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                  <text>10 . The Daily Sentin•l. Middlepvrt-Pomoroy. p.. Friday. Feb. 2tl, 1971;

Meigs 1, 2 mines
still not working
United Press lnleruallonal
About 1,450 coal miners are
on strike today at lllree sites
in Ohio.
.
United Mine Workers
District 6 headquarters in
Bellaire sai d 900 union

A UMW spokesman said
Peabody has refused to abide
by a decision in which . a
worker had a right to be
awarded aocertain job in the
mine.

members have remained off

the job at the Meigs 1 and 2
mine in Meigs County in a
dispute over alleged safety
violations.
About 550 UMW members
at the Sunny hills mine of the
Peabody Coal Co . near New
Lexington, were also pff the
job today in a dispute over an
arbitrawrs decision .

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonite thru Sun .
Feb . 20-22

CREDIT CORRECTED
A report in Wednesday's
Daily Sentinel of the reserve
basketball game between
Eastern and Southwestern
credited Doug Browning with
14 points. The credit should
have gone to Eastern's David
Brown.
NAMES OMITTED
In the report of those attending the birthday of
Tammi Lynette Eblin, the
names of Doug, Mandy and
Dale Eblin and Jay Evans
were unintenionally omitted.

FRAMED
( techni co lor)
Th.;~t " Walking Tail"
man is back .

Color cartoon.
Show starts

at 7! oo p.m .

CLOSED BY FLU
MENTOR, OJ-110 ' UP!
Lake Catholic Jiigh School
was dosed today because of
an flu epidemic which caused
25 per cent absenteeism
Thursday.

Coin collectors
to meet Monday
The Oh-Kan Coin Club wtll
hold a regular business
meeting Monday evening in

the social rooms of the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. building, Mill St.,
Middleport.
A social hour and trading
session precedes the 8 p.m.
meeting and several out-Oftown coin dealers will be
present to buy, sell or lrade
collectors' items. Committees will be announced to
serve at llle 13th annual coin
show March 7 at the Holiday
Inn . A 59-lol coin auction wiU
follow the m~eting and
refreshments will be served.
Area residents lnteresteg in
coins or paper money are
invited to attend.

Hecession may
be prolonged
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, said
today failure of the Senate to
override President Ford's
veto of the public works bill
could prolong the nation's
recession.
"Ge tting people back to
work and helping cities and
counties
through
this
recession should be key

Glenn said.

--------------------~goals,"
HCon~
trary towhatsomeallege,
the

'

Dollar doings can
get you up a tree.
Checking Account
keeps the
record straight.
Checks are
legal receipts.
Instant money to
keep you swinging.

Public Works bill was in-cluded within Congress '
original budget and would not
have made new additions tn
the federal deficit."

t.:AK, TRAIN lilT
The Gallia-Mcigs Pusl
Stale Highway Patrol alii :45
a .m . today were in-

Alfred
~cial

Notes

vestigating

Sunday school attendance
on F'eb. 15 was 35, the offering
$18.90.
'
Worship se rvices were held
at 11, with Duane Sydenstricker speaking from Acts
5:1-16. "Problems We Can
Get Into". Attendance was 23.
Mr . and Mrs. Duane
Sydenstricker, Mr. and Mrs.
Jioward Flanders, and
Florence Spencer, co !led at
the Vera Swartz and William
Carr homes, and had prayer
and sang hymns, preceding
the last Wednesday evening
prayer services at the church
here.
Larry
Atherton
of
Lakehurst, New Jersey,
spent last weekend with his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Atherton, on his way
to Key West, Fla. willl the
Navy, where he is taking
schooling.
Mrs. Mary Carr, accompanied Douglas and
Teresa Carr to University
Hospital at _Columbus Sunday
where Charles Carr is
recovering from recent open
heart surgery there. They
also visited with"Mr. and Mrs.
Sed O'Brien in Columbus.
· Charles Woode received
word of the recent death of
his sister, · Mary (Mayme)
Castle in Phoenix, Arizona.

She leaves a daughter
Virgene Sweeney, where with
~ er
husband,
Charles
Sweeney, Mrs. Castle made
her home. Two other children
Genevieve Grogan and
Maynard
Castle
are
(Continued from page 1)
deceased. She also leaves
Soil and Water Conservation three grandchildren and
program and the Corps that several great grandchildren .
most of the conservation Three sisters, Carrie Burson
work in Meigs County will not or Worthington , 0 .; Ora
require a permit. The two Scaefler of Columbus, 0. and
agencies are planning to Elma Our of the Plains, 0 .
correlate their programs to and several nieces and
best serve the people.
nephews in Ohio and
"The Meigs SWCP and the Michigan.
Corps should'be commended
Mrs. Sandra Mardnko and
in making this memorandwn baby Stephanie Kay of
of agreement, the first in this CQrpus Kristi, Texas are
five stllte area," Boyd Ruth, spending two weeks here with
Meigs Conservationist, said her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Warren van Meter and other
today .

Meigs

relatives. ·

with cash.~

Cost of
(Continued from page 1)
. Thursday
that
unemployment and inflation
are declining. And the
Commerce Department
reported that the real- Gross
National Product rose 4.9 per
cent in the last quart..r of
1975.

TRY OUR

.. POLISH
SAUSAGE
SANDWICH

Member FDIC

CROW'S

STEAK HOUSE
Pomeroy, Ohio

Mr . and Mrs . Robert
Robinson and family of
Torch, Ohio spent Sunday
with Nina RobinSon anp
Clara Follrod .
Several local folks visited
at White 's Funeral Home at
Coolville where services were
held' lor Velma Cassady also
lor Mrs. Charles Hardway
formerly of Tuppers Plains
also.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Taylor and family of London,
Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
Dillinger and family of
Shade, Ohio and Mr. and Mrs.
Randy Dillinger, Todd and
Marta Kay of Pratts Fork
sperit Sunday willl Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Taylor.
A birthday card shower
was held for Iris Carr on Feb.
4. Several visited her at home
on that day also.
Mr. and Mrs. John Hayes of
Chester recently visited Mr.
and Mrs. William Carr.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
Woode attended the special
hymn sing at the North
Bethet Church Saturday
evening, ~'eb , 14. The Norllleasl Cluster Hymn Sing will
also be held at North Bethel
on Saturday evening, Feb. 28,
at 7:30. Everyone welcome.
The North Belllel Church
will also begin a revival on
March 8, with Rev. Robert
Sanders, of Joppa .

a

car -train

collision at the crossing north
of Cheshire. No details were
available. A patrol spokesman said no one was kilJed in
llle accident.

Taxes, school budgets
aired at KC ·meeting

An insight into taxes and
school
budgeting was
DIVORt.:E ASKED
Diane Bachtel, Pomeroy, presented Thursday night at
has filed suit for divorce In Kyger Creek Jiigh School
Meigs County Common during the regular monthly
Pleas Court from Ronald meeting of "The Committee
Bachtel, Pomeroy, charging for Better Education in Gallia
gross neglect of duty and County Schools."
Teeters said, uwe will
extreme cruelty.
always be faced with paying
-taxes, so be thankful that at
COUPLE ARRESTED
lea~!
you have the right to say
CLEVELAND (UP!)
yes
or
no .to taxation. But to
Victor Dodaro, 32, Saga_more
exercise
that right, you must
Hills
and
his wife,
he
informed
regarding the
Jacqueline, 30, were arrested
laws
and
understand
why you
Wednesday by the FBI on
are
asked
to
pay
taxes."
racketeering warrants issued
He explained that more
by a federal judge in Florida.
citizens
would be more ·
Charles McKinnon, special
agent in charge of the willing to pay taxes If they
Cleveland FBI office, said the knew what the money was
Dodaros were charged with used for. The tllx consultant
pointed out that the State of
involvemeflt
in
a
racketeering
enterprise Ohio, f~om •:1e standpoint of
affecting interstate and tllx laws, is the best. Jie also
foreign commerce. No was quite specific about how
''lucky'' Gallia Countians are
furlller explanation . of the
because thelr taxes are very
chwr~ was .provitled.
low compared to the rest of
the stllte.
Teeters observed that
county officials and school
board members must become
smarter in the f1,1ture because
of changing laws and
requirement,s
such
as
Thursday Strikers
reasse.ssment and
January 29, 1976
equalization.
W L
James Blevins, member of
Welkers Ashland
24 0
Simon's Pick . A -Pair
18 6
the Galha County Board of
Team No 1
12 17
Education, asked Teeters if
Team No , 4
12 12
Team No 2
&lt;120
he would look at this year's
Team No . 3
2 22
budget and explain why the
High team 3-gamcs Team No . 6 926, second high
budget commission, conTeam No . 1 916, third high
sisting
of the county auditOr ,
Si mon 's Pi ck A -Pair 915
treasurer and prosl,!cu ting
High i ndiv i dua l three games - · Ann Morri s 423 ,
attorney, forced the school
s~ tond high Phyllis Cli n e 413 ,
board to reduce its budget by
third high Patti Williams 404 .
High ind ividual game - Jo
approximately $450,000 when
Ann ward 160 , sec ond high
apparently there was inside
Patti Wi ll iams 148 , third high
Ann Morris and Phylli s Cline
millage still available.
Teeters explained that the
budget commission, by-law,
Thursday Strikers
Feb . 5,1976
has no authority to question

BOWLING

"'

W L

Welker 's Ashland
18 4
Si mon 's Pick -A -Pa i r
11 10
Team No 1
18 i 4
T ea m No . 4
14 18
Te~m No .3
B 24
Team No . 2
6 '1 6
H igh team thre e gam €S Tearn No. J 9~6. second h i gh
Team No . 5 Simon s 938 ,. thrid
high Team No . 6 Wclkers 924 .
Hig h . ind ivi dual thr ee
games Phylli s Clin e 547 ,
second high -- Drcma Roach
536 , lhird hi g h ~ Patti
Williams 443
H ig h i ndividua l g ame Phylli s Cline 182, second ~1igh
-- Orema Roach ) 72. th ir d
h igh - Phy_l lis C l i ne 165 .

CIA has more,
not less powers

WASHINGTON (UP!)
Sen. Frank Church, chair-·
num of the Senate Intelligence Committee, today
charged tha't President
Ford ' s reforms for s py
-agencies " gives the CIA a
bigger ·shield and a longer
sword to -stab about both
Pomeroy Bowling Lane s
within and without the
Early Sunday M i xed
country.''
F e b . 8,1976
W L
. The Idaho Democrat told
Jacks Dairy Bar
38 18
a
breaktast meeting willl
Pullins.Excavaling
38 18
reporters that an executive
Team No . 6
17 29
Tom's Carry Out
23 33
order issued by Ford WedPomeroy Flower Sh op 72 34
nesd~y
revamping in20 36
H i ll &amp; Mayer Sarb·e r s'
H ig h individua·l game tellige nce agencies "give
D ic k Dugan 237, Marl ene
larger protection." to the spy
Wilson 20 3, seco nd high i n
dividual game Char l es
gr o. p~ "b ut very little
Hysell 196 , Mary VQSS lYI ,
reference to protect the
High ser i es ...___ Ed Voss: 524,
rights of .the American
Mary Voss 561. sec ond h igh
series Dick Dugan 520 ,
people, to eliminate the
Marlene Wilson 551.
abuses of llle agency in llle
Team high game - Team
No . 6 735. team high se ries past, or to eliminate governPull i~ s Ex c avating 2,0'22.
ment by executive secrel"i."
LOCAL TEMPS
temperature
in
downtown Pomeroy at 11
a.m. Friday was 52 degrees
under sunny skies.
The

GROUP TO MEET
EAST MEIGS - The
Eastern PTSA will meet in
regular session at 7:30p.m.
Monday at Eastern High
School.

BAKER'S
BUDGET SHOP
NEW FURNitURE
AT BUDGET PRICES!
Bedroom Suite ...........sns
Sofa Beds. :................ sgs

Recliner...... ~ ............... '68
5 Piece Dinettes. ......... ts8
9112 Unoleum ' Rugs. ..!9.88
9112 Red Olite_Carpet...S24
Bunk Beds Complete ... ~l49
Many ather furniture
bargains avallablei '

expenses In the budget. It
does have authority over
receipts of money and contingency balances. As a final
response lo the question,
Teeters indicated that
probably the budget was
inadequate in its preparation.
He recommended that in the
future, ijte board should
make an appeal.
Teeters said lila! school
boards
should · begin
preparing next year's
budgets in March, complete
them by June and advertise
and adopt them by July 20
and between Aug. 1 and Sept.
I, the budget commission
should make an analysis of
the budgets.
A board then has 30 days to
accept or appeal. It was
further pointed out that tax
an'&gt;eals are handled by the
c1 ~ ts forthwith , meaning "a
etle of weeks,'' not months .
.
Teeters covered in deplll
many other aspects of
tllxation and budgeting such
as how -real estate was
assessed before llle "Park
Investment Case" was
decided in the courts, forcing
equalization of taxation lor
the four types of real estate,
agriculture,

commercial,

residential and industrial. He
noted that all tax records are
open to the public.
Teeters indicated he felt
school boards should appoint
a tax and budget study
committee.
Duane Hunter, Addison,
publicity chairman of the
committee, said this morning
the meeting was fairly well
attended, but expressed
disappointment that only two
school board members were
able to attend. He also noted

Labor brass hit
Senate's action
BAL HARBOUR, Fla .
CUP!). - Top AFL-CIO officials have 'warned that
President F'ord's veto of a
public works bill to create
600,000 new jobs, and
Cong ress ' failure to override
it, will he a major election
issue , Andrew Biemiller, the
AFL-C IO 's chief lobbyist,
expressed !be feelings of llle
council shortly after llle volA!
Thursday when he told
reporters : "It was a tragic
16ss to the unemployed
workers, for communities
that are badly in need of
financial assistance' and for
the economy, which needed
the stimulus this bill would
have provided . The White
House may · consider it a
victory, but we consider it a •
tragic loss for the people ."

Meigs 6.1% unemployment figure challenged
POMEROY - A recently publish&lt;•ct
County was challenged here Saturday by
Ray Goodman, director of Vot·ational
Education. Meigs Local Schools.
Goodman charged lllc figure is false,
having little relation to the truth, and
damaging the public by losing tens of
thousands of dollars annually in lost
revenues to the county, the towns, and tJle
schools.
In a public letter Goodman wrote:
Recently, the unemployment office for
Meigs County, located in Gallia County,

that the county school
superintendent nor his three
assistants could make it.
Hunter said the committee
will continue its efforts to
gether faets in order to ac·
·complish Its purpose of
providing input and asststaoce to the school board for
better education in Gallia
County Schools.

