2 DOOR

Concoors wagon, factorv air,
real low mileage .

1

•LINCOLN CONTINENTAL •MARK IV

$2495

2 Dr . H T, air, vinyl lop, low mileage.

I.

4 Door. V-8 engi n e. std . trans ., c lean intenor , bl ue fin ish ,
radio, good t ires, I owner

I

Loaded

Dr H

FREE LICENSE PLATE with pur chase of any new car, now until April

Sharp.

· Hardtop Coupe, V-8 eng ine,
power stee r ing, radio.

S, loca l one owner .

2

Green fini sh, spotl ess clean inter ior , air conditioned , good
t ires, au tom a ti c tr ans ., P. steering &amp; brak es . radio .

~~~

72 CHRYSLER
NEWPORT ROYAL
2 DOOR HARDTOP

4 speed local one owner, low mileage.

The above 3 Cadillacs sold &amp; serviced by us.

1971 COUGAK H.T. CPE.. .. ........ !2395

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill

Factory air,

YOUR DEALER FOR

Bill Joe Jollnson

USED CAR VALUES

Air, viny l lop,

$4900

-4 -door , 1-owner new car tr ade-in, good Jst line tir es,
spot less clean interior . small v .a engine, automatic trans mission . T he r ight size ....:... the right price . Value $1675 .

ATHENS, OHIO

•MERCURY MONTEGO •COMET

Cuslom 4 dr. Like new. Only

YOUR CHOICE FOR

600 E. STATE ST.
&amp; 1200 E. STATE ST.

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S lARGEST
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER

73 MERCURY MONTEREY
•2895
72 MERCURY COUGAR XR7
like ~~~· •3195
72 PLY MOUTH DUSTER
P
•269 5
72 VW FASTBACK
•2795
72 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER
T,o~:·o:h:::. '2895
71 OLDS CUTLASS S
'2595
71 CHEV MALl BU
•2595
71 FORD LTD 4 DR HT
•189 5
70 PONTIAC CAT. 4 DR SEDAN T,hi.v~~::;:"~ •1595
70 PONTIAC LeMANS-2 DR Whitewi~ri~~w~:~:~i •1595
70 PONTIAC FIREBIRD 2 DR H,T ~:~~~::;po;.~er. •2195
69 MERCURY 4 DR HT
'1095
top.
Only •1395
69 PONTIAC BONN
66 BUICK RIVIERA •G.So
any~here. Only '995
Dr.
66 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF

•72 Cadillacs

1971 DODGE CORONEf ............. 11495

PH. 992-2174

We have traded for some great used
cars during
our big new car sale.
.
.
So come on in and get a great buy on a good used ·car.

$5900

1972 atEV. PICKUP ............... 12495

POMEROY, OHIO

-USED C4R SALE

NOW

Cu~tom H a~chba ck Coupe, .dark green fini sh, like new
wh1te -wall -t•re s, full wheel cover s, protective side
moldings , power brakes, rad io , 6 cyl inder eng ine, stan
dard tran smission. A very popu lar model and priced to go .

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLERPLYMOUTH

MOTORS, INC.

SPRI-N G JUBILEE

1-'73 Cadillac

1973 atEVROLET NOVA ........... 2695

ii

NELSON~
.

.

DALE R. SANDERS INC.

6 cyl., auto. trans .• 21 ,000 miles,

_trade-in on new Pontiac Catalina
by a retired senior citizen .

1969 PICKUP , Dodge 6 cyl. Ph.

..... 211 .

70 -6

CARROLL'S SAVINGS MAKE THE
DIFFERENCE I

'10 CAMARO, 307 Auto ., sliver
with black vinyl top , rally
wh~els , good gas
mileage,
excellent condition . 446 .4972.
70-3
. LOCUST posts. Call after 5 p .m .
Ph . 256-6559.

70·3

EVERffi SAUNDERS - TOM NORRIS - DoN HARDEN

·CARROLL NORRIS DODGE INC.

-- -~- ---,--- - ---

1972 CAPRI bY Mercury , 4 cy l ;
23 to 30 mpg, very clean,
4.0 ,000
m l ies .
Exc~llent
condllion . See to appreciate.
52295 . Almost 2miles from Rt .
160 on Kemper Hollow Rd .
Come after 5 p. m . on week ·
days. Donald Kealley .
68 ·3

For Sale

For Sale
GIRL'S. clothing , good COfl ·
dition .
Size ·
s.
ver-v
reasonable ., Ph . 446-3510.

70 -3

-8 ------------N 1952 F ORO tra ctor with
------·-------fr-ont· end loader . Good shape .
1972 vw Super Beetle , excellent
condition . Ph . (1) 682 -7307 .

68-6

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

Ph . 2$6-6627.1

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

70 -3

EXQUISITE dining room suite,
includes tabl e, chairs, china
closer. side board
and
cabinet. Duncan Phyffe style,
exce llent ~· craftsmanship ,
superb candition . Reply c -o
Box · 314 , Ga llipol is Oa i ty
Tribune for appoin tment to
exami ne I hie suite .
70·l

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

For Sale'

1967 CHEVY lmpola. Ph . -u6·
93l:J after 5:30p.m.
63-12

-·-- ------

.. ·-

MAG~E fiC truck signs midi•

t~ order, signs of 111 kinds.'
S1mmons Printing &amp; Offlu
Supplyo.
' 52 -~

---------.

.

. ..

�..

'·

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I
27.- The Sunday Times -1Sentinel, SIUiday, Marcli 24 _1974 •

26-The Sunpav Tirnes-Se~tinel,Sunday, M•reh 24. 1974

We're Wheelin' and Dealin'

SMITH
.

. &amp;at~
~

SOO E. MAIN

•

1

2

8' Fleetside, white over blue fin ., std . tran s, rndio, good
w -s-w tires, wh eel covers. rear step bumper . A ni ce one .

1970 atEVROLET BEL AIR .........11395

KARR &amp; VANZANDT

1295

1

4-door. V-8 automatic , power steeri ng , radio. good tires .
blue fin ish, spot less inter ior

992 -5342

" You'll Like Our Quality Way of Do ing Business'

automatic tran sm ission,

See one of these courteous salesmen :
Pete Burris
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaugh

1973 atEVROLET CAPRICE 4 DOOR
Fa ctory air, tinted glass, deluxe bel is, side protective
mldgs .. w -w tires, bumper guards, std. V-8 engine,
power steering &amp; disc brakes , automa tic. AM radio &amp;
ta pe, low mileage with bal. of new car warranty, color
wh1te with beige vinyl top.

WIN AT BRIDGE

Ace player sets new record
NORTH

• A3
' A 84
+ 8 7 52

ONLY A FEW NEW '73 PASSENGER CARS LEFT!
CHECK OUR CLOSE-OUT PRICES

ofol08 64

WEST

EAST

•+

-

'

"We MJn averv s1mote busm~

.10 9764

' KQ6

'JI0 9752
H3

NE SELL &amp; SERVICE CHEVROLET CARS &amp; TRUCK~.

•

• Q 10 9

"'Q

K J 53
SOUTH

9

ID&gt;

• KQJB52

'J

+ A K6

of&gt; A72

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

Both vulnerabl e

"Your Chevy Dealer"
992-2126 Open Eves Till 8 POMEROY

I.

West

North

l:":ast

South

Pa s!i

1!\".T.

Pass
Pass

4•

Pas:;
Pass

3•
P&lt;iss

Opening l ead ~ 'fJ

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • By Oswald &amp; James J acoby
There is an old saying
" Marry in haste, repent al
le_isure." We don't go a long
w1th that at all . The older
Jacubys, who married one
Wee k after meeting haven't
star ted repenting yet.
However, we can assure
For over 71 years-since model" A" days.
bridge players who pla y in
haste tha t they are likely to
spend a lot of valuable tim e
PINTO, weight 2443, 122 &amp; 140 cu. 4 cyl. engine,
repentmg .
94.2 wheelbase.
Priced from $2442
We don't know what the
MUSTANG II, 274:fweight, 140" 4 cyl. &amp; 170 V-6 record for the play of two
aces is, but South must hav e
eng me, 96.2 wheelbase.
Priced from $2895
co
me c lose toil in his pl ay of
MAVERICK. 2879 weight. 200" &amp; 250" 6 cyl. and
dummy 's ace of hearts at
302 V-8 engine, 103 &amp; 109.9" wheelbase.
Priced
trick one and ace spades a t
from $2591
trick two.
The hand looked like a
TORINO, 3886 weight , 302 V-8, 351 V-8, 400 V-8 &amp;
but West was unkind
pianola,
460 V-8engine, 114" &amp; 118" wheelbase.
Priced
enough
to
s how out on tha t
from $2976.

'.

4 Or . H. T ., fa ctory air, vinyl

SMALL CAR
HEADQUARTERS

or

first spade lead and p lay
g round to a sickening halt.
When play commenc ed aga in
it was at a. snail 's pace, bul
the boat had sailed and So uth
wound up one tric k short.
. If Sou th had just stopped to
th 1nk befor e leadi ng to tnck
two he wou ld have noled the
poss ibil ity of a bad trump
break. Suits do brea k 5-0
Then he wo uld have seen a
way lo guard against it. All
he had to do would be to ruff
a heart at tnck two . Then he
would lead a !rump to dummy's ace and find out aboul
the bad break.
This wouldn'l bother him at
a ll. He would sim ply ruff
dummy's lasl heart for h is
four th tr ick and slill have
enough winners in his hand to
give him game and rubber.
li'if~ WSP ,, l't~ H

West

North

East

Pass
Pass
Pas.s
Pass

2+

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

JN.T.

4'

3 ..
4+

I I

.,

t

r

~-

1 I

1

Radio City Stat1on. New York
NYI0019

l'etlnd•y'a

(An1weu Monclayi

I

JulnioJ.,, PIETY FOYER SICKEN FACADE
.
Anower: You ha.. lo rlolhi• on a &lt;allle boot-STEER

SUNDAY. MARCH 24, 1974

'6695

13 1 Word of

ancient Celts
70 German canal
71 Occurrence

sorrow
132 Possessive
pronoun
133 French income
135 Deface
136 Likely
139 Island of
Ireland
140 Anglo -Saxon
money
141 Poetic word
142 Compass
point
143 Thai is (abbr.)
144 It was (contr.)
145 "Musical drama
147 lslandin
Mediterranean
149 Greek lett er
150 At no time ·
152 Islam's sacred
scripture
154 Madame de
-----.French
writer
156 Bovine animal
156 Attempt
159 Poinl of view
160 Varielies
16 1 Young salmon

!archaic)
72 Part of circle
74 Just clear of

78 The Wise Men
outburst

84 Old musical
instruments
85 Hebrew month

86 Disturbance
88 Congress
(abbr.)
89 Slav in Saxony

90 Slate inS. W.
Germany
92 International

economic
pool
94 Unique

98 West Coast
university
(init.l
99 Sma ll children

89 Season
90 Explode
91 Intense
19 Make last
92 Grain
20 Stupefies
93 Deposited
27 Musical
95 Flesh
instrument
96 Depart
!colloq.)
97 Chemical
29 God llalinl
compound
31 German spa
99 Pedal digils
36 Shower
101 Whinnies
37 Robin food
105 Greek letter
39 Aborigine of
106 Soaks up
Yucatan
107 Condescending
40 Pain
loo k
41 Devastation
111 Partot
42 Arctic plai n
fireplace
43 Hawai ian
loodstu ff (pi I 112 Drinks slowly
113 Hind pari
44 Musical
115 Memorandum
· instrument
116 Tiny particle
46 Baronet
118 Beer
labbr I
ingredient
48 Scott ish
119 Plot
philosopher
49 Having shOes 121 Scoffed
50 Bovine animal 123 Conjunction
125 A state
51 Girl 's name
52 City in Egypt 126 Heavenly
body
53 Newspaper
121 Rests on the
executive
knees
55 Judge
56 Leak lhro ugh 129 A state
130 Fencing
57 Likeness
swords
58 Pith helmels
131 Macaw
61 A. M . (poet.)
132 Girl's name
63 Female
134 Explosive
relati ve
1
(abbr.)
64 Baked c lay
136
Showy flower
68 Chem ical
137 Harvests
lerlilizer
139 Askew
70 Pulling along
by the anchor 140 Semiprecious
7 1 Close (t.wo
stone
words)
144 Aflernoon
/3 Baby's bed
party
74 Mohammedan
145 Organization
calli a prayer
(abbr.)
75 Coup les
146 Inquire
77 Ohio Senator
147 Container
( 1637· 1904)
148 Extrasensory
76 Talk ing bird "
perceplion
80 Mental image
!abbr.)
61 Parcel of land
149 Without end
83 French for
(poet.)
"king ··
151 Versus (abbr.)
84 Native ol
153 Preposition
Latv ia
155 Note at scale
67 Place fo r
157 Exclamation
wor sh ip

DOWN

104 Regret
1 Young hog
2 Puerto Rican
limestone
3 Native metal
4 Parent
(colloq.)
5 Guido 's high
note
6 Extreme sun
lover
7 First
8 Insect egg
9 Lat in
conjunction
10 Ocean
11 Aroma
12 Policeman
(slang)
13 Wheel track
14 Aoove
~5 H'appen
16 Proceeds
17 Shoemaker's
tool

105 Uninteresting

person
106 Sales pitch
(colloq I
108 Ship channel

109 Near
110 Saint (abbr .)
111 Obser\led
112 Army man
114' Number
116 Hail!

1 17 lures
119 Metal tube
120 Turns to the
right
122 List
124 Architects·
association
(abb•.l
125 Mounl8ins of
Europe
126 Decreased
128 Also
129 Liquefy

•

•

'

·' .•

\

..

. '.

·.

~

.'

.

'

'

1

.•

•

. JUST taken in, 1Q7J 8 track
Stereo in w alnut Console. Pay
balance of $114.56 or terms
. can be arranged. Call 446·
0255
42-tf

1971
1967
1968
1968
1966
1969
_1912

o"

I

!

,

•

0

'

•

~

586 Locust St.
992-7004
Middleport
Open 8 to 6 Mon. thru Sat.
O!&gt;en Daily 8 to 6, (Closed Sundays). Open anytime by Appomtment . Contact Dan Thompson or Tom lavender.

11

For Sale

Mobile Hames
10 x 55 2 bdrm . Gardner
10 x so 2 bdrm . Champion
10 )( so 2 bdrm . Vagabond
12 x 60 2 bdrm . Schult
8 ,.; 42 1 bdrm . Schult '
12 x SO 2 bdrm , Bristol
B&amp;S Mobile Horrte.Sales
Pt. Pleasant, W. va .

60 -lf

GOOD Timpthy hay . Call 245"':"
5652 . .
66-6
1971 .PO~TIAC Catalina , 2 dr.,
A .C., excellent condition .
Phone 446-3933.

ELECTROLUX
Vacuum
Cleaners complete with at tashments, cordwinder and
pamt spray. Used but in like
new condition. Pay S3 4 . 45
cash or budget plan ava ilable
Phone 446-2460.
·
66-6
--------8 E'!" IN G Mac~ rne;,brandnew

Zlg-za9 !n n1ce walnut table.
In orrg1nal cartons. · Never
used , Clearance on • 74
Mode l s.
(Only
a
feW
available . ) $63 ..40 cash Or
~~~s ava i lable. Phone 446 _

