<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15054" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/15054?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-06-09T21:00:19+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="47832">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/bea09cc9bd8a3d68f85ad9e98633d820.pdf</src>
      <authentication>87a889241edbc4e236b1fcee35d993b3</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="48363">
                  <text>.'
Ill- The Daily Scntmcl, M!ddlepor1-Punwmy_ 0 .. Fnday, Juuc 10, t977
~----------------------- - -- 1

Boys State opens June 18th !

Area Deaths

!
I

The 40th edition of The
American Legion of Ohio 's

governm ents on Tuesday
mornin~

and continue the
gov e rnmental
process
through Saturday , with
graduation Sunday morning.
Men from throughout Ohio,
prominent i11 business 1
proressions and government
gi ve voluntarily of their time
and knowledge to aCt as
advisors during the Boys
State session. In addition.
former Boys Staters, who are
now attending colleges,

Buckeye Boys State will open
at Ohio University, Athens.
on June 18 and will close with
graduati on ce r emonies
Sunday morning, June 26.
Ohio's Boys State is the
largest or the some 50 con. ductc'd throughout the nation
by state organizations of The
American Legion . Nearly
1.400 top seniors-to-be boys
from high schools throughout
the stale will register on June
18 and begin almosi immediately to campa ign for
Entries are still bein g
offices in city. county and
accept ed for the Kyger Creek
state government .
After
ina ugura..tion Sto-Pitch softball tournament
ceremonies Monday evening, to be held at Kyger Field
the young citizens will begin
the. operation of their mock Installation of

represent the hired staff of
counselors.
Prominent spea k e r s
sched ul ed to appear in
evening assemblies include
State Le gion Commander
Robert L . Klipstine, former
Lt. Gov. John Brown, OHio
Supreme Court Chi ef Justice
C. Will ia m O'Neill, Lt. Gov.
Richard Ce leste , Governor
James
Rhodes
and
Congressma n Ralph S.
Regula.

MASON DRIVE-IN
Tonight- June 10
HUSTLE " R"

Plus
MARATHON MAN " R"
Sat. thru Tuesday
June 11 - 12- 13- 14

KILLER FORCE " R"
Pius
SPEC IAL DELIVERY
"PG"

Lori Ann Wood , daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Wood,
Spring Ave., Pomeroy, will
be installed as honored queen
of Bethel 62, International
Order of Job's Daughters in
an open installation at 7:30
Saturday night at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Paula Eichinger,· retiring

honored queen , will be tire
installing officer. The public
is invited.

Automatic

ICE MAKER

WITH ANY OF THESE .

ft.,
ft .,
ft .•
ft.,

32" wide
32" wide
,, w1'de
35''4"
35 '14" wide

LYONS ENLISTS .
Randall Lyons, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles R. Lyons of
Route 1, Shade, has enlisted
in the U. S. Air Force.
Recruiter T-Sgt. Ron Rife
sa id upon graduation from
the Air Force's six weeks
basic military training,
Randy will receive training in
the mechpnical ~ ptitude
area. He is a 1977 graduate of
Meigs High School.
SOCIAL PLANNED
An ice cream so'!ial will be
held at th e monthly
fellowship night at the Dexter
Church of Christ, Tuesday,
June 14, at 6:30p.m. followed
by recreation. Th e public Is
invited to attend. Plans for
Bible School to be held at the
church from July 5 through
July 8 will be discussed.

.ICE 'N WATER

sisters, Sadie M cElhiney and
Li da

Joh n son , and thr ee

brother!:. , Robert . Charles
and William Warner .
She was a cha rter mef\l ber
of the Me igs County Humane
Society , and past matron of

Pom eroy chapter OES.
She

is survived

by

her

husband, Allen E. Ball ; one

a mayor of Athens ; Robert , o·t
lancaster , and Vaughn. of St.
Louis, Mo .
Funera l services wi ll be

held a110 a.m. Monday at !he

Dwayne Spence Funeral
Home a t Canal Win chester .
Friends rna~ call at the
funera l home from 4 to 8 p.m.
Sunday . Burial wilt be at
Cana l Winchester .

CHARLES EWIN_G
Char les

~ushnell

Ewing,

81. a res ident of Cuyahoga

Fa ll s, Ohio died Wednesday,

J une 8, a t Green Cro ss

Hospilal in Cuyahoga Falls.

He was a ·graduate of Oh io
University . an d a form e r
teacher in the Meigs County
Schools.
He was born June 30, 1896,
in Meigs County, so-n of the

!ale John T. and Geneva
Ewi n~ .

He is survived by his wife,
along with one sister,
Ethe l Ewing Willi ·a mson ,
Meigs Coun ty and four
nieces .
Memor ial services will be
held Sa turday a' the Chapel
Nor thlawn Mem orial Park.
_G lad y~.

Cuyahoga Falls.

TOP MOUNT

1~ cu. ft .
18 CU - ft .
20 cu. ft .
23 cu. ft.

in death by two

Canal Winchester Friday
LOTIERY WINNER
morn ing .
This week's winning Ohio •
Mr . and Mr s. Will main.
Lottery
numbers :
tained a small home in Meigs
County in the Texas com.
Three - digit number mun ity and were frequent
351.
vis itors here .
Three - digit numtiet Mrs . Wil l. besides her
564.
husband , is survived by four
children,
seven grand ·
Five - digit number chi ldren, and tnree brothers,
39240.
Raymond Shepard, formerly

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

cu.
cu.
cu.
cu.

a lso

(Ruth Shepa rd) Will, 60 , a l

REFRIGERATORS

17
19
22
25

preceded

was

unexpec ted deat h of h is
sister.in·law , Mrs . Milton G.

1:11116®
SIDE BY SIDE

~he

Warner ,

June 17, 18, 19.
, Thoma s and Bob
All entries must be grandsons
Ball, and several nieces and
received by 6 p.m. Monday, nephews .
June 13. Send entries to Bill
Funeral services will be
Hubbard or Tom Morgan, held Sunday, 1 p.m. at Ewing
Burial will be Mei gs
Box 81, Gallipolis, or call367- Chapel.
Memory Gardens . Friends
7311.
may call at the funeral hom e
To enter, teams must pay , after 7 p.m . today .
$50 and two balls for sanctioned teams or $60 for nonMR S. MIL TON WILL
John Will ol the Chesler
sanctioned. .Jackets, shirts
and troph ies will be awarded. area received word of the

:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::

F·R-E-E

Freda Ball , 76 , Rt. 3,
Pomeroy died Thursday at
Holzer Med ical Center .
The daughter of the late
Wilbur and Effie Sti l es

daughter , Mrs . Frankl i n
{ Rita) Lew is, Pomeroy, and
one son , Edward Pres ton
Bal l , Rt. '1 . Pom eroy ; tw o

Entries being taken even yet

queen is planned

MARY VARNEY

FREDA BALL

Walkers
Wheel Chairs
Braces
Supports
Canes
Bed Pans
Crutches
Support Stockings
Custom Fitted
Back Braces

l'rl'wt ry Magdalene Varney,
65 , died at the Hol zer Medical
Cen ter- at approJdmately 9 : 45

p.m. Thursday .
She was bor-n July 7, 1912 at
Torch light, Ky ., one of 10
chil dren of the late Charles
and Chattie Dameron Collins.
married
1-iomer
She
Varney ot M ingo Cou •.ty. W. ·
Va . in July, 1929 who surv ives
along with sons. Arnold,
Freemon I ; Raymond, Bruns.
wick ; Charles and Joe. both
of Penn~ylv ania ; Frankl in
a nd Homer·, Jr ., both ol
Gallipolis,
and
four
daughters , Mrs . Lawrence
( Rosalie) Rhodes, Kileen ,
Texas; Mr s. John {Irene)
Scroggins,
Montgomery ,
Ala .; Mrs . Roland (Mary
Ann) Betz, Red River , New
Mexico ; Mr$. Glenn (Donna
Jean) Crawford , Br:ook Park .
One son preceded her in

Hospital News
llolzer Medical !:enter
( Dtscbarges, June 9)
Audrey Adkins, Mark
Bostic, Charles Clark, Jr .,
Oscar CuMingham, Watson
Davis, Mary Dee!, Hobart
DeWees Sr ., Ivan Fife,
Sondra Hamilton, Michael
Hensley, Thomas Holland,
Audrey Malone , Edward
Mates , Sandra Morgan ,
Woodrow Quesenberry ,
Hobart Rice, Peggy Rucker,
Gladys Simpson, Bertha
Stanley, Marion Thomas,
Timothy Thompson , Paul
Werner, Amelia Willis,
William Woods.
(Berths, June 9)
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Soles a
son, Bidwell, Mr. and Mrs.
James Birchfield a daughter,
Rutland .

dealh.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted
Thomas
Casey, Apple Grove, W.Va .;
Elija Powell, Pomeroy ;
W. Va .; Huley. Wa shinglon William Stegall, Mason ;
Sta te ; a sister, Mr-s. Robert Rosa Ohlinger, Pomeroy;
(Beatrice) Sir , Oxon Hill) Md . Jessie Vanlnwagen ,
She was a member of the Pomeroy.
Fai t h
Baptist
Chur ch,
Discharged - Vera Glass,
Rodney, and attended schools
Anna
Hartenbach, John
in West Virginia .
Funeral arrangements, Mays, Iva Howell, General
under- the direct ion of Miller's Hall, Floyd Bush, Millicent
Home for Funerals, will be
Darst, Perry Shain.
announced .
Also
surviving
are
brother's , Orville. Arthur,
Charles,
Jr.,
Edward ,
Johnny , Woodrow , all from
Mich lg'an ; Ora, Sarah Ann;

News •• in Briefs
(Continued from page I)
W. Wilkins has made downward " revenue adjustments" of
$58.6 million from the figure used when the 1978-79 budget was
submitted last February.
WASHINGTON - THE FOLLOWING SUMMARIZED
Supreme Court actions Thursday :
Struck down 7 to 2"as an Invasion of privacy New York's
law regulating the advertising and sale of contraceptives;
upheld 5 to 4 Olinois' obscenity law, despite objections that it is
not specific enough, and affirmed the conviction of a man
charged with selling "sadi-masochistic" publications; decided
7 ro 2 that a military contraC\or who is sued by a serviceman
for personal injury may not , in turn, sue the U.S. government.
Also, ruled 8 to 1 that lower courts were v;rong to throw out
charges against a St. Louis man who was indicted so long after
his alleged crime that two defense witnesses died in' the
meantime; declared, on a 6-J vote that indirect purchasers of a
product may not sue manufacturers for triple damages on
grounds of antitrust violations, even if higher prices caused by
anti-competitive practices are passed on by middlemen to the
. buyer.

Eat·a·thon set
during regatta
the contestants will be
provided by Country Cousins,
fr~f charge.
.
_ All entry forms, including lists of sponsors, shall
be received before 12 noon,
June 17, 1977, at Country
Cousins.
- All decisions of the
judges are final and the
Meigs Jaycees and Country
Cousins accept no liability for
said entrants or this contest.
- All entrants should be at
Country Cousins no later than
3:30 p.m. on June 18, 1977.
Hamburger eating will begin
at 3:45p.m. and last unttl 4:15
p.m.

If you feel akin to "Wimpy"
of the famous "Popeye"
comic strip, Country Cousins
Restaurant, W. Main St.,
Pomeroy, should be your cup
of tea on saturday, June 18,
the second day of Regatta
Weekend.
The restaurant will be the
scene of a hamburger eat-athon with winners to receive
cash prizes and plaques and
aU contestants their hamburgers free of charge.
Following are the rules and
regulations for the eat·athon :
- Two age groups will
compete- one group will be
those 14 years and under ; the
other group will be those
above 14 years or age.
- It is the duiy ·of each
entrant to obtain as many
sponsors as possible to pledge
an amount for each hamburger eaten in the contest
and to collect the pledge after
the amount eaten is validated
by Ga·eg Gatrell, Meigs
Jaycee
member
and
Manager of Country Cousins.
- First prize in each class
will be $20 cash and a plaque.
Second place finishers In
-each class will receive a
plaque. The entrant in each
class that obtains the most
total sponsors money will
receive a plaque. ·
- All ·sponsor monies
collected in this contest will
go to the Meigs Jaycees for
their Community Activities
and to the Senior Citizens of
Meigs County.
- The contest shall be on
June 18, 1977, at Country
Cousins and the winners will
be based upon the persons
who can eat the most regular
Country Cousins' hamburgers within a 30 .minute
period. All hambers served to

Corporate Bible
school planned
by 2 churches
SYRACUSE
The
Methodist Churches and the
Presbyterian Church in this
area are planning a "Cor·
porate" Vacation Bible
School to begin Monday, June
13 at 9 a.m. continuing dally 9
a.m. to 11 :30 a.m. through
Friday, June 17.
"
A nursery class w.JJlbe held
at Asbury Methodist Church,
all other classes at the
Presbyterian Church for
children of all ages open to all
area children.
A public recognition service for parents, teachers,
and children is scheduled for
7:30p.m., Sunday, June 19 at
the Presbyterian Church.
CLUB TO MEET
The Twin City Shrine Club
will meet Monday, June 13, at .
7:30 p.m. at the club. A fish .
fry will be held following the '
meeting.

ATHENS, GREECE - TBE LAST TWO OCfUPLETS
born ro a Greek woman who took fertility drugs died roday, 3-4
hours alter their birth, a hospital spoke~mari said.
"One died at 6:30a.m. and the other half an hour later,"
the sookesman lor Hyl(eia hospital in suburban Athens said.
"They both were in critical condition and we had not expected
them -to la"st through the night.'' Doctors had mounted a
desperate attempt to save the two infants who were suffering
respiratory difficulties and were being cared for in incubators.
The mother , Cleo Zerbini, 31, had quadruplets two years
ago, all of whom died shortly after birth.

Meigs
Property
Transfers Workmen's fund
Dorolhy C. Anlhony to Gerald
Anlhony , Dorothy An· audit good news ·
"Ge rald

L.

Kaye Wa lker to Leonard
Conrad l yons , Carol lynn
Lyons , lots , Chester, Branchwood Addition .
Robert J . Lewis, Addalou
Lew is 1o William C. Quickel.
parcel , Middleport.

"TIGRESS"
2 GALS .·
FROM PARKERSBURG
THURSDAY, FRIDAY
&amp; SATURDAY
10 TIL 2

THE MEIGS INN
INGELS FURNITURE
106 N. 2nd

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Co unty's
elected officials here Friday afternoon
received offers of financial assistance,
entquragement in facing their many
problems and a shoulder to cry on.
Governor James A. Rhodes led a
group of his administration to the Gallia
County Courthouse for one of many " town
meeting" he is conducting around the
state.
One-hundred and six persons attended
the session including )()(al office holders,
township trustees, village clerks. members of the Rhodes cabinet and the news
media.
Problems examined during the 70
minute session, ranged from dust conditions created by the many coal haulers in
the county to the pressing issue of the
depressing financial status of the new
municipal swinnmlng pool on Texas Rd .
and the old antiquated tank behind Gallia
Academy High School.
City officials have been told that
$200,000 Is needed to complete the new pool
while $80,000 could get the old swimming
pool renovated for the swinnming season.

ASK TO WED
Marriage licenses were ·
issued to lloward Raymond
Erwin, 19, Rt. 1, Racine, and
Solly Lynn Carleton, 17, Rt . 3,
Pomeroy; Michael Edward
Ash , 21, Syracuse, and
Stephanie Lynn Ord , 20,
Syracuse, and Robert Allen
Hartley, 55, Pomeroy, and
Freda Florence Ferguson, 49,
Syracuse.

other cities. u

Governor Rhodes emphasized that
state government must stop mandating
and ruling local government. He said there
Is too much mandating to county commissioners, boards of education, township
trustees and other local agencies but no
funding.
One of the hotter issues surfacing was
presented by
George Woodyard ,
Gallipolis, District 12 commander of the
Veterans of Foreign Wars.
Woodyard, a Democrat, had been
employed with the State of Ohio Public
Utilities Commission from 1972 until two
weeks ago when he was fired by the

Rhodes Administration.
Woodyard asked the Governor what he
was doing for the veterans and especially
why his job was terminated. Woodyard
accused the administration of playing
politics .

992-3629
POMEROY

Middleport. 0 .

Be Sure To Stop in and
Shop Our New Jewelry Department

·----------------------~
I

The cremation in 323 B.C.
of Hephestion, a close friend
of Alexander the Great, cost
$12 million by today's standards because the pyre was ·
loaded down with gold, ivory,
precious jewelry, rare spices
and fabrics.
CLUB TO MEET •
The Meigs County Better
Livestock Dairy ._H Club will
meet Tuesday at 8:30p.m. at
the home of Stephanie
Radford,
FOUND DEAD
CLEVELAND (1.1PI) ~
Luis A. Camacho, 23,
Cleveland, was found shot to
·death Thursday night on
Whiskey Island, according to
homicide detectives.

-PLEASANT

VALLEY
DISCHARGES Roy
Sutphin, St. Albans; William
Stanton, Vinton; Mrs. George
Joh·nson, Point· Pleasant;
Thelma Newberry, Barberton , 0.; Paul Grinnm,
Letart;
Lloyd
Burke,
Gallipolis ; Herman Bowers,
Buffalo, and Mrs. Ronald
Jones and son, Syracuse.

"DON'T HESI'l'A'l'l&gt;" was the opening remark of Ohio Governor James A.
Rhodes during Friday's visit in Gallipolis. Pictured left to right with the governor

Governor Rhodes denied the ac-

cusation saying that just eight field in•mcee, kept the meeting moving with his vestigators were let go compared to 106 ·
enthusiasm and obvious concern .
during the last administration. He stated,
Many times he urged not only the "We are not here lor the political side of
elected officials present, but those in the this, we are here to Jearn of your problems
audience, to ask questions.
and to help you."
" We will try and find answers for
Another major problem reviewed by
you,'' he said.
Gary Bane, Gallla County Juvenile Court
1 Governor Rhodes was sympathetic tQ Probation office, was the lack of Iacilities
the financial plight of the varioUs township for juvenile delinquents.
trustees. He said they needed more and
Governor Rhodes said an official of the
additional authority. During that segment Juvenile Justice Division will meet with
of the questioning, two village clerks and a Bane to discuss a proposed Juvenile
trustee asked for equipment from the Center similar to the building recently
Department of Transportation for village constructed through federal fundin g in
use . The Governor authorized David L. Newark.
Weir, Director of Transportation, to sell
.Other projects reviewed were m~ss
them a dump truck with a grader blade for transit, the Gallipolis Locks and Dam and
$1 each.
the energy crisis.
Gallia County Commission President
'Governor Rhodes was very quick to
John Belville asked the Governor about point out that the state was working hard
the status of the US 35 four-lane project on the energy situation and that there is
from Rt: 160 to Thurman. District plenty of natural gas in the Southeastern
Engineer GleM Smith and Director Weir and Northern part of the state.
noted that the Department of TransIn closing, the Governor emphasized:
portation was proceeding with the project
"We have a tremendous future in
and it would soon be buying right of ways. Ohio. We will get our own energy. We are
City Commissioners John Allison, going to. keep people employed."
Arthur Nibert and Doug Wetherholt, and
The Governor agreed to have directors
Joel Dennis, 0 . 0. Mclntyre Metropolitan from the state's planning agency, housing
Park District, were sent out for a special department, recreational age ncy and
conference on recreational monies juvenile justice department here Wedavailable with-one of the directors in the nesday morning to disotlss various
Bureau of Recreation.
projects.
Governor Rhodes also reviewed the
Elected officials participating were
importance of getiing a Port Authority ' in County Commissioners. Belville, James
Gallipolis. He also stressed the importance
(Conllnued on Page A-2

'

SENATOR OAKLEY COLLINS, left, and Meigs County Commissioner Rich
Jones confer during the visit of Gov. Rhodes to Meigs County Friday.

POMEROY - Informality wa s the key

He said Ohio will not lie able tn produce

when Ohio Governor James Rhodes, accomoanied by state officials, met with
some 75 community and busi'ness leaders

enough t'Oal to meet the needs.
'' We want Ohio to be an energy
producing state,"' he commented.
The Governor said Ohio will not go

at the Meigs 1nn Friday .

There were no formal speeches during
the visit. Instead, the governor threw the
sessiDn open to a qUestion and answer
session to give loca1 resid ents .an opportuqity to air their problems and to see
the State of Ohio can do t.o help.

what

Several times during the hour-long
meeting, Gov. Rhodes ahd those asking
questions on governmental problems to

th rough what it went thro.ugh last winter.
He predkted that coal will be a booming
business next year.
·'
Water and sewage problems of small
towns were referred to EPA .personnel

present. A report was given on the
projected improvement of Route 124, that

FDIC

June Sale Prices on many items all over the store- big sale men's
short sleeve sport shirts - men's dress slacks and fashioned jeans at
real savings. Also reduced prices on men's ties and dress belts. For
the boys in your family save on fashion and denim jeans, light jeans.
In the home furnishings department, select any table cover and
buy at sale prices and in the housewares section, 1st floor- Sale of
crock pots - deep fryers - candles.
Shop the 2nd floor for excellent values in women's and pre-teen
swim suits .- long dresses - girls' dresses - women's baby doll
pajamas.
With Father in mind, visit the furniture department tor bean bag
chairs- springs and mattress sale - living room suite special- floor
lamp bargains and smokers.
;

SHOP FRIDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

side qf the river are in the department's

the next five years.

ment of the shallow gas welJs in Meigs

program. Gov. Rhodes urged Department

Gov. Rhodes stated that th e lottery has

of Transportation officials to bring down

not helped education financial problems at

the plans and show th em to Meigs County.
Officials were asked what will happen

all.

to the program for the mentaUy retarded
since a levy was turned down by voters
last Tuesday. They were assured that the

educational spendcrS1 " Gov . Rhodes sa id

" You can't keep up

with the

and voiced his opposition to proposals

The Governor expressed concern for
city property. He again criticized the

programs which are required.

MARY KRAWSCZYN

Nursing ·class topped
three years, during her senior year she co·
cha ired the student serv ices committee
and was chairwoman of the educational

Medical Cen'ter, is a s pecialist in obstetrics

t

Family fun

Veterans promise
to fight against
hospital change

h..I ghli'ght
of festival

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Veterans Administration hospital
system Is obsolde and Pihould be

merged with commQn ity health
facilities open to everyone, a Na tional
Academy of Scle'n.c es stu~y said

Saturday.

GALLIPOLIS.- A weekend of fami ly
and fun entertainment is planned aga in

·

Veterans

Adm inistrator

thiS year fN the annual River Recrea tion
FesUval sponsored by the Gt. Uipolis Area
Chamber of Comm erce.

Max

Cleland quickly went · on record as
oppos ing that recommendation, and the
commander of the Veterans of Foreign
WafS' called it "insulting. "
The re port, prepa.red by an NJ\S·
Na tional Research Council panel. after

The Festival begins Sa turday , Ju ly 2
with Kid's Day activit ieS' from two till four

in the aftern oon. The children of the
community will be invited to part idp;:~te in
Wheel Barrow races, ·Rope Skipping, sack
races, Tarpan Races and Skateboard

three years of study, said no new VA
hospitals should be built without ap-

Races.

proval of local health planning agencies;

Saturday evening's activities beg,in
with Ope 11ing Ceremonies at 7: 15. The

'

Congres&amp; has appropriated 1268
million to build hospitals In Bay Pines,

Madrigals from Gallia Aca demy High
School , directed by Mrs. Anne Fischer,

Fla., a nd Richmond, Va., and to design

wil l present a concert al 7:30 foll owed by

others lor Martinsburg, W. Va .; Portland, Ore.; ScaUic, Wash.; Little Rock,
Ark-; Raldmore, Md . and Camden, N.

J.

.

Extinguisher puts

tax maps which would cost $100,000. On the Rhodes commented.
.
bridges, Governor Rhodes said the state 1 Discussed alSo was Ohio' s .bid for 190
would try to help but there appeared to be million dollars for disaster aid as a result
littie help Iortbcming on the tax maps.
of last wint er. This moeny "A·ou ld have
been distributed to local communities to

Rhodes urged his listeners to develoR an help with the additional expenses incurred
industrial park with all utilities and to due to the severe winter weather .
contact the EPA for aid. Coal and the
A danger area on Route 124 in
future it holds for Meigs County was Syracuse up for discussion was referred to
discussed . It was conclUded that Meigs has

the Department of Transportation with a

a great potential in coal and an appeal was request for help from the Governor. Gov.
made by Doug E noch for the Governor, his

staff and the people to help with the
media committee.
development of coa l mining and loading.
J. Craig Strafford, M.D., featured
Gov. Rhodes said that processes for
speaker at Friday evening's graduation removi ng sulphur from coal are being'
ceremonies, challenged the · grad uate~ developed and he predicted that in 18
with his presentation, "Visions; Past, months high sulphur coal will be burned.
Present and Future." Dr. Strafford, a
lnember of the medical sta ff of the Holzer

and gynecology. He has been on the
grade point average in the senior class of hospital staff since August, 1975.
37 students and her cash award was from
Conferring the diplomas on the
the Gallia County Medical Society.
graduates was Max W. Morrow, chairman
Selected as . the "Best All-Around of the board of trustees of the Holzer
Student" by the faculty and the entire Hos pital Foundation . The class was
student body was Rebecca Sue Kouns of presented by Janet M. Byers, R.N.,
Syracuse. Her' cash award was from the Director of Nursing Ed•cation. The
Holzer Medical Center Clinic.
seniors received their pins from class
Miss Krawsczyn is the daughter of Mr. advisor Christine Gregory , R.N., and
and Mrs. JOhn Krawsczyn of 300 Broadway student government advi~or Barbara
St., Middleport. She graduated third in a McKinley, R.N.
class of 206 froln Meigs High School in
Musical selections by the senior class
1974.
were conducted by Merlyn H.os2, ac·
Miss Kouns is the daughter of Mr. and companied by Mrs. Merlyn Ross . The Rev.
Mrs. Donald E. Kouns of Dusky St., David Strang pronounced the invocation
Syracuse. She graduated from Southern and the benediction.
Local High School in Racine with the class
.A reception for the relatives and
of 1974. Active in the student government friends or the graduates was held followin g
at the llolzer School of Nursing for the past the ceremonies at navis H:tll. ·

GOVERNOR JAMES RIIODES as he appeared at an informal meeting with
Meigs County leaders in Pomeroy Friday. Here he is greeted by Mayor Clarence
Andrews of Pomeroy.

''You cannot continue these man· legislature, which, he said had mandated
datory programs without money ~" the programs costing 800 million dollars but ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:-:.:-:·
has provided no money tl'l ca rry out the
Governor admitted.
Meigs Cou nty Engineer Wesley Buehl programs.
brought up the question of the need for
"Legislatures should serve. in local ·
repair to many bridges and the need for offices to see what it's like 1" Governor

On the development of ind ustry, Gov .

GALLJPOUS - Two seflior students
of Meigs County received the top awards
at the 54th annual commencement exercises of the .Holzer Medica l Center School
of Nursing Friday evening at Grace United
Methodist Church here.
' Hugh P. Kirkel , president of the
Holzer Medical Center, made the
presentations on heha!f of the Gallia
County Medical Society and the Holzer
Medical Center Qinic. Mary Virginia
Krawsczyn of Middleport had the highest

TIL 8 O'CLOCK

Co unty and that this will take place within

valuatin g fann property for taxation
provided no fund s to carry out the . purpo ses on the same basis as factory or

by two Meigs women

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT

Virginia is moving last, but that highway
improvements to the bridge on the Ohio

requirements for schools and government
established by the legtslature which has

I

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

utility compa ny is interested in develop-

0

'

REBECCA KOUNS

the project. They were told that West

made at the state level for reducing the
state will do all possi ble to help.
teacher·student' ratio from 30 to 1 to 20 to 1.
Arising several times during the ln- This will again increase costs or education
(orm al sess ion were th e mandatory considerably , the Governor stated.

I'

,.

contac1 with the Stale of West Virginia on

Rhodes expres sed hi s oppOsition to
redistricting suggestions in Cnlumbus

whi ch he sa id would do away with local
govern ment.

Discussed also were mental hea lth and
welfare programs which, the Governor
said, are also extremely costly.

I

I

1982. · Gov. Rhodes suggested that . the

mental regulations ,
At one point it was repo rted that a gas

I

/

it is sched uled for the construct ion year of
project be scheduled earlier. US 33
development between Darwin and Athens
was discussed and residents were told that
this too is an active project:
At times during the di~cussions, Gov .

--

\

lnfornrality highlight
of meeting .in Pomeroy

Department of Transportation is IQ close

the bar*GI
the cenlurJ'
1214 Ratted lll2

are James Montgomery, Gallia County Sheriff, and County Comm issioners Paul
D. Niday, Jim Saunders and John Belville.

Governor Rhodes, Serving as his own

Wan I some money?
At low rates I In quick time'
Ask us. We like doing things your way.

Memb •r

PRICE 25 CENTS

of attracting new industry to the GalliaMeigs County area stating, "If you are not
going to get jobs in Gallia County your
youth will Contin ue to leave for jobs in

Wilh the bridge at Ravenswood up for Rhodes indicated impatience with "enddiscussion , residents were tuld that the less forms," bureaucrac~ and environ·

news conference.

Johnston said the reduction
was primarily due to a
decrease in the number of
permanent total disability
awards.
" The easiest and most
significant thing we done Is
we 've started to read the files
and look at the permanent
total disability claims - the
lifetime ben efit s" said

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

Problems of two counties brought to governor

L.

COLUMBUS (UP!)
Johnston .
William
W. Johnston,
" People were getting them
chairman of the Industrial with no supportirig medical
Commission of Ohio, reported evidence - a sprained wrist
Eblen 1o Mark A. Oiler, lol, today that an independent or a broken finger," he adPomeroy .
James R. Stewa rt. to audit showed the deficit In the ded. "That's really all we 've
Farmers Bank and Saving worker's compensation fund done. It sounds very simple.''
Company , parcel, Pom¢roy . had been sliced from $1.3
Booz, Allen reported that
Lillian Helen Stieff, dec . to billion to $700 million.
the
· reason for the deficit
If We Don'! Have 11 , Rober ! L. Lewis. cert . for
The
actuarial
audit,
reduction
"appears to be
Chances Are We Can Get I. trans ., Mid dleport.
Gar-y D. Wright to Cheryl C. · completed · by Rooz, Allen effective corrective action by
Wr ight. parcel. Columbus . Consulting Actuaries of workers' . compensation
Earl . F. Glass, Betty J . Newport Beach, Calif., was system managers rather than
Glass to Evelyn Virg inia
detailed in a June 10 letter to _ improved data or other
Moore , parcel.
Lar ry Richard Wa lker . Johnston released today at a technical adjustments."

tntint

SUNDAY, JUNE 12, 1977

state officials to address the ent ire group
to answer some questions.

thony, lot, Middl erpor t,
Palmer Addilton.
Pearl Secoy. Rosie Secoy to
Gary Basham, Lena Basham ,
parcels, Bedford .
·
Mahlon G. Eblen, Mary E.

AT THE INN

"•

. . GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

NO. 19

Ahthony ,

BOTIOM ·MOUNT

20.cu. ft

VO. 12

meet "on the spot" with state offi cials who
had traveled to Pomeroy to help solve
problems. He frequently called upon ihe

Now .You Know.-------------------------------------~

19 cu. It ., 32" wide
22 cu. ft .• 35'14" wide
25 cu. It ., 35'14" wide

~imts·

out engine blaze
GALLIPOLIS -

Quick action by

members o( the Gallipolis volunteer fire

the· Fe!J1ival Qu een Co ronation at a. Then
musical entertainment provided by Mike
-and Dan Rowan. Saturday's program will
be concluded with a Country and Western
show featuring Tex Harri son and th e

Valley Bo ys at 10 p.m.
Scheduled for Sunday ar e s uch
features as Open House at Our House
Museum all day Long; a Ch icken Barbe!2lle
at 11 a.m.; Gospel Music throughout th e
afternoon and an Afternoon Te.a from onetill four at Our House spon sored by t he
Ga llipolis Bu sin es s 11nd Professi onal
Women'$ Cl tlb.

According lo Ray Bush, city resident

Monday. July 4, featu res an Art Show
sponsor ed py lhe French Art Colony from
10 a.m. ti\1 5 p.m. ; the F'e~tlval Parad e to
s1art at II a.m.: Patriotic Ceremonies at I

fireman, a broken ba ttery bracket caused
a $50 fire in a Union 76 gasoline tanker

speaker. Also scheduled Monday af-

department avmed what could have been
a major fire here Friday afternoon .

truck owned by John Burlile and operated
by Joe lnglehart .
A dry chem_ica \ extinguisher was used
.to put out the engine fire . Thirteen men
and two trUcks respo nded to the l25th
alarm of the yea r.

p.m . with J . A. Denni s of Austin , Texa s as

ternoon and evenin~ is cntcrt&lt;Jlnmcnt by
the Ole Tyme Chorus; SeiE&gt;ctions fr om
Ga llia Country; Da 11 and Mike Rowan :
Wa rd's Keyboard and Frwnd!-i .

Other highlights or the July 4th
program Include Blue Grass _Music wllh

(Continued on Page A·21

Princess Anne is returning Pocahontas' vis~t
•

WASHINGTON (UP!)
When
Pocahontas called on King James I and

visitthe White House , the Kennedy ~nter,
the British embassy and ·the Smithsonian

Queen AMe in London in 1616, she became
the first American to visit a British
monarch.
Ever si nce - with a few unpleasant

lnstitution ~s

Museum of History and Tech·

he wrote that Harrisburg, Pa. " is more
like an Italian than an American town "
and that President James Buchanan was

"looking very well but has grown much
riology.
·
At the musewn, she'll see an exhibit of stouter ."
- A tureen , painted with scenes from
some of tlle artifaCts of all those earlier
interruptions around !n5 and 1812 - the Ang lo-American ce remonia l occaSions. 1776, presented by Elizabeth to this
relationship between the two countries has
An engraving records Pocahontas' visit country as a bicentennial gift~ and a threebeen marked by exchanges of visits, gifLs , to the royal household. Done in 1793, it foot tall bronze statuette depicting a
correspondence and courtesies between portrays her wear ing an Indian regalia cowboy riding a bucking bronco given her
the British monarch and the American even though she is supposed to have in return by President Gerald Ford.
president .
·
- Notes , written in 1834 in the shaky
donned English clothes for the occasion.
The tradition continues this week . In
observation of the 25th anniversary of

Queen Elizabeth ll's .acces;ion

w

Other memorabilia on display include :
- A to urist -like letter home from the

the

Prince of Wales to Queen Victoria,

throne, Princess Anne will be in

reporting on his 'visit to this country in
11160. Addressing it to "My Dear Mama ,"

Washington Tuesday and I' ednesday to

handwriting

Of

old men , from James

Madison and Jo.hn Quincy Adams,
respohdfng to Princess Victoria 's requests
fQ r their autographs .
- Victoria's letter of consolation - from

,

one widow to another - to Mary' Todd
I jncoln written after Abraham LJncoln
was murdered. The letter starL•. ·'Though
a stranger to you, I ca rmot remain silent
_ when so terrible a calamity has fallen upon
you and yolU' country ... "
- A menu, printed on si lk, for Ole d.lnner
at Delmonic0 1S r estaurant in New York
given for the Prince of Wales ' visit in 1860.
The royally-drafted " Trent
memorandum·· which soothed over a tense
situation and lessened the orosoect of
Arigl o-Amrrican combat durin.!J tho t; \vU
war, when U.S. forces intercepted and
boarded the British packet Trent.
The exhibit opens Wednesday and runs
through l.&lt;~bor Day.

I

�A-3- The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Sumlar , June t~. 1977

Saccharin han seems
to he in big trouble
WASHINGTON (UP!) Unless
startling
new
disclosures on the safety of
saccharin develop, it appears
almost certain Congress will
respond
to
cons umer
demands and delay the ban
on the sweetener .
The chief health experts in
both the House and Senate Rep. Paul Rogers, D-Fia .,
and Sen. Edward Kennedy ,
D·Mass. - agree the ban
.should be postponed for 18
months instead of taking
effect this summer as the
Food and Drug Administration proposed .
The unusual accord is
likely to assure a moratJrlum
on the ban, but there are
significant differences in
Rogers' and Kennedy 's
approaches.

Carmel News,
By the Day

"Now THAT'S what I call spirit."

Employers warned under 18s
aren't for dangerous work
force looking for temporary and similar products.
,work this year.
· -The law is more strict for
The Labor Department 14 and 15 year olds, who are
noted both federal and state barred from , hazardous
laws prohibit certain types of occupations including
jobs for those under 18:
manufacturing and mining;
~ Anyone 18 or younger is
operating, . cleaning or
not permitted under federal repuirlng power-driven malaw to work at hazardous chinery, and working as
jobs,
including
those public messengers. In
requiring operation of a warehousing,
storage,
· motor vehicle or work transportation, comrequiring use of explosives munications, public utilities
and radioactive materials, and construction, they may
certain power-4riven only hold office or sales jobs.
machinery, and most hoisting
The Labor Department
apparatus.
said 14 and 15 year olds may
-'- Teenagers also are do clerical and office work,
jobs."
. · prohibited ·from most jobs in hold retail and food service
Some 2.8 million students mining, roofing, demolition, jobs, plimp gas at service
aged 16 and older were logging, sawmills and stations or do errand and
expected to enter the labor manufacturing of bricks, tiles delivery work by foot, bicycle
or public transportation.
But they can only work
.between 1 a.m. and 9 p.m.
from June I to Labor Day,
and they are restricted to an
eight hour day and a 40-hour
week. The restrictions are
strqnger in winter.
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
These provisions do not
apply to newspaper home
deliveries, theatrical
performances, or children
working for their parents in
industries outside of mining,
a fairly low-fat item. Often manufacturing and other
Lawrence E . Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have the fat in steaks with all the hazardous nonfarm occua friend who won 't eat red visible fat removed is less pations.
In farming, tbere are no
meats. She says that eating than the fat found in devil's
restrictions
on workers 16
oo .much meat will cause food chocolate cake, and
years
and
older.
Fourteen
cancer and that it causes many bakery items that peoand
15
year
olds
may
work al
heart disease too . I do know ple don't realize are really
nonhazardous
farm
jobs
people who limit the amount · sources of fat in the diet.
of
school
hours,
outside
To give you a better picture
of meat they eat because they
of the good and bad points Twelve and 13 year olds must
are afraid of a heart attack.
Also, iJ meat contains so about red meats I am sending have written parental
much fa t how come people on you The Health Letter consent.
some weight losing diets eat number 11-12, Red Meats:
lots of meat ? I thought losing Good and Bad. Others who
weight was good for you, that want this information can
it would help you from having send 50 cents with a long,
stamped, self-addressed
a heart attack.
DEAR READER - Some of envelope for it. It will give
wha t you say is true and some ' you more values for different
Billy Brothers, Rose Hill,
is not. In the fi rst place meat types of meat and hamburger
visited
Saturday afternoon
does not cause cancer just and cold cuts.
with
Klmmle
Hamm,
As The Health Letter I am
beca use it is meat. There
daugh_
t
er
of
Mary
Hamm.
ha ve been. some suggestions sending you tells you, lean
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Giles of
that high pr-otein diets may . meat - the muscle part only Grand
Fork, North Dakota
increase the chances of hav- is really a low calorie food. It
ing ca ncer but the facts cer· is over 70 per cent water. A are proud parents of a
tainly don't permit such a whole pound of the separable dsughtet, Summer Mae, born
sweeping conclusion. A study lean of round steak only, con- May 3. Grandparents are Mr.
of the Mormons in Utah show· · tains a little more than 600 and Mrs. Clair Giles, Sr.
Kail Knapp, loeal, visited
ed that they had less cancer calories. That is the reason
his
grandmother, Lena
of the digestive system than lean meats can be lised on
Knapp,
from Fridsy evening
other Americans and they eat reducing diets. If you could
until
Mondsy
evening.
the same amount of red meat. stand it you could eat two
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Paul McElroy
There has been some ques- whole pounds of lean round
were
recent
visitors
of Mr.
tion about the preservatives steal. " day and consume only
and
Mrs.
Carl
McElroy
of
used in some cured meats , 1200 calories.
Columbus.
I think people often forget
particula rly the nitrites used
to prevent the growth o that a large part of the meat
botulism, but the minimal and other food they' get is
PLEASANT VALLEY
amount used seems to be water. It is not all just fat,
DISCHARGES
- Chasta
protein,
and
carbohydrates.
quite safe.
Powell,
Ferguson,
Pliny;
Jane
Even
butter
is
abO"Jt
20
per
People think of meat as fat
New
Haven;
Mrs.
Alice
because of our tendency to cent water. Fal does contain
Chapman,
Ashton;
Russell
· eat marbled beef. The truth is very little water which is
that lean leef with all the visi- another reason why it con· Cottrill, Point Pleasant;
Harry Dodson, Red House;
ble fat removed contains less tains so many calories.
Yes, keeping your weight Deana Nibert, Point Pleuant;
than 35 per cent of its calories
as fat. That qualiJies it to be down is usually helpful in Patricia Blazer, Gallipolis;
used in reasonable amounts preventing heart. disease. For Mrs. · Maxine Warden, Hen·
in low·fat diets. Round steak a meat dish I recommend . derson; Chris Swanll, Point
with all the visible fat remov- alternating red p~eats, fish Pleasant; Mrs. Murel Perry,
ed is a good choic-e here. Of and poultry and using the Point Pleasant; Mrs. Barry
course how the meat is lean products of all three.
Henry, Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs.
prepared does make a dif· ' Dr. Lamb wiU · answer junior Tucker, ·Grimms
terence. If you cover it with a represcntati ve letters of Landing; Clyde Gerlach,
flour paste and fry it in fat the general interest in his col- Letart ; Pauline Nibert,
crust is likely to contain more umn. Write to him in care of Gallipolis Ferry ; Gus Fralin,
fat than the meat. You can this newspaper, P.O. Box Lalltn ; and Mrs. Zally
broillc.;n fneats or cut away 1551, 1\,dio City Station, New
Medors. Rutland.
all tne!at for a roast and have York, NY 10019.
WASHINGTON (UP! ) The Labor Department ,
noting that 2.8 million
students are expected to seek
temporary
work
this
summer , warned employers
Saturday that those under 18
are legally prohibited from
doing hazardous job5.
The department also said
anyone under 16 can work
only a limited number of
hours.
Despite these restrictions,
Assistant Labor Secretary
Donald Elisburg said, "there
is nothing complicated about
laws governing summer

HEALTH

Lean meat fits diets

Wolfpen
News Notes

. Melvin Circle of Columbus
visited his mother, Mary
Circle and not Wavie Circle
as was reported a week ago.
Mr . and Mrs . Garrett
Circle of Racine visited with
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
and Florence on Memorial
Day.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Circle received word of the
birth of a new grandson
named Grant Douglas born to
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Circle on
June 3, weight 8 lb5., 712 ozs.
They live at Ft. Lauderdale,
Fla.
Mr . and Mrs. Donald
Pierce of Athens spent
. Saturday afternoon with
Mary Circle, Mr. and Mrs.
James Circle, New Haven, W.
Va., were at the Circle home
on Sunday.
William Carleton of Racine
assisted Mrs. Dean Brinker
in "repairing a roof which the
wi.iJd had blown off.
Florence Circle visited Mr.
and Mrs. Glen Ables, Bald
Knobs, on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs: Douglas
Circle, Florence Circle, Mrs.
Jim Patterson and sons of
Spiller visited at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Werry and
family of Morning Star for a
cookout Sundsy .
Edson Roush is a patient at
Holzer Medical Center. We
all wish him a quick
recovery. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Grueser and family and a
friend, Barb Davis of Logan,
0. visited at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Lee and
family recently.
Becky Lee held a pizza
party at her home a recent
evening. Attending were
Cathy Baker, Lori Warden,
Michalle Johnson, Angy
Glenn, all classmates of Miss
Lee.

Mr. and Mrs. Lee Harris
spent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Circle,
Verna and Wavie from
Springfield, Ohio.

Kennedy wa nts tougher
restri ctio ns on saccha ri n
produ cts during the delay,
including a ban on vending
machine sales for soft drinks
and

a

proh ibition

on

broad cast advertising of
produ cts containing th e
sweetener.
Rogers did not recommend
any ma jor restric;tions.

But the Calorie Control
Council, which represents the
diet soft drink industry, said
it thinks the differences can
be reconciled and council
members are optomistic at
the fact both prominent
lawmakers agree on the Illmonth moratorium.
Both.Kennedy and Rogers,
proposing the delay one week
apart, cited consumer
outrage at the proposed ban,
which triggered a snowstorm
of letters to members of
Congress. A majority of (he
lawmakers, by some counts,

Overtones of an Agatha Onistie mystery

Berry-s World

Foreign news
commentary
ened with economic, political
and military strangulation.
Buying writing paper is
next to impossible . The
country's Jone paper mill, a

Area Deaths

I

SARAH HO FFMAN
NEW HAVE N. W. Va .
Sarah Virg in ia Hoffman, 89,

New Ha ve", died Friday at
the residence of a daughter ,
Mrs. Orpha Henry , Ashland ,
Ky .

have endorsed one or more of
the many pieces of legislation
designed to ~ounteract the
FDA proposal.
Rogers said the outcry has
mad e ratio nal debate
impossible.
Kennedy said the delay,
during which a study would
be conducted, would "shift
the debate from the
emotional passions of the
moment to a careful
consideration of the health
and safety issues involved."
FDA Commissioner Donald
Kennedy said congressional
in
FDA
interference
de cisions - on a "chemical
by chemical" basis - is
wrong.
But the FDA will have no
choice in the matter if
Cong ress acts, and the
commissioner said if there
must be a delay, he prefers
Senator Kennedy's approach
to Rogers '.

"It's been done/"

groups want independence. from th~ minorities to
The majority of the Shans Thailand to the south.
have joined in a temporary
Ne Win 's elite · arm y,
league
with
Burmese efficient though it may be,
communists and during the needs to be an occupying
past six months have forged a force to eope with the vast
200-mile line from the eastern insurgency.
border with China halfway to
Minor victories only point
Rangoon itself .
up the lack of over-a II
Spreading generou s success.
portions of rice and guns
By wiping out a major base
among dissidents along the of ·the Karen insurgents, it
way, the joint force has has driven that national
effectively put. one-third of minority reluctantly into
Burma under communist league with the communists.
control, without the burdens
When it struck and subdued
of occupation.
· a dissident Arakanese.Qlin
The Chinese -supplied post in the nor thwest, it drew
guerrillas have simply cut off badly needed troops and
traditional smuggling routes supplies
from
the

gift from Czechoslovakia, no
longer produces because
workers have stolen its metal
rollers and small machines to
sell on the black market.
A foreigner walking down
the streets of Rangoon is
brazenly begged for the
(Continued from Page A·!)
ballpoint pen sticking out of
his pocket.
the Dwayne Jolley and Friends, a
Tears well up in the eyes of Parachute Jump and a Ski Show. Of course
Burmese when friends from the River Recreation Festival would not be
abrqad offer !hem a bottle of complete without t"he area 's .largest
vitamins, a tin of malted milk · Fireworks Display. Again this year the
or ready-made underwear. Gallipolis Volunteer Firemen and
Legal Imports are virtually Gallipolis Merchants have combined efzero and President Ne Win's forts to assure a spectacular ·display
Burma Socialist Program beginning at 10 p.m.
party strongly discourages
Mike Kamman is general chairman .
foreign investment as a push
along the "Bunnese road to
socialism.''
Burma's principal export
· - precious stones - mostly
(Continued irom ·Page A·1)
reach foreign markets via
Saunders and Paul Dean Niday; City
smugglers.
And strong antigovermnent Commissioners, Nibert, Allison and
political alliances of armed Wetherholt; Prosecuting Attorney Joe ··
. rebels are proving an unequal Cain; Sheriff James Montgomery : Frank
match for the couqtry's Mills, Jr., County Treasurer; Mrs.
major hope. the well- Dorothy Condee, County Auditor; Mrs.
equipped ,· well-disciplined Louise Burger, County Clerk of Courts ;
Mrs. Evalee Myers, County Recorder ; Dr.
army of 250,000.
Nearly half the 43 million Donald E. Warehime, County Coroner;
people who live within the Common Pleas. Court Judge Ronald R.
frontiers of the Union of Calhoun and MuniCipal Court Judge
Rohert S. Betz.
Bun1..1 ~ re non-Burmese ranging from the several
huridred pygmies who live in
the nor•oern mountains to the
seven million Shans living
northeast of Rangoon along
the Chinese and Thai borders.
All of these several dozen

Family fun

.Problems of

northeastern front.
Having been independent
since recorded history, the
separate
nationalities
consider the Rangoon .army
foreiguers.
And Rangoon still has
proved inept in dealing wlth
the poppy fields in the Shan
states, part of the infamous
Golden Triangle which
supplies an estimated onethird of .the world's opium.
Staunchly isolationist, the
Ran goon government of Ne
Win survives only because his
opponents - except for the
communists - also have ..
heen cut off from outside
help.

Grand jury

called in
GALLIPOLIS- The June tenn of the
Galli a County Grand Jury will convent at
9: 30 a.m. Monday. Three cases will be .
· considered at that time according to tran&lt;e•ipts filed with the Gallia County Clerk
o: Courts Office .
Cases expected to be reviewed include
Davi d Johnson , 21, Scottown, charged with
breaking and entering an unoccupied
dwellin~ and Dennis James Fillin~er, 20,
Rt. 2, Crown City, arrested on charges of
attempted abduction and possession of
criminal tools.
There is always the possibility of
· secret indictments based upon evidence
presented by Gallia County Prosecuting
!.ttorney Joseph L. Cain.
FOUR HUBCAPS STOLEN
GALLIPOLIS - City police here
Friday night investigated the theft of four
hubcaps taken from .a 1975 Chrysler
Cordova owned by Thomas E. Mills, 610
Fourth Ave.

Fainiew

GLENVIEW. Ill. (UP! ) woman in the Brach house sig nature .
Yet ,
bank
H she is alive. what is Helen who does not wish to be seen. graphologists say, they do not
Vorhees Bra ch usin g for
Helen Brach was. or is. 62, appear to have been signed
money ? Or will she ever need a pleasant, attrac tive woman by Matl ick, either . One
money again ?
who loo ked 45. As a hostess at investigator speculated that
As each day passes police a Florida country club, she as many as two oth er persons
and investiga(ors fear that · met Frank Brach, former may have signed them.
they may never know what chairman of the family candy
(Seven of the checks, for
has happened to the heiress of company, and became his more than $lo,OOO, were to
the Brach candy fortune .
third wife.
Matlick's benefit. One. he
A millionairess 50 to 100
He brought her back to a 10- sa id, wa s a belated
times over, Mrs . Brach room mansion and estate on Christmas bonus of $3,000,
cheeked out of the Mayo the outskirts of this affluent altho ugh in vestigators say
Clinic in Rochester, Minn . Chicago suburb. When he Matlick had never received
alter a checkup last Feb. 17. di ed in 1970, she Inherited a such a bonus before. Another,
She dropped .by a specialty fortune estimated from $50 to for $5,500, was to help him
store in Rochester and spent $100 million or more.
buy back a Cadillac , whic~,
$41 there.
She also inher ited . Jack he said, Mrs. Brach bad given
There is only one person Matlick.
him and he had sold.)
wbo claims to have ever seen
Matlick has been serving
- Mrs. Brach made no
her since. Police do not know the Brach family for 18 years. telephone calls and ·accepted
whether to believe him.
He mows the fawn. trims the none 1
although
an
They have no real idea of trees, chauffeurs the ca rs, investigator said "dozens of
wbat has become of her. She and hires and fi res the help. people," including her horse
could turn up any time. Now 52, he is described as trainer, tried to reach her.
2!1ywbere, dead or alive. One resembling Robert Blake of Mrs. Brach was ordinarily a
thing appears sure : for all th e 11 Bar etta " televisio n bit of a telephone addict.
her millions, she has not been show.
"She talked up a storm on the
spending any money.
Mattick is the man who telephone " when she was at
It is a mystery Agatha says he picked up Mrs. Bra ch the Mayo, the investigator
Christie could have reveled when she flew back from said.
in: the question of the new Rochester Feb. 17, drove her . All of whi ch leaves Ernest
nlnepound meat grinder ; the home, and, between 6 and 7 in D. Rizzo, a
private
enigma of the mysterious the morning of Feb. 21 , took investigator who says he was
houseman; the puzzling her to O'Hare International hired by "a friend" of Mrs.
matter of the forged checks; Airport for a fli ght .to Fort Brach to find her, to "doubt
the strangely unused credit Lauderdale, Fla .
she ever got to the home (in
cards; the suspicion that
There is no known person Glenview ) at all: "
there is, or has been, a outside of Matlick who will
But if she did, and if
Matlick
did drive her to.
say he or she saw Mrs. Brach
during that period. But O'Hare, these further facts
Sunday Times-Sentinel
during those four days these are apparent:
Published I!Very Sunday by The
- There were no flights
things did happen:
Oho VttUey Publis hing Co.
leaving
for Fort Lauderdale
Mattick
telephoned
five
GALUPOLIS
DAILYTRlHUNE
branches of a Chicago at the time she got there. She
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Oh.io
department store before he. would have had to wait for
-45631.
found what he wanted: a three hours . There is no
Published every w ~ekdlly evening
except Satu,nlliy . Second Class
ninei'ound meat grinder. He record that she bought a
Postag e Paid at Gallipo lis, Ohio
asked
immediate qelivery. ticket to Fort Lauderdale or
4563l. •
' .
TilE DAILY SENTINEL
- Put in a hurry-up order anyplace else. She did not, as
lll Court Sl. , Pomeroy, 0 . 457G9:
for a complete cleanup and she always diq, telephone
Published. every "Ko'eek d;:~ y evening
except &amp;:ltL&amp;rdti }'. Enter ed as se(;OOd
.repainting job inside the ·close friends in Fort
d.ass mailing nwlter at P om~:roy ,
Lauderdale and ask them to
mansion.
Ohio Posl Office.
Right
after
he
said
he
left
meet her.
By carrie r daily and Sund:J y 75c
per wt&gt;ek. Motor route $3.25 per mon.
- There is no evidence that
Mrs. Brach at the airport, he
ti&gt;.
she
ever got there. There is ·
had
her
Cadillac
thoroughly
MAIL '
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
shampooed and then visited no record that she has cashed
The Gulllpolis Daily Tribune in
and opened her safety deposit any checks or used any credit
Ohio and We!!t Vir ginia one year
box, whi ch he had never done .cards since Feb. 21.
$22.00; six months $11 .50; three mvn .tru -$7.00. Elsewhere $26.00 per
before.
During the time Mrs. Brach
yeHr; six months $1J .50; thn~ m on- Received, he said, 11 is supposed to have been back
ths $7 .50 : mt~tur route $3.25 m pnlhly
checks from Mrs. Brach. The irl' Glenview, according to
The OaHy Sentinel, one vear
checks were ca~ed and dea- Deputy Chief Robert Pfiester
$22.00; SiX months $11 .50; th.ret!ffi un·
lhl; $7.00. El.sewhert: $26.00; six
. red, but the Continental Bank of the Glenview police,
monU,.S $1 3.50 ; thrtlt: months 17.50.
of Chicago now says every Matlick was the only other
The United Press Interntional is
one was a blatant forger;y, person in the place . There
exclusively entitled to the -use for
publication nf ull news displl lches
with no attempt to Imitate was usually a cook and a
LTed.ited to the new~ paper ant.! also
Mrs.
Brach's
flowing maid. After Mrs. Brach left,
O~e local news published herein ,
.

PLAYTEX®

-

accepted for the eighth ann,ua•
Twirling Festival to be held
beginning at !2:30p.m. at
Meigs
Some 300 trophies will be awarded the ·
Twirlers may enter by contacting
Judy
Riggs, Chester, 985-3595. late entries will he accep!A!d at II a .m. on the morning of the
contest. Pictured making final plans lor the event are I to r, Mrs. Barbara Chapman,
secretary of the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce, sponsors of Big Bend Regatta Weekend ·
and Mrs. Riggs, festival director.
Matlick did a curious thing.
He hir£d a combination
cookmaid . Pfiester says
police know who she is and
detectives have seen her . If
so, they are among the few
who say they have.
"They say he hired this
maidcook," a neighbor said.
" But I've never seen her. No
one around here has. We've
never seen her come or go.
The only way she could do it
without someone seeing her is
if she went out the back . BUt
nobody has seen a car coming
from back there .
"Yet, they still have
garbage . I've ·seen it
collected."
Pfiester . said the woman
was let go about May 13. Yet,
Rizzo said, a person called
the Brach house in the
evening a week alter that and
a woman answered .
" If you call there and ask
for Mrs. Brach," Rizzo said,
11
•
the wOman says 'she's not
here but could I take a
message?' Wouldn't it be
eerie if that woman was Mrs.
Brach1 "
It would be an understatement to say Matlick has
fallen under. suspicion . He
has
been
questioned
repeatedly and has taken two
lie detector tests which pollee

call inconclustve .
He continues to show up at
the mansion every working
day and stays until all hours,
although he lives with his
wife on a rent-free farm
owned by Mrs. Brach near
Schaumburg , Ill . He is
presumably paid by the
accountant who has been
made administrator of Mrs.
Brach's considerable assets.
Matlick
has
been
cooperative, Pfiester said. He
has talked too much for his
own good, Rizzo said.
"He didn 't have to say, for
insiance, that he picked up
Mrs. Brach at the airport in
his own jeep wagon when he
·had Cadlllaes and a Rolls
Royce at his disposal," Rizzo
said. 11 0f course , he couldn't
have used one of those cars
without being noticed.
"Had he not said a word
from the conception of this
thing, he would be a lot better
off. He tends to put all the
blame on himself ... as if he 's
purposely pointed every
finger at himself. I just don't
think he would do that to
himself. I almost think he
was manipulated."
If Mallie~ is talkative to
police, he is not to many other
people.
He used·to like to visit ·and

#80 rncot
reg ss 95 now only 54.95
1181 rn cm F1berf11 1
reg 56 95 now only 55.95
#88 SeJmless rncot
reg $795 now only $6.95
#89 Seilmless Tncot F1berf1 ll
reg $8 50 now only $7.50
#87-Seamless rncot Padcled
1eg $8 95 now only $7.95

Support can Be
Beautiful "

ss so

!Sale ends July 9. 19771

SAVEUPTO

r:

luqgested
Reg Pr;ce

oescnpt10n

2'&gt;Dl _ Reg_Bn er _
750&lt;1

---------------------------,
of opinion are welcomed. They should be

boG

RerJ l h~rtle
RerJ 'wer,lqe

!100

P•~q

751}

Long

Leq_
HirJh Wi'IISt
L~
~-

I

.,._

teu_.

tong

j

- -11195
-- IA95
-~

chat with neighbors. Not
lately, they say.
Reporters are completely
out of bounds.
One Ma y afternoon , a
reporter rang the doorbell of
the twostory home at 930
Wagner Road. A window shot
up 10 feet away and the figure
of a stocky rrum in a white T.
shirt. appeared behind the
screen.
Continued on page D-11

Queen City will sue Bengals
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Cincinnati officials have decided
to sue the Cincinnati Bengals
for $27,779 worth of ~nt
surcharges on tickets sold
during the 197&gt;76 season .
The
lawsuit action,
approved by the City Council,
would attempt to recover
income on the tickets which
the Bengals have refused to
retoril to the city In cases
where purchasers failed to
attend the game . Glenn
Redmer, acting manager of
Riverfront Stadium, said the
Bengals are holding the
money in escrow.
Councilman David Mann
said he believed the Bengals'

so•

HIM
MIND
THIS FATHER'S DAY
. .. with a Cobra CB
2-way radio.

• Scan Alert - Auto ."
matically monit ors
Emergency
Channel S.
• Switchable Noise
Blanking and
Limiting
• Delta Tune
Dynaboost
• External Speaker
jack
• PA Capability
• Max imum Legal

4&lt;

Power

• FCC Type-ac cepted .

Now

Only
-S9.9St
.::c~:--129St
+•-----.._.......

1S 91

H.9S t

1695

14.95·

1995

17.95

call it the " Diesel M ob i le."
Features Dynamike . RF Gain ControL

T r u ck~rs

-

Delta Tune . Adjust able Squ e lc h. Full
23 -c ha nne l o peration.
• Maximum Lega l Pow e r
• FCC Typ e-a ccepted

$13995

112532
reg pnce.P6 95 now only S22.9s•

q:-:~

/1

COBRA21
23-CHANNEL MOBILE

COBRAZ9

$4.00 OFF i can't believe it's
a g1rdlecR) AU-In-one

·o .1nn DD cups $1 oo more
ocun 11()() more

interpretation of lheir lease
for use of Riverfront was
Hsilly.'1
"I am determined that we
insist on the interest for the
Bengals' use of what is
rightly the city's ," Mann
said.
Michael Brown, assistant
general manager of the Bengals, said, "The city has
known about this two years.
It seems strange it comes out
during an election year."
"We are a tenant and the
city is the landlord and we
are having the normal
tenant -landlord disputes," he
·commented.

truckers
use

#100 rncot
reg $795 now only $6.95 ·
# 102 rncot e1berfl 11
reg
now oniv $7
11622 seamless rncor
reg $8 95 now only $?.95•
#6622 Seomless Beige rncot
reg $8 95 now only $7.95•

$2.00 OFF i can't believe it's a girdle~ girdles
5tyle

MARY \!ARNEY
GALLI POLIS Funero l
services fo r Ma r y Magdalene
llarney who d ied Thursday
w il l be he ld 2 p .m . Monda y at
M iller' s Home for F une r als
wi th the Rev. John Jeff rey
off iciating .
Buria l wi ll be ln Campaign
cemetery . F rlends may ca ll
at the funeral hom e f rom .2 to
4 a nd 7 to 9 p .m . today .
PA IIhP. ,.. rers
will
be
Raymond Va r ney , Homer ·
Var ney , J r ., Arn old Va rney ,
Dave Holley a nd J oe Jones,
James Coe a nd J a m es
Varnes .

We have the
CB ~-Way
·radios the

#90 Back Buckle
reg $7 50 now only $6.50
#92 Back Buckle F1berf111
,reg S795 now only $6.95

Free Spirit "

ummer

Born June 15, 1881 , In the
Broad Run Community, she
was the daughter of the la te
James and Ida Hoffman
Roush. Her husband, Ph i lli p
Edwar d Hoff man , died in
1967.
Su r v i ving ·
are
four
daughter s, Mrs . Henry, Mrs.
Ma r~ a r et Scanes , Toledo, 0 .;
M r s. Doro t hy Albr i tton ,
Sa tellite Beac h, F la .; M r s.
Marie Rosen, Stau nton, Va .;
one son, Harr- y H. Hoffm an ,
New Haven ; s l x gra nd chil dren and several grea t .
grandchi ld r en .
Fu nera l ser v ices will be a t
the Fog lesong Funer al Home
on Monday at 1: 30 p.m . wi t h

the Re v James Lewi s and
Rev . George Weir ick o f fi ciating . Bu r ial w ill follow in
the Hoffman Cemetery .
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4and 7
to 9 p.m. on Sunday .

' &amp; ~;·

$1.00 OFF bras

News Notes

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Dima Lewis
Letlera
1
of Clifton , Mrs . Nancy
less than 300 words long (or he subject to reduction by 1 Russell, Mandy and Mike of
the editor) and must he slgued with the signee's ad- I Wolf Pen visited Mr. and
dress. Names may be withheld upon publlcaUon. I Mrs. Russell Roush Monday
However; on request, names wiD be disclosed. Letters : evening.
should he In good taste, add.-..slng issues, ilot per- 1 Mr. and Mrs. Woody Brown
sooalllies.
. 1 of Fort Pierce, Fla. visited
I Mr. and Mrs. Homer Warner.
I Mr. and Mrs . Homer
I Warner, Mrs. Pearl Norris,
I Mrs. Virgie Stewart, Mr. and
I Mrs. Hoyt Ferguson enjoyed
I
I a cookout at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Woody Broivn at
Point Pleasant.
Even a dirty, rotten shame
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
.
Roush,
Mrs. Iva Orr visited
Dear Sir :
General Han, Tom Norris,
!not only think it's a shame but a dirty, rotten shame that
Michelle Eakins, Frances
this city can not afford a swinuning pool for their ~ople.
Parsons
at
Veterans
Out in Hollywood, California every movie star there has a
Memorial Hospital Simday
pool as big .or bigger than the old one that's now out of
evening .
commission here.
·
Mrs. Pearl Norris, Mrs.
H some towns much smaller like Rio Grande and Syracuse
Vera
Craig, Mrs. Sherry
can have pools, why can't we?
Walker, daughter Ramona
I was reminded last Friday that there are 14 millionaires
Lynn of Athens, Alabama
in Gallipolis and from the reports of the banks they have more
were dinner guests of Mr. and
than $50 million in collateral.- Mrs. Mary R. James.
Mrs. Darr~ll Norris and
P.S. l hope you are aware of the tragedies that can occur Tracy Saturday.
because there is no pool.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Shane over the weekend were
Mrs.
Wanda
Stewart,
Trustees doing good job
daughter Nedra of Troy, 0 .,
Mrs. Melba Icenhour, Mason,
Dear Sir:
Mrs. Wilda Blessing. Wanda
I would like to thank the Rutland Township trustees Shane of Point Pleasant, Mr.
pubUcly for the fine job they bave done on our road. I have and Mrs. bealand Kirby of
lived on the same township road for the past 13 years. It is in New -Haven, W. Va., Mrs.
better shape to travel over, and has the best job of dust control Maxine Kirby of Vienna, W.
this year than it has ever had. I appreciate the job the trustees Va.
are doing with no more than they have to do with. It's a shame,
Mrs. Dolly Shane, Wilda
as mur.h as the road is used for an emegency bypass, that the Blessing of Albany, Wanda
county can't help the trustees a little.
Shane visited their )lrnlher,
Thank you for a good job. - Robert Richmond, Henry Stewart at Point
Middleport, R. D. I. ~
Pleasant.

:

Puzzles surround all
clues to candy heiress

•
Burmese economy m
shambles
BANGKOK, Thailand
(UP!) - Burma, Asia's
forgotten nation , which
swallowed up tens of
thousands of allied and
Japanese lives during World
War 0, once again i&lt; threat-

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

A compact value . Fits al most any-

w he re. Car , tr uck ,' boat. s now mob ile.
Incl udes Dynam ike . bui lt-in speaker.

switchable noise lim ite r and
adjustable squ elch.
• Weig hs only 3-l/Z lbs
• Ma ximum l.eg ~l Power
• FCC Type-accepted

Cobra

.

2

$88

s

OD cup 1145 more
tXL &amp; XXL SISS more

COBRA 19M

· XXXL8. XXXXL $1 dS more

We ighs only 2-l14lb s. Sm all enough to
fit in any car. Include s buil t ~i n sp e ake r
and Dyn ab oost. Noise limiter and

i
\

\'

-.'
.
#).

~·

I

I

'

~· . ' '

adjustable squelc h. With Me ter
• Maximum Lega l Powe r

• FCC Type-accep te d
Not As Shown

::; .
f

.

•

I

I

I'

$5995

bra

COBRA 26
Chassis not
~xactly a s

shown.

I

Punche s through loud and clear.

\

We have a variety of 23 and 40 channel mobile
and base units in stock and low prices to go with
lhem.

'

'
''

(
. ONCE UPON A TIME,Brltain'sroyalfamilywas the
young family represented.here. The wa1 group, receiving
a · fmal touch up from hairdresser Cathy Holton
represents Queen Elizabeth U, Prince Phillip, Prine~
Charles and Princess Anne in 1952. The group Ia a special
display at Madame TUssaud 's wax museum In London
during the Queen's silver jubilee.

'

r l\.1t•r l..,t"ll\lo·lll$ "ittH·~ /l1' l~ t. '
OSICI ~lyle~, fll kf! 11 • l
' I

•.' lt)\'..

.,·p·.

r, l ltoll

~

..

t,,f •&lt; t • ,~ •·" ~Jvl •·• '·• ~t r"1 df'• •;t, t,. H I 10:..1 1:un P .1 d t l lf1U
, ,, ,., I l.!',' h t•,,. ~ , IJrl "'\ '":.n. r".\·· · ' ,fi, l•· '"'
' . : "1 I', O, o••,ft•f
•

IN THE SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA
OPEN WEEKDAYS UNnL 9:00

n·wo~

• The "Truckers'
Radio"
• Sw itch able Noise
Blanking and
Lim iting
• Dynamike
• RF Gain Cont rol
• Delta Tune
• Ilium. Power;S Met:erl
• PA Outp ut
• Adjustable Squelch
• Maximum Legal
Pow er

• FCC Type-accepted

�A-4- The SWlday Ttmes-Senlinel, Sunday, June 12, 1777

A-5- The Sw1day Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jw1e 12, 1977

Too much of anything is had
CHICAGO { U l'l l
Hichard Hall always gets a

Mt·Cor rnick &amp; Co., it's a
lesson on perspective.
gr ea t response wh en he
"111e idea came up several
serves a poisonous lWlch.
year. a~o." he said of his
That"s beca use all the lunches. " People at va rious
IDxins on the table are hidden times have sa id, 'What if we
tested all foods the way we
business today
test some things '! ' This is just
a logical extension of that
in the so-&lt;:alled natural foods same na ive question."
and mis sing from the
His luncheons include a
processed items.
oilide show and speech, in
For Hall , vice-president for which he notes the high levels
science and technology · at of arseni c in the shrimp,

Workshops coming

•
!'

•.~

•
on many topics

I

~

, ..,.'
•

HONORED ON RETffiEMENT - Ann Watson, seated, retired Friday as an employe of
the Probate Court. Ann was presented a cake and a camera from her fellow employes.
September would mark her ninth year as an employe of the courthouse. Shown wt_th Ann,
known for her fr iendliness, are, back, 1... , Judge Manmng Webster; Carl Hysell, Juvemle
probation officer , and Janet Morris.

Teenage passenger hurt
GALLIPOLIS
One
person was injured in two
minor traffic accidents in·
vestigated Friday by the
Gallia·Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol.
The injury mishap occurred at 9:47p.m. on US 35,
eight tenths of a mile west of
SR 160 where an auto driven
by Karen L. Sprague, 18, Rt.
2, Bidwell, struck the rear
end of a vehicle driven by
Glenn R. Johnson, 35, Nor·
thup.
Penny Tackett, 16, Rt. 2,
Bidwell, a passenger in the

Kyger

Sprague car had minor in·
juries. Miss Sprague was
charged with failure to stop
within the assured clear
distance.
An earlier accident occurred at 5:45 p.m. on the
Fairfield • Centenary Rd.
north of SR 141 where a semi
outfit driven by Frederick N.
Brunton, 23, Gallipolis, was
attempting to pass another
vehicle on a narrow bridge.
The tractor trailer ran off the
right side of the roadway then
overturned. There was minor
damage. No one was injured
·or cited.

Graduation

DO CALL REACT
POMEROY - Motorists
needln~ emer~ency service
on the highway are ur~ed to
ca ll REACT over CB
channels 9, llaod 19. It was
reported Friday that
persons arc oot to ask ror
REACT which was In·
correct.

Stranded

motorists are to call
REACT If they have any
type of emergency.

Counties get
most of first
advance funds

Mr. and Mn Lester Elkins
COLUMBUS
State
and son, Mark, Zanesville,
Auditor · Thomas
E.
were visiting over a recent
. Ferguson's office Saturday
weekend with .Mr. and Mrs.
reported the first advance
Bob Elkins and family arid
distribution of 1977 state
with Mr. and Mrs. Walter
o
o
motor · vehicle registration
Jenkins and 'other relatives.
fees
to Ohio's co-unties, cities,
Calling on Mr. and Mrs.
townships
and villages.
Bob Elkins .and family over
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) Under
the
complicated
the weekend were Tony Housekeeping employes were
by
which
motor
formula
Elkins, Mr. and Mrs. Larry picketing sever allocations on
vehiele
li
cense
money
is
Elkins and sons, Larry and the Ohio University c.ampus
apportioned
to
the
local
Leslie, Dale Mollohan and Saturday morning, but school
Bill Thornton.
officials said the incidents political sul)divislons , the
A large crowd attended the would not interfere with counties received most of the
funds.
homecoming at the White graduation ceremonies.
Distribution is based on ~
Oak Baptist Church on
The employes, members of
formula
involving the
Sunday, June 5.
toea! 1699 of the American
number
of
motor vehicles
Those from the Old Kyger Federation of State, County
registered
within
a county or
Baptist Church who attended and Municipal Employes,
municipality.
The
big countythe Mixed Quarterly Con· were apparently protesting a
small
county
equalization
ference at Faith Baptist contractural
agreement
Church in Logan Saturday , calling for them to work factor, together with the
number of county and
June 4 were Bill and Darlene · Saturday at regular pay.
township
road
miles,
Price, Bob Price; Hortie
A university spokesman
determine
distribution.
Roush and Vera Thomas.
said the housekeeping em- .
Gallia County received
Mr . and Mrs. Ancil Prunty ployes agreed several Weeks
$36,
710; Meigs County
called on their son, Glenn ago to take two days off this
PrWlty, who Is a patient at ·week in exchange for working $26,989; Jackson, $35,003 and
Charleston General Hospital. Saturday at regular pay to Lawrence, $68,479.
Mrs . Elizabeth Honiker clean the residence halls in
accompanied theJ11 home for preparation for a workshop
a visit.
which begins Sunday.
Mrs. Gertrude Sabin and
School officials said
TEENAGER DROWNS
granddaughter, Kiersten although the employes had
CONNEAUT, Ohio (UPI)
Somerlot , were weekend agreed to the arrangement to
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Paul work today at regular pay, - A teenager was presumed
Schuler and son, Portland. they changed their minds and drowned after he and a
Mrs. Sabin, Kierston and asked for time and one-half companion abandoned their
Mrs. Schuler were Saturday pay.
small boat when it caught fire
dinner guests of their mother,
Commencement exercises on Lake Erie Friday. Missing
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Sisson.
were set to go on as was Jeff English, 17, Con·
neaut. Another youth, Mike
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph White scheduled.
Steven Fuller, a vice Sass, 17, Conneaut, swam to
called on Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Wamsley recently .
president of General Motors, saiety.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell was to deliver the main adPorter were Saturday dress. About 2,400 students
overnight guests of their were to receive degrees.
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Bub
Elkins, Jean and Mike.
Fife were Bill and Elaine
CAROlL K. SNOWDEN
Mrs. Laura Wise and
Hortie Roush spent a few Ball, New Haven, W. Va.
24 State Street
They all attended the wiener
Phone
446,.290
days with their daughter and. , roast at the Pine Grove
son, Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Roush and family , Fair- Church on Friday evening.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs.
banks, Indiana . While there Clarence Searls was Mrs.
they attended the high school
graduation oftheir grandson , Eva Mae Phillips, Syracuse.
Harold Wells Jr. and Lewis
Ronnie Roush, May 22.
Miss Unda Jenkins, Rio Brew-~er , Wheaton Rd., were
Grande College student, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Bub
Fife.
spending the summer witt,
Mr. and Mrs. James
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bradbury and children, J.D.,
Walter Jenkins.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Michael and Beth Ann and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ball and
!7~h~~eii'e~~u!~~er~e~~;~~ children were cam~ing and
Swisher, Englewood, Ohio. fishing over the weekend at
Ohio Power, Beverly

assured at
university

Steve's
Got A Special
'

"See me for car
home, life, health
and business
insurance!'

Offer For You.

""" "'Ill

STOP IN AND ASK
ABOUT DETAILS.