PLEASANT VALLEY
DJSC)'IARGES - Mrs.
Jiaskell Gillispie, New
Haven ; John Tompkins,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Steve
Gillispie, Everett Sayre,
Charles Wood, Mrs. William
Oliver, Mrs. Corbett Hudnall,
Mrs. Greg Kennedy, Point
Pleasant; Alton Tennant, ·
John Island, S. C.; Virginia
Maddy, Wilkesville; Mrs.
Jiarold Vreeland, GaiiJpvlis;
Cllnwn BeD, Jr., Mason;
Jack Call, Clifton; Boyd
Pearson, Bidwell; Odessa
Greenlee, Leon.
Births, Feb. 19, a daughter
wMr. and Mrs. Randy Swne,
West Columbia; son to Mr.
and Mrs . Gary King
Pomeroy: daughter to Mr.
"nd Mrs. Daniel Warden,
New anti-bribe
Point Pleasant; daughter to
Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Waugh,
law has teeth
Crown
City; Feb. 20,
WASHINGTON (UP!)- A
daughter
to
Mr. and Mrs. Lee
JIM'S PLAZA TOURED
bill imposing fines of up to $25
Burnem,
Rutland
.
Middleport third graders of million and 10 years in prison
Mrs. Julia McComas recently for American businessmen
visited Jim's Plaza to who brlhe foreign officials
complete a social studies unit was introduced today by Rep . Vetera01 Memorial Hospital
ADMmED - Clarence
on
foods,
shipping, Ronald M. MotU, D-Ohio.
Spurrier,
Pomeroy; Junior
processing and marketing.
" This corruption Is utterly (Bud) ·Darst, Middleport;
The children toured t~e repugnant to the majority of
Steven Ohlinger, Mason;
store's several departments Americans," Mottl said,
Walter Jiarrison, Middleport;
.and were given a treat by the cUing a Ubrary of Congress Rosa lee Wright, Langsville;
management.
report slating American
Grace Roach, Gallipolis;
corporations admitled more
Usa WIHord, Long Bottom.
than $300 million In corrupt
DISCHARGED - F'red
and "questi,onable"
Larkins, Paul McDaniel, Sr.,
throughout the
Mostly cloudy tonight , payments
Gerald Drenner, Patsy
11
world.
The
conscience of
chance of rain . Lows 35 to 40.
Laudermilt, Jean Koehler,
Rain Saturday, highs 50 to 55. this coon lry demands that we Mary Howell, . Frances
Chance of rain io per cent repudiate the tactic of Jiawthorn, Clarence
today, 30 per cent tonight and bribery and puniSh those Ridenour.
responsible."
80 per cent Saturday.

Weather-

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
Washingtons Birthday Sale
OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 8 PM
Specla I Sale Prices Friday1
Feb. 20th
-Saturday1 F~b. 21st and
Monday1 Feb. 23rd
At The Main ~. Jt9me Fumishin• Annex
'
-and the Mechanic Street Warehouse

Elberfelds In Pomero

VO. 11

this tremendous financial Lurden of Cj
ruund trip of say 65 miles just to si~n a
paper stating they are unempl\.lyed? 1 feel
the unswer to this questiw1 is 11bvious. No
une in their right mind is going to spend
money on a trip to Gallipolis when their
family is hungry.
ConsequenUy, not everyone signs up
for unemployment who is unemployed
and, therefore, the 6.1' percent WJem,ployment figure isn't worth the paper it's
printed on , In this, our bicentennial year,
we must speak out strongly against this
lack of represenlaUon which so direcUy

tmts

Cloudy, windy and cooler
with a chance of snow
flurries, mainly northeast,
Sunday. Highs from the mid
30s to low 40s. Chance of snow
flurries northeast and partly
cloudy elsewhere Sunday
night. Lows in the 20s.

NEWS

omwtmt of rcirnhurscmcnt fur sut:h things
as schools , se nior citizens progra1ns, local ,
federal . ;md state programs aw.J funding to
IO('ul ~overnments.
One of the saddest aspects of the
situation is that no one is crying out about
this situation. Meigs County is probably
the only county in Ohio that doesn 't have
an unemployment office based somewhere
in the county. Our _cltizens, who are unfortunate enough to he laid off must drive
as much as 30 or 40 miles just to register
their ,unemployment.
How long must the un"!"ployed hear

•

Weather

HOSPITAL
Holzer Medical Center
1Discharges, Feb.19)
Inez Betz, Mary Birchfield,.
Mrs . Randy Carnes and
daughter, James Chandler,
Terley Clagg, Clara Deck,
Evelyn
Dishong, Uta
Eastman, Kathleen F'ink,
John Grimes, Alta !laley,
Benjamin Higgins, Mrs.
Jerry Hollback and daughter,
Agnes Imboden, Karen ·
Jarvis, Jiazel Leonard, :
Marinda Mattox, Johnie
Meek, Grace Mercer, (J,na
Myers, Jessie Riley, Mary
Roy, Blanche Scragg, James
J-1. Sisson II, Mrs. Paul Sites
and son, VInson Slaplewn, ·
James Stewart, Maurice
Taylor, Jay Thompson,
Monet Turner, Stephanie ·
Ward, Sandra Wiley, Mrs.
Calvin Wright and daugh!A!r
Nettie Wright.
(Births, Feb. IS)
Mr. and Mrs. Charles J.
Brown, son, Gallipolis; Mrs.
Jack Farley, son, Vinton; Mr.
and Mrs. Jimmie Jenkins,
son, Northup; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Moore, son, Oak Hill;
Mr. and Mrs. Gerry Morris,
son, Jackson .
iBirlhol Feb.l91
Mr . and Mrs . Grover
Gillum, son, Jackson; Mr.
and Mrs . John Hager,
daughter, Bidwell ; Mr. and
Mrs. Gregory Smith, son,
Wellston .
•

published a 6.1 percent unemployment
rate figure for -Meigs County , baserl un
their (i~ures for the preceding month. 1
would like the people of Meigs County to
know that these figures are not correct.
They are not even close to being accurate,
and are costing the cities, the county, and
llle schools of Meigs County tens of
thousands of dollars annually in lost
revenue.
A complex formula lllat uses the
unemployment rate for Meigs Couinty
compared to the unemployment rate of the
other Ohio counties determines the

figurl' uf G.l pet. unemployment in Meigs

affects everyone in Meigs County, just as request an immediate and extensive stale
our founding fathPrs did . F;ventually , each survey of the county to determine thil
inaccuracy of the latest 6.1 percent
O( you will he vaying higher taxes due to
the lost income from the Slate and Federal unemployment figure . If there Is ~ a
Government. There must be a strong, significant difference, it would- he Inconcerted effo•t now if the situation is to be teresting to see if Meigs County could }fin
a legal action against the Stale for all tile
solved.
I have tlllked wi lll the County Com" money it has lost due w the stale's
missioners and they assured me they negligence in providing a system, whereby•
would contact those individuals in the we could have a realistic means fpr
Bureau of Unemployment&amp;rvices that reporting unemployment.
Rememher, the wheels of progre""
would allow Meigs Couinty In have an
turn
slowly, unless you get behind them
unemployment office in Meigs County.
aod
push.
Perhaps the Commissioners could also

Your Invited Guest
Reaching More
Than 12,000
Families

ttdittt

Devoted To The Greater Middle Ohio Valley
GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

NO. 4

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1976

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS .

City will spend
$1,317,831 in'76
'GALLIPOLIS- City commissioners,
in special _session Friday afternoon , upproved 1976 appropri ation s tot.1 Jing
$1,317 ,831.
The budget was filed with the commissiOners on Feb. 9 when a public hearing
was heJd in accordance with the ci lv
charter.
·
funds appropriated were: gcncr&lt;.~l $419,7?4; sanitation - $118,7:15: M &amp; H $75,538: cemetery and parks - $16.999:
water - $284,417; sewer - $314,989 :
parking meter - $52,834 ; genera l bond $9,597 ; federal revenue sharing trust fund
- $23,928 and defense lund , $1.000.
In other matters, comrTiissione rs
approved an ordinance calling for an in- ·
crease in water rates for system users
both inside and outside the corporation
limits. Initial reading on that ordinance
was Feb. 4. The new rates become ef·
fective the first of Apr~l ,
In moSt cases, the average increase
per customer will be approximately $2.25
per· month . ll was the city's first water

J
GALLIPOLIS - Gallla County
Prosecutor Gene Wetherholt has been
reappointed to the executive committee
of the Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys'
Association, This committee governs
lhe association a'nd manages all of its
affairs. ·

•

Gilkey declares m
• •
commission race
POMEROY - Bernard . D. Gilkey ,
Republican, serving as a Meigs County
Commissioner through the appointrnent
route Friday filed his petition )Yith the
Meigs County Board of Elections to t'un for
the nomination of hiS party [or the commissioner term beginning .Jan . 3, 1977.
Gilkey was appointed to the board of
commissioners on F'eb. 12. 1975 In succeed
Robert Clark who had resigned. Gilkey, 49,
resides in the Third Ward of Middl~rt ,
has been a committeeman there for the
pasl few years. He served as a township
trustee for 15 years in Salisbury and Scipio
Townships. A graduate of Scipio High
Sclmol, .which was at Harrisonville, Gilkey
served two years in the U. S. Army during
Wilrld War ll,
Gilkey is a member of Chapter 53,
Veterans of. Foreign Wars , Feeney-

Bennett Post 128, American 'Legion,
Middleport; Ute Meigs County ~'arm
Bureau; the Meigs County Township
TrusU,s and Clerks Assn:. of which he is a
past president for t)VO terms; the Coun ty
Commissioners Assn., Modern Woodman
of America, and the Fra ternal Order of
Eagles.
Republicans Who filed for cen tral
committee posts on Friday include Harold
G. Norris, PageviUe; Robert Wood, North
Chester; David Koblentz, South Chestf";
Alva Swick, Salem; Hele·n M. Quivey, East
Bedford; Granville Lyons, Columbia;
Paul F. Andrews, Olive; Evelyn Clark,
Pomeroy First Ward; George Nesselroad,
Jr .; Rock Springs; Alvin Reed, Reedsville;
Ernest E . Sisson, Jr., Syracuse~ and Cora,
B. Beegle, Racine Village.

rate increase since Jan, 1, 1960.
Commissioners authorized City
Manager RichardT. (Dick) Mills to advertise for bids for new lawn mowers. Bids
will be accepted at the city building
through 12 noon on March 8.
City Manager Mills presented com- .
missioners a list of appointments for
various city boards . All but two individuals
arc current board members.
Newcomers recommended by Mills
were John (Jack ) Carty, for the city
planning commission, replacing Richard
Roderick, Sr. (Richard Mackenzie, who
will succeed Roderick as a member of llle
board of zoning appeals, is currenUy a
nternber of the planning commission).
Rosie Stoney will succeed Rev. Joe Wills
on the board of heaith.
Board members are appointed by the
city manager but must be approved by the ·
commissioners.
Others reappointed were ,Elmer
Caldwell, civil service commission; Belll
Cherrington, Jack Jiudson and Stanley
Saunders, city park and playground advisory board; Jack Hudson and Emil
Corbin, board of zoning appeals; iiuiit
Tap, board of health and Eslavaun Mat·
thews, recreation board for a one year
terrf! .

COURTHOUSE TOURED - Members of the Gallia
County Preservation Task Force walked through the Gallia
County Courthouse Friday to inspect recent restoration
work. In the group above are (from .the left) Mrs. Arthur
Allison, Maj. Gen. (Ret) Geor~e Bush, Mrs. Berc Tap, Mrs.

Evan C. Roderick, Mrs. R. D. Tbomas, Mrs· Howard Neal . ·
an&lt;\ David Brook, a preservation officer for the Sooth Central
Ohio Preservation Society, Inc. The task force is Interested in
the hlslorical preservatioo of homeS, buildings and other •
structures in GaiiJa County.

Loans for
farms are
available
•

Bond posted by

POMEROY - Farm owners in ,
Athens, Meigs, and VInton Counties can
share in some $50 miUion of Iunde now
available in the nation lor loans to develop,
conserve an,d improve land Amd water
resources, according to Archie R. Stegall,
County Supervisor of the Farmers Home
Administration ( FmHA).
Measures to alleviate problems of
waste disposal aDd pollution control on
farms rnay be eligible lor financing
through this · source. "These funds are,
available on a first.come, lirst.served
basis throughout the nation," Archie R.
Stegall said.
He explained lila! soil and water loans
from FmJ-IA can he used to develop wa!er
suppues tor home use, livestock watering
or irrigation. The funds also can he uaed
for drainage projects, to instail water or
waste facilities associated with poUutioo
abatement and control and to build other
structores that contribute to conservation
and meet health, safety and en·
vironmen~l requirements. . .. •..
Funds also may he used to level lana,
establish permanent pasture, develop
farm forests, and to carry out basic soil
trealment practices such as liming, ferUiizing, and subsoiling.
These loans may be repaid tn ~nns as
long as 40 years with an Interest rat&amp; of
five percent charged on the unpaid principal.
Applications may be obtained " at
Farmers Home Administration county
offices, ;ncluding llle office at 221 West
Second St. in Pomeroy.

West Virginian
POMEROY - Carl Smith McFall, Pt.
Pleasant, posl€d bond in Meig~ County
Cour! F'rlday when he appeared on
charges of criminal damaging.
An incident occurred near the mine
involving a moVing truck. Rocks had been
thrown at the truck breaking the winds hield . Charles Knight, assistant
prosecuting attorney said McFall, charged
under the state law, was arrested by the
Slate. Highway Patrol. Bond was set at
$2,50Q. MJners, a source said, have been
iristfucted to return to work beginning with
the midnight shift Sunday.

Compliance saves time,
•
•
money m
construction

MIDDLEPORT - The annual Mid- speaker forced delay of the banquet this
'11ckets for the dinner at 6:30 p.m. at
dlepvrt Rotllry Club football banquet year intn the new year.
the Meigs High cafeteria are $4 each aod
• Tuesday evening at Meigs High School will
Therefore, the 1976 Rotary Football may be obtained unUI 9 a.m: Monday at
have a slightly different format this year, Banquet will actually be the 1976 Meigs New York Clothing House and Lohse Drug
mainly hecause of il.s lateness.
High School Athletic Bariquet (In 1977) .
Store in Pomeroy; at Dutton's Drug Store,
Charley Stobart, varsity assistant at Western Auto Store, Baker Furniture
conforming use .
.
Rotary, which began honoring Mid_ Erection of signs or outdoor ad- dleport Yellow Jacket football teams soon the University of Michlgao, has been · Swre, and Citizen's National Bank in
· verUsing structures.
after its organization In 1929, switched its signed by Rotary Banquet Chairman Lee Middleport; at the Rutland Department
Boster stated that the applications (or allegiance to the Meigs Marauders upvn McComastoreturnwhis"oldhometown" Store in Rutl~t Meigs High School,
the building permits and zoning cer- consolidation in 1967. The banquets, with for Ute event. Stobart is a native of Racine and at the Junior mgh School in Midtificates may be obtained from Edith suitably outstanding speakers, usually who graduated at Middleport High School dleport.
Honored guests at the banquet will he
Crosier, zoning secretary, located In the took place in Nov~mber ' or · early where he was a 1361b. center (both ways).
Later
Stobart
started
at
ouarterback
for
the
1975
footbaU squad, the 1975 golf squad,
city mwilcipal building. Questions related Dece'!lber soon after the sounds of
the Ohio University Bobcats. He coached 1975-76 basketball squad, the cheerleaders
to zoning or building should be brought to • crackmg pads settled down.
Boster at the municipal building .
However; difficulty In obtaining a one year at Gallipolis, winning the and the coaches.
championship.