.,

66 -6 - - - - -- - - - - -- -

6&lt;1-6

- -- -- - - - - - - - - CONSERVE FUEL
'68 CORVETTE $2,000. Fair USE your fireplace for e:ktrli
co nd it ion . 367 -0140 .
h~at. We have good .._Wes~
66-6 V~r-glnla chunk and egg coal.
- - - - - - - - -- - - - H1gh in BTU , low nh , atso
stoker and Oh to tum ,
Gallipolis Block and Coal c~··
SPINET-CONSOLE PIANO
Ph . Ai6-2783.
'
WANTED : · Responsible party
36-tf
to purchase spinet piano on - - - - - -- - ---:-:-:-"-low monthly payments . Can 1971 KAWASAKI, 25~ cc, d'irt
be seen toclltly . Write
bike. Fair condition
$.4.00
Manager , . P. o . Bo• 276,
Contact William aarnette '
Shelbyville, Indiana 46176 .
Quail Creek• Mob i le Homes '
69 -2 • Roaney, Ohio.
'
68-3
150 YOUNG laying pullets .
Fresh eggs.
1965 Ford ~T~se;i~V-atu-; inu;b;t
Fa ir-lane 500. Phone 245-5522 .
~6~~-er and 2 motors . Ph . '.u6:
. 69-3
....;.
.
68-3

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

_________ ____

1H8 VOLKSWAGEN Fastback . Very good shape , Call
256-6753 .
69 -6

.

~

'

.

112

1/:1

Vl
1h

12

1

T . Ford PU
Ton GMC pickup
ton GMC pickup
Ton Ch~vy Pickup
T . GMC
ton GMC Picku p ·
ton Ford Pickup

For Sale
1966 PONT!At Catalina, 7 door
hardtop, P .B, P S., good
shape . S495 . Ph. 446 -0294 .
61 -tf
MARCH Specia.ls - 15 Pel . off
on
Reese
hitches,
r efr igerators , and furnaces .
10 pet . off on Awn -o-matlc
awn ings, spare tire kits ; 20
tt . trailer
$4,250
for
$3,350; 24ft . $5,059 for \3,965 ;
21 11 . \3,770 for $2,999; fO ld
downs start at $1,350 .
Camp Conley Starcraft
Rt. 62 Nor-th of
Pt. Pleasant
Bettind Red Cilrpellnn
55 -tf

DISCOUNT

•CATALINAS
eBONNEVILLES
•GRANVIUES

TRADE-INS ACCEPTED!
GMAC AND BANK FINANCING

Parson'
1415 Eastern Ave.