BEll HONDA SALES
''

Rt. 7

~

Ph- 446-2240

Gallipolis

! NHIIU'tU,

Like agood aeighbor,
.State Farm is there.
Sl•!r f f l 1'1 J~ IIJ' f~l ! (I!"' Jioln •tl

'lol'!r 0•!,, U 8 100'!1 ~ .;· ~" li MO~

p 7601

"'

ATHENS - High school
students from Ohio and
surrounding states wi!l at·
tend
Ohio
University
workshops this summer on
everything from music lo
basketball.
Along with the university •
sponsored programs, the
campus will also host
Buckeye Boys State for 1,350
students chosen from Ohio
high schools by the American
Legion. The Rainbow Girls
will also hold their state
assembly on the Athens
campus for 3,300 girls July 1417.
Students of French, German and Spanish who attend
the Language Camp June 19·
26 will be immersed for one
week in dormitory living
where no English will be
spoken. They will also study
folk dancing and singing,
international cooking and
sports.
Editors of yearbooks and
school newspapers and their
advisers from more than a
dozen states will sharpen
their journalistic skills at the
32nd annual High School
Publications Workshop June
26-July 1.
In the sports area, two
boys' wrestling clinics for
seventh graders · through
seniors are scheduled June.
26-July 1 ·and July 3-ll. Two
. boys' basketbaU clinics for

the same age groups are
scheduled for July 24-29 and

July 31-Aug. 1. Girls can
attend a basketball
volleyball camp Aug. 7-12 and
the Student Athletic Trainers
School July 10.15 is open to all
junior and senior high
·
trainers.
Ohio University will also
ho st the state American
Legion Baseball Tournament
· again this year. It will be
August 15-18.
A summer music camp for
pianists, organi sts an&lt;;l
singers offers a concentrated
course of musical study
norrnally not found in a public
school curriculum . • High
school juniors arid seniors
who attend the organ or piano
courses may also earn
college credit. Numerous
camps for high school bands
are
also
scheduled
throughout the summer.
The National Forensic and
Speech Communication
Workshop July 10·23 will
provide high school students
with coaching in debate,
orator)', extemporaneo us
speaking and oral in··
terpretation. High school
seniors can also attend and
earn college credit.
Inforrnation on workshops
can be obtained from the
Workshops Office, Tupper
Hall, Ohio University,
Athens, 45701.

carcinogens m the ham, and

other dangers in the diet.
One by one, Hall shows that
potentially har mful toxi ns
exis t in every item ser ved at

the lun cheon and war ns that
too much or anything can be
harmlul.
Almost none of the foods , he
tell s his guests , would pass
goverrunent safety requirements if introduced as additives . The bread , a
processed item, is til e only
item other than hearts of
palm that passes inspection
on Hall 's menu.
"A lot of people and , tn a
certain
extent ,
our
government, tend to pay an
inordinate
amount
of
attention to the wron g
things ," he said in a recent
speech. "There are risks
associated with food , as there
are with everything else in
our lives."
Hall said people pay the
most attention ID the smallest
dangers and the biggest food
related threat to health
comes from microbes. Next
in order , he said , are
nutritional deficienc i e s,
environmental C()ntaqlinants ,
natural tnxicants such a~
poisonous mushrooms,
pesticide residue and food
additives.
about
People · worry
additives which can only be
dangerous in extremely
concentrated form, Hall said,
bt)t think n·othing of the
· dangers in eating a cream
puff that has been sitting on a

di ner counter for three hours.
When people grew and
prepa red their own food, Hall
said, "we had the confidence

tha t grows froin innocence.
In fact, food is now cleaner,
safer and pro por ti ona tely
cheaper than before. But we
have
th e
no longe r

confidence ."

drUJks enough of it, natural
body enzymes are diluted ID
the point of ca usi ng
dysfunctions.
During his demonstrations,
Hall assures his audience
that his poisonous lunch won't
be !atal - all the foods arc
"nutritious and safe, in ba·
lanced amounts."
Hall doesn 't call for the end
to goverrunent regulation or
dismiss safety testing as
superfl uous , but calls for a
more reasoned approach in
studying and weighing the
relative dangers in different
foods and additives .
Although mos t foods
contain some danger ous
ingredients, Hall said
sanitation, variety and
moderation in diet reduce
risks substantially.
"Safety lies not in av~iding
all risks because we can
never avoid all risks. Safety
is merely a path between

After botulism was found in
a batch of canned food , he
sa id , co nsum ers bega n
ca nning their own food . But
the dangers of that practice
are estimated to be several
thousand times as great as
when foods ar e processed
commercially.
"The most toxic things we
know," he said, "are aU
natural. "
Even water can be dangerous, he said. If a pe rson risks ."

THE NEW

AMERICAN MODULAR HOME
SEE IT AT

ALL SUMMER LONG

l

GT~Wld ~~
MOBILE HOMES INC.
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
Phone 446-9340
Gallipolis, Ohio

more about nearly anything.
I

ACCOUNTING------------------~~~~~-----------------

JOHN HOUCK
HOWARD THlVENER
SAI..ESMEN HONORED - - John Houck and Howard
Thlvener, sales managers at the Gallipolis MoiDr Co.,
were honored recently by the Chevrolet Motor Division of
General Motors with a banquet and dance at West
Virginia's Pipestem Resort. Houck and Thivener, with
other members of Chevrolet's Society of Sales
Executives, were presented rings and tokens recognizing
them as top Chevrolet retali sales managers.
Approximately 33 per cent of Chevrolet sales managers
_ are eligible for recognition by the Society of Sales
Executives.

Rayburn, Pl. Pleasant, W.
Va., Thomas J . Bell,
Mableton, Ga., $13 and costs
each, speeding; Steven M.
Bain, Reading, Pa., $14 and
costs, speedirig; John E.
Kerr, Athens, $20 and costs,
speeding; Ernest E. Spencer,
Racine, $12 and costs;
speeding; Victor H. Leifheit,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
failure to yield ; and Daniel
Swisher, Cheshire, $67 and
costs, overload.
Forfeiting bonds were
Howard Spencer, $27.50, stop
sign; Robin A. Wills, Zanesville, $27.50, no front bumper;
Michael K. Harrison, Mid·
dleport, $27.50, illegal
passing; Frank Gilkey, Jr.,
Langsville, t\lbert Thomas,
Roseville, and Robert Eardley, Liverpool, $27.50 each,
speeding; Stewart Fryer,
Hewett, $32.50, speed in~;
Gordon Stout, Pomeroy,
$33.50,
speeding;
and
Lawrence Johnson, Ceredo,
W. Va., $30.50, speeding; and
Parks· E . Gau ltney, Emma Theodore Connolly, Reeds·
Gaultney t o Mickey 1;0.
Mayna r d, Annetta Maynard. yllle, $100, assault.

record.
This summer she ho1-es to
become the first woman to
successfully swim across the
.. 22-mile body ·Of water · and
back again. American
swimm·er John Erickson
holds the record of 30 hours
for the double swim.

MIAMI .(UP!) - The 4.8 inforrnation about it is 4.8 to
million-ton Cuba sugar crop 4.9 million tons."
·
this year will be barely
Goure says more than 70
enough to pay the Russians per cent of the crop will go to
for their aid, a Cuban affairs Communist countri es. "That
expert says, and will result in leaves I million tons to hard
"more belt tightening and currency countries."
increasing dependence on
Soviet deliveries."
Although the exact figures
are kept secret, Dr. Leon
VETERANS- MEMORIAL
Goure, director of Soviet
Admitted
Clarice
Studies at the University of
Randolph,
Coolville.
Miami, sa id Friday the
Discharged - Paul Qualls,
Cuban harvest "seems to be
Gladys
Taylor.
under 5 million tons. The

ALL THIS FOR ONLY

WE
DELIVER

VALLEY lUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION
923 S. 3rd Ave.
Middleport, 0.
992-2709 or 992-6611
Open: 7:00 to5:00 Mon. thru Fri .
7:00 to ~:00 - Saturday

$

·95
TUBELESS
WHITE
A70x13
Plus Fed. Ex .
Ta• . Sl.96

SIZE

WHITE
LETIE RS

FED.
EX . TAX

B60)(!3
G60x14
E70x14
Fi7"x14
G70x14

$27.95
$31.95 .
$28.95
529.95
$30.95

$2.13
$2 .94
$2 .44
$2.58
$2.74

Prices ph.a tax and old tile off your car

MOUNTED AND BALANCED FREE

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.
7QO E. Main St.

JOHN F. FULTZ, MGR.
.992-2101

Pomeroy, Ohio

8:00-to ,oo a.m.
8:00-10 :00 a.m.

x-General Biology
Lab

x.General Botany
Lab
• -Immunology

14)

MW

{2 )

T
MW

{7l

TTh
TTh

{2)
12)

MW

{ J)

(2J

MWF
TTh

14)

10 :00 a .m .-noon

MW F

(~J

10:00 a.m .- 1:00 p.m.
IO:OO a .m .-noon
10: 00 a .m .- uo p.m.
UO- Io ,oo a.m.

TTh

MWF

(~ )

TTh
MTW Th

14)

BUS IN ES 5 ADMIN I ST RATION-----------.:;;;;-;--:;;;;-:-:=-------------------x-lntroduction to Business
4:00-6 :00 p,m.
141
MTW Th

=--------------------J

BUSINESS E DUCA TION--------------.:o...,n;. .
x-Personal Typing
:oo p.m.

&lt;:.••·•

x-Principles of Chemistry I

i@fOr ad

EMPIRE'S

We Inventory In

July and need to
reduce our Inventory.

·

By BERNARD BRENNER
UPI FARM EDITOR
WASHiNGTON ( UP!) With American wheat siDcks
building ID a potential record
in the summer of 1978,
Canadian leaders are quietly
asking about possible U.S.
action to activate an acreage
reduction program on next
year's wheat crop, says

on farm front
Deputy
Agriculture
Secretary John White.
"They want us ID cut
production tO get the price
up," White explained in an
informal meeting with
reporters at the Agriculture
Department.
But U.S. officials aren't
tipping their hand at this
point, alt!Jough they concede
that the buildup of stocks
means they will have to give
serious consideration to using
an acreage retirement "set
aside" program for the 1978
wbeat crop.
White said the United
States is hoping to get "a
recognition that exporting
nations need some sort of
coordinated policy to balance
supply., . and that it's not up
to the United States alone to
balance the world supply of
wheat."
The official's contents
echoed an earlier statement
by Agriculture Secretary Bob
Bergland that if acreage
reduction is needed, he hopes
that Ca1111da and other major
producers would join the
United States in cuttirlg back
plantings.
White said a Canadian
parliament leader, who met
with him here Thursday,
asked about American plans
for
potential
acreage
controls.
The
deputy

TBA
10 : 0D a. m ..noon

x-Field Experience, Agency-School

TBA

(5 )

MTWTh

{I)

MWF

10 :00 a.m .-noon
10 :00 a. m.-noon
B:CI0-10:00 a .m .
noon- 2 :00 p.m.
TBA

Field Exp. : Teacher Aid

{3)

il l
.(~)

MTWThF
MTWTh
MTWTh F
MTWThF

{4)

(~J

(5)

(1)

TBA

Human Relations and Teachers

12 )

8:00-10 :00 a .m.

B:00- 10 ' 00 a.m.
10 ' 00 a.m.-noon
10 = 00 · 11 : lO a.m .

Reading Method" Elementary
Reading Methods: Secondary

Individual Instruction
Math MethodS:: Elementary

10 00 a.m.-noon
=

Intern Teaching

MWF

(3 )

MTWThF
MTWThF

15)
15)

MTWTh

tl )

TWThF

.( 4)

TBA

l5i

' ENGLISH~--------~---------,~
- ~~~~------~~~--~~ ~
4

cost-of-living allowances and
allowed miners, for the first
time, ID vote on ratification of
the contract.
Miller accomplished these
reforms despite his inexperience as a Wlion official, and
no more tha~ a ninth grade
education.
"I think there are people
today who lose sight of the
fact that I came out of the
ranks," . Miller said in a
recent Interview.
"And I think that although
I've done a lot- the re~ord is
a good one - they seem to
think that I should have cured
everything."
Labor historians view
Miller' s problems a~ the
natural legacy of his
predecessors, Boyle and John
L. Lewis, whose dictatorialstyle regimes provided no
leadership training among
the the rank-and-file.

secretary said his response
was: "You show us your hand
first.''
White also wid reporters
the Carter administration is
continuing a basic grain
reserve policy launched by
the Ford administration.
Under that policy, the
government is urging other
nations to join in setting up a
network of national gr:.in
reserves. But it's insisting the
reserves should be controlled
under individual national
policies and should not be put
into the hands of any
international organization
By leaving management in
national hands, the policy
leaves individual
governments 'free to decide
how grain stocks should be
acquired
and
stored
American policy currenUy
calls for leaving stocks in the
hands of farmers who get
federal storage payments
Wltil market prices rise 40
per cent above government
support levels.
In
a
companion
development, Agriculture
Department economists late
Thursday issued a new wheat
supply-demand analysis
saying odds at present favor
a total 1977 wheat crop of
about 2 billion bushels. '
lf continuing good weather
this summer brings the crop
to that level, It would be the
third consecutive 2 billion
bushel crop and conceivably
could be narrowly above the
2.147 billion bushel record set
last year.
Experts said . chances are
now two out of three that this
year's crop will fall between
1.9 billion bushels and 2.150
billion. The lower end of the
forecast assumes poor
weatller for the rest of the
summer.

x-Field Experience: Community-School
x-lntroductiOn to Education
x-Cataloguing and Classification
x-Natural Science Methods
x-Reference and Bibliography
x-Pre-School Children
Field Exp.: September E.xperience

determined 'man in rough'

Canada wants to
see acreage cut

8:00 a .m .. noon

EDUCATIONI-----------~~~---.~----------------------~71

Miller proves extremely
Miller's disability launched
him on a path IDward the
union
presidency .
As
organizer of the Black Lung
Association in West Virginia,
be became involved in the
anti-Boyle campaign of
Joseph " Jock" Yablonski.
After Yablonski was murdered in late 1969, Miller was
chosen by Yablonski's
suppoters to head the Miners
. For ,Democracy slate that
· ousted
Boyle
in
a
government-supervised
union election in 1972.
Even
his
critics
acknowledge that Miller is an
intelligent, concerned .leader ·
who bas brought democracy
ID the United Mine Workers
Wlion.
He slashed office rs'
salaries, so ld off union
limousines, negotiated a 1974
bituminous coal contract
including better pensions and

14)

MTWTh

CHEMISTRY'-------------------~~~~~~----------------- 1

FALLS CITY HOT t\IR Bt\U.OONS will be sold by the Ohio Society for .the Promotion of
the Bull Frog Inc., during Regatta weekend in front of the old Bendvue Theatre on
Pomeroy's East Main Street. The association will also sell, in addition ID the balloons, Texas
ties, and National frog pictures. Shown with one of the balloons are Bill Young, secretarytreasurer of the Ohio Society, and Barbara Chapman, secretary for the Pomeroy Chamber
of Commerce, which is sponsoring the Big Bend Regatta JWle 17,18 and 19.

PRE-INVENTORY
SALE CONTINUES

SEE US FIRST AND COMPARE OUR
PRICES . QUALITY MATERIAL AT
REASONABLE PRICES.

I:OO a . m .•noon
8:00 a . m.-noon
Noon-4 :00p.m .
6 :00-P : OO p.m .
6' 00 ·9 : 00 p.m .
6: 00 ·9 : 00 p.m.

x-Fundamentals of Biology
·Lab

iNTFRBlN~

BUILDING OR REMODELING?

(4)
I 4)

MTWTh
MTWTh
M TWTh

BIOLOGY--------~-----------..MO~~=----------------

eye·POPping ifts

-DO YOU WANT TO BE
KING OF THE ROAD?

6:00-B: oo p.m .

Advanced Wood Sculpture

PLAZA

building materials

x-Quanfitative Methods I

x-Art History thru Contemporary

CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(UPI) - Arnold Miller, 54,
the disabled coal miner who
ousted powerful union boss
W.A. "Tony" Boyle from the
United
Mine Workers
presidency in 1972, is an
extremely detertnined man.
In the four years since he
ascended ID the top UMW job,
Miller. has encountered many
Pa rcel s, Sa lem .
Nie sel A . Weatherman,
problems be cou1d not solve
Eldred K. Grimes, Atty.· in
and come under a barrage of
E-R CALLED
Fact , to David G . Marcinko.
criticism,
Lot 12, Weatherman 's 2rid
POMEROY
The
Many of his early friends
Subd iv., Orange .
Pomeroy Emergency Squad and supporters have deserted
Farmers Home Adm . to
Jaf!!es W. Casey, Connie A . was called to Mulberry him; the union's executive
Heights at 11:15 a.m. Friday
Casey , Lots, Racine.
board has been almost solidly
Betty Butcher , Edgar E . for John Terrell, who had
against
him; some union
Butch er to Edgar E . Butcher, fa llen from a ladder. He was
officers
even
tried
Be tty But c her. Parcels ,
taken to Holzer Medical Wtsuccessfully ID impeach
Salisbury .
Wa rren Douglas Clay . Center. At 8:45 a.m. Satur· him.
Phylli s J . Clay to William C. dsy, the squad was called
Miller's critics claim these
Chri s t ian ,
Kathryn
M . near Royal Oak Park for Olin·
difficulties have made him
Chr istian, Lot 3, Rutland .
Bern ice F. Grueser, Elmer Hysell who was ill. He was paranoid. They note he
B. J ohnson to Sybil Ebers - taken to Veterans Memorial travels with bodyguards,
bach, l-ot, M idd leport .
Hospital.
often changes the locks at
UMW beadquarters and even
keeps a baseball bat next to
IN THE
his desk.
But Miller refuses to give
SILVER BRIDGE
up. And it is this quiet
determination which is
expected to win him a second
OPEN WEEKDAYS TIL 9:00
term as union president over
.two challengers - Harry
Patrick and Lee Roy
Patterson.
Life has never been easy
for Miller, a Cabin Creek,
W.Va ., native who went into
the mines at age 14, got part
"
of
his ear shot off during
FREE GIFT
master charge
World
War II and came out of
IHl
(lRlJ
the mines after '!I years with
,
I
WRAPPING
black lung disease and
arthritis.

-

6:00·8 : 00 p.m .
1:00-10 :00 p.m.

x-Pencil Sketching
x-Principles of Art Education
x-Basic Photography
x-Basic Wood Sculpture

Judge fines 16
POMEROY
Sixteen
persons were fined and 10
forfeited bonds in Judge
Robert E . Buck's Meigs
County Court Friday.
Fined were Leslie Eddy,
Dart, $8 and costs, speeding;
Ronald Fisher, Gallipolis and
David S. Dunkle, Buchtel, $11
and costs each, speeding;
Bennie R. Stumbo, Bidwell,
Clair E . Mitchell, Rutland
and Harold Cunningham,
Belpre, $15 and costs each,
speeding; Michael P. Salser,
Racine and Ricky Taylor,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs each,
left of center; Everette M.

x:- Principles of Accounting 1
K· lntermediale Accounting 1

ART------------------------~~~==~---------------

Transfers

Sugar crop is just not 'nuff

CASH &amp; CARRY
PRICES

-

Courses are oHered June 13 through July 1S
for nearly anyone who's Interested In learning

Meigs
Property ·

and

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE·AND
COMMUNITY COLLEGE

in Friday court

Swimmer wants channel record
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI ) Tina Bischoff, the 18·
year-old Columbus
swimmer who ·Crossed the
English Channel in a
record nine hours and 35
minutes last August, has her
sights on a second channel

·-------------------0----~

x-Composition 1

' 00· 6 :00 p.m .

MTWTh

(4)

• -Composition I

2:00-4 :00 p;m .

MTWTh

( 4)

x-Composijion II

8:00- 10:00 a.m.
lO:OO a . m.-noon
~:~ · 2 = 00 p.m .

MW

121

MTWThF
MWF

\5)

x-British Literature
x-Bible as Liter~ture (Sel. To.pics)
x-Grammar Revtew
(Note: Both Bible as Literature and Grammar
division students)

~h'.iew

1

Il l

are also offered for upper

FtNEARTS----------------~~~~~--------~:=~--~~
x-Fine Arts

6:00-B: JO p.m.

MTWTh

15)

HEALTH, PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND RECREATION-------- -...-.$--~-----1

x-Beginning Swimming
x-lifesaving

~

Noon-2:00p.m.
6:00 -8:00 p.m .

x-Folk Dance

2:00-4: 00 p.m .

x-Tennis
x-Tennis
x.·Personal and Community Health

6:0~ -8:00

x-First Aid ~nd Safety

6:00-9: 00 p.m.

.~. coaching

Basketball

Noon-2:00p. m.

x-Coaching Volleyball

Noon-2,00 p. m.

p.m.
10 :00 a .m. -noon
Noon-2:00p.m.

.

TTh
TTh
MW
MW
MW
MW F
TTh
TTh
MW

II )
Ill
Il l
11 )

ll )
13)

I 3)

12)
( 2)

HISTORY------------------------------~---------------- 1

x-American History IV

·a :o0-9:30 a . m .

US-1918-1977

MTWTh

I 3)

MATHEMATICS----------------------~~----------~M~T~W;,T~h~F~~I;4)j
x-Technical Math I
x-lnformal Geometry

lO :OO-l1:JO a .m.
8:00-9 :30 a.m .

MTWThF

(4 )

ME D !CAL LABORATORY TE CHNOLOG Y---------'---------------------11
10:00 a .m.- noon
Hematology
MW F ~
10,: 00 a .m.- noon
Lab
[4)
TTh
MUSIC------------------------------------ - - -- - - - - ---1
.

x-Music Primer
TBA
x-Fundamentals of Music
Noon-2:00 p.m.
·X-Music lor the Elementary Teacher
2 :00-4,00 p.m.
x-Music lor the Elementary Teacher'
·{Also oHered tor upper division students)

121
(4)

MTWTh
MTWThF

m

PH 1LOSOPHY AND R E LIGtONI---------:-:-- - - - - - - - - - --------------t

x-Hislory and lit. of New Test .

Noon-2:00p. m.

MTW ThF

(S)

PSYCHOLOGY----------------~~~~~~------------~~
x-Genel"a l Psychology
10 :00 a.m. -noon
MTWTh
(4)
x-Human Growth and Development
S :00-10 : 00 a .m.
MT WTt'!F
(SJ
SOCIAL

SCIENCE--------~--------~~~------------~~--~~

x-lntroduction to Anthropology

•

7 :0Q.9 : 0D

p. m.

MTWTh

f&lt;1J

SOCIAL WORK ----------------~-:::-::--------------.----:-:-:-J
Social Work Groups I
lO :GO a .m .-noon
M WF
(J)

SPEECH--------~--~~~--~~~~=-----~:,:~~~
fundaments of Oral Communications

Mass Media

10 :00 a .m .- noon
Noon -2:00p.m.

MTWTh

(4l

M TWT hF

Ill

SPECIAL CLASSES AND WORKSHOPS ------~---------------------1

Learnfng Disabilities
June 20-July 1

9 :00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.

M TWThF

cOmmunity Choir

REGISTRATION INFORMATION
Number of · credit hours for each course s hown abo ve in
parentheses. X-s indiates courses offered . through Ri o Grande
College.
Time of Registration : 1\&gt;\onday, June 13, 9: 00 a .m . to 11: 30a m. ,
1:00 p .m. to 4:00p.m ., 6 : 00p .m . to 9 : 00p .m. in Com m unit y Ha ll on
the Rio Grande campus .
x-Fees: For courses mark e d with X's ( x) , m ultiply the n umber
in pare nthe ses (cred it hours ) by $13 for re side nts of Jack s_o n , Galli,, ,
Meigs and Vinton Counties . For all other cour ses, mult ipl y crcdlf
hours by $52 .50 . All fee s a re payable at t ime of reglsirat,on .
.
Extra Fees : The following cour s e s have an a dd ition a l fee : Bas1c
Photography $5.00 ; Fundam ental s of Bio logy $10.00 ; Genera l
Biology $10.00 ; General Botany $10.00 ; Pri ncip les of Chem1stry I
$10 .00 ; intern Teaching , Secondary $60 .00 .
Requirements : Any residen t of Jack son , Ga ll ia , Mei gs or Vinton
Counties with a high school di ploma or its e q uiv a lent may reg1s l er
for up to 11 c redit hours without applying for admiss io n Ia .'he
college. There is only a need to r egiste r on June 13. F uH li me
s tudents must apply for admi ss ion by contact1ng th e Oft.re of
Admissions and Records at Rio Grand e Co lle ge-Commumt y Collego.
Rio Grande College -Community Col lege admit s students of any
race. color and national or ethnic origin . Rio Grand e College
Community College is an equal opportunit y empl oyer .
For r •( • infol'ination call 614-245-5353.

..

�A~ -Thc Sunday

A-7 - The Sunday Times--Sentinel, SWldaY, Juuc It, 1977

Timcs-Scrllinel, SundaJ', June 12, !971

Long-awaited neutron bomb ready

Patrick

WASHINGTON ( liPlt - If President C.rrter approves,
the U.S. Army is reported ready to begin production of the

charges

lnn~-awaJtl-d

nul'tron lJomb.
1ms IS the nul·lear wetrht·~d U1at kills ~~pie through
rdcasc uf nl'Utruns bllt h•t.~vrs lxultllng_s and other

structures stamhn14.

trickery

TilE YOUNGER SET tried its hand atfishing in the well.,;tocked pond overlooking Fort
Meigs at Friday night's Rotary picnic held at Fo&lt;est Acres Park m Rutland. Jeff Butcher,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Butcher and grandson of Rotar1an and Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee, shows
off his catch.

Exchange student
with 4 families

MIDDLEPORT - Since
last summer, Fumiko
Iwasaki, Rotary exchange
student from Japan, has
experienced "the American
way of life " from the
viewpoint of a Meigs County
citizen .
She has been a guest at
many events, attended
classes at Meigs High School
where she participated in
many extra-eurricular ac·
tivities,
and
recently
gradua(ed from M.H.S, in the
class of 1977.
Miss Iwasaki, who arrived
here in August of 1976, has
lived In the homes of three
Rotary families , each
as
a
claiming
her
"daughter." One non-Rotary
family had her late last fall, ·
Mr. and Mrs. James Sheets,
Harrisonville R.D.
Becky Fultz, Fumiko's
"sister," the daughter of Mr.
and l&gt;'!rs. Bernard Fultz,
Middleport, also graduated
from Meigs High School this
year. At the end of July, she
will accompany Fumiko to
Japan where she will visit
with Miss Iwasaki's real
family. Fumiko was a
member of the Fultz family
from the beginning of her
stay here through October
when she moved· In with the
Sheets family. In January she
joined Robert Buck family in
Pomeroy.
For the ·past three weeks
~.~_has been staymg. with Mr.

Rotarians in annual picnic
MIDDLEPORT - Mid·
dleport · ·Pomeroy Rotarians
and their families enjoyed
their annual club picnic
Friday evening at Fort Meigs
Park nea r Rutland.
Chief cook for broiled
hamburgers and wien ers
were Rotarian and Mrs .
Vernon Webe r a nd their
daughter, Donna.

In a way, it was a going will tour the United States for
away party for petite Fumiko two weeks with other Rotary
Iwasaki, the local club's students, then depart for her
exchan ge student from native Japan.
Youngsters fished , waded
Japan, who has attended
school at Meigs High the past in a cree k, and played
term . Mios Iwasaki was in- volleyball with their fathers.
troduced to the chib the first Rotarian Lee McComas ,
time during its picnic in r eti red Middl e port
August, 1976. This year, her superintend ent of sc hools,
school completed, she soon even demonstrated how to
throw a frisbee.

Cellmate of Ray's also gone
PETRoS, Tenn. ((UPI ) James Earl Ray's cellmate,
34-year-old Earl Hill Jr., was
among five-prisoner s who
escaped with Kay from
Brushy Mountain State
Prison Friday night.
Hill was serving two life.
sentences for murder, plus a
3-21 year tenn on other
charges.
Others who made it over
the walls of the maximum
prison
were
secUrity
identified
by
prison
authorities as :
- Larry Edward Hacker,

32, serving . two 28 year Davidson County for bank
sentences for robbery with a robbery, was the last up the
deadly weapon and burglary. makeshift
ladder
the
- Douglas Shelton, 32, . prisoners used Ill scale a
serving 98 years for felonious prison waiL He was shot and
assault, murder and grand captured.
larceny.
.
Powell is black. All of the
- David Lee Powell, 27; others are white.
serving 100 years from
f'rison officials said the
Shelby County for murder. yard from which they
- Donald Ray Caylor, 24, escaped is surrounded by a
ROTARIAN LEE Me·
serving 51 years for stone wall varying from 10 to Comas shows off his frisbee
attempted jail esca"pe, anned 14 feet In height. A double throwing taleot.
robbery and assault with strand of electric wire runs
Intent to commit murder,
atop the wall, and the men
-Jerry Wayne Ward, had to slither through a 12
serving 20-40 years from inch space between the top of
' .
the walJ. and the bottom
strand to avoid severe shock
from the 23,000.volt wire,
Stat e
Correction
Commissioner C. Murray
Henderson said there were
only two manned guard
rowers in the· area where the
prisoners went over the wall,
and there was one man in
each.
The guard from the tower
most distant from the escape
point apparently fired first.
The guard in the nearest
tower then joined in the
shooting,
Only Ward was believed
hit. HP. wA~ t..a\r~~~on tn n &lt;:&gt; .t.. ·
Rid~e Hospital fo~ !!':!~.~~.\
of superficial gunshot wounds
on his forehead and left arm.
Ward was returned to the
prison followin!! emergency
treatment.

JASON AND KENNY RAY RIGGS, sons of Rotarian
and Mrs. Gene Riggs , decided that wading ill the creek
was the thing to do. Although the Forest Acres creek bed
was virtually dried up, the boys couldn't resist shedding
their shoes and socks to make the most of the existing
water.

and Mrs. John Rice.
Fumiko left Pomeroy
yesterday to joln a group of
other Rotary sponsored
exchange students on a three
week tour of the United
States. The group will travel
through Washington, D. C.,
Virginia, Georgia, Florida,
Louisiana, Texas, New
Mexico,
Arizona
and
Wyoming with stops at such
spots as New Orleans, Disney
World, the Grand Canyon and
Yellowstone National Park.
Arriving back in Pomeroy
on the Fourth of July, Fumiko
will remain with the Rice
family until she and Becky
leave for Japan on July 28.
The pair will leave from.
Columbus, fly to l.&lt;Js Angeles
for an overnight stay, stop
over in Honolulu for one
night, and arrive in Tokyo
July 31 where they will
"check out the city" on a four
day tour.
Becky and Fumiko will
travel to the Island of
Shikoku,
where
Miss
Iwasaki's home, Saijo City, Is
located, via a computerized
train which Miss Fultz
described as "really last"
with stops in such ancient
Japanese cities as Kyoto,
Nara, and Osaka. The final
phase of the trip to Saljo City
will be by boat to the island
. where Becky will stay with
Fumiko's family about a
week.

secretary·treasurer,

srzt:
165-13
175-13
185-14
195-.14
205-14
215-14
165·15
205-15
'

215-15
225-15
235-t 5
.
' r Sport 11 izt:8

.

Salo

.~~ ~

.

Plu~

51.50
46.50
1.8t
5.90/ 6.00-13
1.99
6 .50.]3
54.15
49.25
2.34
55.75
7,35-14 Ul78- 1·1 60.75
2.54
7.75-H, t'1178-1 ·1 64.2$
59.25
••.
o.
2.64
8.25-14, Gll78-14
64 .00
2.96
69, 50
8.55-14 111178-14 74.50
t.97
. 53.00
5. 90-15 f&gt;.00-15
57.00
8. 15-15,8.25-15
72.75
2.91
67 .75
(;1178-15
8.4515,8.55-15
3.11
71.75
l\ 76. 75
Jift78 .15
3.26
8 .85-1 5, JR78.J 5 79.75
74.75
3.58
1.1178- 15. q,} 5. t 5 1110.50
84.50
.
.
al11o aVIuluhlc
•F.E.T. ~~ FedcrMI F. . xcii'IC' Tux

TIRE

SALE ~NOS JUNE 22

Thr start of the
Ind y 500 is now
on sale . . $7 . ~0 off
DicHardw battny

1

41 ~~olt

Was $48.99
With trade-in
• Tirr und ha~ll r ry 11ri(&lt;' -' inrlud•• insl•llution
• Scari'i hau1 u •·rcdil pl•n to "uil mo11t .. , ..ry n~cd

army of incen tive."

Wallotone nodded and continued. "Now comes the neutron bomb making it possible to wage nuclear warfare and
leave bridges, cloverleafs and lampposts standing. It's a
big step forward."
He also told me that production of the neutron bomb
might make it possible to slep up development of another
new type of warhead.
" It's still on the drawin~board, but what we're shooting
for is a nuclear weapon that destroys the enemy's
buildings but leaves the people standing ," he confided.
I said , "That sounds kind of dumb . Who would want to
conquer a country that had nothing in it but people ?"
" Postwar rehabilitation is one im porta nt
consideration," the general replied . "U.S. policy is to help
defea ted countries get back on their feet so they can take
over· our markets for autos and color TVs.
"It's hard to have a successful occupation program if
there aren't any people around.
'!Another fa ctor Is morale. Leavi ng people standing
after a bombardment would make if possible for
occupation troops to continue the ancient military custom
of bcinging home war brides."

PLAQUE RECEIVED - Judge Robert S. Betz,
municipal judge of Gallia county , accepted a plaque for
"superior judicial service" from the No. I man in Ohio's
julliciary. Chief Justice C. William O'Neill, who handed
Judge Betz the engraved trophy , the Galtia countian's
fifth in a tw()-year period for outstanding or superior court
work . The occasion was meeting in May of the Ohio State
Bar association in the Nether land-Hilton hotel, CinciMaU.
The citation says Jud~e Betz's court docket was up to date
within the rules of the Supreme Court of Ohio as of Dec. 31,
1976.

winding up his campaign in
West Virginia's vote-heavy
President James G. Harlow
District 17, as are Miller and of West Virginia University
the other challenger, Lee Roy recently announced the
promotion of Dr. C. Kenneth
Patterson.
Should Miller win and force Murray to Professor of
the 80,000 retirees under one Education. Dr. Murray is the
of lour pension plans, known son of Mr. and Mrs C. 0 .
as the 1950s trust, to pay their Murray, 2622 Jefferson
initial hospitalization cost Avenue, Point Pleasant,
and drugs, "you will see a formerly of Middleport, Ohio.
rank-and-file uprising ending
Dr. Murray Is completing
in his recall,' ; Patrick said. his ninth year on the faculty at
1
·
'UMW members aren 't
o'••
to stand for this," he West Virginia University. he
g
u"'
is also currently serving as a
sai~~ing threats of fund insol- consultant to the West
Three persons were injured Pleasant, when it went off the
vencies, Miller is " playing Virginia Department of
ln separate traffic accidents in road. Charles M. Taylor, 18,
games" and has "climbed in Education in the Area of
Mason
County
Friday 2626 Lincoln Ave ., was
bed with the coal operators to Consumer Education and is
evening.
All
were
investigated
identified as the driver.
try to club us back into the very active in the National
by
the
Mason
County
Sheriff's
He reportedly was traveling
pits," Patrick said.
Council for the Social Studies.
Department.
east when a dog ran front of
Patrick fired one salvo at
Dr . Murray is a 1956
The most serious accident, his car, a 1971 Ford. In an
m.tW fund trustee Harry graduate of Middleport High
which remains under in- attempt to avoid hitting the
Huge, claiming· he gave School and he and his wife,
vestigation, occurred at ap- dog, he steered his car off the
Miller a $1,000 donation. He Sharon attended the recent
proximately 6 p.m; on Rt. 33 road which ended up in a
said Huge compromised MHS Alumni Association
himself as a trustee and banquet and dance, while
·
near New Haven, when two ditqhline.
would be fired if he;s elected. visiting with their parents.
persons, riding a motorcycle
Huge was unavailable for ·
·
Ave . and Vine St. A driver, Ray C. McDalle, Point
were injured.
POLICE CADET Charles Corbin directs traffic
conurient.
Pleasa nt, was charged with DWI.
Rushed to Pleasant Valley
following a Friday night accident at the corner of Second
Miller aide Paul Fortney
Hospital by the New Haven
disputed Patrick's claim,
Rescue Squad were: Thomas
saying the WdW president
A. McCoy, 34, and Robert
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
doesn't hav e " a hellu va
Raymond Bell of Morning
McCoy, 15, both of Lewis
lot to do with the
Center, 0 . Both were treated Star was a Sunday guest of.
funds. He doe sn't have
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell.
and later released.
control . over them exMrs. Vera Craig, daughter
Details of this acccident are
GALLIPOLIS - Roy C. Vinion, wa s charged with
cept to appoint one person
Mrs.
Jimmy Walker and
sketchy since the 1976
as trustee. The funds are McDade, 50, Point Pleasant, failure to yield the right qf
daughter
Ramona Lynn of
Kawasaki motorcyCle was
independent entities."
was charged · with DWI · way following an accident on . ·
Athens,
Alabama
spent a
movect from the scene of the
However, a fund official, following a traffic accident at State St. at 12 :H p.m. Friday.
week
with
Mrs.
Pearl
Norris.
accident by the time
Officer s said the Oiler car
Barbara Moldauer, acknowl- 10:42 p.m. Friday en Second
Herschel
Norris
also
visited
authorities arrived.
struck a vehicle driven by
edged a March 21 letter In Ave.
l..'lter that evening, Ronald Mrs. Norris and relatives.
which beneficiaries were told
Police said McDade' s car Alfred W. Warren, Jr. , 22,
Mrs. Georgia Wheeler
Kent Circle, 23, New Haven, Wolfe of Wa$hington, D. C. is
that ''we might have to cut struck a parked vehicle Gallipolis. There was minor
received minor injuries as a visiting Mr." and Mrs. Alex
benefits. Yes, there's a pos- ow ned by Ona Sheets, dama ge.
result of a single car wreck, Wheeler.
A final accident occurred
Gallipolis.
There was
sibility."
also on Rt. 33 near New
damage .
A on Court St at 8:50 p.m.
"We have not had Ill take mod·e rate
Mrs. Erwin Gloeckner
Haven, at about 10:30 p.m., visited her mother, Mrs. Ada
passenger in McDade's where an auto driven by John
such action yet," she said.
according to Deputy Roush. Norris at Christian An·
In an austerity move, the vehicle, James Boles, 61, E. Garnes, Gallipolis, struck
a
parked
ca
r
owned
by
James
Point
Pleasant,
was
charged
funds have closed seven
Circle was also treated and chorage Nursing Home at
H. Crace, of Addison.
satellite offices. Officials with disorderly conduct.
released.
Marietta Sunday.
Elsie M. Oiler, 50, Rt. 1,
have warned that the funds '
According to Roush, Circle
Mrs. Megan Manuel of
solvency was threatened by
was traveling east when he Racine visited Mr. and Mrs.
wildcat strikes · in West
lost control of his car, a !975 Eddie Hupp Monday evening.
Virginia.
Visiting Mr . and. Mrs .
Toyota, which lei) the road. As
Patterson, however, used
he attempted to get back onto Arnold Hupp, Mr. and . Mrs.
the same charge against
the road, the car flipped over Eddie Hupp were Mr. and
Patrick.
traveling an additional 72 feet Mr s. Ernest Bush, Mrs.
"Under . the Miller-Patrick
Gertie Manuel, Denise and
before coming to a stop.
administration, the fund
The car reportedly . was Troy, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
payroll cost has tripled
demolished and authorities Roush, Raymond Rowe ,
without any noticeable
said investigation is being Jimmy and Billy Hupp, Mrs .
improvement in services,"
Lucille Adams of Portland.
continued.
claimed
Patterson, a
Mrs. Jack Ables · is a
Another car was demolished
GALLIPOLIS - Two pocket-&lt;;ize books , an
'Kentuckian and member of
medical
patient at Veterans
early this morning on
almanac and a ledger, bave come to light in East
the
policy - making
Robinson Run, near Point Memorial Hospital.
Gallipotia, the property of George L. Fisher, 47
International Executive
TillS STREET SIGN at the corner of Second Ave., and Vine St. was knocked down
Madison Ave,
Boarjl.
during a traffic accident Friday in downtown Gallipolis.
The almanac went through the 19131loodand a few of
Patterson said the fund
payments Ill ·doctors and
its pages are encrusied with mud from that se~o nd
hospitals have be.en lagging
greatest inWldation, and it's 129 years old.
The ledger shows some grocery prices unbelievably
even more recently.
Patrick denied fiscal
low. Its year was 1897, when William Fisher, father of
trouble for the funds. He said
George, operated a store at Slater. Where 's Sla.ter ? It's
the alleged unstable condition
nonexistent now , but it was back of Mercervdle on a
of the 1950s trust could hP
ridge which George Fisher identified as Hannan Trace.
Patterson, who like Patrick He said there would be no
United Press International
remedied by shiftin~ soli!~ gf
Record-keeping in the ledger shows eggs at 8 cents a
The dwindling United Mine was stu mping in West need for the retirees benefits
the $250 million surplus from
dozen. A young chicken is sold for 14 cents- that's the
Workers health benefit funds Virginia during the final days to be cut if the trustees would
another trust ,
whole chicken, not per pound !
have become a volatile issue of the campaign, charged simply borrow from another
Following the election,
There's the typical almanac material in the other
in the union 's presidential specifically that the union has union trust fund that has a
however, Miller is prepared
booklet, with each date set up for s~nrise and sunet and
been slow paying hospital and $250 million surplus.
election.
to adopted the coal operators
phases of the moon. For JWJe 12 1t reads that the sun
In response, a Miller aide
One challenger claims doctor bills.
"greatest scare tactic" that
will rise at 4:39 and set at 7:21. "Frequent showers" is
A fund
official
in noted his boss does not have
incumbent Arnold Miller
the funds are going broke to
the weather predicti0" a few days earlier.
secretly okayed a benefit Washington acknowledged responsibility for health and
make the December coal
cutba ck for some .80,000 the funds' beneficiaries have pension matters. Miller
TiUe page reads that it's "The Franklin Almanac
talks run easier, Patrick
been warned their benefits meanwhile was traveling to
retired miners.
for the year 1848 being bissextile or Leap year, and,
might
be cut because Nova · Scotia on union
Challenger Harry Patrick,
claimed.
after the 4th of July the 73rd year of Amer1can
numerous
wildcat strikes business,
now the union's secretary
independence. Number XXX . Joh? Armstrong,
have
depleted
reserves. The
" The
inte r nat io nal
treasurer, Friday accused
teacher of mathematics, Xema, Oh10. Pittsburgh.
Miller of " playing games" funds are financed by president doesn' t have a
Printed and published by Johnston and Stockton. No. 39
on
coal helluva lot to do with the
the union 's trust funds. royalties
·with
Market st. Sold by booksellers generally in the Western
funds ,"
said
Miller
Patrick said Miller knows productions.
country ."
esman
Pa
ul
Fortney
.
spok
But
she
insisted
no
decision
the
impending
cutback
about
Back part of the book has adverti~,ing , nearly all of~
"He
doesn't
have
control
over
has
been
made
.
in
benefits
for
retirees,
and
patent medicine character, such as wo~m dest~oyer,
Patrick
said
hi s them except to appoint one
does not intend to talk ahout it
"vermifuge/' and citing ~~m~Jcal testu:nony .
information
was
've
ry person as trustee. The funds
until
after
the
election
George Fisher says that he II part w1th the books
are independent entities." ·
reliable
and
it
comes
from
Tuesday.
"for a consideration," and any history buff who
the top; and I stand by that."
He
said
the
retirees
would
considers it ca n call him at 441H659.
be forced to pay th eir initial
hospitalization cost and drugs
WASHINGTON (UPI) Udella retains boxing crown
prescribed by their doctors Commerce Secretary Juanita
up to as much as $250.
'{ou ~o~Au.:&lt;!
Mjs. · Kreps published an the department will begln
11
:Kreps has a $4 billion dollar
UMW members aren't
proved
no
match
for
Udella,
approving
specific
projects
Mll,AN
(UPI
)
Italy's
inch-thick booklet Thursday ,
' pie to slice 10,000 ways .
going to stand for this," he
Savinqs Start At
who hopes to have a crack
Rainbow of Colors
' The money - appropriated listiilg e;q~ctly how much later this month.
sa id . If Miller wins re - Franco Udella retained his soon at the world title . The
'by Congress as part ~f money has been allocated lor
election, he predicted the European flyweight boxing Sardinian-born defending
President Carter's econom1c each eli'gible municipality.
cutback would prompt a title Friday with a fifth-round champion took the offensive
of
Spanish
;stimulus package .- was She had already announced ·
Apple Grove
" rank-and -file upris in g knockout
at the opening bell and
challenger
Jose
Ca
ntero.
·divided
among
10,000 May 16 the overall amount to
Open til Noon on Thursday
ending in his recall ."
Mrs.
Herbert
Mr
.
and
It was Udella 's fourth knocked down the Spaniard
counties, cities and school be allocated within each
Miller's
other
challenger,
Roush, Mrs. Russell Roush,
three times, in the first, third
districts
plus
state state.
Patterson, defense of the t!Ue, which he
Roy
Mrs. Dorsa Parsons called at Lee
and
fourth rounds . A
The
Commerce
won
in
1975
from
governments.
meanwhile criticized both
the
Casto
Funeral
Home
in
powerful
right to the jaw in
Switzerland's
Fritz
Chervet.
Department
retains
the
right
It was Intended to create
Patrick and Miller for
Evans,
W,
Va.
to
pay
their
the
fifth
round
sent C..n.tero to
The
Spanish
southpaw.
a
to
approve
each
project,
but
300 000 construction jobs in
allowing the union's health
respects
to
Hobart
Click
and
the
canvas
for
the final count.
35-year..,id
former
shipboy,
municipalities
are
free
to
fit
955 '&gt;econd Ave .
Gallipolis. OhiO
ne~ public buildings, water
and pension funds to be
!II
vi
~jt
with
the
family
'J"h•Jrsbricklayer
and
father
of
five,
and sewel\&gt; lines, industrtal their programs to the amount
mismanaged.
allocated. Mrs. Kreps said day evening .
sites and roads.

19th century prices

JUNE 1 • JUNE 14

reflected in two hooks
found by George Fisher

Health fund becoming hot issue

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY
F.E.T. 1

NewWVU

battlefield."
I said, " I see what you mean. The annihilation of
combat souvenir&gt; before they can be captured rob an

Driver charged

Rid e on 2 steel belts and
2 radial cord plies, ancl
enjoy the great handling
thut ma•le ra1lial tires
famous. Now on sale !

t•rl ~

Professor

why nuclear weapons have nevttr been used on the

News Notes

16 to '24

Hts ul•r

D r. Murray

.

"These unpkaoant side Plfects are the chief reason•

Apple Grove ·

on sets of 4

AI.SO ... ITS

DR. C. K. MURRAY

rness up the entire countryside.
So 1 got an explana tion from Brig. Gen. Ja ckson
Wallstone, a warhead specialist in the Army's Office of
Slings and Arrows.
.
"Traditionally ," Wallstone told me, "the mam
objective of a military campaign is l? capture somethm?.
An enemy bridge, preferably. Faihng that, a strateg1c
highway cloverleaf. Or maybe a fortified lamppost .
"Now let's say the army of South Bagatelle is invading
Upper Iota. The South Bagatellers march across . the
border behind a nuclear bombardment that not only w1pes
out the Upper Iota n army but obliterates Upper Iota as
we ll .
"The question that immediately springs to mind is :
what's the point of conquering another country if there's
nothing left to show for it?
.
.
" It beats losing, of course. But it's a Victory without the
spoils. There's no posing for snapshots in front of captured

for scmvenirs .

home

Traffic Accidents

HOUSE

radial tires
SAVE

Tnlll'lt'ss ,4.0-iu. whitewalls

is

tages if offers ove r conventional nuclear warheads, which

1iimppH~1s

brrn~ing

Three Injured In

Steel· belted
1

the lighter side

By ANDREW GALLAGHER
CHARLESTON , W.Va .
( UPI ) - Heading into the
flnal weekend of his
campaign to oust United
Mine Workers President
Arnold Miller, challenger
Harry Patrick claims that
retired miners soon must put
up $250 of their own
hospitalization costs in a plan
that will be publicized after
Tuesday's union election .
"It comes from the top, and
I stand by that," Patrick
termed his source, during a
Friday news conference. He
said the information was
''Very reliable."
Patrick, currently WdW

"SISTERS" GRADUATE - Fumiko Iwasaki, Rotary
sponsored exchange student from Japan, and Becky
Fultz daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Bernard Fultz,
Middieport, graduated recently from Meigs High Sc~ol.
Fumiko, who arrived In Meigs County last August, lived
with the Fultz family the first few months of her stay.
Miss Fultz will accompany Miss Iwasaki to Japan at the
end of July where she Will visit with Fumiko's real family
in Saijo City on the Island of Shikoku.

FUMIKO IW ASA &lt;J. ROTARY f'XrHANGE. student from Jaoon ..oroves her skill in a
volleyball match with Rotarians and thetr ramlhes at the Rotary plCDlC. Fumlko, who has
been in Meigs County since last August, left yesterday for a three week tour of the United
States with other Rotary sponsored exchange students. She will return to Pomeroy on July 4
for a brief stay before returning home in SaijoCity, Japan on July 28. Becky Fultz; daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Fultz, Middleport, w1ll accompany Mrss Iwasaki, to Ja_Pan for a
visit there. Fumik~ spent th e first three months of her stay here with the Fultz fam1ly.

It doc'Sn 't take a military ~en ius to explain the ad van-

bndgcs or rlnverleafo. There's .no

MoorGard®

JUNE 12 THRU JUNE 18

DINNER BOX
3 PIECES CHICKEN
•MASHED POTATOES
&amp; GRAVY

•SLAW
•ROLL

No Subt.
No Coupons · No Limit

'149

MoorGio®

Moore's® House Paint

LOW LUSTRE LATEX
HOUSE PAINT
• for w9Qd, brick, cohcrete
&amp; metal
• fade-resistant white &amp;
colors
• qu ick-drying, easy latex
application and cleanup
• resists blistering: mildew.
lumes and alkali

EXTERIOR GLOSS FINISH
.• for wooc siding . doors,
trim &amp;metal
• easy to apply - covers
most surfaces in one coat
• "enamelized" for incredible durability
• Bnlliant White plus a fu ll
line of ready-mixed anj
custom colors

SOFT-GLOSS LATEX
HOUSE,&amp;TRIM PAINT
• for wood siding &amp; trim ,
shingles, shakes, stucco .
&amp;masonry
• latex ease of application
· and cleanup
• distinctive soft-gloss finish
finish gives long-lasting
protection

Was $13 .49

Was $12.38

10.38

NOW 5

NOW

'11.49

10,000
·slices

Was $13.49

11,49

NOW 5

"WE OFF.ER YOlf MOOREr'

j

·- readied

NO LIMIT WHILE SALE LASTS

Yes! oue

~~ .....

MooreD£

....-

.....

UP.t.Ol

.

.

.l

."- PAINTS
;oPULU
UTUTI

Gallipolis, 1\

--

Great savings today
on beauty and protection .
.-J for years to come!

TWI

Rocker Recllners .........!.12C)OD

C&amp;R PAINT &amp;
WALLPAPER CENTER
Professional Painting Services Available
Bus. 446 9458
Evenings 446-1758
224 Second Ave.
Gallipolis

Rreu~~

j

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

C()Rit)IN c\1 SNYUtR
fUIR.NITURt CO. :

'·

�:\-.8- Ttw Suutla) Tmtl':..-...;t'lllllld • .Swhlit~ .. huh' I:! 1•1. J

B-1- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 12, t977

Democrats show their success
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Slate house Reporter
COLUMB US ( UPI I - Although majority Democrats

in the General Assembly
bowled over Gov. James A.
Hhodes two weeks ago on a
partisan voter registration
bill. there is growing

Ohio politics
evi dence prosperity may be

starting to get the better of
them.
House ~peak er Vernal G.
Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, held
all 62 of his members in fine
as the Democrats overrode
the governor's item vetoes of
"instant" voter registration
and two other matters,

lo committe.: h1 await the
r·e~mlt nf Serwtf• arlum un
another laboro()r ientri.l bill

ca llecli\'t' bargaining for
public employes - which also
affects teachers.
Rep. Arthur V.N. Brooks,
D-Clevetand. said teachers
1
' ('a n't have it both ways,"
and that's what will be

decided before the teac her
evaJu"tlon bill makes its
appearance on the floor
again .
The collective bargaining
bill, long so ught by public
employe groups, had its own
trouble in the Sena te and
seems destined for more in
the House.
Sen. William F. Bowen, DCincinnati , normally four-

among themselves over a
teache r eva luat ion and

squ are for labor, took a fr osty
attitude wward passing the
bill out of his Commerce and
Labor Co mmittee after

tenure bill spawned by the

co mmittee

But last week, Democrats
were caugh t squabbling

Oh io Education Association,

their faithful ally.
_ l'he split among the Democrats sent t)le measwe back

UIUIIIl' IIJiJI

t'lllptoyes l.t1 II\'~

irlSide l'it\' lim1t.s.

BOwen und ;_1 t·n uplc nf
issued mvrc storm
warnlnt,"S when th e senolc
rejected hi ~ floo r amendment
requir i n g se p a rat e
bargaining units for poliee
superv isors a nd patrolmen .
Then

(.'( 1lleagues

After a brief caut•us.
Bowen 's ~mendment was
vo ted on aga in and passed .

But the treatment of police
officers, fire fighters and
other municipal workers will
be up for grabs again a s the
measure goes through the
House.
And some of the Sena te
Democrats, notably former

uvt•r ~ mw.:kercl latt.' IO:tst
wtek when a $5 mi Ilion 1tem
in the lmdgt!'t W(J S ready to lx:spcnl.
flowt•n w&lt;:Jnted it to help
.att rotct a Montgomery Ward
distributiun ('tmter with 1,200
empl oyes to Cim:mnati or
nearby Sharonville.

But Sens . J . Ti mothy
Ml'{'orma('k,

D~ Euelid,

and

Robert E. O'Shaughnessy, 0Columbu.s, jumped into the
fra y and asked for ' 1a piec·e of
it " for a Clevela nd -a rea
project and to help pay the
cost of schoo l desegregation
in Columbu s, respectively .

Bowen wa s forced w ba ck
off and the appropriation
Barberton Mayor Kenneth R. went una ssigned .
The day of revolution is not
Cox , may be in a position ~
do some bargaining of theJr yet near , but some cracks are
own . . .;. . strengthening the . beginning w appear.
hand or municipalities in

members

exchange for their crucial
votes on a possible override

defeated
his
proposal
forbidding a labor arbitrator
to overru le a n existing
or d i n ance requirin g

of a gubernatorial vew.
Finally, Democr~ts on the
Senate Finam:e Committee
quarreled briefly like cats

A thought for the day :
Greek philosopher Plat&lt;l said,
"No evil can happen to a good
man. eith er in life or arter
death."

Alfred Sociill
Mr ;utd ~lrs . Wilber
Pctrkt•r attt..'nded tht• Alu111111

H.:tnquet i.l t llw ulll f 'tu:stt•r
HiJ.(h
SC' hool
bu1ldm~o:
Suturcl:t-~ t' \'enmg, June 5.
H l'l~n Wnocll' whose dass
W&lt;J s

1!122. w-as not physic-a lly

ablt· tu attend this Banquet
whi&lt;:h wa s their 55th one.
Sorry.
On Mernori01 l n ay. Mr. and
Mrs Wilber Parker visi ted
Hav l'nswood..
W.
VtL
cemetery, where her r~ ther,
Cu mcy L. Michael is buri ed .
'J11cy were accompanied by
her mother, Mrs. Flm·ence

MichaeL
Mr . and Mrs. Wilb er
~urkcr attended the Alumni
Banquet at Chester Saturday
even ing·. Mr . Pa rker 's sister .

Mrs. Rupert SGhrader and
her husband of Frankfort,
Kentucky also attended . It
wa s Mfs. Sch rader's 50th
anniversary of graduation .

On Sunday they all attended a family dinner at the
home of Mr . a nd Mrs.
Howard Parker.
Mr . and Mrs . Steve
Roumelettc 1Hilah Hayes ) of
Columbus, 0., visited her

;'Volt!.'

Saturday ev('ning .

Fr:lnk and Fern 1Hayes J
C'hccS&lt;·brcw

olso attended the
Che st er Alumni Banqu et
Satu rd ay
eveni ng
but
returnl"d to Shawnee. ·a .

Clara

Fullrod ,

Chicago trips
San Francisco

Nina

Hobmson and Charles and

Helen Woodc ca lled at the
Hayes hOme in
Middlepo rt .Saturda y. while

Cli fford

shuppi n ~.

SPARE PARTS
LOS ANGELES 1UP! l - A
judge ordered Zsa Zsa
Gabor 's e&lt;-husband Jack
Ryan Friday to return w her
the parts he stripped fr om
her Rolls Royce .
Ryan , in ventor of the
Barbie Doll, dismantled the
car sho rtly before th ey
divorced because he said they
had agreed w divide the
proceeds of the rest&lt;lred ca r.
He took fi ve wheels, five
tires, the front bumper and
five wheel covers - about
$7,500 worth of parts.

,. ~'111.1 nu ,.it!f_lf HtMm

Cunlplt:H~\'t,JJm~

You r

P .t~ ()rl L'

Xn1u·. Ll'l

u~

I k·lp Yuu M.1kl·

'! d Hl'l flt·rrlht·r .

All da tes in June have been

boo~ed

We are now

booking Ju l y. August and September .

pa:;~,;~ORIST
)52 E MAIN

POMEAO'Y . OH : O d169

CHICAGO (UPI ) - Jerry second inning .
Morales' two-run double in
McCovey's homer was his
the seventh inning broke a 3-3 475th lifetime, tying him with
tie and le&lt;lthe Chicago Cubs Stan Musial for 13th place on
to a 0-3 victory Saturday over the alltime hom.e run list.
the San Francisco Giants.
The Cubs scored two in the
Morales '
two -bagger first, the second on Murcer's
scored Larry Blittner and triple.
Bobby Murcer, who were
The Giants tied the score in
aboard on fielder's chOices.
Wlllle Hernandez, 3-1,
picked up the victory in relief
of starter Ray Burris, who
lasted just 3 l -3 innings.
Burris yielded back-to-back
homers to Willie McCovey,
his tenth, . and Gary
Thomasson, his eighth in the

topple

BADEN-BADEN, West
Germany (UP!) - West
Germany's top sports
organization Saturday ap!
proved a measure banning
the use of muscle-building
steroids by athletes in in-

Pirates

Bullets

'

DISt:OVERED

Color TV

RUTLAND FURNITURE

STRIKE IT RICII in S.:-\_
V INGS!
strike COLOR with new

Hayt~ali

oiDia . . . . .

The
neal Treasureis
MATTA~

Dependability
·- ----·+

SALE

17.0 Cu.Ft.

Enjoy an oven
that can clean
while it cooks.
From Frigidaire.

Model AT 17FJ
Ouahty 1,::-atu n •s m!lke 1n1:; a
grEcat buy' - b uuSII IDI1 adtu·;t&lt;Jb tc gliClC-ou t !:helves 2 giiCfe.., ut CriSpe r ~ 'c onvc•rtl ble , '" VfH~ I blt• cJo vr5: rf'mu;~a blc
tJrmr r~ck~ optl '&gt;na l ro lltor s a nd

1ce masl,•r c:aoab,illy

f)-:- q

., -·

r

~

r,~-.

L

Frbst*Ciear
Refrigerator Freezer

-·--:r

·1

· ~;A·.

15.3 cu. ft.

!

Gibson
Chest
Freezer

RC-30

Oven cleaning is less of a chore,
thanks to cont inuou s-clea nin g side
and bac k pane ls that beg in reducin
no rmal spatters to a presentably
clean 9ppeara nce during ba king or
roasting . And the panels remove for
cleaning of heavy soi l at the r.ink,
The rest ol the oven is easily acceSS"
ible for norma l clean ing thanks to
an ove n door that lifts right off and
out of th e way. This model a lso adds
an eas y-to-read cloc k a nd a handy
minut e ti me r to your kit c he n wit hout
taking up an inc h of wall or co unt e r
space.
'

New
*
Energy-Saving
Frigidaire
RefrigeratorFreezer
Uses

le~s

ener_gy than

any other 1.6.0 cu-ft or
larger refr igeratorfreezer . 4 full-width
shelves and twi n Vegetable Hydrators.
4.44 cu-lt freeze r
compa rtment.
'M!r cer t ifie d a1 76 ii'Wh /mo.
compar~d w1th energy con·

sumpl 10n ratings as llst el.l by

2995

WIT

Barrr! Stop iD todar!

off

Renee fails
test
·
first
..

rigidaire 30" Electric
ange ·Model RC-30

$398

c~me

Dave Tomlin in the ninth on a
double by Mario Mendoza, an
infield out and Phil Garner's
bouncer to first.

REG. '799.95

Gibson

PITTSBURGH (UP!) Merb Rettenmund and Dave
Winfield slugged solo home
runs Saturday to lead the San
·Diego Padres to a 4-1 victory
over the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Bob Shirley, H, yielded six
hits and stranded nine runners over the first six innings
in gaining the win. Rollie
Fingers, the third Padre
pitcher, came on with two out
in the ninth and registered his
15th save.
Rettenmund led orr the
game with his fourth homer,
a shot which barely cleared
the leftfield wall. Winfield's
homer, his 13th, was a
hooking line drive in the fifth
inning - just inside the leftfield foul pole- and was the
final San Diego run. Both
homers came off loser John
Candelaria, now 7-2.
Gene Tenace and Mike
Champion added RBI singles
for the other two San Diego
runsin the third inning. The
Pirates' lone run

.•

. AHAM J~n . 1975 Dlrectorw ot
Cerhf ie d Refri gerato rs and
Fr~ezers . M a:; va ry '" a cwal
use . dop end1ng on 1'1om e en~ ire nment,

dee r openings . tvoe

el use.

W/T

Elegance.

By
Frigidaire . .
20.3-cu-ft side-by-side ha s .
a 7.04-cu-ft freezer compartment. 100 % Frost·
Proof. Automatic lee
available (ext ra charge).

on
elegance.

By
Frigidaire.
tO O% Frost-Proal; 15.2Cl,l- ft

of convenience, in-

$ $ $

f:LEVELAND (UP!) Tran.'!Sexual Dr. Re~e Richards, signed by the
Cleveland Nets wplay World
Team Tennis, failed the first
of two chromosome tests
·taken w detenntne whether
she can compete in WIT as a
woman, it was reported
Saturday.
.
The Cleveland Press
reported that the test
samples, which consist of
smears taken froin inside the
lower lip, were analyzed at
labs and fell below the
minimum reading required w
declare Richards a female,
However, the Press said
a~other
test has been
ordered.
The Nets had planned to
'have Richards play wo111en's
singles and doubles, but was
ordered
by
WTT
Commissioner
Butch
Buckholtz to keep . Richards
out of WTT competitioo until
results of the c~omosome
tests were validated.

cludihg a 4.75 cu-ft top
l" ezer. Reversa -door s.

SAVE
WIT

the sixth when Thomas
walked, advanced to Third on
Bill Madlock's single and
scored on Darrell Evans'
infield out.
Bruce Sutter came into the
game in the ninth inning and
picked up his 17th save. Gary
Lavelle, 5-3, took the loss.

West Germany
approves ban

Padres

' AT

Seattle Slew wins Triple
Crown by 3¥2 lengths

Let us put
your wedding
in bloom.

IH'utht•r· lll -bW &lt;HHI s1st..:r.
Mrs Cht~rle!-t D. Woode on
Sumla) ilft~r tJttending the
C'hl•.stcr Alumni Ranquet

e~pect

changes
'

LANDOVER, Md. (UPl) There's little chance of a

blockbuster trade, but sheer
mathematics and the installation of Mitch Kupchak
lull-time at center assure
there will be ch&gt;mges on .the
Washington Bullets next
season.
The heavy bidding for
National Basketball
Association free agents is yet
to begin - ·the Bullets are
Interested in Milwaukee
forward Bob Dandridge but General Manager Bob
Ferry and Coach Dick Motta
have indicated they would be
happy starting this season
with what they have.
"We like Bob Dandridge as
a player, but that's .as far as
we've gone," said Ferry. "I

don't know what he wants to
do. "
The Bullets picked up two
big forwards in Friday's
draft - Greg . Ballard from
Oregon and Bo Ellis frorn
National champion
Marquette- and had already
signed free agent Coniel
Norman, a shooting guard .
The presence of Ballard
and Ellis, or possibly Dandridge, will enable Motta to
switch the 6-foot-IO Kupchak,

depth chart.
uAt shooting guard, we've

got Phil Chenier and Coniel
Norman. At playmaker we've
got Tom Henderson and
Larry Wright: AI center,
we've got Unseld and Kupchak. At small forward we've
got Kevin Crevey and
Ballard. We needed someone
to back up (E lvin) Hayes."
They seem to have just the
man in the 6-foot-9 Ellis, who
will he able to play on either
side for the Bullets if he
doesn't go to Milwaukee as
part compensation for
signing Dandridge.
"I can see Bo on the floor
with Elvin and a cel)cter,"

said Ferry.
The analysis leaVes two

' SIGN TOP CHOICE
BLOOMINGTON,
Minn.
(UP!) - The Minnesota
.twins announced Saturday
they have signed their No. i
choice in the recent free
agent .draft, shortstopoutfielder Paul Croft of
· Morristown, N. J .
Croft, 17, Is a 5-foot-ll, 17&gt;pound righthander.
The Twins said Croft will
report to Melbourne, Fla.,
next Friday for training with
the Elizabethtown, Tenn.,
- Farm Club in the Appalachian League.
The Twins now have four
players signed out of 40 draft
choices. Signed earlier were
left-handed pitcher Michael
O'Comior and shortstops Jose
Rodriguez aruJ Scott Ullger:

said the United States
Olympic Commitiee has
given the ruling Its full
support.
The West German Sports
Federation, in a ''Declaration
of Principles," ruled that its
athletes will not be given
chemical strength-builders to
help improve their performances in olympic and
other competions.
·
Willi Weyer, president of
the sports federation , has
repeatedly denounced the use
of muscle-building steroids as
a

" violation

of

human

dignity."
Dieter Count LandsbergVelen, the vice-president of
the Sports Federation, told a
meeting of his organization
. Saturday that American
olympic leaders have thrown
their full support behind the
German anti-doping decision.
"The Olympic Committee
of the United States is
striving for the same principles in the development of
olympic competition which
also are in accord with the
rules of the International
Olympic Committee and the
Int erna tional
Sports
Federations,"
LandsbergVelen quoted the American
statement as saying.
. Liindsberg-Velen said the
American Olympic Committee statement also said
amateur atheltes in U&gt;e U.S.
will strengthen cooperation
with German athletes. The
Alnericans also plan to hold a
on
sports
symposium
medicine with German sports
physicians in the United
States, he said.
Landsberg-Veleli said that
Dr. Irving Dardik 1 cha innan

of the Medical Commission of
the U. S. Olympic Committee,
recently met with West
German sports physicians as
a first step toward closer
cooperation between the two
olympic

alongside 31-year-old Wes organizations.
Unseld.
Ferry explained how he
next season's

Today's hurlers

ternational competition and

a second-year man, to center, countries'

visualized

NI::W YORK I UP I) - P reakness, again c ha sed
Seattle Slew, his powerful Seattle Slew futilely and
stride chewing up the ground wound up second. Sanhedrin,
in the drive to the finish line, who was third in the Kenromped into racing history tucky Derby, again finished
Saturday by winnin g the third with Mr. Red Wing
l09th running of the Belmont fourth.
Stakes to become the loth
ninth
Seattl e Stew's
triple crown champion and straight vic tory was the
the first to accomplish the climax of the fairytale story
bare feat with an unbeaten of his you ng owners, Mickey
record.
and Karen Taylor and Jim
Ridden by Jean Crug uet, and Sally Hill, who purchased
Seattle Slew took the lead the son of Bold Reasoning right from the start in the I •;, My Channer for$17,500 at ·the
mile third. jewel of the Triple Keeneland Yearling sales in
Crown, effortlessly repulsed 1Q75.
The triumph was worth
several challenges in the first
mile and then easily drew $109,080 to Seattle Slew's
away from his seven op-- owners, but the 3-year-old
pOnents in the stretch.drive to colt's stallion value m akes
him the most valuable horse
win by four lengths.
Run Dusty Run, who in thoroughbred history.
The victory completed a
finished second in the Kentucky Derby and third in the unique double for Cruguet, an

Kqmq- Q61llffi
fluU..,d !l.dt I

f1••

~ck

WJSP6X - 9fli1J.m

•

ltl.an • l:lt&gt;oort•lda
f'IMII'OJ ti"n ...... ct.nh
P,.. Tl nkeu • Pt., Pl.n.tet

...

l't1ddl•fl(lrt • Plat roy A'•

MM

wmg:SI!,y • 96/Utn

11rov l',e ....,n ••• I Do ily

Sa~Unel •

l'lalny P1n.tu • "'- · n,.,. ' "

~S!!!
uan~~

..,;~Df,tj'7
•• P'i•-

hck

-

'llot lltil l OUto
••
,.. lltt
" ' Ulth Lo!&amp;p ~~
••n Pliny 1.-.r-» Otw:lu

c--..

By United Press IDternational
(All Times EDT)
'
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Texas (Briles 2-2 and Alexamer 6-3) at Boston
(Cleveland 4-3 and Tlant 3-4), 2, 1:30 p.m.
Chicago (Barrios 5-3) at Bollfmore (Grimsley 11-3), 2
p.m.
Minnesota (Thormodsgard 3-3) at New York
(Figueroa 7-4), 2 p.m.
Kansas City (Colborn~~ at Milwaukee (Augustine 11)7, 2:30 p.m.
Cleveland (Doboon 1-5) at CaiUornla (Ryan &amp;-5), 4
p.m.
Detroit (Rozema 6-2) at Oaklaod (Blue 3-7), 4:30p.m.
Toronto (Vukovich 2-4) at Seattle (Pole 2-2), 4:35p.m.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Montreal (Rogers 8-4 and Alcala 1-3) at Cincinnati
(Zachry 3-7 and Billingham 7-3), 2, 1:15 p.m.
San Diego (Jones U and Owchlnko Hl) at Pittsburgh
(Reuss 1-6 and Demery 3-3), 2, 1:05 p.m.
Philadelphia (Lonborn 1-0) at Atlanla (Messersmith
4-2), 2:15p.m .
Los Angeles (John 11-3) at St. Louis (Rasmussen 4-7),
2:15p.m.
San Francisco (Curtis 1-1) at Chicago (Krukow 5-4),
2:15p.m.
New York (Seaver 11-3! at Houston (Bannister 1-5),
3:05p.m.

oft-criticizes French jockey,
who earlier in the day won the
~ ,800 Mother Goose with 40l shot Road Princess.
Seattle Stew, though, was
an odds-&lt;Jn favorite, just as
he had been in the Kentucky
Derby and the Prea kness.
He paid $2.80, $2.60 and
$2.20 after completing the
ra ce in 2:29 3-5 over a muddy
tra ck aft er st eady rain s
Thursday and Friday, Run
Dusty Run paid $3.20 and

Davis happy to
be with Phoenix

DISTANCE RECORD
MIDLAND, Tex. (UP! ) The city's swim team passed
th e 300-mile mark early
Saturday, setting a new world
distance record.

The record, reached at 5:27
a.m., was the third one set by
the team this week. Officials
said the team, which started
PHOENIX (UP[) - Walter Jerry Co langelo described swimming Monday, also will
Davis says he is delighted to Davis as "an excellent all- attempt to set another world
be headed for the Phoenix arourid player, who gives us reeord by swimming non-stop
Suns and anticipates no an added dimension of for seven days.
The other records set inproblems in reaching terms quickness at forward."
MacLeod said, :•walter has clude the . longest distance
with the teams that made him
the firth player picked in great speed, good range on swam in 24 hours and the
Friday's NBA College Draft. his shot and i~ a leaper. He 'shortest time taken to swim
" I saw the Suns play in the has been well coached and 100 miles.
.1976 playoffs, and I was very has played in numerous
impressed with the way they pressure situations and came·
play as a team,'' sa id Davis. through with good marks. We_
"That's the way we play at couldn't expect much more
North Carolina and I was from a college player."
INKS CONTRACT
Davis' college career was
hoping to go to a club with a
CINCINNATI
(UP!)
team concept."
marked by consistency. His
The Suns selected Davis, a field goal percentage never Willie Zackery, a speedy wide
S-6 forward who also can play dipped below .500 and ended receiver from Central State
guard, behind Kent Benson of up at .531 over four years. He University, has signed a
Indiana, Otis Birdsong of · averaged 14 .3 points as a contract with the Cincinnati
Houston, Marques Johnson of freshman, 16 .1 as a Bengals, General Manager
UCLA and Greg B~llard or sophomore, 16.6 as a junior Paul Brown has announced.
Zackery,
21,
from
and 15.5 as a senior.
Oregon.
"From what I've heard LaGrange, Ga., is 6-1, 185"! played . guard on the
Olympic team. and r have from other players, my poWJds. He was selected by
playe&lt;l both forward and biggest adjuStment wilt be the Bengals in the ninth round
guard at North Carolina. I'm the travel and the number of of the spring NFL draft.
"We are impressed with
confident and comfortable at games in the pros," Davis
Zackery
's speed and ability
said.
"In
college,
you
can
each position , and I don 't
w
catch
the football," Brown
play
30
good
games
In
a
really care where I play. I
said
Friday.
"He gave a good
but
with
tOO
games
season,
just want to contribute as
account
or
himself at our
ana
counting
exhibitions
much to the team as I can,
rookie
camp
and we're
playoffs,
it
will
be
very
hard
and do what coach (John )
interested
in
seeing
more of
to play a great game every
MacLeod asks me to do."
him
."
Phoenix General Manager time ."

No. 1 car forced from race
LE MANS, France (UP[)
- Frenchman · Jean~Pierre

Jabouille, aided by the withdrawal of the No. 1 car of
rival Porsche, took a five-car
lead in his Alpine Renault
Turbo Saturday in the 24

Pos.tpone
twin bill
BOSTON (UP[) - The
Boston Red Sox po;tponed a
doubleheader with the Texas
Rangers Saturday because of

hours of Le Mans Auto Race.
Henri Pescarolo of France,
bidding with Belgian partner
Jacky lckx for a record-tying
fo\Jrth win, limped into the
pits after just three hours
with a broken engine in his
Martini Porsche 936 Turbo.
Withdrawal of the car,
which had been running in
second position behind
Jabouille, was a severe blow
to Porsche, which last year
swept the World Group 6 and
Group 5 Championships and
victory at Le Mans.

rain.

The Red Sox said one game
wilt be made up Sunday as
part of a doUbleheader and
the other wilt be made up
Aug. 25.
Sunday's pitchers for the
Red Sox wilt be Reggie
Cleveland (4-3) and Luis
Tiant (3-4). Pitching for the
Rangers will be Nelson Briles
(2-2 ) and Doyle Alexander (63) .
Following
the
doubleheader the Red Sox
host a three-game series
against Chicago, then close
the homestand with three
weekend games against the
New York Yankees,

The mishap left Renault,
Porsche 's biggest challenger,
holding the top· five places
with Frenchmen Patrick
Tambay running second and
Patrick .Depailler in third
place, both in Alpines.
They were followed by
Australian Verne Schuppan,

Wren, who last week was

named to the American Association of College Baseball
Coaches Hall of Fame, said,
"I wanted to try the pros very
much. But I think I waited too
long."
Wren

coached

cu rrent

Phillie star Mike Schmidt,
Chicago CUb catcher Steve
Swisher, and about a dozen
other former major leaguers
at Ohio U., before joining the
Phillies after the school cut
back its baseball budget in
U&gt;e early ' 1970s.
Now. he has returned to

~" ran ee,

fifth , in Renault

Mirage Turbos.
"The race is not over yet,"
PorSche team , man~ger

injection pump,"
Porshce also had a 935
Turbo still running ,
" I feel very sorry for
them," Renault team chief

Manfred Jantke said. "We've . Gerard La.rrousse said. "BQt
still got the other 936 running thai's racing. The rate iS Only
although it lost 12 minutes just begi nning and we still
while we replaced a fuel have a long way to g_o."

grid deal with NCAA
Peters, athietic director at televise five NCAA National
Dartmouth College and Championship events each
chairman of the NCAA TV year . Those events have not
. yet been determined.
Committee,
The new contract calls for
contract for the network's
Roone Arledge, president
exclusive coverage of college · or ABC News and Sports, each market to receive 23
football from !978 through
said, "We are delighted that, games a year - 13 nationally
1981,
ABC
announced
despite being raced with televised games and 10 weeks
Saturday ,
extreme pressure from both of regional coverage•
On regio~al wee~. a Mal
The pact, worth a reported
other networks to participate
of
45 games will be televised,
$118 million, commits the
in the college football series,
a
40 per cent increase over
NCAA to a television contract the NCAA has elected to
the
28 games now seen
longer than two years for the
remain exclusively with
regionally
. In addition, the
ABC."
first time in the 25 years
will carry four
network
college football has been
The current two-year
ga mes and three
division
2
televised, the announcement contract, which pays the
said.
NCAA $tB million a year, division 3 ga mes. instead of
" We are extremely pleased expires at the end of the the current two.
ABC will begin its t977
upcoming season. The new
with the riew four-year
coverage
on
contract ,"
sa id Seaver
agree ment extends th e. na tion al
association of the NCAA and Saturday , September 10,
when defending National
ABC to 16 years,
In addition to college champion Pittsburgh hosts
football, AB C again will Notre Dame,
NEW YORK (UPI ) - The
National Collegiate Athletic
Association and ABC Sports
have signed a four-year

~

WETIC'e R!:SULI:!
LL 1 S Cll.llTS 8 - PI!41tS 2

PO!E RCY YAoo:tS 20 - TICZRS 6
MA SON RA 11CI: ~S 17- N, H, REDS'
ND1 HAVEN CUBS 11 - RI.NI2 RS 0
PQI!L.L'S CU.N'!"3 10 - IIJ,NGERS 9

PCME P.O'f TICERS ll - N. H. REDS ?
NE'II HAVEN CUBS 7- PIRA"iES

I

YAflYJ:ES

3

v.ur.us '

PGIEP.oY TJctRS 7 -

~H .

C:Utt TS
H. CliBS

MASON JIAI;crJLS It }01, PIRA '!ES

t!.IEStJ.Y -

JUliE

lHh

I'Ct'IP.OY TIGERS i PO.'ELL' S CUN'I'S

f'lloi:E ROY Utll'll.S

c

PI}! ,

PillA IES

MASON RlNGLRS fi H. H, CUBS
\ltmiF.Sr.AI- JUNE 15th
fti'iP.CY PIRA'IE S ~ PrnE!ID't TtG&amp;JIS

Wren won 11 Mid-American Athens as assistant director

Conference baseball titles
and finished second eight
other years at Ohio, until the
iure of . major league
managing caught him.

fourth, and Michel LeClere of

ABC signs four-year

Ex-OU Coach Wren says baseball
can't continue paying big salaries

roster spots open. At present
there are seven candidates to ·
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) fill them.
"Baseball
cannot continue to
At guard Phil Walker, a
pay
the
bog
salaries they are
product of Millersville (Pa.)
paying
some
players and
State and Washington' s
exist.
It
will
ruin
l!aseball,"
seeond round draft choice, 1
says
Bob
Wren,
who
coached
and veteran Dave Bing could
baseball
for
24
years
at Ohio
battle for a possible fifth
University
and
for
21'.
years
guard spot. Bing's chances of
with
the
Philadelphia
playing in Washington again
Phillies.
weren't helped by his otrblic
"The fact that one player
remarks that he couldn't
on
a
club gets an
relate to Motta.
astronomical
salary and .
Mike Riordan (age 31),
everyone
else
just
average
Leonard Gray and thirdcompensation
can
ruin a
round draft choice Jerry
team,"
says
Wren
...
For six
Schellenberg from Wake
Forest are candidates for years, I p~ed pro ball for
fifth forward. It is likely the Toledo Mud!.ens. Th•t big
money w only some was
Riordan could retire and prevalent
then, as now. I
Schellenberg could flop at
experienced
what It can dow
training camp, leaving ·Gray
a
team."
the winhJr by default.

$2. 40, while Sanhedrin to also challenge for the lead
return ed $2.6().
down the back stretch, with
Seattle Slew broke first the late-running Sanhedrin
from the game, in distinct also much closer than usual.
With a half-mile to go,
contrast with his horrible
Kentucky Derby start, .and Seattle Slew had taken care
)Vas challenged for the early of Spirit Level and led by I I&gt;
lead by Spirit Level, who is lengths over Run Dusty Run,
the
awesomely
owned by Meadow Stable, the Then
owners of the last triple powerful colt !Prned it on to
crown champion, Secretariat open the lead to four· lengths
in 1973.
in the next quarter mile and
Golden Chance Farms' Run coasted home to victory.
Dusty Run moved up quickly

of admissions at OU.
Wren cOvers northeast
Ohio, presenting 'college
night' programs, but he stJII
maintains ties with baSeball,
giying clinics and spending
summers
teaching
at
baseball schools.
"I woo't say I don 't miss
baseball at times," he said.
"The one-&lt;Jn-&lt;Jne, day-by-day
association with youngters, I
iniss,'' he said. " But I don't
miss the pressure . Our
baseball program sells
itsel( ... 43 straight winning
years until this spring."
Wren says he averages
about 10 clinics a year
because he is "just cornball
enough to think I might help a

or a coach ...
" I always felt it wa s
inconsistent and never made

yoWlgs~.:r,

sense to pay in.Strucwrs small
salaries to tea.ch pro
ballplayers and help develop
them, and then big money to
the players the instructor
helped get there.
"The instructors that pro
clubs have in baseball wday
are far superior w when I
played, and we only . had
one, "

he

said.

" But,

fundamentals
are
fundamentals and they
should be a bigger part of
rna jor teague coaching than
they are.
"Give me the youngsters
who are .eager to learn. I get
the most kicks from them,"
he said.
·

Tanner, Smith
in semifinals
NOTTINGHAM , Eng .
iUPI) - Roscoe Tanner and
Stan Smith' useq their .
powerful serves Saturday M
move into the semifinals of
the $100,000 John Player
Grass Court Tournament,
joining un seeded
Tim
Gullikson.
Brian Gottfried failed to
make it a U. S. sweep of the
final four wh en he was upset
in his quarter-fina l match by
Chile's Jaime Fillol, 6-2, 2-li,
6-4.

Tanner, preparing for
Wimbledon, which starts
June 20, made the most or his
hard serve to down his friend
Dick Stockton, 8-9, 6-3, 64.

In the decisive third set,
Stockton managed to win only
two points against Tanner's
serve and the man from
Loo kout Mountain, Tenn .,

broke stockton's serve in the
fifth game.
"'fhe trouble is you can't
get near Roscoe'S service on

grass and sooner or later he
Ca n break yours," said
Stockton.
Smith powered his way
past Raul Ramirez of Mexico,
6-C, IH, · and said he was
"right on time" for hitting his
peak at Wimbledon, which is
celebrating its centennial this
year.

�-'

B-2- The Sunday Timeh&lt;;enlinel, Sunday , .June 12, 1977

Hendersons celebrate
sixty yearsofwedded bliss
ALFRED - Relatives and and Aaron and friends, Mrs.
friends joined Mr. and Mrs. Nina Robinson, Mrs. Clara
l..e&lt;&gt; Henderson at the AI! red Follrod, Mrs. Mary Carr.
Methodist Church on May t5 Mrs. Genevieve Guthrie, Mr.
to celebrate their 60th and Mrs. Pearl R. Castl e.
wedding anniversary . Mr . Mrs. Martha Elliott, Mr. and
and Mrs . Henderson were Mrs. Gerald Swartz, Mr. and
married May t9, t917. A Mrs. Ernest Taylor. Gamer
yellow and white color theme Gri ffin, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
was carried out featuring a Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Elbert
four-tiered cake topped with Midkilf, Mrs. Edith Harper,
a miniature bride and groom . Bertha Wright, Mr. and Mrs.
Attending were their Hobart Swartz, Mr. and Mrs.
family, Mr. and Mrs. Millard Swartz, Mr. and Mrs.
&lt;..1arence Henderson, Sher· Art Atherton , Mrs. Guy
man Henderson and Pam, Spencer, Mrs. Edna HarMr. and Mrs. Ralph Hen· mon, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
derson , Mr. and Mrs. Haro ld McNeal, Mr. and Mrs.
Henderson . Susan, Sharon, Charles Woode, Mrs. Garland
Robert Lee and Lisa, Mr. and Caldwell, Mrs. Leota Smith,
Mrs. Richard Follrod and Mrs. Sara Cullums, Mr. and
Chuck, Mrs. Linda Williams Mrs. Ralph Welker, Mr. and

Rupe-Faulk plans
finalized for june
POMEROY - Plans have
been completed for the wed·
ding of Miss Linda R. Rupe,
daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Rupe, Pomeroy, ~nd
Charles H. Faulk, Jr. son of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H.
Faulk, Sr., Pomeroy.
The wedding will oo an
event of Saturday, June 18 a!
4: 30 p.m.1 a l the Pomeroy
United . Methodist Church.
Music by · Mrs. June Van
Vranken, organist. will begin
at 4 p.m. The Rev. Robert
Hayden will officiate.
Miss Lori Rupe will serve
as maid of honor for her
sister. The bridesmaids will
be Miss Brenda Taylor,
Pomeroy ; Mrs . Vicky
Copeland, cousin of the bride,

Ottumwa, Iowa; Mrs.
Charlotte Wynn, Tiffin ; and
Mi ss Joy ce DeLong,
Circleville.
The best man will be
Gerald Hollon, Columbus,
brother-inlaw of the groom .
Ushers will be Randy Biggerstaff, cousin of the bride,
St. Louis, Mo.; Tom Ball and
John Swartz, Pomeroy ; and
Jeff Copeland, Ottumwa,
Iowa .. Tammy Hollon will be
flower girl, and Scott Hollon,
the ringbearer. They are the
niece and nephew of groom.
Guest.s will oo registered by
Mrs. Anita Ball, Pomeroy.
A reception will be held im·
mediately following the wed·

·
:
·
.

·
:

MASON DRIVE-IN
SAT. thru TUES.
June 11-12-13-14
KILLER FORCE

"Ru

Plus
SPECIAL
DELIVERY .
~'PG"

CO LO\'
,,,,.,., ·t
...

It

TONIGHTTHRU
TUESDAY
There's only one
thing wrong with the
Davis babv- .

IT'S ALIVE

:

PG

· ~------------~
CARTOON

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
David Gloeckner hosted a
party Tuesday evening at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Erwin
Glockener, Rt. 2, Racine, in
honor of their daughter,
Carrie, who was celebrating
her third birthday.
A cookout wsa enjoyed
followed by cake and ice
cream served to these guests,
Mr. and Mrs. • Erwin
Gloeckner, Mrs. Zelpha
Boggess, Rosa lee Story,
Clarence Story, Mr. and Mrs.
David Gloeckner. Carrie
received many lovely gifts.

Gr~nge to meet
ROCK SPRINGS - An
organizational meeting of the
Pomona Junior Grange will
be held Tuesday, June 14 at
7:30p.m.
The meeting place has been
changed from the Rock
Sprin~ ' Grange Hall to the
Fairboard building at the
fairgrounds. Children ages 5·
14 are invited to attend. No
money is necessary. In·
rormation about the grange
will oo given out at the
meeting Tuesday ni~ht .

Sunday · Monday
and Tuesda

.

.

.
'

··,-

-:

I

'

~

..

""

REVIVAL
POMEROY - A revival
will begin Monday night at
the Fairplay Chapel, Meigs
County Road No. 1, off State
Route 325 near Danville or
State Route 124, near Salem
Center, and continue through
Friday with services each
evening at 7:30 p.m. Rev.
Thereon Durham will oo the
evangelist and there will he
!lpeCial singing. The public is
invited.

Store Hours
8A.M. -10 P.M.
Mon .-Sat .
10 A.M.- 10 P.M.
Sunday

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OHIO

and Mrs. Ron Eastman and
Nora, Mr. and Mrs. M. F..

PRICES EFFECTIVE
THRU
JUNE 18, 1977

..

Hender son

was

L

••

..
....

Summer chic

Sarah's

Gallia Diary

Hum

l't'lt lly .

Slw ·.~

dil&lt;.., l'(~l!l't'lloll,

un tlt.·r~l;&amp;lltb .

nut

distn·s."it•d

wht.'ll !Sht' '!; 111 a !'ilun· pn ~

1110tmg llt'r dutllcs and s hl'

.

'.

Or ten days Qf

wcarin~

om•

GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis Christian Church
will present the study course
"Lord Jesus Teach Me" at
vacation Bible school June 13·
17. This yea r ;s program is

and Kim Schoonover will
have

the

crib

nur sery.

Nursery 2, Kitty Perry, Nell
Miller. Ronda Simms.
Beginners, Jane Vinson ,
Carla Miller, Sharon Burris,
Rachel Whitehair and Jeri
Griffin. Primary, Gertrude
Marrah, Millie McCarty, Rita
Taylor and Carolyn Taylor.
Middlers , Kay Simms,
Charlotte Smith, Deb~ie
Fraley and Jan Frazee .
Juniors , Leah Schoonover,
Edna Tawney, Arlene Nelson
and Linda Marrah. Youth,
Bonnie Horton, Odella Taylor
and !'larQara King .
Craft director will be
Martha Nash with many
varied craft ideas for all the
vouth. RefreShments will be
by Wilda Kincaid and Bonnie
Tawney.
There will be an adult class
taught by Denny Coburn,
minister. For more information call Pat Ranegar,
367-&lt;JJ06 or 446-3179.

Middleport Baptist Church

1
1

C..'alendar

Exhibit for the month of June : John Winkler's San
Francisco, 36 etchings, presented by the Old Bergen Art Guild.
·
Gallery hours : Saturdays and Sundays, 1 until 5 p.m.;
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a.m. until3.p.m. Rjverby.
June 16, !2:30p.m. - Luncheon for Monitors. Regrets only
w 440.1819 or 441&gt;-1317, Riverby.
June 21, 8 p.m. - FAC Interdepartmental Meeting
Riverby .
'
June 21-24, Tuesday thru Friday - Swruner Dance
Training Session with Nian Cadman. Call 440-7865 or 441&gt;-2457
for Registration information. Riverby.
June,23, I p.m.- Riverby Clean-up Day ; members, please
come and help, Riverby.
June 27-30, Monday thru Thursday - Swruner Dance
Training Session with Nian ·eactman, Riverby.
·
June 28, Bp.m. -FACTrustees Meeting, Riverby.
July 4, 11 a.m.-li p.m. -River Recreation Festival Exhibit
in the Gallipolis City Park.
Aug . 28 - "Annie Oakley" by the Fdre Children's
Theatre out of New York .

...

SUPERIORS

' " ' T

" ' !:&gt;

BULK WIENERS.~~·.

~" '

NO WORDS CAN EXPRESS the amount of thanks I owe
·Hobart Wilson, Jr. and Coot Tannehill. They taught me more
about newspapers and journalism, in general, than any
journalism course I took while in college. Irt addition, they
made the position extremely enjoyable and I will always
cherish these past two years. These two talented men are extra
special people.

"

,j

Open Sunda·y lto 6 p.m.

..""

to offer Bible based series
MIDDLEPORT - Daily
Vacation Bible School at the
Middleport l"irst Baptist
Church will be conducted
June 13·17 from 7 to 9 p.m.
"Lord Jesus, Teach Me" is
.the theme for the school.
Classes will be offered fo~
ages from nursery, two and
three · year olds, through
junior boys and girls, grades
five and six. There will also
oo a ·special class for anyone
on the subject of "Serious
Soul Winning" along ·the
theme, " Lord Jesus, Teach
Me" from 7:30 to8 :30 p,m.
The Bible based lessons
will deal with winning souls
for Christ and Christian
growth with a variety of
teaching rqelhods to be used.
Students will be challenged
and involved through such ac·
tivities as song time, Bible
study, visual demonstrations,
classroom interaction, craft.s,
and other innavative
methods.
The workers in the school
are James Brewer, serious
soul winning class; Carol
Granda!, junior teacher, with
Sue Imboden, craft teacher,
and Susie Granda!, helper;
Kenneth Imboden, middler
teacber, with Reba Hysell,
craft, and Kathy Blaettnar,
helper ; David Swisher,

. Mandy

Russell

given party
POMEROY - Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Russell of Wolf
Pen held a party in honor of
their daughter, Mandy, who
was celebrating her fifth
birthday Saturday evening.
Mandy was presented a
Snow White and seven
dwarfs birthday cake by her
grandparents, Alice and Bob
Russell. She also received
gifts and money.
Attending were Mr. arid
Mrs. Oorsa Parsons, Mrs.
Russell RoUsh , Cindy and
Edward; Mrs. Edna Roush,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Russell ,
Mrs. Ethel Clark, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Russell, Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Hagey, Stephanie
and Brad, Ronnie, Maney and
Mike Russell:' ·
Sending ~i ft• were Mr. and
Mrs. Dana Lewis, Mr. and
Mrs . Herbert Roush , Mrs.
Bertha Russell and Earl
Russell .

•

THIS NEXT PART of my column is perhaps the most dif.
ficult writing I've had during my two years at the Tribune,
because it's a good-bye and like most people, I dislike good·
byes. Come Monday, I will be starting a new position in the
personnel office at Holzer Medical Center, and an attractive
and talented young woman, Catherine Benet, will be the
Tribune's new editor.
My time at the Tribune has been a fun and valuable· ex·
perience which I would not trade for anything in \he world. I
shall miss my c.,.workers here a great deal. I've also enjoyed
working with so many of you, and Catherine is looking forward
to it too. Thanks to everyone for all their assistance and
friendliness.

primary teacher with Martha
Klein, craft teacher, and
Velvet Swisher, helper ; June
Kloes, beginner teacher, with
Den1m Sandal wi th Th1 ck
Manning Kloes, craft, and
Sole and Tatami Insole
Roxanne Granda!, · helper ;
Cathy Riggs , nursery
teachtr, with Sandy Curtis,
craft teacher, and Lori Kloes,
helper.
Bob Parker will oo the bus
Women's Sizes
driver . In charge of ·
refreshments will oo Texanna Well and Mrs. Ambrose.
Price Good thru Tuesday* MasterCharge or BankAmerlcarct
Mrs. Beulah White will be
Open
music director with · Mrs.
Mon .• Sat.
303 Upper River Road
Fran Parker as her assistant.
9 a .m. till9 p.m .
Across From Silver Bridge Plaza
Dil'ectors of the Bible school
Sun. ltil6
are Danny White and Adell
L..._ _ _ _ &lt;iiet to know us; you'll like us.®·---._.J
White.

sale...

290

Flo ----..... Fit for your King

on his tlay. June 19
Plants and flowers
are personal gifts
with a rugged, earthy
feeling . They 're a
natural way to add
zest to his life. A
thoughtful way to
show you care. Our
shop i.s brimming
with gifts designed
especially · for Dads,
inc! uding
fresh
arrangements,
planters. and green
- and flowering plants.
· You
can
charge
~~ - phon e
o r de r
purchases to most
major credit cards,
arid . if your Father's
Day gifts go out-of·
town, our nationwide
network of over 30,000
fe llow
florists
guarantees the same
quality
and
professional service
we offer In our shop.
ori deliveries going
nearly anywhere.
CALL OR VISIT
US SOON!

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
'

Mrs. Millard Van Meter
Phone 992-2039
106 Butternut Ave.
992-5721
Pvmeroy, Ohio
We accept all maior credil cards and we wire flowf!rs everywhere.

"'

You'll be delightd to

everything

supplies

you

need

in

find

art

when you visit our

co mplete uts and crafts store.
You'll Und all typei of palnh.

..

.,

OXYDOL DETERGENT
4 oz.

ART

SUPPLIES

FRESH .
TOMATOES ......~·.

5 LB.

CO'viE IN AND
LET .US Sf--OW
YOU OUR
FULL LINE OF

$}99

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer
June 18, 1977
!11111'1'11!111!

"
"

"

"

.."

brulhes, PIPer lind canvas,
piLU a full line of olhl:i' cr;~fts
such as :
Classes

EDWARDS TO HAW AD
PLAINS, Ga. (UP!) ~ The
Rev. Bruce Edwards, forced
to resign as pastor of the
Plains Baptist Church in a
racial controversy, will
preach to a splinter church
group this month before
taking up duties as the new
pastor of a Hawaiian church.
Stat~ Sen. Hugh :;,uter of ·
Plains, · President Carter's
cousin and leader of the new
Bottsford Baptist Mission,
said Friday Edwards would
lead mission services June
19. Edwards plans to leave
for Hawaii at the end of this
month.

KffiBY BUSTED
• Candlemaking
LAS VEGAS (UP! )
• DICOIIPI!Ie
• and, many more !
Comedian George Kirby has
~ALL OR COME BY TOOA Y! been indicted for the second
time in several weeks on
narcotics chlir~es.
Kirby, 52, was indicted
Friday by a coliJity grand
Auoclah Duler
jury on charges of selling
· cocaine and giving away
beroin. He was indicted May
10 on charges of distrobuting
CR~ATIONS heroin.
·
He has been free on $10,1100
Phone 446.8555
bond pending trial July 6 and
254 Jackson Pike
will tie asked to post another
bond for the newest
Gallipolis
charges.

AMERICAN .
HANDICRAFTS
COUNTRY

SUNDAY
A REVIVAL will start at
Walnut Ridge Church Sun·
day, June 12, with the Rev .
Jack Baldwin of Florida, the
speaker. Services begin at
7:30 p.m. The public is invited. Rev. Johnny Banks is
pastor.
REVIVAL through ~unday at
the Fellowship Chapel ,
Vinton, 7:30 each evening. No
service on Saturday. Singers
wili include Swartz Family.
Tuesday ; .O utreach Trio ,
We,dnesday; Family Circle,·
Thursday and Gospel Echoes,
Friday and Fellowship
Sunday.
Chapel Trio,
Evangelist is Charles
(Sandy) Crockrell of Vinton.
Pastor is Rev. Elmer Geiser.
THE LEMLEY-RALPH
reunion will be held Sunday,
June 19, at Poplar Ridge
Church. All relatives and
frien'ds are invited to attend.
MONDAY
MERCERVILLE Grange will
host Cora Grange Monday,
7:30p.m. Cora will put on the
program . Members are
asked to bring sandwiches.
cookies and soft drinks.
VBS , Gallipolis Christian
Church,6to8 :30/romJune 13
thru t7. Ages nursery through
ninth grade and an adult
class.
THERE WILL BE a Vacation
Bible School starting June 13
at Clark Chapel, Porter, from
9 tillll a.m. On June 17 there
will be a picnic and in the
even in g a
graduation
ceremony at 7:30. Ages two
through 18.
.
FRENCH Colony Chapter
DAR picnic, 5 p.m . Monday
at the home of Mrs. Kenneth
Tomlinson. Bring table
service.
CLARK Chapel Church,
Porter, vacation Bible School
Monday, June 13 thru the
lilth. Beginning at 9 a.m. and
running until eleven. Ages
two thru 18.
LA LECHE League of
Gallipolis will meet Monday
at . 7:30 p.m. at the home of
Betsy Crank in Henderson,
W. Va. Topic for discussion
will he nutrition and weaning.
Call 675-2776 or 446.4010 for
more information .

PAPER TOWELS

3/$1

W/C

CARPET CLEANING SPECIAL
There 's nothing like Stanley Steemer's ability to give you whole house cleaning
with minimal inconvenience. Stanley Sleemer stays outside, only. the cleaning
wand enters your home. Stanley Steemer Power cleans better and dries fas.ter.
Stanley Steemer does not use your hot water or .electricity. Call Stanley Sleemer
today for this ~pec ia l carpet cleaning offer , ..

ARGO PEAS
17 Ol

6/$1

ANY LIVING ROOM &amp; HALL
This offer includes living room
and hall. up to 300 sq. fl.

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires June 18, 1977

$29

NOW
ONLY ·

.

CALL NOW

95
Up to
300
sq. fl.

614/446-4208

~

~cot~JJgilr~®

LOOK FOR OUR

MYSTERY

SPECIAL

'7 :~ wlwn
lloJIJititl gut

of .. t:Ouut·" 111

Carol 1-luru ':-.
std rt ed .

She'd

been

to

l nda.• .

she 'd mCJrvclcU Hl how 111\ICIItivcly Wulllcn wruppctl om·
p1ec:c of fabr11.: around
tllem8clves. Th01t's funetiun~l.

cumfurUtble and fun,
Sht' decided. The~t ' s tlu~ !lind

\ull : \ ' !!Il l tj Ui t\' ')UJ'l' \\h&lt;.tl \.u

tin \Hill tftt 'lll, ) IJlll IJ~t·o thau g
qu ~t ·k t • l b. ,

puls t• ;u··

)o w

t"" J,·r&lt;tt t' ~
.1!1.."1 \. l l'j It tllln·.'· ~ ht: sm:s.

l'lastlt ·tlL'd \\ i.ll ~ ls that I 'U I I I~ ·
raJ:..t••l so the hkH'l hl'l.' ll llll.'~ "
Sll'apkss drl's::i'~ Or ..... ,, a
.-.as h at lilt' w ~ u~t wh1d 1 t'ilH

&lt;:n !li to tha t shdtcl't•d lillie

Uc lJt•d ~~ dw.i: n ways or pttll~·d
up 1ntu &lt;-~. bmulctiu '1

II Jtllllllh!tmg nuw, trv the

Cn•at~·

GuCJ tcmala. other· plctccs, a11d

POMEROY- Nathan Matthew Brown celebrated his
second birthday at his
Pomeroy home Sunday.
Theme for the party was
Ohio River Days with shades
SUNDAY
REV. DAILEY of the Barker
Ridge Church in West
Virginia will speak at the
Good Hope Baptist Church on
Rl. 218 near Crown City at 7
p.m. Sunday . Public invited.
TUESDAY
FRENCH City Ga rden Club
Rose Breakfast at Western
Pancake House 9 a.m .
followed by meeting at the
home of Mrs . Florence
Trainer. Program, " Accent

Your Garden with Roses" by
Mrs. Francis Lanier .

WEDNESDAY
LITTLE Kyger Ladies Aid
will oo held at Grange Hall .
Bring items for rumma ge
sale and potluck lunch.

JIJt •s si iiJ.!

ruo111 . J.mll Uw cur-

Win Hlld Lakt· ; t ch~lll l't.' .
Jr lu•r tcn-waJ th't 'S!'&lt; IS tuu
li.itvk·tu·frorJL uuc 111 J)urpl~.

luok s 1!1
natural fubru.:s. 111 bnght a nd
!iuft flvral s &lt;tml solids and
tt:111k of lht· wun.lrnbc u
wmnan could have w1th jus;ta
tht'St'

few items.
Which is just what Ctti'IJI
Horn crcatl.:!d . Rut .. . you SCl'
the dothcs on ttw han ~ ur,

n t~t ·

ur

IJhll' L'UtlltiL Tllcre m·c
orllj LWtt ('htll l'l'S hcrl' : wcctr 1l
f rtlllt Y.r.tnl s m· h;H'kw&lt;-tn.b.

" You

rna~

look terrific ,"

(;AI.I.IPOLIS ~ Dr. ;~nd
Mrs. Oscar W. Clarke of
Spruce Knoll , Gallipolis,
i:IOnounte the cn~agement of
their dau~htcr.
Susan
Frances, to Richard Marshall
Stein, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Stein of Brookside
Drive, l:olumbus.
The bride-elect is a
graduate of GaUia Aeadcm)1

and received a B.A. degree in
psychology from Deni•on
University. She is employed
as a para-legal for Columbus

attorneys .
Her fiance received a

degree in history from Ohio
Dominican College in
Columbus ~nd a juris doctorate
from
Capital

PROTECTION

UPSTAIRS

SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY

FIRST FLOOR ·.

EST 1947

-

University . He is an attorney

with Barkan, Barkan and
Neff .
Reverends Frank and Turn

will officiate at the
wedding whi ch will take
place at the home of the
bride's parents on August 21 .

Hu)'CS

.,

..

s ht• s ay!"; . Ami tf you don't,
what {·ould bt· t:a s i~r ·? ··Take
of f the d ollies cult/ put Lh\!m

•

-

oo&lt;·k on the ra ck."

•

GRAN OFATHER'S

KNIFE

blue

~lloon s bein~

from the stack of the "Nathan
B" riverboat. To further
enhance the theme, nuts cmd
sandwiches were served from
replicas o.f I'IVCr 'oorges.

"

Refreshments w'ere hcmdled

by Mrs. William Lambert.
At th'e pa rly were Nathan's
parent.s , Dr. and -Mrs. 11 . D.
Brown:

his

gra ndmother,
Bruw n,

g reat-

Mrs.

sarah

1-li·rt ··~ &lt;~ por ki'l knifl' fiw't 41ad

N(lthan Brown

or J!ra JHMnd \'ill up prccia lf~ .

his gra!ldmother-s,

Mrs. Agnes Brown and Mrs. McG.owan, Mr. e:~nd Mrs.
Betty Sayre, and Mr. and William Lambert. Robert
Mrs. Marvin Hill, And y an' Jacobs. Mrs. Katherine
Jenny, Mrs. Ruth Massar, Jitt:Obs . Mrs. Ca therine
Mrs. Le wis Tolle. Mr. and Thor.nas , Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Clifford Phillips, Mr. Russell Brown, Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. James McClaskey, Tom Bowen, ~nd Ms.
Mr, and Mrs. Bernard Fultz, Romona Cu1npton,
Mrs. Luc inda Milcht!ll, Maria · Sumling gi fL-; were Mrs. A.
Mitchell, Mrs. R. Pickens, Mo l'ri:;on, Rupert Sayre, Mr.
Tina Mitcilell, Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. T. M. Mitchell ,, Dr.
Gerald Hilferty, _Dr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Robert Brown, and
Ray Pickens, Dr. Thomas Mr. and Mrs. N. W. Coonploo.

0

noon.

t' ll!!rt\\'(' 1)

c.&gt;u

BASEMENT

ff STA!
1 STEt
·u
J

·,

e n ~dnc­

..

turncU sid(• with J.t r andc h ildrc n's
I HIIHC~ ::u ul hirth d ntes on th e oth er.

!\takes the pPrf,•ct difTer£"ut ~i ft.

___l.::::-fo'~ ~~
J ......
«M SEOONO AWNUI

• .._,.,

AMEJUCA.N GE.. SOCiiTV

DAY IS JUNE 19th

FATHER'

SUI\ DAY
FIRST Baptist Church, ·
Rutland, annual June
meeting withRev. John King,
Trit'&lt;lstone Baptist Church,
Gallipolis and his choi r,
guests at morning service ;
Rev. Edward Buffington, Mt.
Zion Baptist Church, Athens,
afternoon speaker. Dinneo· at

l hilial

Samsonite

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT Garden
Club, 7:30 p.m. Monday at tile
home of Mrs. William Morrb
with Miss Hallie Zerkle as eohostess. Mrs. M. 1.. French
will have the program, and
Mrs. Etoilla Cassell will present the arrangement

or the

month. There will be a recipe
exchange.
, CORPORATE Vacation
Bible School Monda y through
Friday 9 a. m. to 11 :30 a. m.
by the Method ist Churches
and the Presbyterian Church
in Syracuse area. Nursery
class to be held at Asbury
Methodist Church, all other
classes at Pres byterian
Church. Classes for children
of all ages and open to all
. children of the area. A public
se rvi ce

(E)

(B)

for

parents, tea chers and
children will be held Sunday,
June 19, at 7:30 p. m. at the
Presbyterian Church .
TWIN CITY Shrine Club
Monday 7:30p.m . at the club.
F'ish fry will be held.
TUESDAY
FELLOWSHIP ·meeting at
Dexter Church of Chr ist
Tuesday 6:30 p.m. followed
by ice cream social and
recreation .' Public invited.
Plans for Bible School will be
made.
MEIGS COUNTY Better
Livestock Dairy 4-B Club
Tuesda y, 8:30 p.m. home of
Stephanie Hadford.
WINDI NG Trail Ga rden
Club, 8 p.m.- Tuesday at the
home of Mrs. P.at Thoma.
Roll call will be a , rose
specimen. Program will be
on homemade contai ners by

Linda Lambert. " llnses
Speak of Love" ivill be the a r·
rangement of the month

(C)

GREAT FOR 11/M.
Fo r I he rnan wh o t r~:~ve l s !r o m bord!'l to bo rder co :~ s l 10
cOOl s! - o r even ctrouml I he world S1 lll0 uctte mt' t l ~ case&lt;&gt; c an
lt! Ke &lt;J il 1t1r ro uq l1 l rdvt:fl/'1q ! rt]a !mf'n l [ lo: pt' rt!: Sty l ed and
d es tgn cd yrot r&gt;r;;c llcal dlld '&gt;Pi t ~t ble tor men wh o tnwel on
bu smcss or wan t to qui away lrbm 11 al l
Special Features
• Exc lu .;rv e r e ccs~c d luck. s dt:stgned not ro br eak o lf or
o pen acc tdentally
• Ltghtwmghl' rnagn es1 um 11amr• nrv('l l o~cs 11 ~ s hJJPe

• C u:;; t1 10n·conlf o r l h ~r t d l e m al..t· ~ ( .hp PfiSY ro &lt;.:; tt li·r
• •H m gl'S c~r ~ r ec (' S"&gt;Ccl !lnd M'c urt'l y rrv (' Jfld to maqnr;•.rur t
!i;lmr provtdrriq m.1 ~nnum PfO !('CI! an a; q a rn"::&gt; t d€.m , ~t 1 ,,
• To ngue- and -q roove closu re p r o t er: r ~o lravp lmq w.udr r-tw from

du st and

d am pne~ s

• E ~~;l l· n.o r co n s tr u c; ted o l S;;m son rte AI)~Oh lt• to r Clt!t r\
Stl enq th .an(J d urnhill ly - w't pes CIP-a n w r t ~ . a dtlrnp cJC1 th
• Sl lh o uelt P r a ses &lt;ire eASy rlflQ.I&lt;l~ t to ~ac ~o. s1 n c e t ds(' open .-.,
11 .11 Cart• l ull y plannecl lnt er ,ors provrc lf' a ·p lt~ C f' tor eve ry l hlllQ

theme.

--

•

strca111ers amJ
carried out in
the decol'a tions. Among the
streamers rested the l'cnter·
piece cake spouting stnuke

of

Calendar

recognition

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires June 18, 1977

lll~ · ·~a .., h

I ' ll

riverboat birthday.

VANITY FAIR OR HI DRI

JUMBO
ROLL

~\llh

:~~

Miss Clark to wed

Grand for Grandpa
and Father too ...

relatives.

'Lord jesus Teach Me'
at vacation Bible School

y,,u do ll

tlwt's sewn at tlw Uudlc ·t• , h-

(lut'l'll

Ill)

to look lhat diffco·cnt," silt·
Sllys. "So J fed hke f'm a
public servant. Some people
get anxiety attal.:ks bcl.:aWJc
they 've n~ver worn mO:Jgt•nta.
let's say. f like to s~ow them
five different ways of wear·
in!( it."

RENE BROYLES is a patient at the Holzer Medical Center
for all her many friends who've been curious about her
whereabouts. lily "roving reporter" has be~n undergoing test.s
the past week and hopefully, will be out of the hospital soon.
Her room number is 512. Rene has been providing me with
news from too Retired Senior Volunteer Program, Addison
Free Will Baptist Church and other organizations regularly
the past two years. By the way; I want to thank her for the two
lovely roses she brought me last Saturday. It was such a
thoughtful gesture andmuch ap~recialed .

SU!IInlt'l' .

of that first step uut in

THE FRENCH ART COLONY will honor its hard-working
monitors with a luncheon at Riverby on Thursday at 12:30 p.m.
The monitors give a greai deal of their time to ·•monitor"
Riverby on the weekends. They serve as host.s and guides and
answer questions for visitors. Dorotha Suiter. has been monitor
chairperson the pasllwo years, and Mary Allison is.the new
chairperson.

PLANNING - Pictured above are a few of the ladies of Riverby who devote a great
deal of time to the French Art Colony . They are now planning another big event, the
Monitors luncheon tc. oo held Thursday, June 16at 12:30 p.m. The salad luncheon will honor
all the monitors who have worked with the program since 1972. Pictured left to right is
Dorotha Suiter, retiring monitor chairperson ; Mary Allison, new monitor chairperson;
Beth Cherrington and Jan Thaler, trustees. Invitations should have been received by the
monitors who should respond with regrets by calling 440.1819 or 440.1317.

hw

tng it hJw. lugh. uruund. O\'t··r .
wtth knot~ ur witlmut.
That kind ur thinkmg was
wluH gut Ms. llum t.Juilbetl till'

thill ~S because nu une wants

GALLIPOLIS - Does anyone have information concerning
the Tipton family in Gallia County? If so, Vernon J . Tipton of
Springville, Utah would like to learn anything he could about
them. Tipton said Elias Tipton died in Patriot in 1910, and he is
trying to locate his father's family. Tipton's address is 346
South Canyon Ave., Springville, Utah 84663.

( '1111. ..

~ purh"t'&lt;i l