GALLIPOLIS - Failure to obtain a
building permit and zoning certificate can
cost time of construction and money according to James T. Bosler ; city zoning
officer.
Boster said Saturday many problems
haveoccurredasaresultofpersons failing
In comply in obtaining an application for a
building permit and zoning certificate.
He said the failure to obtain a zoning
certificate authorizing llle use uf land and
building can cost an individual considerable Joss in time of construction and ·
money if the way in which the land or
buildings are used or constructed does not
comply willl the zoning ordinance.
Boster stated that after consultation
with many people, it was discovered that
some did not l!now exactly what conditions
required a zoning certificate and a
building permit. Following are conditions
under which certificates are required :
- 'Construction or structural
alterations of any building ; Including
accessory buildings, such as a garage.
- Change in use Of an existing or
accessory building to the use of a different
classification,
- Occupancy and use of vacant land.
- Change in the use of land to the use
of a different dassification.
- Any chanRe in the use of a non-

RADIO STOLEN
GALLIPOLIS - A 23 channel CB radio
was taken Friday night from a car owned
by Gary Fellure, Eureka Star Rt .
Gallipolis ei ty police said someone took the
radio from F'ellure's 1968 GTO. Tlte car's
air conditioner was damaged while the
radio was heing removed .
''

Date processing is
found in contempt
. TOLEDO (UP!) - Introductions
International and Data Date Processiqg,
Inc., with dating referral services in
Akron, Toledo and Columbus, have been
found In contempt and fined for vlolali!'&amp;
terms of a court.approved . judgment
requiring them to resolve cons1J111er
complaints.
:
Lucas County Common Pleas Court
Judge Francis Pietrykowski fined the
·firms ·and llleir principal owner"''M!rator
$1.7 million Friday. The companies also
were permanently enjoined from engaging
in any consumer transactions in Ohio . .

BOARD TO MEET
The Gallia-Meigs Community Action
Agency executive board will hold Its
monthly meeting Tuesday, Feb. 24, at 7:30
p.m. in llle Cheshire Central office. Per·
sonnel and budget and finance committees
will meet at 7 p.m.

•

WATER! STAY 'WAY FROM OUR DOOilS - Owners of Main St.

businesseS in Pomeroy for the second lime in about one month were keeping a

watchful eye on the Ohio River which ha• "isen quickly llle past few days due to

1

COFCTOMEET
POMEROY - Pomeroy Chamher Of
Commerce will meet Monday at noon at ,
the Mei~s Inn.

widespread heavy rains. The water has moved into the low cross-tlrough between the two parking lots along llle Ohio River but appeared Saturday to be at
a stal)dstill.
\

·'

'

..

�2 - The Su.nda:. Till lt':-; ,~·n tinl'l . FdJ. tl., 1~7 6
tl1 '-Ill I

Bu(:keye Hill.· honor roll '

II0/':1

rt!f~'\~llt!!l'i

.-;.

I 11l•,

\.,U1Q io l

f~,\•

) ollr11'·&lt; 1J\

1975 76
Scme ~ter Avl!'ra ge
- A II " A" Student
PA PerfC'c t Atlen dance

ACR I"BUSI NE SS

John

Br\· a nt
M ic hcl e l
Cunn1nghclm , Ra lph Fac tor.
R.og er Hil l. James McKemie.
Donald M ill er , John M il liken .
Rex Philli ps and Dav id Pope .

AGR I-MECHANICS

Exline .
James
Saunders, - Aaron Spencer,
Ke vi n Wood and James
Wooldridge II
Earl

Mark

Black .

Phil

Leonard ,

AUTO BODY - Timothy
Lambert
AUTO MECHAN ICS, JR .
-.. P~ul CeciL Jr .. Barry
Johnson, Paul. Ousley , James
Russell . Paul Spence, Ronald
St i tfler-PA, Timothy Ward -

1)/\ 1 A

/\ (COli N liNt .

and - Mary Candance West.

OHO SR . Deborah
BlJrnehe, Tina Casey , S~ i rley
Chambers , - Coleen Clark . Deborah Oew i tt-PA . Loretta
Dun can. Cathy Greene .
Ka t hy Halley , Catherine
Harvey, - Jean McWilliams,

PA .
AUTO MECHANICS, SR.

- Cindy Pauley -PA, Judith
Phillips, - Virginia Powe lL

-

- Amanda Re ce , Tam my
Riley, Marsha Thornton and
Viola Wills.

Stephen Elliott , - Robert

Johnson and Er ic Spr inger .

BLDG .

TRADES

Michael
Burns ,
Mark
Crawford . Richa rd HaiL
G lendon , Hou se - Jesse
John Son . Marcus Ki nder ,
· Garland Parsons. Frederick
Sydow, Gary Tribby and

DISTRIBUTION
&amp;
MARKET IN G - Amy Beck ,
Lew is
Bodimer .
Mary
Gardner , Brenda Glassburn ,
Robert Grim and Caro l
Smith-PA .
DRAFTI NG
Dana
Exline, · Carlos J ustice-PS,

~ 1 -~ &lt;

11hn
I' •lqlr 1!'
1~.11Pv v,
~ .rlh•r11H
l{t~!ll•
,mrt
lo.,,dh;- Yn h ..
I I S •,
Dr •hltit• 1\dl.rn •,
N1.11H t•,
1\o~rr y
Rfwrtd,r
11 1't, llt..· ~
T,,m 11w llvrnc·lt \
PJ\ ,

(..:1!'()1

( I (' rt 1l•C'Ih

(Cirol Df'nn..;y I un_,,, G1h'&gt;On
P,1t nua Juhn.,on f ,1 mmy
Lahrn1N . C&lt;'!rol l cw1-..,
Ben l t ~

Onlinan t:e Top maintenance job

~

lPrt.•···'

Clon.1 An.H:11pdn-.:
D~·lJr, l
r or t11 vr
M1 ch.lL' I Fort nn .
{.Ill r yl C.rL'C'tl r111d
V1 c"- i
HubbMd . E Vf.'retl Sturgill.
Oebortlh S hJr tt:!v,tnl .1r1 d
M.1rk Willi.nm s.
OHO JR .
Cher yl Be ll ,
Chri sti Cook . Tcu nt Co:-o. .
R~ lph Coy le, Debra Denney,
- Dora Durh.nm . P.lm e lo
E ssman , Reta flJIIer , Christy
Grant. - Pamela Haffell .
Barbara Hall. - Pam ela
M cNeese, - Ta nya Robinson

\

~\.llhl.&lt;

Pen n 1ngt o n ,

Ly l1a

Robert s, Brendil Runyon .
Sherri Sond er s- PA, Minnie
Sk inne r and J&lt;imberlv Staten.

INDU STR IAL
MAIN ·
TENANCE - Terry B~rron ,

Jesse Duncan, Harry Eddy,
Ni cholas Morse II, Larry
Norton , - Raymond Pen nington , Michael Poetker and

Jim Skidmore.
·
MERCHANDI SE
AC.
COU NT ING ~ Susan Clarl&lt;.
~Je nn ifer

Coleman, Patricia
Knaeble,
- P·e-nelope
Mulholand. Colin Saunders
and Cathy Strai t.

OFF ICE MACHINES -

Debra Ball , Pamela Cooper.
PA , - Rebecca Gill , Debra
Grate. - Brenda Kent. lnana

HIO liH1\NIJI·: - Village
1ffi cials he r e in s pe cial
;ession Friday adopted four
ordinances. resc inded two
others upon the re corn.
mendation of Village Solici tor
James Bennett, and an1ended
three sec tions of the Village
Code of Ordinances.
The new legisla tion pertained to penalty schedules in
tra ffi c cas~s before the
mayor's court.
Street commissioners
Frank Petrie, Don Call and
Curt Ramey outlined plans
for street and alley repairs,
installation of new s treet
signs and the cleaning of
ditches . "No solicitor" signs
will be erected in the village .
All salesmen henceforth must
obtain a license from the
village for a $25 fee.
Council approved purchase
of a new adding machine.
Fire Ch ief Robert Br andeberry outlin ed repairs
needed for the fire tr ucks a nd
Mayor Marlin Wedemeyer
informed coun ci l applications
for the funding of the water
tower are being processed .
Atty. Bennett reported on
the progress of · all legal
documenlo:; for the mayor 's
court and Harold Wiseman of
the. Wiseman Insurance
Agency reviewed in creases in
village insurance policies .

.'1-:W HA VEN , W. Va . -

Appnintment of Howard A.
Dailey to s uperintendent o!
maintenan c e
e ff ec tive
February 1, was announced
Saturday by J ohn C. Wolfe,
Plant Manager, Graham
Pla nt, Foote Mineral Company near here .
Dailey was first emp loyed
at the Graham Plant as an

Kingsbury
News Notes

Recent visitors of Mrs.
Neva King were Mrs. Helena
Koehler , Reba Layton, Howe tte , Mrs. Wealthy Will
Brenda Shaf er , - Karen
and Mrs. Janeth Beat. Over
Smith, - Den ise Stephens and
the wee kend Mrs. King
Veneda Zinn .
Jerry Wade . Jr.
at ~eyno ldsburg wi th
visited
WELDING
Mike
Bell
.
COSMETOLOGY I · Mike Gee and Bruce Mullins.
Rhonda
Dav is, - De l la
Allen Perry, Mark _The iss.
her sister, ·Mrs . Nora Cwn·
Harmon-PA , Nor ma Israel,
FOO D SERVICE- Mabel
rnins.
Harrison , T!l)a Lindamood
K imber
Perry ,
Debbie
In 1962 American astronaut
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Seve rt -PA
and 'Marsha
and Billie Marcu m .
Mrs. Wayne Beal were Mr .
FORESTRY - .- Michael John Glenn landed safeiy
Winters -PA.
Carper, Dav id Ch isholm , after three orbits of the earth
COS METOLOG Y II
and Mrs . Kirk Chevalier o!
Vick i Sowers .
Thomas Haynes and Kenneth in a spacecraft.
Chester, Mr. and Mrs . Roger
Young, Wesley, a nd Yevette
and Mr. and Mrs . Russell
Well. ·
support work being done by veterinarians
COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - The Ohio
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean
Drs. Mauricio H. Pineda a nd Lloyd C.
Animal Health Foundation said Saturday
and Mr. and Mrs . J ohn
Faulkner to develop inexpensive and
its first research grant of $1 ,000 will
Walter Dean a nd s on ,
acceptable contraceptives for cats and
support research to find a chemical means
Jeremy, visited Mr . and Mrs.
of controlling reproduction in pet animals.
dogs.
Garold Gilkey, Tammy,
The Foundation, a non -profit
Cindy and Rick, at Athens
organization formed by members of:-;rr=::
e-~
recently.
REP. PERKINS HONORED
Ohio Veterinary Medical -Association, said·
Mrs. Elizabeth Murray has
LEXINGTON, Ky. (UP! ) ~ Ohio State
the grant has been made to the Colorado
been
staying with her sister,
Upiversity' s Na tional Research and
State University Development Fund to
Mrs
.
Della
Douglas, while sbe
Development Center for Voca ti ona l
was
a
patient
a t Holzer
Education Saturday honored U. S. Rep .
Medical
Ce
n
ter.
Other
AUTOS DAMAGED
Carl D. Perkins, D-Ky., for his "outCONTRA
CT
ACCEPTED
visitors
of
the
late
Mrs.
POMEROY Two autos had
standing national service to voca tiona l
~
WASHINGTON
(
UP!
)
Douglas
were
Mr
.
and
Mrs .
moderate damage in an accident on Route
education .''
The photoengrav e rs ' local r:iana Murray a nd Mr. and
248"1n Chester a t 10 :30 a.m. Saturday. The
voted Saturday to accept a Mrs. Richard Houdashelt and
1,600 COI\'IING TO COLUMBUS
department of Sheriff Robert Hartenbach
new con tract oHered to the Mr . Gary King .
COLUMBUS ( UP!) - More than 1,600
said a car driven · by William A. Young ,
Post's • 37
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl
persons were expected to attend the 92nd. ,Washington
Route I , Shade, pulled from an alley into
photoengravers . The action visited recently with Clyde
annual meeting of the Ohio Veterinary
the path of a westbound car driven by
leaves onl y the Pos t 's Harrison a t Middleport.
Medical Association which opened a four Hilda White, Route 1 Long Bottom. There
pressmen
out on a s trike tha t
Recent visi tors of Mr . and
day session Saturday.
were no injuries and no citations.
began las t Oct. I. All other Mrs. Olen Ha rrison were Mr .
cr aft unions who followed the and Mrs. Philip Harrison,
pressmen out on the street Rodney and Trevor, of
have r c 'urned to work.
Weste rville. Other visitors
were Mr . and Mrs. Dale
Harri son .
TWO TO RETIR E
Mrs . Helen Dais s pent
CLEVELAND ( UP! )
Su nday afte r noon visiting
Two Na tional
Weather with Mr. and Mrs . John Dean
Serv ice forecas ters here will and also called on Mr . and
re tire Fe b. 29 ufter putti ng Mrs. John Walter Dean and
POINT PLEASANT - A Monday, March I. 'fhis ad· two 38 bed units above, ad- in a total of 76 years service Jeremy.
modern, new wing to dition is comprised of three ding 76 new patien t ac- with the wea ther bW"eau .
Frederick K . Ophnger joi ned
Pleasant Valley Hospital floors holding 10 doctors' commodations.
here is scheduled to open suites on the ~round Door and
All the rooms are semi- the weather bureau in Day ton
In 1872, the Metropolitan
in October of 1937 and H.
--------------;:
-----------private
,
color-coordinated
in
Museum
of Art in New York
1
1
Davis Dyc k began hi s
1 light shades of green, peach, weather bureau caree r in City w.S opened to the public
for the first time.
and gold. Patient rooms also
are modernly equipped with
I
) ' color television sets, piped in
GERALDINE HOFFMAN
oxygen and suc tion ,.a nd Hill·
PAfl~TIJ"t ~ Gerald ine Rom electric beds.
Hollman, 7J, Rt. 2, Patriot
This addition to Pleasant
died Friday at Holze; . Valley Hospital nea rly
Medical Center.
doubles the size of the
Born January 18, 190J. she
h
was the daughter of the late existing structure. T e
James Luther Staats and hospital is presently 35,000
Margaret Jane Balser Staats. square feet and the new wing
Survivors Include her will add an additional 33,000
husband, Dencil 0 . Hoffman ;
two
sons,
James
L., square feet.
Singleton, Northup , and
Hospital Building and
Milford D. Hoffman. Lan - Equipment Corporation of St.
caster ; a daughter, Wendy L
Louis, Mo . constructed the
Divers, New Haven ; two
sisters , Mrs. Pauline Grin · facility in !&lt;lss than a year .
stead, New Haven, and Mrs . When construction com~
Frances Goodnlte , Cln - menced last March 19, it was
clnnatl ; two brothers, Pete prOjected that the-wing would
Staats, New Haven, and not be completed until April
James
Staats,
Point
Pleasant; IJ grandchildren , or May, 1976. However, good
and
eight
great . weather and careful planning .
grandchildren .
brought completion earlier
Preceding Mrs. Hoffman in th
·
h
death was a daughter. Bill ie
an anticipated. T e addition is uniquely constructed
J . Mull ins.
Funeral services will be in a urace track" design with
DR. GLASSMAN
held Monday at l:JO p.m . at double corridors on each
the Foglesong Funeral Home floor . It has capabilities of
ln Mason . Rev. John E . Uf.
POt NT PLEASANT - Dr . terback will officiate and the adding two more noors above
Dan P . Gla ssman , 65 , burial will be at the Hoffman the present structure..
prominent Point Pleasant Cemetery at Letart. Visiting
An Open House is
physician and family doctor,
hours will be any time atter 2 scheduled Sunday, Feb. 29
died Friday
In Holzer p.m
. Sunday, at lhe funeral
Medical Center following a home .
when the public is invited to ·
series of heart attacks.
·
tour the addition. According
PEGGY RENEA BUSH
to Executive Director James
Dr. Glassman had been a
GALLIPOLIS ~ Pe ggy
Farley, hos pital personnel
L.
medical doctor In Point Renea Bush, of 207 Kelton
Pleasant since 1946.
have
been working' long hours
Rd .,
Gallipolis ,
was
F rlends may call at the pronounced dead on arrival the past several weeks in
Crow Funeral Home from J. at Holzer Medir:al Center
tO p.m. Sunday. The body will around 9 a.m . Saturday . She preparing for the opening.
be taken to Erie. Pa . to the D. was the two monfh .old Refreshments will be served
C. E$urlon Funeral Home daughter of James and during the Open Hou ~ .
where services will be held Sandra K. Bryan Bush , born
Tuesday morning .
Dec . 14, 1975, In Gall ipolis.
She is survived by one
Sunday Times-Sentinel
. Or . Glassman , a veteran at' brother and one sister, James
Pub l ish ed every Sund ay
the U.S . Army Medical Corps Bush II, age four, and Angela
by
The
Ohio
Valley
in WW II, was a member of Kay Bush, age two ; her
Publishing Co .
GALLIPOLI.S
Minturn Lodge AF and AM, gra·n dparents. Mrs. Electa
DAILY TRIBUNE
Pat Wilson Shrine , Benl
Bush. Gallipolis and Arlen
' 825 Third Ave. , Ga!llpolis,
Kedem Templar and Scottish Bryan , Gallipolis. and great OhiO A563l.
·
Rite of Charleston ; member grandparents, Aaron and
Published every weekda y
of the Knight's Templars of Frances Bryan, Gallipol is.
evening exce pt Sa _turd ay.
Secon d Class Postag e Pa 1d
Point Pleasant; member of
Funeral services will be
at Gallipolis, Oh io 45 631.
the Loyal Order of Moose, held 1 p.m. Monday at the
THE D A ILY SE NTINE L
Point Pleasant, member of Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
Ill Court St., Pom eroy , 0 .
the West Virginia Med ical Home with Ron Adams of the
45769. Published every week .
day evening except Satur Association ; member of the Henderson Church of Christ
day . Entered as second class
West Virg i nia American ofllclatlng .
m all ing matter at Pomeroy ,
Medical Associati on and
Burial wilt be In Mound Hill
Ot'lio Post Office .
member of the International Cemetery. Friends may catl
By carrier dai ly and
Brotherhood of Magicians at the funeral home from 7
Sunday 75c per week . Motor
route $3 ,2 5 per m onth .
Ring , 197.
until 9 p.m. SUnday.
MAIL