USED FURNITURE

1CJ71 GMC Suburban
HAS plenty of good used Fur NEW tires Winter tread : Sizes
niture . Refrigerators $19.95
7.7Sx14 , 8.'2Sxl4, 8.5Sx 14, $18
and up ; couches $10 and up ;
each . Cash .&amp;nd carry while
good used color' T .v .; Stoves
supply last~.
- elec . and gas. $10 and up ;
SOMMERS G.M.C.
twin and full s iz e beds ;
TRUCKS, INC.
bed room sul les; chairs ; and
Ill Pine St.
dinette sets . Good used
446-2S32
merchandise arriving
43-tf
weekly. New store hours for
;;;;--,....--------- ---the 1415 Eastern Ave . store
are : 8-8 Mon .-Thurs ..
Fr iday -Sa tu r day 9-5.
58-tf

RICE'S
FURNITURE

1968 CHEVROLE T Impala 4
door hardtop, 60,000 miles.
very clean . 19.66 Fold -dow"n
Camper, custom &amp; Scamper.
hardtop , good condition . Call
446-4050 after 4: 30p.m. ~
65 -6

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

LIMESTONE for driveways.
Curl Winters . Ph . 2~5 - 5115 .
10-tf

'

LUMP Coal. Jay.11ar Coal Co .,
Meig s and Gallia line, St . Rt . 7
at Chesh!r..:o, 7 a .m . to 6:30
p.m . 5 days a week . 992 ·5693.
272 -tf
1 4 ~ tf - - - -- - -- - - - - - - 854 Second
- - ---- ---- ------ AKC Tov Poodle oupp l es.
(Across from Texaco Statlonl
Kenn els of Calhoun, 575.
446-9573
FOAM to till vour old couctl and
Ph . 256 - 62~7.
chair cus~ions as low as
67 -26
$10.95. Upholstery book only
··50c . 4" covered foam ma ttr esses lor standard size bed F OR SA LE : Owner b e ing
529.95 . Pomeroy Recovery ,
transferr ed. Beautiful split
622 E Ma ill 51. , Pomeroy ,
level near hospital . Central
NEW 2 pc . living room suites.
Ohio . Phone 992 -7554 .
Air, kitchell : Electric stove,
tr i mm ed In maple w ith 100
&lt;l i shwasner, disposal ; L ·
Pet . nylon covers . $239 .95 .
67 . tf
shaped d ining , living room .
Three bedrooms. bath . Down
two bedrooms, bath, large
family room. Elect . f ! r-~plece .
Hardwood floors . Attached
garage. Large corner lot . Call
446 -9353 after 6:00.

~~:o

446-3273

For Sale

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

SIOO DOWN
3 or 4 bedroom on your lot .
. Clark Rl"dge Home s, 1 to 5
Daily . Ph. 446-9774 .

Why pay outrageous
prices. Shop Rice's
and save.

Price, Product,
Service

Goble Mobile Homes

B&amp;S
1962
1963
1961
1967
1956
1969

J/,.
112

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

PARE

NOW

For Sale

PONTIAC

MAKE YOUR OWN DEAL ON ANY FULL SIZE
CAR IN STOCK. 20% DISCOUNT FROM THE
RETAIL PRICE STICKER ON THE WINDOW.
NOTHING ELSE TO ADD.

1967 CHEVY. 2 dr s4oo Ph
388·9905.
.,
·
one

- - ---------- -- 66-6

IT MAKES THE DIFFERENCE"·

IXJC

"'Spring Has Sprung,

·sMITII
SAYS

The Grass Has Riz,

The Good Buys lz."

Air cond., P. windows, P. seat. 6040 seal, Cruiser Control, extra
nice.

Air cond., vinyl top, Radial tires,
12.000 miles, like new.

'4595

•3795

68 -J

COMBINATION Funeral car .
Model, 1964 Cadillac. Would
make excellent camper . very
good condition . Air con diHonlng (front and rear ).
Good rubber and will sell
cheap. Box 16, Wellston, Ohio,
or call 18.4 -6521.
68 -3

1973 atEVEUE
4 DR.
Air cond., auto., P.S., P. B., vinyl
lop, 15,000 miles, new Pontiac
Firebird trade.

HONDA 70, 4 sreed, low
mil eage, exce llen cond. Call
146-2673 .
70-3

•3295

AT St u.d , Reg. Tenness~~
Walk ing
horse .
Malor
Greater Glory, 658497 by
Midn ig ht MaJor , si r e of world
Champion B Major Wilson.
standing in Gallia Co . Fe~
private treaty . Phone 388 -9991
or 367-7481 .
70 -3

1970 BUICK
RIVIERA
Aztec green, black vinyl top, air
cond., new Prem tires, extra
sharp.

70 -tf

I

BEFORE YOU IUYI STEP UP TO
DODGE DART, DART SPORT,
CORONET CHARGER OR MONACO.

TREAT rugs r ight , they'll b~ a
delight If cleaned with Blue
Lustre .
Rent
electric
Sflampoo~r
Sl.
Central

1

Supplv .

Co.

70-6

1972 BUICK
ESTATE WAGON
Air cond., custom Interior, Prem
li res . Was $3695.00.

1971 DODGE
CORONET

Air cond., small V-8, auto.. p,
steering,'30,000 miles, new Buick
Electra trade by retired school
teacher.

•2295

•2095

1970 PLYMOUJH

30 MORE TO
CHOOSE FROM
UP TO 36

DUSTER nJOOR

70-6

BLUE Lustre not only rids
carpets of soli but leav~s pile
sOft and lofty . Rent electric
shampooer $1 . G. c. Murphy

1973 atEV.
MONTE CARLD

1973 BUICK ELECTRA
4 DR. HARDTOP

135 MASSEY Ferguson tractor .
56 hours . I set of turning
plows , 1 brush hog . Ph . 245 ·
5163 after 9 p. m .

HAY . Call 367 -74.81 or 388 ·9991.

SEE CARROLL NORRIS
DODGE
'

This Is Where

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

68 -6

lmalh .. abbr .)

(pi .I.

100 Mate
102 Concerning
103 Affirmative

r

1968
T. GMC PU
1967 112 T. GMC PU
1
1967 / z T , GMC PU
\969 112 Ton GM C PU

For Sale

For Sale

18 Straight line

69 Priest of

Ga IIi polis

ton Chevy pickup

112

Gallipolis·Chrysler-Plymouth
1639 Eastern Ave.

1f1

1968 lfz T . GMC Pickuo
1969 112 T . GMC PU

DODGE CORNET 4 DOOR
CHEVROLET BELAIR 4 DOOR
DODGE CORNET 2 DR. HDTP.
FORD CUSTOM 4 DOOR
FORD RANCH WAGON
LINCOLN 4 DOOR
VOLKSWAGEN BUS
YOUR CHOICE

Front kitchen, house type door, all gas. fully
carpeted. deluxe furnishings, 30 gal . water
heater, glass sliding patio doors, storms &amp;
screens.
Delivered and set up. Financing Available .

WAS

79 Across
62 Angry

'

to .form·the surprise antwer ....

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

77 Succor

··'

Now arrange tho &lt;lrcled lotion

I ~ ..--.. I D "t I I I H I I 1"

sea bottom
76 Emmet

..

65
65
66
68
68
65
59

Example of Values:
12x60 Van Dyke 2 BR.

:::::~:==::h==~==-=;-J-;:::~- sun..ted by the abo•• cartoon.

th1s new spa per). P.O. Box 489

I

1_967

s299 SALE

·Sal 'til 5 p.m.
Service 'Til 12
On Saturday

GOLDEN EMPRESS, HALLMARK

K~U~T:_:'B:::'E;;.::C1J--.---,---,

··w in ar Bndge. ·· (c/o

.,

Open .Evenings
'Til 7 p.m. &amp;

RICHARDSON, HILLCREST, VAN DYKE,

(J

j

WHA'T 50\\ E. P60Pl.5
EXPECT 10 FIND IN
A CAa&amp;&gt;.~ET.

TODAY'S QUESTION

~

$1595

t•
2'

on your bidding .

ACROSS

ONLY

New GMC
Truck Headquarters
1968 1!2 ton GMC Dickup
1966 1f2 T. Ford Pickup
. lCJ65 112 T . GMC Pickup
1969 1f2 T. GMC PU
1969 Chevrolet 112 ton pickup
1967 1h ton Chev .
1969 112 T. Ford PU
101.0 nnrlo~ Station Wagon

South

You hold the same hand . East
opens one club. What do you do?

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PH. 992-2196

........-

A-Pass. Your partner should
have figured you ror 5-5-J-0 dis-

See Fred Blaettnar, Danny Thompson,
or Keith Goble

Only 23,000 actua l
mil es .

For Sale

. ,~
"'''"'''"""~-

23

%
•PONTIAC GRAN
PRIX EXCLUDED
eOHIO
SALES TAX
EXTRA

$2495

'

What do you do now?

tribution

4 Dr. hardtop, 350 cu. in. V-8 engine, beige
finish with vinyl lop &amp; match ing inter ior,
radio, auto. trans., P.. steering, P. brakes, fac.
air cond. EXTRA NICE!

UnsCramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

You. South. hold:
•10 8 6 5 4 .. A K Q B6 +A J 5 · -

book to

KEITH GOBLE FORD, IN
r'

3.

72 Chevrolet Impala

EASTERN AVE.

71 VEGA
2 DOOR

hy HEN A I A R N O l D , u H I AOO l F£

u:e:w,!&amp;Nft!l

eELECTRAS
eleSABRE
WXUS
eleSABRES

WOOD MOTOR SALES

71 OPEL
STATION WAGON

~t!l.JW§!1rn® /Jrai -'1.1.-J ,_.

Sen d$ 1 lor JA COBY M ODERN

Above prices are plus freight and with std. accessories . Even
our lar-gest l TO has been certified with over 18.8 miles per
gat. For~ seems to have solved the energy crisis by building a
car easter on gas and more efficient in spite of emission
co~trot. That is why they ar-e becoming incr-easingly popular.
Dnve one today and see for your~elf.