~~~

1d l ~ 1
\\ ll ll ll' ll , t lun c:-.11 1~·.\ 1·a n \H 'a l
.111~ \\hl dl \\~i ~, \\Jth dn m "i.ll'·
~~~~~ cUIIilll.l-!.t ' IIU it\ .
\VIJ\ IIIII 11\0tk, • .. }w t."i \\1\f l

fu·-.1 uf

t:'OldWS
WOIIIL'II
W&lt;tldllllJ..: ,
tei'T'ifit~l.
know wolllt'll r.u·c afraid

·· r

by Sarah C1rsey

.,

Carul

/1,.,

dn.·s...;, Hill' fm111

lh l'.llu·•;rul)~mau
NI·:W YOlO{
1 :-IF I '

•" ,

received

from
the
House
of
Representatives of the ll2th
General Assembly of Ohio
under the sponsorship of
Representative Ronald H .
James, House District 92,
together with a large number
of cards from friend s and

-:.·-:·:·. :-:-··-:-:-:- ''' ··.-.-:-:-:-·-:-:-1

•

Guthrie, and Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Follrod and Suzi.
Acertifica te extending best
wishes to Mr. illld Mrs.

cousin, and Jan Wilson and

Cookout given

P0 WELL'S

and Mrs. Mabel Smith , Mr.
and Mrs. Myri Coakley. Mrs.
Mattie Pullins, Mr. and Mrs.
Hobert Pullins and Michael,
Roger Pullins, Mrs. Caryl
Ruth. Mrs. Zura Hawk. Mr.
and Mrs. Clyde Parish. Mr.

under the direction of Pat
Ranegar of Cheshire and her
assistant Barbara King of
Gallipolis. The program will
begin at 6 each evening and
end at 8:30.
The program Monday
evening will get under way
with Jack Perry, associate
minister, leading the youth in
songs and Pat Ranegar
giving orientation. There will
be a teacher's devotion each
ding.
evening at 5:45. The youth
will enjoy singing, Classes,
missions, crafts, games and
re(reshments.
Jack Perry will have
missions. This year missions
. will be for Grundy Mission, a
children's home in Grundy,
Va. Shirley Coburn will be the
Lucy Holter, Pomeroy, a secretary. Tamhiy Simms

Pam Kautz, Route 3,
Pomeroy .
Jennifer Will will be the
flower gir l, and Floyd
Ridenour of Che.Ster, the ring
bearer. Serving as best man
for the bridegroom will . be
Phil Ohlinger, and the ushers
will be Marty and Bob Seelig,
Pomeroy, Don Stivers, Mid·
dleport, and Jim McClure,
Route 3, Pomeroy.
Guest.s will be registered by
Mrs. Julia Will, Houle I,
Minersville.
A receptin will he held im·
mediately following the wed·
ding in the church social
room. Hostesses will be Miss
Nancy Ridenour, Tuppers
Plains, Mary Ridgway, Route
3, Pomeroy, Cindy Brown,
Youngstown, and the women
of the church assisting.

---

Mrs, Honuld l':astm~n. Mr.
and Mrs _ Otto Swartz , Mrs .
Kenneth Strausbaugh, Mr

Miss Epple, Mt: Ridgway
plan to wed in june
POMEROY - .The open
church wedding of Miss
Sherry L. Epple, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Epple,
Rt. 1, Minersville, and Jeffery Ridgway, son of Dr. John
H. Ridgway and Ms. · Hattie
Ridgway, Pomeroy, · Rt. 3,
will be an event of Stinday,
June 19 at 3 p.m. ·at the
Chester United Methodist
Church.
Pre-nuptial music by Miss
Teresa Buckley of Tuppers
.Plains will begin al2 :30 p.m.
The Rev. Robert Hayden will
perform the ceremony.
Miss Denise Dean, Route 3,
.Pomeroy, will oo maid of
honor for Miss Epple, and her
other attendant.s will oo Miss
_Diana E;pple, her sister, Miss

B.J-The Sunday 'funt...&amp;ntllld. Sumlil), Junt• tl, 1!177

POMEROY Meigs Chapter
53 Disabled Am erican
Veterans will meet at 7:30
Tuesday al lhe chapter home
on Butternut Ave .

(A) Men 's Two Suiters .
(B)

CC) 2t" Companion Case
( Dl 3" &amp; 5" AtJache

24 " Companion Case
Colors : Bronco Brown
&amp; Oxford Grey

·

. POSTPONED
GAI:L!POLIS
The
songfest plauned un June 18
by Silver Run Free Will
Baptist Church ha s been
postponed.

,_,..... r:
~I

I

·-·.'

'
master charge
'NII..-rt..-~

I

LAYAWAY

(E) Men's Sui I Pa ck .
"Free Gift Wrap "

�••
•
•
•••
••

~-TheSundayTimes-Sentinel,Swoday,June 12, 1977

11-S-The Sunday Times.S.ntinel, Sunday, June 12, !977

~:~:4:~~:;:'1@1 Are women doctors dying breed?
BY

CATHERINE BENET

: GALUPOUS - Two years
llgo Sarah Carsey was
fn"iting a "hi, I'm the new
aociety editor " introduction
10 the readers of the Times$entinel. Since that time she
"'" more than proven herself
.. a capable editor, talented
1friter, and sparkling perIOnality to the people of this

By Mary Roth Walsh
What are U1e chances that cial probleon,, a group of
yuur next doctor may be a women donated $000,000 to
Hopkins Umvcrsity's finan-

ly version of last-hire-d first·
fired, womrn we~ hC:~rd hit
by the retn:ncluneut. Quotas
were established that successfully limited the nw11ber
of women to four or five per·
cent of each medical class.
Can history repeat itse lf'~ I
think that such a possibility is
a real one if govemmcnt
pressure is relaxed. Af-

ply : Sexual Barriers in the
Medica l
Pro fe$siun
1835-1975" (Yale University
Pr·ess l. She is currently
~ssociate
professor of
psychvlugy and American
studies at the Univen;ity of
Lowell .

Meigs county girls at
State girls workshop

POMEROY - Laurd Ellen
Hoover, Pamela Kay Powen;,
and May E. Mora of Meigs
County joined 1200 other girls
ac-ross the state Saturday for
the opening of Buck~ye Girls'
State at Capital University ,
Bexley, an Americanism pr&lt;&gt;ject of the American Legion
firmative action programs
Auxiliary.
h.i:t vc come under increasing
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
fire in the past few years.
Wendell Hoover and a junior
Charges of favoritism,
at Meigs, Miss Hoover is atreverse discri.mim:~;tion and
tending under sponsorship o(
dc'&lt;:reasing standards have
GALUPOUS - Mr. and the Unit of Feeney-Bennett
raised serious questions Mrs. James B. Walton, Jr. of Post 128 and the Citizens Naabout the advisability of Rt. 2, Gallipolis, are proud to tional Bank, Middleport. Miss
federal interference with the aMounce the birth of their Powers, daughter of Mr. and
admissions and hiring pr&lt;&gt;- second child, a daughter, Mrs. Frank Powers, Midcess.
Ashley Colette, born at Cabell dleport, also a · student at
Equally significant is the Huntington Hospital on June Meig·s . is
att e nding
fact that medical women are 4, weighing 6 lbs., 2 ozs.
undersponso rshipof
the
still vulnerable to the dictates
Maternal grandparents are · Pomeoy Unit 39, Drew
of the male leaders of Mr. and Mrs. John N. Forren, Webster Post, and Miss
medicine. Although there Ft. Spring, W. Va. Maternal Mora, daughter of Mr. and
have been substantial gains great-grandparents are Mrs. Mrs. Donald Mora and a
in medical school admissions · James F: Forren of Ft. junior at Eastern, is attenin recent years, the number Spring, W. Va. and Mrs. F~ W. ding through sponsorship of
of women in influential posi- Arnold of Chelmsford, Essex, the Middleport Unitl28.
tions remains unchanged. England.
Buckeye Girls' State is an
The percentage of women
Paternal grandparents are eight day workshop geared to
faculty is the same today as it Mrs . Margaret Rosser , educate young women in the
was in 1971. Similarly, Roncev erte, W. Va., and duties, privileges, rights and
medical schools and hospitals James B. Walton, Pinellas responsibilities of American
have refused to appoint Park, Fla. Paten1al great· citizenship, to give them in a
women . to key leadership grandparents are Mr. and realistic maMer an oppositions.
Mrs. Arthur Ingram, An· portunity to learn the pr&lt;&gt;Until women have a real thony, W. Va. Ashley was blems of· liovermnent with
-voice in decisioJHnaking, welcomed home by her sister, special emphasis upon the
their future in medicine re· Alisia Babette, age 3.
contribution women can·
mains uncertain .
made to the welfare of the ciMARY ROTH WALSH is .
ty, county, state and nation.
the author of " Doctors
During this week each girl
SUNDAY DEADLINE
Wanted, No Women Need Apwill
be aSl;igned to one of the
The deadlme lor wedding
25
cities
and five counties.
and engagement notices
With
the
guidance of exand society news bems for
perienced
advisors .and
the Sunday Tlm.,.-l!entlnel
public
officials,
they will
Is 12 noon on the Thursday
organize
platforms
within a
preceding pn~llcation..
two
party
system,
campaign
Informa lion may be turned
In or mailed to the office of for office, elect officials in
the Gallipolis Daily their cities, counties and
"State" and function in their
Tribune or Pomeroy Dally
particular
office, whether
Sentinel. Engagement and
eleciive
20 and 22, from 10 a.m. until 3
or
appointive.
Each
wedding
forms
are
girl
has
an
elected
p.m. Entries must be in no
or
apavailable upon request.
later than June 27 to allow
pointed office. To supplement
their practical experience,
time for judging and
the girts will hear speakers
cataloguing No more than
throughout the week on
five entries will be accepted
per artist.
various phases of governDEMO DANGER
Artists may register at a
PORTLAND, Maine (UPI) ment.
professional or amateur - WiJliam E . Brock III, · At last night's meeting,
level, with the amateur level national cbairman of tbe Mrs. Henry F. Patro: presidivided according to age . The Republican party, told a GOP dent of the Department of
professional category in- fundraising dinner the party Ohio, American Legion Auxcludes those who are or have has a special responsibility iliary addressed the
earned their living through because sn many Democrats delegates on the topic "Why
'
You are Here" and the key
their art and those actively are in office.
selling their work and
"The American people note address was given by the
receiving commissions. The have been placed i11 a very Hon. John W. Brown, Ohio
entries wlll be judged and dangerous circwnstance,n Lake Lands Administrator.
Following church services
ribbons awarded in each Brock said. "Tbey are in
this
morning the girls began
danger
of
being
denied
a
true
. category.
the
Federalist and Nachoice.''
An entry -form (as printed
tionalist
party caucuses in
He cited a Democratic
below) should be returned
for the campreparation
before June 20 so that administration, a
paigning,
election
and infurther information may be Democratic controlled ·
sent to any who desire to · c;ongress and · a majority of auguration of officials.
Among the many speakers
exhibit,
including
an Democratic governors, state
authorization form. If anyone legislatures and local to be presented during the
week are Trooper R. L.
Is interested in exhibiting and officials in his statement.
"We have a very special Phillips, Ohio State Highway
has additional questions,
please call Jan Thaler at 446- responsibility now to be the . Patrol on " Highway ~fety
4425 or 446-1819 (PJ's), or Sue voice of those who may and You" ; Hon. C. William
Beverly at 446-1906. Entry disagree with some or all of · · O'Neill, Chief Justice of the
forms may be sent to: French the policies now being Supreme Court of Ohio il)Art Colony, Box 472, imposed upon this nation by augural address: Mrs.
the Democratic majority,"
Nodine Henniger Miller, atGallipolis, Ohio 45631.

what Adela Rogers St. John
and an old Irish proverb says woman '! Many eommen· tht! st:hool after rcac.:hlng an
can't be done : we drive three tatoo'li behevc that if l'urrent a~rt..,ment with officials that
mules at once. Look around trcud.s cOntinue at least half women would be admitted 011
and take note of how many of tllis country's doctors wrll the same terms .as men ~
By the tun1 of the c-entury,
women- are wives, mothers be women by 1990.
This may be an overoj&gt;' a major rolu for women in
and career women . We play
tim
is tic view. There is no medicine seemed assured. In
many roles and personalities
question
!hat women have 1894, women represente-d a
and yet, we are still most
made
significant
progress in signilicant portion of the stuimportant, ourselves.
rcet!nt
years.
The
nwnber of dent body at a growing
lrea .
In m y new job, 1 would like
women
enrolled
in
medical number of medical schools in
: Sarah is now leaving the to explore just what makes up
school
hets
increased
more the country: 19per cent a!the
l)ewspaper staff to join the today's woman. There are
than
300
per
cent
since
1969. University of Michigan; 25
~lzer Medical Center staff issues which are ce ntered
An
article
earlier
this
year
in per cent at Tufts University :
In the· personnel department. around women only and we
and 37 per cent at Boston
the
New
York
TimPs
even
tach of us, be we readers or will learn about th em.
University.
suggc~
Led
that
women
now
- aff members, will miss her Problems about health care,
The turn-of-the-ce ntury
CJ"eatly. We do wish her much legal questions and social have a better chance of getperiod
was a ·•golden age "
ting
into
medical
school
than
111ccess with this new facet of standards.
for
women
doctors. In 1900,
men.
~riUe . There is , however,no
There will be features on
18.2
per
cent
of Boston's
What
few
people
realize
is
way that I can say I am how to live better, feel
physicians
were
women, a
that
women
experienced
a
feplacing Sarah - no one healthier and exist more in
fig
ure
which
has
not
been sur·
similar
breakthrough
in
the
~uld do that. I will simply harmony with the world
passed
to
the
present
day.
late
19th
century.
And,
just
as
lay, " Hello, allow me to around us. We will still devote
Convinc'ed
that
the
battle
UH!'
recent
gains
owe
a
great
Introduce myself. I'm the a huge amount of attention to
eq
uality
in
for
sex
ual
deal
to
the
women
's
liberanew ... "
the basic essence of the
medicine
had
been
won,
tion
movement,
much
of
the
· Uke any other womim in woman 's section i marriages,
1977 I have been blasted with births and other milestones in 19th-eentury progress can be woman's rights advocates
every movement from Total a woman's life. To deny us credited to the women's shifted their attention to
other battles.
Wom~nlsm
to radical these matters would be to rights crusade.
Similarly, convinced that
It
is
no
coincidence
that
the
feminism. The media has told deny us our human rights.
t
hey
had outlived their
current
increase
in
the
me how to improve myself, You will read about famous
usefulnes
s, 19 separate
number
of
women
physiciaru;
my family, my home and women, world wide and those
parallels
the
development
of
women's
medical colleges
every other issue concerning who make the news within
closed
their
doors.
tne women's liberation movemy existence. Like many our community.
At
that
point, a male
ment.
women I often suffer an
Together we will learn
backlash
developed in
A century ago, the rise of
Identity crisis. Yet for a few about being women in today's
the women's rights move- medical circles. Concerned
moments each day I realize world. The discovery, just
over what they believed to be
just how far I have come and like us, will be at times mel\1 provided aspiring
a surplus of physicians,
female
physicians
with
a
how much progress women perlexing, always fantastic,
medical leaders sought to
simi!: r boost.
have made in general. We do and most enjoyable.
Rejected by the more reduce the nwnber or practi·
prestigious medical schools tioners.
Not surprisingly, in an earand denied appointments to
internships and hospital
staffs, nineteenth- ce ntury
women opened their own
medical schools and training
hospitals.
· At lhe end of the century,
.
there were only seven
hospitals in _the United States
.
DEXTER
Summer
Devotions were given by where women could count on ·
securing
internships!
All
of
floweriqg bulbs and seeds the hostess who presented
was the topic discussed by scripture from Mark and these institutions were owned
GALUPOIJS - The anMrs. Robert Holliday at a Peter and also gave the ln- and operated by women.
nual outdoor exhibit in
Women also waged a cooperation with the River
meeting of the Star Garden di'ln Prayer. Members gave
carefully
planned campaign Recreational Festival is
Club held at the home of Mrs. the club prayer and collect.
to
gain
entrance
into the elite being planned by the French
Orion Nelson.
For roll call members named
Mrs. Holliday talked about the flower of tbe month of medical schools. In 1892, tak· Art Colony to be held in the
hybrids, and also the their birthdays. Mrs. G. A. ing advantage of Johns city park in downtown
Gallipolis on Monday, July 4,
suitability of soil where bulbs Radekin provided a flower
and seeds are planted. She arrangement for her church,
from 11 a.m. until 5 p.m.
suggested ways to improve and Mrs. Henry Turner and
A registration fee of $4 will
flower beds, noting that new Mrs . G. A. Radekin made arbe required of non-member
plants should be watered rangements for the senior
exhibitors and a 15 percent
.. regularly and given a high citizens day celebration .
service fee will be retained by
sulphate fertilizer. She also
In flower arrangements
the French Art Coiony for the
suggested mulching plants displayed, Mrs. Radekin won
sale of any. work resulting
GALUPOLIS- The Senior · from the exhibit.
.
for good growth. Mrs. Holli- first. Mrs. Lawrence ChapCitlzensCenter,locatedat220
AU
entries
must
have
been
day also talked about drying man won the traveling prize,
Jackson
Pike
in
the
County
produced
since
July,
1974
and
. !llants and flowers noting that and Mrs, Seth Nicholson the
Hdme
Building,
is
open
not
previously
exhibited
in
· baby's breath, larkspur, cox- hostess gift. Mrs. Chris Diehl
Monday
through
Friday
from
the
aMual
River
Recreation
comb, and strawflowers are was a guest.
among some of the best for
Refreshments were served 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The schedule Festival show. They must be
of activities for this week is framed or matted and
by tile hostess.
this.
as follows :
securely wired for hanging.
Monday, June 13, Physical Matted works should be
F'ltness, 11:30 a.m.; Portrait eovered with acetate, have a
Meeting, 10 a.m. ; Chorus protective backing and bave
Practice, 1-3 p.m.
a hanger attached. Paintings
Tuesday, June 14, Quilting not
meeting
these
and Visiting, 9 a.m.-:! p.m.; requirements
may be
Bible Study, 1:30 p.m.; Ball disqualified.
Entries are to be delivered
game (bus leaves at 3 p,m.)
. , REEDSVILLE- The June material. They plaMed to
Wednesday, June 15, to Rlverby,-530 First Ave., on
: Jneetlng of the Reedsville buy a Pulpit Chair for the Physical Fitness, 11 :30 a.m.; Saturday or Sunday, June 17
: .V.M.W. was held at the home church . Members of the C8rd Games, 1-3 p.m.
and 18, from I to 5 p.m. and
. ' ~or Mrs. Nell Wilson. The U.M.W. are also selllng
Th~rsday ,
June
16, Tuesday or Thursday, June
: meeting opened with the religious cards. Contact any . Quilting, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. ; ·
~rayer .
The member if you wish to buy Council Meeting, 2 p.m.
FAC Entry Form
: ~ord's
;levotional topic was the some cards.
li'riday, June 17, Nutrition
: .Jmportance of Bible Study.
Eleven shut-in caDs were Games, 1·3 p.m.; Art Class, 1· :Plans were made for a made. Refreshments were 3 p.m.; 'Social Hour, 7 p.m . Name--------------------~------­ Phone~--~---------:;JIB rage and bake sale for served to Pat Martin, Sandy
The Seniors' Co-op and the
· ?'une 25 at Dolly's building. A Cowdery, Pauline Brewer,
8
are open
: ;Jonatlon of $20 was made for Vivian Humphrey, Alberta Craft
from Sbop
12:36-1:30
p.m.each day Addre "'--....,-----------------------------~----------­
.. ~he Junior Church craft Edwards, Darlene Reed,
The Senior Nutrition
Mamie
Buckley,
Lorraine
Program
serves the following 1) Professional _
2) Amateur ( Adult 3) M' entries
.
Wigal by the hostess, Mrs. menu at noon:
High Sclloolare not for
· : ~Parent- Teachers
Wilson. Games were played
Monday- Chicken Pot pie,
and the prizes were won by mashed potatoes, green
ElementaryjudgingVivian · and Pauline. There beans, cranberry sauce,
· : ! to meet in forum
Check one;
member_
$4 entry fee ep cloa ed ____
will be no meeting in July and biscuit, butter, canned
- '
peaches, milk.
!' ROCK SPRINGS - The August.
Title
Media( Oi l, watercolor, · ceramics,
Price
Tuesday - Baked pork
· Meigs High School Parent sculpture, graphics,
chop, baked spiced apple with·
photography, etc.)
.:Teacher forum will meet .
raisins, corn, greens with
ZTuesday, June Hat 7:30p.m.
. in the high school cafeteria.
vinegar, bread, butter, spice 1 . ----:;-----------.,PICNIC HELD
cake, milk.
: This is an organizational
RUTLAND - Fifty - five
Wednesday - Beef stew, 2 •
;meeting, a constitution will
--~----· ! be adopted and a slate of persons some from as far pineapple slice salad, butaway as Toledo and Dayton, tered potatoes, cornbread, 3 · · - - - - - - - - ..officers will be elected.
\ All parents who will have attended a picnic held by the butter, ice cream, mllk.
Thursday -Hamburger on 4 ··------~----- - - - - - - - - - ' - - - , students at the high school Southeastern Ohio Black
Lung
Association
last
Sunday
bun, French fr!ed potatoes,
,: next year and ail teachers are
at
Forest
Acres
Park.
buttered peas, butter, mixed 5 · · - - - - - - - - -- - - ~ urged to attend.
fruit cup, milk.
MEET TUESDAY
Friday - Baked turkey,
GALLIPOLIS
The
mashed potatoes, coleslaw
with green pepper bits, regular meeting of the GaUia
cranberry sauce, bread, County Di!trict Library
{;;f ASh Trays
butter, lemon pudding, milk. Board of TI'Witees will be held
Tuesday,
June
14,
at5
p.m.
in
Choice of beverage served
with each meal. "Services the Librarian's office at the
JeweiiJ
rendered on
non- Library, corner of State and
Third.
discriminatory basis."

Ashley Walton
makes amval

Star Garden Club

Entnes
• fior outdoor

meets at Nelson 's

•J;. •t- exh.tot
now 0'Pened

Reedsville ·U.M. W.
. meets in Wilson home

.

TAXMAN COME'I11

TOWSON, Md. (UP!) - A
federal tax lien of $116,600 has
been ·filed against the
property of former Baltimore
County executive Qale
Anderson, wbo was convicted
of extortion and tax evasion
after ·an inVestigation by
federal prosecutors that also
led to the downfall of former
Vice Pr'"'ident Spiro Agnew.

Music fills the air
The sound of music filled
the air Sunday, June S, as
students of Marta Dean
performed at the Grace
United Methodist Church.
Parents and fans listened as
the aspiring musicians
played various pieces.
Students who perfonned
were :
April
Henson ,
"Twinkle Twinkle," an old
French
tune ;
Teresa
Harrington , " Pel)guins At
Play, Julia Helm and "FuMy
Bunny," David C. Glover :
Heath McBride, "Batter
tip! !'', Louise Garron, "Blow
The Man Down," Duet,
arranged by J . Thompson;
Kyle Saunders, "Parade,"
Arthur Hollander, "State
Fair," William Gillock;
Phillip Savage, " Worry!
Worry!" W. &amp; C. Noona,
" Prairie Sunset," .l':verett
Stevens; Michael Dean, "The
Pirate Song," W. &amp; C. Noona,
"Little Inchworm ," Jane S.
Bastien; Gary' Cox "The
CaUiope,'' W. &amp; C. Noona,
0
The Circus Is Coming"
(Duet), Jon George; Wendie
Lemley, uThe Kite/' Beryl
Joyner, "Children's Dance,"
At•strian Folk Song, " Happy
Woodpecker," William
Scher; Thomas Savage,
41
Giant Steps,"" Benjamin
Wennel, ~'Lil' Frog," JaneS.
Bastien.
Also, Jeff Sheridan, "Race
Horses," W. Wilson, "The
Band on Parade," Marion
Black, "Big Chief Indian,''
Jane S. Bastien ; Paula
Carpenter, "Butterflies and
Bees," Benjamin Wermel,
"Our School Band,'' David C.
Glover, "Tall Pines," Jon
George;
Lies! Sheets,
"Trumpets," David C.
Glover, " Dancing on the
Dyke," Mae-Aileen Erb,
u Marta's Mazurka ," David
Karp; Cynthia Neal, "Blue
Lanterns,'' William Scher,
·"Day Dreams," David A.
Karp, "Big Beat,'' Wesley
Schaum;
Jerry
Call,
"Twiddle Dee Dee," William
Scher, "Playground
Frolics,'' T. Salutrinskaya,

torney, " The Educated
Woman and Her RoleS 11 i
Hon. Alan E. Norris,
Repres·e ntative, Ohio
General Assembly, " The
Ohio Constitution and You";
Dr. John T. Bonner, Jr., vice
president of Ohio State
University: Gertrude W.
Donahey, Ohio Sta te
Treasurer on "The Status of
Women in Government";
Hon. James A. Rhodes,
GovernQr of Ohio, inaugural
address.
Activities of the week will
also include concerts by the
band and chorus, as well as a
talent show.

Hanison's
Service Center
447 SECOND AVE .
Phone 446-9233

SWIMMING

[':EI ~I·'I~3~·
- ALUMINUM

-STEEL
- SUPPLIES
Bud Harrison
Evenings 446-3750

John Fuller

Day 446-3434
Evenings 446-4327

LEAR
PHOTOGRAPHY
Spring Valley Plaza,
GaHipolis

446·7494

DO NELLI'S
RECREATION

•

'

'•
••

CAMPING - fiSHING
SWIMMING

';

,•

EUCIRIC

•

Located
Half way .
Between

"••
•

Gallipol)s
&amp; Jack"'n

Off flt. 35

:( Jac'kson County

Savage,

" The

Juggler,' ' ·carl Wilhelm
Kern, "L'Av{llanche" Op. 45,
Stephen Heller, "Taking It
Easy," William Gillock;
Melinda Board, "Sonatina"
Op. 157 No. 4, Fritz Spindler,
"Sorrento Festival," Wllllam
Scher ; Brenda
Price,
"Turkish Rondo" Op. 36, No.
2 Richard Krentzlin, "The
Butterfly" Op. 36, No. 4 from
"Springtime,"
Louise
. Wright, "Elfin Dance" Op.
12, No. 4 (Duet), Edward
Grieg; Mitzi Dean, "Sonata"
Longo
58, ·Domenico
Scarlatti,. "Sonata" Op. 49,
No . 2,
Ludwig
van
Beethoven ; "The Bareback

Rider". from "The Circus,"
Joaquin Turina; Todd
Osborne, " Polonaise" Op. 40,
No. l, F. Chopin, "There Is
No Greater Love,'' Fohn
Peterson.
The recital was truly a
group project as parents set
up chairs and Mr. John
Longley took charge of taping
the music. Betty Carpenter
cr~ted a plano cake for the
occasion and helped Unda
Harrington ·with refresh·
ments.

Have your ·
favorite old
Pictures
copied
Your precious old family
pictures ca n never be re- .
placed onc e lost or faded. ·
Let us mak e tclithful copies :
of them now to share with
loved one$ . If your picture
Is timeworn , additional
charges for restOration are
stile priced. Your original :
picture is returned to you a
unha rmed.

SPECIAL OFFER:
umrtell Time OniJ •
•

Sx7 black

and white
copy

$485 ·'•

POMEROY
Inspection Stockton, master of Hemlock
was held at · the Thursday Grove Grange, ·aMounced
night meeting of the Rock that the fifth degree practice
Springs Grange ·held in the for inspection in July wiD be
hall. Deputy Master Mendal held Monday night, June'!/ at
Jordan was the inspecting of- the Rock Springs Grange
ficer and gave the grange a hall, 8p.m.
score of 869 out of a possible
The deputy master spoke
1,000.
briefly presenting his report
The committee reported of inspection. A previous pr&lt;&gt;favorably on 12 applicants for gram had been inspected by
membership. Mrs. Amos him.
Leonard, CW A chairman, anMembers reported ill were
nounced that three garments Mrs. Mildred Betzing, Mrs.
from the Rock Springs Grace Whaley, and Mrs.
Grange have been sent to Elizabeth Jordan for whom a
State Grange. Plans were round-robin card was signed.
also made to assist in the usRefreshments were served
ed eyeglass program. Thank by Mr. and fVIrs. William
you notes from the CB Club Radford and Homer Radford.
and from Hugh Custer were
read.
VISITED
Donations were made to the
POMEROY
- Mr. and
Ohio Travel Fund, Friendly
Mrs
.
Roland
Will of
Hills Camp, the Meigs County
Lexington,
Mass.
have
Museum, and to Pomona
returned
home
after
visiting
Grange for new sashes.
Past Master Lucille here with Mr. and Mrs:
Leifheit gave the first degree Chester Knight and other
for inspection. Stanford relatives .

·'

c1~~s~ay, ~~~:'i,3~ -;,.~~
7

Crocheting, 10-11 :30 a .m.:
Horseshoes. 10 :30 a.m.:
Bowling, l-3 p.m.
Senior Citizens Nutrition
Program, 11:30 a.m.-12:30
p.m. Monday through Friday.
Menu for June 13 through
June 17. 1977:
Mooday
Creamed
baked chicken, mashed
potatoes, buttered green
beans, cranberry sauce,
canned peaches, biscuit,
butter, milk.
Tuesday
Meatloaf,
creamed corn, turnip greens
with vinegar, spice cake with
carmel icing, bread, butter,
milk.
Wednesday - Beef stew,
pineapple slice salad - cherry
garnish, cornbread, butter,
milk.
Thursday - Beef pattie,
potato salad, buttered peas,
mixed fruit cup, bread,
butter, milk.
Friday - Baked turkey,
mashed potatoes, coleslaw
with green pepper bits,
pudding, bread, butter, milk.
Coffee, tea, buttermilk,
juice served dally. We would
appreciate your registration
the day before you plan to
eat.

POMERO'Y - Members of
the St. Paul Lutheran Church
are preparing for making of
homemade ice cream to be
featured during Big Bend
Regatta Weekend. ·
It is ~uested that orders
for lee cream be placed on
Tuesdayand Wednesday, between 7 and 10 p.m., while the
ice cream is being.made. The
calling number of ·the church
is 992-2010. Ice cream will be
packaged and ready to be
picked ·up on Wednesday
after 6 p.m. Six flavors will be
!IVailable.

JOINT SCHOOL
Community Bible School
will be held at the Rutland
United Methodist Church on
June 20 thru the 23rd, and
from June '!1·28. This is being
co-sponsored by the Rutland
Church of Christ. The school
will begiil at 6:30 and run
until8: 30. Classes wlll be held
for three yea'r olds thru grade
nine. Refreshments will be
served nightly and the public
is invited.

%'~ PUT

UP THE
CEILING THAT
KEEPS DOWN
THE NOISE

~it~eclat...it6~[?a1M
SUN., JUNE 19th

Armstrong Cus h i ontone ~ Suspended Ce ili~gs
absorb up to 60% of all the noise that strikes
them while covering pipes, beams, or high
cei lings. Easy-to -assemble metal framework
holds smart -looking acou stical and lighting
panels. There are many styles to choose from.
And we can show you how easy they are to
install yourself .

FOR DAD:

G1

a

Getaheadstart
In your new town.
Don't waste limo wonderlna obout a lut way to ,.t
your boarlnp. Call me-your WELCOME WAGON llostou.
When you• .. jllltmovlli, you're prOSIId lor time.
And tho lilts, community ond buslnoso lnlormotlon I !Irina . ·
will me your family limo ond monoy.
let me h11r from you soon.

1W@~

SA BIHL

Devin

Meigs
POMEROY
Senior Citizens Center ac·
tlvlties located at the
Pomeroy Junior High School
is open 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
Monday, July 13 - Cards
and Games, Square Dance,
12:3().3 p.m .
Tuesday, June 14 Physical Fitness, 10 :45 a.m. :
Chorus, 12:16-2 p.m.
Wednesday, June 15 Social Security Represen·
tative 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. :
Crime and Safety, 10:30 a.m.:
Games, 12:3().2 p.m.
Thursday, June 16 Physical Fitness, 10 :45 a.m.;
Nutrition Education, lla.in.;
Horseshoes, 12:30 p.m.; Singa-Long, 12:15 p.m.

Ice cream.for sak

' ------------------------

HEY CAMPERS!

" Fiddlesticks, " Violet
Reiser ; Tim Sheridan, "TomTol)l,"
Beryl
Joyner,
" Chastushka," Russian
Song ; Laura Amsbury ,
" Little Gray Burro,'' Jane S.
Bastien, 11 PaMing Fancy"
Op. 28, Samuel Maykapar,
" The
Fifers,"
JeanFrancoise Dandrieu; ''Wild
Rider" Op. 68, No. 8, R.
Schumann.
Also, Diana Sheridan, "A
Dance,'' Daniel G. Tuck,
"Village Dance" (Duet), Jon
George , ' 4 Running Along' '
Op. 39, D. Kabalevsky ; Sheri
Longley, " Old '!i'ashione·d
Boogie," Roger Grove,
" March in D Major,'' Bach,
"Playtime" (Duet ) (rom
"Familv Album." N. Delio
Joio; Chr istina Unroe,
''Sonatina" I · Allegro;
William Gillock, " First
LoM,11 R. Schumarm, "The
Chase," William Scher;

FA-C and Nian Cadman
to conduct dance session

PH..... ,Yn

[;1 Bar Ware
M Coff-. Mugs
[?i Beer Steins

{;;f Wine DecanteiS
M Fanciful Aprons
(;1 Imported Handkerchief Sets
AI

beautiful~

gift boxed-

Father's Day Special!
25% OFF ALL PIPES
' In stock.

Offer goocl 011ly till Saturdoy, June 11th.

Priced !rom $1 .111 to suo.

Where

CAROLINA LUMBER
&amp;SUPPLY COMPANY

....,
I

,.

el•~r~et--

Peddler's Pantry

..__state &amp; Third _________ Galllpolls, o. - - . . J

675-1160

TAWNEY JEWELERS
422 Second Ave.

Gallipolis

Point Pleasant

312 6th Street
1

Store Hours

Mlldlr · F~diJ 8-5 Saturday 8-,12 noon

STEVE BRO'fi'N .

Bf0UJn
. tours

A

·

ustralia

GALLIPOLIS - Steve
Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Brown, 934 First Ave.,
Gallipolis, left ·wednesday,
June Bto attend a five week
workshop
program in
Australia. Brown will be
traveling with a musical evangelistic team from
Cedarville College. The
program is sponsored under
the Missionary Inter-ship
Service program. The team is
composed of 15 team
members, one sound man and
the campus pastor of
Cedarvllle College, Rev .
Harold Green as the
evangelist. The team will be
ministering .songs and
testimonies in churches, rest
homes, hospitals and public
and private schools in the
Sydney and Melbourne area.

GALLIPOLIS
The
French Art Colony In
cooperation with Nia n
Cadman will hold a Summer
Dance Training Session the
last two weeks in June at
Riverby . The sessions will
run Tuesday through Friday,
June 2t through 24, and the
following week, Monday
through Thursday, June 27
through 30.
Each daily . session will be
ooe and one-hall hours in
length for the eight days, with
45 minutes for instruction in
Tap and 45 minutes of Jazz.
Individual classes can also be
ina.de available any day at a
Blighter higher fee than group
instruction.
Nian Cadman, now for the
second year, is the
choreographer for "Gallia
Country." She has owned and
operated her own dance
studio in Youngstown, the
past 17 years. Her activities
in Youngstown included the
choreography for both the
Junior and Senior High
Schools' Spring Musi c
Concerts, the High School's
presentation of "South
Pacific," and Youngstown
Playhouse 's rendition of
" Showboat." The Happy
Hearts Tamburitzans had her
choreograph their over,..as

tour of Europe.
A member of Dance
Masters of Ohio, Penn ·
sylvania and America, Nian
Cadman is also a member of
the Professional Dance
Teachers Association. She
has taught for Dance Master
of Ohio and Pennsylvania,
and in Miami for the Florida
Chapter, as well as in
Washington, D. C. for the
national convention of Dance
Masters of America. She has
completed two of the required
three years of the reachers
Training School held at Kent
State University and studies
aMually in New York City
under many professionals,
Students of Nian Cadman
have achieved many honors
in competition. This year one
of her students holds the
Pennsylvania State Iitle and
will compete in Atlantic City
for the National title. Miss
Dance of Ohio is one of her
students who will compete for
Miss Dance of America also
in Atlantic City. One of her
YOUJ1ger students can be seen
on television commercials
and the Kojac ~eries.
For addlilonal information
on the French Art .Colony's
Summer Dance Training
session, call Judi Sheets at
446-7865 or Anita Tope at 446-

N!AN CADMAN
2457. Special arrangements
can be made for anyone who
is able to attend only four of
the eight day session. This
program is open to boys and
girls as well as adults, with
three classes being offered
forthevariousage groups: 78 year olds, H3 year olds and

14 years and older.
The cost is $4.50 for a one
and one·h~lf hour session, or
$15 for four days, or $30 for
the full eight days.
now for
preCall
registration as only eight
students may be included in
each session.

Golfers meet
POMEROY - An organizational meeting for the
Women's GoH Association of
the Pomeroy Golf Course will
·be Mid at 9 a.m. Tuesday
morning . AI that time plans
will be made for special
events and social activities
and dues will be set.
Ladies Day will be held at
the course each Tuesday at 9
a.m. and participants need
not be a member of the
Association in order to play.
At a recent meeting officers
were elected with Mrs. Betty
Fultz, being named presi·
dent; Mrs. Margaret Follrod,
vice president; and Mrs.
Phyllis Uackett, secretarytreasurer.
Free goH lessons will be
available and small classes
will be organized soon. Instructors will be "Bub"
Stivers, and (leorge Hackett,
Jr.

Plans completed
POMEROY-:._ Plans for the
wedding of . Shar~n Bing,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs .
Vernon Bing, Pomeroy, and
Terry Sayre, son of Roy and .
Maxine
Kesterson ,
Langsville, have been completed.
The ceremony will be held
on June 17 at 6:30p.m. at the
home of the bride, Route 143, .
with a reception inunediately
following the wedding. In the
event of inclement weather,
the wedding will take place at
the. Bradbury Church of
Christ with the music to begin
at 7 p.m. Friends are invited.

Son born to
Darst family
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs. Jeffrey R. Darst (Kitty
Metzger ) &amp;Mounce the birth
of their first child, a son, Unn
Keith, who was born Friday,
May 20 at Holzer Medical
Center. The infant weighed
S(!ven pounds 12'h ounces and
was 21 inches long.
Paternal grandparents are
Tom Darst, Middleport, and
Mrs. Elizabeth Gilkey,
Shade. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
John Metzger, Middleport,
paternal great-grandmother
io Mrs. Beulah White, Middleport ; maternal great·
grandmother is Mrs. Amy
Metzger, Pittsburgh, Pa .,
and
maternal
greatgrandfather is Earnest Wells,
Middleport.

THEME PLANNED
Ah exciting program . has
been prepared by Campaign
Youth Group for Vacation
Bible School to be held June
15through 18 from 6:30-3 p.m.
"Lord Jesus, T~ch Me" is
the theme for the school, to be
held each weekday from
Wednesday_Ao Saturday.
Cla111es wiltbe offered for all
agea from nur~~ery (ages 2~3 )
through college-age and
adult .
•i

There's nothin g quite like the
feeling you get when sitti il g
behind t he wheel of a new car.
And, there's nothin g quite like
T he Willing Ban k to help you
experience th at feeling. We have
minimized all the fuss and
confusion of fin ancing and have
geared our service to help yo\1
a nswer t he questions. Whether
you come and see us persona lly
or have your dealer give us a
call, you ca n be su re your loan
will be processed qui ckly a nd
efficiently . The Willin g Bank is
the key to your new car!

CJhe

~

OhioValley Bank
Gall1pe&gt;hs Oh•Q

/~

Four Convenient Locations To Better Serve You

...

�B-7-The Sunday Tunes-&amp;&gt;nhnd.Swlda)', Jw1e12, 1977

B-6- TheSwnlay Times.Scntmel, Sw1&lt;lay, June 12, 1977

Honor roll released
1!10 GRANDE - Students
on the Buckeye Hills Career
Center honor roll for 1976-77

are :

Ag~irulture Bust ness, Sr. Eddie Atkins, Jeff Dennison,
Carol Lewis.
Agriculture Mechanics, Sr.
- Robert Cunningham, Phil
Exline - x, Mark Leonard,
Ma rk McC laskey, Matt
Saunders, Richard Zim-

Whitley.
,
Food Service, Jr. Mt'lvin
Biars ,- x. Deborah Harvey.
f'llnstiiw Mill e r . Janl'l
Miller , Cathy O'Dell. Norman
Patton, llil'ky Swain.
Borne &amp; Community. Sr. Vangia Parley , C.atht&gt;rine
Richie .
Borne &amp; Community, Jr.Patti Fowler, Becky Gilbertx, Darlene Kirby , Connie

merman.

CELEBRATE - Mr. and Mrs. Glerm Powell will
celebrate their golden wedding armiversary Sunday, June
19, with an open house at their home on Route 588, three
miles west of Gallipolis. Friends and relatives are invited
to attend between the hours of two and five in the
afternoon. Mr . and Mrs. Powell (the former Opal Lamb)
were married June 18, 1927, in Cheshire, Ohio. They are
the parents of two daughters, Mrs. William .(Maxine)
Northup, Gallipolis, and Mrs . Stanley (Doris Ann)
Harrison, Vienna, Va . They have six grandchildren, Mrs.
Debora! Northup Smith, Jeffrey Northup, Mrs. Brenda
Harrison Ruysen, Anne Harrison, David Harrison and
Lyrm Harrison.

Amateur Gardeners
elect new officers
MIDDLEPCRT - New officers were elected at the
Wednesday night meeting of
the Middleport Amateur
Gardeners hel&lt;l at the home ·
of Mrs. Edward Burkett.
Elected were Mrs. Burkett,
president; Miss Erma Smith;
vice president; Mrs. Harold
Lohse, secretary; and Mrs.
Edgar Reynolds, treasurer.
Mrs. Harry Davis presided
at the meeting during which
time the civic committee
. reported that geraniums anddusty miller had been provid- .
ed by the club and planted at
Middleport village hall by the
girl scouts of Mrs. Mary
Wise.
Devotions by Mrs. Burkett .
were from the first chapter of
James and pertained to the
church. She read a poem en-

tilled "The Church, Christ's
Body" by St. Augustine, and
had prayer.
Arrangements by Mrs.
Burkett included sweetpeas
in pink and white in a crystal
bowl, a table arrangment
containing roses, pinks, fever
few, and fox glove, and a buffet arrangement in a ceramic
bowl with purple larkspur,
daisies, anlil clematks.
Mrs . Rose Reynolds
displayed a wood rose handcrafted in the Gattlinburg
area. The petals were made
from the wa-pa tree which
grows in the mountains of
Tiawan.
Mrs. Burkett and the cohostess, Mrs. Kenneth
Amsbary
served
refreslunents.

WrLL CELEBRATE- Mr. and Mrs. Ray Houck, Fort
Recovery, will celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary
on ' Saturday, June 18, from 7 to 9 p.m. at 541 Fourth .
Avenue, Gallipolis, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Hawk, sister of Mrs. Houck. Ray Houck and Diana Fife
were married by the Rev, Vernon Shaler at the Church of
the Nazarene in Gallipolis on June 14, 1952, The couple
have three children, Alan, Nashville, Tenn., Brent, Findlay, and Teresa, Fort Recovery. Relatives and friends are
invited to attend the open house.

Miss Hudson to wed
GALUPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. Jack A. Hudson announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of
their daughter, Jill Lana, to
Gordon Scott Wolfe, son of
Mr. and ·Mrs. Norman G.
Wolfe of 20~ Cheryl Drive,
Albany, Indiana.
The wedding will take place
June 19 at Grace United
Methodist Church with Rev.
. James Frazier of Gallipolis
and Rev. Norman Wolfe, ,
brother of the groom,
Corydon, Indiana, officiating.
The wedding will begin at 2
p.m. with music and the
ceremony starting at 2:30.
Th.e custom of open church
will be observed with a
reception following.
The bride Is a senior at
University of Southern
Mississippi ma)ortng in
elementary education. Her
fiance Is also a senior at
Southern
Mississippi
majoring in polymer science.
He is currently employed at
Lilly Ind~rial Coating, of
IndiaMpolls, Indiana.

Knighting, Denise Mill er,
Agriculture Mechanics, Jr. Dawn Musick - x, Barbara
- Greg Ball, Gene Duke, Staten , Brenda . Treible,
!Yiorgan,
Brian Michelle Wilson .
David
Richards. Tom Wright, Rick
Trade
&amp;
Industrial
Zinn.
Education: Air Conditioning .
Forestry, Sr. - Timothy
Heating , Sr. - Steve Bennett,
Atha, Lester Callahan, David Mark Canaday , Kenn eth
Chisholm, Paul Frye, Morris Mollohan , Bret Bussell.
Simpson, Larry Strickland.
Air Conditioning - Heating,
Forestry, Jr . ~ Jim Bethel, Jr. - Cliff Kiser.
John Bethel· x, Ellen Cox- x,
Auto Body, Sr. - Danuel
Keith Cox - x, Darrell Den- Graves, Dana Halfhill, Rick
ney, James Gill - x, Lynne Lambert, Timothy Lambert,
Herdman, Bryan Martin, Larry Ruff, Mark &amp;beets,
Wayne McNair, Roger Willard Sheets, Greg Stover.
Miller, Kim _ A. Saunders,
Auto Body, Jr. - Roger
Ralph Whitington.
Caldwell, Robert Davis, Kip
Data Accounting, Sr. Graves.
Gloria Arcadipane, Vickie
Auto Mechanics, Sr. Hubbard- x, Everett Sturgill, · Paul Cecil, Barry Johnson.
Mark Williams.
Donald Martin, Paul Ousley Data AcC()unting, Jr. x, Jim Rilev - x. Ronald
Kathy Elkins , Roberta Stiffler-x, Paul Spence-x,
Hubbell- x, Nikki Johnson- x, Kevin Stoneburner, Timothy
Carolyn Robinson - x, Bonnie
Tackett, Donna Williamson,
Leta
Woolum,
Teresa
Wagener.
Marketing &amp; Distribution.,
Sr. - Jennifer Coleman,
Penelope Mulhoiand - x,
eynde
Pope,
Patricia
Schoonover, Judy Slone.
Marketing &amp; Distribution,
Jr. - Mike Castor, Penney
Downey, Wendy Layton, Jeff
Souders, Connie Spencer.
Merchandise AccoWJting,
Jr. - Diane Adkins, David
Lowman, Sharon Reynolds,
Laura Wellington.
High Sltill Steno, Sr. Tammy Burnette - x, Carol
Cremeens - x, Carol Denney x, Tammy Lahrmer - x,
Benita Penningion, Sherr!·
Sanders- x, Kimberly Staten
~X.

x..
Auto Mr•·hanics. Jr.

W:1n l -

Edw~rd

Adamson,

Dani~J

Nicholas Morse · x, I .Drry

(;anter, Matthew Johnson,

Norton - x. Raymond Pen-

Marsha ll Mil rtin. HiHHly
t\kKinnty - "· (;reM Olive r.

nin~tou -

By Marion C. Cra"iord
Meigs Coonty Humane Soelety
POMEROY - Well, what an interesting
week th1s was. Let me tall you about it. 1
never thought anything would C()mpare with
my two years in Vietnam, but Meigs County
and Gallia, by golly, can almost measure

x. Miehltcl Poctkcr,

J im Skidn•ore , llalc Whetsel.
Industrial Maintenance, Jr.
Terry Abbott, James
Michael Clevenger, Tim Co llins - x, Jay Drummond, ·
Godwm- x, Jesse Johnson· x. Joseph Merry, Jeff Ne lson,
Marcus Kinder - K, James Craig Pinkerton - x, Steve .
Stack, Frederick Sydow, Ramey, Tim WatSiln, Dale
Gary Tribby- x, Jerry Wade . Whilbum.
Building Trades, Jr. ~
Welding, Sr. - Mike Bell,
David Mullins, James Larry Ellison, Rick Fraley,
Patrick, William Rupert, Roy Cliff Jude, Merrill Lanning,
Sayre, Jon Tu rner, Roger Bruce Mullins, Rick Walters.
Vance.
Welding , Jr . - Jerry
Cosmetology
Sr.
Adk ins, Ri ck Foul, John
Rhonda Davis, Tonya North, Howell, James Kemp - x,
Rita Roush, Tammy Scott, Dallas
Sayre,
Marty
Deborah Severt, Vicki Williams.
Sowers, Marsha Winters.
x - Denotes all A's.
Cosmewlogy, Jr. - Pam
Ca rter , Zona Conley, Sharon
Conn , Mary Cra wford ,
Margaret Culpepper, Vicki
George, Lisa Grow, Tam!
Hammond, Patty Holtz, FIRED
MANSFIELD, Ohio (UP! )
Kimberl y .Jackson , Helen
Stifner, Melody Wiseman, - Richland County Sheriff
Thomas Weikel fired 10 depuKimberly Robbins.
Drafting, Sr. - Tammy ties and three sergeants
Coleman, Dana Exline, Thursday after three days of
Michael Hulbert , Carlos a sick-raU walkout.
All 13 officers were
Justice, Allen Perry, Brian
members of the Richland
Roche, Bob Ruff.
Drafting, Jr. - Kim Bates, County Sheriff's Deputies
Randall Betts, Steve Lor- Association formed by the
men recently to help solve
bach.
Industrial Maintenance, Sr. internal problems.
Mark Perry.
Huildin~ Trades, Sr. -

up!
I. We started being deluged with calls

·Patsy Pugh
PLAN TO WED - Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pugh,
Cheshire, are announcing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their daughter, Patsy Ann Pugh
to Kenneth Robert Little, son of Mr. and Mrs, Cuba Little,
Cheshire. The bride-elect is a graduate of Kyger Creek
High School. Her fiance is employed by the Meigs Local
School District. Wedding plans are incomplete at this
time.

..

UN I.CO
FREEZERS

.

H;gh Skill Steno, Jr . Beck, Mary Ann, L'hristine
Heck, Vicki Jordon Tammy Kisor, Darla Landrwn, Kathy Luckett, Lucille
•Holds 710 lbs . Two s!iding
Milstead, Cat hy Morgan,
Selena
Reffett,
Mary
baskets for easy food selecReinhart, Cynthia · Stroop,
tion . Model OH20 (21Lori Ward - x, Rebecca
Ziegler.
0574) . Also available in 8,
Office Machines, Sr. 10, 15 and 25
ft . sizes .
Becky Gill, De~bie Gill, Reba
Reg. $368. S5.
.
Layton, Cheryl Pierce, Rosie
Roberts, Sue Woodyard,
Diane Zinn.
Office Machines, Jr. Debbie . Clevenger, Piana
SPACE-SAVING
Goldsberry, Joyce Henry, IRI:FRIGERATOR-FREEZE
Sally Hotham, Veneita
ONLY 28."' WIDE
Miller, Karla Paulsen, Arlene
. Pitchford.
MODEL CTF14ER
Home Economics: Di14.2 cu. ft . capacitv
versified
Health
Occupations, Sr.- Cheryl Bell,
• 28" wide . 61 " high
Christi Cook, Tammi Cox,
• 4 .58 cu . ft . freezer
Ralph Coyle, Deborah
::Jenney , Pamela Essman,
• 9 .60 cu .·tt . fresh foOd section
Beth Fuller, Pamela Haffelt• No-Frost fhroughout
x, Barbara Hall - x, Debra
McCormick, Pamela Mc• Automatic ict
tker
accessory (av _... ble nt
Neese - x, Tanya Robinson,
eKtra cost I can be in stalled
Dora Russell - x, Deborah
when you buy it ... or
Shafer, Verna Weddington,
it
~an be added lat er
Mary West, Carol Wilcoxon.
Diversified Health Oc• Two adjustable cant ilever
cupations, Jr. - Barbara
shelv es in fresh load cabinet
Boone, Tawna Borden,
. ~Adjustable rneat keeper
Ginger Camden-x, Tanya
Carter - x, Iva Chapman,
• Twin slide-out crispers
Sally Cummings, Elizabeth
• ·covered butter bin
Dickerson, Tammy Hemby,
Mellsa Houser, Cindy Hunt• Portable egg tray
ley, Anna Jarrell - x, Chris
• SY2 doOr shelves
Knisley, Lisa Kruger, Nancy
LeMaster • x, Lisa Maynard • Two Easy-Release
ico-cube trays
x, Stephanie McKinnis, Patty
*AS
Morse,
Jenny
Petrie,
Christina Reedy, Teresa
Sheline, Tami Thaxton - x.
Food Service, Sr.
Rhonda Skaggs, Teresa

x,

..

20 Cu. Ft. Chest

Perfect for:

cu .

•'

SUMMER HOME
RECREATION ROOM
BEACH HOUSE
HOUSE BOAT

any more.
6. Nice call: Woman with ' wild bird
(Cardinal) which she has had for six years,
told me about bird, sounded great, so made
arrangements to visit her home, take pic-

ft. storage 0 Manual defrost D. Deep door shelves
D. Egg rack D. Crisper D. Easyrelease ice cube trays.

POMEROY - The Senior
Citizens Square dance group
recently sponsored a dance
where a total of $56 was
raised for the Penny Lynn
Johnson fund. During the
regatta senior citizens wilt' be
raising money to be donated
to the Pomeroy Action Group
for the river bank clean-up
effort. A quilt which was
donated by Ralph l!adcliff
will he on display at the craft
sale on Lynn Street. Perhaps
you will be a winner!
On June 19, Heritage
sUnday, several senior
ci tizims 'Hill be demonstrating crafts at the Meigs
Museum. The crafts are a
sample of what will be shown
at Yesteryear II September
17, 1977.
This Wednesday at 10 :30
Pomeroy Police Chief Jed
Webster will speak to senior
citizens on "Precautions
Senior Citizens can Take in
Their Homes. For Their
Safety."
According to Dr. Edmund
G. James , Jr., Director,
Division of Crime Prevention

~~l
!I

DELUXE SELF-CLEANING
30" HOTPOINT OVEN·RANGE
WITH LUXURY FEATURES
D. Digital clock O J.in-1 surface
unit O Oven window door D.

--~ Deluxe trim.

Model

RB747T/ V

$50 .DISCOUNT·

ADVERTISED ON WSAZ-TV

-..-·--'
.

an

Model CSF22E

$100 DISCOUNT

that I wrole about not

TWO-SPEED
WASHER AND
ELECTRIC DRYER

sso.DISCOUNT

DELUXE NO-FROS"'[. 15.7
CU. FT. ROLLS OUf ON
WHEELS!

ON THE PAIR

Ohio
Department 'or finances, and health. Senior
Economic &amp; · Community Citizens. concerns arc as
Development, the elderly are varied and individu~l as at
eight times more vulnerable any other age.
to . crime than other age
Though a per.On may be
groups. Crimes against the proud of the fact that he or
elderly in rural Ohio have she has made it to be 60 or
increased J5 percent in the over, they may resent being
last three years. This is 8!'1 apart as a Senior Citizen
something that should be of a or "over the hill" by people
real C()ncern to citizens of that assume all older people
Meigs County, so make an are alike and all have the
effort to be in attendance same interest.
Wednesday morning.
Someone
has
said:
The Marietta boat trip still · "Nobody grew old by merely
has openings, so get your living a number ·of years;
reservations in by calling 992- people grow·old from lack of
7886 or by stopping in at the purpose. Years wrinkle the
skin bu(to give up purpose
center.
Working In the information wrinkles the soul. Worry,
and ·referral (I &amp; R) office of · self-distrust, fear, doubt, and
the Senior Citizens Center by despair - these bow lhe head
virtue of the service we offer, and turn the spirit back into
puts us in touch with people dust. Yo u are as young as
with problems. While it is your faith, as old as your
true that senior citizens have doubt, as young as )'our selfSllme problems that younger C()nfidence, as old as your
people do not have, there is fears, as young as your hope,
never a time that you can as old as your despair."
lump
se nior
citizens
We are here to help you
problems together. Their "accent
the
positive,
main concerns may fall into eliminate the negative." Call
three categories: family, 993-7311 and ask for Leafy or
Donna,
·

ne"' set of crustal fracture
zones that rank .with thP
deepest yet known beneath
Earth's seas. •No comparable
features exist on land.
"This is quite exciting,"
Dick said in a telephone interview. " It represents
another area of really
dramatic fracture zones."
. The sea bottom features
were discovered by sonar
sounding carried out aboard
research ship Islas Orcadas,
a vessel owned by the United
States and operated by the
Argentina
navy.
The
discoveries were made in two
expeditions sponsored by the
National Science Foundation
which reported the findings.
Ooe canyon is 420 miles
long, 18 miles wide and 1.8 to
2.4 miles deep. Another is 120
qJiles long, 12 miles wide and
up to 2.4 miles deep. In

Ocean 1,150 miles north of
Anarctica, it was reported
Friday.
Dr. Henry Dick of the
Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution In Massachusetts
said the canyons represent a

Model CTF16E

sso DISCOUNT

DRIVE A LimE AND SAVE A LOT • FREE DELIVERY WITHIN 75 MILES • YES! WE SERVICE
. AT YOUR L.OCAl. HOTPOINT DEALER

POMEROY LANDMARK

., '

''

JACK W. CARSEY• .MGit
SERVING MEIGS, GALLIA AND MASON COUNTIES
STORE HOURS: 8:30-5:30 ,,...- MILL CLOSES AT 5100 P.M.

Guardsmen go into training

•

COLUMBUS (UP!)- More
than 3,000 Ohio National
Guardsmen are to ·leave
today for their annual two
week swnmer training at
camp Grayling, Mich.
The ONG said units of the
107th Armored Cavalry from
northeastern Ohio would
. iraln at the Michigan post
with support from the 54th
Support Center, Rear Area
Operations Conunand located
in Worthington.

•

Other supporting units
training' at camp Grayling
will he the 371st Support
Group from Kettering, the
37th Signal Co. from
Lakewood, the 437th Military
Police Battalion from
Youngstown, the 323rd
Military Police Co. from
Toledo, the 200th Medical Co .
from Cleveland, the Htwth
Trarwportation Co. from New
Philadelphia, and the 214th
Light Maintenance Co. from
Coshocton and Newark.

•

Jobs preserved
WASH! •r;TON IUPI I Sen. Ho"•ard M. Met7.enbaum, D-&lt;ihJO, said his
Clea n Air Act amendment
passed by the Sena-te Friday

1on~ al!o·~

canyons located·

'

WASIUNGTON (UP!) American scientists working
from a research ship have
discovered two submarme
cariyons more than twice as
deep as the Grand Canyon ·
under the South Atlantic

&lt;:~ ,vays

DELUXE 21.9 CU. FT. NOFROST SIDE•BY-SIDE
ROLLS OUT ON WHEELS.

~. Bruiser "

Well, he is gone again, and this time along
with his next door neighbor's dog. Someone
in lhe neighborhood is SICK, Anyone seeing
either of these dogs either together or apart,
please contact the Braggs at 992-7735 ... The
Boston is of course black and white, with
slight pug face and the other is named
"Jaws" and is part Great Dane and part St.
Bernard with a black collar that has a rabies
tag on it. She is female, white, with black
patch over left eye. Anyone seen with these
two animals should be reported to the police
and to the Braggs.
8. Ruth Koenig and her daughter Kay of
out near Eastern High School, while out on
SR 124 near Rutland found dog that had been
left by the dumpster along with a little pile
of dry dog food. She brought dog by for us to
see. Nice try, " deserter," we will attempt to
place your trusting pet, but more than likely
she will he euthanized because there are too
many characters like you in this co unty and
not enough humane individuals such as Ruth
and Kay willing and able to assume your
responsibility until a permanent home is
found with some "adult."
9. Placed several dogs and . pupoies
through referral service; in fact, spent
several hours daily on just this project (and
we've got 24 acres to include almost an acre
of garden to take care of, plus four dogs and
two birds of 0 ur own ). Does anyone have a
few spare hours they'd like to loan us? Keep
calling us with those lost, found, stray, hurt,
injured, and cases or cruelty to include
neglect though, we'll do what we can but,
boy, I sure wish we bad a sl)elter so we could
do more.
·
10. Reference the article in the Sentinel
concerning CRUELTY, LEG HOLD TRAPS,
sent in from Cleveland by the International
Fund for Anin]al Welfare. We have the
petitions for you to sign. Please stop by the
Humane Society Thrift Shoppe in Pomeroy,
across from the Post Office, Thursdsy,
Friday or Saturdays ... we need all the
signatures we can get to put this issue on
Ohio's November ballot.
And, along with all the above . I was
supposed to write my article for this co.lumn
being as brief as possible! Sorry. I don't
have room for it this week ... will have to
cover Traveling witil Pets next week.
Animals available for adoption are as
follows:
.
I Sm. puppy part toy Border Collie and
Beagle, male, 992-6260.
1 B mo. old fema le med. size Foxhound
type, sweet disposition, 985-3884.
1 year old coon dog, 992-7467.
16 mo. old Shepherd type, blk. and tan,
good disposition, likes children, 992-3361.
Small puppies, very cute, Will end up
small 7-ll weeks old, 94~2028.
2 adult German Shepherds, male and
female, 992-7339.
.
1 small mixed breed blk. and tan,
friendly, 949-2789.
4 puppies, female, wired ahired terrier
type, 8 weeks old, 667-6381.
Don't forget, folks, the above attempts,
actions, and hopes cost money. Send
donations and requests for membership to
Humane Society, B~x 682, Pomeroy.

SENIOR CITIZENS' SCENES

'50 DISCOUNT

LET'S TAll&lt; ABOUT
HEARING AIDS
AND THEIR COST.

II you have a question or wish
appointment call me at 592-6238.

about three ponies located not too 'far from
Rutland - no pasture, no food, no water and
no shelter from the elements ... (would you
say no brains on the part of the owner )? This
case is being investigated by the Humane
_Society this week, the owners have been
warned ; next step is a check by the sherifl's
office and possible taking possession or the
animals .. . Chickens, ducks and puppies,
too !
2. Woman visiting from Columbus, her
grandmother in Holzer. While both away at
hospital the house furnace exploded
throwing open the back door at which time
the young woman's· dog took off; German
shepherd with choke collar and answering to
the name of Mickey; woman Is upset, house
destroyed, dog gone. Has anyone seen
Mickey?
3. Meigs County woman saved poodle
from being killed in traffic in Gallia County ,
sought In vain to find the own~r. even tried
to leave it with woman in Kanauga area, but
she wouldn't accept it, brought it home to
Middleport, bathed and fed it; her thanks
fo" this effort by the owner' Taken to C()\lrt
lor dognapping! Kidding? No 1
Major Miller and myself, along with
several other Meigs County and Gallia
County "Humanitarians" showed up to see
what would happen in this farce. We saw the
charge made to look ridiculous and case
thrown out of court! Good thing, as no one
would try to be a good samaritan again.
But, two good points were derived out of
this unfortunate incident : First. if you do
find an animal, try to find Its owner, leaving
behind your name, address and phone
number in case the owner covers the same
trail, then call the sheriff, notify the radio
station, and advertise in the paper.
Second, animal owners, if you don't
have your pet licensed and the tag on your
pet, it is not legally yours. The license
makes it your personal property, without it,
you don't have a leg to stand on in event of a
court action.
4. Dog hit by ear, owner calls and wants
us to do something. Please folks , we would
love to be able to do aU that you expect of us,
but we cannot tend to personally owned
animals. We are just plain folks like you,
volunteers, trying to help homeless and
defenseless animals. I told him to take the
dog to the vet, providing him with the address of one. If subject young man is reading
this article, please call and let me know how
your dog is!
·
5. Got call from Middleport: Stray cat
frothing at the mouth, weak, can't wal!&lt;,
neighbors afraid of it C()ntaminating their
animals. Called the Humane Agent and
Major Miller and I met her where the cat
was located and euthanized it on the spot so
· that the poor thing wouldn't have to suffer

ture of her and her bird, and will tell you
about it next week.
7. Remember the part Boston Terrier

D. 9.5 Cu.

FABULOUS JUNE
SPECIAL •••••••••• $100 DISCOUNT

For 28 years I have fitted hearing aids
combining quality product and
professional service with reasonable cost:
While we will continue to serve those who
can not come to our office we will now
reward those who can by fixing the price at
$275.00 for the best known custom made and
individual fitted hearing aids. Prior
medical an~ audiological examination
encouraged.

'

~pAWS

HOOFS•.•and••

- Terry Barron, Randy
Brown, Jesse DuOC'an - x,

••

would " preserve the jobs of

Ihousa nds of Ohio coa l
miners by requiring Ohio

utilities to bum cual that is
locally and regionally
t

I'

I

availuble.' '

II

Ohio is the nation's top
coal~onsuming

state and the

fifth largest coal producer,
said the senator. The state's
coal industry has a payroll of
more than $200 million and
employs about 15,000 persons.
·rhe President or a
des ig nated agency, under
Metzenbaum's amendment.
co uld require utilities or
major industrial coa l burners

to buy coal locally available il
It is detem1ined that C()al
importing would cause
severe unemployment or

economic hardship.
The amendment, supported
by United Mine Workers, tile
National Clean Air Coalition,
the Sierra Club and United
Steelworkers of America will
prevent utllities 11n d industries from buying lowsulphu r coa l in the West and
then passin g on high transportation costs to consum ers

while Ohio coa l sits unused,
said Metzenbaum.
Co-s ponso rs
of
th e
amendment were Sens .
Jennin gs llandolph , D-W.
Va ., Birch Bayh, D·lnd., and
John H ein~. R·Pa .

Taxpayers see chance to save
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - commission sa id , concluding
C()uld save $2.2 that 11 this nonsystern of
Taxpayers
CHURCH TO BECOME CLINIC - Remodeling has begun at 548 Jackson Pike for The
billion a year if the various welfare and its horrendous
Amsbary Eye Clinic, office of Ophthalmologist Dr . Harry L. Amsbary, son of Mr. and Mrs.
welfare application forms - burdens of paperwork are a
Wayne Amsbary of Gallipolis. Dr. Amsbary is moving here this summer from Cleveland,
"a
national disgrace" - were national disgrace."
Ohio and will be seeing patients in August. Remodeling is being done by Carter &amp; Evans.
stream-lined, the Com·
mission on Federal PaperCHIEF FOR GOY
work says.
LOS Al'{GELES (UP!)
The commission Friday
urged the Department of Police Chief Edward Davis,
Health , Education and an outspoken conservative,
Welfare to adopt &gt;iandard said Friday he will run lor
welfare application form s to governor of california if he
to
receive
replace "the endless maze of continues
encouragement
.
fonns, red tape and paper"In my ;-peaking engage·
work ... "
ments
and talks with people
The present .setup ••takes sn
throughout
the state, I've had
much starr that it - and
nothing
but
substantial enNEW YORK, N. Y. - circulation.
Uivision has instituted not the needs of the poor courageme
nt
,'' he said
James H. Hollis, Bureau procedures to track the becomes the focus of
United States daily and
during
a
broadcast
interview.
Sunday news paper s cir - vice president for mass development of the business program operations," the
culated more than 17.t billion merchandising sales,/ noted as part of its program to help
preprinted advertising in- that the number of preprints advertisers usc preprints
serts in 1976, up more than a circulated by daily news- more effectively, Mr. Hollis
billion or 6.9 percent over the papers has more than said.
He noted that steadily
previous year, according to doubled since 1970 when the
the Newspaper Advertising total distribution ca me to 8 rising mail costs are
stimulating the use of news·
Bureau, Inc. The Bureau 's billion .
for
The Bureau believes that paper distribution
Insert Division bases this
figure on reports from 729 the use of preprinted news- preprints, and he pointed out
good chicken .
daily and 366 Sunday news- paper ads will continue to tha:t' mal'ly newspapers are
Some offer fair soft drinks. Others not-toooffering
market
papers with 75.5 percent of grow rapidly, and. its Insert now
bad cones and shakes. aut there is only one
coverage plan~ under which
the total daily and 83.5 perplace you can get the best of all these things
they distribute preprints to
cent of the total Sunday
-THE
DAIRY ISLE in Middleport.
both subscribers and nonsubscribers in t_he.ir circulation areas .
We feature :
Retai l advertisers ac·
Sundaes
counted for 13.9 billion or 82.7
Banana Deluxe
percent of the tota I inserts
Zombies
and national advertisers for
Hot Fudge
2.9 billion or 17.3 percent.
Cake
Retailers used the total
4 Cone Flavors
circulation for 9.6 billion or
FORT WAYNE, Ind. Soya in 1949 as a salesma n 69.1 percent of their
Strawberry
Centr~l Soya · has named and ·poultry serviceman at
preprints, and partial clrShortcake
Vernon E. Shupe and Edward Guntersville, Ala. He was . culation for other 4.3 billion
Sodas &amp; Coolers
E. (Earl) Durham to new promoted to salesm~n at the or 30.9 percen t. National
management positions in its C()mpan)"s Louisville, Ky., advertisers used the full
Farm Supply Department. wholesale farm su pply circulation for 94.4 percent of
Shupe will be manager of warehouse in 1951 and named their preprints (2.7 billion )
the company's farm supply assistant manager at North and partial circulation for
warehouse at Third Ave. and l.iberty , Ind. , in 1952. only 5.6 percent (162 million ).
Sycamore St. in Gallipolis, Durham was promoted
CARTOON
The Bureau estimates that
Ohio. Durham become s manager at Minerva, Ohio, in advertisets expenditures for
manager of Central Soya's 1953 and named manager at preprinted
GLASSES &amp;
ad
inserts
subsidiary, ABC Grain Gallipolis, Ohio, in ,l955.
amounted to $846.5 million in
16
Corporation, Buckey and
Ccntray Soya is an in- 1976, a 12.9 percent Increase
Bryon Sts. in Cicero, Ind .
ternational agri business and over the .$.750 million exPEPSI
Shupe joined Central Soya . fo od process ing company pended ror preprints in 1975.
as a bookkeeper at its In' ·with co rporate headquarters
A report ana lyzing preprint
dianapolis, Ind., farm supply in Fort Wayne, Ind. The volume and revenues of U. S.
warehouse in 1957. He was company
operates
90 daily newspapers is available
promoted to
assistant facilities in .the United States (rom the Insert Division of
manager of the Gallipolis and 20 outside the U. S. the Newspaper Advertising
warehouse in 1965 a'na named marketing products in 70 Bureau, Ind., 485 Lexington
man~ger of the CC?mpany's co uritries worldwide. Central Avenue, New York, N. Y.
Salisbury, Mo., fanh' supply Soya had net sa tes of $1.84 10017.
locust &amp; Fourth St.
store in 1966. Shupe was billion last fisca l year from
promoted to manager of ABC its feed manufacturing,
Grain Corporation in 1968 and · soybean processing, grain
held that post until his recent merchandising and con-

Preprinted, inserted ads

growing rapidly in U.S.

Eating Fun For The
~~~e :r~t~~s Whole family !