Foundation has$1,000 for its first project

e lectrician in the main·
tcnance department in 1955.
In March of 1968 he was
promoted
to
assistant
foreman in the rriaintenance
department and in 1969 to
foreman . On October I , 1972
Daily
became
general
foreman in the Maintenance
Department, serving in that
capacity until his promotion
as s uperintendent.
Dailey attended Pomeroy
Public Schools and graduated
!rom Pomeroy High School .in
1941. He attended umo
University from 1941·1942 .
From 1942-1945 he served in
the United States Air Force .
Following this military
service he attended and
graduated from the Spartan
School of Ae ronautic~ in

Area Death s

· ~

.....

"'
HOWARD A. DAILEY

from

Rush

teered tree servic.es to all
men whom he e)(amined for
entering_ the service from

Mason County during WW II.

Harold. both of Portl•nd, and
Charles of Middleport.

He Is surv i ved by his wife·,
Funeral services will be
Jean Bailey Glassman , a held Monday at 2 p.m . at
reolstered nurse; a daughter. Morse Chapel with the Rev.
Annajean Glassman , at Freeland Norris ofliciating.
home; lhr-. b . "oers, Ralph Burial will be in Morse
Ivan Glassman, of Erie. F'a. Chapel Cemetery . Friends
and Irvin and Ivan Glassman may call at Ewing Funera l
of Miami, Fla ,
Home 'after ,1 p.m . today .

d i spatches

credited to the

newspaper and also the loca l
ne".\('S publish ed herein .

'·' )

ENJOY TASTY DINNER

,.

••

SPECIALS AT MURPHY'S

j

." ';

FAMILY RESTAURANT

.....

~

4 TO 8 PM ONLY

•••

Tender Boned Chicken w~h SaYOIJ
mashed p.otatoes, vegetables, roll ..... :........ '1.49

..,.

Baked Steak dinner with tossed ·salad,
gravy, vegetable, roll and butter............... '1.49
Beans and Com Bread

''

"'··f

...

'

w~h

~
........
.......................... ............... ~

"

"Home-made" Chicken and Dumplings
and butter ..................................... 11.36·

..
' 1

"ALL
Served with tossed salad. warm roll and buller .

'I
·,.J

ONLY '1.69
Dinner Specials Effective February 23 Thru March 20, 1976

'l •(I

G •.C. MURPHY CO. -

THE FRIENDLY STORE
PLAZA
'· :J;

'.

...

OJ '

Bagging a wild turkey

GALLIPOLIS - A fOOd
pantry to relieve hunger in
Gallia County was set up as a
goal of a gro~p of cl~rgy and
laypersons meeting Tuesday,
Feb. 17 after looking into
emergency hunJ!!er needs in

the poet's corner,
THE GIFI' mAT PLEASES
Writteu In 19« ou tbe Island of Corsica
Little girls, the roses you gave me
Have. withered and little remains,
But the gilt ijlat you gave, dear children,
Will ever its beauty retain.

.

In the 10 years of turkey hunting In Meigs County, only two
gobblen have been bagged, both In Olive Townahlp. As a
matter of fact, ooly 44 hunters have tried their luck legally In
the county over the last 10 years, and none did last season.
· Gallla CoiUlty has fared a litue better, but not like Vinton
or Hocking Counties: 198 Galllans have hunted in the last
decade, only 31lall year. Sbtleen have gone home and had a
turkey dinner, but only two did in 1975. Greenfield Townshlp
seems to be the hottest place, but Hunllngton Township has
produced five turkeys.
A aurprlalng fact Ia the size of these local birds. In 1975, ten
l!liJounders were harvested in the southern counties, nine 13
pounders, eight 18 pounders, and would you believe, one 24
pounder!
.
Your best bets are still ViniJII, Hocking, and Ross
Counties. Hocking has recorded 108 kills ,
I've got one more article to present to you on turkeys,
maybe some evening this week, or next Sunday, but then Den
Talk may be discontinued, at least on a regular basis. Until the
next " turkey talk" , be a good sport. Ilo!t' t forget that fox
season closes Feb. 29. Also, try to get out to the grouse hunt
being sponsored by the Ohio River VaUey Bird Dog Club on
Feb. 28.

J. PAUL MOSSMAN
YOUNGSTOWN ~ The
Maboalng Nallonal Bank
has IDDOUDced retirement
o! J. Paul Moasmilll wbo
had sei'Ved as tbe Bank's
VIce President In charge o!
Public Allain the past tt,&lt;,
years. Prior lo jolnlnt! the
bank be had rellred as
Executive VIce President
of the YoungsloWII Area
Chamber of Commerce
where be bad served for 14
years. He bad previously
beld Chamber o! Com·
merce poRts lo Lakewood,
Ohio, Jamestown, New
York, Binghamton, New
York and Gallipolis.

Ladder fund at $1,215 Four bonds
forfeited
POMEROY - Donations
for an aerial ladder lor Meigs
County as of Friday totaled
$1 ,215.41 according to Mrs.
Don Thomas. Mrs. Thomas
said persons wishing to have
a donation picked up should
contact her at her residence
289Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy .
Checks may be mailed to the
above address but should be
made out to the Meigs County
F ire Departm ent Citizens
Fund. ~Jiyoile wishing to
donal'&gt; out prefer not to have
!he'r name published may do
s~"' l)n req ue_s t.
Latest contributors are

Mrs. Edward J . Smith, Dale
C. Warner A~encv. Mildred
Hawley, Mrs. Cora Beegle,
Shirley Y. Beegle, Gerald E.
Shusler, Ohio Pallet Co.,
Hartley Shoes, Mr. ani! Mrs.
Owen Watson, Mr . and Mrs.
Harlan Wehrung, Laurel Cliff
Health Club, Court St. Cab
Co., Gene Bass, James
O'Brien , Davis Insurance,
Lewis Harris and Bob 's C.B.

The beauty of the flowers has faded ,
As fadeth the beauty of flowers ;
But the gift that you gave me is growing
By giving me beautiful hours.

·roP

gav~

Far more than tile roses you

37
BAG

1

I

I

SPHAGNUM

r,
'

'

37
BAG

I '

:

. . .

.
'

$ 37 ..::

Here is my prayer for these children:
God keep them from hann and wrong ,
May their days be many and sweet.
May their lives be happy and long.
It is not just the flowers we give
It 's not just the flowers that bless.
It 's the kindness and love we give
With any gift that is the best.

REG. $4.99
SUNSHINE
SPHAGNUM

-PEAT MOSS
~RESSURE

PACKED

::

:
......"'-=

BALE

~

;

-

:

~

_,..,...
'.

"'

, ~I

_,

FRAMED
(techn ico lor )

RADIO AWARDED
man is back .
Color ca rtoon .
RACINE - The Racine
Fire Dept. awarded a
Bearcat police radio to Ray
Show starts it 7:00p .m .
Blland of Galllpolis, Pete
Simpson said Saturday.
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.

THRU WED·, FEB. 25TH

CARTOON

.CUSH.ONFLOR®
VINYL. RUNNIR
Wipe clean cushioned vinyl con
be cut t·o fit .
lovely poll?rns.

l•shlon~
. . ,. .In

~.;•:;:.•Y:.---

174

MISSES REG. s6.44
SHORT SLEEVE PRINT

· ·3 ·

:.:{

"

I
I
I

•I"

•

PANT
TOPS

PANTS

an01 ...

····)

REG. $2;47 • 3 x 6 PIIT

DOU8UKNIT

HU

l

j

$494

PAl R

Allraciive jttcquCifd patlerns and le• lure'd sol i d~ with c loslic wa lubands .
Machine wa~hab le . no-iro n. 10 ro 18.

REG. $6.99 Wamens Sizes

U.OYDS

$5.49

•
•
•
•
,•

.

••

$16.88

•

•

'
••
•

••

BATTERY

REG.:

'4.47

l

REG.

7 FUNCTION

•

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY

POCKET

BATH
SCALI

Moisture - re~oisloi'lt

'3

Wh11e boled ename l f inish. I,Voskoble 11in)l l mol

"

'

and easy - li::Hcod d ia l

REG.

~~t . $1176

Sq. Root

'3

PI
Plus 1-Exchange Keys

S ID

42" • 60" • 66"

88

.

~harge

,s).'l. ·

REG. 139.99

FEATURES POWERFUL
""
. MERCURY VAPOR
BULB 175 WATT

EASY
INSULATION

.,
'

Charge -

II!

'149

"

'.\

All aluminum panels
and frame . Baked on
enamel finish. Sloped
roof styling. Sliding
·doors. Ideal slorage .l or
mower ond garden tools. ·

New Hours
10 AM to 11 PM

DUSK TO ·DAWN$

SECURITY
LIGHT

SOLD UNASSEMBLED

Daily
REG. sC!f

r:.sr.-,•••
PIPIUI
Utili

CALCULATOR

Percent

'4.47

.ALL ALUMINUM STORAGE

DI-NNER BOX

2nd&amp;OM

"'
' ....

~

"'

POLYISTIR

• Rus~ poly hinges

No Coupons · No Limit

.,

TONITE
Sun. Feb. 22

JUST ONE OF MANY BIG
SPORTSWf·A R FASHION
VALUES AT MURPHY'SI

TOILII' SIAl'

No Subt.

,.,;

TONJGHTTHRU
TUESDAY

MEIGS THEATRE

PRICES EFFECTIVE 4 DAYS ONLY

THE FAMILY PLACE TO SAVE

WMI1'1 IIIAMILID

PO~ND
l 99~
BAG
•
Covers nearlY
400 sq. feet .

G.C.MU

'

'"

I
s

oppco

• MASHED POTATOES
&amp; GRAVY
eSLAW

I lu'flln ·
'

DIAL

..
4 CUBIC
.
..:=
51
$
FEET

;
...=

•

LENS

3 PIECES CHICKEN .

.......

11

.'

,,,

COLO\l ·

LARGE

a:z

j..
,~

herself to return on Tuesday .
February 24, •t 7:30p .m. to
share idea's about the
location of a pantry and begin
plans for opening one .
Everyone who would like to
become a part of this in·
terested group should come
to the Presbyterian Church,
51 State Street, Tuesday,
February 24 , at 7:30 .p.m .

ELECTRIC

l..
~

•

That " Walking Tall "

Carney A. Ball
P .O.Box 199, Bidwell, Ohio

· ~------~~-----------)

'
FEBRUARY 22 THRU
FEBRUARY 21TH

-:..

found. Some families on
limited Incomes just are not
able to provide these specia l ·
products.
A second major area of
conce rn was for those
families who run out of f9od
before the first of the month
when food stamps or other
resources are made available
to them. Included in this
category were people who
have been burned out or who
might have had their money
or food stamps for the month
stolen. Presently, there are
very limited ways of helping
these people.
In response to these needs
the group began discussing
the possibility of a "community food pantry ." Slides
of such a pantry in Columbus
were seen .
The group en ded the
meeting with the challenge to
go out looking for an ideal
location for such a pantry .
Eve r yone in attendance
comm itted himself , an d

i.
i

:X

BAG ·

me,

Far more than the gilt from the !land,
T'was a gilt from the heart of sweet children:
Though I was a stanger to them.

.

SOIL
35 LB.
BAG

..-:3• •
...
..=
3...
.....

~
- ~---

a

While I was a tired, weary soldier,
And was touring for pleasure and rest,
The gift that you gave me, sweet children
I count It the dearest and best.

-

POMEROY
Four
defendan Is forfeited bonds in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews Friday
night, all four being posted on
trespassing charges.
The four allegedly parked
without authorization on the
Powell's Super Valu parking
lot and each forfeited a $10
bond . They are Debbie
McGuire, Pomeroy; Marlene
Harrison, P9meroy ;_ Connie
INJURY SUFFERED
·
POMEROY
The Warner , Minersville , and
Pomeroy Emergency $quad Sidney Manuel, Portland .
Therilt Randolph, Reeds·
answered a call to the
ville
, forfeited a $327.70 bond
Crossroads at 2:24 p .m .
on a charge ot ar~vmg
posted
Friday for Doris E. Halfhill ·
JOINS HONORARY
while
intoxicated,
and
MARlETT A Marietta who suffered a laceration o! Richard Kowalski, Colwn·
College senior Jo Ellen Diehl the neck in an auto accident. bus, forfeited a $30 bond
of Pomeroy hae been in- She was taken to Veterans posted on a charge of driving
ducted into Omicron Delta Me morial Hospital where she left of center. Fined $100 and
Kappa,
a
leadership was treated and released.
~osts in tbe court upon conhonorary , An English major ,
of an assault and
viction
ASK TO WED
Miss Diehl is active in the ·
battery
charge was Basil
POMEROY - Marriage
Marietta Co llege Singers,
Haynes,
Pomeroy.
The Sigma Sigma Sigma licenses were issued to Oscar
Sororily and the Marcolian , · Vernon Imboden, Jr ., 25,
student newspaper. A 1912 Minersville , and Virginia
graduate of Meigs HS, she is Mae Smith, 29, Columbus,
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs . and tC Jerry Clyde Ferguson,
36, Middleport, and Belly Lou
James Diehl , Mulberry
Heig&gt;ts.
· Ferguson, 32, Middleport :
HOME DAMAGED
SYRACUSE
-The
Syracuse Fire Department
was called Thursday at 3:45
p.m . to a mobile home OC·
DIRT
EXTRACTION
METHOD
I
cupied by Patty Roush, Third
I
RE
1
1
Streakless Machine Wall Washing
1 St. Rollie Stewart, fireman,
Upholstery - Windows· Floors
1 reported the fire was believed
1
Complete .Une of . . .
t to have been caused by
1.
de!ectlve wiring. Damages
1
Cleaning Equipment &amp;. Supplies
were estimated at $1,000.
There.
was no insurance. The
1
home is owned by Kenneth
I
FORFRIENDLYFREEESTIMATES
Lawson, Chester . Eleven
Call 675-5572 After 4 P.M.
t men answered the call .

i ADVANCED CLEANING SERVICE

MICHIGAN

Other pr~ram s which 'help
recipients of food s l&lt;lmps get
the most out of their buying
power are the Coun ty Extension Agency and the
Project
Hope
Home
Management program, and
the Senior Citizens Nutrition
Program provides meals for
those 60 years and older.
Cur ren tly tha t · facility
leeds between 30 and 45
persons per day at the center
and they hOpe to institute the
delivery of 16 meals per day
to some elderly who are
totally home bound. Finally,
it was noted that the welfare
department will shortly be
institutin g a program of
Home Real th Aides who will
help senior citizens who are
limited in what they can do
lor themselves.
couple of major problem
areas where needs still exist
were noted;:
Representatives fr om
Holzer Hospital told of persons put on medical diets who
could not ~fford the items for
that diet or who did not have
accessibility to those items .
Particuwrly
highlighted
was the need of babies placed
on milk substitutes. Often
these substitutes ·are not
ava ilable an d are highly
expensive 'when they can be

Gallia County . The meeting
began with the group &gt;haring
information co ncerning
existing programs to help the
hungry. It was noted that the
Food Stamp Program is the
Jar~ est of these .