~I

500 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio

E NTEIIPH ISE 1\SSN 1

The bidding has been:

sed ., only 47,600 miles.

®s

992-2174

BUICKS

•2695

runs perfect ,

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.

DATSON Phone 592-4463

automatic.

Remember We Service What We Sell

almost four per t:ent of tht:!
time.

MALIBU
2 DOOR HARDTOP

4 wheel drive, only 33,000 miles.

Your s for only

We Built Our
Business on Service
and now Service is
Building Our Business.

ON ALL 1974 FULL SIZE BUICK$
AND PONTIAC$ IN STOCK

L&amp;M Phone 592-4491

72 FORD BRONCO

One of the cleanest 66's
4

72 atEVEUE

$1695

Factory air, good car, vinyl top.

Sale Price •3895

...,
..

Pomeroy

15 DOWN AND 10 MORE TO GOI

eCAPR! eDATSUN eSUBARU eCOUGAR

70 CHEVY
NOVA
2 DOOR
Sharp,
6
cyl.,

6 cyl. , automatic

While wi lh black vi nyl lop, air, nice car .

Open Eves. Til 6-Til 5 P.M. Sat.

1970 FORD FAIRLANE 500 ......... 1895

Ret:~~ 3 ;ist

Cadillac . Oldsrnobile
GMAC Financing Available

EXTENDED TO MARCH 30th

ONLY

72 PLYMOUTH
GOLD DUSTER
2 DOOR

Concoors wagon, factorv air,
real low mileage .

1

•LINCOLN CONTINENTAL •MARK IV

$2495

2 Dr . H T, air, vinyl lop, low mileage.

I.

4 Door. V-8 engi n e. std . trans ., c lean intenor , bl ue fin ish ,
radio, good t ires, I owner

I

Loaded

Dr H

FREE LICENSE PLATE with pur chase of any new car, now until April

Sharp.

· Hardtop Coupe, V-8 eng ine,
power stee r ing, radio.

S, loca l one owner .