Durham, Shupe
named to posts

SLOPPY JOE &amp;
FRENCH FRIES

oz.

~ dairy lsle

promotion.

sumc r 1 food service and

A native of Fort Payne,
Ala., Durham joined Central

industrial foods processing
businesses.

Midwest boss of FEA quits
CHICAGO (UP!) - N.
Allen Andersen, 41, Peoria,
has resigned as Midwest
regional administrator of the
Federal
Energy
Administration, effective the
end of July.

Andersen was in charge of
a staff of 250 in the six ..state
Midwest region that included
Ohio and five other states.
An FEA spokesman said
Friday a successor has not
yet been chosen to replace
Andersen, who has held the
job since August, 1974 .
Andersen plans to take a
position in industry.

comparison, the Grand
Canyon is 217 miles long, four
to 13 miles wide and 4,000 to
5,500 feet deep. ·
The newly . disco vered
canyons are 1,300 miles
MOTHER CALLED
southwest of Cape Town,
POMEROY - Mts. Bertha
South Africa.
Parker received· a telephone .
Dr. John Sdater of the call on Mother's Day from
Massachusetts Institute of · her son, Lt. Col. Cednc
Technology said the fracture Parker, San Antonio, Texas,
zones occur along a boundary from whom she learned her
between two large moving grandson , Eric, who is 16
, segments of the earth's crust. years of age, had t~ken a test
These blocks or plates are . with seniors entering college
moving away from each
and is one of the top five
other and as they slide, they
taking the test.
fracture the sea bottom.

•

GIVE A BEAUTIFUL "NEW"
LOOK AND PROTECTION
TO YOUR OLD ROOF

-Insulates against cold
or heat.
-Will not ctiip, crack or
peel. - No need to tear off.
your roof to repair any
slate, metal; shingle or
built -up roof, Make it
leakproof with beautiful
Granules.
-Choose yours in any
color of your choice .
-Add years of life to
your present home or
building.

FREE
ESTIMATES
GUARANTEE
ON 801H
MATERIALS AND
LABOR.

I

r---------------~----MAIL THIS COUPON
Ha ckett Granulaled Roofing
1
Middleport , D. j

93 7th Ave.

Pl ease send me further informati or
Granvlated Roofin g . I t is understood I
under no obliga tion wtlalsoever .

Roof [ 1 Sidewall [

I (Please Check)

I
1

1

I

NAME ______________________ ,

ADDR

ESS----------------1

CITY_,..:__ ___;_ __ _ Zl P

---~

_______________ J

�B..S- TheSuuda) Tu n&lt;•,.Senllnd .Sunday , June 12, 1977

Green Elemerttaty says
good-bye to school

School Board Holds

1\n asscmbl\' markNJ tht·
closin14 da y· a t Crt.'{'ll
Elementa rv S.: hool on TimrS·

Grievance Hearings

n l lh ' tlut•lln WPut h

day June '2. Several of the
students entertained with a

rw •J•. .l aS(m

voriety show. Jamie Lane
wa s the em ce t" for t he
pro~ ram and gave an uut
standinR performani·e of· &lt;HI·

20 IAL.

GALVANIZED
DYNAMAJHt

GARBAGE
CAN

3 ONLY

IUC'rltC SIA ..T t HP

RIDER LAWN MOWER
.
'"'''
" . - '' ...,

..

~/
Robert Grim, Vickie lloyd

HARDWARE LIEPT

HARDWARE DEPT.

•

I

$366

·~-·

ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs. J. Owen Uoyd,
Gallipolis, are announcing th~ engagement and
approaching marriage of their daughter, Vicki Marie to
Robert Eugene Grim, son of Mr. and Mrs. John 0. Grim
Gallipolis. A 1976 graduate of Gallla Academy High School
the bride elect is presently employed at The Wiseman
Agency. Her fiance, a 1976 graduate of Kyger Creek High
School and Buckeye Hills Career Center, is employed by
TI'i..Star Electrical Contractors. Tbe couple will be
married in !he presence of immediate family on Jply 1.

0

•

EAST MEIGS - Judi
· Perry has been accepted as a
candidate at large in the Ohio
All American Girl Pageant to
be conducted in the Ohio
State University, Holiday Inn
in Columbus, July 18-19.
Miss Perry is secretary for
the Sunbeams 4-H Club,
secretary - t~easurer lor
Students Council of Eastern
High School, Candystriper at

PRONTO LAND

CAMERA
Ploy~ NJ-., FM, ond FM·Stereo broo&lt;k:o1t1. ph.o\
B·troc• tope cortndiJel arid phono9raph 1ecord1.
· Ae&lt;ard1 8-tnxk tope ,:an ridQet dite(11y from tM
radio, or r..:ord ple»yet or li""''! with microp~
(indud.d) . ,.-;..,. . ~t":;ln f1100ion w!.Qor ~w 1 lc h .
Slide controls tor vol ume . bolo nce , bon ond
treble. Sllde rule t,ming .....ith lighte d blotl.out diol
and FM·Sttno •i'ldicOtor l1ght .

l .c~t·t·. Juni or Johnson, t\n~U'

l

Cathe ll-ine Be·net

\_ 446 - 2342.

L

r

Pleasant

Accord

..

.

-~.H~ol

.
_.._....._.._.._:._...._.._._..._...___..___...._..._...._...._,
.._.._.._,_.._.._.__._..-

news

reporter

..

A KOOAIC TRIMLITE INSTitJMYtc- · 18
Co"*O rna'" it ecny to tolt• color
pict""" irtduon or out, witt. flipfloth.
Ho Wlftinol, to • •· Du~p in a filM
co~. ochoara the film, Ol'ld p,..
tfwJht.,tt.r, That'•alltMrei,toit•

···-···
I
~---~ .I
r.:.~ -

ly ""'•• .,_, lor ....,.....,.,

..........."""'"'

.n..
.. ,. .,.... ··""·f..·
..qll-n~"ll.
&lt;OI'dlltf
'

$1899

reached

on wages

swimming,

COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
· tentative agreement has been
reached in a strike which has
tied up highway construction
in the Buckeye State since
May 18, the Ohio Contractors
Association said Friday. .
Cement masons and
laborers were expected to
return to their jobs Monday.
The state's highway construction firms , most of
which are represented by the
association, were struck May
18 by the Laborers Council of
Ohio in a wage dispute.
The walkout affected about
1&gt;,000 laborers and masons
and another 20,000 workers
who honored picket lines;
holding up $70 million worth ·
of state highway projects.
The agreement reportedly
calls lor an hourly increase of
85 cents In each of the next
three years. A 711-cents-anhour increase will take effect
·immediately, and laborers
will get an additional15 cents
an hour ·Nov. 1.
Union members , who
currently average about $8.60
an hour, are to vote on ac·
ceptance of the proposed
contract Thursday . The OCA
must wait 14 days before
submitting the agreement to
its members for a vote.

beginners, intetinediates,
swimmer and advanced
swimminq.
Advanced swimming Is a
prerequisite for both junior
and senior life saving which
is to be offered in July and
August sessions. Interested
persons are to register at the
pool or call Jess Browning at

SUNDAY SPECIAL

GROUP WOMEN'S

SANDALS

5 00 PAIR
.... Pin
~l(l'SHOES
ONLY . S

32

oz.

10 oz.

MOP &amp; GLO

Homemakers of America ,

and also on the Annual Staff
at EHS.
Her hobbies indude:
sewing, cooking and all ·craft,
and collecting turtles.

EN DUST

LOS ANGELES (UPI)
The estate of oilman J . Paul
Getty has earned $8.74
million since he died little
more than a year ago.
The Income was disclosed
Friday when ·Superior Court
Judge Neil Lake authorized
payment of $4 million. to the
museum Getty founded and
made
the
residual
beneficiary of his estate at
nearby Malibu.
The executors, son Gordon
Peter Getty and Title Insurance and Trust Co .•
requested the payment and
also reported a partial in·
ventory indicated the estate
is worth 11bout $714 million
which will be increased
shortly to $720 million with
new investments.

We Stock It!
'Pri~m.~~
Tole Painting &amp;
Decorative Supplies

GAZEBO
Phone
'165
61

Pt. Pleasant
......,....._

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

HOUSEWARES DEPT.

\~ \

\-/--1 I

\ .' · ·
,•

REDWOOD
-TRELliS

20 OZ. AEROSOL
WINDEX

'

GLASS CLEANER
68~

HARDWARE DEPT.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

12 OZ. PLANTERS DRY

32

ROASTED
PEANUTS

aac

COSMETIC DEPT.

2.5

oz.

SOLID DEODORANT

'119

.REGULAR • HERBAL
UNSCENTED
COSMETIC DEPT.

79~
HOUSEWARE DEPT.
CLAIROL .

NATURALLY
BLONDE
SHAMPOO • IN TONER

'119
COSMETIC DEPT.

recipients.

Corrie ·ten Boom
movie to be shown .

tipped ~a rnati 0 ns, and baby's
. breath tied with blue ribbons.
Beverly Sa nford ol At water , maid of honor. ca rried

a bouquet of blue daisies ,
white carnations, bab y' s
breath and whi(e ribbon to
complement her ensemble.
Boyd Bilderback of Glen
Burnie, Md ., was best man
and Kerry March seated
guests. Photogra pher was
Bernard H. Worby, Lexingtou
Park , Md·.
Among guests at the
ceremon y and the reception
which followed immediately
at the Four Winds N.C.O .
Club, Fort Meade, were Mr.
and Mrs . Raymond Casey of
Thurman, Ohio , and Mrs.
Linda Lane, of Gallipol is.
The bride, a graduate of
Waterloo High School, . has
served with ihe U. S. Air
Force fou r yea rs. Her
husband , an a lurhnu S of

Gallia Academy High School ,
is a technical sergeant with
the Air Force.
Followin g a wedding trip to
Virginia , New Jersey, and
Maryland, the newlyweds arc
residing at 7858 Apt. G,
Bruton Drive, Glen Bumie,
Md., while awaiting their
transfer to. Italy.

POMEROY - Nwnerous
relatives and fri ends joined
Mr. &gt;inil Mrs. Arnold Rupert
Kni ght of Lincoln Hill,
Pomeroy , in the celebration
of their golden wedding aunivet·sa t·y , May 29:
Hosted by their children,
lhe obserVance was held at
the Parish House of Grace
Episcopal Church . Mrs .
Knight wore a yellow orc hid
corsage. the gift of her
da ughter and sou-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Dtllard, and
Mr. Knight had a yell ow mwn
boutonniere.
Both the Knight home and
the Pa rish House were
decorated with floral arrangemen ls ,

the

gifts

of

Jr., John, 'and Mike, Gle1.
Da le, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Brooks Rossel ,'Kris, Ken and
Che ryl , Mrs. 0. H. Gall, Mrs.
J . w. Myers and Linda, all of
Mow1dsville, W.Va .; Mr. and
Mrs. .Joe E. Leaseburg,
Scherr, W. Va .; Mrs. Erie
Weiss, ·' Pokey" ami J oey ,
Morgantown, W. Va .; Doyle
Phillips, Bradenton, .F la.;
· Mrs. Gladys Thacker and
Mrs. Jack Phillips, Belington, W. Va .; Herbert
Knight, John, Jason, and
Dennis. Mr. and Mrs, Lee
Knight and Jackie, Akron;
Mr. and Mt·s. Birdsell Knight.
Cuyahoga, Falls. .
Dr. und Mrs . \'Iewton
Baug hman, Morgantown, W.

'.

.' .,.

r'•

I

' '

.

"'

an niversary

of

Couple celebrates
60th anniversary

4

Queen

but -most have left the public differently. She ha s already
Elizabeth's reign.
utterances to the President. taken on mental health and
The First Lady's role has
Mrs. ·Franklin Roosevelt the problems of the aging,
all the official overtones and went into_mines , prisons a nd and before Car ter 's six
trappings of an officia l in to
war
zo nes
·to months in office are· up, the
mission, without being that . demonstrate the caring and First Lady will have
She holds no government interest of the White House in established herself as his
position. but Mrs. Carter the fate of the people. In that world emissary.
believes she is uniquely respect, she has been a model
Since she played such an
qualified
to
explain for many of the first ladies. effective part in campaigning
First Ladies Pat Nixon and for her husband to win the
" Jimmy's commitment to
human rights" and policies Betty Ford achieved personal presidency, Mrs. Carter does
because " I am the person identities by virtue of their not like to take a backseat
who is closest to the activities against a White now that he is in the Oval
House backdrop . · Th ey Office.
President .' '
.
Whether that is the criteria managed to combine their
~n she found that she
for representing the United special pro,iects with some was not getting enough time
States interests is another senSe of making the Wh1te In talk In hin1 a bout the issues
question . But she apparently House more open and and problems that come to
has made no diplomatic blun- hospitable lor the American the While House, they
ders and has been effective people.
decided that a weekly lunch
in 'conveyin~ to Latin
Mt·s. Ca rter shuns the role was in order . Now Mrs.
American leaders Carter's of hostess at teas and Carter appears weekly on the
determination to improve receptions for the hundreds President's o[ficial calendar
every month who seek for a lunch date.
relations .
Other presidential wives invitations W come to the
During the campaign and
have been close to thei r · White House sociallv. and ·the afterwards, Carter said that
hu sbands and probably doors hav~ been ~..:1atively he would be sending his
discussed th e prnblcm s d osed .
family on world ctiplomatic
fa cin g the nutilln w1th tlwtn .
S tw
Se i!S
her role Jnissi()ns.
?

Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Thomas

t•elativt•s an d fr iend s . Va.; Mr. and Mrs. William R.
BIDWELL - On .March 20 Browning, Rochell e and
:"' umerous other gifts were Knight and Bill, Point Plea- at the Eno Grange Hall , Mrs. Ryan ; Mr. and Mr s. Ronnie
presented to the honored cou- san t, W. Va.; John Knight, "Andrew (Dorothy) Toler and Tol er and Christopher and
pie.
Hunting\on, W. Va .; Ri chard Mrs. Eugene (Clai ribel ) Mike Gee and Mjss .J ~an i e
An imported handcut and Knight and Tricia Williams, He rt enst ein , da ught ers of Hert enstein.
ernbroidered doth was used GalliJ,?o lis ; Jean H. Brown, Marie and Maurice .Thomas ,
One so n. Ray mond , is
on the refreshment table Morgantown; Mr. and Mrs. g8ve a reception and op~n deceased.
whi ch featu t·ed a three Charles P. Skaggs, Morgan- house in honor of th e ir
Seve ra l fri end s and
layered cake, each layet: be- town : Mrs. Audra G . parents' 60th wedding an- relatives went to the famil y
ing insl'r ibt!U with the name Lc.n nbert, Belington , W. Va .; niversary. "
,
horne for the evening mea l.
of one of their children Susan Moats, J unior, W. Va. ;
The hall was decorated by
$pecia l thanks wa s ex:
Cha rlotte (Mrs. Ro ger Mr. • nd Mt·s. John Houck, Janet Browning, Patty Toler tended to th e Eno Grnnge for
Dill• rd ), William and Vin- Mr. •nd Mrs. Howard and Mike Gee.
the use of the hall and to those
cent. At th e base of the la rge Thivencr, M1's. Martha Neal,
Mrs. Denver Wal ker baked who
se nt
fl or al
arcake were 14 small heart- Mr . and Mrs. U. A. Cornell, a ti ered cak e which wsa ra nge ments and ~i ft s .
shaped t:akes, one for each Mr . ami Mrs. Jimmie Evcms, served with. punch, mints,
Uut -of -t own g uest s were
gr•nde hild , and • one Ga llipolis; Mrs. C. B. nuts and coffee by Mrs. Mr. and Mrs, Gary Jenson.
miniature he•rt-shaped co ke H•ym"n, DeLand, Fla. ; Mrs. Donald Browning, Mrs. Columbus; -Mr. ~ nd Mrs.
for the couple's on ly grea t- Amy K. Jones and Amy , Maurice A. Toler and Mts. Steph en
J ensen
and
grondehild.
Jackson: Mr. •nd Mrs. Ronn ie .Toler. Miss Jeanie Stephanie, Columbus; Mrs.
Serving as hostesses for the Charles Baird, Madison , Herten s te in register e d HonK . Lup, Korea: Mr. and
reception we r~ Mrs. Patrick Wise.
guests.
Mrs. Ra lph Palmer. TrotLocha r y , Mi ss Mar ie
Mrs. J. E. White, ColwnDa u'ght ers and thei r wOod; Mr. a nd Mrs. Wade
Biehm a n , Mrs. Robert bus ; Mr. and Mrs. Ronald F. families present were Mr. Palmer, Dover and Mrs.
ltoberts, Mrs . James White, PL. Pleasa nt , W.Va. ; and Mrs. Maurice A. Toler. Stell a Webb, West Jefferson. ·
O'Brien, Mrs. R•lph Graves, Mrs. Lucille Swaekh•tmner, Mr . and Mrs. Donald
Mrs. Delmar C•naday, a"d Mason, W. V• .: Mrs .
Mrs. Helen Neutzling Mrs. Theodore Reed, Sr. (Edith ),
Nancy Reed, •nd Mrs. · Athens; Mrs. Robert Mees.
Elizabeth Chase.
Colwnbus, and Mr. and Mrs. Marie Bic:tunan, Mr. iJncl Robe•·t Mees, Cha rl otte Mces
Mrs. Dallas Blevins, Mr. a nd Evans, ley Miller, . Mr, an d
Here from out of the county Mac Cottrill, Car roll.
for the anniversary celebraOthers attending the Mrs. ThomCis Bowen , Mr. and Mrs. Oli ver Mic hael. Ma rth a
tlon were Mrs. Na ncy S.
celebration were Mrs. Norma Mrs. C. E. Bl• keslce, Mr. and Neal, Mrs. Helen :-leu tzling,
Powell, Lake Worth, Fla .; Amsbary, Mrs. Ruth Arnoh). Mrs. J•m cs Buchanan, Mrs, Mrs. Roberta O'll rien: Doy le
D•·· and Mrs. Joe Myers, Joe, Miss . Judy Arn ol d, Miss Berth• Canaday , Mrs. Annie Phi lli ps. Mr. an fl Mrs.

Rosalynn, a new kind offirst lady

oz.

LIQUID PLUMR

GALLIPOLIS - The Post
Chapel at Fort George H.
Meade in Maryland was the
setting Saturday, Apri116, for
the ceremony when Sgt .
Theresa Mae Dobrilovic and
Tech. Sgt. Lewis 0. Casey
exchanged their marriage
vows in the presence of a
gathering of relatives and
• close friends . Chaplain
Francis X. Donahu e ofSUSAN TAYLOR
ficiated.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Dobrilovlc, 2309 Porter Road,
GALLIPOLIS - Susan B. College, Berea, Ky., she has Atwater, Ohio. The groom is
Taylor of Bidwell has joined been active in the Gallipolis the son of Mr: Raymond
the staff of the Medical area in church and youth Casey and the late Hazel
Shoppelocated in the Spring work. She is married to Casey of Gallipolis, Ohio.
Valley Plaza . Mrs. Taylor Harold Taylor, a 1975
Arrangements of blue and
bas been employed as an graduate of Berea College. white carnations and yellow
instructor at the Holzer He is currently employed as a mums adorned the altar for
Medical Center Schoo) of vocational agriculture in- the service during which Mrs.
structor at Gallia Academy Marie Kelley, organist,
Nursing.
played traditional nuptial
A graduate of Berea High SchooL
music,
Miss Dobrilovic, who was
escorted by her father, wore
a princess style go"'" and
train fashioned with long
sleeves and a Venice lace
insert at the neckline and lace
accents on the train. A Juliet
'· cap of pearl flowers held her
CHESIDRE - "CORRIE :
veil of illusion. She carried a
Behind the Scenes with THE
bouquet of daisies , blue
HIDING PLACE," a new fulllength color release from
World Wide Pictures, will be
shown at Cheshire Baptist
Cheshire on Sunday, June 19.
A single showing is scheduled
WASHINGTON (UP!.) to begin at 7:30 p.m.
President Carter has put his
THE HIDING PLACE, a
family on a diplomatic road
true story filmed in Holland . +J~~·i·
show, a ptoud extensiofl of
and
other
European i:
himself.
locations, is bascJ on the
~
- .
His wife Rosalynn has been
experiences of Corrie ten
talking up her husband's
' .
Boom, who, with her father,
foreign policy points in Latin
CORRIE TEN BOOM
sister, and brother, provided
America - a journey
refuge for countless Jewish
reporters on board already
families. A secret room was
.
have billed a success. His son
constructed in their home as her life in Holland, her Chip, and Chip's wife Caron.
a hiding place for use during family, and her lifetime of are making the party circuit
Gestapo raids . The ten service to others."
in London with British
Boom •s activities were
Bliss added that the film royalty ·to celebrate tbe 25th
discovered , and they were "offers a great lesson in the
sent to prisons and con• perseverance of a personal
centration camps.
faith in a very dark and sidelights on the experiences
According to '· Kenneth . trying period of world of the cast and crew during
Bliss, director of Distribution history. Corrie ten Boom, the filming of THE HIDING
for World Wide Pictures, now in her eighties, has a PLACE ."
The Reverend William L.
THE HIDING PLACE has tremendous vitality, a deep
Uber,
pastor of Cheshire
been
extremely
well- spiritual commitment, and a
Baptist,
stresses that th e
received, both by audiences profound love for her fellow
showing
of "CORRIE" is
and film critics. "CORRIE man. We believe we have
was produced to give people succeeded' in transmitting a open to the ~ubli c fr ee of
who have seen THE HIDING part of her zest, personality, c harg e. " We t:m cnurag€
PLACE or read her many and source of strength families to plan to attend
together. for what we believe
·
b k
through this film."
best-se II tng 00 s an opBliss noted that the film will be a memorable exportunity to hear her share
mliny of her memories about includes ' ' inter es\ in g perience," he concluded.

Susan Taylor joins skJ!f

FLOOR POLISH

DIAL VERY 1DRY

2413 Jack~" 6v9.

JEWELRY.DEPT.

643-3009.

Interest earns
Q0
miiJi·on
owu.74

"Can I borrow some of your campy clothes toniQhl, Dad? . ..
I'm going lo a masquerade party! ·

JEWELRY DEPT.

advanced

..

Knight 's observe
golden _anniversary

and

Couple weds in Maryland

INSTAMATIC CAMERA KiT

..... .... . .

Co lle~c .

PomeroyMiddleport I(

representative for the St.
Paul United Methodist Youth
Fellowship,
Future

KODAK
Alii

Georgetown

·
1
992 - 2156
.
I

Tech Sgt. and Mrs. Casey
.......
-"*'·-··-'-"
·'--·~ ,,..

rrom

Char/e.ne 110eifl h !

Veterans Memorial Hospital,
in the Flag Corps at EHS,

swun sessions

....,. ... brO'Idt"" - - I J N ... , . . .........
~
-...~""

Ann Johnson. 510 Mapl e
Dri ve , Ga ll ipolis, will receive
a Silas Noe l Irt('tntl ve Gran t

ll nlll'\, Bill v t\dkm:; , Lcl' Ann
1 .£'11"\ t~ n . H·:lnd y Am sha ry .

JEWELRY D:,:E:,P.:,:T·_ _...;.,_.._ _ _J_Ew_E_
.LR_Y_D_E_P_T_.,..._ _

..... . . _ .... 4 . .. 10

·m issions at (;c o r ~e t o wn
f ollege, (;£&gt;Orgctn v. n, Ky.,
ha s announced tha t Oebri.l

Dchhi£'

three swnmer

....... a-.o~-lD

GAL I.ll'iJJ.lS
non
lleBordc , direc tor of ad -

'l'url e \ , Kim Theiss. Mk hae l

Pool offering

HOT LATHER DISPENSER

::

Miss Johnson is a 1977
.Je nnif er (;ib StJIL ll it:h&lt;:Hd
graduate
of Ga ll ia Academy
Niday. Jmny Foley. Johtuly
lllgh
School
where she was a
Adkins. Debbie Ball . Mark
GREEN
K
lOS
SAY
...
of
th e Na tiona l
member
Ea d• . Missy Dallas and Mike
Society,
choi r,
Honor
Chapman did a German folk
J
unio
r
Classical
Thespians,
. da nce, " The Child ren's S&lt;~ x ophon e accompanied by Montgomer y, Missy Oli ver ,
DEBRA JOHNSON
Polka ."
Kim Watson at the piano. The Tracy McNabb, Kim Watson, League, Science Clu b, F utu re
Teachers
of
America
and
Ru st y Moor e ' s am usi ng tune was "Joy to the World ." and Tammy Meadows to the
He is the son ol Mr. and
Vol unteeens . She was also a
Theiss, Teresa Edelmann. m ono l o ~ue, ''The Dog Show"
Mandy North and Jo Ellen music, " Boog ie Fever ."
Mrs.
Charl~s Wood .
member of 4-H and Junior
Rhonda Carter . Melanie earned many laughs of ap- Oliver did a lazz dan ce to
Sta
ge
crew
for
th
e
De
Borde
also announced
Lea ders and was a member
Niday, Lisa Henry, Cindy preciation from the ~udienc: e . "Rock ' N Me."
produ cti on was Henc e of the Youth Fair Board . She that Kathi e McCoy, Ro ute 2,
Davison , Lori North, Angie
Julie Lane . dressed in a
Following this was a so ng Halley, Gwynne Nid ay , Sonja
Bidwell , will r ece ive a n
Hudson. Angie Smith and nauti ~ al outfit and blond ' 'It's a Small World" by April Phalin, Janet Burris , Shelley wa s yearbook editor and wa s Honor Sc holars hi p fr om
named to the Homecoming
Kim Steele. They performed curly wig gave a pantomime Graham with Sheri Saunders Dodson and Tom Moore.
and
Valentine Queen court s. Georgetown College.
to "This Land Is Your Land ." to the tune " On the Good Ship at the piano.
Miso McCoy is a 1977
.~ member of First Baptist
Next wsa a pantomime of Lollipop."
Closing out the program
~
ra
duate of Ga llia Academy
Ch urch, she is the daughter ol
Donald Deems played was a dcmce by six sixth
"Me and My Teddy Bear" by
EARNS DEGREES
Mr. and Mrs. Otis .Johnson. Hi gh School where she was a
Jackie Corwin followed by a exceptionally well on the grade girls, Lisa Leget. Heidi
GALLIPOLIS - Margaret
Mike Wood , 623 Second m em ber of th e Na tiona l
Orr,
daugh(er
of
Dr.
Terry
r--'~_._._.._._..._...._._,._._..~.._...__...._.._.._.._.._._...._._.._..,-..-.-..__.)
and Mrs. James M . Or r of Ave., Gallipolis, will r eceive Honor Society, Spanish Cl ub,
a James Graham Brown Tri-Hi-Y, symphonic ba nd ,
l
Ga ll ipolis, earn ed two Scholarship and a football choir, St'ie n ce ~ Ph o t o Club
Masiers Degrees at Columbia scholarship from Georgetown and 4-H . She wsa fr ont page
Universit y in New York City College.
editor of th e Ga ll ia Scri pt and
in January ol this year.
Mr. Wood is a 1977 graduate was named to the Society ol
Awarded to Miss Orr at of Gallia Academy High Distinguished America n High
graduation ceremonies on Schoo l where he was a School Students. She is the
IJ
I May 18 were a Master of Arts member of th e Nation al Ohio B.Y.F. executive board
.
tC
inEducationalAdministraion Honor Socie)y. Key Clu b, publicity chairm a n.
I "
and a Masters of Education in Varsity "G" Club, football
A memb er of Cal va ry
Educational Administration.
and track team. He was Bapti;t Church, she is the
I FollowingtheceremoniesDr. team
named AII -S .E .O.A.I.. in daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Orr attended an football.
William E. McCoy.
outdoor reception with their
daughter at Teachers College
of Columbia University which
honored
th e
degree

I Gal/illo/is-Point

judi Perry to compete

POLAROID

3 ONLY

5715-19

News

l\f

l\tiH~

Thont~t s ,

:::

(

libbing as he introduced the
acts.
Beginning the show was a
song and drill team of third
graders. Tammy Wood,
Danny Beebe, Mark Danner,
Steve
Wil coxen,
Scot
Roberts, Greg Duncan. Kerry

12 &amp; 13

DAY &amp; MONDAY

,,,,

;u ul
Susan l.mtf~' r . A gr.uuptlf hr!'t
~ r adt• r;o;. ll('b blr &lt;; rrcrl. F:rw
Bl ac.·k bu rn . T a r11m~· ( ' hi.t p ·

4

BY NEIL FRIEDER
no record of having received vacation in July.
In a special session Friday evening, the Mason County this money although it was
He noted that the grievance
Board ol Education conducted two separate grievance noted that a special audit of could eventually become a
hearings - the first dealing with the issue ol back pay lor the personnel payroll, ordered class action suit because it
secretar ies and the other regarding work performed beyond by the board at a previous applies to all 12-month
the 240-&lt;iay contract fo r 12-month professional employes.
meeti ng, could determine profesional employes, which
No definitive answer or solution was given by the board whether this money was would include principals,
into either case. Instead, it exercised its perrogative to received or not.
supervisors and athletic
deliver an answer· with in 20 days following the hearing.
In responding directly to coaches.
The hackpay issue wa s crease in utility costs, there Cook's remarks on an in· AI the previous board .
prompted
when
thre e are not sufficient textbooks, crease in utilities, Legg sald meeting, the board set 240
secretar ies, Mrs . Maxine some of the school buildings these secretarys' utitilities days as the maximum amount
of
days
a
12-month
Nibert, Mrs, Lois Nibert and have leaky roofs and the have also increased.
professional
employe
would
Mrs. Jul ia Pyles, filed for the county cannot provide sufIn pushing his argument
,be
paid
for.
It
also
en
fed
the
grievance apparently on fi cient numbers of bus that the secretaries should get
school
calendar
lor
12
month
behalf of a larger group ol shelters so students would not paid for their cur rent
secretaries. Along with the have to wait for school buses classification back to 1975-76, employes on June 10, which
three secretaries at the in the rain .
Legg noted that if they did the would rule out a two week paid
hearing was Kenneth Legg,
In providing additional same work in 1975-76, that vacation · in July for these
executive secretary of the support to Cook's statements, they are doing now. then they employes.
Ware stated that for the last
West Virginia School Service Board Member Robert Adkins should be paid for the same
10
years he has taken a paid
Personnel.
read a list of 16 areas which amount.
Apparently, the controversy could be affected by cutbacks
In response to this, Board two week vacation in July.
"I've hjld It every year since
stems from the recent if the board agreed to comply Member Bill Brady added that
enactment of Senate Bill 121 with the secretary grievance. some of the secretaries could I've been here," he stated.
setting up job classiFications Among the items were : a not even type. But in rebuttal, "All 12-month professional
for auxiliary and service cutback
in
class room Legg said !bat the board hired personnel are involve d here,"
•
personnel, which apparently materia ls for students , a the non-typing secretaries. he continued.
Prior to the hearings, the
began with the 1975-76 school further cutback in music, art Brady countered by saying:
year. School personnel were and athletics, a curtailment of "Since I have been here the board held a brief reconvened
placed into job classifications services for the handicapped, board has never hired anyone session from the previous
for that year in compliance cutbacks in custodial supplies, without the superintendent's board meeting. At this session
it agreed to name pro:recuting
with the bill and in the keeping Early Childhood recommendation.''
attorney
W. Dan Roll to serve
follpwing year apparently c.lasses at two days a week
However, Legg reminded
some
secretaries
were instead of increasing them, no him that the board has the in the capacity as a&lt;)vlsor to
reclassified to higher levels. upgrading of heating systems right to hire auxiliary per- the board in the hearing of
The secretaries reportedly as well as no additional funds sonnel without the recom· school bus driver Sherry Gall
feel, that in 1975-76, they were fot; projected increases in mendation of the superindent. Stephens while it agreeds to
classified wrongly and are utilities.
·
In speaking on her own hire Mike Shaw to represent
seeking back payment of the
He further noted that behalf Lois Nibert, a Superintendent Cook in the
difference in job classification salaries for secretaries in secretary at Ordnance case against Stephens. The
for the 1975-76 school term , commercial businesses in the Elementary, said the schools hearing is scheduled lor June
and
th eir
present county were paiq between could save money by cutting· '1:1.
Present were Superinclassification as Secretary II $2.73 and $3.64 per hour with back on some of its waste.
tendent
Lowell
Cook,
or Secretary Ill.
top executive secretaries She noted that she · and
Assistant
Superintendent
According to Finance making appproximately $5.07 another person retrieved two
Director Reba Woodnim, it per hour. He also added that year-&lt;&gt;ld textbooks from trash William Capehart, . Board
would cost the county ap- most secretaries work an cans recently. She also ·'said Members Harry Siders, Paul
proximately $33,000 to comply eight hour day. In comparing that teachers were ordering Watkins, Bill Brady, Donna
with the secretary grievance. these secretaries to school too much materials and not Thompson and Robert Adkins. ·
At the outset of the hearing secretaries, he said they work making use of them.
Legg told the board members a seven-hour day and the top
When asked if he was aware
that he was going to check the secretaries, if a new pay raise of two year-old textbooks
various county levy estimates is grant~d by the state, would being thrown out, Cook said he
which he stressed would show earn $5.35 per hour.
was not.
an increase in tax revenue.
In response to both Cook and
Following this hearing the
In response to this, Adkins, Legg noted that school board held a shorter one inSuperintendent Lowell Cook secretaries do as much lor volving Dick Ware, director of
5aid there may be a seven per their individual school , as a health education.
· •
•
cent increase in tax revenues secretary does In the County
Ware's grievance dealt with .
but at the same time there bas Board Office.
back pay for approximately 21
been a 20 per cent Inflationary · Legg also said that the days per year going back to
SYRACUSE
The
increase which is affecting the board office should have 1967, as well as a two week Syracuse Municipal Pool will
offer sWimming lessons ·in
cost of operating schools.
received approximately
three sessions this summer.
In a passionate response to $33 ,000 from the state
The first session, already
Legg, Cook noted that there department last year io
will begin on Monday,
filled,
are ~.000 students attending supplement auxiiiary per- .
June
13.
To follow will be two
·schools in Mason County who sonnel. However, m response
two
weeks
sessions in July
are not warm due to the in· to this, Woodrwn said there Is
and August.
The Red ·Cross certified
lessons are $10 and consist of
by Gill Fox
SIDE GLANCES
10 one-half hour classes.
Classes are divided into five
. swimming levels,' beginning

!i!r·:·:-:c~'/1; ,;;,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,:::

'

C hapm a n

and

l\nna

Margaret, Mr . • nd Mrs. Fred
Crow , Mrs. R. rt. Cutler ; Mr.
•nd Mrs. Hoger Dillard , J ohn
Mattr1ew, Rog~ r F'. , David
Mark, Ma ry Andrei.! , Ma rcia .
Melanie a nd D~phne ; Mr'.
t~nd Mrs. Dale Dutton, Mrs.

Thelma Dill, Mrs. Dorothy
Downi e, Mrs . l(ac ll ae l
Downie, lllc Rev . Harold
Deeth . Mr. and Mrs. Paul
E ich, Mrs. Mi:! n a Foster, Mr.
and Mrs. Bemard Fultz.
Mr . and Mrs. Hdscoc
Fowler, M•·s. ~leil a Gruese r.
Mr. • nd Mrs. Bill Gruescr,
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Gibbs ,
Mr. l:l nd Mrs. Ha! ph C"; r&lt;:tvesl

Mi. and Mrs Wa lter
Gru cser , Mrs. Th elm a
Gruesc r. Mrs. FrctiC:I l-lar

Hidw rd f&gt;o ulins, Jot,.&gt;y an d

I .1s&lt;1 ; Nant y Heed, Fntnklln
ami Wmu.ltl Hize r. Mrs. All ee
Hob cso n.
M r s.
Nu n g ~1

Hoberts. Mrs. J . 0 . Hoede l,
Mrs. Wilma Sargent, Mr. and
Mrs. Trl'll Sdwenleb. Mr.
and M.....,.. l.cu Stun ·. Mrs.
Ka thleen Scott , !VIiss Lucil le
Sln itll , Mr. and Mrs, Clay
Tuttl e, Mrs.

Mr:, . Mila
Hea l h ~ r .

Ann \Va tson;

W ol ~l s .

Ky.lt' and

Mr. and ,\1r!;. Mcum-

Webst!' r. Mrs. J . !':.
Wlutc, Mr. and Mrs Bud

mg

W1bun. Hunald and Eleanor
Whitt', E lean or Smith ,
C'i.l i'Ol vn Sn\ith , Mild rt!d !-lite,
c111d A.udrl'y Bd l. rmd Mr. and

Mrs. &lt;ierald Powell.

4

linger , Mrs.M ari l:l n Haym an,

George Harris! Mrs, Helen
Hayes, Mr·. a nd M1·s. Bob
lloenicli • nd Jayne, Mr . and
Mt'S, Edison Hol&gt;stctter . Mrs.
Ji:mct Kom , Mr. and ~r::; .
Vincent Knight, Vint:c. Jr.
and Chris, Mr . &lt;:ni t! Mrs.
Actrotl Kelton; Mr. and Mrs.
P a l ri' r.: k Lm:hary . Mrs.

l.ue1lle l.cifhe1t. Mrs. Bradrurd Maag.

Mrs. Dorothy MIHTIS . Mrs.
. '•

ROSF: CLUB MEETS
TU PPEHS PLAI NS - The
annual picnic for members of

the Rose Ga rden Cl ub and
thei rfa mili es will be held al6
p.m. Thursday at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Stout.
l

�t;.;J-lJtebllllOay lunes-!.enttnet, ~unda; , June It,

na m.. w1t1l 2.13 p m By that
settmg OlympiC decathlon time he was already the
gold medalist Bruce Jenner, NBA 's newest mtlhonatre
R1ght afwr Killlsas City
27 and G-foot-1, who averaged
10 pmnts per game when he used 1ts No 2 pick to fill the
played for Graceland College \'acancy left by the departure
as a so phmore seven years of Bnan Taylor by selecting
best of the b1g mt&gt;n ova1lablf? ago and says he hasn't played Btrdsong, the highest scormg
b;. taking l nt.hanu's Kent
stnce.
semor m the nauon last year
Benson and UCLA's Marques
The Bucks s1gned Benson to with a 30 3 average, the
Johnson Kansas City came a s1x-year contract estimated Bucks chose the !Hi Johnson ,
away w1 th H oustl1 n's 6-4
at more than $1.5 mtlllon half UPI's Player of the Yea r
guard Olls Btrdson~ The an hour before I he scheduled Milwaukee got the thtrd p1ck
Boston Celt1 cs qwcdy scored 1 p m EDT start of the draft. by trading center Swen Nater
an other coup and the Ne\\ But several clubs had trouble to Buffalo earlier m the week
Orleans Jazz drafted a lady , hookmg mto the conference
Mtlwaukee kept rtght on
Della State's 6-3 Lucy Hams. phone at NBA headquarters parlaying 1ts good fortune by
Just for good mea sure 1 t he
so th e Ktngs could nol taking G-5 Erme Grunfeld of
Kings used thetr seventh actually announce Benson's Tennessee with 1ts No. 11 pick
and th en choos ing guard
Glenn Williams of St. John's
with the fifth p1ck of the
...
'•'•'
second round .
" ! th~nk we just got the best
· draft m the history of the
·:_:.·_: _ NBA, " exclaimed Bucks
President James Fitzgerald.
Los Angeles, the only other
By Greg Batley
team w1th three f1rst-round
POMEROY - l hope by now that you sportsmen of the pi cks, went for help at the
area are be gmning to believe that the anti-trapping people are
at work in Me1gs County and the surrounding area Most of you corners and the backcourt by
taking North Carolina State
probably saw the large ad m this newspaper, askmg for
forward
Kenny
Carr,
support m the anll-trappmg movement. I assure you that my
Maryland guard Brad Davis
opiruon or those pa id ads are not the official views of thiS newspaper. Tha t ad was pa1d for by the anti-trapping people, and and Duquesne guard Norm
Ntxon
this newspaper IS a business that relies on paid ads Now,
sportsmen, how about us paying for some ads?
I'd hke UJ pomt out that any of you who don't knQW yet , that
in November there will be an tssue on the ballot to ban the leghold trap U that Issue passes, then other outdoor sports wtll
follow The success of these anti-trapping people will hmge 011 By Untted P ress lnternattona t
the ertwtwnal appea l of th err campatgn, and for those of you
Bas eball
Boston s .gned as draft
not already aware, let me point out some of the fallacies of cl'l OICes
s h or t s I o p Erwm
their appeals so you won't feel taken in if you side with them Bryant , ou tf ielder R I c h a r d
First, m reference to the ad , It was slated that birds, Par r. ca tche r Charles Thomp.
son. second baseman Frank
squrrrels and other arumals are bemg put through needless Gil
l , ca tche r R1chard cotebert ,
pam, These anti people forgot to mention tlu&gt;t It IS already rrght handed ptl cher Mark
Saund ers, rtgh t handed ptl cher
illegal to trap squrrrels, birds, and other animals. If they try to Rosa1re
Vtn$ and ol.l flt el der
tnck you m this matter, do you really beheve they will be Russell La rrt be e. sen t Bryan1.
Thompson Colebert and Saun
honest in other things they say'
ders to E lm tra , Parr and Vms
We sportsmen , through license fees and other to Wrn ston Salem nnd Gill to
contrtbutions, channel our monies to actually help the wildlife, Wmt er Haven
Cincinnal1 - S1gned as fr ee
rather than spendmg the green stuff to back campaigns that agcnls
oulftelder ~Obert Potts
f1ll polillctans' pockets. tf you don't believe that the anti- and pttchers La rr y Jackson
Lombardo and Ket ley
trappmg people are getting nch or that therr money doesn 't Rtchard
Becker
help the animals, JUSt ask to see the ftnancial reports of these
Cleveland Stgned draft
choice st:lOrtstop Jerry Dy bttn
doilooders
Skt and asstgned htm t o
Due to the montes received from us sportsmen, there are Batavta, N Y
OetK!a nd F.red Manag er
now more deer, tu rke~, and other animals than there were
McKeon and named San
when Dame! Boone 1Jamed these parts If you don 't believe Jack
Fran ctsco Gtants · Coach Bobby
that statement , call m• and I'll show you the facts and figures. Wtnkles as 1'1t s r eplacemen t
Pttfsburgh - ACCIUtred tre e
Some of you locals ,even signed petitwns by trickery. You agent
f trsl baseman outftelder
were approached and told , "Sign this to help wildlife." They Bobby Tolan , sent Ken Macha
didn't even tell you. that 1t was a petition to ban trapping.
People as devious as that - can they really be trusted? Stay
' -ake, because there. is a real danger
Lots of you aren't lakmg this threat seriously because
Maror Leagu e Results
e1gs Count)· . • t ~··a! Remember, this 1ssue will he voted
By Untied Press lnternat1ona1
• ,.J. throng' • ' ! e state, so every vote counts. How do you
Nattonal leolgue
000 000 010- 1 4 1
w.d\k th• ,.. ··¥1~ "' Cleveland will vote when these people trick San Fran
Cllicgo
100 010 Olo- J 10 1
therr.ond telllh&lt;H. •ovotetohelpw!ldlife?
Knepper, Willi ams (7) and
There 1s a grou;&gt; of concerned people organizmg to combat Sadek, R Reuschel and M1tler
W-'Reus chel , a 2 Lth1s movement, and we're called the Meigs County Conunittee wald
Knepp er , Q, 1
for Wtldlife Conserv•tion . We 'll do all we can to actually help
110 110 300- 7 110
wildltfe. We 'll have a fair booth, and we'll need money to f1ght Phd a
Atlanta
201 200 000- S 7 1
the anti people.
Lerch . Reed (5 ), Brusstar
Now let's turn to the good news As I once said, the muskie f7 J. Garber ( 9) and Boone ,
is makmg a comeback In the Buckeye State, and Henry
Thomas of Chester has proven tl. A couple of weeks ago, Henry
was fishmg m Shade R1ver (in years past) a muskie hotspot
but unproductive m recent years ) and landed a f1ve and onehalf pound, 29 mch muskie . Game protector Andy Lyles
checked 1t and verified that it was a true Ohio River Drainage
muskie. Last year, Henry caught another one of comparable
size These two catches document the Division 's :eports that
true reproduction Is still happenmg with the musk1e, and our
waters are getting better.
VINTON - Vinton's L1ttle
Donnie Longenette, a surteen year old Eastern High
student, was a happy lad on May 21. Donnie was fishmg in League team got off to a slow
Forked Run Lake and landed an eight pound, two ounce, 24 start this season. Vinton's
mch largemouth bass. Donme was using a live minnow for first loss came at the hands of
Hannan Trace , 18 to 2.
bait Some of you anglers thought Forked Run was dead Winning pitcher was K.
wrong agam.
Leon Sauters of Hemlock Grove netted a three and one- Petrte. Loser was Harold
half pound walleye on Memorial Day weekend at the Rac111e Marcum. Vinton had only two
Dam. Yes, this was a true walleye, not a sauger, as it was hits, one a two run homer by
checked by Andy.
Mtke Wolford, the other a
Andy remmds you "frog" people that June 15 signals the smgle by 'I' ana George .
hegmning of frog seBilOn. It might he Regatta week, but frog
Game two, at B1dwell,
leg lovers will he out on the waters trying to get some tasty Vinton looked good until the
frog legs Don't forget that no matter where you go (pond, fourth Inning when Bidwell
stream, or rtver ) you must have a valid Ohio fishing license as plated home 14 runs to beat
frogs are cons1dered migratory. The limit IS ten frogs per Vinton 26 to 6. Winning pitperson per rught, and the possession limit IS also ten. You may cher was P. Hollinghead.
take fro gs by hand, gJg, or longbow.
Losmg pitcher was Tana
Speakmg of frogs and Regatta weekend, the Ohio DiviSion George. Tan a led V mton in
of W1ldllfe will have a booth at the Regatta in front of or in hitting w1th two hits, in·
Elberfeld's Department Store. Nice of the store to provide this cludmg a home run. Wayne
space - thanks, folks . Also on Regatta weekend, the Division Smalher and Arnet Nottingwtll once agam conduct tis very popular casting clinic, with ham each had one hit.
prizes and other awards being presented to the youngsters in
In Game three , Vinton
attendance . Ted Dean and Andy will be on hand to conduct the played Rio Grande. Rio won 9
clime to be held at the tenms court on Saturday, June 18, at 10 to 5. Winning pitcher was
am.
Young m three 1nnlngs of
One last note. Lots of you folks are trying to help Mother relief. Losing hurler was
Nature by caring for baby animals that you mistakenly think Mtke Mave.
have been abandoned by their mothers. Andy and I know you
Vmton was led by Arne!
mean well, but m most cases, especially wtth deer, the mother Nottingham's two hits. Other
will be nearby but won't show herself. The mother usually hitters were Wayne Smather,
won 't reclrum her baby once a human has taken it. Time and Mike Wolford, Tana George
again Andy has found that well-intentioned people only and Ross Swisher. Bobby
complicated things by takmg the baby home. The animals Atkins picked up his e1ghth
were meant to be wild, so please make sure of the facts before walk this season as he walked
you help,
4 times.
Good fishing , and safe-boating.

Washington ,

round p1ck to tak e r ecord-

Den Talk

p1ck1 ng

fourth . went wtlh powerful6-7

forward Greg Rallard uf
Oregon, then added lanky but
agile G-9 forward Bo Ellis of
Marquette w1th another ftrst
round selection
The Celt1cs grabbed Cedr1c
" Cornbread" Maxwell. a
sharp-shooting forward from
North Carolina -Charlotte,
w1th 1tsNo . 12 pick . MaxwPil,
~. averaged 22.3 pmnts per
game last season. was the
fourth best field goal
percentage shooter m the
NCAA and pulled down 12.1
rebounds per game.
Buffalo , ptckmg 13th,
wanted Maxwell, too, but
when the Braves couldn't get
him they went ahead with a
deal made w1th Chtcago JUSt
before the start of the 1ra ft.
Chicago gave the Braves
$1:i0,000 and its second-round
pick and used the No 13 slotit
or1gmally owned to pick Duke
guard Tate Armstrong.
All hve Ali-Amertca
players - Benson, B~rdsong,
Johnson , King and Rickey
Green - were drafted on the
first round. Green, the speedy
guard from M1chigan, was
chosen 16th by Golden Slate .

CINCINNATI ( UP!) Tooy Perez, makmg his first
appearance at Riverfront
Sl.adium since heing swapped
during the winter, received
the rught 's only standing
ovation.
But it was the Cincinnati
Reds who got the base hits as
they pounded out 16 hits
enroute to a 13-1 victory over
the Montreal Ezpos Friday
night to go above the .500
mark for the first time since
April 9.
Among the Reds h1ts were
homers by George Foster,
Cesar Gerorumo, am Danny

Driessen ,

Vinton LL
team drops
three tilts

..
.,""'
~

e
c

=

..,3
..,.

.••

E

Tourney entries
12TII ANNUAL RIVER
RECREATION FESTIVAL PARADE
Gallipolis, Oblo
Officla I Entry Blank
1977 theme "Another 200 Years."
July 4, 1977_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 12:30 p m'
Orgamzatwn - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - (Or individual entermg)
Type of

...

i'i rr

entrY--~---------'

'1 f mrin'JdU{ll - - -- - - - - - - - - - -

Add res ~ -------------Phone· - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.
Mail entry to Galhpohs Area Chamber uf Commerce
ltfftcc, 16 Stdte•St • Gallipolis. Oh1o 45631 l!\11 entne&gt; must
be tn prior tu Wednesday, June 29

being accepted

Leon . Campbell (SJ, Camp {9 )
and Corr ell W- RE&gt;ed, 52 l Campbell , 0 2 HRs- Ph1 ladel
pt1ta , Schmtdt 2 ( 11) , Luz msk t
(11), Atlanta Mon ta nez (6 l
Mntrat
000 000 100t 50
Ci nct
023 J~O 12x- 13 16 0
Bahnsen . Warthen 13l. Al ca la
(5l. WaiXer (7l and Carter ,
Norma n ,
Borbon
(7 )
and
Bench W- Norman (6 2) L Bahn sen ( 11) HR s- Montreal,
Dawson (4) , Ctncmnatt , Foste r
( 13) , Geron1mo (5 ), Or tesser.