CARPETS STEAM CLEANED

SUBSCR IPTION RATE S

Mr. Conger Is survived by
three sons, Clarence and

'""

...

VALUE!

Medical College, Chlcago, ' llt .
He served as lli Mason County
Health · Officer and volun -

"'

''"'

SUPER

The
Gallipolis
Da ily
Tri bun e i n Ohio and Wesf
Vi rgin ia orie year S22 .0(l ; six
months $11.50 ; thre e monthS
$7 ,00 . El se where S26 .00 per
year ; six months $13.50:
three months $7 .50; motor
r o ute S3 .2S monthly .
The Dally Sentinel, on n
y ea r S22 .00 ; Six month :;
$11 .50 ; three months $7 .00 .
Elsewhere
S26 . 00 ;
six
months $1 3.50 ; three mon t hs
$7 .50.
"
The United Pr ess In,.
l ern (ltio nat is exclusively
entitled t o the us e to r
publication of all news

"'

wife , Roberta, at 570 Grant
Street, Middleport. Th~y are
the parents of two children ,
one daughter who is married
and a son who lives at home.

Tulsa, Okia. and from the
RCA Institute, New York, N.
Y. and the Cleveland Institute
of E lectronics .
Dailey resides with his

POITING
-SOIL

C.ORNELIUS CONGER
PORTLAND - Cornelius
Conger , 61, Rt. 1, Portland,
died Saturday morning at
Veterans Memorial Hospital .

Food pantry may relieve hunger in Gallia Co.

~e~.

MICHIGAN r ,.
PEAT ·~ 1 PEAT MOSS· II

He attended West VIrginia
and
was

Den Talk

ByGft&amp;BaUey
'
POMEROY - I promised more facta iJn the wild turkeys In
southern Ohio, 80 if some of you novices want to try your lucy;
thla year, maybe u.e.e will help,
Melp County has had four tranaplanta of wild turkeys, but ·
relatively no bunting pressure. TUrkeys in Meigs County, r1
coune, are DOt as raunerous as In other areas, but there Ia a
suffldent pcpulatlon to warrant hunting them. But thla bird,
coosldered by 110111e to be the wariest r1 aU animals, usually Is
not bagged by IQI'e luck. So you're going to have to do 8011le

"'

MICHIGAN

University
graduated

3 - The Swiday Times-Sentinel, F'eb. 22, 1976

is ·no e~~sy trick for hunters

',

/ .

•

""

New wing of hospital
will open March first
I

~

•

ch;.1nged in goes to Howard Dailey

R l•Q Gran de

.

.
'

I

I

I
I I POUNDS

I

I.
I
I

PHY

..........
•• Dehydrotod
Atl "'?"nic ·
.

~··

110. '1.tl

I
I

I
I

I

co.

- SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA STORE • DOWNTOWN G

99

REGULAR 25'
VEGETABLE &amp; FLOWER

PACKET

-'
"

"

.
,,

~fo~~~
10~
RICE

,EACH

�2 - The Su.nda:. Till lt':-; ,~·n tinl'l . FdJ. tl., 1~7 6
tl1 '-Ill I

Bu(:keye Hill.· honor roll '

II0/':1

rt!f~'\~llt!!l'i

.-;.

I 11l•,

\.,U1Q io l

f~,\•

) ollr11'·&lt; 1J\

1975 76
Scme ~ter Avl!'ra ge
- A II " A" Student
PA PerfC'c t Atlen dance

ACR I"BUSI NE SS

John

Br\· a nt
M ic hcl e l
Cunn1nghclm , Ra lph Fac tor.
R.og er Hil l. James McKemie.
Donald M ill er , John M il liken .
Rex Philli ps and Dav id Pope .

AGR I-MECHANICS

Exline .
James
Saunders, - Aaron Spencer,
Ke vi n Wood and James
Wooldridge II
Earl

Mark

Black .

Phil

Leonard ,

AUTO BODY - Timothy
Lambert
AUTO MECHAN ICS, JR .
-.. P~ul CeciL Jr .. Barry
Johnson, Paul. Ousley , James
Russell . Paul Spence, Ronald
St i tfler-PA, Timothy Ward -

1)/\ 1 A

/\ (COli N liNt .

and - Mary Candance West.

OHO SR . Deborah
BlJrnehe, Tina Casey , S~ i rley
Chambers , - Coleen Clark . Deborah Oew i tt-PA . Loretta
Dun can. Cathy Greene .
Ka t hy Halley , Catherine
Harvey, - Jean McWilliams,

PA .
AUTO MECHANICS, SR.

- Cindy Pauley -PA, Judith
Phillips, - Virginia Powe lL

-

- Amanda Re ce , Tam my
Riley, Marsha Thornton and
Viola Wills.

Stephen Elliott , - Robert

Johnson and Er ic Spr inger .

BLDG .

TRADES

Michael
Burns ,
Mark
Crawford . Richa rd HaiL
G lendon , Hou se - Jesse
John Son . Marcus Ki nder ,
· Garland Parsons. Frederick
Sydow, Gary Tribby and

DISTRIBUTION
&amp;
MARKET IN G - Amy Beck ,
Lew is
Bodimer .
Mary
Gardner , Brenda Glassburn ,
Robert Grim and Caro l
Smith-PA .
DRAFTI NG
Dana
Exline, · Carlos J ustice-PS,

~ 1 -~ &lt;

11hn
I' •lqlr 1!'
1~.11Pv v,
~ .rlh•r11H
l{t~!ll•
,mrt
lo.,,dh;- Yn h ..
I I S •,
Dr •hltit• 1\dl.rn •,
N1.11H t•,
1\o~rr y
Rfwrtd,r
11 1't, llt..· ~
T,,m 11w llvrnc·lt \
PJ\ ,

(..:1!'()1

( I (' rt 1l•C'Ih

(Cirol Df'nn..;y I un_,,, G1h'&gt;On
P,1t nua Juhn.,on f ,1 mmy
Lahrn1N . C&lt;'!rol l cw1-..,
Ben l t ~

Onlinan t:e Top maintenance job

~

lPrt.•···'

Clon.1 An.H:11pdn-.:
D~·lJr, l
r or t11 vr
M1 ch.lL' I Fort nn .
{.Ill r yl C.rL'C'tl r111d
V1 c"- i
HubbMd . E Vf.'retl Sturgill.
Oebortlh S hJr tt:!v,tnl .1r1 d
M.1rk Willi.nm s.
OHO JR .
Cher yl Be ll ,
Chri sti Cook . Tcu nt Co:-o. .
R~ lph Coy le, Debra Denney,
- Dora Durh.nm . P.lm e lo
E ssman , Reta flJIIer , Christy
Grant. - Pamela Haffell .
Barbara Hall. - Pam ela
M cNeese, - Ta nya Robinson

\

~\.llhl.&lt;

Pen n 1ngt o n ,

Ly l1a

Robert s, Brendil Runyon .
Sherri Sond er s- PA, Minnie
Sk inne r and J&lt;imberlv Staten.

INDU STR IAL
MAIN ·
TENANCE - Terry B~rron ,

Jesse Duncan, Harry Eddy,
Ni cholas Morse II, Larry
Norton , - Raymond Pen nington , Michael Poetker and

Jim Skidmore.
·
MERCHANDI SE
AC.
COU NT ING ~ Susan Clarl&lt;.
~Je nn ifer

Coleman, Patricia
Knaeble,
- P·e-nelope
Mulholand. Colin Saunders
and Cathy Strai t.

OFF ICE MACHINES -

Debra Ball , Pamela Cooper.
PA , - Rebecca Gill , Debra
Grate. - Brenda Kent. lnana

HIO liH1\NIJI·: - Village
1ffi cials he r e in s pe cial
;ession Friday adopted four
ordinances. resc inded two
others upon the re corn.
mendation of Village Solici tor
James Bennett, and an1ended
three sec tions of the Village
Code of Ordinances.
The new legisla tion pertained to penalty schedules in
tra ffi c cas~s before the
mayor's court.
Street commissioners
Frank Petrie, Don Call and
Curt Ramey outlined plans
for street and alley repairs,
installation of new s treet
signs and the cleaning of
ditches . "No solicitor" signs
will be erected in the village .
All salesmen henceforth must
obtain a license from the
village for a $25 fee.
Council approved purchase
of a new adding machine.
Fire Ch ief Robert Br andeberry outlin ed repairs
needed for the fire tr ucks a nd
Mayor Marlin Wedemeyer
informed coun ci l applications
for the funding of the water
tower are being processed .
Atty. Bennett reported on
the progress of · all legal
documenlo:; for the mayor 's
court and Harold Wiseman of
the. Wiseman Insurance
Agency reviewed in creases in
village insurance policies .

.'1-:W HA VEN , W. Va . -

Appnintment of Howard A.
Dailey to s uperintendent o!
maintenan c e
e ff ec tive
February 1, was announced
Saturday by J ohn C. Wolfe,
Plant Manager, Graham
Pla nt, Foote Mineral Company near here .
Dailey was first emp loyed
at the Graham Plant as an