2

Green fini sh, spotl ess clean inter ior , air conditioned , good
t ires, au tom a ti c tr ans ., P. steering &amp; brak es . radio .

~~~

72 CHRYSLER
NEWPORT ROYAL
2 DOOR HARDTOP

4 speed local one owner, low mileage.

The above 3 Cadillacs sold &amp; serviced by us.

1971 COUGAK H.T. CPE.. .. ........ !2395

1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill

Factory air,

YOUR DEALER FOR

Bill Joe Jollnson

USED CAR VALUES

Air, viny l lop,

$4900

-4 -door , 1-owner new car tr ade-in, good Jst line tir es,
spot less clean interior . small v .a engine, automatic trans mission . T he r ight size ....:... the right price . Value $1675 .

ATHENS, OHIO

•MERCURY MONTEGO •COMET

Cuslom 4 dr. Like new. Only

YOUR CHOICE FOR

600 E. STATE ST.
&amp; 1200 E. STATE ST.

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO'S lARGEST
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER

73 MERCURY MONTEREY
•2895
72 MERCURY COUGAR XR7
like ~~~· •3195
72 PLY MOUTH DUSTER
P
•269 5
72 VW FASTBACK
•2795
72 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER
T,o~:·o:h:::. '2895
71 OLDS CUTLASS S
'2595
71 CHEV MALl BU
•2595
71 FORD LTD 4 DR HT
•189 5
70 PONTIAC CAT. 4 DR SEDAN T,hi.v~~::;:"~ •1595
70 PONTIAC LeMANS-2 DR Whitewi~ri~~w~:~:~i •1595
70 PONTIAC FIREBIRD 2 DR H,T ~:~~~::;po;.~er. •2195
69 MERCURY 4 DR HT
'1095
top.
Only •1395
69 PONTIAC BONN
66 BUICK RIVIERA •G.So
any~here. Only '995
Dr.
66 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF

•72 Cadillacs

1971 DODGE CORONEf ............. 11495

PH. 992-2174

We have traded for some great used
cars during
our big new car sale.
.
.
So come on in and get a great buy on a good used ·car.

$5900

1972 atEV. PICKUP ............... 12495

POMEROY, OHIO

-USED C4R SALE

NOW

Cu~tom H a~chba ck Coupe, .dark green fini sh, like new
wh1te -wall -t•re s, full wheel cover s, protective side
moldings , power brakes, rad io , 6 cyl inder eng ine, stan
dard tran smission. A very popu lar model and priced to go .

GALLIPOLIS
CHRYSLERPLYMOUTH

MOTORS, INC.

SPRI-N G JUBILEE

1-'73 Cadillac

1973 atEVROLET NOVA ........... 2695

ii

NELSON~
.

.

DALE R. SANDERS INC.

6 cyl., auto. trans .• 21 ,000 miles,

_trade-in on new Pontiac Catalina
by a retired senior citizen .

1969 PICKUP , Dodge 6 cyl. Ph.

..... 211 .

70 -6

CARROLL'S SAVINGS MAKE THE
DIFFERENCE I

'10 CAMARO, 307 Auto ., sliver
with black vinyl top , rally
wh~els , good gas
mileage,
excellent condition . 446 .4972.
70-3
. LOCUST posts. Call after 5 p .m .
Ph . 256-6559.

70·3

EVERffi SAUNDERS - TOM NORRIS - DoN HARDEN

·CARROLL NORRIS DODGE INC.

-- -~- ---,--- - ---

1972 CAPRI bY Mercury , 4 cy l ;
23 to 30 mpg, very clean,
4.0 ,000
m l ies .
Exc~llent
condllion . See to appreciate.
52295 . Almost 2miles from Rt .
160 on Kemper Hollow Rd .
Come after 5 p. m . on week ·
days. Donald Kealley .
68 ·3

For Sale

For Sale
GIRL'S. clothing , good COfl ·
dition .
Size ·
s.
ver-v
reasonable ., Ph . 446-3510.

70 -3

-8 ------------N 1952 F ORO tra ctor with
------·-------fr-ont· end loader . Good shape .
1972 vw Super Beetle , excellent
condition . Ph . (1) 682 -7307 .

68-6

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

Ph . 2$6-6627.1

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

70 -3

EXQUISITE dining room suite,
includes tabl e, chairs, china
closer. side board
and
cabinet. Duncan Phyffe style,
exce llent ~· craftsmanship ,
superb candition . Reply c -o
Box · 314 , Ga llipol is Oa i ty
Tribune for appoin tment to
exami ne I hie suite .
70·l

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

For Sale'

1967 CHEVY lmpola. Ph . -u6·
93l:J after 5:30p.m.
63-12

-·-- ------

.. ·-

MAG~E fiC truck signs midi•

t~ order, signs of 111 kinds.'
S1mmons Printing &amp; Offlu
Supplyo.
' 52 -~

---------.

.

. ..

�..
.,

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28 - The Sunday'Ti'mes ·Sentinel, Sund""" March 24, 19i4

'

ITT question: Not what, but why?
By MIKE FEINSD.BER
WASHINGTON (UP!) - As with so many of the troubles which
beset him, the question about President Nixon's role in the IT!'
easels nol what he did but why he did it.
• What he did was to intervene personally in the Justice
Department's attempt in 1971 to force the International Telepbone and Telegraph Corp. to sell off ail or part of six businesses
1t had absorbed in one gulp.
Nixon's intervention did not come to light at the time and two of
his attorneys general- John N. Mitchell and Richard G.
Kleindienst-gave sworn testimony that he had not intervened.
Their account was contradicted on Jan. 8, 1974, when the White
House issued an IT!' "white paper" defending Nixon's role as
neither improper nor unusual-&lt;tnd in no way· related to ITI's
pledge to underwrite _some ol the expense ol holding the 1972
Republican National Cnnvention in San Diego, Calif., where
Nixon wanted it.
Out-&lt;Jf.COurt Settlement
Nixon's intervention delayed a Justice Department appea l of a
lower court decision upholding IT'!' in one ol the department's
three antitrust cases against the firm, the Grinnell case.
The delay was long enough to perrnit ITT and the government
to negotiate an out-ol-&lt;:ourt settlement ol all three cases. IT!'
made its convention oller in the course ol those negotiations.
Ever since the terms of the settlement were announced, ex·
pertshave differed on who won-ITI or the Justice Department.
Certainly, IT!' got more than it would have if Nixon had played
no role and if the case had gone to a Supreme cOw-t coltclusion
and the cow-t upheld th e Justice Department's case -&lt;ts the
court has in every other major antitrust action ol the last two
decades.
On the other hand, no less a critic of the Nixon administration
than Archibald Cox has called the settlement satisfactory.
So has Erwin N. Griswold, another former solicitor general.

I
II
•

Lawmakers face
2 major issues

I

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COLUMBUS (UP!) - Legis·
lative leaders hope to make
progress this week on campaign fmance reform and an
emergency energy bill - two
pieces of major legislation
standing in the way of a spring
recess early next month.
The campaign financing pr()o
posal, adopted by the House
last week, will be returned to
the Senate Tuesday or Wednesday for concurrence in amendments.
The Senate is expected to ask
for a joint conference committee to look over extensive
changes made in the bill since
it cleared the upper chamber
last montb on a party-line vote.
Sponsors from both parties
have assembled an "agreed"
bill containing limitations on
campaign spending and
reporting requirements, but no
limits on political donations.
The House made one depar·
lure from the compromise version which could concern Re·
publican senators.lt took out a
section of tbe bill which would
have pardoned Sen. Donald E .
Lukens, R-Mlddletown, from a
five-year prohibition against
running for public office.
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter,
R-Ashland, said he plans to
seek alternative language to
give Lukens an escape from
the penalty once the campaign
financing law takes effect,
later this year.
Energy Measw-e Debated
Leaders from both chambers
will be trying to come up with a
potential compromise on an
emergency energy bill,
Republicans have complained that Gov. John J .
Gilligan 's proposed
Emergency Energy Board
would give the governor too
much power in times of
emergency.
Sen. Michael J. Maloney, R·
Cincinnati, said he would try to
draft language agreeable lo
both the governor's office and
Republicans by the time a spe·
cia! joint House-senate energy
committee meets Tuesday
night.
A House floor vote is sched·
uled for Wednesday on comprehensive drug abuse control
legislation written by Attorney
General William J. Brown.
The Senate Insurance Com·
mittee, despite opposition from
its chairman, Sen. Stanley
Aronoff, R..Cincinnati, w.ill
begin amending a no-fault
r - - - - - - ·-

.. .. -·- - ~-

Guarantee your
family an income

A Slate Farm Family Income Polic y
can provide a reg ular Income to he lp
pay for food, rent, Jiving expenses
If you'r1. taken out or the ple ture.
Lei me'al,ve you all the details.

P.rk Central Hotel Bldg .
Second Ave ., Gallipolis
Ph . 446-4290., .Home 446 -4518

LIFE

However, committee mem-

bers, bombarded with fiveweeks of testimony, said they
are ready to prepare a biil and
recommend it for passage be-

fore spring recess.
Rep. John T. McCormack,!).
Euclid, will try to keep alive
his proposal to require nickel
deposits on all beverage containers and force a return to

the all-returnable
sysiem.

bottle

Testimony on the controver-

sial bill wiil continue Tuesday
in the House Environmental
and Natural Resources Com·
mittee. Last week the beverage
industry claimed abandonment
of non-returnable containers
would displace thousands of
employes.
McCormack said he may lor
a vote on the bill this week or
next rather than refer it to a
subcommittee, where it could
he buried.
In the House Educa lion Committee on Wednesday, mem·
bers will consider a proposal
by Rep. Donald S. Maddux, D·
Lancaster, which would repeal
Ohio's compulsory education
law.
Also this week, the House
Judiciary and Senate Ways and
Means conimittees wiD take a
look at a joint subcommitte report on how to implement the
farm land tax exemptions approved by voters in November.
The House Interstate Cooperation Committee may vote
Wednesday on a bill drafted by
the state Department of
Rehabilitation and Corrections
to allow Ohio to participate in
prisoner exchange program.
The recently conceived 19member Interstate Corrections
Compact is designed to
promote nationwide adoption
of penal policies and lead to
regionalized planning .
Both chambers reconvene 8
p.m. Monday in an effort to
wrap up pending major leg isla·
lion

before

spring

Griswold played a larger role than was known at the time.
buy no firm with sales over $100 million.
At the time, Lawrence O'Brien, .then Democratic national
In exchange, ITT got to keep the Hartford Fire Insurance Co.,
chairman, and consumer cru5ader Ralph Nader raised a howl
with its $·1 billion in annual premium income and large liquid
but got nowhere in questioning the relationship between the I'IT assets which the cash-6tarved ITT badly wanted. The Hartford
settlement and the pledge by !'IT's Sheraton Hotel subsidiary to
acquisition was the biggest conglomerate merger in history.
support a San Diego convention.
ITT is a Goliath among giomts. It Is the eighth largest U.S.·
Dlta Beard Memo
based company · and the world's largest international
The amount of ITI''s commitment never has been established.
conglomerate.
The "white paper" says it "apparently" was $200,000 with
Teo Major Industries
1100,000 already forwarded when the decision to hold the conAt tbe time of the settlement, ITI had nearly 400,000 employes
vent ion in San Diego was scrubbed. I'IT received a refund.
·
and operated in 67 countries. Its subsidiaries are leaders of 10