1&gt;1
N Y
000 010 000- I 2 2
Houston
001 200 lOx - 4 6 1
Matla ck, Saldwtn (7) and
Stearns , Andujar and Fer
guson W- Andu1ar (7-3) LMatlack (3 7)
Ill

IRntng~]

S0
021 110 200 oo- 7 12 2
P11l
302 001 100 03- 10 13 0
Grtff tn Sptlln er (6), S1eber t
(6). Fingers (7) and Tenace ,
Jones, Tekulve {5), Forst er (7),
Gossage ( 8) and Dyer wGossage , 52 L- F•noers. 4 2
HR s- San Diego, Ten ace 2 Ill.
Ptltsburgh, Stargell (1 0)

OAKLAND (UP! )
Oakland A's owner Charles
0 . Finley decided 11 was time
for a managerial change 'again - and he wasted little
time in making the move.
In quick order Friday, he
fired Jack McKeon and introduced San Francisco Giants
.Gooch Bobby Winkles - who
;had a highly successful
,coaching career at Ariwna
•State University and a not-so :successful managerial tenure
'with the California Angels as field boss of the young A's
through the 1978 season.
Winkles becomes the 13th
person hired by Finley to
manage - including Hank
Bauer and Alvin Dark, who
-each
served
the
unpredictable owner twice since he bought the team in
1960.
After a hurried meeting

Its strength is in the results
it commands. Somewhere,
sell, buy, rent, lease or offer,

Thitltledown

either locally or the other

results

side of the world! As fast as
a phone call, results happen.
Our classified pages, with
the help of our professional
telephone ad representstives, get results for those
who advertise as well as
those who are looking.

• YankP.P.!';.

N Y

00(1 210 OOx -

49l

Zahn. Schueler (5). Burgme1
CHESHIRE - Entries are
(8 ) and Wynegar . Gu1dry ,
now bemg accepted for the er
Lyle {9) and Hea ly W- Gu1dry .
Kyger Creek slow pttch soft- 4-2 l - Zahn , 6 4
hall tournament to be held at
Texas at Boston postponed
the Kyger F1eld June 17-18 'becatJse ot ram
and 19
All entnes must be
BILLS SIGN THREF.
received by 6 p.m. Monday,
ORCHARD PARK, N. Y.
June 13.
!UP!) - The Buffalo Btlls
Send entrtes to llill Hub- Saturday announced the
bard or Tom Morgan, Box 81, stgmng of three free agents.
Gallipolis, Oh1o or call 367·
The Rill• •aid they Sl~ned
73!!
hnebacker Ralph Fisher of
Cost IS $50 and two balls for the Umversity of Maryland,
sanctioned teams or S60 for k1cker Frank Stavroff ol
non-sanctmned teams
Indiana Umverstty and
Jyckets. sh1rts and trophies quarterback Ken .Johnson nl
will be awarded"
the University "' ('nlhrmlo.

the
Pomeroy
downed the hnd

New Haven Cubs 8-0 behmd
' the one-hit pitching of Roger

Kovalch ik
The w[nning
"'hurler fanned · slxteen of the
:.eJghteen outs and walked

; only two Cubs R. R. Wam sley socked a home run and
LsJngfe to lead the Yankees
~and Scott Harrtson had two
· singles. Shawn Gilmore hit a
J riple and Brett Carl a single
•to round out the hitting .

. Darren Gilland took the
-loss as he tossed a fme game ,
""allowmg just s1 x h1ts whtle
.fanning nine and not allowing
a single free pass Gilland
' also ruined Kovalch ik's b1d
for a no-hitter as he collected

,the only Cub hit, a single
y
430 100-11 6
•c
000 000--() 1
:. Kovalch ik and
Gilland and Greer

1
4
Richards

•

Tronto
000 202 000- 4 7 1
Seattle
001 000 02D-- 3 6 1
Lemanczyk , Wlll1s 19 1 and
As!"- by , Montague, House (6)
anJ Stinson W- Lemanczyk, 4
S L - Montague , 5·4 HRs ~
Toron to , Fa irly {5) , Howell (2) ,
Seattle, RuJones (121

M.nn

,,
•

contest ,

Cleve
000 000 ooo- 0 2 0
Caltf
010 000 00)1; - 1 4 1
Garland and Fosse , Tanana
and Humphrey W- Tanana, 10
2
L - Garland ,
'2 6
HR Cahfornla, Bonds ( 13)

--.
100 000 ooo- 1 7 l

sa1d Reds manager Sparky
Anderson .
Borhon yielded a seventhuuu ng homer to rookie Andre
Dawson for the Expos only
run . The save was the third of
the season for the Dom1mcan
nghthander
The Reds chased Expo
starter stan Bahnsen in the
third 1nnmg after getting to
him for five runs and eight
hits, including doubles by
Johnny
Bench, Davey
Concepcion and Joe Morgan.
Foster's homer, his 13th of
the season, came with a
runner on during a three-run
fourth inning Pete Rose's
500th
career
double,
sandwiched between singles
by ConcepciO n and Ken
Gnffey, gave the Reds two
runs in the fifth. The homers
by Geronimo and Dnessen

wtth Fmley m Chicago
Thursday night and an
equally hurried trip back to
the San Franc1sco Bay Area
Friday, Wmkles said, "We
talked about the possibility of
this happemng the past few
days . Charhe thmks the
teams has a chance to wm the
American League pennant
this year and felt tl was tlffie

pools1de session with the
media .
"This team has a lot of
young guys and I like that,"
he said. "A few veterans on
the squad gtves 1t a good
nuxture of young and old ."
Winkles must contend with
the wholesale defecllon of key

for a change."
McKeon's dismissal was
the third 1n the major leagues
\his season. John McNamara,
who once managed the A's,
was replaced by Dark at San
Diego and Joe Torre
succeeded J oe Frazier with
the New York Mets.
The sudden armouncement
early Frtday mormng came
with \he A's - a blend of
rookies and ag ing cast-offs with a 26-27 record and in fifth
place in the A£. West under
McKeon.
·
McKeon, who guided the
Kansas City RoyalS two
seasons ago to thetr ftrst
w1nning year since joining
the American League as an
expa nsion entry, was asked
to remain in the A's ·
organizattvn
as
aamintstrative aSSIStant to
Fmley, but there was no
response from the deposed
manager
" J ac k
is
senously
considering the proposa.J,'' a
team spokesman said "rtts
something Charlie and Ja ck
had talked about before and
we're hopeful he will remam
with us."
The usually talkative
Finley stayed m the
background during Wmkles'

Scioto results
..

Summer league summaries

American League
Kan C1 ly
OOJ 000 000- J 8 0
Mt iW
010 101 10le - 4 11 3
Bird , Gura (6). Pattm (7),
Littell (8 } and Wathan , Staton .
McC itJre taJ , Castro (8) and
Haney
W- Staton , 4 6 L GtJra , 3 3
HR - Mtlwaukee,
Lezc ano (11 l.

Cht CQO
000 010 ooo-- 1 52
Batt
100 130 Ol x- 6 10 0
Stone and Downing , F lana
gan and Dempsey W- F iana
gan , 1-5 L - Stone, &amp;-5

NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
'(UP!) - Reward 's Turn
carried Bennie Feliciano to a
I: 12 finish for the six furlongs
;Frtday to win the featured
eighth race at Thistledown.
' The winner paid $4.80, $3.20
and $3 .20. Gin Miss was Se
'cond and Forsyth Dnve was
third.
• The H-11 ninth race trifecta
'or Power Road, Imagummo
and Proper Partner was
:Worth $391.20. The 5-9 daily
!louble of Storm Coach and
£old and Free returned $16.

•• In another Little League

( 12 Innings]
LA
000 002 220 IQO- 7 9 1
St L
210 300 ooo 101- a 15 2
Rau , Sosa (l:d . Hough (7),
Wall (111 and Yeager . Fa lcone,
Met ..ger 17) , Hrabosky (91.
Carroll (11 ) and Simmons WCarroll, 4 1 L- Wall , 1 2 HR slos
Angeles ,
Yeager
(6) ,
Monday (?), St LOUtS, Stm
mons (7)

Del
020 022 OOQ- 6 12 0
Oaklnd
200 001 010- -4 10 1
Arroyo, Foucault (7 ) and
May ; Langford , Torrealba {5) ,
Coleman (6 ) an'd E Wit1 Htms
W- Arroyo , 4 3 L- Langford, 4·
.s HR:s ~ Oak land , Gross 2 (l.&amp;l

Perez before the game
Driessen fled to the outf1eld
during batting practice to
avoid
que stions
from
reporters.
"!knew I would get a lot of
them, " said Dnessen, "and
sometimes questions ca n
make you try too hard."
Fred Nor man and Pedro
Borbon combmed on a five·
hitter to give the Reds their
victory in opener of the fourgame 8eries
Norman 's VIctory was his
fi fth straight and stxth
against two losses. He
departed after SIX mnings
during which he blanked the
Expos with four hits.
" Norman's s ide stiffened a
little and smce we had the
ten-run lead I didn 't want to
take any chances on him
injuring himself seriouslv,"

• In Little League action
· recently, Tuppers Plains No.
~ 2 downed visiting Chester No
· 1 11 - 1 as Bnan Well got the

win by tossing a one-h1tter
•while fanning ten of the
: twelve outs Well and Greg

SUNDAY-TIMES

&lt;o111ns socked tr iples for the
::Winners, and Tl m Probert got
r:e double Getting smgles
~were

V . Gill tan, M . Connoll y,

..Well. T Guthrte and M.

~l ddle .

,. Ed

SENTINEL

Werry

was

charged

'With the loss and Clintoo
:Bailey got the only Chester
~it,

:c:

a double

~TP

•

001

11
721 1- 11 8
0-

:: The M iddleport Indian s
-.came from behind to down

!'the

visiting

Middleport

" Braves S .4 with winn ing
::\)Jtcher John
Cremeans
1coring the w1nning rtJn m the

~ttom

of the seventh on a

..grounder by Jimmy Farley
! Allen King got a home ru n

:Ond Ralph Snider a triple and
'"Single to lead the hittin9
~ ndy
lannerell•
and
~~.Cremeans each got a smgle.
:: The Braves gol three h its,
II Slnglesj by Earl Wine s,
~ ohn
Blake
and
Dav e
eutter .
Burdette
was
toy:harged with the loss
~· s

012 1oo o---'--4 3

I

000 211 1- 5 5

•
•• The Mason Reds tell to the

' .Visiting T•gers 11 7 as Tony

~ Gilkey picked uD h1s third win

by f ann tng nme and walkmg

five

Gilkey a lso got lwo

smgles as dtd Brian

Wrll ,

while Joh n Smot h led the
hitting woth a trt ple, double,

and si ngle Ron Denny had a
trtple, Terry Smr th a double
and Clrff Icenhower a smgle .
Spradling t ook th e los s as
he t eamed wtth Edward s to
fan nme and walk twelve.

Edwards had a doubl e and
two smg l es, Ze rkl e two
si ngles, and Bradl e y a tnple

and single to lead Jhe hittmg .
Spr adl •ng had a tflple and
Thom pson a srngle to rot.~nd
OtJt the h1tt 1ng

107 102- 11 10
015 001- 7 9

T

R
In

Pee Wee action. the
Angel s came from
beh •nd to down the host
Rt.~tland

Rutland Reds 11 9 Ja ck
Peterson got lhe win by

f annrng ten and walking
four teen Davrd La mbert ,
Mark Norman and Kent Eads
got a double each , and single
httters were Marty Hart ,
Lambert.
Peterson and
Norman .
R1ck W1 se took the loss as
he walked thtrt ee n and
fanned twelve W1se also led
the h1tt1ng w ith a tr iple and
two doubles Br ian Hawley
got a tnple and stngle wh1 fe
Shawn Grant soc ked a
double

A
R

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Miss
War Dancer took the early
lead and stayed m front the
rest of the way to wm the
featured mnth race Fr1day
mght at Scioto Downs.
The wmner, drtven by
Ral ph Lunsford, covered the
mile in 2:014-5 aod won by a
nose ove~ True M1ss Heather
M fm1shed third.
Miss War Dance r pa1d
$11.60, $5.80 and $3.40
The 7-3 seventh race perfecta was worth a track
record $1,365.90, erasing the
old mark of $1,241.00 pa1d
Aug. 21, 1975.
A crowd of 7,264 wagered
$5 20.

accounted the Reds' final
tllree runs .
The pa1d crowd of 35,148
gave Perez a standin g
ova tion when he went to the
pia te for the first time in the
second iruung.
The ex-Reds slugger fouled
to Bench who was then
soundly booed by the fans,
which drew a chuckle from
Reds players.
Perez walked in the rourth
mning and went down
swinging in the s1Irth before
lifted by Expos manager
Dick Williams.
•·r know Tony wanted to do
real well but so dtd !," said
Norman.
The Red lefty, aware that
Perez is a good olfspeed pitch
hitter, gave the former Red
nothing but hard stuff Friday
rught.

Northfield
results

Ohio Valley

Run 17 -14 Cmdo Hindy got the
wtn whtl e the hitt ing was led
by Glenda Brown wrth l wo
homer s, Tracy Bt.~rdette w'1th
a homer and tr tple , Kellle
Burdette w1th a tripl e and
H1ndy w1th a double Other
h tfters were Mary Bogg s with
thr ee smgl es, Vicky Ebersbach and Cns Ebersback
with two singles each, and
Brown and Hind y w1t h a
single each
Kim Grueser was tagged
with the loss , and Terri
Wil son led the hitt.ng tor
Forest Rt.~n w1th a trip le and
single. Grueser had thr ee
smgles, K •m Seth and Lo1s
Bailey had two smg l es, and
Annette Mills, Joy Ne1g!er,
and Pam Brauer each had a
smgle
M
440 221 4--17 15 7
FR
000 940 1--1 4 12 4

i

1
1
2
2

3

SIGNS CONTRACT
CLEVELAND (UP!)
The Cleveland Ind1ans
Friday announced the signing
of their 15th draft chmce in
th1s week 's baseball draft,
Jerry Dybzmski, a shortstop
at
Cleveland
State
University.
The Indians said Dybzinski
batted .350 in 35 games last
year with six home runs and
24 RB!s.

In girls' action . Me igs IS
now J.Q alter downrng Forest

SUNDAY ONLY
SAVE $500 OFF
Any Pair Men or Women's Hush Puppie's

.....

ro~n'I*I'
5HOES

Silver Bridge Plar.;

n

"

,." " .,. "

'.."''
"' •

""

"
"

....,'

••

Double no-hit game
features PL action
Addaville girls
win 9-4 battle
ADDAVILLE - The Addaville girls slo-pitch softball
team, playing under the
banner of " Smith's Excavating" defeated the Wells
Excavating team Thursday
ev emng on the Green
Elementary School diamond,
9-4, with Lisa Rainey the
winning pitcher. Smith's was
led at the plate by Cmdy
Swisher who socked a home
run m the fourth tnnmg.
LoSing pitcher was Lee
Lynch.

rare
performance
on
Memortal Fteld Friday night
as the Pony League Braves
edged the Giants HJ.
Both hurlers, the Braves
Boo Weaver and the Giants
Art Foglestrom, tossed no
hitters
The Braves only run came
In the first Inning when Chuck

Derifield walked , stole
second and third, then scored
on a wtld pitch.
Both Foglestrom and
Weaver hurled all seven
mnlngs in the double no-hit
contest.

RIO GRANDE REDMEN SUMMER BASKE:l"BALL

CAMP
REGISTRATION FORM
(For boyogrades 7to 1%).
NAME

eyes new mark
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Tina Bischoff, the 18-year-old
Col umbus swimmer who
crOBSed the English Channe I
m a record nine hours and J:i
minutes last August, has her
sights on a second channel
record.
This summer she is hoping
to become the first woman to
successfully swim across the
22-mile body of water and
back agam
Amencan
swimmer John Erickson
holds the record of 30 hours
for the double swim
But Bischoff sa1d she IS •
more interested m simply
completing the feat than m
breakmg Erickson •s record.
"I probably won 't swim
unttl around the end of July or
early August," B1schoff said
Friday She and her coach,
Ma1or League Leaders
By \Jn1ted Press tnternah onat
Batting
(based on 125 at bats I
Nationa l League
G ~B H Pet
Tr illo, Chi
52 182 67 368
Parker , Pitt
51 208 74 356
Scott , St L
49 136 45 331
Stmmns, Sl L
51 18.4 60 326
LUZtn$k t, Phil
.t6 178 58 .326
Randl e, NY
36 126 41 3'25
Templin , Sl L
5 1 219 71 324
Stennett, Ptlt
51192 62 323
Vlenhne, Mtl
46 189 60 317
Hrnandz , 51 L
54 186 58 312
Am erica n league
G AB H Pet
Carew , M 1nn
54 223 B4 37]
F1Sk, BOS
52 182 62 341
Bai lor , Tor
41 154 52 .338
eos tock , Mnn
52 19'9 67 337
Singleton , Bit
46 160 53 33 1
Fa1r 1y, Tor
-4 3 142 46 324
W i lt S, Tex
45 16-4 53 323
Sodrholm , Ch
46 165 53 32 1
Munson NY
51 207 66 319
B.nntstr ,Chi
5.cl220 70 318
HISle , Minn
55 211 67 318
F uentE's, Oet
52 211 67 318
Poquette , KC
41 148 4? 318
Home Run s
National League . Ce y and
Smt lll , LA 14, Burroughs. All
and Foster. Ctn 13 . WlnfteiCL
so 12
Amencan League · Zlsk, Ch'
15 . Rtce, Bos , Hisle, Mmn and
Gross. Oak 14 , Bonds, Ca l and
Nettles NY 13
Runs Batted In
National League · Cey , LA 52 ,
Winfi eld , SO 46 ; Burroughs , All
and Garvey, LA 44, Parker ,
P1fl 42
Amer1can
League .
H1s1e,
Mtnn 5'2, RtJdt, Cal 42, Z1sk .
Ch t 41. Hobson, Bos, Co wen s,
KC and Munson, NY -40
Stolen Bases
Nal1onal League
Tav eras .
P1tl 24 i Cedeno , Hou 22 .
Morgan , Ctn , Ca bell , Hou and
Lopes, LA 20
Amencan League : Remy, Cal
20 , Patek, KC 17 , Norris , Cle v
16 , Bon ds, Ca l 14, Rtver s, NY

Gene Pierce, plan to leave for
loodon June 20.
"We're going over earUer
tJ:lan we did last year so I can
get more practice in and get
used UJ the water," she
said.

The
S-7,
124-pou nd
swunmer said she is training
for the feat by stuffing herself
with food , swirruning e1ght
hours a day and working out
in three swl.!i weighted down
at both anns and legs.
To raise the $12,000 she
esttmates she'll need for the
trip to England, Bischoff will
partic1pate in a swim
marathon here June 18. Area
businesses and mterested
inillviduals w1ll be asked to
pledge amounts for the
number of hours they believe
she'll swim.
Plt~h1ng

Most \lictor1es
National League : R Reuschel .
Ch i and For sch , Sf L 8 2.
R:hoden, LA and Ca rllon 1 Ph il a.
3; Rogers, Mtl 8 .f , Burns, Cll i

8-5

American League
Tanana ,
Ca l 10 2 Ryan , Cal 8 5; Cas tro,
Mi l 7 2, Gar vin, Tor 7 3 ,
F1gueroa and Torrez , NY 1 4 ,
R May , Ba tt 1 -5 , and Palmer,
Ball 7 6
Earned .Run Avera~e
(based on 5~ innings pllthed)
National League . Candelaria ,
Pttf 1 ~5.. Rogers , Mtl 1 77 ;
HoUgh , LA 2. 18 , F tngers , SO
2 59 , Sutton, LA 2 75
American League · Tidrow,
NY I 86 Tanana , Cal I 85 ,
Ftgueroa, NY anQ Blvle~en ,
Te)l; 2 23 ; Ryan, Cal 'l.&amp;J
Strikeouts
National League : Rog ers. Mil
90 ; Nlekro, All 83, Halick i, SF
70 , Koosm an , NY 67 , Seaver ,
NY 66
Amer.can League: Ryan, Cal
143. Tanana , Cal 106 ; Palmer ,
Ball and Bl yleven, Tex 82 ,
Ec ker sley. Clev 66

CANCELLED
CHICHESTER, England
(UP! ) - Officials Saturday
cancelled th e remainder of
the $20,000 Women 's All-Gold
Grass Court Tennis Tour·
nament after a third Straight
day of rain left the courts
unplayable.
The tournament failed to
get past the quarter-f1nals
because of th~ bad weather
and the remaining prize
money will be divided.

13

L
1

June 12 - Rock Spr ings at
RaCine , New Have n a t
Syracuse, Jackson County at
Mason County
Jun e 19 Raci n e at
Sy racu se. Rock Spnngs at
Mason County , New Have n at
Jackson Coun ty
June 26 - Mason at Ra c mej
Syra::use at Ja ckson County ,
Rock Springs at New Haven .
July 3 - Ra c in ~ at Ja ckson
County , N ew Haven at Mason
Cot.~nfy, Rock Sprtngs at
Sy ra cuse
July 10 - New Haven a t
Racine .. Rock Spn ng s at
Jackson Cou nty, Syracuse at
M ason Coun ty
JtJiy 17 - Ra cine at Ro ck
Sprtngs , Syracuse at New
Haven , Ma son Coun ty at
Jack son County
July 24 Syract.~se at
Raci ne , Mason Coun t y at
Roc k
Spring s,
Ja ckson
County at New Haven
July 31 - Rae~ne at Ma son
County , Jackson County at
Syracu se, New Haven at
Ro ck SprtnRs
All
games
are
dou·
blehead ers

022 61--11 7 1
212 31-- 9 6 o

,, '

s,.

ADDRESS

Playing Schedule

NORTH~'IELD,
Oh10
(UP! )
Sensat1onal
sophom ore Baron Chuck
made it ,seven-for-eight m
1977 Friday night as he
coasted to victory m the
second round of the Ohio
Sires Stakes se ries at Northfield Park.
Baron Chuck led a parade
of f1ve Vlctors in the $31,400
event, which was d1vtded into
five heats to accommodate
the 43 three-year-old colts
entered. Joining Baron Chuck
m the wmner's ctrcle were
Rock Butler, Adobe, Maho
Deb and Royal Story.
Dominic Staffrey piloted
Baron Chuck to hts fourth
consecutive victory m 2:02,
capturing the $6,900 sixth
race heat. The gelded son of
Baron Hanover posted a 1¥•
length vtctory over Volunteer
Captain.
Northf1eld also ts the next
stop of the Ohio Sires stakes
trail for the three-yea rold colts as they return for a
match July 21. The $63,000
Cardinal Pace, the finale of
the Oh10 Stres smes for
three-year-()ld colts, also will
be run at Northfteld on Oct
12.
The big tnple combmation
of 1·2-10 was worth $347 40
A crowd of 4,536 wagered
$443,041.

,,,,

GALLIPOLIS - It was a

players to other teams via the
free agent route and the sale
or trade of several others.
The only players familiar
to Winkles are center f1elder
Billy North and pitcher Vida
Blue, both stars during the
A's' world championship
seasons which ran from 197274.
After developing such
talents at ASU as RlCk
Monday, Reggie Jackson and
Sal Banda for the major
leagues, Wmkles JOined tbe
California -Angels' coaching
staff and before replacmg Del
Rice in 1973. In turn, he was
ftred midway through the
next season.
"! felt I did the hest I
could," Winkles sa1d of his
flrst managerial job. "It was
a tittle hard to take when I
was let go. But that's tbe
past Let's look forward."
lndeoendent Baseball
Stan Mus1cat Div1sion
18 Years &amp; Older
league Stand•ngs
Team
W
Mason County
3
Ro ck Spnn gs
2
Ra ctne
'1
Syracuse
2
Ja ckson County , W Va
1
New Haven
0

Amencan Le•gue
Mator Leagu~ Standtngs
Ent
By unlred Press tnlunaflon~l
w L Per (;8
Ni~thottal League
New York
J3
east
30
SS6
w L Pel GB Boston
)0 21 545
8alllmor
Chlcaqo
34 19
PtUSbgh
28 30 &lt;83 I',
30 11 188 3 Mtlwauete
Ctevel"ct
5 1 LOUIS
2J 11 460
31 13 182 3
Oetro tt
Phtla
2J 30
B
30 14 5 56
Montrea l
31 415
13 19 .. 2 10t J Toronto
West
New York
22
407 IZ!'
W. L
Pel GB
West
w L Pel GB M1nneso1
33 23 S89
Ctucago
)7 10 649
Los Ang
30
156 2
Cinci
Tel'ias
25 110
26 ,509 B
Cailforni
San Fran
27 26 S09
21
)4 4)3 1'2 11 Oakl;md
28 481
San DlfKIO
Houston
16 28 481
23 33 411 131 ~ Kanss Cly
Ananta
21 37 362 16 1 ~ Seattle
36 400 11
Fnday •s R:esuUs
Fnday 's Resuus
Balt1more 6. ChtcaQo 1
Chtc aqo J , San Francisco 1
New York, 4, M tnnesota 1
Ph 1la 7, Atlan ta .5
Texas at eoston , ppd .. rain
C!net lJ Montreal I
Mtlwaukee 4, Kansas Ctty 3
Pttlsbgh 10 San Otego 7
Toronto 11 , Se attle 3
Sl Louis 8, Los Ang 7
HOIJSton 4 NPW Vn,.lf I
Oetro•l 6, Oakland 4
Sunday ' s Games
California 1 Cleveland 0
New York at Houston
Sund ay's Games
Ph il adelphta at Aflan1a
Te'ICa$ at Boston
Los An.getes at 51 LI)Ut$
Detro1t at Oakl"nd
San Fr anctsco at Ch icago
Toronto at Seatlle
Montreat at Cmcmnafi. 2
Cll1cago a1 Balt imore
San Otego at Pi ttsburgh, '2
Minnesota at New York
Clevel-i!nd at Caj• torni a
Kansas City at MllwatJk.ee

.,

Winkles new A's manager

someone has something to

Friday's linescores

Perez '

replacement at first base .
Driessen's homer, coming
after an eighth.iming walk to
Ray Knight, capped the Reds
scoring for the night and was
one of his three hits.
After shaking hands with

Sports transactions
to Columbus
Sea ttle Sq;med as free
agen t s shortstop Ky le Koka ,
r tght handed p tt cher Gregory
Btercevtcz and oulfte lder AI
Weston
Pro Football
Buffalo Stgned as free
agents fullback Pau l Adams ot
VtrQmt a Tech detensn1 e end
Lutller Allen of Northeasl
Oklahoma and tPt~h t end Mtke
Burnap of Vtrg tn ta Tech
Ctnc tnnal t - Signed Central
State Untver st t y wtde r ecetver
Wt llie Zacker y, a nmth -round
draft ct1 otce
Denver - Stgned Quar terba c~
Norrts Weese and cenl er Phtl
Ot sen to 1977 con trac ts
Washtngton - Stgned tackle
Terr y Herme lt ng to a senes of
one ye ar contracts
Pro Basketball
Buffalo - Sold tl.s 1977 No 1
draf t ptck to Chicago for the
Bulls ' second round pt ck plus
$1 50.000
Mt lwatJkee - Stgned No 1
draft p"k center Kent Benson
to a Stx year contract

Columbus girl

cinnati pulls to
within 8 games of LA

Milwaukee gets Benson
i'&gt;EW \'ORK t t iP I t Everything wcntarrord~ng to
plan at the :-lallonal
Ba sketball Asso&lt;·1at10n
colleg• draft Fnd3) once the
phones started workmg
Milwaukee stockpiled the

w.,

State

ISears I

zip,____

Parent Sign .-----~

Telephone No.

RETI1RN CHECK AND FORM TO : Arthur
Lanham, Box 174, Rio Grande , Oh1o 45674.
(RETURN $10.000 deposit or FULL AMOUNT )
: dates-June 26-July I.

60-8 100 off

8

on high efficiency
air conditioning

22,000 BTUII "A" •·oil mod&lt;·l
Was 5549.00
''S il cut Se utincl " CIOIItrnl autnmati call) pi cks
mo,t effil'i cul fan ' peed . Pre-c harge d compo-

nent s. Tuhing kit,
8 00

Because We Care ••• .

thcrrno ~ tat

off 1,000 CFM attic vent fans

$68.95 s1dewa11 vent fan now only
$68.95 roof-mount vent fan now only

. You get more from us than just a
place to put your money. We off~r a
truly personal financial serv1ce.
When you're in need of a loan, we try
to work out an arrangement that's
best suited to you . If you want advice
on how to save, we go over our many
high-interest savings plans and help
you select the one for you. Because
we care ... we'll take the time to get
to know you
and know your
financial needs. And as far as we're
concerned ... that's the only way to
do business.

Member of FDIC

COMMERCIAL &amp; SAVINGS
BANK
Court Street

Silver Bnage Plaza

ex tra.

$54.88
554.88

50·'80 off

1

Sf"ar~ ~~15"

ga!'O

furnnf•t•:oi
Nuw IU
luw " "
lor HO,OOO HTIJI I ~pa (· •

'229""

SlH' f'r upf111 w

furn ll! ,.

Was $279.95

o,

'249"1'

tml y
fur !10,00() BTl ' II
l'tut tll l'rf l,,w furnu t't'

Was $309 .95
15 Pet. off metal ductwork and registers
• Hurry! Sale prices end June 22
• Shippinp:, ins1ullnt iun t"'l: l r&lt;l

Satt~{acl ! Oil

('onvl n•~ n l' Shu11 !"! ~ r~

2770
'4rt uur Phone SG6VICe
" IIlii: hy Phonr 44'·

Gu!lranteed or Yrtur Mrmt•y Hnt·k

[Sears

I

SILVER BRIDGE

PLAZA

St. -\U!-1 Ullt: RUC K A.NII (0

•

•I

�\..1-t-

C-!i-The Swulay Times-&amp;ntmel. Swlday. Jwrt• 12. 1917

l UC o3Willd.) l U lll'~-.:t.CIIlliiCi, ~W IUd) , .JUiiC I t., t 4 I I

Geiberger makes golfing history
MEMPHIS, Tenn. t UP! I - excited
and
talkative said the pressure was not as twOolime Memphis winner
AI Geibergor won 't complain Geiberger said after the intense as onlookers might Lee Trevino. were at 140.
Geiberger said he is con~
e'·en if he doesn't win the round. " I hit 18 fairways and have suspected .
Memphis Golf Classic. He's 18 greens tin regulation! and
"!just kind of worked up to vinced other golfers will
already made golfing history. I putted 23 times. You can' t it gradually," he said. " By duplicat~ his feat now that he
Geiberger, a veteran of 17 get much better than that." that point, my confidence was has finally cleared the
J&gt;Sychological hw-dle of 60.
years on the tour , shot an
He played the back nine of pretty high."
" It ( 60) was a mental
almost perfect, 13-under-par the 7,193-yard Colonial
The man with the best
59 Friday for a 131 total to Country Club first and opened chance
or
preventing barrier - just like the fQurtake a six-stroke lead over with a birdie on Ule par-4 lOth Geiberger from adding an minute mile," he said. "Once
rookie Keith Fergus going hole. He picked up another 11th tournament title is that was broken, several
into Saturday's third round. birdie with a 14-foot putt on Fergus, who chipped in for an people did it. I'm sure this
, uerberger 's round was the Ule par-3 12th, and on the 15th eagle on the finishing hol e for will be the same way. Now
first under 60 ever recorded hole began an incredible a five-under-par 67 Friday everybody will shoot 59. If I
can shoot it, anybody can."
in a PGA event, bre&lt;~king by string of seven holes under and a 137 total.
Geiberger also said his
Veterans Gary Player (71)
one stroke the previous par.
record
• breaking performrecord held by six other
Geiberger, who has missed and Ray Floyd (651 went into
ance
does
not guarantee he
players. The last round of 60 the cut in six of 14 today's round seven shots
will
pick
up
the $40,000 first·
was shot by Sam Snead al the tournaments he has entered back at 138. First-round
place
check
when the
Dallas Open in 1~57 .
this year and who has not won leader Tom Storey, an onClassic
ends
Memphis
When Geiberger sank an a tournament since the again, off-again member of
Sunday.
eig ht-foo t putt on the Western Open in 1976, added the tour who shot a 65
" Anytime you have a low
finishing hole for his lith and two more birdies with short Thursday. soared to a 76
round
like that, regar&lt;Uess of
last birdie (he also had an putts on six and seven.
Friday for a 141.
what
you
do the next day it's
eagle l, the enormous gallery
He said it occurred l&lt;l him
Tom Weiskopf, winner of
a
letdown,"
he said . 11 1
that began ·followin g him after the birdie on the seventh last week's Kemper Open,
midway through the round hole that he had a chance lo Mike Hill, Woody Blackburn realize everything wer.t my
exploded in cheers.
shoot 59 if he could birdie one and Mike Morley were tied at way today . It may not
" I fell like 1 was "inning of Ule last two holes. but he 139. Six players, including tomorrow.''
the tournament , 11 a still

'Great opportunity'-Grote
CINCINNATI t UPI) Guard Steve Grote of
Michigan looks at being
drafted by the Cleveland
Cavaliers as ''a great
opportunity lor me ."
"It looks like (guard Jim)
Cleamons is not going to be
with the club next year ," he
said. " They've got three
guards right now . They
selected Ed Jordan of
Rutgers, me and Mel Jones of
West Texas State.
" Obviously they want
guards," said Grote, whose

former teanunate witl! the
Wolverines, Campy Russell,
already plays for Cleveland.
"So Ule opportunity is !here.
It's up to me to make the
most of it. 'It's a matter of me
working hard, capitalizing on
the opportunity."
There are those w'ho
contend Grote has played
NBA defense ever since he
came out of high school in
Cincinnati to terrorize
opponents as a starting fresh·
man for Michigan. He had a
propensity toward fouling out
and a typical Grote foul, it
was said, left the offended
player in stitches.
They tell a story on Grote at
Michigan about Ule time he
clobbered the only other
person in sight - an Iowa
player who thought he had a
chance to make a layup then carne back lividly
clalrning he never touched
the fallen guy and tl!e referee
· had maliciously called a foul
on him.

He played hard-nosed
defense and worked the same
way .on offense, earning a
reputa-tig~s . a coach's
player.
"People's general opinion
is Ulat Cleveland sometimes
needed a coach on the floor,"
he said. "They say they look
bad shots and made mistakes
at crucial times.
"They need a coach on the

floor, 11 Grote said. "That's
why they drafted me. I'm
ready to do it.
"It's kind of exciting," he
said. " I know they draw
about 20,000 a game and
they're
very
avid,
knowledgable basketball
fans. I'm excited.
"I'd have liked to have
gone higher - just like

everybody else," Grote said.
"But once it got to the third
round, I don 't think there's a
better team Ulat I could have
been picked by . They didn't
have a first round choice,
either."

They got Steve Grote on the
third, and those who have
seen him play think he may
turn out to be Cleveland's
best choice of all.

Will auction ball to
raise hospital money

one during the tournament's then donate it lo the Hall of
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP!) AI Geiberger, who set. a PGA Pro-Am event - to raise Fame, he said.
" ( hope that makes
record Friday with a 59 in the money lor the hospital.
"Mte,
I
made
the
promise
everybody
happy," the still
second round of the Memphis
and
talkative
Golf Classic, said Saturday to Danny, I got to thinking excited
he has resolved a dilemma tl!at Ule Golf Hall of Fame Geiberger said as he
about what to do with the ball would want the ball, too," prepared fQr Saturd ay's
Geiberger said.
round.
he used on all 18 holes.
The 17-year PGA tour
The ball was dull but un- .
After finishing the 13·
under-par round Friday on veteran said he worried marked after the record
the 7,193-yard Colonia.! Friday night over the round. Geiberger, who said
Country Club Course, dilemma then got up ea rly he usually changes balls
Geiberger promised to give Saturdav morning and called every four or five holes, said
the ball to entertainer Danny an official of Ule Ben Hogan he realized after playing 17
Golf Co., which manufac- holes that he had been using
Thomas.
the same ball all day.
Thomas, thwe host of the tured the ball.
The official called Hogan
" I figured I had a good
Memphis ·tournament and
and
the
former
golfing
great
thing
going, so there wasn't
founder of St. Jude Children's
agreed
that
the
company
will
any
reasons
to change," he
Research Hospital here,
buy
the
ball
for
$1,000
and
said.
planned to auction the ball along with one former
Agreement announced
President Gerald Ford used
Wednesday to make a hole-in·
PORTI..AND, Maine (UP!) games a year and a featw-e
- Philadelphia Flyers' whicl) for ces the Flyers lo
executive vice president Gil asswne an increasingly large
Stein and Cumberland Civic financial burden over the life
Center trustees announced of the contract. The hockey
GAU.IPOLIS BASKETBALL CAMP APPLICATION
agre,ement Friday on a five· team is still unnamed but wUI
year lease of the center as include at least 19 players.
For boys grades 4through.6). ---,July 25-July 29
home base for an American
The Flyers reserve all
Hockey
League
team.
·radio
and television rights to
.,.,.,. Name
Age--GradeNextYearAfter eight weeks of AHL games played at the
negotiations, both sides Civic Center.
,iJjij·i
fbooe - - S c h o o l - - - - agreed to a minimwn of 40

Addr~

Indians drop 1-0 tilt
By MIKE TIJU.Y
Tanana has started 14
UP! Spurts Writer
games this season and won
One measure of Frank 10. In two of the remaining
Tanana is this : The Bobby four,
his
teammates
Bonds , Joe Rudi, Bobby neglected to score. In one,
Grich, Don Baylor and Nolan they were no-hit by Dennis
Ryan California Angels are a Eckersley . Eckersley
!7-24 team without him.
obviously knew when to take
Bonds proposes a higher matters into his own hands.
measw-e : ·~ It' s not fair to
"This was a helluva better
compare someone like feeling Ulan that game," said
Frank, who is a good pitcher, Tanana. "The shutouts aren't
with someone like Juan going to last forever . I've
Marichal, who was a great been on a good streak. "
pitcher. He has another 15
That's like saying Seattle
years on tl!e mound. He'll get Slew is a fine racehorse.
better as he gets older."
Tanana owns ,live shutouts,
Tanana's two-bitter Friday his ERA is 1.84, he's three
night, coupled with Bonds' days ahead of . Denny
homer, hWig a 1-0 loss on the McClain's 31-viclory pace of
Indians
and
Wayne 1968 and, sorry, but Bonds
Garland.

Will defend title June 18.
ROME (UP! ) - Victor
Galindez of Argentina will
defend his World Boxing
Associatio .n
light
heavyweight title against
Richie Kates of Vineland,
N.J., at the Palazzo Delio
Sport June 18, promoter
Renw Spagnoli said Friday.
S P a gn o Ii
sa id
arrangements for the match
- originally scheduled for
Johannesburg, South Mrica
- weremadeinNewYorkby
his
partner,
Rodolfo

Sabbatini. Galindez is
expected to arrive here
Saturday and Kates should be
in Rome Sunday. Kates is
listed second in WBA
rankings and fifth in WBC
rankings.
The fight will be held at
4:30 p.m. EDT and will be
televised nationally over
CBS. Spagnoli said one of the
heavyweight preliminaries
will include Alfio Righetti of
Italy, Muhammad Ali 's next
scheduled opponent.

brought it up, he has won 61
games at age 23 and
Marichal, who won 238
overall. notched No. 61 at age
25.
Wayne Garland, 2-3,
allowed only four hits, but one
was Bonds' 13th homer.
In other games, Baltimore
trounced Chicago 6-1, New
York toppled Minnesot,a 4-1,
Milwaukee edged Kansas
City 4-3, Toronto nipped
Seattie 4-3 and Detroit lopped
Oakland 6-4 . Texas at Boston
was rained out.
In National League games,
Chicago
downed
San
Francisco 3-1, Philadelphia
tripped
Atlanta
7-5,
Cincinnati pounded Montreal
13-1, Pittsburgh stopped San
Diego 111-7 in II innings,
Houston rapped New York 4-1
and Sl. Louis edged Los
Angeles S.7 in 12 innings.
Orioles 6, White Sox 1
[)oug DeCinces slammed a
bases-loaded double in the
fifth as Baltimore snapped a
lhreegame losing streak.
Mike Flanagan, 2-S, fired a
five-hitter to break a perljOnal
four-game losin g skein,
beating Steve Stone, 6-!i.

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Tbe
Cincinnati Reds Friday annoimced the signing of four
more players taken in tbe
recent baseball draft,
bringing to 10 tl!e nwnber of
draftees signed by the Reds.
Signed were Robert Potts,
19, an outfielder from Seattie,
Wash. and .UJe Reds' top pick
in the secondary phase of the

White Sox in
21-7 victory
GALLIPOLIS - The Little
League White Sox downed the
Ath leti.cs 21·7 lo remain
unbeaten in two starts Friday
evening.
The A's dropped to 1-1 on
the year. Chris Ellcessor Was
credited with the win. Steve
Skidmore was charged with
the loss. Kev Pullins led the
winners with five singles.
John Elardo had three triples
and a double, Ken Russell two
singles, a double and home

Mcl'.llT!IUH

Yankees 4, TwiM 1
Willie Randolph's two-;un
double erased a 1.0 deficil in
the fourth and Chris
Chambliss singled in a run
and later stole home in the
fifth as Ron Guidry upped his
record to 4-2. Sparky Lyle
notched his 12th save.
Brewers 4, Royals 3
Cecil Cooper's opposite
field double in Ule seventh
scored Jim Wohlford from
Ulird to help Jim Slaton snap
a personal six-game losing
streak against Kansas City
and raise his season record to
4-3. Reliever Larry Gura fell
to 3-3.
Blue Jays 4, Mariners 3
Ron Fairly drove in two
runs with a horner and double
and scored the deciding run
on Doug Rader's single as
Toronto beat its expansion
twin for the third time in as
many meetings.
Tigers 6, A's 4
Tilo Fuentes singled three
times to extend his hitting
streak to nine games and
spoil Bobby Winkles' debut as
Oakland manager. Owner
Charlie Finley fired Jack
McKeon earlier in the day.

RAISING EARTIIWORMS

draft. Potts played this
spring at Yakima Junior
College in Washington state,
where he hit .330 and led his
conference with a schoolrecord 42 RB!s . He will report
tl!is weekend to the Eugene,
Oregon, club of the Northwest
League.
Also signed were No. 13
pick Larry Jackson, a righthanded
pitcher
from
Rockledge, Fla .; No. 15 pick
Richard Lombardo, a lefthanded pitcher from Albany,
N.Y., who pla1cd at Florida
Southern in j..akeland, Fla.,
tllis year, and No. 17 pick
Kelley Becker, a !eft-handed
pitcher from Scottsbluff,
Neb. All tl!ree will report to
the Reds' Billings, Mont.
.farm club.

Can Vou Answer "YES" ro ThcS{'
1

0o \IOU hkf

Qu'' ~lton!&gt;·;

rd!Sir\B h&lt;i~Sf'l('k?

2 Do you "'1!101 "

hu~oor'~

nl

y&lt;lur

r....,, .,

3 Do y!'!u ne.d rcl•rrmf'nl or nl•d !f1(0f1wl
4 Doyvu haue•t... lo yi!IHlOfO!I"''Iand'

®

m

PERHAPS YOU CAN BECOME A WORM GROWER!
IF ACC EPTED AS A PROD UCER, WE

*

Profession.1l Gu1dance
• Ell.c hange Membership

,,....., '"' '"""····
t1! "A" !ITliUl • SMTMNA. TENNU$U: 31117 • (615) 254-7327

TAKING ATRIP

run.

.)j~~

·Give Dad The Gift That Comes
In Pairs

Father's
Day

They breathe comfort.
Keep your tee t f rom
gettmg col d and cl ammy

m the wmte r, ho·l and
shcky 1n th e summer

77 BUICK$
AND

PONTIAC$
IN STOCK
READY TO GO
HUGE DISCOUNTS
48 MONTHS FINANCING
LIBERAL TRADES

e~ Ha

..-~·-----:-~__.._...-.

I

l

Tr;~velers

1

1
~
·
I
'I
I
I

ar~

2. America'n Express
Cheques
good at more
hotels, restaurants, retail outlets, and gas stations 1han any
other Travelers Cheques .
3. American Express Travelers Cheques are supported by over
650 travel offices arounr;l the world . They other two major
travelers cheques aren't backed by. any travel offices.
4. More travelers use American Express Travelers Cheques
than any other kind.

.

.

They provide exira

comfortable support
Bu11t·1n spnng steel shank
support

child who most appropriately
represent the style of dress,
in accordance with the date of
their car entry. Special prizes
will go to the car club which

Follies dancer

ARLINGTON, Va. (UP!) Harriet Hoctor, who danced
with the " Ziegfield Follies"
in the 1920s and later in films,
died Thursday at Northern
MOSCOW (UP!) - Soviet
Virginia Doctors Hospital. trade with the United States
dropped nearly 16 per cent in
She was 71.
Miss Hoctor, who ran a the first quarter of 1977, most
dance school in Boston for of it resulting from a
more than 30 years until lessening
of
Russian
retiring in 1974, performed in agricultural purchases
London after touring the because of a record Russian
country on the Keith Circuit wheat crop.
and appearing in many
The United States Com·
mer.cial Office in Moscow
musical comedies.
. ._

NEW YORK (U P!) - The

and Telegraph and two
su bsidia ries.
The s uit filed 1n U. S.
is suing the world's largest
communications
company Dist rict Court in Manhattan
for $150 million, charging alleged that !IT&amp;T and the
antitrust violations in the sale subsidia r ies - West ern
Electric Co . and Bel l
of telephone equipment.
International
Telephone Laboratories Inc. - comand Telegraph initialed the bined to prevent ITT from
selling telephon e equipment
battle of lhe
lo its subscribers.
behemoths Friday, ·
world's largest conglomerate

NTIAL- COMMERCIAL
Streakless Machine Wall Washing
Upholstery· Windows . Floors
Complete Line of ...
Cleaning Equipment &amp; Supplies

ADVANCED CLEANING SERVICE
Call 675-5572 After 4 P.M.

I

said total two-way trade turnover of $658.4 million was
down 15.9 per cent from first
quarter 1976 trade of $783
million. Soviet purchases of
American agricultural
products during the first
quarter of this year reached
only $398.2 million, down 26.4
per cent from last year's
$540.7 million.

HAMM£R

.

They'll Do It Every Time .

FOOT

F~IPF\:$

T~.O

GYPSUM
BOARD

---. 3/8"X4X8

BEST

IN T&gt;-IE BIGS.

PANELING

TOOA-Y,
&gt;-115 FOLKS

CAM.E TO

se.e ~ ~ ""

Big group of

·

.'' . .

richly grained
finishes.

,

I

~;

NSULATION

$2.39

"""'I"·'ft'l'i(;
' 1; 1\..-~

SPECIAL ~

J.M. FIBERGLASS

. ElECTRIC WIRE

4"Xl5"

1,

· 12·2 With Ground

BRANDY BIRCH
SALE 15.49

2SO Foot Roll

.-,P..'-~$5.99

Regular S26.9S

50 Sq. Ft

REC. BOXES

61fz"Xl5" ·
sALE 15.99

EASTLAND
PECAN

1:.~1·~1
"7?1.4N&gt;4' TO

DE. E B.O.RAN,

McKe;e;sPORT.
PENNA.

&lt;idl'

1

t

tjoo

/

.'

FA~IL'I'

e··lll lz'- o·

8

I
I

'""" .

10'- 1 " X

!

ti· O"

1

I

1

KITCI'I(M

biN lNG

Roo•

1

POl

\

SALE •8.99

PRE FINISHED
MOULDING
20% OFF
-

SEOAOOM 11- l

tt I

g·_z- x 1t-o·

!i-•i Y 1t· o·

,.

\

L t'I!NG
16'- ( )C

.,

·--~

\

-or
ltill

12"X12"

SALE

*2,39

BATHROOM
VANITIES

LIGHT

30%0FF

FlxniRES
40%
OFF
LIST

CARTER AND EVANS INC.
NOW ON DISPLAY •••••••••••••••••• ~•17,900
(Delivered &amp; Set Up)

Johnson's Mobile
Homes Inc.

VINTON BRANCH-VINTON
Rt. 7

446-3547
Gallipolis, Ohio

W.HUI'ACTURID tY

it

4''Xl0 FT.
DRAIN PIPE

ROOhll
!4·-6-

Johnson's SPECIAL

Special
.22 ft .
100 ft . rolls

Good Selection

r

~-·------~------------~~

%OFF

14•

II

3 Locations To Serve You!
MAIN OFFICE-SECOND AVE.
THIRD AVE. BRANat-THIRD AVE.

GOLD LACE
AND
BLUE LACE

..,.,
I

'
BE CROOM

ALL•AME ROCK
HARDWARE

55•

SALE

Sq. Ft .

~

30 Sq . Ft .
Roll

Each .

CROSSI P.Nl &gt;
SEO~OOM

42&lt;

CEIUNG BOXES

SALE •6.49

DAN lliOMAS &amp; SON

i
I
I

SALE

Lumber &amp; Building Supplies
17 OLIVE ST.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

STORE HOURS
Mon. · Fri. 1: J08 .m. to Sp.m.
S.tur&amp;.y 7:l0f. m . te 4 D.m .

I

I
1
I
I
I
I
I
I

. :

L------------------------~

JUNE 25TH

-·--..a..-~---.l

"Your Full Seroice People To People Bani&lt;"

One giant sues another giant

Soviet-U.S. trade off 16%

AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVELERS DiEQUES ARE
AVAILABU FROM

wear

Vinton

SALE

try on a pair.

_ _.._.._.. ________ .._ ___ .._._,_.._,_.,1

1. .American Express Travelers Cheques are sater than money.
If lost or stolen you can get your money back.·
.

L

'LIQhtwe•ght, long wean ng
non-mark•ng soles fo1

couple, man, woman and

342 Second Ave.
Gallipolis. Ohio

5. So if you're laking a trip gel American Express. the world's
leading travelers cheques.
· - - - -·----.-.._.._.__ _ _...,._ ...... _.._..__

They have comfortable
Mierocrepe ,,. soles.

trophies in categories
ranging from restored Ford
Modei-T's to Corvettes · and
Thunder birds.
Officials from the Appalachia Old Car Club say
prizes will be presented for
the · best dressed family,

For active farmers: Rugged,
barnyard acid resistant
uppers for extra - long wear
on hardwo.rkingfeet. Corne

Hush
RtliP.!~~

20~FF
REG. PRICE

·Special

and

Co unties. and the financial

SALE '4A9

AMERICAN EXPRESS
TRAVELERS CHEQUES

Hush PUPP.JA!!'
are born comfortable.

1\thcns. flocking ,

commitment by Gallia
Count y are only a few of the
milestones we have passed
since the federal funds ended
"t the end of 1975," McLain
noted , adding , ' 'Southeast
Ohro is one of the few areas of
the country thai has been
ablo:, to prove that the concept
of federal 'seed·money' can
work to . establish viable
majority ever experienced on programs that local areas
any Vinton County levy .
ca nnot affo rd to start by
SEOF.MS · Board
of themselves."
•
Trustees President James
SEOEMS vehicles recently
Mcl..ain commented nn the passed the one-and-a-half
election :
million mile mark in
·'SEOEMS is pleased that delivering professional
the residents of Vinton emergency care on over
County have registered such 36,000 emergency rUlJS. In
overwhelming support for addition to Gallia and Vinton
continu~ SEOEMS service
Counties, Athens, Hocking,
to their area . We have never Jackson and Lawrence
seen a more vital campaign County voters have approved
than that put o.n by the tax levies to finance
citizens or vinton County.
SEOEMS, and there is
Car Club Antique Car Show at the Bob Evans Farm.
He noted that the action was working toward that goal in
Entries are expected from seven states including West
y~ another step in per· Meigs County.
Virginia, Kentucky, Indiana and Ohio.
manently
establishing
''The rest of our Paramedic
SEOEMS in the area .
Life Squads will be
"Successes such as this are operational
by
mid·
the best way we have to know summer," the ·sEOEMS
that our record of service is president explained, "as the
satisfactory to the persons we third and final phase of the
enters the most vehicles, beginning at I :30 p.m. on the serve."
state-certified Emergency
"SEOEMS' accreditation Medical Technicians began
along
with
spec.ial picturesque Bob Evans
recognition of the vehicle that Farm, Route 35, Rio Grande, as the first recognized Paramedia • Instruction two
travels the farthest to attend Ohio.
Paramedia Instruction weeks ago," McLain said. He
the show.
Admission is free and any
car model made prior to 1938
can enter in the appropriate
class for a $2 registration fee.
A flea market selling anJUNE 13th
tique car-related items will
also highlight the old' car
THRU
exposition. Registration will
begin at 9 a.m. with judging

MEDIUM LAUAN

::'::;:: Parents or Guardian Signature

!·:·:::
Make Checks payable to Gallipolis Ba!lketball
·:;:;:;: Camp $20 Deposit Fee by July 8

tn
l.awrcn ('~

Up to 150 antique cars expected at show

PITC.~ ..

LET US SUGGEST
SOMETHING BETTER

service

also
co mmented
that othe r exJstlng J,!roups ,"
SEOEMS has recently be~un McLain explamed. "we are
a program to infonn the tryin~ to mforrn u-. rnany
public about what they must people as we riln read1 what
do to make Emergency they must do" hen a medical
Medical Services work at top emergency occur.s until our
can
performance. The program, profes!iiona l (·arl'
he said, is in cooperation with arrive." Mcl"'in said that
the Corporation for Health anyone who wrmt5 to arrange
Education in Appala chian such a pro~ ram should call
446-9840 for mforrnalion.
Ohio (CHEA 0 ).
"By working through
various clubs, Industry arid

I!

APPROXIMATELY 150 AUTOMOBILES like Ulis
1920 Model-Twill compete June 25 in the Appalachia Old

BOOT

IF SO

YANKS WIN
NEW YORK - Willie
Randolph . hit a two-run
homer and Graig Nettles
stroked two RBI singles
Saturday to carry the New
York Yankees to a 6-!i victory
over the Minnesota Twins.

im-

&lt;.'O Unties approved I:!Uaran-

BARN

WILl YOU BE CARRYING LARGE SUMS OF MONEY?

Lynn Sheets had a double
for the losers.

Ohio ,

10

plementatinn of Paramedic

teed funding for the service.
Vinton County ci tizens
Tuesday approved a 2-rnill
tax levy by a 10 to I margin to
continue the operation of the
Southeast Ohio Emergency
Medical Services (SEOF.MSr
by a count of 2,445 in favor ,
with only 243 opposed . That
vote was the greatest

of 20s is dead

ACi TODAY' SEND FOR YOUR FREE BRQCHURP

Prof;:!nun

Mcdi l'~ l

Life Squad ::&gt;ystern was
strengthened a~ain last week
when the sixth or its seven

OFf~R

• MMket mg Servrce
• Comple1e Suppltes

The

reKional RnH:ra:tency

RIO GRANDE - Classic
restored automobiles from
seven states will compete
Saturday, June 25 at the Bob
,Evans Farm here in . the
Appalachia Old Car Club
Antique Car Show.
Some 150 nostalgic cars
dated prior to 1938 will
compete in 23 classes for

PROFIT

Reds ink four more players

Vinton voters like SEOEMS

1

TOOLS.
All HAND

TOOLS

20% OFF

·-----------

Joint

�C.7-The Swlday Times-'lentinel, Sunday, June 12, 1977

spdkesman and a Huuse supporter uf h.ls energy prugram
say th e lobbyists have had !heir day and now It rna)' be the

people's turn.
While Huuse press secretary Jody Powell Friday
weighed t he actions uf House eu mmillets Jn the pa sl week
on Carter's energy proposals and said, " II Is his (the

President's ) feeling tha t lhe oil compani es and aul&lt;lmobile
companies and th eir lobbies won significant prelimina ry
vjcturics .•. I think we've gnt a tough fight on our hands.''

Rep. Thomas Ashley, IH)hio, told newsmen Ca rter
sh&lt;~uld not abandon his program on the basis of the few
tentative decision.~ of the past several days.
" My advice to him would he to keep at it. Tell the
American people what the !acts are. I think he wa s on base
when he snid !hat this l&lt;lwn has been alive with lobbyists In
the last month or so ... Somebody has got to protect the
interest of lhe people and that is the job ol the president and
of Congress," Ashl ey said.

':,

..

BY FRANK HILL
GAI.I.JPOL!S - Napoleon Bonaparte at the peak of his
power as ruler of most of Europe sent a Gallipolis woman a
gold rnc~Jai. This woman was Marie Menager who Napoleon
on&lt;"' Murted. She was !hen known as Marie Bonine . and
Napoleon was a young Lieutena nt in the French Artillery.
Mis; Bunu"' came with the French 500 to Gallipolis. While
on the high seas she met Ciodius Roman Menager. Theirs was
the first marriage performed in Gallipolis.
Many years ago this meda l was in the possession of Mrs .
Grace Silepard Aleshire, a native of Gallipolis living at the
time in Huntington, W. Va. Perhaps someone reading this
might inform us where this medal now is. It would certainly he
a wonderful gift to Our House museum !
Napoleon had intended to foll ow his friend, Francis De
He her court to our city. De Hebercourt once owned the land
where Ou•· House now stands. Across First Ave. from the Our
House he operated the first post office in lllwn in 1794 in a small
log cabin . This cabin wa s iar..r covered with weather board. It
was torn down a few years ago and a modern one floor brick
residence now stands there. I have a picture of the old post
~~ .
.
Many years ago I read !hat De Hehercourt had bought land
here for Napoleon, but there was a change in Napoleon's plans
and he never came to our city. The history ol Europe would

CATHERINE CORA BENET

GALLIPOLIS - Catherine
Cora Benet, a June graduate
of Rio Grande College, has
joined )he staff of the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
Sunday Times-Sentinel as
women 's editor.
Miss Benet, daughter of
Marine Corps Warrant OfJI
iicer and Mrs. William D.
Adkins of New River Station ,
New River, N. C., is a 1973
graduate of Quantico High
School, Marine Corps Base,
Quantico, Va.
At Rio Grande. she was
head reporter .for the school
newspaper, The Signals, and
was active on the debate and
forensic teams and artistlecture committee. She also

belonged to Phi Kappa Delta
Speech Fraternity and served
as a Gallipolis State Institute
volunteer . She graduated
cum laude.
She was selected for Who's
Who Among Students in
American Universities and
Colleges in 1976 and Who's
Who in Poetry in American
Colleges and Universities in
1975.
Her hobbies
include
reading, RuSsian History and
Literature, European
politics, travel, baseball,
orienteering (cross-country
running and map reading ),
and acting .
Miss Benet resides in Rio
Grande.

_,.,....... ""~~llilliJ~.tJI4t"P

CHANCES FOR VICKY Epple's success in the pre-

Kawasaki

JetSkr'J

........

1595

1

"

"'
.. ~·..: -;._. .......

'~

BELATED CONGRATULATIONS wMr. and Mrs. George
Hackett, Sr., S. Second Ave .. Middleport. They recenUy
marked their 57th wedding aMlversary.

._.,_...,""'-~f Olympic basketball tryoutsatSquawValley, Calif., this month

Discover a great
new water sport.
~,~

POMEROY - Many of us do have a sense of compassion
for small animals - and that's good.
However, sometimes we misunderstand and do the wrong
thing even though we think we 're helpin g, Meigs Game
Proteclllr Andy Lyles advises.
Andy is getting called quite frequently these days when
residents find a fawn or a small raccoon, squirrel or rabbit.
Andy points out that a doe deer leaves her fawn and returns to
her offspring only three or four times a day . People finding a
fawn think they have been abandoned and take the fawn into
captivity until something can he done. Even though the
intentions of the individual are good, the end results are not,
Andy says. The doe becomes difficult over taking back the
offspring or the offspring is taken into captivity imd would
stand a far better . chance of survival in his native habitat,
Andy explains .
Exceptioos, of course, are if a fa wn or small animal has
been injured in the case of a fawn - if the person is sure that
the mother has been killed.
At any rate, Andy wanted residents Ill be informed of the
problems that sometimes do develop if a small, wild animal is
picked up. Quite simply, in most cases, unless the animal is
injure&lt;l, it's apparenUy best Ill let well enough alone.

.are Increasing. The Epples have been notified that a second
team will he chosen from lhe girls trying out to play in Taiwan
so with twice as many to be chosen Vicky's opportunities
increase . Vicky will he leaving· for Squaw VaUey on June 16.

have certainly been different if Napoleon had embarked for
the new world It had been rumored !hat he had intended Ill
found an emp~e here,- so maybe it was to our benefit that he
remained in Europe.
For Those Who May Be Interested :
Gallipolis Township 1802 is older than Gallia County , 1803,
or the state of Ohio 1803.

GALLIPOLIS - Appoint·
ment of Glenn C. Dayton.
M.A., as psychometrist to the
Gallia · Jackson - Meigs
Community Mental Hea lth
Center and J ea n Holway
Whitn ey t o th e center's
emergency services progra m

I cannot understand why our city and county do not launch
a fund raising drive for the benefit of finishing our new
swimming pool. I read recenUy where cities smaller than our
own have built y .M.C.A.'s, parkll and playgrounds, and
various other recreational facilities through an effort Ill
benefit !heir areas. By using this method all could he ln_volved
and it would not he a burden on any one group.
Are we too proud Ill place carmislers in our business houseS
to collect money to raise funds for this very worthy pro~!?
Fraternal orders social clubs and many other CIVIC
minde!l groups (I ard sure) would donate to this cause. We
could have bake sales, yard sales, etc., etc., even an auction,
with surplus goodies dooated just for such a drive.
Where is your initiative, Gallipolis7
We can all get busy and raise funds to complete ow- new
pool. Why worry about getting the job done7 Let's go out and
do it !

wa s

Scene at Caldwell farm during field day .

ended over bodies
SOUTHG ATE, Ky. (UPI ) aten sive check of dental
- The long, anguished wait re cords. Officials then
has ended for the !amities of determined Miss Bohrer's
two Ohio women who died in body had been wrongly
the Beverly Hills Supper Club identified in place. of the one
remaining corpse.
fire.
Stine added that the in·
The bodies of Judy Bhrer,
28, Cheviot , and Evelyn correct identification had
. Shough, 62, Dayton, had been been made by a famUy on the
missin g for nearly two weeks basis of a "visual in-aile•: th e devastating blaze in spection.'' Officials refused
to release the name of the
which 161 persons died .
Two
fe mal e
bodies family involved.
"When anyone goes and
recovered from the fire
remained unidentified until sees that many bodies they
Thursday, but Campbell can he emotionally upset and
County , Ky ., Coroner Or. will be wiUing to settle for
Fred Stine had said the something similar," St-ine
corpses did not match the said. "The misidentification
identities of l~ e mis sing occurred before the FBI got
1
there to check dental records
women.
Friday Stine revealed !hat and fingerprints."
Miss Bohrer was mistakenly
buried und.er another name.
SELLING CANpY ,
Her body was exhumed and
MIDDLEPORT - The
reburied Thursday.
Middleport Youth baseball
The coroner explained that league will be.;;elling candy
one of the unclaimed bodies all next week. Persons are to
was finally identified as Mrs. contact Pat Kitchen at 992·
Shough , following an ex- 6212.

PROFIT
RAISING EARTIIWORMS
Can You Ansiuer "YES" lo The-se QueshC'l ns?
'l Do you Wllnt " b~oni!U ol your ,_n~
J. Do yOU nred ~~•rtment 01 e • ll ~ onc:onw?
I Do ynU hA11• ll t-.rk ~Ard or _other land'

IF ACCEPTED AS A PRODUCER , WE OFFER

• Markettng ServiCe
• Complete Supphes

ACT TODAY' SEND FOR YOUR FREE BROCHURE!
Send nanw, addreH. phont , ducription ollidlili•• to:

· ~ N~TIONN.
~·"""""

..

'"" ......,
,

WO~M

GAOWlR S (ll CHA"KiE. IfiC.

&amp;15 •a· ITRE£T • a•n-NA. TINNUSU :n111 • (615) 254-7327

MEIGS COUNTY'S SENIOR citizens are taking a big role
In activities of Big Bend Regatta Weekend.
There are eight now who want to take part in the Ea I-athon to be held at Country Cousins next Saturday and more are
scheduled to sign up next week. There's a little problem,
however, since sponsors are required to take part in the .
competition. Mrs. Eleanor Thomas asks any individual, club
or business who would be willing to sponsor a senior citizen in
the hamburger eating contest to contact her at onee. The phone
number is 992-7686 or 992-7884.

J&amp;R SPORT SHOP .
J)gmero· , Ohio

MR. AND MRS. LES DAMEWOOD enjoyed the
experience of going to Elmwood High School where they
attended the graduation of their granddaughters, Diane and
Susan Benschoter. The graduates wore royal blue caps and
gowns with white tassels which Mrs. Damewood reports was
quite effective for the 140 members of the class.

. ALICE NEASE HEADED to Seattle, Washington to join
other relatives prior to attending the wedding of her son, Dick,
In Oregon.
Alice traveled as a wheel chair patieht since she has a
blood clot In one of her legs. At Chicago, Alice had to change
planes and was taken off one plane and put on another by
airline employes. A couple of minutes before takeoff time,
there appeared to be some problem in the seating which Alice
was on and a couple of minutes before the plane was to leave
the airport, one of lhe airline employes checked Alice-'s ticket .
It was discovered that she was on a plane which was headed
for Tucson, Ariz. Alice was whisked off that plane and onto the
right one. Yo_u can always bet if it's going to happen, it will
happen to Alice.

HomeliteX:L
Automatic during
Saw Buck Days.
Regularly $ll4.95

ANNA AEIKER HAs A SEVEN or eighth month old silver
and black German shepherd type dog which has been at her
home on Middleport Hill for several days. The dog has a collar,
has apparenUy been trained well and gets along famously with
children, Anna reports. As yet no owner has claimed the
animat Anna would like to locate the owner or someone who
would like to have a nice pet. If you're interested Mrs. Aeiker
can

NOW ONLY

~~1.411$
YOU'RE IN CONTROL
WITH THE XL® ~·~UTOMATIC!
Lightweight, precision balanced. Weighs
less than 81h lbs. with HY' bar an,j exclusive SAFE-T-TIP that prevents kickl:-·.ck.
Easy, fast starting. Automatic chain oiling.
Softone 1M muffier. And- during our
SAW BUCK DAYS- it's only $84.95

HC

EXCLUSIVE SAFE-T-TIPN
PREVENTS KICKBACK!

\'bu're in conbof with Hen LeEte.

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
985-3308

Chl!ster, o.

,.

}

j

carry
the
California
encephalitis virus, he said.
Ackerman said mosquitos
can pick up encephalitis from
these animals then pass .it on
to humans.
Mosquito spraying will he
intensified in any areas
where infected samples are
found, Ackerman said.
REHEARSAL SET EAST MEIGS - There will
be a rehearsal for all Eastern
High School hand members,
majorettes and banner .
carriers from 7 to 8:30 p.m.
Thur.day in the high School
band room in preparation for
the Big ' Bend Regatta
Parade.

I

I

Gallia

+++

SATURDAY was the last day as women's editor .of the
Daily Tribune and Sunday Times..Sentinel for Sarah Carsey.
Miss Carsey, who served as a member of the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company's editorial staff the past two years, has
accepted a position with the personnel department at Holzer
MediClll Center.

+++

MEMBERS of the Tribune, Sentinel and Times-Sentinel
staffs wish her well in her new endeavor. With her charming ·
personality and versatile ability, we know she will continue to
be successful as a career gal.
,

+++

THROUGH her efforts the past two years, the women 's
pages have shown tremendous improvement. Her untiring
work in other areas· of the editorial department was greatly
appreciated.

The fiendishly seductive
·
$4986*car from
Do I •' •

+++

THE newspaper's loss is Holzer Medical Center's gain.
Agaj.n, good luck, cricket!

.

+++

,j

..

V«JLVERINE ' ·

I

6" WELT WORK BOOT
• Pebble textured cowhide
leather
• Weh construction
• Cushion insole and steel
shank arch suppo~
• Oil resistant neoprene sole
and heel

Glenn Dayton, M.A.
tervention, CRISISLrNE - a
24-hour tel~hone counseling
service, a telephone counseling-crisis intervention
for
training
program
members of the community,
and an emergency outreach

CARL'S
SHOE SffiRE
Gallif'nlis, Ohio

,_

Special Fathers!
SKIL" 6112-IN.
CIRCULAR SAW

WORKMATE•" DOES
MORE FOR YOU!

$3567
SJ{I£SAM&lt;
foldaway portable work center,

lightweigh1, ideal fgr ba semen t

gidnt vi!e and 'ow horse in one!
Con be set up anywhere . 79 -001

2

proiech. 1Yl HP. Cuts sTandard
K .4 at 45 a. Safety switch . 534

VA~UE-PLUSrM

Yl H P, DUAL·

+-t-+

ACTION SANDER

JET X
PRESSUU
WASHER

Tribune and weel&lt;ly Gallia Times ... John Frazier ends nine
months leave of absence, returns as county sanitarian ... John
Vanden, 75, retired restaurant operator, dies ... Arden Dobson
named new teller at First National Bank ... Two-llundred and
seven register for first summer session at Rio Grande College.

Go to work

Diplomat offers classic, sculptured lines. A 318 V8 engine with the
Electronic lean Burn System. Power front disc/rear drum' brakes. Power
steering. An automatic transmission. And a very handsome interior. All
standard . All for less than you might expect to 11ay when you buy or lease.

in quality

.. -

Outdoorsman . .

lllcllllll? •••

7 P'micl .....

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

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

shoes

for wo rkme n. Quali ty buil t

to stay "on du ty" whe n
yo u're· "on du ty."
Designed lo keep yo u
comforta bl e all day .

I

,._ ,__ __....,. .,

''' , ,, ...., tlucttc.....,.

114•11 .._WI.,...,. Y•'U lm
~

;M illllr ...till ilea1C lllwtt'

...... DII'IWIH ...1, . .... it

and deliver the

...... , art11. CIDi II lor I
lrli WlllfOWir llllt....trdOII.

kin d of lo ng wear ·
yo u expect lor yo ur

...···-'"'""'..,..,...,

(DealeJShip$ available)

CARROLL NORRIS OODGE, INC.

work

'

.

*MariU facttne r's suggested retail price for Diplomat two-door as shown .
Destinat ion clrarges, taxes, title fees, and additional equipment extra.

N

TN( otHt

/

LDQAN CDRPORA11CJN
NniO IJOII 75S-4t.,

SALES-RENTALS-SERVICE

~\.__ _

,·

At toc ll es fo garden llme, sp1 ay 1
on Jet X Sud s, th en rinses off
dirt wi th pO'W erf ul spray ac tion.

maste

1.5 KW thru 500 KW
/

VJILUI·PLUI'"
Orbital or straight action for
foster work. Tokes 4V, x 11 " pa-

per. 6' detachable · cord . 7490

P.O. ... U6 No t,., W ""' ~S ill

Gallipolis, Ohio

AMY 'S FIT
WASHI NGTON (UP!)
Amy Carter won a physical
fitness award Thursday.
With President Carter in
attendance, his 9-year-old
daughter ste pped forward to
accept the award as pa rt of
ceremonies closin g the
Stevens School extend ed
program.

Specials for

TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the files of the Daily

Presenting Diplomat. The new luxury car from Dodge that's as easy to
handle as it is easy to own. Thanks to a manageable new size and an equally
manageable mid-price.

300 3rd Ave.

University . She also wor~ed
for the Appalachee Com·
munity Mental Health Center
at the Commun ity Crisi s
Center, a 24-hour face·t~face
crisis intervention .
During this time she also
worked for Project Alteract.
a division of the Florida State
Unive r s ity Oil-Campus
Counselin g P rogram . She
wa s
r esponsible
for
developing and leading group
programs offered to students
and Tallahassee area community members through
Project Alteract. Following
her graduation from Florida
State University in June 1976,
Jea n worked briefly lor the
state of Georgia at the
Clayton Community
Treatment Center, a juvenile
-.treatment center located just
south of Atlanta in Clayton
county.
In her new role, Mrs.
Whitney will he available to
provide emergency crisis
intervention counseling to ·.
persons within the community. She has also been
involved with the development and training of
volunteers for Crisisline, a 24hour telephone counseling
service to GaUia, Jackson
and Meigs counties. Jean will
also provide outpatient
counseling on a limited basis.
and hopes to continue her
interest in group programs.
The Center's Emergency
Services Program serves
Gallia, Jackson and Meigs
counties offering emergency
face-to-lace
crisis
in-

Father's Day

MISS Carsey's suceessor will be Miss Catherine Benet, a
1977 graduate of Rio Grande College. We welcome Catherine
into the Fow:th Estate.

Control plan for bugs set
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
State Health Department is
sending two-man teams to
every county in the state
starting Monday in a major
campaign Ill control enceph.
alitis.
State Health Director .John
Ackerman said Friday three
tw&lt;Hnan teams wiU each
cover a county a day
collecting mosquitos and
blood samples from birds for
testing in lhe department's
laboratories here.
Although people get
encephalitis from mosquillls,
birds are carriers of the St.
Louis encephalitis virUS and
mammals such as squirrels

'I

so LONG, Cricket!

DWIGHT SPENCER WHO is a regular in Pomeroy where
he sells his sarden produce says he never saw such a spring.
The other morning Dwight had 34 degrees at his place and
frost. Hopefully, Spencer feels that the June 8 frost did no ·
damage.

"I lhink it started with
HUMBOLDT, Iowa (UP! )
simple
animosities against
- Shotgun-toting, rock individual
teachers. But once ·
throwing students from
ljumboldt High School are it started, the stode~ts found
terrorizing their teachers in out the teachers are
vulnerable and it turned into
this community of 4,600.
a
mocking of our law
"This is very frightening,"
enforcement.
,
said Daniel Holste, a
Terry
Acri,
a high school
Humboldt High School
·speech
and
journalism
teacher whose house has been
teacher,
believes
Humboldt's
the target of roc~-throwing
varidalism
might
be an
incidents "at least" 15 to 20
of
student
reaction
outgrowth
times. " And I would say the
problem is increasing at a to a crackdown on discipline
-Ill the high school two years
very rapid rate ."
Two recent Humboldt High ago. Angry with the . school
graduates have been arrested administration's discipline
on charges stemming from policies, she said many
the spree of vandalism and students rebelled.
violence .
The homes of Holste and
other high school teachers HULLS TO SPLIT
WINNIPEG (UP!) - The
have been the targets of
increasing number of shotgun wife of Winnipeg Jets hockey
blasts, tossed rocks and star Bobby Hull has filed for
bottles, yard damage and divorce.
Joanne Hull cited mental
other acts of vandalism
and
physical cruelty as
during the past several
reasons
for the divorce and
months.
for
custody of the
asked
More than half of the
couple's
five
children.
teachers responding to a
She
requested
an
recent pol) said they had been
unspecified
lump
sum
victims of vandalism or acts
of terrorism a!ld the teachers · payment, costs of lhe action
earlier this week asked the and a maintenance allowance
for herself and the children .
City Council for help .
The Hulls were married in
"It's hard to believe this
could he happening in Harry ·February, 1960, in Waukegan,
Reasoner's utopia,'' said stu· Ill.
Hull, in the fifth year of a
dent body President Dana
l().year
contract worth $2.7
Webb, 17, referring to
million,
has
16 days from the
television anchorman Harry
the
request
was filed to
time
Reasoner's Humboldt County
indicate
if
he
will
contest it.
roots.

l

l By Hobart Wilson ]r.

working towards staging of the annual yesteryear observance
which was quite successful last year .
Any group who would like to help is asked to come .forward
so the staff Will know you're on board. Also there is no charge
for anyone wishing to have some sort of a sales booth at the
yesteryear event. So do contact the center. The staff does need
help.
Yesteryear is scheduled for Sept. 17 a.nd by the way, the
mustache growing contest will be repeated for the info of those
who want to take par( in that.

behavior disorders.
Dayton is a graduate of
Roberts Wesleyan College in
Roc heste r, N. V. and
received his Masters degree
in Edu cations I Psychology
from th e Uni versi ty of
Northern Iowa in 1974. He
was a staff psychologist for
the Ohio State Oepa rtment of
Co rre c ti o n s
an d
Rehabilitation for two years
before taking this position
a nd has taught courses in
Personality Assessment at
the Ohio University branch
college in Chillicothe.
Recently published in the
Journal of Creative Behavior,
his theoretical interest has
long been in the area of
c reativity
and
gifted
children. Mrs. Whitney is a
therapist offering direct
services to the community.
Born in Dallas, Texas, she
grew up in Miami, Fla. She
received her education from
Florida State University in
Tallahassee, graduating in
1974 with a bachelor's degree
in psychology-history . She
continued her graduate
education at Florida State
and received her master's
degree in counseling and
human systems from the
College of Education.
Her graduate training
placements included the
Florida State University
Counseling Center during
which ~ime her responsibilities included providing
individual and group counseling to the students and
staff at Florida State

terrorizing teachers

! Dateline
I

THE STAFF AT THE SENIOR citizens center also is

A new way to let the good times rolf/

Shotgun-toting students

~-----~-------------------1

,. _&gt; &lt;' "'·

All the thri lls of speedboating , wa te r sk iing
and surfing ... all ro lled
into one sensational sport. Just for the fun of it , take along a
Jet Sk i when you g o to water. Fit s in a stat ion wagon . pickup
or van for easy IOI1ng_

here

placed behind the ear on Holland baler each rolled one
cattle and gives a com· bale and allowed the people to
mendable result in fast gains. inspect them .
Pasture renovation using
My personal impressions of
no-till methods was ex· the evening were an overall
plained. The Gallia SWCD's amazement that so many
Zip-Seeder was on display people can work so well
and the rental procedure together and accomplish such
discussed.
a fantastic public - in After the crowd ,.,,joyed a formation service. Certainly
go od meal, provitled by last night's program is an
numerous spon~rs, a round • encouragement to any futur~
baler demonstration capped plans for information - type
the evening. Dealers for the demonstrations.
Verm eer and th e New ·

control ol multiflora rose.
Several question s were
generated here.
After this we went to "the
back 40" and listened to
Marion tell details about his
cow her~'s breeding , health
and pasture programs. The
picture above shows Marion
explaining the use of round
bales and all-season pasture
management.
Marion's keen interest in
his farm showed throughout
the evening . Chemical
dealerships, Cooperative
Extension Service specialists
and SCS field representatives
were all present to answer
· "specific or detailed "
questions, but the landowner
fielded these questions and
very adequately answered
them. Even with the expertise provided to Marion's
program - it's evident that
he uses them for guidance
and advice and not to do his
farming for him .
Back in the barn lot, Marion
demonstrated the implant
procedure for a growth·
stimulant. This implant is

By Steve Hlblnger
Dptrlct Conservationist
GALIJPOLIS - Thursday
evening's field day at Marion
Caldwell's farm was a true
show of community involvement and cooperation.
There was a crowd of 160-170
people to see the demon·
stration; probably 50 of them
had some part in planning,
organizing or presenting the
'program.
The activities started with
!he Beef Princess and Junior
Beef Princess Contests.
After this, Marion in·
traduced his family and gave
a brief account of his farming
operation and his plans for
the future.
Then the tour began. Local
farmers donated use of
tractors, wagons and their
services as drivers.
Stops included an anlysis of
land drainage practices that
were . installed
this
spring, Here, waterways,
field tile and a rock chute
were explained.
Next, the Extension Service explained chemical

Something To Think About:
What is so unusual about the construction of the bridge
over Raccoon creek at Northup7

• Professional Guidance
• Exchange Membership

announ ced

Saturday.
Dayton will he primarily
respon sible for handling all
testing referrals for Meigs
County. Services provided
include psychological assess·
ments, lQ evaluations,
achievement and vocational
testing and screening for
learning disabilities a nd

Field day on Caldwell farm
good example of involvement

The answer Ill last week's question .
Mr. Robinson, long time city editor of this paper, gave
certain city streets various names such as: Maple Ave. -600
block of Fow-th Avenue; Island Side - 1000 block of First
Avenue.
Brandstetter Heights, junction of Chillicothe road and
Henkle Ave.
Academy Place - 300 block of Fourth Ave.