Kingsbury
News Notes

Recent visitors of Mrs.
Neva King were Mrs. Helena
Koehler , Reba Layton, Howe tte , Mrs. Wealthy Will
Brenda Shaf er , - Karen
and Mrs. Janeth Beat. Over
Smith, - Den ise Stephens and
the wee kend Mrs. King
Veneda Zinn .
Jerry Wade . Jr.
at ~eyno ldsburg wi th
visited
WELDING
Mike
Bell
.
COSMETOLOGY I · Mike Gee and Bruce Mullins.
Rhonda
Dav is, - De l la
Allen Perry, Mark _The iss.
her sister, ·Mrs . Nora Cwn·
Harmon-PA , Nor ma Israel,
FOO D SERVICE- Mabel
rnins.
Harrison , T!l)a Lindamood
K imber
Perry ,
Debbie
In 1962 American astronaut
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Seve rt -PA
and 'Marsha
and Billie Marcu m .
Mrs. Wayne Beal were Mr .
FORESTRY - .- Michael John Glenn landed safeiy
Winters -PA.
Carper, Dav id Ch isholm , after three orbits of the earth
COS METOLOG Y II
and Mrs . Kirk Chevalier o!
Vick i Sowers .
Thomas Haynes and Kenneth in a spacecraft.
Chester, Mr. and Mrs . Roger
Young, Wesley, a nd Yevette
and Mr. and Mrs . Russell
Well. ·
support work being done by veterinarians
COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - The Ohio
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean
Drs. Mauricio H. Pineda a nd Lloyd C.
Animal Health Foundation said Saturday
and Mr. and Mrs . J ohn
Faulkner to develop inexpensive and
its first research grant of $1 ,000 will
Walter Dean a nd s on ,
acceptable contraceptives for cats and
support research to find a chemical means
Jeremy, visited Mr . and Mrs.
of controlling reproduction in pet animals.
dogs.
Garold Gilkey, Tammy,
The Foundation, a non -profit
Cindy and Rick, at Athens
organization formed by members of:-;rr=::
e-~
recently.
REP. PERKINS HONORED
Ohio Veterinary Medical -Association, said·
Mrs. Elizabeth Murray has
LEXINGTON, Ky. (UP! ) ~ Ohio State
the grant has been made to the Colorado
been
staying with her sister,
Upiversity' s Na tional Research and
State University Development Fund to
Mrs
.
Della
Douglas, while sbe
Development Center for Voca ti ona l
was
a
patient
a t Holzer
Education Saturday honored U. S. Rep .
Medical
Ce
n
ter.
Other
AUTOS DAMAGED
Carl D. Perkins, D-Ky., for his "outCONTRA
CT
ACCEPTED
visitors
of
the
late
Mrs.
POMEROY Two autos had
standing national service to voca tiona l
~
WASHINGTON
(
UP!
)
Douglas
were
Mr
.
and
Mrs .
moderate damage in an accident on Route
education .''
The photoengrav e rs ' local r:iana Murray a nd Mr. and
248"1n Chester a t 10 :30 a.m. Saturday. The
voted Saturday to accept a Mrs. Richard Houdashelt and
1,600 COI\'IING TO COLUMBUS
department of Sheriff Robert Hartenbach
new con tract oHered to the Mr . Gary King .
COLUMBUS ( UP!) - More than 1,600
said a car driven · by William A. Young ,
Post's • 37
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl
persons were expected to attend the 92nd. ,Washington
Route I , Shade, pulled from an alley into
photoengravers . The action visited recently with Clyde
annual meeting of the Ohio Veterinary
the path of a westbound car driven by
leaves onl y the Pos t 's Harrison a t Middleport.
Medical Association which opened a four Hilda White, Route 1 Long Bottom. There
pressmen
out on a s trike tha t
Recent visi tors of Mr . and
day session Saturday.
were no injuries and no citations.
began las t Oct. I. All other Mrs. Olen Ha rrison were Mr .
cr aft unions who followed the and Mrs. Philip Harrison,
pressmen out on the street Rodney and Trevor, of
have r c 'urned to work.
Weste rville. Other visitors
were Mr . and Mrs. Dale
Harri son .
TWO TO RETIR E
Mrs . Helen Dais s pent
CLEVELAND ( UP! )
Su nday afte r noon visiting
Two Na tional
Weather with Mr. and Mrs . John Dean
Serv ice forecas ters here will and also called on Mr . and
re tire Fe b. 29 ufter putti ng Mrs. John Walter Dean and
POINT PLEASANT - A Monday, March I. 'fhis ad· two 38 bed units above, ad- in a total of 76 years service Jeremy.
modern, new wing to dition is comprised of three ding 76 new patien t ac- with the wea ther bW"eau .
Frederick K . Ophnger joi ned
Pleasant Valley Hospital floors holding 10 doctors' commodations.
here is scheduled to open suites on the ~round Door and
All the rooms are semi- the weather bureau in Day ton
In 1872, the Metropolitan
in October of 1937 and H.
--------------;:
-----------private
,
color-coordinated
in
Museum
of Art in New York
1
1
Davis Dyc k began hi s
1 light shades of green, peach, weather bureau caree r in City w.S opened to the public
for the first time.
and gold. Patient rooms also
are modernly equipped with
I
) ' color television sets, piped in
GERALDINE HOFFMAN
oxygen and suc tion ,.a nd Hill·
PAfl~TIJ"t ~ Gerald ine Rom electric beds.
Hollman, 7J, Rt. 2, Patriot
This addition to Pleasant
died Friday at Holze; . Valley Hospital nea rly
Medical Center.
doubles the size of the
Born January 18, 190J. she
h
was the daughter of the late existing structure. T e
James Luther Staats and hospital is presently 35,000
Margaret Jane Balser Staats. square feet and the new wing
Survivors Include her will add an additional 33,000
husband, Dencil 0 . Hoffman ;
two
sons,
James
L., square feet.
Singleton, Northup , and
Hospital Building and
Milford D. Hoffman. Lan - Equipment Corporation of St.
caster ; a daughter, Wendy L
Louis, Mo . constructed the
Divers, New Haven ; two
sisters , Mrs. Pauline Grin · facility in !&lt;lss than a year .
stead, New Haven, and Mrs . When construction com~
Frances Goodnlte , Cln - menced last March 19, it was
clnnatl ; two brothers, Pete prOjected that the-wing would
Staats, New Haven, and not be completed until April
James
Staats,
Point
Pleasant; IJ grandchildren , or May, 1976. However, good
and
eight
great . weather and careful planning .
grandchildren .
brought completion earlier
Preceding Mrs. Hoffman in th
·
h
death was a daughter. Bill ie
an anticipated. T e addition is uniquely constructed
J . Mull ins.
Funeral services will be in a urace track" design with
DR. GLASSMAN
held Monday at l:JO p.m . at double corridors on each
the Foglesong Funeral Home floor . It has capabilities of
ln Mason . Rev. John E . Uf.
POt NT PLEASANT - Dr . terback will officiate and the adding two more noors above
Dan P . Gla ssman , 65 , burial will be at the Hoffman the present structure..
prominent Point Pleasant Cemetery at Letart. Visiting
An Open House is
physician and family doctor,
hours will be any time atter 2 scheduled Sunday, Feb. 29
died Friday
In Holzer p.m
. Sunday, at lhe funeral
Medical Center following a home .
when the public is invited to ·
series of heart attacks.
·
tour the addition. According
PEGGY RENEA BUSH
to Executive Director James
Dr. Glassman had been a
GALLIPOLIS ~ Pe ggy
Farley, hos pital personnel
L.
medical doctor In Point Renea Bush, of 207 Kelton
Pleasant since 1946.
have
been working' long hours
Rd .,
Gallipolis ,
was
F rlends may call at the pronounced dead on arrival the past several weeks in
Crow Funeral Home from J. at Holzer Medir:al Center
tO p.m. Sunday. The body will around 9 a.m . Saturday . She preparing for the opening.
be taken to Erie. Pa . to the D. was the two monfh .old Refreshments will be served
C. E$urlon Funeral Home daughter of James and during the Open Hou ~ .
where services will be held Sandra K. Bryan Bush , born
Tuesday morning .
Dec . 14, 1975, In Gall ipolis.
She is survived by one
Sunday Times-Sentinel
. Or . Glassman , a veteran at' brother and one sister, James
Pub l ish ed every Sund ay
the U.S . Army Medical Corps Bush II, age four, and Angela
by
The
Ohio
Valley
in WW II, was a member of Kay Bush, age two ; her
Publishing Co .
GALLIPOLI.S
Minturn Lodge AF and AM, gra·n dparents. Mrs. Electa
DAILY TRIBUNE
Pat Wilson Shrine , Benl
Bush. Gallipolis and Arlen
' 825 Third Ave. , Ga!llpolis,
Kedem Templar and Scottish Bryan , Gallipolis. and great OhiO A563l.
·
Rite of Charleston ; member grandparents, Aaron and
Published every weekda y
of the Knight's Templars of Frances Bryan, Gallipol is.
evening exce pt Sa _turd ay.
Secon d Class Postag e Pa 1d
Point Pleasant; member of
Funeral services will be
at Gallipolis, Oh io 45 631.
the Loyal Order of Moose, held 1 p.m. Monday at the
THE D A ILY SE NTINE L
Point Pleasant, member of Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
Ill Court St., Pom eroy , 0 .
the West Virginia Med ical Home with Ron Adams of the
45769. Published every week .
day evening except Satur Association ; member of the Henderson Church of Christ
day . Entered as second class
West Virg i nia American ofllclatlng .
m all ing matter at Pomeroy ,
Medical Associati on and
Burial wilt be In Mound Hill
Ot'lio Post Office .
member of the International Cemetery. Friends may catl
By carrier dai ly and
Brotherhood of Magicians at the funeral home from 7
Sunday 75c per week . Motor
route $3 ,2 5 per m onth .
Ring , 197.
until 9 p.m. SUnday.
MAIL

Foundation has$1,000 for its first project

e lectrician in the main·
tcnance department in 1955.
In March of 1968 he was
promoted
to
assistant
foreman in the rriaintenance
department and in 1969 to
foreman . On October I , 1972
Daily
became
general
foreman in the Maintenance
Department, serving in that
capacity until his promotion
as s uperintendent.
Dailey attended Pomeroy
Public Schools and graduated
!rom Pomeroy High School .in
1941. He attended umo
University from 1941·1942 .
From 1942-1945 he served in
the United States Air Force .
Following this military
service he attended and
graduated from the Spartan
School of Ae ronautic~ in

Area Death s

· ~

.....

"'
HOWARD A. DAILEY

from

Rush

teered tree servic.es to all
men whom he e)(amined for
entering_ the service from

Mason County during WW II.

Harold. both of Portl•nd, and
Charles of Middleport.

He Is surv i ved by his wife·,
Funeral services will be
Jean Bailey Glassman , a held Monday at 2 p.m . at
reolstered nurse; a daughter. Morse Chapel with the Rev.
Annajean Glassman , at Freeland Norris ofliciating.
home; lhr-. b . "oers, Ralph Burial will be in Morse
Ivan Glassman, of Erie. F'a. Chapel Cemetery . Friends
and Irvin and Ivan Glassman may call at Ewing Funera l
of Miami, Fla ,
Home 'after ,1 p.m . today .

d i spatches

credited to the

newspaper and also the loca l
ne".\('S publish ed herein .

'·' )

ENJOY TASTY DINNER

,.

••

SPECIALS AT MURPHY'S

j

." ';

FAMILY RESTAURANT

.....

~

4 TO 8 PM ONLY

•••

Tender Boned Chicken w~h SaYOIJ
mashed p.otatoes, vegetables, roll ..... :........ '1.49

..,.

Baked Steak dinner with tossed ·salad,
gravy, vegetable, roll and butter............... '1.49
Beans and Com Bread

''

"'··f

...

'

w~h

~
........
.......................... ............... ~

"

"Home-made" Chicken and Dumplings
and butter ..................................... 11.36·

..
' 1

"ALL
Served with tossed salad. warm roll and buller .

'I
·,.J

ONLY '1.69
Dinner Specials Effective February 23 Thru March 20, 1976

'l •(I

G •.C. MURPHY CO. -

THE FRIENDLY STORE
PLAZA
'· :J;

'.

...

OJ '

Bagging a wild turkey

GALLIPOLIS - A fOOd
pantry to relieve hunger in
Gallia County was set up as a
goal of a gro~p of cl~rgy and
laypersons meeting Tuesday,
Feb. 17 after looking into
emergency hunJ!!er needs in

the poet's corner,
THE GIFI' mAT PLEASES
Writteu In 19« ou tbe Island of Corsica
Little girls, the roses you gave me
Have. withered and little remains,
But the gilt ijlat you gave, dear children,
Will ever its beauty retain.

.

In the 10 years of turkey hunting In Meigs County, only two
gobblen have been bagged, both In Olive Townahlp. As a
matter of fact, ooly 44 hunters have tried their luck legally In
the county over the last 10 years, and none did last season.
· Gallla CoiUlty has fared a litue better, but not like Vinton
or Hocking Counties: 198 Galllans have hunted in the last
decade, only 31lall year. Sbtleen have gone home and had a
turkey dinner, but only two did in 1975. Greenfield Townshlp
seems to be the hottest place, but Hunllngton Township has
produced five turkeys.
A aurprlalng fact Ia the size of these local birds. In 1975, ten
l!liJounders were harvested in the southern counties, nine 13
pounders, eight 18 pounders, and would you believe, one 24
pounder!
.
Your best bets are still ViniJII, Hocking, and Ross
Counties. Hocking has recorded 108 kills ,
I've got one more article to present to you on turkeys,
maybe some evening this week, or next Sunday, but then Den
Talk may be discontinued, at least on a regular basis. Until the
next " turkey talk" , be a good sport. Ilo!t' t forget that fox
season closes Feb. 29. Also, try to get out to the grouse hunt
being sponsored by the Ohio River VaUey Bird Dog Club on
Feb. 28.

J. PAUL MOSSMAN
YOUNGSTOWN ~ The
Maboalng Nallonal Bank
has IDDOUDced retirement
o! J. Paul Moasmilll wbo
had sei'Ved as tbe Bank's
VIce President In charge o!
Public Allain the past tt,&lt;,
years. Prior lo jolnlnt! the
bank be had rellred as
Executive VIce President
of the YoungsloWII Area
Chamber of Commerce
where be bad served for 14
years. He bad previously
beld Chamber o! Com·
merce poRts lo Lakewood,
Ohio, Jamestown, New
York, Binghamton, New
York and Gallipolis.

Ladder fund at $1,215 Four bonds
forfeited
POMEROY - Donations
for an aerial ladder lor Meigs
County as of Friday totaled
$1 ,215.41 according to Mrs.
Don Thomas. Mrs. Thomas
said persons wishing to have
a donation picked up should
contact her at her residence
289Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy .
Checks may be mailed to the
above address but should be
made out to the Meigs County
F ire Departm ent Citizens
Fund. ~Jiyoile wishing to
donal'&gt; out prefer not to have
!he'r name published may do
s~"' l)n req ue_s t.
Latest contributors are

Mrs. Edward J . Smith, Dale
C. Warner A~encv. Mildred
Hawley, Mrs. Cora Beegle,
Shirley Y. Beegle, Gerald E.
Shusler, Ohio Pallet Co.,
Hartley Shoes, Mr. ani! Mrs.
Owen Watson, Mr . and Mrs.
Harlan Wehrung, Laurel Cliff
Health Club, Court St. Cab
Co., Gene Bass, James
O'Brien , Davis Insurance,
Lewis Harris and Bob 's C.B.

The beauty of the flowers has faded ,
As fadeth the beauty of flowers ;
But the gift that you gave me is growing
By giving me beautiful hours.

·roP

gav~

Far more than tile roses you

37
BAG

1

I

I

SPHAGNUM

r,
'

'

37
BAG

I '

:

. . .

.
'

$ 37 ..::

Here is my prayer for these children:
God keep them from hann and wrong ,
May their days be many and sweet.
May their lives be happy and long.
It is not just the flowers we give
It 's not just the flowers that bless.
It 's the kindness and love we give
With any gift that is the best.

REG. $4.99
SUNSHINE
SPHAGNUM

-PEAT MOSS
~RESSURE

PACKED

::

:
......"'-=

BALE

~

;

-

:

~

_,..,...
'.

"'

, ~I

_,

FRAMED
(techn ico lor )

RADIO AWARDED
man is back .
Color ca rtoon .
RACINE - The Racine
Fire Dept. awarded a
Bearcat police radio to Ray
Show starts it 7:00p .m .
Blland of Galllpolis, Pete
Simpson said Saturday.
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.

THRU WED·, FEB. 25TH

CARTOON

.CUSH.ONFLOR®
VINYL. RUNNIR
Wipe clean cushioned vinyl con
be cut t·o fit .
lovely poll?rns.

l•shlon~
. . ,. .In

~.;•:;:.•Y:.---

174

MISSES REG. s6.44
SHORT SLEEVE PRINT

· ·3 ·

:.:{

"

I
I
I

•I"

•

PANT
TOPS

PANTS

an01 ...

····)

REG. $2;47 • 3 x 6 PIIT

DOU8UKNIT

HU

l

j

$494

PAl R

Allraciive jttcquCifd patlerns and le• lure'd sol i d~ with c loslic wa lubands .
Machine wa~hab le . no-iro n. 10 ro 18.

REG. $6.99 Wamens Sizes

U.OYDS

$5.49

•
•
•
•
,•

.

••

$16.88

•

•

'
••
•

••

BATTERY

REG.:

'4.47

l

REG.

7 FUNCTION

•

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY

POCKET

BATH
SCALI

Moisture - re~oisloi'lt

'3

Wh11e boled ename l f inish. I,Voskoble 11in)l l mol

"

'

and easy - li::Hcod d ia l

REG.

~~t . $1176

Sq. Root

'3

PI
Plus 1-Exchange Keys

S ID

42" • 60" • 66"

88

.

~harge

,s).'l. ·

REG. 139.99

FEATURES POWERFUL
""
. MERCURY VAPOR
BULB 175 WATT

EASY
INSULATION

.,
'

Charge -

II!

'149

"

'.\

All aluminum panels
and frame . Baked on
enamel finish. Sloped
roof styling. Sliding
·doors. Ideal slorage .l or
mower ond garden tools. ·

New Hours
10 AM to 11 PM

DUSK TO ·DAWN$

SECURITY
LIGHT

SOLD UNASSEMBLED

Daily
REG. sC!f

r:.sr.-,•••
PIPIUI
Utili

CALCULATOR

Percent

'4.47

.ALL ALUMINUM STORAGE

DI-NNER BOX

2nd&amp;OM

"'
' ....

~

"'

POLYISTIR

• Rus~ poly hinges

No Coupons · No Limit

.,

TONITE
Sun. Feb. 22

JUST ONE OF MANY BIG
SPORTSWf·A R FASHION
VALUES AT MURPHY'SI

TOILII' SIAl'

No Subt.

,.,;

TONJGHTTHRU
TUESDAY

MEIGS THEATRE

PRICES EFFECTIVE 4 DAYS ONLY

THE FAMILY PLACE TO SAVE

WMI1'1 IIIAMILID

PO~ND
l 99~
BAG
•
Covers nearlY
400 sq. feet .

G.C.MU

'

'"

I
s

oppco

• MASHED POTATOES
&amp; GRAVY
eSLAW

I lu'flln ·
'

DIAL

..
4 CUBIC
.
..:=
51
$
FEET

;
...=

•

LENS

3 PIECES CHICKEN .

.......

11

.'

,,,

COLO\l ·

LARGE

a:z

j..
,~

herself to return on Tuesday .
February 24, •t 7:30p .m. to
share idea's about the
location of a pantry and begin
plans for opening one .
Everyone who would like to
become a part of this in·
terested group should come
to the Presbyterian Church,
51 State Street, Tuesday,
February 24 , at 7:30 .p.m .