But Dita D. Beard in her famous memo said she understood th e major industries with sales approaching $10 billion and inpledge was $300,000 and had been raised to $400,000 as IT!'
sw-ance premiums adding $1.6 billion. Its biggest sectors are
pressed lor an antitrust settlement. She cailed the convention
insurance and telecommunications. (IT!' is to the rest ol the
pledge "our noble commitment ."
world what AT&amp;T is to the U.S. telephone industry.)
The Dita Beard memo, surfacing nearly six months before the
Cbairman Greene, 63, is a hard-driving executive whose 1972
Watergate break-in, gave the Democrats what they were looking
sala ry and bonuses ol $813,311 made him the nation's fifth highest
for - the whiff ol major scandal in the Nixon administra tion in an
paid businessman. His company's profits approach half a billion
election year.
a year.
Mrs. Beard the swear~ike-a&lt;&gt;ailor lobbyist lor IT!' adaed just
Under Geneen, IT!' has taken over some 250 companies. Its
the touch of mystery and drama to keep the story on page one. appetite makes IT!' what Business Week calls "the symbol of the
Especiaily when she vanished from sight shortly alter the acquisitive Machiavellian corporation ' whose sole interest is
memo was published in Jack Anderson's colwnn.
profit by any means."
The merl!o suggested !'IT's San Diego pledge was a payoll for
McLaren defended the out-&lt;&gt;f-&lt;:ourt IT!' settlement at the
the antitrust settlement.
recpened Kleindienst hearings. He called it "harsh," the biggest
"Our noble commitment," said Mrs. Beard , "has gone a l~ng divestitute m history. He said he approved it in part out of fear
way toward our negot1attons on the mergers eventually commg
that breaki ng up the mergers would strike a "near fatal" blow at
out as Hal wa~ts them. Certamly the Pres!~ent has told Mttchell/ ffl', and could have shaken up the stock market, the economy
to see that thmgs are worked out latriy.
and the U. S. balance of payments.
"Hal" w;ts Harold S. Geneen, chairman of ITT. "Please
Not long alter negotiating the settlement McLaren was nomidestroy this, huh' " said Mrs. Beard at the end ol her memo, nated by Nixon for a U.S . district judg.;hip in Cbicago. The
addressed to her boss, W1lliam R. Merrtam.
nomination sailed through the Senate in a single day and without
ITT gave r,jse to bumper stickers that read "Nixon's Had IT!'," hearings.
and the case educated the nation about paper shredders.
Kleindienst and Mitcheil testified under oath that Nix an had
When in the course ol a Senate hearin g Merriam explained why not interfered in the Justice Department's handling of the case.
ITT stuffed 1ts Washmgton hies mto a paper shredder. th1s exSaid Kleindienst: "In the discharge of my responsibilities as
chang e took place.:
.
the acting attorney general in these cases, I was not interfered
Sen. Sam J. Ervm: ."You could ?o~. destroy that (Dita Beard)
with by anybody at the White House. !was not importuned; I was
memo because you dtd not have II.
not pressured ; I was not directed. I did not have conferences with
Merriam: "No, that is right, but theremight have been a lot of respect to what I should or should not do."
others in there like that."
Said Mitchell: "The President has never talked to me about
Mitchell had excused himself !rom handling the IT!' matter any antitrust case that was before the department ...
because he had represented an interested party as a lawyer Specifically, with respect to IT!' or any other litigation, no. I
before becoming attorney general.
have never talked to the President about it."
So Kleindienst, his deputy, handled the case. When Mrs.
Last summer, during the Senate Watergate hearings, a memo
Beard 's memo surfaced, Kleindienst, who had won Senate written in the course of the Kleindienst hearings came to light. It
Judiciary Committee approval to succeed Mitchell without was from White House counsel Charles W. Colson to H. R.
lacing a single IT!' question, demanded that the hearings reopen Haldeman, then White House chief of staff, and it cautioned that
"to clear my name."
there existed memos which ''would lay this case on the
They lasted six weeks and tarnished his image. He was forced
President 's doorstep."
'
to acknowledge that he had met five times with an IT!' director
Wrote Colson :
despite his earlier assertion the settlement "was handled and
" .. . Certain ITT Iiles which were not shredded have been
negotiated exclusively " by Richard McLaren, the depariment's
turned over to the SEC (Securities and Exchange Cnmmission),
antitrust chief.
there was talk yesterday in the committee of subpoenaing these
ASupreme Court Ruling
from IT!' . These Iiles would undermine Griswold's testimony
McLaren had taken office in 1969 determined to slow the
that he made the decision not to take the appeal to the Supreme
growth of conglomerates, whose hugh acquisitions at the time
Court. Correspondence to (then Treasw-y Secretary John B.)
seemed worrisome.
Connally and (then Commerce Secretary Peter G.) Peterson
He saw in the ITT case a chance lor a Supreme Court ruling
credits the delay in Justice's filing of the appeal in the Grinnell
which either would broaden the definition of anticompetitive
case to direct intervention by Peterson and Connally, A memo
behavior, or invite Congress to broaden it.
sent to the Vice President (then Spiro T. Agnew) addressed,
In the settlement, IT!' agreed to sell off the Canteen Corp,, a
'Dear Ted,' from Ned Gerrity (public relations director for IT!')
food vending and catering service; Avis Rent-a-Car, Levitt &amp; tends to contradict John Mitchell's testimony because it outlines
Sons, Inc ., the homebuilding giant; the fire protection insw-ance
Mitcheil's agreement to talk to McLaren following MitcheU's
division of Grinnell Corp.; a plumbing, water sprinkler and
meeting with Geneen in August, 1970 ...
"The memo further states that (White House domestic adviser
firefighting equipment maker, and two small insurance comJohn D.) Ehrlichman assured Geneen that the President had
panies. In aU, IT!' agreed to shed $1 billion worth of assets and to

":a'"

~
, Home Offlct: Bloomhlt:lon, lllinoi1 ! ,.,~ .......
Uh •
St•f• F•rm iJ there.
HIISURANCE COMPANY

·~~!!!s::~m=~=:;:::~=::::r..:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:=:::::::::::::::::::::::~::::~"!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::*~==::::::::::::i:i:.;:=..~:=:-":::::::&amp;:.:.~:::::»~::8~~;:;:;:;:::::::.

;instructed' the Justice Department ~ith respect to the bigneSs
policy. (It Is, of coutse, appropriate for the President to lnstnfcl
the Justice Department on policy, but in the context of U.
hearings, that revelation would lay this case on the Presidenr s
doorstep.)"
11TMemos
Cnison told reporters he was only playing "devil's advocate"
when he wrote that memo.
~.
Shortly before the 1972 election, the House commerce lpvestigations subcommittee heard about the ITT memos arid
requested them from the SEC. Rather than comply, SEc
Cbairman William J. Casey shipped 34 cartons of files to tile
Justice Department, where they were out of the House panel's
reach.
,
Casey swore before the subcommittee on Dec. 14, 1972, that the
Justice Department had asked for the files. Ralph E. Erickson,
then deputy attorney general, swore that Justice had not ask~d
for them.
•
Casey, now undersecretary ol state lor economic affairs, hfs
been nominated by Nixon to head tbe Export-Import B~. TJ;Ie
Senate Banking Committee has delayed acting on the nonunation
while Casey is investigated for possible perjury.
.
Last laD, a short time before Nixon fired Archibald Cox as
special Watergate prosecutor, Kleindienst went to Cox with )
new version of ITT events.
~
He said Ehtlichman caiied in 1971 with instructions not to
pursue the I1T appeals. Kleindienst said he replied he could ~t
drop the appeal because it had been recommended by McLar&lt;in
and approved by Griswold.
"
Threatened to Resign
"
A short time later, Kleindienst told Cnx, the telepbone rang
again arid Nixon came on the line. Mter calling him a wlgar
name, he said, Nixon said, "Don't you understand the Engliiih
language?" and ordered the appeal dropped.
·
Kleindienst said he threatened to resign ra !her than carry out
the order. Only then, he said, did Nixon back down .
,
Kleindienst's account to Cox came to public attention on OCt.
30. The White House responded with a denunciation of Cox filr
"leaking" Kleindienst's account and an explanation which for
the first time assigned an IT!' role to Nixon.
•
The White House statement said Nixon had directed Kle!p·
dienst not appeal because he felt the ITT a)llieal "represented·a
policy of the Justice Department with which he strongly
disagreed - namely, !bat bigness per se was unlawful.
"When the specific facts of the appeal were subsequently
explained in greater detail, the President withdrew his objection,
and tbe appeal was prosecuted in exactly the same fonn
,.
originaiiy proposed."
The Jan. 8 "White Paper" gives a somewhat different version.
It says Ehrllchman described the ITT appeal as an "attack on
the conglomerate" which violated Nixon 's antitrust policies. It
says Ebrllchman said he could not convince the Justice
Department to drop the appeal.
' 'The President expressed irritation with the failure of the Head
of the antitrust division, Mr. McLaren, to loUow his policy," the
paper says. It says Nixon telephoned Kleindienst and ordered
him not to appeal. Two days later, MitcheU "advised the
President that in his judgment it was inadvisable for the
President to order no appeal to the Supreme Court in the Grinnell
casen" lhe white paper says.
"The attorney general reasoned that, as a personal matter,
Mr. Erwin N. Griswold, solicitor general of the United States,
had prepared his brief for appeal and would resign were :!be
appeal not to proceed. The attorney general further feared
legislative repercussions if the matter were dropped entirely.:
"Based upon the attorney general's recommendations, the
President reversed his decision ... "
The new version assigns no role lo Kleindienst and introduces
Griswold as the ligw-e whose threat to resign caused Nixon to
retreat.
·
It makes no mention of those named in Colson's memo as
participants in the ITT matter -ConnaUy, Peterson, Agnew,
Ehrlichman, among otbers.

..!::.;:.'::~!..!m:l.7!.~~he d~.~':.!::.C:.~."'·~oo· Kissinger,, Brezhnev in
The amateurs now are operating out of
France, Mexico, South America, Southeast Asia, the United States- anywhere
there are drugs to be had or used, ac·
cording to Bartels.
"People rent planes, fly down to
Mexico, pick up a couple hundred pounds.
of mariJ'uana, an ounce or two of cocaine
and bring it back," he said. Some dealers
bave also been known to use aliens as
"mules" to bring drugs into the United
Slates.
Bartels said it is also getting barder to
guard every potential port of entry for
illegal drUgs with the growth ol the Latin
American in.flow. Such relatively new