Anguished wait

Miss Benet appointed
women's news editor

Mental health center adds
two specialists to staff

THIS IS THE WAY IT WAS

J.OBBYISTS HAD THEil\ DAy
WASHINGTON tU Pi l - Pres ident Carte r 's

program.
For further information,
individuals and agencies may
contact the commu nity
mental hea lth cent er in
Galiipolis, Jackson or
Pomeroy.

HOURS

�C~- The Sunday

!).1- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June 12, 1977

Times-Senllnd, Sunday, Junt•ll . 19 11

·rt .:

King's killer James Ray still free

.~\ \l County agent's cornerEn~~:;·:~·: ~~~~~ture i'(
::::::::

POMEROY - If you grew up in the country, no doubt you
are familiar with the "Old Swimmmg Hole." Those were the
days. all right, but there are no records of the numbers of
people who drowned because of insufficient safety equipment
and procedures.
Today, safety rules have improved , even in the country,
where signs are being posted and life-saving equipment
provided at fam1 ponds. and other swimming points. June is
defiritely a critical month for youngsters, as school lets out
and the water and weather is warm and inviting. Children and
ad ult.s alike are ready for some diversion, says Clair W.
Young, Extensioo Service Leader , Safety, The Ohio State
University.
Young says we still have unguarded areas where both
swimmers and non-swimmers drown almost daily . These
deaths take place while people are ftshing, swimming in
unauthorized places, or swimming alone. Many drownings are
fully clothes persons, tndicating that they had no mtention of
getting into the water. Some fall from boat.s or docks, or slide
down stee p banks into deep water of swift currents.
Safety rules that should be followed by everyone include

Bollen

I

Tt-111-J~

t 1) know how to swim , a t least enough to save your own life or
the life of " c'Ompanion, and 12) don't swim or boat alone.
Everyone who tak es a boat into the water should know the
basics of boal safety, including how to operate the boat, Young
says. Boaters should know what to do if the boat capsizes how to board it safely once again . There should be
recommended safety equipment such as life preser vers
aboard for each occupant. These should be checked
periodically to make sure they are in good conditibn and are
capa ble of keeping a person afloat, Young says
Safety rules for swirruners indude knowing how tQswim,

never swimming alone or in unguarded, . murky or dirty
waters. Also, avoid swift currents, water holes with unknown

depths, a nd foreign materials in the area. A good basic rule,
Young says, is to know your swimming area .
Swinuncrs and non-swirruners alike should know the basic
procedures to follow with a drowrung victun . This includes the
knowledge of artificial respiration .
A note to parents with young children - get them intO
swlrruning instruc tion classes; have them observe boating

safety procedures and demonstrations ; monitor the child's
acltvities at all times. Caretakers of pools and lifeguards
should talk to families about water safety .
Those in the country with farm ponds should have proper
life saving equipment at the .site. Tlus includes floating
devices, ropes and.()r long poles.
GULLIES CAUSED by planting up and down the hill

I CA\.\GIHT

lHE \JON@

Agriculture and

\(ON~

FL.l.) FROM

PETROS, Tenn . ( UP[) - One of the convicts
who escaped with James Earl Ray, convicted
assassin of Martin Luther King Jr ., surrendered
to authorities today . Ray remained at large.
Authorities said David Lee Powell, the only
black among the six escapees, walked into an
open field and surrendered to a Tennessee
helicopter that was scouring the area .
Powell . who appeared exhausted as he was
being put into the back seat of a patrol car was
immediately returned to the prison ' for
questioning.
'
Officials said they specifically wanted to ask
Powell about how Ray, who was serving a 99-year
term for the slaying of King, happened to be
among the group.

MY

NBIJ BINOCI \Lt:o.RS ~

Land inventory will

0

our community
Uy U1·yson

ll. (Bud) Cal'ter

Galli a County

DAIRY-PRO 25,18, and 16 solubility-balanced co n centrates
Feed Dairy-Pro 25 half and.
half with corn for a 16o/o rattan.
MILK MAKER 14, 16, and 18
pellets: less segregation, added
A &amp; D. uniform Ca :P, clean up
faster, work well in magnetic
feeders.
HI-ENERGY OPTION A: ad·
ded fat in Milk Maker 14, 16, &amp;
18 for more concentrated energy,
pa la tability. faster clea n · up .
COW LAC PELS: economical
16% pell ets with 4 Y2% of pro·
tein from urea.

ASK ABOUT OUR BIG
DISCOUNT FOR TliE
NEXT TWO WEEKS.

POMEROY LANDMARK
•
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.
Serving Metgs, Gallia and

Mason Counties
PH . 992·2181
Store Hours: Open 8:30-S: 30.
Mill Closes al5 p.m.

FEED

COME SEE

Ext~nsion

determine erosif)n extent

Agent

GALLIPOLIS - Registration for voting in the national
beef referendum will take place until June 17 ~ t the
Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service (ASCS)
offices. This registration is necessary in order to qualify for
voting in the referendum between July 5 and 15.
Eligibility to register and vote ts based on the caienqar
year 1976. Anyone who owned beef or dairy cattle any time
during 1976 is eligible to register and vote. If a producer owned
cattle during 1976 but now owns no cattle, he or she is eligible to
register and vote. This is the way the eligibility requirement
was published in the Federal Register and must be followe~ .
Each production entity - such as a family , partnership, or
corporation is entitled to one vote. A +-H or FFA member may
register and vote provided he or she is an eligible producer
separate from his or her family operation .
The referendum is an attempt to boost the self-help efforts
of the beef induslry. lf passed, the new program would provide
$30 lo $40rnillion each year for beef promotion, educatwn, and
nutrition research, compared to the $4 million being spent now .
Ohio would receive about $70,000 from the National Beef
Board to continue its in-state educational and advertising
activities. The Ohio Beef Marketing Program operating
committee ·is on record saying that if the national program
passes they will ask that the Ohio ten cents per head checkoff
be discontinued.
Funds for the new program would be generated by a valueadded plan designed ·SO the cow&lt;alf man, stocker.()perator,
and feeder , will each pay his fair share, based on the value that
he adds. The collectwn rate will be three-tenths of one percent
of sales value.
The planning for this new program started from a
producer committee which mel in 1974 to study the feasibility
of a uniform collection plan to "tell the cattle industry's
storv." From this committee evolved the Beef Development
Task Force re11resenting eight national beef and dairy
producer and marketing organizations. This task force ,
working with other state and national producer groups,
worked closely with Congress in developing Public Law 94-294
{the Beef Research and Information Act) which calls for the
beef referendum.
For further information about the Beef Research and
Information Act or the upcoming referendum, write or call
your county A.S.C .S. office, your county Extension office, or
your area Extension office.

By Boyd A. Ruth
Soil Cons. Service
POMEROY - The U. S.
Department of Agriculture's
Soil .Conservation Service

(SCS J ts making a " Land
Inventory Monitoring Study"

to determine the extent of sotl
erosion throughout the entire

cou ntry, according to SCS
Administrator R. M. Davis.
The inventory will supply
basic data from which SCS
will' estimate the amount of
se.d iment produced by
erosion. It will also provide
mformation on soil and water
conservation needs,· potential
cropland, water quality and
land use.
Metgs SCS field personnel
soon will be visiting each of 35
sample sites county-wide to
evaluate about 20 study
factors including kind of soil,
climate',
crop
slope,
sequence, and conservation·
measures in use.
The most common types of
wa.ter and wind erosion affecting farmland will be
studied this year. Gully,
streambank, roadside, and
construction site erosion will
be studied during 1978,
The inventory will cover
nonfederal rural and urban
land in the 50 states, .Puerto
Rico , and the Virgin Islands.

"You and Your Dog." Becky
Phillips gave a health report
on " Recycling Solid Waste."
After the meeting games
were enjoyed while Mrs.
Ri ebel served refreshments.
The next meetmg is to be at
Renee TrusselPs home on
June 21. - Tina Beaver.

Meigs 4-H Club News
POMEROY - The Five·
Point Star Stitchers 4·H Club
rnet May 23 at the horne of
club member Tarnra Clark
with seven members and one
advisor present. The group
discussed attending 4-H
camp, making a club banner
and upcoming a&lt;;tivities for
the summ er.
As a part of the club
projects, the members used
menus from their outdoor
Cookery Project Book to
make "Angels on Horse back" and "S'Mores." P3m
· Riebel gave a report on
personal grooming ca li ed
"Good Grooming Grab Bag."
The meeting was followed by
a game of dodge ball. - Pam
Riebel.

THE WILLOW CREEK
Roadrunners, a new club,
mel May 28 at the home of
their advisor, Mrs. Rita Eblin
with five members attending.
Officers were elected, dues
set, and the club name
chosen. After the meeting,
the members played ball tag·
and were served refreshrnents · by Dixie Eblin and
· Valene Jeffers.- Rita Eblin .
TWELVE MEMBERS and
two advisors of the Merry
makers 4-H Club met at the
horne of Beth, Renee, and
Rhonda Riebel to discuss the
4-H Tag Week on June 2.
Demonstrations were given
by Beth R1ebel on "Tasty ·
Meals" and Rhonda Riebel on

SMALL FARM?

FOREST ACRES PARK
was the meeting place of the
Rutland Road Runners 4-H
Club on June 3 with 15
members present. Denise
Lambert reported on flower
gardening and Shawn Eads
on cooking, and then all
members of the club sampled
the pizza he had demon·
strated. Jan Rife also. helped
with the refreshments. Afterwards, everyone engaged
in a game of baseball.
Denise Lambert .

KING MILT!~
LONDON (UPI) - The
Queen of England wasn't the
only one celebrating an anniversary Friday. Even as she
marked her 25th year oo tbe
throne, Milton Serle - known
as 11 The King" in his video
heyday - marked tbe 2\lth
anniversary of his first TV
show by taping his famed
''Top Banana" skit, in clown
makeup and oversized shoes,
for "The Muppet Show."
Berte's first corrunercial
exposure on U.S. television
took place June 10, 1948.
" Besides the four years
I've got on the Queen, I also
played the Palace years
ahead of her," Serle quipped.

THE FIVE-POINT Star
Stitchers met June 6 at the
home of Lori Louks with six
members present. Topics for
discussion
were,
parlictpaling in the Regatta
Parade and 4-H Camp. Four
of the members wili be attending Canter's Cave 4-H
Camp at Jackson , Ohio from
June 14 to the 18th.
Pam Reibel presented a
health report and Cheryl
Folmer gave a safety report.
Mrs. Judy Eichinger then
demonstrated how to put in
sleeves and sewing on snaps.
The girls then played dodge
ball. The next meeting will be
at the horne of Melinda
Mankin on June 21 . The club
will then cook a breakfast
mea l from the Outdoor
Cookery I project book. Pam Riebel.

The American
farmer deserves.----,.
a"',_ lot ofcredit.

""-'

Our 60th ann1
versary is an appropnate t1me to salute the
greatest producer of food
and t•ber in the world American farmers .
S1xty years ago. t he Land Bank
establi shed to help th e farm er by
prov iding dependable. long-term
financ1ng .
·
We 've changed a lot over those
years , but our purpose has remained
the same . to prov1de fa rm ers w1th
THE BANK OF
the credit to produce that food
GENERATIONS
and fiber.
Clyde B. Walker Mgr.
Gallipolis Ph. 446-0203

Upper River Road

FEED YOUR HORSES
OMOLENE•••FOR LIFE.
NOW THREE NEW
OMOLENE PRODUCTS
All three new Omolene products
fortified with vitamins and minerals.