ELECTRIC

l..
~

•

That " Walking Tall "

Carney A. Ball
P .O.Box 199, Bidwell, Ohio

· ~------~~-----------)

'
FEBRUARY 22 THRU
FEBRUARY 21TH

-:..

found. Some families on
limited Incomes just are not
able to provide these specia l ·
products.
A second major area of
conce rn was for those
families who run out of f9od
before the first of the month
when food stamps or other
resources are made available
to them. Included in this
category were people who
have been burned out or who
might have had their money
or food stamps for the month
stolen. Presently, there are
very limited ways of helping
these people.
In response to these needs
the group began discussing
the possibility of a "community food pantry ." Slides
of such a pantry in Columbus
were seen .
The group en ded the
meeting with the challenge to
go out looking for an ideal
location for such a pantry .
Eve r yone in attendance
comm itted himself , an d

i.
i

:X

BAG ·

me,

Far more than the gilt from the !land,
T'was a gilt from the heart of sweet children:
Though I was a stanger to them.

.

SOIL
35 LB.
BAG

..-:3• •
...
..=
3...
.....

~
- ~---

a

While I was a tired, weary soldier,
And was touring for pleasure and rest,
The gift that you gave me, sweet children
I count It the dearest and best.

-

POMEROY
Four
defendan Is forfeited bonds in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews Friday
night, all four being posted on
trespassing charges.
The four allegedly parked
without authorization on the
Powell's Super Valu parking
lot and each forfeited a $10
bond . They are Debbie
McGuire, Pomeroy; Marlene
Harrison, P9meroy ;_ Connie
INJURY SUFFERED
·
POMEROY
The Warner , Minersville , and
Pomeroy Emergency $quad Sidney Manuel, Portland .
Therilt Randolph, Reeds·
answered a call to the
ville
, forfeited a $327.70 bond
Crossroads at 2:24 p .m .
on a charge ot ar~vmg
posted
Friday for Doris E. Halfhill ·
JOINS HONORARY
while
intoxicated,
and
MARlETT A Marietta who suffered a laceration o! Richard Kowalski, Colwn·
College senior Jo Ellen Diehl the neck in an auto accident. bus, forfeited a $30 bond
of Pomeroy hae been in- She was taken to Veterans posted on a charge of driving
ducted into Omicron Delta Me morial Hospital where she left of center. Fined $100 and
Kappa,
a
leadership was treated and released.
~osts in tbe court upon conhonorary , An English major ,
of an assault and
viction
ASK TO WED
Miss Diehl is active in the ·
battery
charge was Basil
POMEROY - Marriage
Marietta Co llege Singers,
Haynes,
Pomeroy.
The Sigma Sigma Sigma licenses were issued to Oscar
Sororily and the Marcolian , · Vernon Imboden, Jr ., 25,
student newspaper. A 1912 Minersville , and Virginia
graduate of Meigs HS, she is Mae Smith, 29, Columbus,
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs . and tC Jerry Clyde Ferguson,
36, Middleport, and Belly Lou
James Diehl , Mulberry
Heig&gt;ts.
· Ferguson, 32, Middleport :
HOME DAMAGED
SYRACUSE
-The
Syracuse Fire Department
was called Thursday at 3:45
p.m . to a mobile home OC·
DIRT
EXTRACTION
METHOD
I
cupied by Patty Roush, Third
I
RE
1
1
Streakless Machine Wall Washing
1 St. Rollie Stewart, fireman,
Upholstery - Windows· Floors
1 reported the fire was believed
1
Complete .Une of . . .
t to have been caused by
1.
de!ectlve wiring. Damages
1
Cleaning Equipment &amp;. Supplies
were estimated at $1,000.
There.
was no insurance. The
1
home is owned by Kenneth
I
FORFRIENDLYFREEESTIMATES
Lawson, Chester . Eleven
Call 675-5572 After 4 P.M.
t men answered the call .

i ADVANCED CLEANING SERVICE

MICHIGAN

Other pr~ram s which 'help
recipients of food s l&lt;lmps get
the most out of their buying
power are the Coun ty Extension Agency and the
Project
Hope
Home
Management program, and
the Senior Citizens Nutrition
Program provides meals for
those 60 years and older.
Cur ren tly tha t · facility
leeds between 30 and 45
persons per day at the center
and they hOpe to institute the
delivery of 16 meals per day
to some elderly who are
totally home bound. Finally,
it was noted that the welfare
department will shortly be
institutin g a program of
Home Real th Aides who will
help senior citizens who are
limited in what they can do
lor themselves.
couple of major problem
areas where needs still exist
were noted;:
Representatives fr om
Holzer Hospital told of persons put on medical diets who
could not ~fford the items for
that diet or who did not have
accessibility to those items .
Particuwrly
highlighted
was the need of babies placed
on milk substitutes. Often
these substitutes ·are not
ava ilable an d are highly
expensive 'when they can be

Gallia County . The meeting
began with the group &gt;haring
information co ncerning
existing programs to help the
hungry. It was noted that the
Food Stamp Program is the
Jar~ est of these .

CARPETS STEAM CLEANED

SUBSCR IPTION RATE S

Mr. Conger Is survived by
three sons, Clarence and

'""

...

VALUE!

Medical College, Chlcago, ' llt .
He served as lli Mason County
Health · Officer and volun -

"'

''"'

SUPER

The
Gallipolis
Da ily
Tri bun e i n Ohio and Wesf
Vi rgin ia orie year S22 .0(l ; six
months $11.50 ; thre e monthS
$7 ,00 . El se where S26 .00 per
year ; six months $13.50:
three months $7 .50; motor
r o ute S3 .2S monthly .
The Dally Sentinel, on n
y ea r S22 .00 ; Six month :;
$11 .50 ; three months $7 .00 .
Elsewhere
S26 . 00 ;
six
months $1 3.50 ; three mon t hs
$7 .50.
"
The United Pr ess In,.
l ern (ltio nat is exclusively
entitled t o the us e to r
publication of all news

"'

wife , Roberta, at 570 Grant
Street, Middleport. Th~y are
the parents of two children ,
one daughter who is married
and a son who lives at home.

Tulsa, Okia. and from the
RCA Institute, New York, N.
Y. and the Cleveland Institute
of E lectronics .
Dailey resides with his

POITING
-SOIL

C.ORNELIUS CONGER
PORTLAND - Cornelius
Conger , 61, Rt. 1, Portland,
died Saturday morning at
Veterans Memorial Hospital .

Food pantry may relieve hunger in Gallia Co.

~e~.

MICHIGAN r ,.
PEAT ·~ 1 PEAT MOSS· II

He attended West VIrginia
and
was

Den Talk

ByGft&amp;BaUey
'
POMEROY - I promised more facta iJn the wild turkeys In
southern Ohio, 80 if some of you novices want to try your lucy;
thla year, maybe u.e.e will help,
Melp County has had four tranaplanta of wild turkeys, but ·
relatively no bunting pressure. TUrkeys in Meigs County, r1
coune, are DOt as raunerous as In other areas, but there Ia a
suffldent pcpulatlon to warrant hunting them. But thla bird,
coosldered by 110111e to be the wariest r1 aU animals, usually Is
not bagged by IQI'e luck. So you're going to have to do 8011le

"'

MICHIGAN

University
graduated

3 - The Swiday Times-Sentinel, F'eb. 22, 1976

is ·no e~~sy trick for hunters

',

/ .

•

""

New wing of hospital
will open March first
I

~

•

ch;.1nged in goes to Howard Dailey

R l•Q Gran de

.

.
'

I

I

I
I I POUNDS

I

I.
I
I

PHY

..........
•• Dehydrotod
Atl "'?"nic ·
.

~··

110. '1.tl

I
I

I
I

I

co.

- SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA STORE • DOWNTOWN G

99

REGULAR 25'
VEGETABLE &amp; FLOWER

PACKET

-'
"

"

.
,,

~fo~~~
10~
RICE

,EACH

�S - The Sunday Times,&amp;ntinel ,

Homemakers'
Circle
BY BE1TIE CLARK

Eo..,.....