entry points as Miami, Seattle and
Vancouver "are a serious problem ."
Asked about incidents where narcotics
agents have broken into the wrong house
or arrested the wrong person , Bartels

•

VOL. XXV 'NO. 240

POMEROY·MIDOeEPORT, OHIO

~·

&lt;

eSOLIQ STATE IGNITION WITH NO MOVING IGNITION
PARTS OR REGULAR STANDARD IGNITION

The Almanac

By United Press International
Today is Sunday, March 24th,
the 83rd day or 1974 with 282 to
foUow. The moon is between
its new phase and first qtiarter.
The morning stars are
MercUry, Venus and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mars
and Saturn .
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aries. U.S
treasury secretary Andrew
Mellon was born March 24th,
1855.

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SAIGON - COMMUNIST FORCES BROKE off major
·fighting north of Saigon bul launched heavy new attacks in the
Mekong Delta, the Saigon command said today. Fow- stiff fights
were reported around Cang Long district capital, 50 miles south
of Saigon just below the Mekong River mouth, the command
~d.
.
Initial field reports said there were 25 Communists and 11
govenunenl soldiers killed, with another 31 South Vietnamese
missing in action. '~;here was no report of casualties in one of the
battles. All four fights were within fow- miles of Cang Long, a
small distriC\ town of about 5,0110,

.-

..,...'

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''We do NOT approve of .
marriage on a financial basis."
In 1965, white civil rights
worker Viola Liuzzo (lee-&lt;&gt;o'. ·
zoh) or Detroit was shot and
killed on a road near Seima;
Alabama . She was foiiowing a
protest march demanding equal
volin~ rights for ne!(roes.

ELBERFE·LDS ·.I N POMEROY

;'

•

WASillNGTON- LAWYERS FOR WATERGATE defendants H. R. Haldeman and Gordon Strachan plan to let pass a 5
p.m. deadline today for appealing to tbe Supreme Court a ruling
that a sealed Watergate grand jury report be turned over to a
· House inquiry into the possible impeachment of President Nixon.
The White House did not object to the report, which purportedly
dealt witb Nixon's handling of the Watergate cover-up, going to
tbe House Judiciary Committee. But the two attorneys had
argued that its contents would be leaked to Capitol Hiil reporters,
· · damaging (heir clients' chances for a fair trial.
JohnJ. Wilson, attorney for Haldeman, formerly Nixon's No.
1 aide, said Sunday he was inclined to lei the deadline pass
wltbout filing an appeal. The only thing that would change his
mind, Wilson said, would be a decision by John Bray, Strachan's
attorney, to appeal to the SUpreme Court. Later Sunday, Bray
said he would inform the court early today that he would not
contest tbe ruiiog by the U. S. arcuil Court of Appeals lor the
District of Columbia.

Elderly couple hurt in wreck
Two personlt were taken to
Holzer Medical Center by the
·Pomeroy ER squad. Sunday
following a single car ~ccident
Sunday on County Road 403,
Minersville hiD, · the Meigs
Dept.
County Sheriff's
reported.
Clell B. Wood, 74, Minersville, Rt. 1, was traveling south
on county road 403 when he

Ptl. Evans, of Lower River

'\

IN;;,~:·: in Brief~

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Lawn Boy a.ccessories in stock. New Blades . Lawn Boy Engine Oil
· Lawn Boy Spark Plugs · Grass Catcher assemblies.
Lawn Boy Mowers on sa - Wa.r.ehouse Mechanic Sfreet.

MISS INGRID HAWLEY, center, received the annual
scholarship award of the Ladies Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion, from ·Mrs, Isabelle Couch, right,
chairman, as Mrs. Grace Pratt, auxiliary president, looks
on . A senior al Meigs High School, Miss Hawley is the
daughter of Mrs. Diane Hawley, Wolfe Drive, Pomeroy and
the late Clarence Hawley. She is a Candystriper, a member
of the Meigs County 4-H Advisory Committee, the Meigs
Junior Fair Board, the Middleport 4-H Munchers Club and
works as an office as5istant at Meigs High School. She Is coeditor of the annual, a member of the band, a member of the
National Honor Society, serving as treasurer. She attended
Buckeye Girls State as a junior and was in both the junior and
senior plays. Miss Hawley has been accepted at Capital
University.

Talmadge warns
farmers of '74

looked at an object on the seat,
intending to move it. However,
the road made a slight turn to
, the left at that point in time,
· and Wood did not, his car
rolling over an embankment
sideways.
Wood and his wife had visible
but no apparently serio•s injuries. No citation was Issued.

port emba rgoes will be
tremendous. I also know that if
prices farmers receive drop as
low as the target prices in the
farm bill enacted last year, it
will be disas trous."

He also warned that the
energy crisis would not
disappear with the lifting of the·
oil embargo and it had
"created strong concern for
living may increase another 15 negotiating international rules
to 20 pet. this year. If farmers governing the limitation ol
produce a bumper crop, he exports of basic commodities.
said, prices might he below
''If we use embargoes, other
cost or the export demand nations will too. Even if we
~ould cause a shortage at home
don't some countries will
which would increase costs to certainly be takin g a new look
the housewife.
at the value ol the raw
"Consumers are not likely to materials which they sell us.
tolerate another 20 pet. in- Strong international proteccrease in food prices this tionism will certainly lead to
year," Talmadge said. "If that more shortages here, and
happens the pressure for ex- galloping inflation worldwide."

Ford will quit by 1977
unless party deadlocked
NEW YORK (UP!) - Vice
President Gerald R. Ford has
promised his wife to quit public
life no later than 1977, ruling
out a run for lhe Republican
presidential nomination, according to an interview in
People magazine.
Bul he left open one way he
could be the GOP 's '1976
flagbearer-il the nominating
convention is hopelessly deadlocked.
Ford said in the interview
that
his
self-imposed
retirement deadline stemmed
from a bad neck nerve problem
'his wife had been suffering
since 1964, causing numbness
in her arm. ·
"It was tension created by
problems of me being away so
much and her having to nm the
family," Ford sa id.

I

.. -

'i

·-

1 •

' .

"'

.

..

'

.

~

'

...

..
'

Road, Gallipolis, is in Holzer
Medical Cent er, recoveri ng
from concussion. He wa s
reported in good condition .
Samuel P. Copely, 21, Bid·
well, driver or the truck, was
jailed, charged with driving
while intoxicated and for
eluding a police officer. He was
treated lor minor injuries and
released at Holzer Medical
Center before being confin ed.

Eagle band
rated 'I'
at Minford
The Eastern High School
Band directed by Charles Wills
received a I rating at the
district band and choru s
contest Saturday at Mintord .
The I rating means , "an
outstanding performance with
very few technical errors and
exemplifying a truly musical
expression.
One judge stated, "Good tone
quality, good intonation and
overall good interprel)ltion,
with a highly developed facility
and good precision justifies
this rating .
The contest was divided into
two areas, concert and sight
reading. In the concert portion

there were three judges. The
band performed three numbers . The first was a warmup

mar ch. For this, Eastern
played " The Klaxon " by
Henry Fillmore.
The second number was the
required selection which had to
he played by all groups in that
class. This was "Ariella lor
Winds," by Frank Erickson .
The third number had to be
selection !rom ~ listing of
several options. Eastern chose
" Introduction and Caprice,"

by Charles Carter.
In the sight reading portion
there was one judge. The band
is given a number it has never

seen helore and the director is
Because the ailment persis· then given two minutes to
ted, Ford said, the couple · study the selection and two
consulted a psychiatrist who minutes to discuss it with his
told them the condition could band, then the number must be
performed.
not be eased.
The Fords agreed last year
that his race for another term
TWO TO HOSPITAL
in the House of RepresenRACINE - The Racine E·R
tatives would enable him to · squad was called Sunday at
achieve his goals or 28 years in 6:30 p. m. lor fow--year-&lt;&gt;id
Congress and retire in 1977, he , Brenda Lee Taylor, Racine,
said.
' Rt. 2, a medical patient, who
"She said okay and the kids was taken to Veterans
said okay.lflhadbeen there 28 Memorial Hospital. At 6:51 a.
years, I'd have been 63- which m. today the squad transported
I tbought would be young · Clarence Wickline, 63, Racine,
enough so sbe and I could just a medical patient, to Veterans
go off and really enjoy our· Memorial Hospital.
selves for 10 years or more .. Sle
wouldn't have any more neck
LODGE TO MEET
pains and arm pains," Ford
The Twin City Shrinettes will
was quoted as saying. "I made meetThw-sdayat 7:30p.m. at
a real firm commitment not the home of Marie Hawkins,
(Continued on page 7)
Middleport.

•
•

The Gallipolis local ollicc o[
th e Ohio Bureau ol Employment Services announced
tod ay it is accep tin g ap plications for mine mechanic ·
machinery tra ining to start in .
mid April.
The 30-week training course
will in clude instruction in
maintenance and repair of

underground

coal

mining

machinery as well as the
principals
of
repair in g
mechanical 1 elec tri ca l and

hydra ulic machinery.
The program is coordinated
by the Ohio Bureau of Em·
ployment Services and the
Meigs Count y Board ol

en tine

A high speed chase on the
Route 35 bypass by two MeigsGallia
State
Hi ghway
Patrolmen ol a speeding driver
ended ea rly today when the
pickup truck being chased
rammed the patrol car of Ptl .
Larry M. Evans, 23.

/

/

e19 OR 21 INCH CUT SIZES

Also on this day in history :
In 1902, one of the earliest
" Advice to the Lovelorn"
columns received this question:
"Can two people •live as
comfortably as one on 12

1

'

1

Mine mechanics course offered in mid-April

MONDAY. MA~CH 25, lY/4

~

eBUY YOUR NEW LAWN BOY MOWER WITH OR WITHOUT
GRASS CATCHER

Stop in at Elberfelds Mechanic Street
Warehouse. See the many models of Lawn Boy.
Sele.ct t~e model and size best for your grass
cuttmg 10b.

year, the target date set by
Nixon Brezhnev replied :
1 take an optimistic view on
(Continued on page 7)

Education. It is fed erally
funded by the Manpower
Development and Training
Act.
In terested applicants should
contact the Gailipolis office at
45 Olive St. or telephone 446·
1683 to
discuss
their
qualifications for the training .

A cowbird is the smallest
type or blackbird.

PHONE 992·21 56

TEN CENTS

Officer hurt
in car chase
~"·'

LAWN MOWERS

ad-

where the Soviet Politburo
meets every Thursday.
Asked about the prospects
lor a SALT agreement this

·~~--------------~~=-------------

SYRIAN GUNNERS POUNDED ISRAEU POSITIONS in
the Golan Heights for the 13th consecutive day Sunday. Egyptian
diplomatic sources said tbere must be disengagement in the