are

FOR PERFORMANCE
AND BREEDING
HORSES ·

FOR ACTIVE
PLEASURE HORSES

OMOLENE

OMOLENE

100

200
FOR FOALS AND

·BROOD MARES

OMOLENE 300

J. D. NORTH PRODUCE.CO.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

VINE STREET

...

~~~~till A Good Way of Lif~f~~:: .~:
CENTRAL SOY A

• Nf'w 'qu•dt -~hlln~ " nttarhment
featu~ lllli'' U t1me

"

SALUTES DAIRYMEN DURING JUNE, THE DAIRY MONTH

THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS FOR FLY CONTROL

or rear
mowu

~FIZER

OUST BAG5--Reg. $15.95
DAIRI· SOL-.Reg. 56.90
KILL-KO
FLY SPRAY CONE-Reg. S24.50ga!.
Kl LL·KO
HORSE&amp; CATTLE SPRAY- Reg.SS.95gal.
SUGAR FLY BAIT-Reg .' $1.40

• A 12 H . 16 11nd
p:w. .. rful ·t,. 1n t~ li ndfor
16 h11 m odt'l~

Gel a 4
power and diese
medium sizes tractor.

THEY'RE

.PASQUALI

SPECIAL$13.95
SPECIAL$ 5.90
SPECIAL$21.50
SPECIALS 4.95
SPECIALS 1.15

Gel rid of those pesky flies around your Farm and Home .

Rugged- Dependable

N- ftom the .,.... upl

They're backed by MP parts, Mrvlc. and flnancl.,..

Shinn's

Tractor Sales·
WIN, W.VA.

{in a

81130

19.9to34 HP

CENTRAL SOYA
of Ohio, Inc.,
Gallipolis, Ohio

•3895 TO '4895
Come in and ask us for a demonstration ,

FULTON-THOMPSON
TRACTOR SALES INC.
POMEROY

Be sure · to make plans to attend Central Soya's "June is Dairy Month"
celebration Sat, June 18th. Prizes, relreshmenh and meet our new manager ...
I

;:::
;:;:
:;:;
}
····

PETROS, Tenn. (UP!) -The convicts
who escaped with James Earl Ray were
desperadoes in every sense of the word.
Ray and three others were convicted
murderers. The other two were convicted
of armed robberies.
Earl Hill Jr., Ray's celhnate at Brushy
Mountain State Prison in the East
Tennessee mountains, was among the
band of escapers.
Hill, 34, was serving two life sentences

-David Lee Powell, 27, serving 100
years from Shelby County for murder.
- Donald Ray Caylor, 24, serving 51
years for attempted jail escape, armed
robbery and assault with intent to commit
murder.
Jerry Wayne Ward, who was serving 2().
40 years for bank robbery, was shot by
priscn guards as he went up a makeshift
laalddler tlwpriscners used til scale a prison
w . He was taken to an Oak Ridge

~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~:"~.:~~~np~::~ ~0=~tr~:t~:~adu,in~[~i~la~~~h:J

in Nashville in May 1974, but was
recaptured six days later.
Prison officials identified the other
convict.s who escaped Friday night as:
-Larry Edward Hacker, 32, serving two
28-year sentences for robbery with a
deadly weapoo and burglary.
:.::., -Douglas Shelton, 32, serving 98 years
for felonious assault, murder and grand
@ larceny.

returned to the priscn.
Prison officials said all but Powell are
white and had been incarcerated for some
time.
Hacker is bellev~ til have been a .
member of the so&lt;alled "Dawson Gang"
which tbe FBI blamed for more than 30
bank robberies across the South that
netted close to $2 milli9n dtiring the mid·
197Q's.
.

'V~e~r~~~~~----------~----------------------------------------------..1
'

:..,_ -~·.'~" · ~

'-.

ASSEN, The Netherlands
;::: - Saturday condemned the
;::: Dutch assault on a hijacked
:;:: traih and school to free 55
;::: hostages as a "cowardly
:;:
.·.

member of the terrorist
group, the Free Moluccan
Youth of Assen.
Dutch
Marine
commandoes, attacking from
both sides of the train and

supported by eight U.S.-made
FI04 Starfighters which laid
down a smokescreen, planted
plastic explosives on the
doors of the train and
charged behind a tatoo of

.,•.:\: :

SUNDAY JUNE 12 977

:·: VOL 12
NO. 19
•
·1
PAGE 1·0
:::: .:..:::.::....:..;:,__ _.....::..:....._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~-"-------------.,.
:::
:::·
;:::

/
;:;:
;:

not leave prison willingly. He
said he talked to Ray by
phone Wednesday and
detected no rumblings of
discontent.
"In fact," Kershaw said,
"his conversations with me
and his letters to me - I
received a letter within the
last few days - also
indicated confidence in his
chances for a new trial, and I
had no information that he
was contemplating
an
escape.
"This leads me to believe
we may not be dealing with
an escape but an abduction.
The fact that he did escape
with such a large group of
men leads rne to think that be
was taken out."
Abernathy said he was
"firmly convinced" the
escape was a move to set Ray
up to be killed.
''There is a scheme in this
PETROS, Tenn (UP!) inmates.
country
to destroy an
Brushy Mountain State
In 1961 a group of priscners _
individual
who has the
Prison is a forboding facility, threatened to blow up the
information
and
the facts and
deep in tbe rugged East mine with dynamite, but the
to
the point now
bas
come
Tennessee mountain country. revolt was quelled.
Many believed it was escapeBrushy was dosed in 1972 where he is willing to tell
proof.
by then Gov. Winfield Dunn those facts, and I would say
SurrQunding the prison because of a strike by guards. be is going to be destroyed as
many others have been
yard on three sides are sheer The 50() Inmates were trans- so
desiroyed. •i
cliffs and 3,000 acres of !erred to the rilain Tennessee
John Lewis, a former King
rugged
woods
and State Priscn in Nashville.
associate
recently named asunderbrush. In front of it
Outraged lawmakers
sociate
directilr
of the federal
there is a parking lot and charged that no prison in tbe
ACTION
program,
noted that
roadway leading to State state matched Brushy's
several
other
key
Highway 60.
security.
assassination
figures
have
James Earl Hay and five
"Brushy Mountain is an ·
companions escaped over tbe impenetrable unit," said one. · died violently.
" I just don't want to ~
back wall intil the dense "There is no way a prisoner
another
Oswald-Ruby thing,"
underbrush Friday night.
could go but north and that is
be
said,
referring to the view
The maximum security · thousands of acres of
of
some
conspiracy theorists
prison was built ~1 years ago mountainland."
Lee
Harvey Oswald and
that
of stone quarried from the
Dunn responded by saying.
his
killer,
Jack Ruby, were
limestone mountains. It was "Petros is old and antiquated
both
murdered
to keep them
originally buill for 1,600 and it's remote."
from
telling
what
tlley knew
prisoners but at times there
When it was closed, only
about
John
Kennedy's
haye been as many as 2,500 five persons were left to
assassination.
housed there.
guard the deserted facility
The inmates at Brushy and thieves stole metal
"If there were
no
were USed to mine coal up roofing, electrical wiring and conspiracy, he would be in no
until the mid 60s when the plumbing fixtures . Vandals danger," Faunt.roy said. "If
rnjning operation was closed wrecked windows and toilets. there were a conspiracy, he
down because it was
Brushy was reopened in would be in danger. I don't
unprofitable and because May, 1975, because of. know if he is in danger or not .
there
were
frequent overcrowding at Nashville . I just have questions."
rebellions
amonl(
the

Prison not

action" and vowed to carry
out more terrorist attacks in
reprisal.
"The risk of civil war is
great in Holland as a result of
these assaults," satd a

....

Attorney fears
for Ray's life
Conference, and by John
Lewis, a King associate.
Members of the House
Assassinations Committee,
whose investigators have
interrogated Ray several
times in recent months, say
they are reserving judgment
on the escape conspiracy. But
they stress it is important
that Ray be captured alive.
Jack· Kershaw, Ray's
Nashville, Tenn., attorney,
said in a telephone interview
be is convinced his client did

is going to be destroyed, as so many others have."
Ray was given a 99-year prison term in
exchange for his guilty plea in the King
assassination , but no sooner had the prison door
slammed on him than he changed his story and
sai!i he did not kill King . He claimed he was
pressured into entering the plea by his defense
attorneys .
Ray has told the House Assassinations
Committee in recent weeks that he unknowingly
became part of a conspiracy that was reponsible
for King's death . He said he had been hired for
what he thought was a smuggling scheme by a
mysterious man by the name of "Raoul ," whom
officials have never been able to trace .
Abernathy said he believed Ray was being set
up to be killed, a belief also voiced by the Rev .
Jesse Jackson, one of King' s aides who was with
him at the time of the assassination.
"He CRayJ .will be killed by those who helped
get him out of jail," Jackson said Saturday in
Chicago .
Jack Kershaw, the most recent of Ray's long
string of attorneys, said the fact that Ray escaped
with so many accomplices led him to believe that,
"We may not be dealing with an escape but an
abduction ... the fact that he did escape with such
a large group of men leads me to think that he was
taken out. "
Rep. Christopher J. Dodd of Connecticut, a
member of the House Assassination Committee,
also expressed concern over Ray's safety .
"If the man who has pled guilty to
assassinating Dr. Martin Luther King is gone,
then we lose the key link in the King assassination
case," Dodd said.

m

Correspondent
questioned by
Moscow police

:::·:::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:=::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::;::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;.;:;;;.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:;:·:::·:::·:::::;:;:;:;:·:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:·:::·:·::;.;.;:;.;:;:;:;:;:

WASHINGTON (UP!)
James Earl Ray's lawyer
said Saturday he fears his
client was abducted from
priscn by people who don't
want him to talk about tbe
murder of Martin Luther
King Jr.
He thinks Ray may be
killed.
Similar
fears
were
expressed by the Rev. Ralph
Abernathy, who succeeded
King as head of the Southern
Christian Leadership

fugitive investigation we' ve got going."
President Carter told Attorney General
· Griffin Bell to keep him posted on the progress of
the manuunt .
Other prisoners helped set the stage for the
break by Ray and his cohorts . While some of the
convicts lobbed horseshoes and batted around
volley balls during the evening recreation period,
a fight broke out near the basketball a.rea . About
the same time, one athlete fell to the ground
faking a sprained ankle .
There was confusion and within a flash a
ladder fashioned from pieces of water pipe was
slammed against the prison wall, which is about
12 feel high in the recreation area , and Ray and
the others scrambled up.
On top were two strands of electrified wire,
carrying 2,300 volts of current. They slithered
under the lowest one - about 14 inches - above
the wall , and dove for freedom while a rain of
gunfire from the guard towers slapped among
them .
A seventh man who tried the escape, bank
robber Jerry Ward, didn ' t make it. He was
wounded by the guards' gunfire, but nonetheless
seemed pleased.
" Jame.s Earl Ray got out! Ray got out!.' ' he
chortled from his hospital bed.
Former associates of Dr . King were
suspicious of the escape.
" I really believe that the prison officials,
authorities in very high places, have planned the
escape," said the Rev . Ralph David Abernathy,
who succeeded King as head of the Southern
Christian Leadership Conference. "I would say he

Longest hostage drama ends

Escapees are true desperadoes

escape-proof

• Unique new ~ Modul•r Mo..·u'
~hmin11t~1 •k•p• ar~d red ul.'t5 ~al pm11

~l df'

Iowa State University,
whi ch helped destgn the
study, will cooperate wtth
SCS tn compiling the data .
High-speed computers will
be used to eva luate the
complex sample data and to
ca lculate statewide, regional ,
and national soil erosion
rates and sediment yields.
Fieldwork for the first part
of the inventory will be
completed by November I,
and slat~·by-state data will
be available May 1, 1978.
Sediment yield estimates will,
be completed in mid-1979.

.. .

the all-new Massey-Ferguson
lawn and garden tracton.

dl~l.' haq(l'

instead of around tlle slope.

Ray and five other desperate criminals three of them convicted murderers - used a
makeshift ladder to scale a wall at the Brushy
Mountain State Prison Friday evening while
guards were trying to quell a fight which two other
prisoners staged in the recreation yard.
Lawmen believed they had Ray and his
cohorts hemmed into a five mile square area
immediately adjacent to the prison, but at
midday, following a fruitless, nightlong hunt, they
expanded the area of search to include a 10 mile
radius.
Charles Bass, of the state prison system, said
this was done "because the dogs appeared to have
two hot trails" which took them outside the
previously designated search area.
A light rain fell briefly during the morning ,
but quit before it wiped out the scents the
bloodhounds were tracking.

Officials hoped to press the dogs hard on the
heels of the fugitives to keep them running and
exhaust them .
Although prison officials said there was no
reason to believe that' Ray had outside help, his
escape brought charges from black leaders that it
was rigged and that officials wanted to silence
Ray from testifying further concerning the
assassination of Dr. King .
.
Helicopters with infra -red detection devices
were pressed into the manhunt, and FBI agents
were brought in from Atlanta and Knoxville to
bolster the army of prison guards and state and
local police already on the scene.
Bass said he believed the fugitives split up
into two groups after their escape and that one of
the groups was being led by Larry Hacker, a
convicted robber, who is shod in tennis shoes . The
others, Bass said, apparently were wearing
regular, hard prison shoes.
Bass said it was not known which group Ray
might be with, or whether he had struck out on. his
own . "We are extending our search cutoff point to
assure that they are not beyond our perimeter, "
Bass said.
Three of the fugitives were seen about an hour
after their escape on a ridge behind the prison, but
it was not known whether Ray was among them .
State Corrections Commissioner C. Murray
Henderson said: "We feel like we have the area
well surrounded, We feel like 011r chances of
catching him are very good."
FBI Director Clarence Kelley added Ray to
the nation's list of "ten most wanted" criminals
Saturday, noting that "this is the highest priority

MOSCOW . (UP!)
American Robert C. Toth,
correspondent for the Los
Angeles Times, was detained
and grilled for three hours
Saturday by Soviet security
agents who said he was
caught receiving state
secrets from a Russ ian
scientist on a Moscow street.
Toth told Western news!l)en
he.refused to sign a statement
admitting the allegation but
was allowed to return home
alter questioning in a police
station by police and an of·
ficial of the KGB . He said he
was refused information as to
what would happen next.
Toth, 48, has been in
Moscow for three years.
Married and the father of
three children, he was
scheduled til leave the Soviet
Union next weekend.

Waldheim
asks Jews
t9 clarify

Confessed killer never
got along with family
NASHVILI..E, Tenn . (UP!) brothers and four sisters, two
- The confessed kiUer of Dr. of whom are now dead, as is
Marlin Luther King Jr . never Ray's mother .
got along with his povertyTeachers at the junior high
stricken family , drifted school he attended in Ewing,
between holdups and led a Mo., remember he always
bitterly lonely life.
fought wtth smaller children
James Earl Ray, dark- and pilfered lunch money.
haired and slight, was born 49 One bitter winter the sallowyears ago in a rundown shack faced boy and his brothers
in Alton, Ill., on the banks of ripped out the inside walls of
the Mississippi River. His thetr dirt floor home to use
father was a drifter and for kindling. The flimsy
sometime tenant farmer wbo ·shack collapsed about them
by spring.
took odd railroad jobs.
"The children grew up tn a
Ray did poorly in school
red light district. The mother and rarely made a passing
drank .
The
father grade. Shortly after he joined
absconded, " wrote a blunt the Army he drew three
social worker who visited the months at hard labor and a
Ray home during early general discharge because of
drunkeness and petty crime.
Depression days .
Like his father, he drifted
The sullen and defiant man
never was close til his four about the country taking odd

Women's goals today same
•
as m 1848 Ohioans told

COLUMBUS (UP!) Women 's Decade from 1976Frances "Sissy" Farenthold, 1885.
president of New York 's
The summer meetings will
Wells College for women, told culminate in a National
more than 2,500 women at the Women's Meeting in Houston
Ohio's
Women 's Meeting this in November. Sunday,
KENT, Ohio (UPI) - U.N.
weekend
they are working for Ohioans will select 56
Secretary General Kurt
virtually
the same goals as delegates and vote oo a
Waldheim called on the new
the
first
women 's rights number
of
national
government
in
Israel
convention
resolutions
in
1848.
in
preparation
for
S;!turday to "make its views
In
the
129
years
since
tllat
.that meeting.
known" in an effort to diffuse
Ms. Farenthold, a former
a Middle East situation that historic meeting in Seneca
" remains very dangerous ." Falls, N.Y ., she said, only one Texas state legislator and tbe
first women to be nominated
Following an address to women's goal - suffrage been
fully
achieved
and
for the vice presidency, said
has
graduating students at Kent
three
fundamental
problems
she
was reminded of how
Slate University, Waldbeim
persist:
'
"socially
acceptable sex distold reporters, "The Arab
inequality
under
the
law
crimination
is" by a recent
states have made their views
decision
of
the
Rotary Club, a
secondary
roles
for
known, as had the previous
business
and
professional
or·
women
in
all
institutlons
government of Israel. Now
ganlzation,
to
continue
its
a
vacillating
Supreme
there is a new goverrunent
exclusion
of
women,
because
Court
and it must makes its views
1848
demands
for the "time was not right" for
known .
change.
opportunities
in
education,
"We have heard unofficial
She said only "courageous
trade,
the
professions
'and
reports and rumors , but w~
rights
in
property
and
efforts"
by women have
have not yet heard a for~ .~ n
brought
about
female Rhodes
policy statement of the new guardiansh ip of children
translate into 1976 demands Scholars, !.title League
govermnent." he said.
for
an
equal
right players and labor union
Waldheim said the Middle
East situation ' 1remains very amendment, day care apprentices .
Ms. Farenthold said ,
dangerous. II is one of tbe centers . and equitable pay.
The
two-day
meeting
at
the
"though
we women are a
most complex problems we
caste,
we
are a questioning
state
Fairgrounds,
sponsored
are faced with , and we are
by
the
Ohio
International
caste.
We
are beginmng to
doing our best to be helpful. "
Women
's
Year
coordinating
come
tilgeU1er
to seek our
He said recent talks he has
history
...
Committee,
is
one
of
56
state
talk
about our
had with Russian and
territor·
i
al
session
aspirations
...
and
assert our
and
American officials leads him
plannin g this summer in legal rights."
(Contlllued on p~ge 1]-ll )
ohsetvance of International
But she alse_cited continued

their stand

jobs and serving short hitches
for robbery and passing
forged money orders in
places like Los Angeles and
Chicago.
For his part in a St. Louis
grocery store hold-up, Ray
was sentenced to 20 years at
the Missouri state prison in
Jefferson City. After a couple
of bungled attempts, Ray
escaped in April 1967.
Retired Warden Harold
Swenson recalls Ray was a
quiet prisoner who had no
problems with black irunates
but a Memphis prosecutor
said Ray was a racist who
~riped openly about the
integrated prison. Famed
attorney Percy Foreman of
Houston said his former
client never hid his hatrll!l of
blacks.

inequities in the score of
" worlds " that concern
women :
- in education: of 6,000 U.S.
school districts, only three
are headed by women
superintendents.
- in politics: her personal
case ~ " We a re so little
organized. We have so little
self-esteem, that when a
women aligns her political
life with the women's
movement, her political life
is in jeopardy."
- in health : the U.S. trails
seven nations in the number
of women who die in
childbirth .
- in the military : the Pentagon , worried about the low
quality of volunteer recruits,
has indicated it may· start
seeking women.

bullets at dawn Saturday to
end the longest mass hostage
drama in moderli'history.
Two of the hostages - a 19year.()ld girl and a 4().yearold man.- were killed in tbe
attack along with six of lbe
nine Moluccan gunmen who
had held them for 19 days.
The other 49 hostages aboard
the train were freed.
Twelve hostages were
injured along with two of the
terrorists . Most of the injured
were women but doctors said
they were not in serious
danger.
Justice Minister Dries Van
Agt said the two dead
hostages were not hit by
bullets fired by troops.
In a coordinated attack,
Marines backed by annored
cars staged an assault on the
nearby Bovensrnilde elementary school and rescued four
teachers still being held
there. They arrested the four
other Moluccan gunmen who
seized the school and held 105
children at gu npoint lor four
days before freeing them.
"The assault lasted only a
few minutes, but it seemed
like eternity," Daan Peter
Pot, a 2().year.()Jd student
said after his release from
the train.
In fact , the operation look
about 10 minutes after troops
went into action at both
locations at dawn. It ended a
life-and-death drama which
lasted 445 hours and 14
minutes.
Soon after the assault
ended, Moluccan militants in
Assen hoisted the flag of their
phantom re·p ublic, hailed
their "fallen fighters" and
pledged "the battle will go

· on

01

•

One
radical
group
condemned the government
(Continued on page D~ )

Weather
Clo udy today. Chance of
showers. Highs in the 70s.
Continued cool. chance of
showers tonight and Monday.
Highs Monday in the 70s. lows
tonight in the high 40s .
SWIIII LF.SSONS
MIDDLEPORT · Mary
Jan e Deeley ha s been
employed as swi..mmmg in·
slructor at the Middlepm:t
pool and the ftrst session of
swimrni ng lessons will begin
on Monday, June 27
Reg istrati on is currently be·
111g ta ken at the poo l. Cost ts
$10 for jumor ami senior life
savi ng, and $7.50 for beg in·
ne1· , intermed iate and ad·
vaneed swi nuniug . An adult
swlmmtng course will also be
offe red if there is enough ' in·
tcrcst.

Plan trip to Cuba in
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Ar·
rangements for a Cleveland
City Club forum to be held in
Havana In late fail or early
winter, at which Fidel Castro
would speak and submit to a
queslion-and..answer serles,
are near completion, it was
reported Saturday (!oj

~.

The t:tevet~ud ·Press
reported that Cyrus Eaton,
long-time friend of the CUban
strongman, has personally
made contact with Castro and
expects an OK for club
members and their spouses til
fly down for a long weekend
in late fall or early winter.
,j

�~2 - l he ~Wld.i:i)'

J Ull t!:i~t·ntlnc l , SUIIllet). Jtllll' I"/., HI/;

Looks expensive, but ...

SUNOAY . JU U•

WE SPECIALIZE IN
6 30 Jerry

LOOKS

\ '\1 ' I '', ~ / \ /'1 '~ ·' \ /'1 "I./ I

-

SERVICE

ARE
DECEIVII\IG

Disagreement over
•
sports zssue may
mar conference

LONDON
(UPI)
Commonwealth lead e rs
traveled to Scotland Saturday
for a weekend of talks at a
$100-a-day luxury hotel but a
D1ploma1 Medal li on 2· Door Coupe
major disagr.eemen t over
sports events Willi wh1le·
• Manageable new s1ze
ruled South Africa threatened
to split the meeting'.
• Great new nde
The heads of 34 Common·
• Luxuriou s in every way
wealth governments headed
• Surpnsing pnce
$100-a-mghl
for
the
• 2-door and 4-door models
Gleneagles Hotel, a golfing
resort near Perth , Scotland ,
for relaxed discusSions on the
sports issue as well as the
top1c of supplymg arms and
money for black nallonahst
guerrillas in Rhodesia and
South west Africa.
African leaders hoped to
Dodge
persuade New Zealand Prune
Minister Robert Muldoon to
Gallipolis. Ohio
prohibit sports learns from
his country from competmg
m South Afnca
_,..._ _ _ _ _ _ _,. aparthe1d
pohc1es -of whose
racial

see it today ...
you'll be glad you did!

..
-

CARROLL NORRIS
DODGE
Ravenswood to
host tourney
RAVENSWOOD - The
filth annual Fruth Pharmacy
Slo-Pltch Softball Tour·
nament w1ll be held July 2, 3,
and 4 at the KERA Fields in
Ravenswood. W. Va.
It will be a double
elimination tournament w1th
sponsor trophies being
presented to the top three
teams. Individual trophies
will be presented to the top
two teams.
Entry fee 1s $45 and two
game bails. For information;
contact Ed Baer. Home
phone is 614-992-7214 and
offlce phone is 304·273-4311,
extension 2224, or contact
Don Swisher, home phone is
304-675.$44. Office phone is
304-675-1121.

GALLIPOLIS 0.

Israeli frown
toward Carter
TEL AVIV, Israel. (UP!) The Israel! ambassador to
the Umted States said
Saturday Israel is "no t
happy" with President
Carter's Middle East policy
because the Arabs could
miSinterpret his comments
Palestinian
about
a
homeland
" We are not happy w1th the
cumulative effect that
various statements made by
the admimstration created,"
said Israeli Ambassador
Simcha Din1tz in a telephone
mterV!ew broadcast over the
Israeli government radio.
Dinitz
said Carter's
statement
about
a
Palestinian homeland and
the need for an Is·

segregatwn have been
condemned
by
the
Commonwealth
Black members of the
Commonwealth
have
threatened to boycott the 1978
Commonwealth Games at
Edmonton, Canada, unless
Muldoon backed down .
Zambia President Kenneth
Kaunda
told a news
conference Saturday that
while Muldoon 's "heart IS in
the right place, he has iiot
wtderstood the complexities
envelopmg us m southern
Africa.,.

Kaunda repeated the
blacks' contention that it was

eilller "Ignorance, or playing
into the hands of South
Afrtca " to suggest sports and
poht1cs could be separated.
South Africa's apartheid
policy, segregating people
" whetl1er m sports or m
trams " was polit1caiiy
motivated, Kaunda said
Southern Afnca and the
confhct 1n RhodeSia and
South West Afnca (Nam1bia)
dommated discuss10ns at the
London SWll1111t conferenc'e
which opened three days ago.

River Downs 1

The horse ran the mile on
the turf m I : 41 3-5, good for
hefty returns of $55.80, $22.40
and $13.80.
Grand Stride returned $12
and $4.60 while the No. 3
horse, Oh10 Vamp, returned
$7.20.
A Ul·9 da1iy double of Can
You D1g It and Lady Adelaide
returned $50
A crowd of 4,129 bet
$412,231.

International league
Urttfed Press lnlernahonal

Tidewater

2.:1 23 511

R ichmond
Rochester

24 23
27 26

Charleston

- - - - - - - - - - - Syracuse
raeli
w1thdrawai
to Toledo
the pre-1 967 M1ddle East Columbus

war borders was contrary to
U S.-fsraeh understanding on
ways to solve the Arab-Israel!
dispute.

W L Pet. GB

33 18 647

8;

12 30-Meet the Press 34,1 5; Directions 6; Testimony
Time 8, The Issue 10. Lower Lighthouse 13
I oo-Amerlca's Black Forum 6. Bob Jones University
8, Face the Nat ion 10. Issues &amp; Answers 13: Nova
20. Prevln &amp; the Pittsburgh 33.
1· 30-Movie " I Was a Male War Bride" 3; NBC News
Spec 1al4, )5; Awan~6 , Ben Haden B, Medlv 11
2 OG--Mov1e " Distant Drums" 6; To Be Announced 8;
Movie "Second s" 13, Age of Uncertainty 20;
Doc umentary Showcase 33.

2 30-Celebrily Bowling 8.
3 00-Women' s Golf 3.4, 15, Tennis 8; Tnbal Eye 20,

Wildl ife in CriSis 10
3 30-Voyage to the End of the Earth 33.

7

7
911:2

21 27 460
23 33 .411 12'12
17 32 347 15
Fnday 's Results
Charle ston 18, Syracuse 4
Rochest er 7, T idewater 6
Toledo 6, Pawtucket 2
Columbus 7, Richmond 3

.

run on both the Republican
and Progressive tickets. This
also was ruled illegal.
As the campaign wore on,
the Tribune became more
sympathetic toward
Roosevelt, primarily because
of the animosity that Mr.
Sibley felt toward Daugherty
and Harding who were
· running Taft 's campaign
Sibley
claimed
that
Daugherty and Harding
would be the ruination of the
Republicans in Ohio. The
Journal called Roosevelt the

"windy

on~,"

' vain/' a
1

and one who
was runnmg for the
presidency to seek revenge.
Congressman Switzer of
Galli a county, a staunch
supporter of Taft, was the
victim of much of the mud
thrown by the Progressives
and the Democrats. Switzer
11

fencesitter"

Sen. Byrd says
Carter's fault
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - In
his strongest criticism of
President Carter yet, Senate
Democratic Leader Robert
Byrd Saturday warned the
White House to " cool it" and
stop
issuing
outraged
statements over changes
Congress is mal&lt;ing m the
energy program.
Byrd told a news con·
ference Carter 's program
suffered major setbacks
during Hou se com m ittee
hearmgs because it contamed
!lOme bad 1deas and vague
plans.
Besides, he said, the
inexperienced White House
failed to lobby effectively for
what It want~ .

managed to win re-electwn
by 36 votes. Switzer too may
well have been the first Gallia
count1an satinzed m a cartoon. The caption had Switzer
saying, "It is not true that I
voted w1th Aldr~ch all the
tune, for some of the tune I

76ers go for
board strength
PHILADELPHIA (UP! ) The Phlladelphia 76ers, who
consistently came up short on
the boards last season, made
the
nat10n's
leading
rebounder the1r flrst chmce in
the NBA College Draft.
Alter choosing Seton Hall 's
Glenn Mosley in the first
round Friday, they p1cked
Old Domimon 's Wilson
Washington, another rebound
spec1alist, m the second
round
"Rebound1ng cost us some
games," said Gene Shue,
whose 76ers lost the NBA
finals in s1x games to the
Portland Trail Blazers .
"Reboundin~ is the major
part of defense "
The 6-foot-8, 195-pound
Mosley averaged 16 31
rebounds
per
game.
Washington, 6-9, 227 pounds,
led Old Dommion m
rebounding in 22 of the
Monarchs' 29 games last
season.
Ph1Jadelphia also chose
hometown sta r Joh)l Olive, 68, of V1ilanova .
Other 76e rs' se lectwns
Fnday were: Arnold Dugger,
6-3 , Oral Hoberts; Jack
Jones, 6·1, Utah; Teku
Wynder, 6-4, Tulsa ; ·George
Gibson, 6-3, Winston-Salem,
and Dennis rorest. 6·4.
Nebraska .

did not vote. ll
The Bulletin prmted weekly
the reasons for votmg for
Wilson Some of them were:
'~ He will cl ea n
house ,"

"stands fer income tax/' "he
stands for the rights of
labor," ''he stands for free
trade," and "he wants to bust
up the monopolies."

11 .00-News 3,4,a, 10, 15; Monty Python' s Flf lng C~rcus
33
11 15-CBS News a. 10; PMA Pulse 15.

The year 1912 was further
complicated because in
September Oh1oans went to
the polls to vote on 42 con·
st1tutional amendments. One
amendment gave women the
right to hold public office and
another the right to vote The
former passed I, 177 to 1,134,
and beheve 1t or not, the
latter fa1led 1,330 to 1,296.
Apparently some people
wanted women in office, but
they did not want them to
vote!
Political rallies brought to
the county notables from all
over the country Even such
things as the Rio Grande an~
Vmton bean dinners had to
suffer the harangues of
politicians. Close to 5,000
people attended the Vinton
dinner that year.
1'he fmal vote in Gallia
county read, Wilson, 1,735 ;
Taft, 1,337, and Roosevelt,
2,013. In seven townships Taft
and Roosevelt had the same
number of votes. Wilson won
in Addison , Morgan and Oh1o
plus in the 1st and 2nd wards
of Galhpohs.
After the election Mr.
Sibley of the Tribune wrote ·
" It looks like the Progress ive
party has come to dwell in
our m1dst, not as a transient
vis1tor, but as a sineere
organization of determined
men." - James Sands, Box
58, Barlow. Ohio.

3695

5

•

1·05-Porky P1g 10.
1·30-Schoolles 10
a.oo-Howdy Doody 6, Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; SesameS
33.
a 30- B1g Valley 6
9 Q()-A M 3; Ph il Donahue 4, 13, 15 ; Andy Griffith a.
Childhood 33.
9.30-Cross·WIIS 3; Edge of Night 6 , Concentra t1on 8
IO .oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Dmah 6, Mike Douglas 13;

•
•

-

Love of Life 8, 10; Erica 33
II 55-CBS News 8; Ms Flxlt 10.
12 :0()-News 3,A,6, 10; Shoot tor the Stars 15; Divorce

,.

Pomeroy
Open Evenings Until8p .m.

Cubs sign five choices

LOUrt

9.oo-Movle "The War Between the Tates" 3.A. 15;
Pallisers 20,33; Maude 10.
9 30-6 RMS RIV VU a.10.
IO :oo-News 20. Austin City Limits 33
10.30-Farm Digest 20.
11 :oo-News 3,A,6 ,8, 10, 13, 15; Monty Python's Flying
Circus 20; Black Journal 33.
II 30-Johnny Carson 3.4. 15. ABC News Special 6J3;
Kojak a. Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33 . : .
12.0()-Streets of San Fronclsco 6,13; Movie "My
Foollsh Heart" 10; Janak1 33.

1971 OLDS CUSTOM CRUISER ..........'1595
Loaded. v 8, P.S, P.B , automatic, temp. control, P.

CHICAGO (UP! ) - The
Chicago Cubs Saturday
announced the Slgmng of five
choices from this week 's
baseball draft and ass1gned
all of them to thelf
Bradenton, Fla , Farm Club
in the rookie Gulf Coast
League.
Signed
were
secoad
baseman Dan Rohn from
Central Michigan Umvers1ty ;
catcher Mike Shepston from
Phoenix, Ariz., College ;
pitcher Joseph Step hers from
USC Coastal Carolina ;
shortstop Mark Obal from
Northeastern Univer Jity ;
and shortstop Jerome Ahlert
from Aiken H1gh School,
Cincinnati.
The Cubs drafted 40 players
but three caMOt be s1gned

.,

.,.,.,G1&amp;s.,F~~u,

' . . .,,

unt1l after the conclusion of
the College World Series,
being held thi s week in
Omaha, Neb.
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT ,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
A T H E N S

3f4 Ton Pickup, auto ..

P.S .. V-8, A.C, vinyl lop N1ce

1974
THUNDERBIRD

1975 MUSTANG II 3 DR 2 PLUS 2.... '3395

Auto, P

P.S.. 4 cyl, 4 speed, A.C, dual sport mirrors. Digital

Cruise.

s:,

P.B., P.W..

auto,

air,

f1lt

1975 C-10 .................
.p

'3795

auto . trans , custom delu ,;e package, radio,

1S,OOO m iles. A real beauty .

'

J I o

..
.. " "
·- •

'" ..-

--.
•
•
--

FREE OIL CHANGE FOR ONE YEAR WITH ANY
NEW OR USED CAR OR TRUCK. 2000 MILES
BEFORE CHANGES.
See Pat Hill, Rocky Hupp or Darrel Dodrill
For a Good Deal an a New or Used Vehicle
Open even1ngs til7:00 except Thursday and Saturday •

Middleport, 0.

BE1TY NAMED
PALM DESERT, Calif.
(UP!) - Dolores Hope, wife
of comed1an Bob Hope and
chairman of the board of
trustees of the Eisenhower
Medical Center, announced
Thursday that fonner First
Lady Betty Ford has been
made a trustee.
Mrs. Ford and her husband
moved to the nearby Palm
Springs area when he left the
presidency and are building a
borne there . Mrs. Ford has
been a patient at the hospital
several ti'i"es for treatment
of chronic arthritis and a
pinches nerve in her neck.

f!:!J

r

'""

" Ill

sold and serviced thi s one.

•2395

1973 AMC
GREMLIN
6 cy l , auto, P S , P B , low

1973 BUICK
CENTURY
2 Dr ., auto ., P S , P 8 , a i r ,

1973 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX
Br own w1fh be 1ge top . loca l

mileage

vrnyl top, one owner

ow ner .

'2695

'3195

Nolice5

In Memory

ASTRO GRAPH

GET YOUR EAR S P•e,ced l&lt;ee w• lh

IN

Bernice Bede Osol

HIGLEvs

•

l he purch o!&gt;e of $10 po1r o f
earnings, To wneys Jewelers
BARBER

sHoP ANo

TRADING POST Open 5 days,
8·8, clo9ed Sunday ond Man
day 1 1/t Miles norl h of S S
Shoppmg Plozo R1 7, Gun s. ,
Book s, Pollery

\YJriimrJ
Ul!J\.!JU

~ ~

DEAR 99
LOS ANGELES (UP!) Actor Don Adams, who
played bumbling secret agent
Maxwell Smart on the "Get
Smart'' television series, was
to be married today to
Michelle Judy Luciana, 26, an
actress from Montana.
M1ss Luciano's pearl •
encrusted weddmg dress was
modeled alter an 18th·
century gown worn in the
movie, "The Prisoner of
Zenda," a spokesman sa1d. It
is her first mamage and the
third for Adams.

RadiO City Stat1on. N.Y 100t9
Be sure to specify your
sign

b~ rth

ARIES (Morch 21·Aprll19)

It al
a l l possible leave you r
checkbook . wallet or credit
cards at home tod ay Money
shps through your clutches like
water through a s1eve

TAURUS (Aprii20-Mey 20) Th1 s

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

U;;l'-!l ®

by Henr1 Arnold and Bob Lee

l :':::"='::::I:·"\1

GEMINI (May 21·June 20)

Do

nothing out ol anger, emotion or
jealousy today Hasty actrons wtll
have a way of coming back to
haunt you at a futu re t1me
You're not as tolerant of pals as
you normally are If they tend to
be t1ght -hste d. by all means
avo1d assocratlng with them to day.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Giving

BYBEA

[) I

orders may be your destre today,
but 1t's not your forte B~au se of
your laCk of tact, you may foment
a slight rebellion

(]

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) A lillie

rAWNEOt

) t] . j

WHAI THE AUDIENCE
DID WHEN TI-lE
HAM AC:.TOR APPEAFi'ED
ON :STAGE .

learnrng can be a dangerous
thing Today you shouldn't try to
' pose as an eKpert tn an area
Where you're not dry behmd the
ears.

Now arrange the circled letlet'S to
form the surpnse answer, as suggested by the above car1oon

make any bus1ness dec1slons today where you ' re under
pressure Better to get a good
night's sleep and tackle tt in the
morning

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Don't

IPSOME

I I I
Answer: TOOK THE t I

I l ) [ I I Jr I I J
(Answers Monday)

,_ v

Yester~ay s

Jumbles. TAWNY KNIFE EMERGE

I Answer

How music may be played- and

listened to - BY EAR

BOBBIN

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) In
one·to-one relationships today

you 're more senstt1ve about your
end than usual. You look lor the
other guy 10 co ncede but
perhaps you should

Thrum an R
pa ssed owy
today on th e
WfJ •mss Jhe
show II wa s

you Dod ond that 5 l ~ r s u 1 ~ We
w1 sh you co uld ho ... e b een w llh
us mor o fh e thoughh 1n our
h{'(lrt s 1s sl1ll 1hm e P~Jcn
th ough li s hard to bear I Know
your re 111 o hellc r place now .
whe1c tear:. wt tl "v" v' t i l ' "
your br ow Sad ly mis5ed by oi l
l he Chtldren

4

4

OF
John so n
who
three year s ago
13th doy of Jut1e
&lt;;;rnd e he usnd Ia

IN

·...-' ·

-.,......-...
...
....--.
...
•.

...•.

--·-••·
..•..
•..

..••

....·
...
·..

•3800
NOW IN STOCK
3-1977 SEDAN DEVILLE$
&amp;
1-1977 COUPE DEVILLE

..

....-

See one of these courteous salesmen : Pete
Burn s, or Marvm Keebaugh.

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

·.

" You' ll like Our Quality Way
Of Oiling Business"
992 -5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Evenings Tll6 : 00 - Tll5 p.m. Sat.

No li ct&gt;!'i
SWEf PER and scw rng rno ch1ne
1t•pd 1r, ports and sup plies P1ck
up and delivery Dov•s Vacuum
Cleaner ' t mdc up Georg es
Cree k Rd Ph 446-02Q4
PASQUALE Elet:tnc ol
446 27 16 day or n1gh 1

...-

..•

ALL FULLY EQUIPPED

POMEROY, OHIO

l&gt; O ::.ad he ho d to go We r m !l ~

cl asses . call 4.t6 7 161

June 12, 1977
Don't be dtscouraged thiS year
1f you feel your progress IS 1m
peded by others There may be a
few knots 10 untangle. but rest
assured you can handle 1t To
fmd out mpre of what 11es ahead
for you send for your copy of
Astra -Graph l etter Ma1l 50
cents for each and a long self
addressed, stamped envelope to
Astro-Graph , P.O. Bo x 489 ,

MEMORY

...

Whit e dark vinyl roof. blue mter ior , stereo
radio wth tape. T&amp; T wheel. full power and
factory a1r .

Bill Nelson.

992·2174

-·....

73 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
500 E. MAIN

• ..

'5500

Don't forget you owe H to yourself to check with SmHh Nelson before you buy any car new or used.
We can save you money. We are the Friendly Dealer. We have the sharpest Pencil in town.
Of

,._

Vmyl roof, leather seats. full power . lac tory·
air. c r ui s e co ntrol . T&amp; T whe el. ful l s tereo . 1
own er.

June 18, 1977

See or call one of these Friendly Salesmen: Ceward Calvert, J. D. StoiJ

..-

74 Sedan DeVille

Hurry!
Offer Ends

225 4 Dr H T Thts ca r ha s
every thinq

.....
~

F ull power. factory air , leather seats, T&amp; T
wheel. ste reo . 32,000 miles

'3695

1973 BUICK ELECTRA

CANCER (June 21·July 22)

1:00--Tomorrow 3,4.

new

'2995

'1395

could be a d1sconcer1tng day lor
you 1f yot.~ ' re not extra toleran t 1t
seems your good Intentions are
misunderstood by companions
and family alike .

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one lener to each SQuare, to form
tour ordinary words.

..

owner

Sold this

one

••

75 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

1974 F·lOO ....................................•2795

1111\INl ID'il

i&lt;

Thi s car ha s

P B., local owner .

GJ~w\J)~(!]t} w~~~~~~oR,.;i~~,~~~ ~o~~' :~~~o~;

BUCHAREST (UP! ) ,.
Romania reached the finals j
•
•
1
of the European Zone Davis
•
,,
Cup Saturday by taking a a..o;
lead over Britain in their
Best-of-Five meet.
llie Nastase and Ion Tir~ac
...
• • ,.
defeated brothers John and 1971
Prop erty appra 1Sed at ..- .Davtd Lloyd, 9-7, 2~ , 6-4, 9·7, $6 ,000
00
James J . Proff1tt
tn a match interrupted
Sheriff of several times by rain and
Me1gs Coun ty , Oh io ~.
lasted nearly three hours .
(6 ) 12, 19, 22. {1 ) 3. 10
... . .•
_:;·:·: .·:·· .:· ·.. ·: ·.·. :·: , ·.. ;.;., :·::: ;.;.··:· ·:· :·:-: ··:·:·:·:·:·:·:·.·:· .;:;..,:;:·.:··:-:-:::···:·:·
12 · 4~Movle "Night of Dark Shadows" a.
I: 10-News 13.
MOVIE CHANNEL 4 - 5 ond 7 p.m.• Runion
Roulette; 9ond 11 p.m.· Dog Day Afternoon.
CHANNEL 5 6 Jo--Testimony Time.
7 oo---Paul Gaudino Family Fitness

..... .

98

1974 BUICK
APOUO
'2 60 V 8, au to., P S , P B ,

wheel.

,

C 0 U N T Y .....

SAV IN GS
&amp; L OAN CO MPANY
PL A INTIFF
VS
CHARL.ES D HATFIELD .
ET AL
DEFENDANTS
No . 16,364
LEGAL NOTICE
Pur su ant to an ord er of
Sale 1Ssued by the Com m on
Pleas Cou r t of M eigs County ,
Oh10, I wil t off er for sale at
public auct•on on th e 16th day
of July , 1977 at 10 00 AM at
the Cou rt Hou ~ e St eps, m the
V1l la ge o f Pom er oy, Co unty
of Me1~s. Sta t e of Ohio , th e
fotlow1ng descr fbed real
es l&lt;t te
Sa1d re al est ate Si tUated 1n
V1l lage of Middleport, Cou nty
o f Me i gs and State of Oh10 ,
Be1 ng lots 340, 341 and 5' Off
the west si de of Lo t 33 9 1n
Horton's lower Pomeroy sub
d1v lsion of the Village of
Middleport
Ref erenc e Deed Volume
261 page 11 , Mergs county
Deed Recor ds .
Terms of sa le Cash for not
less tha n tw o -lh 1rds of the
appra1sed value , sub1ec t to
I •en for real es tate taxes for

s., V-8,

00 . . . . . . . .

1974 CHEV.
MAILBU
Lagu na. a•r , 1ape, local one

1975 PONTIAC
VENTURA
2 Dr , VB, auto . P S , P B

L.W. B., 3 speed. 225-6 cy l.. radio, lulone pa1nt. 13,000

L.W. B.. 3 speed, P S .. radio, v.a, tulane pamt, 10.000

1974 OLDS

1975 DODGE
DART
2 Dr Slant 6, auto , P S •

miles, like new

Closed Sunday .
'92-2196

-

--••·

..

•.
•.

'6800

'4695

'3395

1976 [).100 OODGE ....................... ' 3995

DAN THOMPSON FORD
'

75 Cadillac Sedan DeVille

Only

'3995

Acyl ., auto trans , vinyl top. Sharp gas saver .

miles. Nice.

real

'3495

1974 FORD PINTO 2·DR ................ .... '2595

Buckeye Golden Card Honored On Parts &amp; Service

...
- •.

'8800

'6800

1975 CHRYSLER
DORDOBA
Th ts car has everythmg

'4295

Lux 4 dr
everything

•3395

locks. Sharp.

1972 OLDS DELTA 88 ..... .............. '1495

PS,

p B.

seats, P. windows, trlt wheeL AM-FM stereo, P. Dr.

S.W B., 6 cyl., auto. trans.

"Your Chevy Dealer"

11 :00-Wheel of Fortune 34.15. Happy Days 6,13; Bit
With Knit 33.
11 .30-ll's Anybody 's Guess 3,4, 15, Family Feud 6, 13;

C20

302 VB. P.S., auto lrahs. vinyl top

•

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
992·2126

1974 CHEV.

1973 FORD GRAN TORINO 2 DR ......... '2195

•
•
•
•

•

OasIs 1n Space 33

mileage

sht4295

V·8, P S , auto. trans .. A C., luggage rack.

•

10 30-Hollywood Squares 34,15; Price Is Right 8,10;

PB,.

1975 PLYMOUTH
FURY Ill
Dr , air, extra low

1976 F·150 ........ .... ...........................' 3795

Hurry In For A Good DEAL

7:0()-Today 34,15, Good Morning America 6, 13. CBS

Yarnell 10.

1973 FORD WAGON 4 DR ................ '2295

TEC CUSTOMIZED VANS
SWINGING TURnE by Turtle Top

6· 30-Columbus Today 4; News 6; Summer Semester
8, Medix 10
6·45---Morning Report 3

To Buy a Home 33.

••
•
•

CHEVY VANS
TEC·MINI HOMES

6·15-Farm Report 13.
6:20-Not For Women Only 13

4·oo-Mister Cartoon 3; Gong Show 15. New Mickey
Mouse Club 6. Lucy Show a, Ssame St 20,33; Movie
"All the Way Home" 10, Dinah 13.
4.30-My Three Sons 3; Star Trek 4; Emergency One
6, Partridge Family 8; Hogan's Heroes 15 .
5·00-Big Valley 3; Brady Bunch 8, Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20.33. Emergency One 13; Mission
Impossible 15.
5 30-Adam-12 4; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co
20.33.
6:0()-News 3,4,a, 10, 13.15; ABC News 6 ; Zoom 20;
American Odyssey 33.
6;30-NBC News3,4 ,15. ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News a. 10; Vegetable Soup 20
7 oo-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Liar's Club
6; Buck Owens 8; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13, Mv
Three Sons 15; Americana 20, Montage 33.
7.30-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; In Search of A;
Muppel Show 6, Gong Show 8; MacNeii·Lehrer
Report 20,33, Candl&lt;j Camera 13; Nashville on the
Road 15
a·oo--Little House on the Prairie 3,A1, 15; Pilot 13;
Jefferso~s a.lO; Decades of Decision 20,33.
a : 3~Baseball6,13, Interfaith CommitteeS; Shields &amp;

•

4

Supreme 4 dr ., a1r, P.S. ,

6 cyl , P S., auto. trans.

clean

'4495

CU11ASS

1975 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR ............. '2495

dock. low mileage. Ex clean .

Think Chevrolet Think Pomeroy Motor Co.

6 00-Summer Semester 10

a.IO
2 Q()-- $20,000 Pyramid 6, 13; At The Top 33
2&lt;Jo-Doctors 3,4, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13, Guiding
L1ghl 8, 10.
3 oo--Another World 3.4.15, All In The Family 8,10,
Lowell Thomas Remembers 20; Bit With Knit 33.
3.15-General Hospital 6,13.
3·30-Malch Game 8,10; Lilias, Yoga &amp; You 20, How

•
•
••

Country Squ tre, V-8 engme . automatic, power steerrng,
bral&lt;.es, door locks, window s &amp; sea ts, 8 pass., air, rad 1o
Ltke new f1res, many more e.xtras .
·

MONDAY, JUNE 13, 1971

" I 30--0ays of Our Lives 3,4,15, As The World Turns

-

••
•
•
••

1972 FORD LID

Movie Channel4 - 5 and 9 p m - Noon to Three, 7 and
11 p m
Star Is Born

I oo-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; News 8,
Young &amp; the Reslle,s 10; Not For Women Only 15;
Great Performances 33.

••

a,

vinyl top

1975 CHEV.
CAMARO
V-8, auto , P S , P B ,

4 dr. H

•4495
1975 OLDS

1975 FORD LTD 4 DR ................... '3695

•

bik . viny l top, good t1res

12 Q()-ABD News 6
12 15-FBI 6; Ironside 13
12: 30-Movle "Jigsaw" 4
I: 15-ABC News 13.
I · 3'0-Pyeton Place 4

Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.

-

l door , a1r cond tf toned, P S, P B , rad1o. whrte f lntsh,

11 3Q-Movie " Hann ibal Brooks' 1 3,15 ; Star Show 4,
Mov1e " The Treasure of Pancho Villa " 8; Hawaii
F1ve -O 10 , Janakt 33
11 45-News 6, 13.

a. Midday 13. Forsyte Saga 33
12 30-Chico &amp; the Man 3, 15; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Bob

.

1972 MERCURY MONTEGO

Per

Here's Lucy 8,10, Once UpOn A Classic 33

GALLIPOLIS - Aside
from Gro'fr Cleveland's two
. victories, the Republican
party dominated Amencan
presidential politics from
1860 until 1912. In 1912 the
Republicans nominated for
president the mcumbent Taft.
But Teddy Roosevelt decided
that he would run too. The
Republican party was split
Wide. The tremors of this split
were felt even at the local
level.
In May 1912 Gallia county
Republicans had elected 18
men to the cowtty's central
comm1ttee . In
August
Shennan Eagle, a long-time
Republican leader, came out
l1l support of Roosevelt. In
September Eagle would be
named state chairman of the
Bull Moose party.
· Some real excitement was
generated in September when
Judge Gates called a meeting
of the central committee.
Only a handful of the 18
members showed up. Those
that came were for Taft. Most
of those who stayed away
were for Roosevelt. Judge
Gates declared a vacancy
ex isted where a com·
mitteeman failed to show up.
Ail the vacancies were then
filled with Taft men !
· The Gallipolis Journal,
. which was a staunch Taft
supporter, claimed the action
was just . The Gallipolis
Tribune {not officially for any
candidate) and the Gallipolis
· Bulletin (Democratic) ealled
it "foul play."
In late October the
· Secretary of State ruled that
. the action of Judge Gates was
: 11iegal. A further problem
· xlsted among local can·
: didates who wished to be
a~wciated with both Taft and
JWose'?'lt. 'fhey w"nted to

••

•

News 8 , Chuck White Reports 10

Teddy Roosevelt's
candidacy
.
split Gallia County's GOP

P.S. , V -8, A.C., electric clock . cr u1se control.
Sharp - 2 in stock.

•

2'92 engme, 15.000 lb .. 2 speed rear axle, 108" cab to
axle, clean cab, like new , 825x20 tires .

"Corey · For the People" 3.4.15

Morn1ng, Trl Sate 13

•
•

•

1973 CHEVROLET 2 TON

20,33.

6 . 5~Good

owner

-

automatic , power steering &amp; brakes, a 1r con d ,
vinyl roof, gold f 1n1 sh, vmyl tnferior, rad10 New w-w
t1res

9 DO-Movie " Suicide Run " 6. 13 ; Masterpiece Theatre

Morning. West Virg inia 13.

.-.

6 cyl. , P .S , A. C. . vinyl top, auto. trans., eK. clean

sha rp.

P.S .. reclining buckets, nice, economical.

6 cyl..

......

Red w ith
whi t e vmyl top , red lea ther
mterior , fu ll
power. factory air, full
stereo. c ruise con trol. T&amp; T wheel.

We have some of the best late model used cars that we have had for a long time. MoSt of them
local owners. So buy now and get 50 gallons Free Gas.

1975 MAVERICK 4 DR ................... '2995

-·•

1974 PLY. VALIANT 4 DR.

Remember this Is the last week for 50 Gallons Free Gas with purchase
of a used car from Smith Nelson Priced over S6DO.OO

1975 BUICK
LESABRET , loca l
Custom

•
•
•

1 owner, clean interior, air, P steering &amp; brakes.
automati c, l1ke new w w ti res .

V

1975 FORD GRANADA 2 DR ............. '2995

·~.
~

1975 BUICK
LESABRE
Custom 4 dr . HT, extra

•
•

1974 FORD LID CPE.

20
a:oo-Columbo 3,4,15; Six Million Dollar Man 6,13,
Rhooda 8.10; Previn &amp; the Pittsburgh 20,33
8·30-P hylli s 8,10.

6 : ~Good

P.S., A.C, V-a. P. B, reclin ing buckets, sharp.

'

31 20 60a 2
511
509

1975 FORD GRANADA 2 DR ............ .'3495

8' Fleetside, automatiC, P st eering &amp; brakes , 350 V:S,
H . duty spr tngs, m irrors. R step bumper, rad10.
chrome equ 1p 2 tone blue &amp; wh rte

American Odyssey 33
7: 30--Know Your Antiques

7

P.S.. V-8, P.B, A C., reclinmg seals .. . 21 n stock.

1974 CHEVY c1o ••••••••••••• s3095

60 Minutes B. 10, Crockett's VI ct ory Garden 20;

Great

1975 FORD GRANADA 4 dr ............. '3394

1976 AMC HORNU •••••••••••• s3795

oo-world of Disney 3.4.15. ABC New s Special 6,13;

Palllsers 33.

inserts

•

.--.....

...--..

4 cyl. , auto trans .• AM. FM 8 track stereo .
P.S., A C., vmyl top, body side moldings, with vinyl

Sport abou t. 6 cylm der, automatiC, power steenng and
brakes , delu xe equ1pment, while wal l t ires, luggage
ra c k , da rk green fin1sh , less than 10,000 m i les,
showroom clean

Press 33 , $25,000 Pyramid 10 ; News maker '77 13.

lO ·Oo-Who's Who 8, 10;
formances 20

1976 FORD ELITE.. ........................ '4995

3 sea •- , l es~ than 8,000 miles, never tttled and used by
Mr s Kn1ght Fu l l accessory equipment, 1nc. arr(
Positraction , power seat s, w1ndows &amp; door locks This
rs a nice wagon &amp; one at th e ful l size ones

6 ·30-- ·NBC News 3,4, 15, News 6, 30-Minutes 8; World

30-Mov~e

••

1976 CHEV. IMP. WAGON •••••• 5995

6.0()- News 4. Andy Grlttith 6; Andy Williams a.

9

1976 FORD MUSTANG 2 dr ... .......... '3295

•

..••.

Charcoal grey. silver lea ther interior. full
power , factory air . AM- FM stereo radio,
T&amp; T s teering wheel. 13,000 miles .

DAN THOMPSON FORD

..•

5

4. DO-Bewltched 6 , Auto Raci ng 8, 10; Hogan' s Heroes
13, Holli s Sum men. 20; Documentary Showcase 33
4 . 30--Tenn1s 6,13; Documentary Showcase 20
5 DO-Grandstand 3,4, 15. Age of Uncertainty 33
5 30-Star Trek 3; Bobby Vinton 4; Music Hall
America IS , Agronsky al Large 20

7

•
•
•

•

.....

••

76 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

AT

••
•

Wh ite f1n1sh, red v1nyl 1ntenor, automati~. power
steer mg , rad10, tap e, 10,000 mtles, ru st proofing, estate
tr 1m , air cond i tioning

Evangelistic

AT THESE A-1 USm CARS

--

1976 VEGA WAGON ••••••••••• 3595

Wall Street Week 33

race at River Downs

'

Fa ce the Nation

••
•

5

-....
p

'8900

•

,

.

~
..,.

Light blue , blue vinyl roof , de-elegance
int e nor , full power and air , AM· FM stereo
with tape , T&amp; T s teenng wheel.

•

'

...'

76 Cadillac Sed. DeVille

•

Landau s11ver, red custom mterlor . power split seat.
air, powe r steenng and brakes, power doof locks and
windows , radio and tape, much more, save a plenty .

Hogan 's Heroes 10; Town Topics 13, Sesame St 20 ,

CINCINNA11 ( UI'l )
Michael Bryan led Frankhn's
Jean to a surprising onelength wm over Grand Stride
Fnday m the $5,700 feature

Pawtucket

Answers 6 .

-.....

-•
-•
--

1976 MONTE CARLO •••••••••.'5948

Outreach 13, Insight 15; At The Top 20

•

-·--·
---

Tradesman 200, sport wh eel s and whJte let1ered tires,
VB automatic power steering and brakes , rear door
and side door 'glass, RH seat. rad1o. blue finish , add
your own camping equipment

12 00-At Issue J, News Conterence.4 4, Issues &amp;

..,..,.

---

1974 DODGE VAN •••••••••••• 53395

Upon A Classic 20.

..-

•

Local owner, 350, VS, automat ic power steer ing and
brakes , rally wheel s, chrome equ rpmenl.
rntenor pan-eled and Insulated. carpeted , ready to add
your own camp rng equ1pment

IO .oo-Chnst is lhe Answer 3; Church Service 4. Leroy
Jenkms 6 , Robert Schuller IS ; Christ1an Center 8;
Movi e " The Valley of Decision" 10: Jimm y
Swaggart 1J .
10 · 30- Big Blue Marble 3. Junior Almost Anything
Goes 6 , Yours tor the Asking 4, Robert Schuller 8 ;
Garne Ted Amstrong l J ; Zoom 20 .
I I DO-L id5VII le 3i Doctors on Call4 ; Hot Fudae 6 ; Rex
Humbard 8, 15 ; Rev Henry Mahan 13. Elec Co 20
11 30-TV Chapel ) , Anlm8ts, Animals. Animals 6;
Focus on Columbus 4; Testi mony Time 13; Once

--....

12, 1977

-•
--•
••
.--- -.

1976 CHEVY VAN G20 •••••••• '5695

20

[).3_ The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, June

•

Vacation Travels
-See Us Now-

9 00-Gosoel S1nqlng Jub1le-e J, Rober t Schuller 4,
Oral Roberts 10. Rex Humbard 6, Rev Leonard
Repass 8 , Better Way 15, Mister Rogers 20
9 JQ-Wha t Does I he B ible Plainly Say? 8. If Is Wri llen
H). J1m Frank.lin 13, Th1s is the L1fe 15 i SesameS

Smith Buick-Pontiac
the luxurious-andaffordable new

oo-

Humbard 13; Open B1ble 15.

ALL MAKES AND MODELS
PHONE 446·2282
for appointment

1911 EASTERN AVE.

Planni.1y Your

ttdnds 8, Public Polley

FMums 10. Newsmak;er ' 77 13
Chnstopher Closeup 3. Tennessee Tuxedo 6:
Th1nk1ng 1n Blac:k 8. Rev Cleophus Robinson 13
I 31)... Thts is the Life J : Your Health 4, Show My
People 6, Jerry Falwell 8. Porky P19 10, Amaz ing
Grace Btble C lass 13
I 5.)--,. Blac k Cameo 4 , Mormon Choir 3. Day of
Dl scover-y 4, Communique 6, Dr . E J Daniels
Presents Happ iness Is 13. Sesame Sl 20
8 3Q--Oral Roberts 3; J immy Swaggart 4, Day o f
Discover y 8. James Robison Presents 10, Rex
1

·' AIR COND17101rJING

F a l w~ ll4 . TalkuJg

--"

1917

Servrce

B~CI N

your sp• rng ~.l oortmg by
your &lt;:01pels cleaned by
best me th od known R P. m ov~
a ll l h.-. d1r t Moku your carpet
For free
lnok T)c:&gt;w o~o1n
cs ll mo tc call379-2btl2
ho ~J r~tq

l OVING Memory o f rn y D~ AD ~ f o t k rern ovcd No charge
prC(:IOU!&gt; Mol he r M1 &lt;:, Ruth G
Co112.t5-S51 4.
ARMCO PLAN
Meadows Wh o wcn l Ia be w11h
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio
Je sus June II . t968 Those THURMAN HOU SE M l •q ues , Fur
nlluJO !&gt;lr•ppmg 1epa1r and
(UP!) - The Armco Steel
whom we lo\le go ou t of srghl
•elrn1o:; hed Coun ty Rd 8 oil 35
But never out of rnm d I hey ore
Corp. announced a new 3Ccn ter vdle VIll age ?45· 9479
chenshed 111 th e heart s of 1hose
year labor agreement with
they lec1ve behm d l o1J 1119 and WE DO PORTRAITS. Commerc1ol
Employes
the
Armco
kmd 1n oil her ways up n ghl
and WQddmg Ph olography ,
Independent
Federatwn
and 1vst to the end of her days
al so cop1es and l ull lme of
S1ncerc and true m hco •l and
Thursday that fea tures a
Ama lev • Su pplie-s
Tawn ey
mtnd bcooutdu l mmnones "le
Stud 1os. Passport s 1n col or
stock purchase program for
lell beh1nd
Sadly ondlov
V'f'hi iO you WOII NO OppOill t
hourly workers.
1nglynmsed by her doughier
men I necessary
The agreement covers
Rosol ec- Mtt chell and grand
chi ldren Dcbb1e Ke•th and PASS PORT PH0 10S 1n color whdc
workers at the M1ddletown
you wo1 t lear Pho tog1 ophy.
Tony
Works, the company's largest
Go ll lp&amp;~ll s
446 7494 coli for
steelmaking operation. They IN MEMORY OF Ul YSS( S G Ar - t•PP' cl osed Moqdoy!&gt;
roweed w ho passed owoy
will get a m1mmum SO cents
June 11 1968 Thu1 Q!&gt; tha i re
an hour m wage increases
PIANO tl: SSONS c h il dr ~n s 011 d
~nmd us ol you A. l111leform
over the tile of the contract,
odul l s
M1s
HOliJOy Von
down o cou ntry lone, lr ~ s h
VrCH1k
en
992
·"1270
plowed
ftelds
and
b1
rd
s
tha
i
annual cos t ·o f-liv1ng
s•ng , 8eou11lul greo n gro".s and LOOKING FOR good home fo1
adjustments and · 1mproved
o sky of bllJC oil l ho!&gt;e lhlngs
I rained lemo le pu p 7 a mos
pension and insurance
Dod rem md us of you Sadly
old Port Cerrnor1 Shepa rd
benefits.
m1ssed by your lonnly Wde
blot ~
ond ton good w•lh
C htld~t~ n and gro ndchrldren
Armco officials said the
lhdd•en
II lllf(HOsled call
stock purchase program w1ll JANEY Jn lov• ng memory of Gene
992 331) \ or the Humane Souo ly
019'12 7680
ond Ch13r1 y Jon es v. he passed
begm at the end of 1978 and 1s
away one year ago June 12th WANH: D t&gt;omcone to d1~ mo n l le
the first of.1ts kind for hourly
and 14th 1Q76 Wherever we
old burldmg
Roc mo BophSt
employes m steel. They said
go , Whote~J cr we do l ocked " '
Chur
ch
Ah.o
OC
ctlp lmg soal ed
11
tt may be a fir.st" in heavy
our heo1l s Ar c rncmor•es of
b r d ~ lor 01
1t1que giO ~ !&gt; . pews
you . Memon es ore lreosurc s.
industry
ar1d on y wood wor~ or lrom1ng
No on e con steoJ Death JS a
1nolcr 1al!&gt;. Cortta&lt;:l Oo11 Walk er
heartache , No thmg co n heal
94.9-2122 or 94Q 2867
ll's only two graves that :.ldl
:· ·.·.::;.·.· .~:::: ..-:· .·..• :· ...·:; ·::· :·:::·:;:;. ;.:·:.··:.··.-:· .·
need core Sui 1h0 one s we R ~ WAR D OFFI:R EO fo• rnf ormo
tron lcod1r1g to tha •t:cove ry of
love or e s. le ~ p • n g th ere The
SAGITTARIUS (Now. 23-Dec.
Iorge female Hound , wh 11e w1 th
pam ol portmg wtthou l good21) Proceed with caut1on tod ay 11
block "patch ov e r lcl 1 eye
bye Wdl temolfl w•th us Un1d
you're attempting a do - l t Wccnng block studd ed co lla r
we du) Sad ly m1ssed by the•r
Phone 992 · 773~ .
yourself proJect with unfamiliar
lamil 1es
tool s Read th e Instru ctions!
CONCRE TE WORK Po11os slops,
walks and d1 1ve woy s Ph one
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-~an. 19)
992 2244
In certain sacral Sltuauc.ns you
conduct yourself quite well to - Notices
day_ A cns1s could arise when
one you re not too fond of mak es ltAR PHOTOGRAPHY comp l£!1e Auto Sales
Photography serv1ce Weddrngs
the scene.
Portro1t Com mcrcml Sprm g 72 GRANO lO~ INO spor t orr P 5
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 19)
PB 3~ 1 c rtg1nc 2 bbl 60 vOO
Va lley Pla zo Voll1pol1 !&gt; Ph
It's possible there may te some
m1 lc " good cond , Ph 675 3M 3
446 7494 , Open ruesdoy thro
rumbl tngs m your household toSaturday 10 !J ldl 8 9 11 I hurs
1964 BUICK tlEClRA 225 3 ~ pd
day The trouble 1s, you m ay
boys b icycl E.' 446·4076
TREE HAVEN CERAMICS DAY OR
ampltfy them in stead of trying to
NIG HT Clo t&gt;s es green wo1 e Ol'ld
71 PONTIAC CAT AliNA
be a qu1et1ng Influence
supplre s custom l 1nng Ph
PS PB AC ~8 000 M1l e~ GOOD
PISCES (Feb. 20-M r h 20) y 0ll
2115 9484 or 3Bt:l BBI t
C L~AN CAR Ph 446 3933
• c
can eas1ly hnd raul! today, but HAND D fR OPKAL FISH 823 -41h
1971 Ml:ijl.UHV $700 6Q(hev ' •
you may have a rude a~akenlng
Ave Colli po ll:.. Hr ~ I') 8 ~"',
1 f-' 11\o. up 'l'. l th new ~ng m c
when others start to eKpOund on
lhru liTUil&gt; Hob C 1et;Jn ,
I$8SU . Ph 446 1502.
your failings as we.l

.

,,

.. ·

Auto :;a les

j\&lt;)iS&lt;' :;u les

NEWGMC
Truck Headquarters
197 4 ' , r CMCP•ckup
1973 ', I Che.., PU
197 4 ' , I GMC Ptdwp
1973 1, Chev Ptckup
197 &lt;1 ', I GMC PU
1972' ' ? T Clrl'v p1ckup
I 1973 ' , f Chcv PU

2 AK C REG Bn llany Span•el Jogs
12 l ool alurnmun, boat wll h
•~
eleclnc 11 ol lu1g mo101 1971 . ,

Chevrolet

half -ton ·

~t c k

up

h e avy duty $1 100 cosh or lak e
O~JC'f

pay ments, 1971 Yornaho
Phone Q91-3663

11,olor&lt;yclo

197 t1 ' 1 T Che • PU

1973 EICornm o w1th top
1970 Olds Della 88
t9l o1 ', T Ford PU
1973 th1 ce fourth T Forr! PU
197 4th rcc fourth Chev . PU
197 4 thr ee fourth 1 GM C PU

Prnfes!" ionu.J Se r•lices
N~ W

COMPANY
B1 g Bmtd
Oove-foper!&gt; Fines t •n re1nod el
•ng, po1n fl ng and concr e1e
wo r ~
lnhJno• o nd e)( len or
Free
es t i Jno l es
Ph o na
9~ 'l 3573

1975 · , 1 CMC PU

IQ7')
1966

CMC PU
SI(J Wa gon
19/ J ' 1 r. GMC 4 W.D
197 1 GMC 9500 Troc lor
SOMMI::RSGMC
1HUCKS , IN C
133 P111e Sl
44b-2S37
'1

f

Ch e ~J

~ X C A V AIION

COMPLEfl: se pt1t
"' ystem'&gt; Sp l iTIQS developed
All work '" guaranteed Brorl
lew • ~ pho•,e7 42 24SI .

..
r

i·

·.

BRIDGE
Oswald and Jim Jacoby

Club play proves important
II
NORTil
• A 52
• Q762

+K

54

... J 9 3

WEST

+ Q J tO 2

EAST
• 10 9
¥ K 83
• t\ 8 7

... 2

4fo K8764

... 87643
, ¥ A 10 5

SOUTH I D)

North East

Pass

1•

P.ass

Pass

Opening

Pass

('V(' nt

SU('f cad

.u1d det·ld es

in
lo

Lackie d ubs 1rnmedwtely li e
w m ~ th e spade 1n dumm y .mrl
musl se lec t th e n ~h t dub to

The n ght one
th ~H

I.

Neather vulnerable
West

i.t !H

IS the

mne If

he leads low he can only play

• 963

10 5

dub fmPsse mu st

lead

• K QJ \
• J 94
A AQ

pl .ry th e a('f' T h~ a~.:e doesn 't
ilppear ;:r nd a lhtrd diamond IS
lt'&lt;J J~ a s t Will S and returns the
10 ul spades and 11 '" U!J to ,..·
South t o fmd d w ~1 y to score
Sf'V t' ll tr 1r k s
"
He 1 ount,s and sees thal the

South

IN T

Pass
lead - Q •

•me club

Ill' l&lt;•ads the Jack and t:ast
pl ays low he ca n lecu1 rl sen~ nd
cl ub but ttwl wJII b12 a ll

When he pli!ys the nine he 1s
su1 e of tour club tn cks provid-

ed Eas t holds the king .

lly Oswald &amp; James Jacob y
Her e IS a proSaiC' Onf' ·

notrump con tract taken from
the Luk acs-Rubens book Th1s
IS the so rt of hand tha t occ ur s
day in a nd day out and
produces a lot of extra tnck s

for those who kn ow how to
take the bc&gt;t lme of play
West opens the queen of
dtamonds and contmues w1th

the Jack aft er South plays low
South plays low aga in, ll e has
dec1ded tha t West didn 't tc 1•d
from ace·queen&lt;'ack and
' hopes thai ~~ as l w11l have to

•·

from dtlr'nmy if ,.,

A W1 scon s1n reader

wants to

"

..

know when a card is played
from dummy
"f
The answer IS tha t onre ·•
declarer tou che:;; a tard 111

dummy w1th cv1dent intent to
pl;,y it musl.be played It does •·
nul have to be played If touch·
ed acr~dcntally or for purpost'~ of arranging cards.

..

! For a cop y 0( JAC O OY
MODERN, send $1 ro ··wm ar
Bndoe." c / r;J Uus newspflper,
P 0 Bo)/ 48!i, Radio City SttfiO n,
New Yo rk r.fy 10019)

1'
1 .

�•

0-5- The Sunday Tunes-Sentmel

1).4-TheSunday Times-Sentinel Sunday June

12 1m

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Hl'lp Wanted

Help \\

Help

anted

The Gallia-Jackson.Meigs
Community Mental Health Center

2 Chntcal PsychiatriC Soctal Workers Must have a
masters degree m chrncal psychtatrtt soctal work

plumbe s and p pe f te s Ap

5 Psych1atnsts Must hold an OhiO license and have
completed psychiatric res1dencv In an approved
fac1hty Will be responsible for mechcal dtrectton of
Inpatient Un1t
staff development and certam
outp1tient respons1biht es
The Mental Health Center os a prrvate non
profit corporatron and an equal opportunoty
employer
Please contact
Dr
Harroet
Kaufman or Dr Davrd De Rota at 446 4950 rf
qualified and rnterested
Addrloonal
mformatoon os avaolable through the Center
Receptronosts or through the Ohro Bureau of
Emplo ment Servrces

FACTORY DIRECT
DISTRIBUTOR
National manufacturer w II appoint qualified
nd v dual to service company establ shed retal
accounts In this area NO SELLING REQUIRED
guaranteed Inventory exchange prlvllege Complete
training No quotas 100 Pel Mark up No franchise
lees

e c

n el$

C oude

W n a s R o G onde 0 Phone
he Oh o Store Emplovm•n Of
2,.5 5 21 at e 5
tceo D 233~G a laSt Po
LAVNESNEW&amp;USEDFURNITURE
smou n S
Appl cants must be ~
18 to 25 yea s of age Equal Np EW b d
.,~ ed
0 p Emp oye
ne e oom su e ~ m
p
UR su e $ 90 Med e onean
sof a and love seat $325 Eo Am

sofa &amp; cho

for Rent
IWO 8EOROOM ole f! owns
1 tl le
Court Adu ts only
Phone 992 3324
975 HOlLYPARK 14l&lt;b5 Com
plete v fu nlshed unde p nn ng
ondownng Phone74221b9

With at least one 'f'Nr of supervised expenence in

4 Psychometr11t Must h1ve masters degree in
psychology and knowledge of full range of baste
psychological test batfertes and interpretation
•ncludtng some acquaintance With prolectlves

dows

pi cot on maybe p ck&amp;d up ot

cl niCill evaluation and psychotherapy
3 Clonocal Psycho(01Josh Must have Ph D wolh
mtenstve experience tn psycholot~tcal assessment
cflntcal evaluation consultal on and psychotherapy
Must hold or be ellg1ble for current Oh10 license

tor Sale

tor Sale

APPLICAliON WILL BE ACCEPTED All TYP~S of bu d ng moter ol.s
July 1 h u 10 fa oppren ce
bock b ck sewer p pus w n

os currently accepting apphcatoons tor the
to llowmg posrloons
1 Psycht•tnc Nurses for Emergency Servtces and
OUtre•ch Must be a registered nurse wtth at least one
year of postgraduate supervised expenence In
'PfoYchiatrec mpattent fac1hty

Wanted

Wanted tu Do
WILL DO Baby s t ng n my home
any
shIt
Con
fu n sh
efer&amp;ncel Phone 992 7803

Auto Sal""
1970 FORO F250 p ck up Compo
spec ol
au omo c
Powe
s ee ng Powe b okes low
m age n ce cond t on $ 295
Ho old B ewe
long Bot om
Oh o Phone 985 355-t

W DE 8 too

p ck up

Bed n ce
cond ton
Phone 9e5 3554
Ho old B ewer long Bot om
Oho

1973 Como o 350 o4 speed o
P S P 8 AM &amp; FM rod o foe
ory Mags Phone 992 7869

wood

t

n $250

KOWASAkl 175 d rt b ke $400
Surulo. 72 s eet b ke $750
Cal 94Cj1 746J eo.-en ngs of a 6
pm
1971 SHORT bed uck camper
Oa s;un spec o
1971 0 ds
Cu lou Sup eme '176 Jeep cJ5
w th heade s and b g w1de
res 7 p ere b eakfos 1et ul
ed Cob o
9 CB
Phone
949 2636

and S300 mode n sofa cho r
oveseo $27S sofa bed w h
mo ch ng cho r S 50 Reel ners
$100 and up Tabes Coffee
end Hexagon maple o p ne

$50eoch mogoz ne
ocks
mop e$28
bookcase $20
Bas on Rod~; er $55
maple
table 4 cho s $175 able and
s K cho n creme o avocado
S oq d ne te able and four
cho s $55 Sunk beds camp ete
S 50 mattress and boiC spr ngs
SbO eo f m ches of drawe
$-tO Queen size no t en &amp; bo)(
sp ngsse $130
GOOD USED
Up ght F eeze \
Telev sons
co o &amp; b ack wh e canso es &amp;
po fables woshe s drye s
ranges ref gem o s bedroom
su es beds ches 5 d essers
ab es
amps cho 5 o he
ems oak on que bookcase
w th 9 ass 2 on ~ue oak w n
dow fans .4 oa~ cha s I pie
d eue n o led walnut cal
.t46 0322 day o even ng 3 m
ou Bu av e Rd
REFR CERATOR
RANGES
Woshe s and d yen GENE
SKAGGS
29-t Eoste n A'le
Ph .t.t6 73Cil8

Used gas r•nge
living
room tables queen size
mattress and boxspnng 7
pc
dinette set
metal
kltehen hutch New fX12
linoleum
rug
SIS 95
Corbin &amp; Snyder Furn Co
••, 1171

MAllARD DUCKLINGS &amp; obb ts
Phone 9.t9 288
SOFA EXCELLENT cond on Cof
fee table and 2 match ng end
able!lo
e~Ccel ent
condil on
Phone CW2 3283

FOR THE BEST IN FURN TURE
UPHOLSTERING F ee Est mates
P ck up and del vet-; serv ce
call Mow ey s Upho s e y P
1972 VW von ecent y ove hou
Pleasant W Vo b75 415-4
ed eng ne 63 000 m les Phone
992 7277
COMMERCIAL DRYER dr es 20
shee s at on&amp;t me
comm
1972 MERCURY Montego MX
mangle wall heote
own
Powe steer ng powe b okes
cho rs con oct Ruth C rdeofte
radio o r cond t on ng new
5p m
es $995 Phone 9.t9 2288

974 KAWASKI 00 good shape
$-tOO a so .t ET Mags for Vega
o Monza S 00 Ph 2-t5 5823
ofte 5 pm
967 FO~D two door 289 eng ne
LICHT
WEICHT CHIMNEY SLOCK
powe
s ee ng
Phone
Must be able to devote part time to bus ness Ful time
aI( 3 B,;8 Go I pol s Block
9927565
available If qualified Experience not required -but
-446 2763
must have strong desire to create flnanc al security If
972 FORD Van Econo ne 200 In
you have ntegrlly stab llty and m nlmum ol S42SO
s de f ICed up Past Eoste n H gh FARM FENCE POSTS ALL SIZES
ave 6 000 to choose from
cash available call (loll free) 1 SOO 643 5596 or wrlle
School o top of h II Phone
Sl 99 and up sh ngles $14 95
WELCO INC 510 Plaza West LoHie Rock AR 72205
96S 3323 $2200
pe sq
Ande son w ndows
1975 RAM CHARGER 4 Wheel
s uds other bu ld ng mater al
d ve
13000 m es
Ph
Open do ly 9 7 F anks Bo go n
LOCAL INSURANCE agency needs ATTENTION
MANAGERS &amp;
4.t6
502
C:en er IH 160 Po er Oh o
someone to ep esen hem on
Demonstro ors F end y Home
on estobl shed err to y Good
Toy yo t es has open ngs for 1970PONTIACCATALINA PS PB COM MERICAl
SLATE
con
wages e:~Ccellen ben f s II
manage s and deale s n your
AC A 0
rod at t res good
operated pooiiQble very good
you con meet people don t poss
Toy Po y Pion ex
o eo
cand Ph 446 1615 ask for
cond $550 Ph 256 1525 after b
th s up No e~Cper ence re
per ence helpful
Ca
&amp;
Dove
PM
qu red only the w II o work
Telephon&amp; necessary call col
Sertd
asume to Bo)( 672
ect to Coro Day (5 18) .t89 8395 1974 MUSTANG 2 Halchbock 1975 250 MX CANAM Motorcycle
good cond
ow miles for
$500 Ph Jh7 0586
or wr te F end y Home Po t es
POmeroy Oh 45769"---:--~
mo e
nformot on
cal
20
Ro
lroad
Ave
Albany
N
Y
42 VENTILESS RANGE HOOD
INTERVIEWER FOR counselng and
367 7615 sole p ce $1995
1220
:-_5
: ::__ _ _ __
odm ss ons
a
Gal •pol s
coppertone good cond t on
ge 5 eolly good gas ~eo~
Bus ness Co lege
Phone HELP WANTED a epa metal
388 6274
T 4 WD PS PB 4 - - .,....,..______. -.............
4.t6 4367
ba n roof and shed Mus f co ry 7S CHEVY
WOOD
FRAME STORM SASH
5pd w h oppe and wh e
own nsu once Phone (614)
HIGH w ndows 6 PC 3 s zes
SOMEONE TO pu up hoy Phone
spokewhee s.:c_
Phc:_4:_4-=6-::l-'
0"
24-'~
6673368
co l4-t6 0208 ofte 4 PM
949 2531
-~
CORVETTE 75 8)(C o I ex os
13 000 m les must see best ot SIGNS Hondpa n ed p ofess ona
RETIRED GENTLEMAN
wants
quality bus ness s gns sto e
fer o11er $7500
Oov d
w ndows t uck doors bonne s
olady
housekeeper
Ph
446 4950 0 446 B502
pos e s mo
boM: names
379 2573
1971 P0NT AC
one owner
Phone 4.t6 0161 T m Tope 525
3 AND .t RM furn shed and un
PS PB o r cond new I e5 Ph
Th rd Ave
COUNCILINC
-~
---,-,furn shed opts Phone 992
4.6
9=
5
3
:
;
7
-'-~----,-JUNE
SALE
10',
OFF
ot Gal pols
S434
197 FORD PICK UP TRUCK 1965
EVERYTHING
STOREWIDE
-----~-'-:::::=.:::~~:::._:Ph 4•6 •367
COUNTRY Mob e Home Po k R
Mercury 4.46 1522 or 446 703
NEW 1 PC DINETTE SETS REG
33 en m es north of Pome oy
$2995 NOW $11695 NEW
1'176
CHEROKEE
4
WD
low
La ge ots w h cone ete pot os
SOFA BEDS REG $119 95
m leage 6 ely stand
Ph
s de walks
unners and off
NOW $ 01 95 RICES NEW AND
4467689
st eel po k ng Phone 992 7479
USED FURNITURE B54 2ND
FURNISHED APT Adults on y no 73 DODGE PICK UP TRUCK PS PB
AV__
E__P~·6~
95~2=
3~~au o Ph -446 7369
pets Phot"e 992 387 4 M d
971 HARLEY Oav son fully dress
LOW weekly and mon hly rates of
dleporl
97
PONTIAC
one owne
ed exc cond ots of ext as
l bby Hotel ·U6 17 43
PS PB o cond new I en Ph
$2300 furn Ph .t.t6 3980 eve
ONE BEDROOM fu n shed aport
4&lt;16 9S37
Ph 446 7 1
Catl
ment
n M dd epa t
S-43-t or 992 3129
1970 FORD
T P ckup Sl
ens SUZKI good cond a so o
ngerlond profe5~ ona drum
pop coole cash reg adding
SLEEPING rooms fo
2 BEDROOM MOBILE home n
se
Fuzz BOIC Kustom PA ~~~ 446 094"1::-~­
Hote
Roc ne area Co 992 5858
system
m crophones w th
TEAM OF MULES WELL BROKEN
OFFICE space downtown 5 .t Se
AVAILABLE AT R ve s de Apo t
stands Ph 256 1315
coli of e 5 367 7672
ments one bed oom $105 pe
cond Ave 4.t6 0008
196e FlkEBIRD w tli o Che11y eng
month 2 bedroom $138 pe
1916
HARLEY DAVISON SPORT
SMALL OFFICE FOR RENT &lt;4 5q
Ph 38B B830
monlh Phone 992 6098 E~uol
STER lots of eKt as pr ced for
Ft L bby Hotel
Hous ng Opporfun ty
$275 coli
qu ck so e John M Clary Ph
OVER 4 000 lb Tobacco bose fo
4.t6 25.t2 after 5
HOUSE FOR en I 3 or .t bed ooms
ease or rent Ph .t46 01b6
w th bu It n k Iehan 2 baths 73 CHEVELLE MALIBU 350 Air EAR CORN Ph 256 114;;6::__ _
BRADBURY RENTALS
Second
located 4 m les west of Ho
OKC
cond
om fm
auto
FERC TRACTOR AND MOWER
floor fun shed eff ope t adults
r sonv le House w II be shown
cond Ph .t.t6 2774
on Monday and Tuesday June
only no pets 729 2nd A'le
Ph 388 84c2;0::__~--­
13 and f.4 by oppo ntment only CORVETTE 75 e)tc all ex ras PIANO BALDWIN ACROSONIC
_Dep Ph ••6 0957
3 000 m les must see best of
Coli dur ng week of June 6th
Can be seen at 141 Woodland
UNFURN Ap s VI age G een
fer o"¥er $7500
Dov d
thru II h 8 a m t II 10 am to
Apts
Mulba y H s
n
.t.t6
.t950
or
4.46
8502
Drv~·~-----~--~
make oppo ntment
Phone
Pome oy LuiCU 'f v ng n new
lc;l73
25 Yomoho d rt t a I b ke
(502)
•39
5331
19H
MERCURY
MONT GO
Br
Apts
los efully
2
1500 m es e"c cond
Ph
BROUGHAM
MX
PS
pb
a
r
decorated k tchen Appl furn
VILLAGE GREEN APTS MULBERRY
256
64
3
cond
cru se con rol $2595
fullyo carpeted Starting $117
HEIGHTS LUSURY liVING N
Ph 24S 92S6
HOOVER UPR CHT SWEEPER 1977
Ph 9'71 636S Syb and J m
NEW 2 BEDROOM APTS
Models only S22 00 each cosh
Wood Managers Apt 10
TASTEFULLY DECORATED KIT
971 VW SUPER BEETLE $1150
or lerms coli 4.t6._:cc._c_
2876 _ _
CHEN APPLIANCES FURN SHED
new
snow
hres
Ph
-4.t6
1191
FOR RENT OR LEASE Over 4 000
FULLY CARPETED STARTING
after 5 PM
ELECTROLUX Sweepers
com
lbs
tobacco base Robe t
AT $117 PHONE 9'12 6365 SYBIL
p etely ebu It w th a tach on
Queen Ph 4.t6 0168
NICE
WORK
CAR
966
Falcon
AND JIM WOOD MANAGERS
_'::-:cc=c::-.-:c
ly $32 50 cash or te ms Ph
uns perfect e~Ccep needs
2 SR MOBILE HOME FOR RENT N
APT 10
••6 2S76
c
utch
work
Ph
446
.t922
COUNTRY Ph 256 922
TWO BEDROOM o I
17 Cub c ft t ost t ee upr ghl
MOBILE HOME One 8r adults
modern anch home 1 m le
t ee:~:er I ke new Ph 256 6758
f om Roc ne $125 per month
only no pe1s 322 3 d Ave Ph
BACKHOE AND LOADER ON 1966
Reference$ ond depos t re
.t.t6 37 48 or 256 1903
Inter 2,.0 T actor good work
qu ed Phone 9.49 2-t 13
TRA LER SPACE IN Ct-lesh re Ph
- ~
ng cond neeclspolnt $2595
4
CRACAR
DEEPDISH
soiled
15
THREE BEDROOM mob le home
Jh7 0639
Ph 388 BB95
Inch
wheels
w
ttl
2
G
60
ond
unfu n shed $110 00 month
2 8R TRAILER IN CHESHIRE
2 L bO t res Five lug bot pol
plus ut I ties and depos t
Adulls only Ph Jh77329
tern he cond $325
co
Rafe ences requ red On S Rt
2.t55612
2 BR MOBILE HOME Fu n $125
143 Phone7.t2 3186
plus uh t es
Ne ghborhood
REMODELED house n
Rd Dap Req adults only Ph NEWLY
Chester Fu ly co peted and
H6 4757 afte 3 PM
pone ed Reasonable ent to
971 CHEVY wagon 9 ponenge
eiCce ant cond ton h oughou
Phone 992 5746

--------

---

-- --

m

--

•

LOFTY p1ke tree f om soil Is the
carpet cleaned w th B!ve
lust e Rente ectr c chompooe
$1 Ce~ol Supply Co _ _
12 x 60 MOBILE HOME 2 Br hot
e~Cpondo I 'I ng
oom bock
porch slo age bu ld ng ve y
n ce Sob McCo m ck Rd 5
m n f om town Ph 446 2543

---

r gh porty Phone I ( 61~)
B66 173
APARTMENT FOR
rent
n
Pome ay 4 rooms ond both
po t a ly turn stled Coup es on
iy No petS SSO a man h you
poy ut I t es Contact Mrs Paul
Sw she 957 Hysell St M d
dlepo t

:: ----------~~~~~
RENTAL HOUSING SURVEY
,
•
:

A rental housing prolact os being planned for lhls
community The prole&lt;! would provide comfortoble
Hvlng II rN.:onable rental rates Your opinion on tloe
following will llolp us to determine wllotloer sudl •
project is proctlcol Thosdoes NOT OBLIGATE YOU In

:

an1 way

•

i

,

:

,

!
,
~

•

I

••

Alt-Mitrltal Status Mltrrood--Sinole----

of por1011s
ho-ld-Annual '~n~co~m~•===
Do you
own or Inrent
prtHnt rHidtnce?
Do yeu llvo in ho- aP'rtmenl or room?

r"----------------------.,
PUBLIC SALE
SAtURDAY, JUNE 18
LOCATED ON STAT£ ROUTE 7
IN CHESHIRE. OHIO
The ltillowono Is a partial llslong
Dlnong room set (6 cnalrs) buffet and cnlna cabinet 2
dinette sels 3 straight chairs 21 Pholco TV living
room Sutte electnc stove GE sweeper Maytag
washer lamps platform rocker with ottoman 3
rocking cnalrs 2- 3 pe bedroom sulles metal bed Iron
bed chest of drawers with m rror cedar wardrobe
antique dresser w th m rror 9x12 wool rug wheat
cr.adle tredle sew ng mach ne gl der with 2 cha rs old
cook stove Stidham scales sausage mill stone jars
service for 8 Homer Laughlin china depression glass
POts &amp; pans and other interesting 1tems

No

Is yow priHnt hollslng modern not modern but
lldeQuate lnHiquahl----.....,......_--,-__,,--Would you be wllllnt to ...,t end move In II on
.,.rtmenl was avalllblt at rNsonoble rental ratts?
Nome
AddrHs
1elepholle

llietum To

P 0 Drawer 3f
e.tll,.lll. Olllo 45631

TERMS CAS~
SONNY SMITH OWNER
AUCTIONEER LEEJOHNSON
Crown Crty
Note If the property os sold by June 18, Mr
Smrth wrll offer a garden hiler
rtdrn;
mower, han1f plow, small trarler for mower
and other ;arden equrpment

Route l

Free

Pomeroy 0
Estimates

HOOVER UP RIGHT sweepers
1977 models On y $22 cosh o
e ms Phone 992 5 .t6
ELECTRO LUX SWEEPERS Com
pletely re bu If w lh a
fachmenls Only $32 50 cosh or
terns Phone99251_..6
4 REGISTERED ho ses fa sole
5
Arne can Saddle ho se
go ed Chestnut 17 I H Ge d
eg ste ed
A ob on mare
reg s e ed
Appy
rna e
eg ste ed one qua te horse
geld So e Also k d broke
pan es Phone 69B 3290
TWO FLOOR gos fu noces fa
so e Phone 91il2 550
RANGE P NE d n ng room ob es
w h 4 cho rs and on o d che y
buffet Phone992 5154
1966 SCOTTIE CAMPER $600 1%5
C:hevrole spo s \/On $300 Con
be seen a Pou E Wo fe
es dence Rt 1 Roc ne County
Rd 2B
H B. N day old o started egho n
pul e s 6oth floo o cage
g own ova lob e Pou try Hous
ng and Autom.a on Mode n
Poult y 399 W Man St
Pome oy Phone 992 2164
YAMAHA HARLEY DAVIDSON &amp;
Con AmMo o eye es Camp e e
soles and fantast c se v ce
Hou sMT Th96 WF97 Sa
9 5 The Motorcycle People ol
Southeos e n Oh o
Athens
Sport Cycles Inc 20 W St mson
Ave A hen s Phone 592 16c;l2

ti

•

••

Superoor
Steam Extractoon

•
•

Young's carpeting

••
•

Roule 3 Pvmoror D
tnstallahon samples
brought to your home
woth no charge
Cupet Lono Tilt
Phone Mike Young ot
...._., 2206 or 992 "30

PIGS 7 9 weeks o d $30 each
Phone 9.t9 2115

1969 FORD von b cy good body
Contact C flo d HoO C f on
W Vo

---

Business Services
Young's Carpeting

Carpel &amp; Upholstery
Phone Moke Young
At
992 2206 or 992 7630
The Orlgonoton
Nol The Imitators

2 23 1 mo

Nobol Summol Road
Rl 1
Moddleport 0
992 S724
Complete
Sales
and
Serv ce and Supplies

.

Racllator
Service

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

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

........

wheel
Alignment
balancrng
tune up,
work
mrnor
brake

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
p_,

l'to."ZZI74

DUGAN'S

repair
Bohond Rullond Grode
School Evenono work by
oppoontmenl Pn 742 2005.
6,5 1 mo Pd

SWAIN'S
Automatoc
Transmrssron Servrce

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED

REASONABLE

RATES
Reedsvolle

FREE
COAL
me' on~ ond co c um
chlo de and cQ idum b ne for
dus coni o and spec ol m " ng
sol to fa me s Excels or So t
Works Mo n Sf ee Pomeroy
Oh o o phone 992 3891

--

--

CAMPER
$600
Also
horse
ra e $-450 Phone 61.4) 698
3290

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Lei

Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; cond1t1on your
water and a Co op water
soltener Model UC XVI
Now Only

'279.95

Let us test
Free

your

water

Pomeroy Landma111

r.~Jack

W Carsey Mgr
USED 3 morllhs 56 nch coboue
oppe w th mot ress nsula ed
Phone 992-2181
aCid panoled co pet 2 oof
.
vents F t 8 FT bed $600 SPRING CARDEN Supples Cab
Phone985 4180
bage covl flower
broccoli
o.nd head
et uoe pants
ONE REGISTE~EO Je sey tom y
yellow wh te ond ed on on
m lk cow now m k ng 2 years
sets on on plan s Kennebec
o d one eg ste edNub on B I y
cobb er Kotohd n Red Pon ac
Goot
I yeo
o d Phone
and Red Losodo seed potatoes
742 2292
Bu k go den seeds po t ng so I
18 ACRES and on K ngsbury Rd 3
peat moss f u t ees and rose
m es f om Hor sonv le Has
bushes
M dwoy Ma ket
camp ete y fu n shed
2x50
Pomeroy
Oh a
992 2582
mob e home nclud ng washe
Bob s Ma kel Mason W Vo
ond
d ye
and
o
~0412?~721 -~
cand on ng large pond spr
PLANTS
Cabbage
ng ond we I newly bu t 201C3b TOMATO
caul f ower b ussel
brocco
garage and 24x48 cone e e
sprouls egg plan s hong ng
floo shed Pr ced o $IS 000
baskets
po s
geron ums
Phone ofte ~p m 992 52~
f als
petun as
began as
COAL FURNACE Phone Jh776S2
mar go ds
pons es
salz a
bo som
d an thus
snop
RABBITS BREEDING does pets or
d ogons alyssvm V nco col
I Y..!....S Phone 992 7013
eus Cleland s Greenhouse
Roc ne Gera d ne C e and
TWO q73 CT 70 Hondo T a lb kes
ke new coli 446 0010 afte .t
PM
GRAVLEY TRACTOR $2SO Ph
New Co Op water sof
6A3 2739 . - - - -~-,-teners model VC SVI
MOTORBOAT and I a le
col
Only S279 95
Save UO oo on a new
245 9_1~6~2:__.______ _
Hotpo nf Refrtgerator
YEARLING BUllS Reg Po led
t New 20 cubic fl
Hereford Ph Don (OK Ph
Chest Freezer
$319 9S
Now tn stoctc complete line
_37_9_2:~67~.:.:_-,--~-:
of bulk garden seeds
ONE FAN $8 00 ebu It May Tog
1 Good McCullouth Chan
Wr nger Washer $65 30 nch
saw
su
elec c Range A I cond
1 Good Used Poulan Chltn
saw
ssll
$79 95 5 pc b eokfost se
1 Good Used Untco
sharp $39 95 so d ook drol
Dryer
sao oo
sman desk $89 95 metal s der
1 Good Used G E Dryer $85
w th u cusl1 ons $35 Oepres
s on gloss tlowe pols many
other m sc tems Rays Used
Furn ure Add osn Oh n he
old Qr nke Store Bu ld ng Ph
367 0637
-Jack W Carsey Mgl'l
MOVING sell Reasonable 1c;J Ft
Phone 992 2111
doub e door s de by side
efr g freeler perfect cord
Ph 675 •2::
42~-------:
42 n cost ron k tchens nk 1
MOVIN(1 NORGE washer and
bas n and 1 dra n board hong
d ye nume ous art des Ph
on wall type wh te I 3 burner
4-'6 05.t8 alter 6
gas hot pate Phone 992 5714

lillll

---

FOR SALE

Pomeroy Landma111

YA
Jllil,:

Ph 378-6250
5 27 TFC

0

SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 10100 A.M.
ALBANY, OHIO
On old R 50 , mole W ol Albany Mr Chesser IS
rettrmg from the butldmg and de1hng bustness and
will sell
7 SEVEN TRACTORS-MACHINERY
The following tractors are all in good running order JD SC JD 60 Massey Harris 30 w rubber like new
Coop 30w love power &amp; good t res A C WD 45 w wide
lront end good original palnl &amp; live power 101 M
Harris 335M M w wode front end MACHINERYM F 35 sell propelled 8 combine s de del rake J D
front end loader gooseneck tandem llat bed trailer w
ramp elec brakes lights &amp; 5th wheel AC semi
mount 7 cut mower Ford 3 pt 6 cut mower d sc lnt
45 baler 2 A C 3 bollom pock up plows set Ford Ferg
12 plows good 12 Hammermlll Case 2 raw corn
planter w 3 pt pickup &amp; good fertilizer boxes Oliver
Super or 1l hole grain drill horse riding left nand
break ng plow sel 3 pi cultivators 200 gal gas tank
on skids etc
TRUCK--BLDG SUPPLIES &amp; MISC
1970 Ford 4 wheel dr ve truck Speed Queen washer &amp;
dryer 30 Kelvlnator range cast ron Implement
seat 20 Ins de hollow wall doors odd lots of onsulatlon
sev sheets pori cal board rolls building paper 2 sink
tops 1 lol cement blocks overhead garage doors
windows &amp; many other bldg supples Terms Cash or
c1c w I D No eats Not responsible for accidents
CLOVIS CHESSER OWNER
SHERIDAN$ AUCTIONS ERVICE
./1
Ph 441 •263

ANY PERSON who has anyfh l'lg fa
g ve away and does not offer or
o tempt fa ofte any othe th ng
fo 1ale may place on od n th s
co umn There w II be no
cho ge o the odve s•

BOARDING &amp; AKC PUPPIES
NEW 1977 Prowler Tro'lel T o lers
K &amp; P Kennels 388 8274 R.l
nslock, 19ft to 25ft self con
5~
m Ia east ol Po fer
to ned Po 1 serv ce ond ac
cesser es 8ETZ HONO~ SALES HILLCREST KENNEL
jtt 7 Kanaugo Ohio Ph AKC OOBERMANS qually pup
446 22-tO
from Champ on blood I ne
stock pup usually O\ID loble
SCHOOL OUT SPECIALS Starcraf
eds o blacks stud serv ce Ph
M n Motor $2100 off 21 tt lS
A.t6 ~SA
T a ler $3999 foldowns sto t
$1850 and up H ghest d scoun 8RIARPATCH Kennels Boo d ng
n T State orea We sell ser
Groommg AKC Gordon set
v ce and quolty Camp Conley
ters Engl sh Coclcer Spon els
S arcrah Soles Rt 62 N of f'f
Ph ••6 •191
Peasant
RISING STAR KENNEL
968 TROTWOOD 22 Fl trove Boarding Indoor Outdoor Runs
o er fully self con o ned f'h
Groom ng All B eed1 Cleon
675 5274
Son tory foe I t es Chesh re Ph
367 0292
1976 PROWLER CAMPER SELF
CONTAINED s eeps 6 Ph CENTENARY
WOODS PET
6756261
GROOMING FACILIT ES P o
len anal Serv ces offe ed oil
SWISS COLONY t ovel t a le s
breeds all styles Ph .t.t6 0231
cus om mode MAPLE LEAF
AKC
SHETLAND SHEEPDOGS
ondems 16 up CRICKET nuck
(M n co les) 2 females 7 wks
campers spec al at CODNER s
o d Shots and wormed Ph
CAMPERS
Rambow R dge
367 0292
Open even ngs Toke Meigs 28
o 32 to Bashon l()wner Robe t DRAGONWYND Cot1ery Kennel
C~n~g Boltom Oh _
o __
Chow Chow pupp es orr ved
May 19 s red by Chu I Ch ng
Reds end Blocks H moloyal'l
K tten1 (Pe s on•) bpec;tctd
Moy 30 Ph .t46 38-t.t ofter I
HOUSE IN COUNTRY Ma r ed
pm
coup e w th no ch lclren Runn
AKC SHETLAND SHEEP DOGS
ng wafer not necessary W
M netu e Collies shots and
do
epa rs
Call co llec
wo med
Full
health
614 5S5 2633
guo onteed Ph 367 0292 or
3677112

3 BEAUT FUL female bQby k t
tens Ph 446 .t922
ONE SHEPHERD HUSKIE FEMALE
I yr old eiCc watch dog good
temp Ph ol.t6 790&lt;1
PUPPIES 7 wks old colt 256 132.ol
between q and 5 pm

GENERAL Con roctou
Do ol
mosonary co penter &amp; plumb
ng
nstol and repo r al
dr vewoys Ph A.t6 95~
PAINTING I ee esl motes call
fo fhe best pr ce 367 0676
days
CONCRETE AND SLOCK WORK
DONE BY hour or contract F ee
es mo es Ph 367 6295
Will 00 BABYSITTING onyt me
ef Ph
ony hou s hove

4•621~09
~-------------­
SEWING MACH NE REPAIR Ph
446 •:.:2:::
3S:::__ _ _ _ _ _ __
WOULD LIKE TO DO SEWING
ALTERAT ONS
ron ng Coli
367 0507
AM NTERESTED N dong bobys t
tlng n my home Offer ng fa m
a mo1phere w th p enty of ploy
space
W Jl
also p ov de
nu se y school fo mo fo
ready and w II ng ch ld en Ph
Jh70507

ln111latron StrYices
GOOO RICH Top so I Cho es R
Hotf eld Backhoe Serv ce
Phone 7.t7 2008

STOIII
WIIIIIMU DOORS

COAL AND Wood cooks ove ed
ck hound 1 year o d 8
dhouses P en c tables Phone
985 412-t

WIRDIMS

CASE LOT
CAN GOODS
Strlckly wholes•le to all.
Not less than 1 2 case

Miller Produce
&amp;

Garden Center
1210 Washongton Blvd
Belpre, Ohoo
Robb ts
~

b eed ng doe pets o
PhoneCj1Cj127013

l.t FT ALUMINUM Bass boot w h
t o lor 4 horse powe Sea s
e'lg ne and one two speed
I a ng rna o
5550 Phone
742 2315
976 BASS BOAT Fully equ ped
Phpne 9c;l2 6305
972 GRAN Tor no PS PB AC
New batte y and brakes Good
condton $1100 Alsoweste n
sodd e and br die for orge
horse $75 Phone 992 6115 or
992 -5616.

AUJIIIIUM
51DIIfC.SOFFm
~IGS

lARR1,,A:'!~DER
Ph H2l"3

4-10-1 mo

BRADFORD Auc onee
Com
pie e Serv ce Phone 9.49 2487
or 9.t9 2000 Roc ne Oh o Cr t.,
8rodfo d
ELWOOD SOWERS REPA R Sweepers loaste s
ons all
smo I opp onces Lawn mowe
next o State H ghwoy Garage
on Rou e 7 Phone (6 .4) 985
3S25
REMODEl NG P umb ng heat ng
and all types of gene a repo r
Work guo on eed 20 years ex
pe ence Phone 992 2.t09
SEWING MACHINE Repo rs ser
v ce al makes 992 2284 The
Fobr c Shop
Pome oy
Autho ;zed S nger Soles and
Serv ce We sha(pen Sc ssors
EXCAVATING doze loode and
bockhae wo k dump
uCk$
and lo boys tor h re w I hou
f d
to so limestone and
grovel Coli Bob or Roge Jet
fe s
day phone 992 7089 •
n ght phone 992 3525 or 992
S232
EXCAVATING dozer backhoe
and d tche Charles R Hat
I eld
Bock Hoe Serv ce ,:
lh.H!and Oh a Phone 742 2008 ..

CB SPECIAL
ROBYNWV 23
CB Mob e Transce ver
complete w th weather
proof PA speaker 2 way
base oaded ca antenn'!,
for oaf top or trunk mount_:
Power cord coax antenna
cable and a I hardware
nctuded
ON~Y

169 9S

2BRMH$100 3BR
Ph ••6 0175

MOBILE HofT!e
plumb ng and
992 5656
HOWERY AND MART N Ex
covot ng
sept c systems .,.
doze backhoe dump uck
g ovel
b acktop
I mestone
pav ng R 143 Phone (614)
69S 7331 ._ _ _ _ _ _~

Pomeroy Landma111 I·
HARRISON S T V Repo r Serv ce
Co Is 276 Sycamore St M d
9,. :_JickPhonet92
W Carsey Mgr.
dlepo t Phone992 2522
2111
~

7 CASE mower J pont h tch
New Hollondbo e
olmos
new Drag d sc fa k fa ound ALLEN S GENERAL CONTRAC
TORS emode ng house w r
bales
New Idea manure
ng
house plumb ng tree
spreade Call ofte 4 p m dur
est
mates
446 2910
ng week Roy Myers b98 3411

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1977

Located about t mole South ol Oak Hill Olllo lust off ol
State Route 93 down lrom the Vollage Tradong Pvot
Watch for Pubhc Aucttrm S1gns

-

-

I'eta for Sale

\ardSale

RISING STAR Kennel Boord ng
Indoor Ou doo runs g oom ng
ol heeds
ce an sontoy
foe I hes oe 'JC7 71 2 Ch4Uh re
Phone (614 )367 0291

IF YOU hove o se v ce to offe

HOOF HOLLOW Buy s~&amp; I rode
or tro n horses RUTH REEVES
t a n•r Phone (61-4) tJoc;IB 3190

Phone 992 3141 o 992 3602

DR VE WAY SALE June~;;;tJ
45 L ncoln Ave Good clean
clothes tems pr ced to se I

FOUND
N Port ond oreo 2 FAMILY YARD SALE on Woods
Ped gree Co e black b own
M II Rd near Tycoon lake f om
and wh te femo e Owner moy
B dwe
come ut B dwel
co 843 3009 or 992 7680
Woodsm I post
Raccoon
--====--=-cc:~_::__:_:c:_:_~ b dge F rst Rd
ght f rst
house eft clo hes baby tems
topes toys mony odds and
ends Mon to Sot

Real

m

CA RTERS PLUMBING
AND HEAT NC
Cor Fou th &amp; P ne
Phone .t46 3888 o ol46 .44777

COUPLE SEEKS 2 o 3 bed oom
home Close o HMC Col collect
61" 294 8.t83

MolillFilomes for Sale
AULT MOBILE HOME S SERVICE
Sk rl ng ancha ng end pet os
co I 4.t6 3608 at e 4

STANDARD
Plumb ng Hea ng
2 5Th rd A11e .t.t6 3782
GENE PLANTS &amp; SON
PLUMBING - Heal ng - A
Cond t on ng 300 Fourth Ave
Ph .t46 6J7
DEW TT S PLUMB NC
AND HEATING
Route 160 ot Eve g een
Phone .t46 2735

TRISTATE MOB lE HOMES
1220 Eosfe nAve
CALL POLIS OH
1969 R cho dson 12xb0
1969 Academy 12x60
1972Mona ch 12x60
1973tncon 4)(b4
197-t l HoboTT AC
1969Fanl T

8 AND S MOBILE HOMES
PT PLEASANT W VA
1973A enl2:.~-t028r
JUNK auto and sc op me at Ph 1973 V cor o 41C67 3 8 2 both
1972 Monarch 12K50 2 Br cen t
8
a
FURNTURE E"ep 1972 Cameron 121Cb0 2 8
t ng lJphoste ed Ph .t46 0322 1958 Mo left 1Ox47 1 8r

c=~~ ~

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER G~~D ~:ED
ACROSS
1 Unll of Chinese
currency (p )
6WinQhkt
10 Merr mertt
14 Fal nto disuse
19 AUaeks
2t Unasp rated
22 Tr ck
23 To led
24 Keeps
260ulver
28 D vide propor
t onally
29 Beverage
30 Woman a name
32 Tanned sk n
33 Congenial
34 Mans n ckname
35 Pay attention
37 Parent leo oq)
39 Cyprlno d t sh
40Locate
41 Tableland
42 Smoke and log
44 Feast
46 Peel of fru t
47 Female horse
48Scorch
50 Blush ng
52 Su IS
53 Note of scale
55 Heavenly body
57 Aeonllnenl
(abbr I
58 Speck
59 Rtver n Afr ca
60 Thoroughfare
(abbr )
62 ConJunct on
64 Hurried
66 Earth goddess
68 Symbol lor
ruthen1um
69 Theater box
70 Resort
71 Roman road
73 Arenas
75 African deserl
71 Antlered animal
78 One deleated
80 Enlhuso.. m
81 Mans name
82 Earthquakes
84 Enthustasm
86 Raonla I
87 C tlzen

89Macaw
921nterrecllon
96 Chooce port
98 Nobeman
99 Awa ted sett e
ment
101 More vapid
103Gul lkebrd
104 Perform
t 05 Conflagrat on
106 Proceed
107 Negative prefix
108 Former Russ an
ruler
110 Capuch n
monkey
It 1 Nota of scale
1121nsacts
113 Brazilian estu
ary
115 Cooed ava
117 Mans mckname
11 9 Protect ve
organ1za1 on
(on I)
120 Prophet
121 Apprehend ng
124 Arab1an ch1et
1a n
1 26 Clolh measure
(p )
127 Sour tempered
128 Colontze
130 F sh sauce
132 Perla n ng to an
era
133Foodl~h

134 Confederate
genera
135 Vast ages
137 Eskers
139 Mans n ckname
140 N p
141 Shades
143 T1mber
145 Comb lorm
mouth
146 Idol zes
148 Sham
150 lnlaled
152 Wanted
153Wampum
154 Shower
1 56 Barrel slats
15 7 Summed up
158 ldenl ca
159 Hurr ed
160 Cub c meter

DOWN
1 Jewtsh aw
2 G1ve extreme
unci on to
3 Holds n hogh
regard
4Meadow
5Mix
6 Man s n ckname
7 Un t of Butgar an
cur ency
8 B ackblrds
9 Aeconsl uct
10Cassly
11 Musca nstru
men!
12 Compass pont
13 Col ege degree
labb I
14 Mans name
15 Sw ss ver
16 Second rate
horses
178rstly
18 Dropsy
20Cul
23 Urge on
25 Heavenly body
27 Buy back
28 Body of water
31 mtatcr
33 Mr Cosby
36 Performs
38 Malures
40 Monetary
penalty
41 Pa tner
43 Sh p channe s
45 Mus c slowly
46 Ceremony
47 D stance
measure
49 Str kes
51 Perla n ng 10
Norway
52 Operatic barber
53 Posl
54 Preposition
56 Fees pad to
counselor
59 0 echon
60 Masl
61 Labels
63 Dinner course
65 Arrow
6 7 Organ ot hear

ong

69 Note or scale
ANTIQUES Fu n m sc tams
70 Tales
.::::
50
: :...:.._
_ Ph 2•s 50,
72 Repulse
7 4 Cler cal degree GOOD USED RECR GERATOR
AND FREEZER UPR GHT OR
(abbr l
CHEST Ph 446 0322
76 Greet ng
17 Food t sh
5 0 ACRES--;;; ; -evel ;-;,oy
79Edge
top dol or lond contract prefer
83 Female sheep
ed Ph 2-45 5533 ~-85 Sword
5
0
ACRES most y evel w pay
86 Season ng
top dol or ond contract prefer
87 F ghl
ed Ph 2-45 5533
~ __
88 Speed contest
89 Pad not ce
STOCK BEEF BULL 1 o 20 monlhO
90 Esteem
old Ph 367 0337
91 Worsh p
92 G eek tette
CASH pad fo o I makes and
93 Body ol water
mode s of mob e homes
94 Exclamat on
Phoneareo code61 4 423 9531
96 Snare
97 W le ol Gera nl TIMBER Pomeroy Fares Pro
ducts Top pr ce for sand ng
100 Compass po nt
Ca 992 5%5 or
sowt mbe
102 Unusua
Kent Hanby 1 .tA6 8570
105 To s
109 Clell
COINS CURRENCY tokens o d
11 2 Warn ng dev ce
pocket watches and cha ns
113 Punc l ous per
s ve ond gold We need 1964
son
and o der s ve co ns Buy sel
114 Concur
or trade Call Rage Wamsley
116 Poke stake
742 2331
1 18 Storage p t
OLD FURNITURE ce boxes b ass
1 20 Shu I nos ly
beds
e c
comp ete
121 Skna menl
households Wr eM D M er
122 Seesaws
R 4 Pome oy Oh o o call
1 23 Feel hot
9'12 7160
25 Dec de
1 26 Worn away
127 R1ver tslands
129 Mans name
131 Callng
WANTED TO BUY
132 Babylon an hero
1 5 Acres on Rt
133 Falslf ed
Suitable lor buoldong sole.
134 Fa thlul
••, 4921
136 Seeds
138 Wash 1ghlly
14D Aa sed
1 41 Eng! sh street
WANTED
CHIPWOOD P;;ies
car
Mo:~C d ome er I 0 nches on
1 42 Break suddenly
lorga5l end S8 per ton bundl
144 Specks
ed slobs $6 per ton Del vered
147Cypr nod f sh
to Otl a Pollet Company R 2
148 Edible seed
Pomeroy
Oh o
Phone
149 Expire
992 268,~9·'---~151 Umt of La tv an
TRAILOR WANTED Sel up on o
currency
n Me gs Coun y or eo Phone
153 Postscr pi
9•9 2353 0 992 5502
(abbo )
155 A stale (abbr l

see.

ror Sale
ReaJ Estate for SalP

•

MAIN
POMEROY

MONTEREY Mob e Home Two
bed oom Gas heat Phone
992 500
971 flEETWOOD mob !e home
I .t~C65 3 bed ooms 1 bath
unfurn shed
d shwos he
was he and d ye
unde p n
ng Phone 667 6385 ofte 5
pm
ht x 60 MOB LE HOME F ant
po ch bock pot o on 1 oc es
w th new bo n Phone 773 5233
(Flo wood a ea)
6 ROOM t a Ia o urn num po o
and underp nn ng n good con
d ton 8 ch pone I ng on n
s de Good as new has o be
mo'led Phone 247 2252

WI do odd obs oof ng po n
t ng gut ur wo k Phone 992
7409
SEW NG ALTERAT ONS
'upho s e ng
d opes
eosonoble 572 Sou th Th d
Ave
M ddleport
Phone
992 6306
P ANO TUNING lone Dones 2
yeo s o f se v ce
Phone
992 20B2
'
PIANO TUN NG by Elec on c
Compo son
Accu o e
Reo so nob e 992 3718
Will CARE fo e de y women n
ou home T o ned and e"
pe anced Phone 992 7 34

DACK TERMIT NC SPECIALIST
PEST CONTROL L censed IN
stJ ed
F ee
ln spec on
Membe NPVA and OPVA C
M Hall W lkes11 li e Oh o Ph
b69 4914
V E F LUNGER Woler De wry
Ser11 ce
Ph
379 2 24 o
379 2 12
ROOFING
HOME
M
PROVEMENTS
PANT NC
Co pente
wo k
gene ol
ep or
PH
.4.46 43 b o
4-46 8568
DUNCAN AND PETTRY S PLUMB
lNG heo ng new nsulo on
Ph 367 7b72
~-

NEALS WATER DELIVERY 24 Hrs
Ph 367 7 01 o .446 3c;l87

--

DUTYS BUILDING AND REMODEL
INC
FREE ESTIMATES Ph
256 1352
WATER WELL DRILLING W II om
T G ont Ph 7-42 2879 of er 6

---

-

---

SANDY AND SEAVER INSURANCE
Co has oft e ed se v ces for
F e nsurance cove age n
Go o County fa o mos a cen
tu y Fa ms homes and pe
sonol prope y coverages o e
avo lab e to
mee n
d v duo Ineeds Co,toct T F
Bu eson you ne ghbo and
ogen

i
I

•

1
l•
&amp; ..-

s

al th sane before you buy Four BR 2 2 baths
Lg. Kit w th ~ullt ns (except Refg ) d n ng room 9
LR fam ly room and two card v ded garage Lots of
storage Carpet throughout ce-ntr~l heat ng and a r
Spacious lot PI• acre) C ty schools Appointment onlv

CUSTOM REMODEL NG 20 yeo s
eKpe ence 388 8308 New d y
wall ce I ng w th sw I o eiC
u e des gns 0 her d y wol
epa 11 ny wo lpape ng new
baths new k tchens Any h ng
n emode l ng o epa

Alum &amp; Vinyl Siding,
doors shuUers &amp; spouting,
Insulated
replacement
windows 15 years exp 367·

Loadedw th space Th s home was bu It n them d 30 s
to lasl forever Four BR s formal DR Lg LR w th
II replace 3 balns full basement w tn FR and fireplace
Natural gas centra l heat (very low heat ng b lis)
large metal bui d ng for garage and work shop
Includes 2 acres wooded ot K C school d str t:t

Perhaps the neatest yard n town lots of f owers and
shrubs Large flat lot and a very cozy two BR home
Th s home has more fea tures lhan most Ca ll loday for
an appo ntmenl You wl De glad you d d M d S30 s

This ovely home has no equal In qua ty and pr ce
Bu It by a craftsman that be eves the r ght way s the
only way See th s one f you are seek ng qua ity
Prtcect well below replacement cos t

Summer retreat or year around home E ther way you
w I en1oy th solder home located on the Beaut fu Oh o
Rver n Eureka Look for our s gn on the eft a s you
trave down r ver Pr ced to se1 on Y $25 900
~

01%8
BORDERS GARAGE DOOR SER
V CE Comme col ond es den
o spec a z ng n ope o o s
Loca l 256 6472
DOZER WORK excovo f ng land
c eo ng Ph .t46 0051
Dec ease hos~ fuel b Is and n
c ease the 110 ue of you home
w lh o f rep ace f om LOGUE
CO NTRACT NC
FREE
ESTIMATES PHONE 366 9939
STANLEY STEEMER CARPET
CLEANER Any v ng oom and
ha $29 95 up o 300 Sq F
Sou heos e n Oh o No
1
Co pel
C eane s
Ph
6 4 446 4208
ROOF NC CUTTER WORK AND
CARPETER
WORK
PH
38S 8507
COUGHENOUR WATER DELIVERY
446 3962 o~ 4262 ony me
CHAIN LINK FENCING WOODEN
FENCING
AWN NGS Pot o
cove s
Aul s Home
l1
p o'lemenls Ph 446 3ti)8 of e
4

BACKHOE: DOZER D TCHER and
vck Cone ere wo k
dump
Ha f eld Backhoe Ser ~utlond
Oh Ph 742 2006 o 44b 2786
TV SERVICE Elec on c TV C n c
756 2nd Ave
Ga po s
.t46 3980 Se v ce Cal $5 95
p us po s and lobo Se v ce
co s w h n 24 Hrs
STUCCO PLASTERING ond P oste
epa r Textu ed ce I ng sw rl
f oo on b ush des gn 32 yrs
e )(p Wo k by the hou o by the
tob 256 1182 T Co Plos e
ng ond Stucco

.lpplk:• on• •~&lt;• 11 he
g lt:Y 0 YOU homt
Fo moe nom,. 11 "'

MR SUMMERS 114 2U8
1K 228 615

•l
•

•j•
1

BOBS
CB
Rod o
Equ p
eve yth ng n Two Woy Rod o
Antennas and occes Geo ges
C eek Rd Go pol s 446 45 7
SM ITH EXCAVATING
doze
backhoe enche dump uck
wo k done ot eosonob e o es
Ph 446 3981 John Sm h J

1

••
••
I

~:.:~~-Ti~::;~~
PASQUALE Insu la ng 103 Cedor
S Gal pol s Ph -446 27 6 o
440 092

I
!

WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
YOUR PRQPERTY I LIST WITH USJ
HENRY E CLELAND
REALTOR
Hank Katloy &amp; Leona
Associates
992 2259-985 4112
992 2568

FHA.BoVA

~OIJ.fi~OS

••

0

JUST LISTED - Exaclly
what you have-been lookmg
ror - 12 acres close to
town 7 room br ck with 4
BORMS full basement
CALL TODAY $2500000
JUST LISTED - Thos 2
BDRM frame home has al
the
requtrements
for
country llv ng 5 acres
garden fru t trees barn
m lk house ALL FOR
S15 000 00
SPLIT ENTRY - This 1
yr
old home has 3 4
Sdrms rec room ut lily
n ce k tchen &amp; I acre A
GOOD BUY AT S37 500 00
COOKS DELIGHT - The
kitchen 10 th s southern
style home has everyth ng
plus 2 baths on the 1st
floor 2 baths on the second
floor total of 5 bedrooms
good
lo cal on
ONLY
$24 000 00
WHITE ELEPHANT - 12
rooms 3 k tchens 2 baths
a 1 br ck 2 story home
several f replaces I ve n t
or buy to r~nt ASKING
$20 000 00
' "• ACRES Close to
Pomeroy Thts 3 Bdrm
frame s ready to move
nto 3 acres fenced w th
barn for an mas Sec uded
&amp;
beaulllu
ONLY
$19 200 00
GOOD OLDER HOME The hardwood f oars and
trim make thiS 3 Bdrm
home real y d stlncllve
0 n ng
room
bath
basement
f rep ace
CHEAP AT $12 50000
ON THE RIVER 3
Bdrms
bath basement
own water 2 tirep aces
FISHERMAN S
PARADISE $7 300 00

12 )( b3 V ndo e w h 10 I( 20
screened n po ch and cen o
Ph 367 0284 f no answ
o
Ph 367 71.40

----

Consisting n pa•t of 2 p ece L vlng Room Suite
Wooden Bed complete Maytag Automatic Wasner &amp;
Dryer General Electric Range Record Player Metal
Desk File Cabinet Wh te Electroc Sewing Machone
Chairs Mel a I Cabonets Couch End Tables Color If. B
&amp; W TV s Eleclr c Fans Lamps Rugs Bed Clothing
Electric Sweepers Sewing Cabinet Chest of Drawers
Electrical Appl ances Cooking Ulens Is Hand &amp;
Garden Tools and other useful household lems not
II sled
ANTIQUES
&amp;
COLLECTORS
ITEMS
Oak
Comblnatoon Bookcase Secretary Ook Wasnstand
Large Rolling Table Oak Love Seal Marble Top
Stand Tear Drop Lamps Lap type Coffee Grinder
Horse Clock Jewelry Oak Dresser with Bevel Mirror
Powder Horn Granote Beby Wash Pan Ook Stand
Wicker Planter Porch Swing Plank Bottom Rocker
Glass Doored Cupboard Lantersn Quilling Frames
Square Trunk School Desk McGuffey s Readers
Books Silverware Square China Cabinet Wall
Kerosene Lamp Oatsy Air Rifle Picture Frames
Mantel Clock 2 drawer Stand Add ng Mach ne T n
Toys Slralghl Razors Motel T Hub Cap Dlsnes &amp;
Glassware Quallly with lots of Quantity
OTHER ITEMS TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION
Terms Cash
Luncn woll be served
THE ESTATE OF THE LATE
HARMON KNIGGE
Berurd Knine-Admtntstrator
Daryle Alban -AUCTIONEERS- Kennetlo Swoln
O.k Hill Olllo
Gallipolis Ohio
THE NUMBER SYSTEM WILL BE USED
,
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS

~£stale

wont to buy o se I someth ng
oe lookmg fof work
o
who eve
you II get resu s
foster w tho Sen nel Won Ad
Call992 21 56

YARD SALE Tues June U 9a m
tlll9 p m and Wed June 15 9
om ttl 9 pm Car Boso
AKC SHeTlAND sheep dogs
es dence G &amp;a Bend 2 m
(M n ) Call es 2 females 7
below Ra venswood Fer y
weeks o d Sho s and wormed
Cia h ng of at s tes o s of
Phone (61-t ) 367 0292 o
boys sh rts and 1eons Al so I I
367 7 12
tie g s d esses portts etc K
ME GS COUNTY Humane Soc ety
ch.en oppl onces and utens s
An mol Co el ne
7680 o
d shes o s bo tie s books
after 6 p m 992 5.t27
reco ds good whee choir lup
pe wo e and much mo e
REG AKC Dove mon P ncher pup
p es Chomp on blood lin It GIANT -4 FAMILY yo d sole June
Phone 8-43 234.1
13 th ough 17 lo s ol n ce
cloth ng of o I ' tes but cheap
PEEK A POO dog I
yeo o d
pr ces
on! que tewele y
House b oken very good w th
lo s of m sc
clothe' d ye
ch ld en
Coli m 707-t or
tems Home of Frances King
992 3465
K ng R dge Rood Wo ch to
s gns
n Ho lsonv lie and
'YORKSHIRE TERRIER 3 Lb mo e
Page'~ e
1 y $150 G andson of Cham
p on Al5o co ry ng coses fo
LARGE YARD iDle Mon Tv1n
$Ole Ph .t46 0548
Wed q .t on New l mo Rood n
Rutland Phone 74'1 1b48
AKC PEK NGESE
mole and
female young gentle ve y at
SFAM LYYARD soles o ngJune
feet onote Ph 256 6230
13 Clo hes old d shes Sh ley
Temp e dol o he dolls books
AKC Reg M n Schnauzer pups 6
pots ond poOl&gt; bedd ng I nens
wks old make wonderfu pets
o d p c ures stands
amps
Ph 675 4073
stone o s tewel y a cond
t oner boxes of m sc B 0 S
2nd S reel M dd epo

l!t~a _ tHeatmg

MH$125

MOSILE HOMES LOTS
GREEN TERRACE MOBILE COM
MUNTY
LocatedonRf 141 ctywoer cty
schools 5 m n f om Gal pol s
and Holzer Hasp ol

R!r~JC(IIEIIT

Pets

Found b ack do~ po t Coli e and 2 FAMILY YARD SALE Mon and
po German Shephard n M d
lues 13 U 10 6 J m les
d epo I by sw mm ng pool tog
outRodney Cora
Rd
hos El Paso Coun y on t Coli
Household
c oth ng
b kes
992 3873 or 992 2081
~
ems odd ng mach ne

"llOiin

Starting at 10:30 A.M.

AUCTION SALE

Campmg Eqtupment

IMATES

FunttnJ Ani*'
Blow• olot Wlls &amp;Attics

for Sale

GJVI!IIWBf

•

2-23-1 mo.

EXPERIENCED

Swtday June 12 1977

3 Bedrooms 1 2 baths 1 m
Call now I s only $27 900

from c ty pa k on Rt 588

MOST OF OUR LISTINGS CAN BE FINANCED WITH
ONLY10 PCT DOWN PAYMENT IF YOU QUALITY
ooklng for Investment property? Seetnel!ouse and lot
t 2127 Chestnut Th s one ca n be bought for o"lv
15 500 Ca I now
Older homes are often the bes t homes We are offer ng
an a der home that s sol d and square Th s home s
located n Chesh re t has a modern balh n ce kitchen
and centra 1 heat ng ga age and shop AI of th s p us a
large at (1 13 acres ) w th access from Rt 7 a so from
Jrd St See th s one before t s too late
Only s x m es from Gal pol s turn eft off Rt 2l8 on
Raccoon Rd The first pace on th e eft s a two sto y
farm houses tuated on 2 75 acres of and Pe fee or
ra s ng your own beef and pork Also p enly at space
for an ce garden Pr ced to se I M d S70s
Dr ve by and take a look at the ho e at 354 Jrd Av e
You w
ove the c?nven en t ocation Th s home ha s
just rec ently been compete y carpeted throughout It
has a very n ce k tchen w th bu It n range and oven
ots of cab nets and counter space w th a m ca tops
1 2 baths open sta r case part al basement for ced air
heat storage bu td ng on back of of Cal tor an
appo ntment
More home l or the money Smal ot lo ma nta n You
will be p easantly surpr sed when you ook at the
nter or of our hst ng located at 31 Evans He ghts Cal
for an appo ntment now S25 900
Bu ld on at w th water and sewage Lot s part all y
wooded and s 100x371 Located on F oyd ClarK Road .
Just gett ng started"' Perhaps our new I sting n
Eureka s what you are oak ng for Two BR s bath
w th shower LR and k tchen House s pane ed
throughout w lh mar lie in balh The ful ength front
porch offers an e)Cce!lent v ew at the Oh o River
Prleed at on I y 17 'X)(I

s

MOST OF OUR LISTINGS CAN BE FINANCED WITH
ONLY 10 PCT DOWN PAY MEW" F YOU QUALIFY

�[).7- TheSundav Tom~ntinel. Sunday, June 12 , 1977

D-6-The Sunday Tunes&amp;ntmel. Swulav. Jun~ 12, 1977

Real _Estate for Sale? Sell It Through The Want Ads

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Re&amp;l Eslat"
Real

HPal t.•tute for Sale

E•tnle for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

H ..nJ Estate for Sale

Ru ssell D Wood
Evenmgs
446 4618

Ken Morga n
Evenmgs
446·0971

RUSSELL WOOD REALTOR
446-1066

I

m
IU AL!OR'

25'1• Locust St.
Gallipolis, Ohio

446-3636

THE WISEMAN AGENCY

FIRST AD ! 83 acres, JO pasture, pond 3100 lb tobacco
base . good barn . No house but a perfect bldg or mobile
home stte S2l.SOO
FIRST AD ! NiceJ BR frame ranch , eat tn krtchen. low
cost
hea1. J1 12 miles from city Best you II fmd for

Associate

REALTOR

INVEST IN THE BEST! l S4 acres plus st yliSh L shaped 3 BR brick ranch Covered front porch en try ,
21f1 baths, fa mt ly rm , ftreplace. lg L R with bay
wtnd ow, mud rm laundry off 2 car garage , eat rn
k tt chen w1th range. hood. oven, r efrtg , dtshwasher ,
formal DR, cen a.r , city sc hools, Ftfties

a.

LOOK ING FOR A modern home with a nice lot I I Th ts 3
bedroom ca rpeted home, wtth attached garag e, ts
sttvateO on a pprox•ma tely 110'•150' lot m Green Acres
S 0 Plenty of room for a garden and swimming pool
Call for an ap pomtmen t to see th 1s and buy for SJ2,500.
NEW LISTING - 3 bedroom home located In Plantz
S D l ull ba sement, Gallipolis city water and sewer,
sit uated on 3 lots F A nat gas furnace Pnce
$3S ,OOO 00
NEW LISTING IN GALLIPOLIS - l bedroom cottage
overlookmg Ohio R 1ver, garage, fool shed, large 1of
Pn ce $16,000 00
•
2 Bedroom Mob 1le Home
st tuated on 1 acre lot ,
Kemper Hollow Rd Rura l
water,
A C
2 out
butldlngs
P rt ce
512.00000 •
New Llshng · 2 bedrooms
l1vtng room , d1nlng and
ktlche1i , par t basement
Located on la rg e lot ex
tendrng from Gar f teld A'Ve
to n ver Prt ce
S32.000
Call
today
for
ap
pomtment \
Lease Thts Commerctal
Build ng ,
l oca ted
on
Eastern Ave, Ga\ ltpo l ls
6.000 sq ft Owner wr11 help
r emod~ l 1' necessary Ca ll
for more 1nfor ma1ton
New Usllng - 2 bedroom ,
carpeted home st lu ated on
60'x 150' lot in Cheshire,
drllted well. natural gas
Was $20,000 J:'ric'e
neat
reduced, $18.000
In Vtnlon Nice 1.
bedroom, car peted home
on shaded lot Modern
kttchen, dishwasher , range
and
r efrtge ra to r
tall
match) , for ma \ din ing
rOOIT1 Also, 1nclvded In the
price are 3 1ots, 50'K1 25' AH
for only $30,000
If you haVe always wanted
to operate your own
business
here's
your
opportunity!! We have
recently ltsted a gotng
business . take
possess ion , and begtn
ringln~ the cash reg1ster
Drive 1n business located
on ~s acre. new drilled well ,
sewage treatment plant,
prtce
1n c ludes
all
equ tpment and inventt.ry
Located on Ohio side from
new
dock
being
constructed on Ohio River
Call for more 1nfdrmahor•
Nestl ed Wtthtn A Woodet
Area on 3 Acres of Lane
adtacent to Or chard Hd
Rd Ttu s 4 or 5 bedroon
home wou ld be the pr1de uf
arw owner Two wood
burn111C1 #~rep l aces ' gr ace
botll !he I 1V1 ng room anrl
family room Heated and
cooled by the mode rn
econom1ca1 t1eat pvmp
system Galltpo lt s C1ty S 0
concrete driveway com
pJelely surrounds srnal!
pond at the entral'lce to the
property
Shown by ap
po1ntmfnt only
IF YOU DON 'T SEE THE
PROPERTY YOU WANT
tN TH I S AD CALL . WE
MAY BE ABLE TO FtND
IT FOR YOU
Call Wood Insurance&amp;
Real Estate 446· 1066

En loy the privac y of one of
the fme st homes In Ga ll 1a
Cou nty
Situated on a
PICturesque 5 acre lot
overlooktng
1h e
Oh tO
Rtver on l y f1 ve m1nutes
from downtown Ga!lt pol1s
Th is hom e ts less than 2
yrs old and has been butl1
a r ou nd a mag nll1 cen t
fa mily room w stone wall
ftrep lace , a beaut ful vtew
from any pos1t ton 3 B R 's
2'h bath s a c
2 w b
ftrepla ces Bu Jit m oven ,
dtsposaJ. rang e, dtsh
washer, electr1c garage
door opener, c tfY water
Pr 1ce has been redu ced to
198,000 00 $10,000 00 down
help
and owner will
f inance Shown by ap
pomlment Call today for
more 1nformatlon
151 Acre "Fifih - S1tuated
net~~r
Vtnton, 75 acres
ti llable , 56 acr&amp;s bottom
anCI20acres In t tmber, four
bedroom home , 100 'x 20'
eQU ipment bu ll d 1ng and
larg~ barn This Is a good
c:ne , buy now for S79,00D oo
Ranch Styl~ 3 bedroom , all
el ec tnc hom e In Ga ll ipolis
Ctty
School
Dts tr1ct
Sdu at ed on 120'x 75' lot
Ca rpeted except for k1t
chen and bath
new ,
cond1t1on, rural water
central sew11ge coll&amp;ct ton
blacktop stree ts
In BtdWell, 1\ bedroom ~·
story
carp~ t ed
home ,
stor m w 1ndows and doors .
large garden area, good
lo cat 1on on co r ner lo t
Price 1i22 ooo

LOW DOWN PAYMENT, •HA
VA fm anc1
fable on this 3 BR , g ~n• C\1ed home Carpeted L
k~~-~~f~;,~d~l~~n,~lng area. H~ ~~d floor s, c1;1 rport
n
exterior FENCED LAWN In
FAMILY PLEASER - Tenn 1s co urt and playg round
tmost 1n your own backyard 1 2 story, 3 BR home
r. m , eat ·ln kitchen w1th lots of cabtnets
~~~!,~ lg lot , garage, low cost gas heat Ml
IE S
BY THE OHIO" Very appea l ing 2 story
mnd••·n•zed older home features f1r ep la c:e 1n LR lg
fn•m'•'dm tng room , 4 BR , fully ca rpeted, ru r al water,
schools 121.000.
2 IILOC,KS FROM DOWNTOWN, nice 2 story, l BR
frame Fully carpeted except k1tchen Lennox gas
forced air furnace Low gas budget K1tchen fully
•,~,~~~~~.d w1th refngerator , rang e, dtshwasher ,
d
washer .=.nr4 rfrver . S28.500
BEAUTIFUL WOODED SETTING - 3 BR bnck
frame, 2 full baths, modern kttchen w 1th range,
and refrtg Uttlity rm w1th washer and dr'/er
roams partially furni shed Carpeted E•cellent
throughout W1th 3 .=.cres 532,000, 10 acres $37,500
ROOMY, REASONABLE 3 BR home m B1dwell
Exterior recently modern tzed with new stdtng
Garage, other outbu1ldmgs Lg lot with garden space
Rural water, septtc tank $16,000

5'12 ACRES beautiful b
rolhng Well and septl

SOlD'""'
nearly all flat.
_ . ., blacktop road , $6,000

VACANT LAND IN CITY - Approx 2 acres nice level
land Excellent building Sites JUST LISTED SlO.OOO
FARMER ' S FARM - S3 acres, 1S 20 tillable rest
fenced pasture and timber P.ond and streams Tob
base, coal nghts, gas and oil rtghl s leased Lg barn,
shed 3 BR modern ized home ha s vinyl siding, all
electric w1th firepla ce In LR . Modern kitchen w tlh
range, hood, refrlg .. freezer $37,000
190 ACRES, 60 tillable, 100 acres pasture fenced. 2
ponds, tobacco base. some timber , 3 barns, other
ovtbldg 4 BR br rck hom e, nearly completed Fireplace
In LR , full basement, garage. Perfect for best cattle
Call for appolntmenl

NINETY SIX ACRE hill farm . some t i llable land ,
lb. tobacco base, 1972 Hom ette 2 BR mob1le home,
septt c tank, good water supply , Hannan Trace Schools
Just listed 525,000

3 Bedroom Home st tuated
on
16'1.acres,
ap
prox tmately .tl miles north
of Holzer Hospt ta l . on Old
Rl 160 Owner w1ll se t\
house anCI l acre to t tor
$22,000 00 or buy Muse and
161!.- acres for $37,500 oo

CAN'T STOP LOOKING at the view from this I 41
building site. Beautifully landscaped , good road ,
water , located on Lower Rtver Rd Most ,.~,,~ra;,,;,l
view of lhe Oh1o Rrver in the area S7.500

NEW LISTING Buddtn g
l ocated at 1222 Secon d
Ave, Gall po l ts. Pr1ced tor
qutck sate
$17,500 00
NEW L.l STING · l1 80 acres.
s.ttua ted tn ruStiC. Morgan
Twp on Morgan Lane 2
bedrooms. ltvtng room ,
bath , sma ll pond on
property E l ectr 1c t"leal.
supr lemented wtth wood
co&amp; burn1ng stove Pr 1ced
nght for 513,000 00 Owner
may help ftnance
IF YOU ' RE PLANNtro.G
TO SELL. CALL US , WE
HAVE
A
LIS"'F
OF
PROSPECTIVE BUYERS ,
ANO WE ' RE ANXIOUS
TO SERVE YOU

BUILDING? We have sites on Lower Rt. 7 with Ohio
River frontage, Rt. 141, Addison and Rt 160 Call for
complete detatls
COMMERCIAL LOT &amp; BUILDING. 1n c1ty of
Gall1pQl1s Lot 66'x 174' , City water and ga s Butldmg tn
cond Immediate possession S25.000
GREAT BUSINESS LOCATION near old Rt. 35 just a
few mdes from c1 ly Ideal for garage, body shop.
plumb1ng or convert to sales room for flori st, grocery
etc Over 1,900 sq. ft downstairS w1t.h attracttve
carpe ted office J BR, tastefully decorated home
upstatr s Carpeting throughout. lots of parktng space
9 acre Owner relocated In area $40,500
EXCELLENT INVESTMENT property near Hol zer
Hosprtal and Spnng Valley Plaza Mobile home park ,
11 pads with 4 late model mobile homes All Utiltftes
In come ftgures avatlable Ia senous buyer
CHEAPIEI 2 BR frame
ctty water, gas heat, lr

SOlD
1, uttllty rm
, .,.7,000

MODERN BRICK , a ROOM RANCH HOME
Sw1mm1ng pool wornes are over look{ Almost new &amp;
mode~n In every way, sw1mm1 ng pool 1ncludedl
Beauf1ful foyer, 3 bedrooms n~ee , large 4 double
closets 1 s tngle L R ll'xlB', formal 0 R, util1ty R
mce family R, comp lete k1tchen, mce s1ze &amp; handy,
large 2 car garage alfached These are a few of the
ms1de features Now the rest - Lots of shrubbery ,
allracflve gate entrance to beaut1fully fm1shed
walkway lead1ng mto a modern new oval pool s1ze
17 x35' w •th divmg board and n1ght l 1ght Pool
completely fenced tn There Is plenty more 2 extra
lots, plenty of yard or garden space, fenced m on 3
stdes, apple trees, grape vtnes, central a1r, gas forced
a1r furnace , lot s of Insulation, low heat bill s, basketbal!
court I qu1t - please ca l l for the rest
COUNTRY HOME
COUNTRY MANOR
&amp; -40 ACRES
WITH AN
5 Bedrocm) bath, whtte al
ARTISTIC SETT IN G
Stdtng, ntce country k tl
One of Gall1a Col!nty's best
chen wtlh buIll 1n ca bs
3 '200 SQ fl over al\ ap
Elec wall oven table to p
pro1umate l y 8 acres of
Fuel oil lurnac:e and
tand , nice pond
House range
cons1s l s of 8 roo ms 3 or &lt;1 a wood burntng space
a l so a wood
bedrooms , 3 fl!ll baths 2 heater
bummg fireplace Dril led
showers , st,;nken ltv.ng well
w1th etectr1c pump
room 16' x1~' Wllh ma ss 1ve
stone firep la ce K 1tchen 1s Barn corn crib chicken
good
pasture
beyond word s You Will house ,
t enc rng, 15 to 20 acres of
havQ lo see to believe 20 A
mcc pantry baY wmdow t1mber , app r oK
l1 l lable land All mmeral
1ook1ng out over 'Valley
Heat pump tor heat1ng and ngh ts goes, sever al apple
cool1ng
28'x8 deck 1ng tre es Ca II now
rvnnlng length of house 2
WOOOBURNING
car garaqe and many more
FIREPLACE
feature s Th i s good family
HOUSE &amp; LARGE LOT
IS 1eav 1ng county
Ccill Garden space, ... bedrooms
today for annn1ntm~nt
on Jackson Sf m V nlon , F
IUEAI. CO UNTR Y
&amp; R porches, c1ty water,
HOME
garage &amp; storage ar ea.
Th 1S 1s the one many people wells are paneled Cetllngs
ask for 8 room 2 story are tile On t y S6 900 00
LAND CONTRACT
country home located tn
one at the greatest and 6 rooms, 2 stor y wood
pi ctu resque farm tng areas bu r n1ng fir ep l ace city
of Gall1a County One acre. water on a la rge lo t 1n
le1Je\
land
very V1n t on
\2.000
down
product1ve Great le'Vel payment and $133 3&lt;1 per
yard Garden spot - the mon th Just l1ke rent Cal l
best 5 \arge bed room s, tor mo r e 1nforrnat1on
pretly remodeled kttchen.
ACREAGE
a ll built 1n new ba t h
BUILDING SITES
dmtng room
L R
ca r 65 Acres,
tn Green
peted , very n1ce ftr ep\ace &amp; Perrylocated
Twp
Small
por ch around front of amoun t of t1
mber , 50 A
hous e blacktop road. rura l t1llable 2 barns
40'x30' and
water Much more Be the 40' x24' If you are
1 rst to call It won't l ast for va luable land tookmg
for 1n
ves tment , here d rs Call
6 ROOM FRAMt
today
ON 2.84ACRES
tn Merce r ville
2 or 3
SUPER BUILDING
bedrooms , r ural wate r 2
SITE -27 ACRES
car garage , wood burn \ng Thts 1S lh e one you have
ftrep\ace barn, smoke been looking for Over 27
house w1th cel la r Large ac land Old homestead,
shade tree , also peach 8. very I til e value except
apple trees All m\ner a\ wonder ful ch0 1ce ar ea for
ngh 1s goes All of th1s build1 ng Rura l water lme
ONLY 52500000
runs the length of approx
12 acres , r eady to develop
1 ACRE PLUS
App rox , 15 ac res ttmber
On Georges Creek Rd
la nd al l Wlfhtn 5 m 1\es of
1975 Kir kw ood
12' x60' Gall 1pol ts Blacktop rd to
mobd e home, 2 bedrooms the area Th rs wilt go fast
Large
24'x28 '
garage
lcon cre l e blo c k
Wtl h
180 ACRES PLU S
sh 1ngle roof ) l 1ke new Has
Vacant A wood land
rura l water system. sept1c
wonderla nd
some
tank EKtra nice bu l\dlng
pasture and til la bl e land
l&lt;lt All Ortly 515,900 00
Less than S160 per acre

CITY PROPERTY-CONVENIENTLY LOCATED
One block below C1ty Park, nice home. completely
restored, you must see the lns•de to believe the edent it
has been remodeled and r edecora ted 6 rooms, 2 baths,
F A gas furnace. new wl rtng, plumbing, dry wall,
pa per, &amp; comple tely carpeted w1th top grade
ca rpeting F1replace, house IS covered with new alum
s1drng, garden area. a ll of tht s &amp; more This one Is
ready to move mto
9ROUM
COUNTRY HOME
6 ROOM HOME
W1th 3 acres , more or less,
NOT TOO OLD
of level land less than 1/2
3 bedrooms, fam ilY room
ml1e oft blacktop road 5
12 x2.tl
tota l eolectrtc,
bedrooms, 1112 bath , fronJ &amp;
thermopane
w1ndows,
butlt m back porch, large
rural water system, n1ce
16 1f, 'x22 1/:l llvmg room.
metal storage bulldtng
automatrc washer &amp; dryer
located on a n1ce l eve l
goes, but It 10 cabinets , s s
landscaped fenced tn tot.
dbl s1 nk, elec coo k stove
concrete driveway N tce
Hot water c1rcu1atmg heat
home at on l y $23.500 00
plus
wo od burn1ng
f 1r ep la ce Has th owrt
150ACRE;:,
wa t er syst em Th 1s 1S a
S350 00 PER ACRE
n1ce up to date country
Thts 1S a good Hil l Farm
nome
Lots of pOSSibii ii iES
85
acres of pasture, -40 ac r es
VACANT LAND
or more 11 11ab l e some
JACRESMORL
t1mber L1ne fen ces are
Leva\ land 1n Gall,poi iS
good 10 room s remodeled
Ctty Schoo\ D 1st on Clay
2 story house 3 well built
Chapel Rd 1'h miles f rom
barns. 2 shed s and other
State Htg hway 7 750 ft
ou t butld1ngs
Call tor
frontage on B'urot Run Rd
appo1ntment
&amp; 150 fl fronta ge on Cl ay
Chapel Rd On l y $3,000 00
HOME AND
BUSINESS
l~cated on Sta te H 1ghwa,
RIVERFRONT
7 3 Bedroom home w th
COTTAGE
ba th , ltvtng roo m. eat 1n
acre plus 2 bedrooms , 4
ktlchen This t1ome was
room co ttage, ga rage and
comple tely r eftn lshed l ast
other outbu ildings Has 1ts
year and looks very n1ce
own watel" sy stem Approx
Ga r age, ce ll ar, extra
23 0 tt frontage on th e Oh10
bv •ld 1ng lot Also w1th th1s
R lver , also fronlage along
property
1S
a
w ell
Rt 7 snacte t rees, storm
esta blt she d grocery sto r e
doors, heated w 1th gas ,
whteh has don r• ~u s tness
front &amp; ba ck por ches L1ke
for at \east 40 1 r
H ous~
to ft Sh'J Boat? or Relax to
and bustness ea ch o~ as new
the breeze of the r 1ver?
roof This property could
be a good 1n'Ves t me rd
MOBILE
oroperty Call no w 1
HOME &amp; LOT
MOBILE HOME
ONLY $590000 on State
LIKE NEW
Htghway • 554
1963 3
Kirkwood
197 4 mode l
bedroom
Town House
5
ro o m s,
2
1&lt;1'x65'
Mob i le Home wttll drilled
bedrooms, bath &amp; shOwer,
we\1 wtth etectr 1c pump ,
modern k1 !Cil en al\ bu 11t tn
a lso storage bl dg 12'xl2',
w1tn a doubl e wati oven S
loca ted on le\lel l ot
29
piece dtnette set 11vrng
Acre Qu i ck home for
room lurndure , bedroom
sorneone
flirn1 tur e, a1r c on&lt;"~ lt•one r
10'x7' metal stor a • bldg
LOOK WHAT WE HAVE!
Smoke ala rm II all oes A
EDGEMONT DRIVE
QUtck home for a modest
3 bedroom home - modern
pnce Call now
m every way Fully car .
peted exce pt kitchen &amp;
bath Ktlchen is co mplete
COMFORTABLE HOME
- all bUilt 10, n1ce SIZe,
RIVER FRONTAGE
6 rooms &amp; bath par t1a l
also eat '" area
N 1ce
formal dtntng room The
bas em en !, ntce front por ch ,
l1v lng room 1s beau ttfU I
beaut1fu l IJIE!W of r1ver
fmt shed off by a fi replace
Th ts propert y 1S clean &amp;
for th e famil y crrc le Full
att rac.t1ve It has had many
basement New for ce d atr
m an hrs spent on 1f It 1S
natural
gas
furnace
m ade more beaut1ful wtfh
Central arr Garage Nte e
garden area, In Cl udes
lot Se ldom can you buy a
raspbernes, st raw ber nes,
home on Edgemont Drtve
cherry trees and grapes
These 1 people lust don't
L ess t han &lt;1 m ti es of
area speaks for
GalliPO l iS, south on Rt 1

REALIOf

Audrey Canaday
Realtor Assocoate
446-3636

HOMESITES for ~ a l e 1 ocr• and
up Mtddleport near Rutland
Coll992 7481

NEW l bedroom tlouse '1 bath s
oil elet
1 ocr&amp; Middleport ,
close to Rutland Phone W2
7481

...
•

•

.

.,

You've Admtred Th1s One and Thought II Would Never

Be for Sale Drtve down Lower R1ver Road J mtles and
this time consi der owntng one of the nrcest propert ieS
in the a rea. This beautiful nver fror.~t property featvres
a formal entrance and center hall , large ltvmg room ,
formal dln•ng ,_ complete k itch en with breakfast area ,
paneled family room wtth w b f treplace, J bedrooms,
2V1 baths, fu ll dry dtvided basement and 2 car garage
Over an acre of land with mature shrubs and trees
FantastiC v1ew A perfed place to li ve. $79,000

NEAR LAKE JACKSON ..J 162 a m I ro lling lane ,
/ mostl y woods and brush ,
Old nouse, lots of st ate rd
0 frontage , S200 per acr e
L1J COUNTRY HOM~ Wl . t-4
0 EVERYTHING - Mi!llke 1m
W appotntment to see th is .4
w YT old br tc k lo cated about
7 m 1 I rom HMC Th is
beauty Is 'Situated on \0
tn acres of land 10 the c1 ty
(!) school dtstr lct wtth ll• m l
frontage
on
Raccoon
Creek
Oth er
seec,a l
1- teatures are 4 SR s 31 1
tn baths , family room w 1th w
..J b ftreplace , formal d1nmg
room , forma l entrance ,
laundry
room ,
l arge
screened 1n pat1o and 2 ca r
0 garaoe Ove" $1 00.000 ,
LLI BEEF CATTLE COUN
C TRY - 300 acres mostly
U.l clean rolltng pasture land ,
W fenced and cros s fenced 3
barns fOb btse . old home
1/'1 .1250 per acre
.., HUNTER 'S DELI GHT
53 5 acre s M L mostly
-wooded , rdea I tor your
t- weekend camp Located'"
V'l Margan Twp and pr~ced at
::i S12 SOC

,'

...·'·:
..'.
·..

Thts Bnck Ranch Offers Sohd Quality
Here tsa fme 3 bedroom Qrtck on a quret st reet close to
~olz er Medteal Cen• ~ ' ha~ '\n c luO es a very ntce
kttchen (range &amp;~'\) ..
dtntng area, 1' 2
gleaming f ile bat~ ~
lam1ly room, ca r pe l
throughout, full bast:: ~'t'-, .,garage, patro larg e f la t
landscaped 1ot Owner t .ovtng out of state New l 1st1ng
- be the 1st to see 1t 545,900 00
Up to 40 Ac Can Be Purchased with thts One
If you want a home 1n the country iN her e the air IS fresh
and you can ratse your ch1ldren wrthout tnterfere nce
be sure and see thts nearly new 3 bedroom bt level.
Includes a large ltvmg room, pretty k•tchen, 2 baths,
large family room - Sun deck and pat1o It's located on
l ac.lot about 8 m tles from town If you want more land
with It we can get It for you $35,000 as I S

SMAll farm for sole 10% down
ow11er f1ndnced Monroe Coun
1)1 W Vo Phone (304 ) 772·
3102 oc (304)772 3227
COUNTRY farm land wtlh seciud
ed woods; water and good ot
cess tn Monroe Coun ty W Vo
$1 000 down co li (304) 772.
3102 or (30~ ) 712 3217
Commercta l property appro" 17
acres le..,el land located ol
Tuppers Plains on Ohto Route
7 Phone (614 )667 6304

REDUCED AGAIN 3 bedroom 2 1/ 1
batl'l bt level I m•le nor th of
F1ve Potnl $42 500 Phone
992 2492

S Acres, l ift m1les from
town . Pr1vate Bld!il . stte.
$12,000

•

446-3554
HOMESITES for sole I acre ond
up Mtddlepo rt near Rutland
Call 992 748 I

NEW 3 bedroom house 2 boths
oil elec I acre M1ddleport
close lo Rutland Phone 992
7481
SMAll form lor sole 10% down
owner fmonced Monroe Coun
ly W Vo Phone (30.4) 772
3102 Of {304 )772 3227

-

-

_._

---

NEW 3 beoroom house bu1lt·m
k ttcl'lel'l, bath and 1h Phone
742 2306 or contact MilO B Hut·
chtson Rutland Otl 1o

sq. ft. of living space.
Very large family
rm.-living rm. with
fireplace , lots of
closet space, 2112
baths , utility rm .,
large bright kitchen
with eating space and
lots of cabinets.
Dining room, utility
rm ., large one car
garage, full acre lot.
Low heating bills, air
conditioning
being
added. $36,900.
Call 446- 1225

•I

••

•
•

••
•
•
•

VA·FHA 30 yr , ftnono ng Ireland
Mortgage 77 E Stote Attlens,
phone (61_. ) 592 3051

FOR SALE BY OWNER , 4 Br home
2 botl'l Dr , · eot·m lo:tt w1th
-~
d1shwasher and dtsp , study
HOUSE IN Tuppers Platns 2
1ewmg rm or other, lots of
bedrooms el&amp;c heat double
closets carpet and HW floQrs
garage 2 lois Phone (614)
new steel ~ 1d 1ng storm drs
667 ·3065 or 667 3360
and wnds , FA tlaot , basement
gor on 1g corner lot tn
n~telocotl on 1n c1 ty May be
seen anyftme except Weds
and Sun evenmgs 130 Bastlnot
w e sell anything tor
Dr Goll•pol1s , Oh1o
anybody 11 our Auction
Barn or •n yvor hom e For
1nformat1on 1nd ptckup • THREE B HOUSE BY OWNER , ex
fro large family rrn with
servtce call 256 1f67
Sale Every Saturday
f1replo~e beouttful kitctlen lpts
Ntght al7 fl' m
of cobmefs , dishwasher range
d1n rm wtth mce vte w lg
ut1l1ty room Wtlt'! shelves for
conned food 2 baths lois of
closet space sets on 1 acre
level lot wtth 5 acres pasture
ad1o•nmg garoge two f por
Kennetft Sw11n . Auct
ches on Bulav1lle Rd \near
Corner Third &amp; Ohve
Stlrine Club coll.t146 0352.

-----

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN

that thts
sprawling bl"1 ck tr1 level r\ on~ of
nicest coun try
homes you've ever s~r. i hi! tr.au+y ts sttuated on 41/t
acres of land about J \2 miles from Rodr.ey Why not let
your famtly entOY 4 BR ' s, 3 baths. lar~e ll\'lng and
dtnmg rrom , complete k•tchen, fam ly room wtfh stone
fireplace and 2 car garage Be the ftrst to see thts one
Stro~t Really, 446 (1()00

SWAIN

AUCTION SERVICE

.-

•
•
•

Before you
r you truly want a
bargam 3or4
den or fam 1ly room , 2112
bath!s. lots of
large family , k itchen (range,
dishwasher and many cabinets}, dtning area and large
livtng room w1th a co zy w b fireplace Large screened
1n porch, is per fect far these long summer even1ngs
Garden already planted and growtng 3/, Ac fl at
landscaped lot at edge of town
Excellent 3 Bedroom Ranch
Modest Price
Very ni ce 3 bedroom home with a large newly f1mshed
family room Th1s one w tl l surprise you . Located on a
large lot across the street from Addaville Grade
School 531.900

11.~ Ac .• Good House Overlooking Rtver - ThiS One
needs your per sona l attent•on Pa1nt w ill make 1t look
like new agatn Nrce J bedroom home w it h family room
and basement Overlooks the nver and provtdes a b1g
garden auf back 532,000 00
Best Old Home in TownOn the Market Today - Here is
a solid square older 4 bedroom 2 story that wrll please
you if you're looking for a good one . Large Jlvmg room ,
formal dtning, large kitchen &amp; breakfast nook, 2 ful l
balhs, basement, modern centr;3rl atr - overs1zed 2 car
garage and lot on 4th Ave. $51.500 And 1l's wor th 11
WANTTD BE "TURNED ON"
THIS ONE WILL- Just Imagine owning one of the
most attradtv.e home~s
Joo 1n excellent neighborhood •
Thlsl or 4 bedroom~
fe., .. ures a large equipped
country kitchen anl
. o.~• •ll
.,lly room with super
big wood burnmg I . epl· oi "' .~ rooms are big and
you'll en loy the large f ""~ .andsceped lot /ust a few
min . from town TaKe a?',, minutes TODAY to see this
very. nice family home.
Jf1f2 Ac . W~ Jed Lot · ~ct tor building your new
_home Wonderful roll
"" ~ :overed countryside
$19.500.00.
-~\

M. WISEMAN 446-3796

·'

••

tn the woods and t ·l'ft, ft. tgh for any fam •ly

4 large
bedrooms . biggest ~~ - 1m 1n the ent1re area
K1tchen has every!~ up.'(
wooded setting on 8
"'
ac lot $89,000 00.

THE BUY OF A LIFETIME (NEW LISTING)
Thts 1s a new l1sting that you must see 1f yo1.,1' re look 1ng
for a quality home in a quality locat 1on Ovmer Is
movmg out of state and d~&gt;,lres a qu ick sale- (he has
priced thts home ,.flo(\~ 'lglv) . :Th rs spacious 4
bedroom brick 8. Ira,_. ,...."'- ¥111 satisfy the most
discr~mlnatlng buyer ·,1_ "
a forma~ entrance,
huge liv ing room ove ~'r ~ the Ohio Valley, formal
dining. cherry panele . ,not plywood!. fam 1ly room.
oversized ktfchen, 2112 sparkling baths, 2 wood burning
firep laces , full basement, 2 car garage and a
beauttfully landscaped trH covered lot, 562 •.500 .
NOW WE'RE GETTING SOMEWHERE
let me show you the cleanest .. ·me on the market - J
bedrooms, formal din ln
" 1tchen. hardwood
floors, full basement and c.,i:/-1..·" ~ •s sma ll barn w ith
kennel and dog runs Plus d.~\ ,..Jme rental tncome
af-$l6S 00 per month ONner l"dnsferred Price $4:2,900
ThrH 'Bfilroom RIC ...,..n.\ t\ ry Clean - The perfect
home to 9et yovrseh ~
lust 2 mile out Large
living room , pretty kot'd,'\'\
lfhs, garage and flat
lot. Irs a beauty SoiQl"~r Jnd .
17'hACRES PARTLY IN THE
CITY LIMITS (NEW LISTING)
Here's a modern 7 room home located rn town on PI(
acres JOin ing 16 more outside t he city l1mtts Large(s
stall hor se and hay bar~#\.\\\ 1 water &amp; electric Thls
lovely home offers t~ ~~~· ·vtng room •n town,
modern kitchen and fL .-- ~
At least 2 exc el lent
buildmg lots Horsebaclr.. \l.~ "9· and d1rt b1ke trails.
trees, hrlls and wild life r ,ght here 1n town . You can' t
beat th ts one and tts priced In mid ftftles

,..t'\\S) '

'l.

\'!1.

CRYING FOR A'
grass Is growtng ,.
river on a 2'11 lot
Huge
large
baths
Price

~(\\SJ q

My pa int Is pealing ,
I overlook the
town

?":' ~· ~ \\ iown .

Ju!l"'f: •

RIVER WATC'' 'ER WANTED
4 bedroom (J,rv-.:A.\'a .' ' ranch, format dtnmg,
l1v1ng room. 1.~ \~ ' · builtin kitchen, 3
- 4 of these ro ......~\." directly onto the river
S62.500 00
"'

P\cturflque yko Fr·.,"\l) 'dlnv LOT. lhls u&gt;~ ~·• 2
ac ofptn etreesand c. ~
\
viewforS15,000 Sold

May 171h

~~'
•

E•. N. WISEMAN, BROKER

500 2ND A. VE.
LOTS One mtle off Rt 7, off
lower Raccoon Creek 8f]o r Run
Rd
f1nanclng avolable Ph
2S6 6413
Modular t-fom e on 100 K 150 lot
pt, 675-7263

CALL 446 3643
IRELAND
MORTGAGE
CO
SpeCioh.ttng 1n FHA ond VA
Home loons Also Refmoncmg.
463 2nd A..,e Located 2nd fl oor
Galltpolts Ph 446 7172

GALLIPOLIS

NICE 3
h1.1me New
1n kitchen new furnace and hot COU NTN'I" form lond wtth ~echud
water hea ter newly decorated
cd woods wcter and good O(
liv1ng room wtlh f~r e ploce On
cc s~ 1n Monr op lr&gt;u•lf ~ "'
va
lr $14 800
3 :1 acres 1n
'S I J.:U _down call (30-4) 772
Longsv1 lle Phonc7&lt;12 'J7b'J
3102 or {304 ) 772 3227

z

EDGE OF TOWN
One of
the cleanest homes vou 'll
fmd on today's market
Th iS love ly ranch off ers 7
BR "s 1 bath , n1ce k1Tchen
w tfh range and plenty of
CBb,ne ts, LR , large fam ily
room w1 th patto doors
lau nDry room new US sl eel
S1d 1r.; , central a1r and over
l acre of land Sho wn by
IIPPOinTmeflt

v_..-.

v.
-i
_

z

Gl
Lll

Z

m
m

C

v;

GOOD FOR NOTHING
excep t t'luntrng and cam
p1ng
180 a c r~s of the
wtldes t coun lr y in Ga! l 1a
County
Lo(a ted In the
Wayne Nattonat Forest and
or1ced at Sl95 pe r acr e All
roa t qas &lt;:~nd oil mc\udcd

z

(;)

"'

Z

m
m

C

m

PRICED REDUCED TO C
513,000 - O.Vner says sell
th1s 6 room and bath home 1
with new alumtnum sldlrtg.
large LR &amp; kllchen , 3 BR's, ~
BABY FARM - 17 acr es dln 1ng room , oil furnace _
on sta te Route 718 10 tile
0 c1 ty school d1SI PLUS a 2 and flat lot In Thurman
(;)
L&amp;J BR c ottage with n1cc
- C/'1
0 f 1r eplace, barn &amp; a mobile PASTURE FARM
W home pad
S19 ,900 w1th S40,000 , 150 acr e$, mostly
clea n rol l 1ng h1ll pasture
W tmanc1ng available
Good woven wire f ences m
Z THE OLD K IW ANIS lots of rd fronta ge , old m
.,. CAMP Is for sate 200acre s hovse and barl'l and lob 0
C) of wood l and near R10 base Located 1n Wrtln u t f'T'I
Grande w1lh lot s of fro n Twp
C
~ !age on a b la ck top road for
1- \7 5 000 Other features are ROOM TO ROAM. 1 fh Ink
V\ a 27x 55 lodge w1H1 k1t cnen
you would say that this
- &amp; f irepla ce, sneller house, sprawltng brick t rl level IS C
...J nice 2 BR &amp; bath co ttage one of the nice st coun tr y \I)
1 wt!h new carpel a. scvF;ra l
homes you've ever seen -1
O small cab 1ns
Thts beauty Is situated on
U.l NEAR LECTA - 101 acr e 4'h acres of land about l in Gl
C ft~rm w1lh 45 A til labl e 5 miles from Rodney Why VI
LLJ rm h&lt;luse •..J barn s, sever al not let your f?~mlly enJOY 4
BR's, l baths. large l •v •ng Z
LLJ other outbuildmgs cellar
house spr1nQ water &amp; a and din i ng room. complele m
3500 lb lo b ba se sso 000
k itchen, family room with m
stone f ireplace and 2 car 0
&lt;-'N EAR TOWN - 5 73 acr es 9arage Be the frrst to see m
Z va cant land on Rou te 160 tlt tS Ol'le
0
j:: about 2 m 1 out Lots ot
.., potent1al tor $1-l 000
N EW LISTING - The one
you've been wa 1hng for
Modern 3 BR ran ch wtlh r
fiJII b a s~'&gt;ment PLU S 22L OT S OF LOTS
Located acres o f la nd 2 barns &amp; VI
0 on Graham Sc hool Rd , m il k house nca r Add1son -1
L nt:(Jin P1k e &amp; Georges
Z
W Creek Rd Mobile ho!Ti es S45 000
0 welcome
G"'
w
HARDW ARE STORE
w
Here 's your ct1 ance to ~ t;" t
Z LISTING S N EEOEO - s tart ed ,n your ow11 m
..,.WE
ADVERTISE busmess. Th1S properly !s m
(!I NATIONALLY - WE BUY loc ated In Vm ton, Oh 10 &amp; C
c an be bo ugtH tor \ 12900
SELL - TRADE
plus stock &amp; eqlJipment
m

l

l

?....,

I
I

A SVUND INVESTMEN1 m
descnbes th is 53 acre tract 0
ol land Localed oo US JS 1
near Rio Grande Owner ts
retlnng and has agreed to rfmance to the nght party
Potenftal Plus tor S55,000 -1

z

z
z

~­

BEAUTIFUL RANCH Extra ntee ranch 4
bedr ooms, for ma l dming room , tam 11y room ~ 1 th
frrep lace covered patro, lovely krtchen w 1t h butlt 1ns
central atr, garage wrth electnc opener Located clos~
to Spnng Valley Plaza Owner wa nts to se ll no
reasonable offer refused Call for an appomt~en t
today

I

Z:

z

"'

I

....

IN TOWN - E•cellen t loca tiOn tn town, close to shops
and schoo ls N 1ce large house w1 th 5 bedrooms, 2'h
ba ths, family room, ju lly car peted beautrfu ltn ground
swr mming pool, spend your vacatton at home th1s year
Located on Locust St for S4Cil 500
INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 3 houses on Ga r f ield
Ave Need some work, all are r ented and !ookrng for a
new owner $36,500 Call tor more mtarmatlon
NE~ LISTING - N 1ce home w tth 3 bedrooms fully
carpeted d1ntng room enclosed back pork a lum rnu m
sr dtng on house, severa l fru 1t trees. mce garden space
beauftful Jl l.t acres, located on Bull Run Rd Close to
Vmton $2&lt;1.500

GOOD BUY - Good4 bedr oom home wr th ba th, fam ily
room , n1ce k tlchen wr th r ange and r efrtge ratar,
sto rage butldtng garden space Loca ted on St Rt 554
af B 1dwell, $19.500
GOOD INVESTM ENT - NiCe 4 wlfl stn gles, both s1des
are rented Only 2 years old each s1de has 2 bedrooms
ltvmg room , mce k ttchen wtth range, refrigerator ,
dishwasher Loca ted close to town on Bellomy Lane
113.900
COUNTRY LIVING - N1ce nome tn the count r y has 2
bedrooms bath, forced a•r f ur nace, large 2 car garage,
coun t y wa t er Located on 1 acre on Gardner Ford Rd
to..- $26,500
IN TOWN - Good tnvestment or commercta l s1 te 2
houses on a ful l c1ty lot Loca ted o Ol tve St Pnce
reduced to $26 500
BIDWELL - Ntce 3 bedroom home, bath wt th shower ,
famlly room beaut tful carpeL very nrce and 1[1
excellent condttron, coun ty water, nt ce level lot
12d,900
CLOSE IN TOWN - Good f ram e home, 3 bedrooms.
bath , full basement. la rge lot Located on Kelton Rd
$18 500
LOT S- Need a n tce lot look at these
1 Bulav1lle Rd, Close to Plants SubdtVIStOn 1 $3,300
2 Rt 141, close to town, 6acres 55,200
34 ACRES - Ntce 5 room house 1ust remodeled new
ba th , new kttchen new carpet mce f trep1ace, has
several buddtng s Loca ted an Fatrvtew Rd close to
M ercerv rlle $28 500
50 ACRES - New l1strng, busmess and 1nves t m~nt
proper t y, has a n1ce 2 bedroom mobile home Beer &amp;
Wme Carryout,land has a large vein of coal , owner has
a partral 1nterest tn mt nerals, w tll get f1fty cen ts per
ton of coal when m med Located on St Rt 233 at Gall! a
Call for more rnforma t1 on
LOVELY RANCH - This ran ch ha s a brick fron t, 3
bedrooms. bath with shower , car peted, concrete drive.
storage budd1ng 1 large level lot Located on Bulavllle
Rd po 500
JUS) LISTED - Lovely 2 yea r old ranch wtth country
llv tng , has 4 bedrooms, 2 baths. large kttc:hen drn1ng
w•th range and r efr lg carpe ted, basement heat pump
wtfh ce ntral atr , located on Clark Church Rd off f1t
160 on app. 6 acres of beauftfulland $42,900
WE BUY, SELL OR TRADE
EVENING S CALL
John Fuller-446 4327
Oscar Batrd--446 4632
Lee Johnson- -256 6740
Ear l Wlnters---446-3828
Wetherholt----4 46 4244

1

WE NEED LISTINGS

••
•

t\

ATTENTION HOME BUYER Don 'l miSs th is
barga 1n. O~·mer has alreat:W moved out of the ar ea and
must sell tmmed tately.. (\'ikkJR}ese features - brtck
ran ch w1th fu ll ba "' ..,.(\V (.. ;;~ J atr, heat plump
carpeting through "':/"' ''Ill 'l,.";; s, ver y n1ce built rn
k1tctlen , su n deck, pdo('-"'' "• shed famil y room , 2 car
garage , and best of a l :\'~ .te pnce 1s a low $38,500 Plu s
the owner w1 ll help fmance qu allf1ed buyer

,.,•'.
.•
,.,.
,.

3 Bedroom Brick
Close to Holzer, 1500

Best Barr •n'" Gallta Co
You won't fmd a be:,;:(\\.'t\) ,' "
qe bedrooms, formal
dtn1ng, one of the ~ ,. ~~
,n the area . bi g family
roo m w1th w b f1re f'6 ~...,~'-fi l hs, 2 car garage Pnced
at $47,500 Won't refu~a rfea sonabl e offer

\\ :I

•'·

..

NG - Are you lookmg for a niCe home,
acreage and a good loca ttOn? Make an appOintment to
see fhts lovely bnck home w1th 4 bedrooms , drnmg
room , 2 ftreplaces. newly decorated , basement, I car
garage and 17 acres of meadow and wooded land
Could be purchased wi th hali of acreage or 2 acres
Located 112 miles from Holzer Hosp1 tal on Kemper
Hollow Rd S57 ,000

FOR PERSONAL ATTENTION AND
AQUICK SALE

.,
.,.,'·

z

Of
EXPERIENCED PR
REAL ESTATE SERVICE

'i\ ;,

'•'

RIVER VIEW

34 YEARS

''

'•

FOR SALE
F1rst Ave. Riverside
residence, 112 block
from
park.
4
bedrooms, 2 baths,
family room. living
room ,
country
kitchen , with n 1ce
lower level yard .
Owner 446-9364.

We have SOlD far more real estate
than we have listed this spring and
n)ht now have qualified buyers in
all price ranges waiting for us to
find the right property.

WE OFFER YOU

.,

FOR SALE
Modern l bedroom ranch,
"full basement, 2 barns,
mtlk house, 22 acres near
Addison. Strout Realty 446·
0008

PROPERTY TO SELL

'
••

...'

--- -

RON CANADAY, REALTOR

Put Your Money and Your Family In This Quality 8u11f
Ranch Built for a famtly that knows how a home
should be built 3 nice sized bedrooms, beautiful
k1fchen, formal entrance, dintng area wtth pat ro doors,
loads of closet space, garage and large usable lot.
You'll apprec•ate the qualtty bu1lt mto th1 s except ion
home. Its 9 months old and owner must move Yours
for $38,900. W ill show anyt1me

. "'

IDEAL FOR THE HANDYMAN : 2 story house
large lot tn c1ty Good tnvestment property Need!l l
some repa.r $6,500

[H

0

WE NEED GOOD
RESIDENTIAL AND FARM

..

and bath,

WE NEED LISTING~I

m
m

0

z

IJ ACRES, remodeled one story. 4 BR home. forced a1r
furnace, with good barn and storage bed, 666 lb
tobacco base $28,000

Acre Buildtng Lots ,
situa t ed
on
Rodney
Harrtsburgh Road Rural
water a vat !ab le
Pr tce
\.4 ,000

m

Gallia County's

SOlO

used as rental
Two full bath
See th ts one
$37,500

z"'

Ph. Home 446-2885

Ph. Home 379-2184

BETTER THAN NEW l yr old frame ranch,
shake trim . l BR. all electnc, fully carpeted exce&lt;&gt;t l
bath and kit 1 car garage , ntce leve l lawn $28,500

WITHINJ
1
home is so arranged t hat 1t can either be
property , or to house one happy fa mtly
rooms , twa kttchens. three bedrooms
today located on Third Avenue Price

z

(;)

CALL 446-3643

AD! 100'x90' lot. septic tank, ctty
s. 2 fully furn ished late model mobile
Spring Valley Plaza $21,500 W1th one
e. S1S SOO

BEFORE YOU BUY! See th ts new J BR all electric
home Lg country ki•~Llots of cabine t space__,
Tappon range, d1sp&lt;
replace In LR . fully
carpeted except krt~:he'" ctnd bath Garage N tce leve l
125' x '160' lot SJLOOO.
OF THE WEEK! This 4 BR briCk colon talts full
pleasa nt surprises from the slate floored foyer to the
sundeck off the llvtng dining area Wel l planned,
equipped kr tchen , 31ull batt"ls, l amrly room , 2 car
aaraoo&gt;. largecor ner lot ()l.mer reloca ted by employer
must sell Im med iate ly, S49 ,900
HUFF AND PUFF but you' ll never blow thiS l BR
bnck ran ch tn l 2 full baths, cen atr, LR features
repla ce &amp; lg bay window Fu lly equipped. co lor
coordinated k1tchen, cherr y dmette, forma l OR , plush
carpe ting, fu ll basement 2 car garage, l20'x220' lot
City school s LOW FIFTIES

"'

-l

GAUIA COUNTY'S LARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

,.'

-'sonme Stutes - ·
AssociatP

Merrill Carter

Real Estat.. ror Sole

Heal Es1ate /or Sale, ·

(:
\..

CANADAY REALTY

(DJ' Sa!P

OWN
YOUR
OWN
CAMPSITE
In
the
wilderness of the Wa yne
National Forest 5 to 8 acre
tracts of woo dland now
avatlable
adjo ini ng
thousands of acres of
government land. Publtc
hu nting ,
frshing
and
camping permitted Prices
sta rt
at
S2SOO
Wtth
fin ancing
available .
STROUT REALTY
446·
0008!

GRADE A DA\RY One of Goli1o
County s be sT 1&lt;10 A fe rtile
land most ly hllablc 8 cow
parlor 18 x 50 ~ do wdh
unlooder and Ieeder bO hee
slol ls othnr barns cnbs and
remodeled home SI 00 000
Strout Really 44b 0008

PASTURE FARM
S4D,OOO , 1SO acres , mostly
clen rolling h1ll paS1'ure
Good wo .. en wtre fences ,
lots of rd . frontage , old
house and barn and lob ~
base located •n Walnut
Twp Strout Realty 446·
0008 .

z"'

z

I-

ll\

....

RANNY BLACKBURN,
BRANCH MANAGER
LISTINGS N E EDE ) -

c
I

r

"'

-i

[._I STINGS N EEDEQ ~

TEAFORD[g
r.f"tli ,J1
VIRGIL B TEAFORD, SR
REALTOR
216 E Second Street
Porueroy, Oh1o 45769
Phone 992 l32S
ST UCCO 9 rooms 3
bedrooms. 2 baths Krtchen
has stove and refrrgera tor
Coal
furnace ,
full
basem ent. 2 car garage,
and on level lot $35,000
BABY FARM - 2 3-J acres
tn Rutland Townshtp Has a
4 room stucco house with
ba th, and two outbudd1ngs
Only $9 soo
TUPPERS PLAINS - 8
room frame house on Rl 7,
T P
water avail a ble ,
electnc and n1ce corner
lot Just $5 000
Ml DOLE PORT
10
rooms, 4 bedrooms. bath,
large ll v tng , hot water
heat , on corner lot w 1th 2
car garage
BRICK 3 apartments,
one down and 2 up one
furn1 s:hed and has a 3 car
garage
All
In
good
condrhon for $17 ,500
MIDDLEPORT
Enormous fam tly home
wrth s bedroom s J• 2 baths,
large rec room wrth but!t
rn bar
2 wood burntng
all
on a
f 1repla ces ,
beaut rfull y landscapea lot
with shrubbery
Good
ne 1ghborhood
App01ntmenl only
COUNTRY HOME 3
bedroom s bath fuel otl
furna ce, full bas eme n !,
carport and garage on 2
acres $2S 000
DEXTER
Bu s mess
bulldmg 30'x40' Wtll sell on
land contract Only SS 500
MIDD LE PORT
Convenientl y located , 2
bedroom frame home
Bath , gas heatmg and ctty
water Want on l y $11,000
tor qurck sale
8 ACRES - 4 bedroom
house
.modern
bath ,
nalural gas FA furnace,
n•ce kit chen , outbulldmgs
and nea..- town for $20,000
WE HAVE SEVERAL
BUILDING LOTS AND
ACREAGE
WHAT DO
YOU
NEED?
MAKE
YOUR
INVESTMEN T
NOW
Gordon B Teaford
Helen L Teaford
ASSOCiate s ~

BOB
E
BRA I&lt;C H MANt.I;E~
8S5 SECOND AVENUE
GALL I Pn'-r tS, OHro

Office
Hom e

446-790~
446-• u•Y

LET THE
GALLERY SELL
YOUR PROPERTY
WE M11KE BU YE R I'INO
SELLER
CONTA CT S
TH ROUCf-1
OTH ER
BUSJNE SS
E N
TE;'RPRI SES 11 5 WELL A S
THE
REAL
ES TIIT E
BUS IN ESS

GALLIPOLIS
AREA L\5TINGS
CLOSE TO SCHOO LS
N1c e 2 bedroom horne W1lh
family ro(lm that could be
lJ Sed
as lhl'
m&lt;J st er
bedroom Th1S home has
be~n
remodel ed r ece ntly
Pr tce d at only $23 000 CO
and 1S reildY for you t o
move1nto now
Do n o t
detay call u:. toda..,.
IN TOWN

1 story J bedroom w1th
separ atE! d n1no room artd
garage (no! attached)
Pr 1ced at only Sl6 .SOO OQ
Tnc lot al&lt;~n e will be worth
lhts m l 1me Wilh some
work lilt s COli be rna de ~ nlo
c1 beaut,tul home
NEAR MINES
Recen t ly con5 tr ucled 3
bedroom hOme wh tch sttll
has some fln 1sh work to b•·
comp lelt'd You w111 really
entOY tl'le ou1e! 1ocat10n of
th1S prop ~ rty Prt c:ed at
on\y $17 ,500 00
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
Lu.ung bus 1ness that can be
boUqht at a close ou t pn ce
Cal! m today for mo re
deta tts
U I HER COuNSElORS
&lt;..ROWN CITY
Joe Cr;~ns
2511 ~~~6
Not1onal Ad Vcr ll ~1 11q Wt1"
Gilllery M H (J me ~
96 ALKt torm good hou5oe J
bor ns '/5 tillable O( res o:o:c
huntmg ond l1shmg 3 tcnlh
mile .sotJth of DeKier Oh10 ,
Co Rood 10 742 2049 Gerold
M.nor

SR:AND NEW
RUSTIC RANCH
Choose your own carpet tn
thts lBR ma1nfe11ance f ree
beauty Buy wtth l lot or 17
acres Located on the
Floyd Clark Rd approx 7
mtles florfh cf Hoher
Hospttal, '.. m lte off ISO
Stro ul Rea It
6 0008

�f}...B -

The SwuJa)

I'um:~..St:nt utd, Sutul.t~

. Jum• 12. I!)77

U1e Brach house and said. ·· t
mtght l!d It next. ' · A

Candy heiress

lll'IJ,!.hl.Klrhuttd !u gh St' hOUI t!1f)

by and vo lunte&lt;•red ,
" M~ fu tl1cr won't let mE' ))olss
there at rught."
"111e kids talk about 11 a
tell ," she said. "We used to go
tnek or treatm~ or carolling
there and he tMathck l would
W&lt;~lked

" What
said.

IS

it '!" Matlick

" I'm a reporter,'' hl' was

told
"Unh unh .'' Matlick said
TI1e window came down .

don't thjnk anything will ever
come up nt!w ,"
Obvio usly . lie len Brach
mal' be dead. by natural
c:tuses or by design . If she- is

Nation'smost wanted killer captured

'

Longest
I Continued from pa g(l 0-1 1

for whut 1t Cdlled "cowardly ..
actwn" in stormmg lhe train
and school and said
'BUthorities wiU have to "bear
tbe consequences of their
actions.''

come to the door . He seems
too nice a man ... "

Earlier, tbe same group
had said the use of force
The neighbor felt Mrs . would be met with new
arc so m e of the theQnes
Brach
lS, or wa s. an terrorist acts .
p.m. Matlick answered. The investigators mentmn :
incongruous
focus £or such
One example of the racial
- She is of£ somewhere
reportH told hnn he was
apprehensions.
conflict threatening Holland
same man whn had VIsited havmg a good time. Rizzo
"She was a very attractive came as trooP" stormed the
the day before and $uggested thought for a while she was
woman."
the neighbor said. school at Bovensmilde. Wit11 would be to Matlick's cruismg the Caribbean with a
big
woman
with a lull nesses said Moluccans livmg
"
A
advan tage to answer some new-found ma le friend . But
head
of
heir
swept
up on her ned to the school fired on the
such behavior, those close to
questions.
head,
She
could
attract
men , trOOP".
Matlick was cou rteous . her say, would be quite
think.
She
had
this
quality
I
Armoured car crews swung
"I'm sorry. but I'd have to fore1gn to her nature. She was
rather
like
Patricia
Neal
.
thetr
cannon~
toward
not,
and
never
had
been,
a
consult the attorney.'' he
~~ She's nothing like those
Moluccan
houses
and
playgirl.
Satd ,
pictures
in
the
paper
of
her.
returned
tbe
fire
,
shattering
·
Something
terrible
hap"Did the attorney tell you
When
I heard she was 62 I several windows.
pened
IQ
her.
She
could
have
nol to talk to people like me ?"
Premier Joop Den Uyl
suffered a stroke. She could was shocked . I thought she
'·That's right •·
was in her mid-4~. That 's the promised to clamp down on
have
undergone
an
operation
I'EOPLE'S ARMY recruited by Ethiopian strongman Lt. Col. Mengistu Halle Mariam lacks a few roollne Items of
~ nd of conversation
way she looked.
Moluccan
paramilitary
a
Rw
de
Janeiro
face
lift,
profession•
I arm lea elsewhere, such as uniforms and in some cases weapons . Some of the recruit• at tbls traiD.l1g camp
" We 're no closer to fmding
"She
wasn't
particularly
at
Debre
Zeit
drill with slicks rather than rifles. The "people's army" Is being raised by Ethiopia's Marxist military
organizations
and
sell
e
the
for
mstance
wh1ch
went
her than the day we star ted ,''
neighborly
but
she
was
very
regime
to
combat
insurreclioo!l in various parts of the country.
arms
they
hold
clandestinely,
wrong.
In
that
case,
Pfiester sa1d "She is a
pleasant. There's a delivery
"Y(e
have
only
one
wish
investigators
say.
she
might
missing person. "
man m town who thought she now," Den Uylsaid. "To keep
H1zzo said. 'Somt: sources need someone to care and
WIIS temfic. She used to give
bitterness and rancor from
cover for her Loyal Jack .
Matlick would do 11, they him gifts from time to time. taking the upperhand."
"She used to come over
Johan Manusama, the
believe.
Wagner Road is a pleasant, here sometimes. She 'd say, 'I moderate "president of the
leafy place this spring . The know I should be more Moluccan Republic in exile"
Brach house sits behind a rail neighborly but I don't seem to urged his countrymen in a
fence, a slightly overgrown have the time.' She was choking voice on television
FATHERS ARE SO VERY SPECIAL ...
lawn, and a curling, graveled always pleasant. There was "to express our independence
The lowest pnces everl
Rap :
Co me 1n and see our
driveway . There are seven nothing strange about her. ideal in a much he\1er way
I'd like to add this to your " What is a ... "list. It's dedicated
greal selection today .
"Jack MaU1ck -well, he's from now on. 11
acres of wooded Brach land
to
my dad on Father's Day.
a funny guy . He used to come
The assault came as a
behind it.
HONDA
WHAT ISA FATHER TO HIS OLDEST DAUGHTER?
over
here
and
talk
he
talks
complete surprise to tbe hosCOliiG STIIOffC/
It is not a neighborhood
He's tbe proudest guy in the world when he holds you for
BETZ HONDA SALES
.
where lear seems to have a like a farmer - about how tages.
the first time.
life was over there. Once she
Rt. 7
"Most of us were terribly
place. But 1t is there.
He's the man your mother wakes up to give you your 2 a.m .
The neighbor quoted in this went to Ohio and he had to startled by the assault, " Pot
feeding.
report refused to give her drive her three dogs all the said. "Though I immediately
He's tbe guy who smacks you (hard) the first time you
dived under the .bench, a
name . She glanced over at way there. In a Cadillac."
play
with matches.
The neighbor left an infer- bullet just passed me. The
He's the one who finally gives you permission to smoke,
ence that Matlick did not like boy next to me got a bullet
but because you know he hates the idea (and he quit two years
tbat very much. But she did through his hair."
ago), you never start.
not wish to talk of him at
Pot said the dead girl, 1!1He's the grest kidder who still worries (a little) each time
length.
year.(Jid Ans Van Baarsel,
you
go
out thelrontdoorwitb a boy.
Certainly, there is a lot of from Else, suddenly got up
...
The
one who takes you drinking on your 21st birthday,
money to be gained from off tbe floor and was hit by a
by LANE
but orders dinner quick before you thin!t of a second round.
Mrs. Brach's estate. Most of bullet in her head.
He's the man who when you tell him you're engaged, you
it, reportedly, will go to her
The dead man, identified
cry,
because you love him and don't want to leave ... And when
Ia vorite charities of animal only as a Mr. Mansjou,
he
walks
down the aisle with you, he brushes away a tear too.
care and shelter.
appeared to have had great
He's that special person who listens, loves, and Jets you go,
Matlick, it is reported, is in trouble breathing as he
and he's got a very special place in my heart. - DAUGHTER
for ~o.ooo. But he is not crouched on the floor to
AND BRIDE
hurting for money, Rizzo escape the lire. He was hit
said, "He's got all kinds of when he stood Up to catch his
Dear Helen and Sue :
mm.ey . He gets a grand a hreatb, Pot said.
It's difficult lor me to tell my dad tbe tbings I've said In
month for doing nothing and
Pot said at the beginning of
tbis
letter. Would you please print it for him- and maybe for
$300 to $400 a month for the attack a voice was heard
other
girls who have a hard time expressing themselves:
expenses. And if she doesn't calling to them through a
.
Dear
Dad: You and I aren't much lor emotion. We kid a
show up he couldn 'I collect loudspeaker telling tbem to
lot,
and
if
I got serious 011 you, we'd both be embarrassed. So
(on tbe bequest) lor seven lie down and "not to panic."
I'm
wnting
to tell you, now tbat I'm 19 and grown up (tho\lllh
years at least. No way."
Pot said tbe marines did a
you'd arguewitb that), how much you mean to me.
One theory, it appears, can lot of shooting into the air as
From the " Oakmount" Collection by lane. This
You've let me learn from my own mistakes (unless tbey
smartly styled contemporary bedroom su1te features
be discarded. At one time the they forced tbeir way into the
were
too serious and tben you raised tbe roof). You and Mom
expert cra fl smctnship and styling plus Oak Veneers
meat grinder was linked, in train and he said he "had the
have
given
me the right to my own decisions (unless tbey'd
and Oak Sotid,s , antiqued brass. finish hardware,
rather grueoome fashion, to impression the Moluccans did
land
me
in
deep
serious, and then you got stubborn and I got
recessed bases. no sag drawer glides.
IT'S
A
SMALL
START,
but
judging
by
the
eager
the reported presence of not offer much opposition."
mad,
but!
always
knew deep down you were right).
from
tbeflrst
U.S.
cruise
ship
to
stop
at
Havana
shoppers
three savage German
Officials said 65 trooP" and
had
problems
and trouble, but you'd somehow gotten
I've
in
16
years,
business
should
be
very
briSk
mdeed
when
and
SALE PRICED AT
shepherd dogs roaming the marines stormed the train.
me
out
of
them,
even
if
I didn't appreciate it at the time. Now
if
Cuban
tourism
resumes
in
volume.
Cigars
and
rum
Brach grounds.
Fifty-five trooP" a \tacked the
that
I'm
just
about
adult
I realize I wouldn't ever have made it
were
leading
purchases
of
p~ssengers
from
the
liner
"Have you seen those school.
witbout
your
wisdont
and
love.
.
"Daphne"
during
their
day·and-a-hall
stay.
dogs?"
Pfiester said.
Machine gunners and
So
Dad
and
Mom,
I want to say "Thanks!"
"They're not German sharpshooters zeroed in on
Thank you lor understanding and always caring; for
shepherds. They're little tbe compartments holding
loving
me even when I didn't deserve it. Thank you for coming
mutts. They're tbe kind of tbe Moluccans and kept up a
to
me
when I WIIS too ashamed to go to you. Thank you for
dogs that, if you yelled at virtual curtain of bullets
apologizing
to me when I was tbe one who was wrong. Thank
them, tbey'd wet the floor ." between the gunmen and
you lor knowing I was sorry when I couldn't put it in words.
their hostages to prevent
Thank you for acting silly and making me laugh when I was
reprisal killings.
.,.
down.
The . train passengers Even tbough I didn't always show it, !love you more than
some carried on stretchers
- "My dad is the greatest anytbing. I'm simply trying to say, thank you lor being just
MINNEAPOLIS (UP!) what you are -the greatest parents in the world. - YOUR
(Continued from page D-1) but most walking witb fists
clenched and smiles frozen on "My dad is the greatest lover cook because he 's a gourmet
to believe the Geneva peace tbeir laces - were taken to a because he rubs my mom 's cook. He can make the best DAUGHTER
conference on the Middle Red Cross emergency post feet and calls her princess onm (sic) soup and everyone
East can be reconvened and then rushed along even if she is getting closer in loves 1\. But I don't like it Dear Daughters - and all you other daughters :
May this column be on tbat breakfast-in-bed tray you bring
before the end of the year. cleared roads to the age to the queen."
because I don 'I like onins."
yourdadsonthis
special day. -HELEN AND SUE
When asked about the Academic Hospital at
- "My dad is the greatest
"My dad is the greatest
Dutch government's action Groningen.
cook because when mom is sleeper because he doesn't
Saturday in freeing the
Many of tbe hostages were gone his coo)!lng ls so bad know it when my brother and
hostages held by South in p1jamas at the time of the grandpa feels sorry lor us I crawl into my mom and
STANDARD
DRIVER INJURED ·
Moluccan
terrorists, assault, which came at 4:53 and
takes
us
to dad's bed."
RIVERSIDE, Calif. (UP! ) He was taken to Riverside
Waldheim said, "Terrorism a.m. and clothes were strewn MacDonald's."
- "My dad is the greatest
Race driver Bill Foster Community Hospital and
is a burning problem -a real in tbe carriage of tbe tram
These were some of nearly TV watcher because he can
escaped with minor injuries treated lo,r a sprained left
ordeal lor mankind.
and on the ground outside as 5,000 entries in a contest to switch channels to see a
Saturday when his car piled arm, spramed left leg and a
"I contend strongly that tbey changed to flee their find the world's greatest dad Bear's touchdown, a Lion's
into a wall at Riverside gash on his nose. He refused
this approach cannot solve captivity.
sponsored by Donaldson's fumble, Sarah Fawcett's
Raceway and burst into to be admitted to the hospital
political problems," he said.
department
store, Cougar, all during a Viking
flames.
and returned to the track.
" What
we
need
is
undoubtedly wltb an eye · on time out and not miss one
11
understanding, not
promotmg sales lor Dad's play .
Unico Latex Red Barn
terrorism."
Day, June 19.
Pa1nt. No. 315 (15.0756!.
The secretary general said
Entry
blanks
wue
Regularly $8 ,99 gal.
tbe sometimes controversial
provided in nine "My-Dad 'sappfl!llch to problems taken
tbe-Greatest" categories:
by
U.N.
Ambassador
Andrew
Lover,
Outdoorsma n,
Un1cc Oil - Base Red
Young
is
"a
healthy
Intellect.
Cook,
Entertainer,
Barn Pamt, No 415 (25·
approach. It seems that not
061). Regularly $9. 30
Ice Cream Eater, Traveler,
gal.
everybody agrees, but
CLEVELAND (UP!) TV Watcher and Sleeper.
everybody recognizes the Formation of the Human
NEW SHIPMENT
Prizes range from a "Pamgood attitude of tbe new Rights Coalition of Nortbern pered in Pink Weekend"
No. 415 Red Barn Paint
representative and the new Ohio
was
announced (Lover ), two round trip
m 2 gal. cans (25-0160).
administration in lore1gn af- Saturday by John Campbell, tickets to tbe Smithsoruan
Regularly $8.99 gal.
fairs."
a former Clevelander who Institution in Washmgton
also was one of the leaders of (Intellect), and Ice Cream
KYGER
the unsuccessful light to keep Zoo Party (lee Cream Eater)
Visiting Sunday with Mr. Miami, Fla.'s, gay rights law
to a Tour of a Twin Cities beef
and Mrs. Ed Spears were his on the books.
processing
plant (Cook).
A mighty good red barn pamt at a price that will brother and wile, Mr. and
"This action is important Winners will be notified June
, appeal to you . Dress up the barn and you smarten Mr.. O'Dell Spears of
because of the events in 17, and an Awards Banquet
up th e farm . Nothing does it for the money like Florida.
Miami Tuesday when an will be held ;June 23.
Mrs . Nina Rupe spent emotionally
UNICO STANDARD BARN RED PAINT .
charged
Some of tbe early entries:
Thursday with Mrs. Iva electorate voted over- "My dad is tbe greatest
Clark, Cheshire. While there whelmingly to aMul human sleeper because I can pinch
they celebrated Mrs. Clark's rights," Campbell said
his nose shut and hold his
At Our Mechanic Street Warehouse
birthday, which is J~me 3.
Friday at his new disco, New moutb closed to stop his
Mr. and Mrs. James Dementions, in Cleveland. snoring and he can keep on
No. 301
Airtight construc tion w 1fh Asbestos sealed doors
Johnson (Ina Louise Rupe) of
Campbell, a millionaire, sleeping withuul ~athing ."
Florida were calling on Mr. started his national chain Edra capacity firebox pro111des all night heating with one loading.
and Mrs. Leo Rupe recently, Club 'Baths, Inc. - in 1965 ill
Cast iron grafes wtth ftrebrlck lining for heavy service
jiiiiiiiliiiOOiiiiiiiliiiiisiiiiii-. Cleveland. He said the Miami
N'l. 201
vote will unite homosexuals
Full size ash pan for easy disposal of ashes.
across the country.
K. Snowden
"It's unfortunate tbat a
* ' Quiet 2-speed blower.
stole
st.
second-class
singer and self- housing and job opportunities
24
Phone 446-4290
appointed messenger of God, lor homosexuals
Now's the time to install your wood heater so you will be
~lllll!"""lllll_______ who has no qualifications,
Gay activists have pledged
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.
ready for the cold winter months .
c.
can suddenly command the to picket three Greater
Serving Meigs, Gatlia
Use our convenient Lay-a-way Plan.
IDSUraact, too! attention of tbe media in her Cleveland locatloos of Jeans
and Mason Counties
Store Hours : 8:30-S:JO.
Call me for details!' ofWljust
cause," Campbell said West, a clothing chain,
Mill Closes all:OO P.M .
the defeat at tbe hands of because of the firing of a
Like a l(OOd neighbcJo. anli1laY campaigners led by homosexual from one of the
St.te ~Inn is there. singer Anita Bryant.
chain's stores in Miami
"
·
,.,"'
''"'
................
~
...
......,,
1bedefeated
gay
rights
law
following
the election,
~""·
1
• • flo•~ ....... ~ • • ' nJn in Miami had guaranteed £air
Ca
mpbep
said.
'- --:.
The next day the reporter
called the Rrach home at&lt; 30

nol, if she is in control of her
person and faculties. tbese

QUALITY FURNITURE

$61 goo

EATHIRAMIC

Dads measured
by varying 'sticks

Waldheim

RED

Campbell
critical
of Bryant

$7.99

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

$8.29

WOOD

$7.99

HEATERS

WHITE LATEX

HOUSE PAINT

$ 85

*

WHITE OIL-BASE
HOUSE PAINT

c.

POMEROY LANDMARK

*
*
*

LIFE .

.PA

PETROS, Tenn. (UP!) - James Earl Ray. confessed
assassin of Dr. Martin Lutber King Jr., was captured today by
a posse of lawmen led by two bloodhounds who ran him down
and ended his :;4 hours of freedom as America's most wanted
fugitive .
Ray, 49, exhausted from tbe ordeal, vainly tried to cover
himself with some leaves as the baying hounds - sandy and
little Red - approached his makeshift hiding place. Sandy
reached him first on leash by prison guard Joe Chapman about
2a.m. EDT.
"James, are you all right?" Chapman asked.
"I'm okay," Ray replied, his face wet with sweat and ·his
sweatshirt and pants muddied.
Forty.five minutes later, Ray was back behind the stark
walls of Brushy Mountain State Prison where he and live other
convicts - three of them convicted murders -escaped Friday
night.
Two of the ~oovicts remained at-large but prison officials
said they were confident they would be in custody before the
day was out.
Ray was captured about 10 miles from the prison ne
Earlier announced plans by Tennessee officials to deploy 150
national guardsmen were canceled when word of Ray's
capture was announced.
Tennessee Public Safety Commissioner Joel Plummer said
Ray had exercised vigorously in the pri.son yard to prepare
himself lor the coming ordeal.
Some of the escapees wore themselves out in the initial dash

\!all H.IO

.... . .

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

from the prison, Plummer said. " But Ray , being older and following the April 4, 1963, assassinauon of King at the
Iairly cunning, didn't move as much."
Lorraine Motel in Memphis, TeM.
The convicted assassin stayed with his escape plan until his
The breakout was the first successful over-the-wall escape in
trail was picked up by the fresh bloodhounds early today. the history of Brushy Mountain.
Then, he ran as hard as he could until he couldn't run anymore.
Lane said Ray was captured "about 500 yards from where
He surrendered witbout a struggle.
we picked up Hill." He said, "They (the bloodhounds ) ran him
An FBI spokesman in Washington said Ray was "in good hard lor three hours" alter HiD was found .
Lane said authorities believed they were closing in on the
C&lt;llldition, except tired."
Warden Stonney Lane said Ray had tried to cover himself third man in the group, convicted murderer Douglas Shelton.
with leaves but could not escape the bloodhounds, who picked 32.
Douglas Ray Caylor. 24, serving 51 years lor armed robbery
up his fresh trail three hours earlier when three men fled as
pri.son guard:! approached them .
and assault with intent to murder, also was still free. Caylor,
Ray's Brushy Mountain cellmate, convicted murderer authorities said, apparenUy separated from the other
Earl Hill Jr ., 34, was among the three. He was captured almost prisoners alter the lreak and went off in another direction.
Newsmen were unable to talk to Ray when he returned to the
immediately, but it was another tbree hours before Ray was
trapped.
prison.
"He doesn 't want any pictures taken and he doesn't have
"GenUemen, we have Mr. Ray in custody," prison spokes·
anything
to say," a state trooper said.
man Jim Henderson announced over a pollee radio at 2:35 a.m.
Ray
was
handcuffed and his head shifted from side to side as
EDT. A blue and white state Corrections Department car
he
was
escorted
along a :!(}.foot long sidewalk at the prison. He
wheeled through tbe prison gates witb Ray in tbe back seat just
said nothing.
a few minutes later.
Lane told how the dogs tracked him down.
"We are extremely pleased at the capture of James Earl
" We picked him up at an old gold mining camp called
Ray," Gov. Ray Blantm said in a statement read to newsmen
Coyote,"
Lane .said. "When the dogs picked up the scent, we
by prison officials. "This concludes one of the largest
did
not
know
it was James Earl Ray. The dogs picked up the
manhunts in the h111tory of Tennessee."
Witbin hours of the escape, Ray was put at the top of the scent to the river and down the west bank about 500 yards.
"There," Lane said, "he turned and went into a wooded
FBI's list of "most wanted" fugitives, a position he held while
leading police agencies on a two-continent chase in tbe weeks
(Continued on page 8)

•

en tine

at y
QUEEN INSTAU.ED-!Ari Ann Wood was installed
honored queen of Bethel62, Jobs Daughters in traditional
ritual. See Charlene Hoeflich's account oo page 5 today . .

VOL XXVIII

NO. 41

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, JUNE 13, 1977

I
·~::::::~:=::::::::::::::::::::::;::::;::::;:;:~:·:·:·::;::::::·:;:=:::::::·:·:::::::::::::·:·::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::~j

JI!News. • •in Briefsji Appalachian
Bv United Press International
NASHVILLE, TENN.-James Earl Ray's attorney
plans to release a photograph of the mysterious "Raoul" who
the cmlessed assassin of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. claims
gave him instructions to buy tbe gun that killed the civil rights
leader. Jack Kershaw of Nashville said Sunday he will release
tbe picture once he confers with Ray, captured early today
after escaping Friday evening from Brushy Mountain State
P.ri.son at Petros.
"I feel it would be a disservice to my client if I released the
photo without his permission,". Keyshaw said.
He said he had plaMed to release the picture before Ray
escaped. Kershaw said he "discovered" it during the course of
his investigation of the case about 10 days ago. Ray has
claimed he was set up in the King murder by "Raoul," and
thought be was involved in a gun smuggling operation.
Ray has told House Assassinations Committee
investigators he did not kill King.

to
hurry new plant

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. Faced with a severely
diminishing reserve
generating capacity to meet
Visitors at the four-&lt;lay Big Bend Regatta opening
the power demand of its
Thursday
ean rent a frog if they are not able to capture
customers, Appalachian
own
entries lor the frog jumpbig conte1t.
their
Power Co. reported today it
An
agency
named "Hurts Rent a Frog" will IIUPPIY a
has accelerated construction
candidate
lor
the
Saturday night ·frog jumping contest,
of the 1.3 million kilowatt coal
expected
to
have
several
hundred entries.
fired generating plant near
here.
::::::::-:::::.:·:·:':·:·:·:-:':-:':·.::::::::·:':':·:·:::::::::·:·:::::.:::::::::::.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:·:·:·&lt;:·:::::·:·:::::::·:::::::::::::::·:·
Construction on the plant will be a negative 15 per cent Babcock and Wilcox Co. of
BELGRADE, YUGOSLAVIA - THE BELGRADE was begun b1 early 1974 but and the American Power Barberton, Ohio, and the
conference opens Wednesday with its Yugoslav hosts because . of financial dil- System reserve market will ninth 99.7 per cent efnervously eliJlecting the ""rst - a full-blown confronts lion be- llculties t~e company was drop to 11.7 per cent.
liclent precipitator supplied
tween tl;e United States -and the Soviet Union ovtr human forced to · MW'li~..,'We know there will be an by Waeelabrator-Frye Inc.
rights.
Increase
in
power
When the New Haven Plant
struction in late 1974.
Delegates from 35 nations are attending the conference,
John
W.
Baughan, requirements to serve the was aMounced in 1974 its
expected to last four In six weeks, and plan to set the dale and executive vice-president of continually
expanding estimated cost was $420
agenda for a full meeting in the fall In review the Helsinki APC, reported work on the economy of our service area million. The current cost
accords. The Helsinki agreement, signed by leaders of tbe 35 plant's giant 500-loot cooling including new coal mining estimate is $630 million.
nations in 1975, covers economic, political and military issues tower is expected to get under locllities which are being
It wiD take about tbree and
- but tbe most controversial is human rights.
way next month while planned in southern West a half years to complete the
Yugoslav officials, concerned over the human rights erection of structural steel is Virginia and southwest plant. At peak of construction
accusations being traded back and forth between Moscow and scheduled to begin in Sep- Virginia. While we recognize some 2,700 people are exWashington, have made it clear tbat procedural matters are tember.
that conservation of energy peeled to be working at the
all they hope will be discussed.
The Marley Cooling Tower will have an effect on our load site. At present between 500
Co.ofMission,Kan.wlllerect forecast, we have taken this and 600 are employed.
the tower. The contract for into consideration and we
NAIROBI, KENYA - A BRITISH-BORN businessman the steel erection has been have to be prepared to meet .:::::::::::::::·:::·:::::·::::::::::-::::·:·:::-:·.::·:·:&lt;·:·:·:-'·:·: ··:·:
arrested in Uganda on espionage charges may already have awarded to the Bristol Steel the demands of our
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
'been executed and his body burned, a newspaper in Kenya said and Arm works Inc. of Bristol, customers."
Wednesday through
today. An anonymous telephone caller from the Ugandan Va.
Three other major phases Friday, fair Wednesday
capital of Kampala tnld paper, The Nation, tbat Bob Scanlon, a
Baughan said the firm had of the construction are now
middle-aged lather of three, was shot last week in a suburb of no choice but to move ahead out for bids. These are : the and a chance ol showers
Thursday or Friday. Highs
Kampala and his body was "dumped and burned."
with the construction of the massive electrostatic
In the 80s and tows In the
But tbe newspaper also quoted a Ugandan information plant because of the In- precipitator installation,
upper
50s and GOs.
ministry spokesman as discounting the report, saying, "There creasing demands of its scheduled to get underway
ts no question of tbe man being dead." The spokesman
customers.
this fall, and the concrete ·:·:·:::::::.:·:·:·:::.:::.:::.:::::·:·:':':·:·:·:::.:::::.:-:·:·~: :·:·:·:
described the burning reports as "absolutely wrong," adding
"We must have this plant in stack three boiler erection.
that tbere had been no communication between Uganda and
serv1ce by late 1980 or early
Major equipment lor the
Britain oo Scanlon's fate.
1981 if we are to meet the plant has been delivered to
needs of the customers," he the on-plant site. This m·
OOLUMBUS - THE OHIO INSURANCE Institute said said, and added:
eludes a 1.3 million kilowatts
today auto insurance rates rose an average of 32.6 per cent in
"Based on the most con· t u r b in e
g en e r at or
Ohio between Jan. I, 1971 and Jan. I, 1977.
servative forecast of our manufactured by Brown
·
The Institute, in Its 1977 Insurance Guide, said the
customers' needs at tbal Boveri of Switzerland; the
Pomeroy firemen and
calculated auto premium used to get the average was based time,
without this plant in super critical pressure emergency squad members
upon an adult male driver with a standard-51ze, one-year old service, Appalachian's generator rated at 9,775,000
were busy over the weekend.
vehicle and a ~ood driving record.
reserve generating capacity pounds per hour furnished by
At 2:43a.m. Sunday, Alice
Morris of near Pomeroy was
:::;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:::::::::::::;:;:;:::::;:;:;.;.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·!·!·!•!•!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!•!•!·!·!·!•!·!•!•!·!=:·:·:=::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:::·:;:;:;:·:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;:;.·.;:;.; taken to Holzer Medical
Center by E· R and at 2: 211
p.m. and 9:03 p.m. firemen
were called to Dark Hollow
where a county trash
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The local
other 'death camP"' separated chi!and when they preach the same hate
collection container was on
FBI should spy on tbe United White
dren from their motbers• arms, and
and poison as Adolf Hitler did."
lire.
People's Party and the National
gassed tbem."
Americans contantly are being
At 4:03 p.m. E-R went to
Socialist Congress because the
Americans have the right to ' "bamboozled by glib politicians and
the Bob Williams residence
dissent from official government
quick buck artists," Leibowitz
groups have .a liistory of violence
on the Harrisonville Rllad lor
views, tbe editor said, adding tbat
wrote, adding that "ours is a system
and they preach the same hate and
Brenda Williams who was
poison as Adolf Hitler did, Editor
constitutional rights must be insured
of checks and balances."
taken to Veterans Memorial
Irving Leibowitz of The Journal,
and "guaranteed for everyone,
"The threat to America is tbat
Hospital and at 9:10 p.m. to
Lorain, Ohio, said SUnday.
inclnding seli-Btyled Nazis."
even a small nwnber of detennined
an apartment buildmg on
Leibowitz' newspaper Sunday
"But nowhere is it written that we
men patterning themselves after
fulute
143 for Thomas Sarver,
Jlllblished the first in .. series of
not carefully be on tbe lookout lor
Hitler and preaching tbe Nazi gospel
who
was
taken to Holzer
any attempt to Nazify and terrorize
of hate can create an atmosphere of
articles about Nazis in America. He
Medical
Center.
said it's being done because ''we
America," Leibowitz wrote. "If the
terror," he wrote. "In Germany,
regard it as information the public
Nazis ever came to power, would
Hitler was ridiculed as a kook and a
tbey grant such freedom to others?
nut until, as dictator, he virtually
and tbe authorities ought to know,
PAPERS FILED
and want to know."
"The correct answer, of course, is
ruled all of EW'ope."
COLUMBUS
In"Before Adolf Hiller came to
.that we must tolera\f free speech,
The editor said Americans, alter
corporation papers lor the S.
power in Gennany, no one took him
even t/Je Nazis and other extremists,
exposing tbeir faults, combat them.
J. Mullins Trucking Co.,
seriously," Leibowitz wrote. "His
otherwise tbe values they represent
"We are a nation of immigrants
Albany , were filed with
rallies and street marches and beer
have already come to power , This
and we have a tradition of lair play.
Secretary of State Ted W.
hall brawls were dismissed as
does not mean tbat we have to allow
and decency and individual liberty,"
Brown last week through S. J .
i.solated rowdyism.
them to bully us, terrorize us, 'or
he said. "! don't tbink we are ready
Mullins as agent, by Charles
"He preached hate. He organized
victimize us into submission."
to give up this precious, tbough
Tell, Columbus attorney.
Leibowitz said the fight lor
fragile, democracy tbat is America,
brownshirts and stormtroopers and
terrorized whole neighborhoods, and
freedom is a constant battle and
lor all tbe bunk put out by tbe hale
CHURCH VANDALIZED
especially Jews and others. When he
never is won and ''we have an
moogers.
The Meigs Co~mty Sheriff's
came to power, Hitler opened
obligation ... to be alert to tbe danger
"The kind of America we ought to
Department,
under the
concentration
camps
and
of those who spread half-truths,
be,and will be, does not rest witb tbe
direction
of
Sheriff
James J .
slaughtered millions of Jews, Poles,
outright lies and messages of hate
extremists, or even the politicians.
Proffitt,
is
investigating
and intolerance to divide us."
It's up to you, and me, and everyone
Russians, Gypsies. His doctors
damage by vandals of the
conducted medical and sexual
"Should the FBI spy on such
else who believes in equality of
Methodist Church in An·
experiments on women. His guards
organizations- right-wing and leftopportunity and ll)dividual liberty as
tlquity and a report a coon
!![ at Buchenwald and Dachau and
wing?" he asked. "My answer is yes
opposed to the restrictions and :(
dog has been stolen from
!i[
.
when tbey have a history of violence
oppressions of the Old World ."
( Mike Burke of Hemlock

No frog to jwnp? Rent one!

Firemen, E-R
remain busy

: :.

Nazi Americans, like Hitler, preach violence

~,.

!~;:::::::;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::·:·:·:·:·:.:::·::: !•! !·!·:-:;:::·:·:::·:·::;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;.;:;:;:;:: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; ;:;:;:;:;.;.;.;·!·!·:·:·:·::!·!;!•!•!%•!·!·!·!;!;!•!•!;!;!;!·!:' ::·:·!·!;!;!;!•:.;.:::·:·:·!•!·! :

Grove.

TOURNEY WINNERS - Bill Grueser, right, president of the Meigs County- Big Bend
Bass Anglers, presented tbe winners of the tournl\fllent, Jim Gant and Jim Matthews, 1-r,
botb of Vincent, Ohio their check in the amount of $262.50 lor having tbe largest catch of fish
in tntal weight. Taking second place were William Jones, Marietta and Gary Brown, Utile
Hocking that carried a priz~ of $1211; third place of $84 went to K. A. Cubbison, Coolville and
Rod Cremeans, Belpre.
(See other pictures on page 4)

President calls Baptists
to increased commitment
Baptist meeting that "will
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Carter Is urging call lor a greatly accelerated
Southern Baptist leaders to Baptist missionary effort ."
Carter's meeting with
"revise the thrust" of the
church and increase the Baptist leaders served "to
number
of
volunteer lay the groundwork for this
missionaries from 250 to at proposal and win them over
least ~.ooo within flve years. to our side,"Gregg sa1d later.
"The President called the
Carter, while teaching the
meeting
to let us hear of his
Bible class at the F1rst
concern
that
we immediately
of
l!aptist
Church
get
more
volunteer
workers
Washington Sunday, said the
out
into
the
field,"
Pastor
Southern Baptist Convention
needed an "Increased Charles Trentham told the
commitment" to winning ~ongregration during
converts in tbe United Stales services.
Trentbam said the motion,
and abroad.
He noted 11 8 very severe drafted "under the spell of
that meeting," will "urge
dropoff" in donations.
In
a
lour-minute every church to supplement
videotaped message to be and support the effort ...
shown at a Soutbern Baptist throughout tbe homeland and
meeting in Kansas City overseas.''
Presently, the church's
Tuesday, Carter will urge
that the church raise its
goals. He met privately witb
Baptist leaders at tbe White
House last week to press his
plan.
Carter told the Bible class
Partly cloudy through
it was necessary to "revtse Tuesday with a chance of
tbe thrust of our church, even show ers Tuesday. Highs
though we are one of tbe most
today and Tuesday around 80.
dynamic churches in the
Lows tonight around 60.
Christian kingdom ."
Probability of rain 10 per cent
Fred Gregg, the class '
today
, 20 per cent tonight and
regular instructor, said he
30 per cent Tuesday.
will present a motion at the

Weather

Local notices, briefs
MONDAY. JUNE 20 is
Bloodmobi le Day in Me i ~s
County . The Bloodm obi le will
be

at

the

Pomer oy

Elementary School from 1 to
6

p.m. All blood types are

needed

and

residents

are

urged to donate blood .

THERE WILL BE band
rehearsal for all Eastern
High School Band members.
majorettes
and banner
carri~rs Thursday from 7 to
8: 30 p.m . in the h1gh school
band room to prepare for th e
Regatta parade

p m

Six
available

THE

Havor s

will

be

LI"TART Township

Trustee s will ho ld their
regul ar meeting at 7 this
e\leni'19 at the res idence of
Tom Norris 1n Letart Falls

TWO DISSOLVTIONS of

marriage were entered 1n
Me igs Coun ty Common Pleas
Court Saturday and one
divorce was granted .
Filed were the cases of

Lutheran

Kar en Murra y, Pomeroy,
fr om
Dana
M urray ,
Pom eroy , and Henry P'aul
..,r1ce, Long Bottom from
Naom i Ruth Pr ice, Lonq

Church , Pomeroy. Persons
may call in orders on

granted to Sheila M . Reeves

ICE CREAM will be on sale
at the

51

Paul

Bottom . A divorce was

Tuesday and Wednesday ,
June 14 and 15 between 7 and

from Robert L Ree ves.
Th~ appoin tment of Robert

order!:. on Wednesday after 6

was also entt?red Saturday .

tO p m and pi ck up Iheir

Hawley as a deputy sheriff

goal is to have 5,000 volWJtary
missionaries by tbe year 2000.
"I'm afraid that if we keep
tbat goal that's all we'll ever
do,' ' Carter said.

Gregg said Carter favors
moving the target date up to
1982. There are now only
about
250
volunteer
missionaries witb the church
and another 2,500 lulltime
missionaries.
During tbe class, Carter
cited tbe Mormon church,
which he said has one
missionary lor every 250
members. "! don't think the
Mormons are any better than
tbe Baptists," he said.

More houses
are numbered
on rural roads
James Page. project
engineer for Fleming, Page,
Stolte, Inc , has announced
houses on the following roads
have received new numbers :
Buckwheat Road (TR 16),
Ogdin Road (TR 25 ),
Woodyard Road (TR 3).
McG inms Road (TR 4), Jesse
Creek Road (TR 353), Sanford Davis Road (TR l!lOW).
Joe Boring Road (TR 341 ),
Edmundson Road (TR 34),
Swick Road (TR 342 ), Kennedy Road iTR 355 ), Piper
Cemetery Road (TR 340),
Morton Road (TR 63), Mine
No. 2 Road (C R 61, Nelson
Rllad (TR 328), Infirmary
Road (TR 365), Cemetery
Lane (TR 392), Hollman
Road (TR 182), Strongs Run
Road (CR 52), Star Hall Road
(CR ~ ). Old Dexter Church
Road !CR 6), Derry Lane
(TR 337 ), Ellis Road (TR
453 ). Saxton Road (TR 625 ),
Price-Strongs Road (TR 33),
Metheny-Fairplay Road (TR
37N), Molchan Road (TR 38),
Lasher Road (CR 13), King
R1dge Road (TR 396), Folden
fulad (TR 26 l, Mt. Union
Road (TR 14 ) and Hannon
Rllad (TR 405 ).

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="791">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11326">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="48365">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="48364">
              <text>June 12, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="780">
      <name>henry</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="265">
      <name>hoffman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1944">
      <name>varney</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