WASHINGTON (lJPI) Heights before there can be further withdrawals in Siani. They
Sen.
Herman Talmadge, !).
said Egypt believed that the current Middle East peace efforts or
Ga.
,
warned
today that farSecretary of State Henry A. Kissinger could result in a Syrian .
mers
face
a
very uncertain
Israeli accord by late April or early May, setting the stage for the
lutw-e in 1974 with a number of
Sinai talks and a second Israeli troop pullback there.
critical
issues which cannot be
A Syrian communique said Arab gunners scored direct hits
solved
by
congressional action
on an Israeli observation post at Tel. AI Faras in the southern
alone
likely
to appear.
sector of the Golan Heights Sunday, destroyed an engineering
The chairman of the Senate
unit and killed or wounded "a number" of Israeli troops. An
Agriculture
Committee told the
Israeli communique said there were no casualties in the .;ro.
·
American
Agricultural-Editors
minute barrage which began at midday and that Israeli gunners
Association that the cost of
did not return the fire.

eCHOOSE EITHER A LAWN-BOY PUSH MOWER OR THE
POPULAR SELF PROPEUED MODELS

dR .
ruBoth
es an ·ussla.
men were m an ex· ba t ·
d h
panslve, · n ermg moo w en
they entered the Kremlin room

.

Devoted To The lntere~t. Of The Meigs-MaMJn Area

•

\

u 'ted Stat

fi0 r N.lXO n

Now You Know

at y

Partly cloudy tonight and
Tuesday, chance of a lew
periods of light snow north.
Lows tonight in the 30s. Higbs
Tuesday generally 35 to 40.

HEADQUARTERS FOR

journment.

~

Weather

LONDON- PRINCESS ANNE MIGHT BE.tbe first member
of the immediate royal family to testify in cow-l In a criminal
casein this century if the man who allegedly attempted to kidnap
her goes on trial, legal sources said today. They said the
testimony of the daughter of Queen Elizabeth could he vital both
to the prosecution and to the defense - to the prosJCutlon as the
intended victim who saw it all bappen, to the defense in support
of a possible plea to a lesser charge than attempted mw-der.
Only Queen Elizabeth among Britons cannot be summoned
In a court case. While this excemption thecretically does not
apply to royalty below the sovereign, in practice King Edward
VII, as Prince of Wales, was tbe last member of the immediate
blood royal actually to take the stand in court proceedings - a
divorce case in 1870 and a notorious baccarat gambling scandal
thereafter.

ON SALE
AT THE WAREHOUSE
ON MECHANIC STREET

Wtl rm up t alk s

such unaulhorized ''frolics.''
·~
"If you decide to break the law and go
out and raid hO)TleS without a warrant or w
.
without any probable cau"'l," Bartels has ~l
warned l)is agents, "we're going to come Sl
down hard. II you pull yow- gun on j MOS COW
(UP!)
_
th
·
ed
·
,
·
.,
unau orLz occa.stons, you ,r. ~ gorng to :-.!, American Secretary of State
••et 30 days of! wtth t
~
•
.
ou pay·
~; Henry A. Kissinger and Soviet
He sa 1d, .h.owever, drug law en- -~ Communist party Secretary
1orcemen t IS "th e t oug hest, most~
~
. ·. Leonid 1. Brezhenv opened
demandmg 1orm of 1awe nforcell'\en t th a, t ;;:&lt;
:&lt;e talks today to pave the way for
ex1sts ...everybody carnes a gun. Its '!i a Russian visit by President
· ::;l
t.. Nixon. Brezhenv optimistically
part .o1 the counter-&lt;:u 1ture or narcoltcs
traff
t
h
t
1
"
.,
. 1c o s oo peep e.
:i~ predicted agreement this year
Bartels also credite,,d a crackdown. on;:;,.:,· on . a new Strategic Arms
heroin
add Icts a.~d ? cha ~ge ~ r a tt 1tude ?,: Umitation (SALT) agreement.
.
m young people . with culling m half the~ That was expected to be the
number of herom addicts m the Uruted ~ main issue in the three days of
States smce 1970.
::t talks to try to sort out difHe said drug arrests nationwide rose j~ ferences on arms, trade and
!rom 15,5CO in 1972 to 24,900 tast year . . . the Middle East that have
fil:lll\&lt;ll111\&lt;il1WO!Siii'IS'll~~~ll\&lt;ll1Wi§i~:;:::;:;.-:::=::-.: =:!: v. ~:.:::!!:..-:::::::::::::.-:::::x::::::*::::~-::: : :o:;:;:;:;:-.;: : : :::::: : : : : : : : :::::::::::::::: : : : : : ::::::8:::8;:;~"!~:~::~:&gt;:~;:?,&gt;_:-:;:~:=-&amp;..~"!":~:-:;.~ &lt;.."OOled the detente between the
connection'' is giving :way to the ''Latin
American connection" in the battle
against drug-trafficking.
The head of the federal drug enforcernent department says "everybody
and his uncle" Is getting in the drug
business as hardcore professionals
Ianguish behind bars.
John -F. Bartels Jr., administrator of
drug enforcement
for the Justice .
.
Department,
said in an interview in U.S.
N
&amp;
ews World Report the back of the
"French connection" has been broken.
' 'Those five French.COrsican fwnilies ·
which for years brought in between 70
and 80 per cent ol the heroin into this
country aren't operating," said Bartels.
"But now any guy with $2,000 can walk
across the Rio Grande or go into Tijuana,
hang around
a bar and find something to
.
bu
d ll
y an se . Everybody and his uncle IS

By. United Pressllttemellonal

dollars a week?" The answer:

Carroll(. Snowden

STATE FARM

insurance bill Thursday .
Aronoff had wanted the committee to continue hearing testimony on various threshold
packages and how premium
rates would be affected.

I .

According to post co mmander Lt. E. W. Wiggleswprth, Ptl . Evans attempted to
pull over the truck operated by
Copley. Copley did not stop, but
proceeded at a high rate of
speed on the Rt. 35 bypass. Pll.
Evans called for assistance
and wa s joined by Sgt. David
Proffitt at the junction ol Rt. 3!i
and Rt. 160.
With both in pursuit, sirens
and blinkers activated, the
truck continued at a speed
es timated at 70 mph, the officers said.
Pti. Evans was able to
ge t in front or the truck, hoping
to Ioree him to stop.
Copley, instead of stopping,
proceeded to go faster . Ptl.
Evans attempted to turn left
into a driveway. At that point,
Copley's truck went left ol
ce nter, striking the patrol
cruiser in the rear .

MRS. MARY J. ROUSH, AMe St., Pomeroy, may be on
the way to becoming a millionaire. Mrs. Rousb received
word Satw-day that sbe has won $500 in the Massachusetts
State L:&gt;ttery and as such a winner will now qualify for the
million dollar drawing. Tl1e million dollar drawing includes
not only the first prize of a cool million, but a second prize of
$1,000,000 and eight $10,000 awards. Holding her $500 check,
Mrs. Roush reported that her name was selected as a winner
on March 15, and that her current lottery ticket expired
March 17.

Cold moving east
By United Press International Central and Northern Dlinols.
A cold wave tbat tumbled
It all goes to prove it's not
spring temperatures In the nice to fool Mother Nature.
Midwest moved east to the
Talk of an early spring
Atlantic Cnast today,
following a mild winter ended
Freezing weather was during the weekend.
reported from Maine to as far
Mother Natw-e struck backsouth as the Southern Ap- dropping the temperatw-e to 33
palachians, the Tennessee below zero in Roseau, Minn.,
Vailey and southern Arkansas. setting a cold mark for late
Snows were forecast for nor- March in Chicago, icing high··
thern Minnesota through the ways in Texas, Missouri,
upper Great Lakes and for lliinois and Indiana, and piling
up as much as seven inches of
snow from central Missouri
through Ohio, western Pennsylvania, upper New York
state and New F;ngland.
Tlie Chicago reading ol 5
above broke a liJO.year record
and came Um same month that
By United Press International the !hemometer climbed to 80
Twelve persons died in lor a pre-6Pring warm weather
traffic accidents on the state's mark on March 3.
highways during the weekend,
including two youtbs killed
while riding their bicycles
EXTENDED OU'ILOOK
Saturday, the sta te highway
Fair Wednesday and a
patrol reported today.
chance of showers Thursday
Brent Taylor, 9, Hamden, and Friday with a warming
was killed when he was struck trend. Lows Wednesday and
by a Highway Patrol cruiser Thursday In the 20s and In
while riding his bicycle on Ohio the 30s Friday. Highs In lhe
J' near his home and David 30s and low 40. Wednesday
Duffy, 15, died alter being
warming lo the 50s and low
struck by a hit-&lt;~kip driver on
60s by Friday.
Ohio 159 while riding his ~'&lt;'JIPl&lt;.mB~~IIm~lltllllllltlllll. rral
bicycle , the patrol said.
The
Highway
Patrol ·
monitors traffk fatalities in
the state durmg weekeqds
from 6 p. m. Friday until
The first day of speakers
midnight Sunday.

Brent Taylor of

Hamden dies

The cold wave set record
lows in dozens ol midwest
communities and threatened
fruit trees in Indiana and
llllnois, where the earlier mild
temperatw-es had started trees
to bud. Horticulturist J . Bon
Harline of Anna , Ill., said the
freeze may have wiped out the
entire comm~cial peach crop
in the Midwest.
An ice storm left hazardous
roads over a broad area of
north, west and central Texas.
At least four highway deatbs
were attributed to storm·
related accidents. Two of the
victims, Melvin L. and Linda
Moyers died when their trailer
truck hit ice at the Braws
River Bridge, skidded into
another truck and exploded.
St. Louis and Cleveland,
Ohio, had seven.Jnch snowfalls.
A 12-&lt;:ar pilOHJp was reported
on the icy South Expressway in
Akr onl Oh'10.
At least nine Iowa communilies reported low record ternperalw-es. 11 was 5 below in
Waterloo, 3 below in Cedar
Rapids and one above in Des
Moines.
In Ohio, new lows included
one degree at Toledo, 4 at
Dayton, 8 at Mansfield and 11
at Cincinnati.

Tuesday speakers listed
Dr. Milton Mason, optometry,
Middleport and Gallipolis;
trades will be held Tuesday at Margaret Hubble, practical
Meigs High School where the nursing, Hocking Technical
sixth
annual
students ' College; Kim Bonewit, hotelvocational conference is un- restaurant management,
derway.
Hocking Technical Coiiege;
Speakers will be Michael David Wright, coal mining,
Kish, admissions department Southern Ohio Coal Co.; Mrs .
of Otterbein College ; Sgt . Dorothy Jenkins, telephone
Jerry Stovall, recruiter, U. S. work, General Telephone Co. ol
Marines; Mrs. Merle Johnson, Ohio; Floyd Hopewell, ad·
owner and operator of Jonnie's missions department, ' Art
Beauty
Salon;
Roger Iitstitute of Pittsburgh ; Madge
Quis.e nberry ,· engineering Hauldren, owner, day care
department, Ohio University ; center, Sun Valley Nursing
Edison
Baker, interior School , Gaiiipolis; Tim
decorating, Baker Fw-niture Shepser, accounting , computer
Co.; Carl Denison, engineer· programming, drafting, police,
chemist, Rutland; John Zerkle, Mtiskingum •Technical College.
trucking, Zerkle Trucking Co.;
from various professions and

CARWASHSET
The senior class at Eastern
High School will sponsor a car
washSatw-day from 9a. m, to 7
p. m. at Bailey's Ashland in
Tuppers Plains.

WILL MEET
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter
or Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
meet Thursday at 7:45p.m. at
the home of Mrs . Pearl Welker.
Jean Werry will hi. co-hostess.
Members are to bring a
stockh olders list.
I

y
I

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