ExteuteaA.-, ·
Homo

•

"SEWING FOR SPRING"
GALLIPOLIS - Use fabric io duplicate the fashion look of
ready-to-wear in sewn-at-home garments. To achieve best
results, select sewing notions an&lt;J techniques that relate to the
fashion• fabric.
Soft knits are used to achieve the soft, supple fashion look
which is important now and for spring. You'll find a wide
variety of these soft lmit fabrics. One example is nylon jersey
- a very supple Iabrie with a soft, luxurious look and texture.
Select a pattern that enhances such a Iabrie, especlally its
ability to gather and drape beautifully.
Soft knits will need special handling. Experiment to find
sewing notions and techniques that will help you create a
smooth garment. You'll need to use a soft interfacing to
provide shape without stiffness. Often a lightweight fusible
interfacing applied to the facing will work well.
Experiment on fabric scrapll to determine the best
hemming method. In some soft knits, hand hemming stitches
•
will show no matter how carefully or loosely the stitches are
placed. Often you can achieve a smooth hem with fusing web.
ENGAli~MENT ANNOUNCED - Announcement is
Use
a narrow strip of the fusing web - about one-fourth to
BETROTHAL ANNOUNCED- Mr. and Mrs. Robert
made of the engagement of Miss Dianna Rose Root of
thr~ighths
inch wide. Place ibis narrow strip about one. MISS ADAMS ENGAGED- Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R.
J. Roush, Mason, W.Va. announce the engagement and
Long Bottom, to Josepb Paul Hutchins of Louisville, Ky .
fourth
inch
from
the
upper
edge
of
the
hem
and
fuse
It
in
place.
Adams,
362 Debby Drive, Gallipolis, announce the
approaching marriage of their daughter, Pamela Jean, to
The brlde-&lt;!lect is the daughter of Mrs. Delores Provence,
There
are
several
brands
of
fusing
webs
OJi
the
market,
so
engagement
of their daughter, Nancy Kay, to James A.
Marshall (Stormy) See, son ol Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Long Bottom, and Jack Root of Mentor. Mr. Hutchins is
follow
package
directions
carefully.
Mullins,
son
of
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt V. Mullins, 300 Second
Marcus &amp;e, Jerrico Rd., Point Pleasa·nt, W. Va. and
the son of Mrs. Mary Hutchins, Louisville, Ky. Miss Root
the
fiber
content
and
Iabrie
structure
will
Sometimes
Ave.,
Gallipolis.
The bridHiect, a graduate of Gallla
grandson of Mrs. Georgia Cheney, Gallipolis. Roth are
is a 1976 mid-tenn graduate of Eastern High School and
Influence the sewing techniques you use. Some soft wool and
Academy High School, is a seniQr at. the Ohio state
employes of the General James M. Gavin PlanI. A June
her fiance, a 1972 graduate of Seneca High &amp;hool,
fur blend knits are very delicate and require a light touch in
University, Division of Pbysical Therapy, Columbus,
wedding is planned.
Louisville, Ky. is employed at the All Weather SysteinS,
sewing. Usually a light woven interfacing works better on
Ohio. She isalsoa member of the collegiate chapter of the
Inc., in Louisville. Wedding plans are incomplete.
these fabrics. Edge finishes, if needed, often must be done by
Delta Gamma Sorority at Ohio State. Her fiance, a 1969
hand to reduce bulk.
graduate of Pallia Ac~demy, also attended the Ohio state
Suedes and suede-look fabrics create an Important fashion
University, and is now employed by Mullins Enterprises,
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
look this season. These fabrics may be used for an entire
Inc. in Gallipolis.
••
•
garment or for trim. Some new synthetic fabrics look and feel
0
like real suede, but can he machine-washed and dryer-dried.
To achieve good results with suede-look fabrics, select
••
''
0
patterns
with simple, straight lines. These fabrics probably
0
••
•
will not ease well, so avoid style details, such as set-in sleeves, .
•
·•
that call lor easing.
0
GALLIPOLIS - A shower Null, mother-iii-law of the
Most of these fabrics will be pennanenUy marked by pins
0
o
POMEROY - Flowers and by hard pressing. Use sharp, line pins and pin in the seam was given recenUy in honor of bride, Mrs. · Mary Kay
: were reported sent to Mrs. allowances only. Use dres.'!lllaker's chalk and mark on the Miss Beth McGhee at the Robinson, Mrs. Dean Mason,
: Dorothy Roach, a patient at wrong side of the fabric. Or use dressmaker's carbon and a home of John Felker, Lower Kim 'Gooderham, Mrs. Sue
•
•
• Holzer Medical Center, when smooth edge marking wheel-check this technique on a Iabrie River Rd., Gallipolis. Games Jones and Liz Martin .
were played with pri~es
Sending gilts were Mrs. "
: the Chatter Club met recently . scrap to he sure it doesn' t mar the suede surface.
at the home of Mrs. Marie
stitch seams once- accurately! Stitch marks will sbow if awarded to Mrs. Paul Fuller, Gloria SU:vers, Mrs. Gloria
Leifheit. .
.
you must rip and relocate seam. Avoid backstil!;j)ing - tie Mrs. 'Ron Calhoun, and Adams and Nancy, Mrs. ,,
mother of the bride to be, Georgia Cook, Mrs. Mary
Susan Cleland threadS at the end of a line of stitching.
.
Mrs.
Bud
McGhee. Ellen Lingo and Darcy and
presided. Birthday gifts were
You may need to do something "extra" to keep seams flat. Mrs.
received by Mrs. Lola You can use fusing web to anchor seam allowances. Use fusing Refreshments of cake, punch, Holly, Mrs. Barbra Stewart,
GALLIPOLIS
A Stout and son Roger, Mrs.
Harrison, Mrs. Opal Biggs, web to finish hems, too. Top stitching is another way to keep nuts and mints were served Karen Smith and Suzelle '·
miscellaneous household J~unita Woods and daughter Mrs. Don Denney, Mrs. Max Mrs. Betty Biggs, Mrs. edges flat. Take care not to overpress these fabrics as you b&gt;; hostess Debbie Felker and &amp;lowden .
shower was held ·recenUy at Mljl'y, Mrs. Mildred peorge, Jarrell, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Cleland, Mrs. Mary Starcher, work.
Sherie Alley to Mrs. Betty
Hatcher, Mrs. Emma Morris.
the Harris Grange Hall to Mrs. Odella Taylor, Mrs.
Mrs. Elaine Spires, and Mrs.
honor bride-to-be Miss Ethel Hammons, Mrs. Dene
Hostesses were Mrs. Pam Frances Carleton who also
Christea Stout.
&lt;.
Hammons, Miss Johnna Stout sister-in-law, Mrs. received an anniversary gift.
Attending were Mrs. Rhodes,
.,
Games were played with ·
Miss Rita K. George Kathy McCully, and Miss
Herbert Justice, Ewington: and Miss Debbie Denney of Linda McCully cousins of the prizes going to Mrs. Starcher,
NEW HAVEN - The New report and Fay Carpenter the '
Mrs. Thelma ~ippietoe, Bidwell Route. Mrs. Ruby tride to be. Also pre~nt was Mrs. Harrison ," Mrs. Alice
Haven Women of the Church treasurer's report.
Dunbar, W. Va.; Mrs. Judy Weddingion and daughter groom-to-be Danny Justice of Jacobs and Mrs. Hattie
of God met in February in the
It was announced that the , ,
McCully, Mrs. Fran Shaw Verna Kay ·of Vinton Route. Ewington.
Missionary
Building with State Convention will be held "
Mrs.
Harrison
won
Fisher.
·
and Mrs , Fran · Denney,
Pansy Fry and Orpha Fields in Parkersburg on April 23
Sending . gifts were Mrs.
Refreshments of mints, the door prize·.
Gallipolis: Mr. J. C. Stout
Sandwiches,
salad,
cookies,
serving
as hostesses. Roll ca ll · and 24.
and daughter Mellayne, Mrs . . Kay Irwin, Mrs. Irene t potato chips, cake and Kool- coffee and pop were served.
was
answered
by, "I Talk to
POMEROY
Breast
sell
meeting wit!! Mrs. Louise
Missionary
Education
Camden, Mrs. Willa Camden, · Aid were served to all the
Stephen Stout and daughr.ir Mrs.
examination
was
the
God
When
I
... " Eleanor Djrector. Iva Capehart, was ·n
Folmer reading Psalm 15 and
Jacque Glassburn, Mrs. guests.
Stephanie , Mrs. Kathleen Margaret Denney, Mrs.
j&gt;rogram topic presented by an article on Love. The Davis read the secretary's in charge of the program, The
The wedding will be an
Durst, MrS. Garnet Meeks, Pauline McCoy, Mrs. Betty event of Feb. 'll at 7:30p.m.
Mrs, Sharon Bailey and Mrs. contest prepared by Mrs.
theme was " One Nation
Mrs. Lottie Young, Mrs: Judy Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Don
GALLIPOLIS
The
Janet
Pickens of the Meigs Burbara Offutt was won by
at the Church of God of.
Under God." She was '
Hively, Mrs. Garnet Hattan, Phillips, Mr. and Mis. W. H. Prophecy on the 0. J. White Emanon Club enjoyed lour County Cancer Society at the Mrs. Lottie Leonard and Mrs.
assisted by Fay Carpenter. A
Mrs. Pearl Denney, Mr. and Phillips, Mrs. Marie Hively, Road. The custom of open tables of bridge when it met · Thursday meeting of the Vena Whaley.
skit, "The Searl and The
BRIDAL POLICY
Mrs. T. A. McCully, Mrs. Miss Carolyn Fielder, Mrs. church will be observed .•
Thursda'y at the home of Mrs. Rock Springs Better Health
Others at the meeting were
Bonnet" was given by
Esta Volbourn, Mrs. Betty Vernoka Waugh, Mr. and
Wedding and engageClarence Waugh.
Club.
Mrs. Helen Blackston, Mrs.
Delores Taylor and Mrs.
First prize was awarded to
Held at the Rock Springs Betty Conkle, Mrs. Frances ment notices lor tbe
Mrs. Taylor was in _
Capehart.
Mrs. Donald Robinson and Oiurch, Mrs. Louise RadfOrd Folmer, Mrs. Sandy Folmer, Sunday Times Sentinel
charge
of
devotions taken ',
must be In our hands by 12
second prize to Mrs. William was hostess. Mrs. Bailey and . Mrs. Barbara Goeglein, Mrs.
from
Ephesians,
Chapter 4. 1
Willker. Dessert of cherry Mrs. Pickens presented a Beuna Gf11eser, Mrs. Thlema noon on the Thursday
She
read
a
poem,
"Making a
pie, ice cream and coffee was film on breast examination Jeffers, Mrs. SuSie Pullins, preceding publication.
Nation
Great"
and
closed
served. The next meeting will and then discussed the free Mrs. Leonard Leifheit, Mrs. Information may be turned
POMEROY
Steve Department; Phyllis Bearhs
with
circle
prayer
.'
Margret ~Ua Lewis, Council
In or mailed to the
Dawson, ·clinician of the and Susie Casto, Planned Secretary: Henry Cleland, be a book review at the horne cancer clinic held once a Jackie Zirkle, Mrs. Martha
Attending were
lVII,
of
Mrs.
Donald
Robinson.
Gallipolis
Dally Tribune or
month at Veterans Memorial King, Mrs. Judy Humphreys.
Gallipolis Mental ~ealth Parenthood; Doug Llzon, Jr., Bureau of Vocational
Capehart,
Pansy
Fry,
Susie
Pomeroy Dally Sentinel.
Hospital. ·
Next meeting will be hnSted
Center, discussed funding Retired Senior Volunteer
Wolle, Sue Erwin, Becky
Rehabilitation;
Chester
King,
A
thought
for
the
day
:
Engagement
and wedding
The Lord's Prayer and by Mrs. Pbyllis Skinner with
and stalling of the new Pro•gram;
Reed,
. Eleanor Davis, Fay
Bobbie Red Cross Chapter: Vernon George Washington said,
pledge to the nag opened the Mrs. Louise Radford to bave forms are also available on Carpenter, Delores Taylor , .
facility currently under Leadingham, Gallia-Meigs Nease, Meigs County Red
"The basis of our political
request.
the program· and Mrs.
construction in Gallla CAA: Jane Brown, R. N.,\
and Orpha FieldS. Pansy Fry.~.
Cross blood program: Robert system is the right of the
Pullins, the contest.
County, at the Tuesday Meigs County Tuberculosis
won the door prize.
•·
T. Bumgarner, Rotary Club,
ATTENDS MEET
,,
meeting of the Meigs County Clinic: Leafy Chasteen, and Jim Cleland, Ohio Valley people to make and to alter
their
constitutions
of
NEW HAVEN, W. Va.
Human Resources Councll at Senior Citizens Center:
Fellowship,
Inc.
govenunent.''
Mrs. David Flelda, Jr., State
the Meigs Inn.
President of West Virginia
Dawson said the purpose of
Women of the Church of God
the Center will be to better
attended an Executive
serve the residents of the
Committee meeting at !he
three counties, Gallia, Meig;
"
Main Street Church of God in
and Jackson 1 on mental
••
· Oiarleston on Monday and
health prob.lems as well as to
ATHENS - Filmmakers .have been made since April
work with other agencies in are invited to submit their 1974 and cannot have been for competition in European Tuesday.
Create the Interior
festivals.
solving problems.
design
that fits the
flbns before April 10 for the . entered Ireviously in the
Inlof!lllltlon about entry
A discussion was held on 1976 Athens International local festival.
personal
lees Is available by writing
the functions of the 648, 169 Film Festival, to be held here
GUll/ BILL KILLED
Films from the competition the Athens ll)ternational
preferences
and
and the 409 Boards with April 22 through May L
WASHINGTON (UP!)
will be selected for Film Festival, Box 388,
the life style of
Dawson stating that feedback
The House Judiciary Comdistribution worldwide and Athens, Ohio, 45701.
your · family with ..
from the various agencies is
mittee has killed legislation
A total of $2,11011 in Irize
Provincetown. This
welcomed by the Center as a money will be awarded in m
to ban the manufacture, sale,
•
is
heirloom quality
way of better serving the categories, including
resale and importation of
furniture
that
residenta. He spoke of the documentary, narrative,
cheap, easily concealable
retains
Its
beauty
care-line, a 24 hour experimental, animation,
handguns.
pl~y
emerge,ncy service, and of an video and feature filmlJ, the
for years to come.
outreach program being latter two new categories.
trump. East would have had
written. into the new grant More than 5,000 persons
NORTK
Provincetown . has
21
to give him his ninth trick hearts failed to drop.
application.
4Q2
attended last year's five-day
styling that Is ever'
someway or other, but South
Malcolm Orebaugh, also of festival which attracted
" K J 10 6 3
popular.
never gets
was'
in
fOur
spades
.
• Q9 8
the Gallipolis Megtal Health about 200 films. Festival
He
ruffed
the
third
diamond
out
of
date.
Select
4 A 53
Center, stated the Center is to offlcla!s expected at least 300
and promptly led his singleton
A Utah reader wants to
WEST
pieces
suitable
for
EAST
!Dl
develop services within the films this year.
heart toward dummy's jack . know if it is correct to open
410 4 3
49
various rooms in
.region as well as to coorAll lllms will be jlldged
If East took his queen South one notrump with 17 high-card
.974
"AQ85
your home or for
dinate,
keep
from publicly by .a panel of
would have been able to score points including a singleton
tiO 7 2
tAKJ64
accent
compatible
auplication, and provide new nationally known critics. Last 4 J 10 4 2
his lOth trick by takillj! a rul- ac·e.
+K 76
services.
many
other
with
fing finesse against East's
The answer is lhat all exyear's judges Included
SOUTH
Working
with
other Arthur Knight, a West Coast
ace. But East had been doing perts and .writers have found
furnishings.
"AKJ8765
some heavy thinking as soon that such Mnds should be
agencies in drug abuse and critic, and Unwood Dum, a
"2
Created by
as dummy hit the table and opened one of a suit. You can
• 53
alcoholism problems, aging, speclsl effects designer for
•Q98
East won with the ace - not still get to notrump, but in the
and children's services are a "Star Trek" and other
crajt11men ·
'
North-South vulnerable
the queen. East felt that il meanwhile you have shown
part of the program, Hollywood productions.
South held a singleton heart that your hand is better
Orebaugh noted. New serwho take pride
The l(Miay festival wUI also
something good might adapted to suit play .
Wesl North East South
vices discussed were rape feature workshops and
· in excellence
happen. while if South held a
control and transitional seminars, a guest speaker
(Do you have a question
doubleton
he
would
repeat
the
I t
I4
lor the ,.parts? Write "Ask
homes lor childr~n and from Hollywood, feature
apparently proven finesse.
Pass 2 •
Pass 2 4
tho
Jacobys" care of this
'
.
'
geriatrics.
films and a tribute to ''The. Pass 3 N. T. Pass 4 ..
Sure enough something good newspaper. The Jacobys will
. , DIWliOUI
Attending the meeting were Rise of Antfrlcan Cinema." Pass Pass Pass
did happen. South won the answer Individual questions
Jolin Rice, Meigs County
The festlwl Ia open to Oepninglead - %t
spade return in his hand , 'if stamPtd, self-addr•ssed
Eitenslon agent: Mary F. 16mm (optical 801111dtracks
entered dummy with the se- enveloPts are encl08ed. The
Skinner, personal advocacy only) and 35mrn films
cond spade, discarded a club most Interesting questions
coordinator: John S. Culp, produced by Independent By OnuJd ·&amp;James Jacoby
on the king of hearts, led a low will be used in this column
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Sharon Ihle, R N. and Eloise lilmrna kers and production
North would have had no heart. ruffed and had to go one and will receive copies of
Smith. Veigs County Health COippanios. All films must
IIOUble making three no down when the 'Ween uf

•
••

Woman 's World

~

Sarah Carsey 1Char/ene Hoeflich
: Gallipolis-Point Pleasant l Pomeroy-Middleport

:

446-2342

i

Nancy Kay Adams

•• Chatter Club

: sendsflowers
: to patient

Beth McGhee feted

992-2156

a

Shower honors Christia Stout

Breast selfexamination
topic of society program

Church women gather

Game enjoyed

New health center discussed

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

.....

"

TriPle selected
Nortlwn Grawn

Film festival scheduled

EMPIRE CELEBRATES IT'S
th

By Katie Crow

Annie Anybody

Pamela Jean Roush

22, 1976

Katie's Korner

feat11ring

Dianna Rose Root

~'eb .

.Solid Maple

POMEROY - Pomeroy Mayor Dale Smith receivoo lor
Valentine's Day, from his daughter ~usan, a wooden gavel to
use during his duties as Mayor.
Perhaps 'you would also like to lmow the offices of the
council have been moved where the water board office was
located and the water board is now housed where the
unemployment offices were located.
.
The W.ayor himself rolled up his sleeves anq helped w1th.
cleaning and renovating both the rooms. The council room has
been painted, new.floor covering laid and new curtains placed
over the windows.
·
~lte 'an Improvement.

DURING

THE.

SEJ:WING BELATED BTRTHDA Y WISHES to Rachel
McBride, Syracuse, Marie Smith, Mason. and Dude Gibbs,
Pomeroy.
May you have many more.

ONE GROUP OF

VARIED ITEMS

SUlJi.!rvisor.

·

' MRS. KENNETH \l'lcLAUGHIJN, Pomeroy, will . be
admitted to Holzer Medical Center today and will undergo
major surgery Monday.
LIKE TO COMMEND Carolyn Thomas lor a job "well
done " as secretary to the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce.
, Carolyn will be leaving the chamber as she has accepted
employment with WMPO Radio.
Wish the best for you .

Shop in New Haven, and also

a member ,of the cl ub ,
presen'ted a program on
corsage making , She made a

feathered carnation corsage

and a glamillia corsage. The
door prize was won by Sara
Gibbs.
The valentine theme was
used in the decorations .
Others attending were: Mrs.

Marlene Campbell, Mrs.
Orpha Fields, Mrs. Naomi
Bumgarner, Mrs. Maxine
.Miller, Mrs. Marjorie Batey,
Mrs . Marion · Batey, Mrs.
Shelma Jones, Mrs . J&lt;~ nid
Adams , Mrs. Betty Burris,
Mrs . Sally Clark, Mrs. Joy ce
'Moxley , and guests Eric
Russell and Marcia Thorne:

SECTIONAL
REGULAR '799.95

DISCOUNT

2~5

PC.

BEDROOM SUITES

Cake decorators start new club

REG. '449.95

meeting will be March 5 at 7
p.m.
Attending in addition to

'37676

those. named were Naomi

Durst, Roberta Shriver,
Joann Darty, Margaret
Edwards, Pauline White and
Joann Fetty.

NOW

END TABLE

Reg.
1749.95
Now

SOFA AND
LOVE SEAT

NOW
The Newest
Antiques

BEDROOM SUITE

Prt:c ious 1-t ~ k ;Jrar gnl d
w edd i n~ ri ngs. Dcli cattl v
hand craft ed ;Jnt i&lt;j lH.:s t y lt'.
' l n s pir~.::d hy tlw pa11o t,
(l 6 ign t:J ft~r rlw future..: .

SOFA &amp; CHAIR .
REG. '549.95

REG. '1299.95

NOW

See our f ine collection of
bef!ut i ful d iM h onds a nd
v.;·eddi ng Mnd s

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
" House of Diamond s.
and Fine G ilt s1'
422 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio .

Reg. 1749.95
NOW•6oo•o

1--'-5 PC. PINE

by ArtCarved

5 PC. WALNUT

BEDROOM SUITE
R~g.

_1

429.95

1

now

60
'660

SOFA. and
LOVE SEAT

Reg. '89.95 to '99.95

Nehaclima club
meets at library

'46060

SOFA and
LOVE SEAT
REG. '1099.95

60
'360

ONE OAK

DINING ·ROOM SUITE

SOFA &amp;CHAIR .
REG. '699.95 .

REG. '1699.95

•

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. holiday bazaar in November.
The Nehaclima Garden Club A letter was read concerning
beld its February meeting at the state garden club con. the New Haven Public vention to be held March 14-16
Library with Mrs. Lois at the Greenbrier HoteL
Bumgardner, Mrs . Carolyn Members were urged to
· T~rne and Mrs .' Tana attend . The theme of the
Sirl10nton as hilstesses .
\ convention is 11 Aware of Our
IVlrs. Sally Clark, president, Heritage!' •
ca~ed the mee ling to order.
Mrs, Naomi Bumgarner
~'oJlowlng the club song, the
reported that New Haven
Pl~ge of Allegiance and
Bicentennial Week would be
collect, devotions were given co-ordinated by the New
by:Mrs . Tana Simonton who Haven Woman's Club the
excerpts from two week of June 28-July 4. The
one, "I've Got To Talk club was asked to enter a
T~)omeboiy Cod" and "Lilt
float and have an activity,
Your Heart'' .
Mrs. Joy Russell, owner of
club voted to have a the Forget-Me-Not Flower

'7676

THE FINAL CONCERT of the Tri-County Community
Concert Association's 1975-76 season will be presented
Tuesday, 8 p.m. at the Gallia Academy High &amp;hool
auditorium. Duo-harpists Longstreth and Escosa, who
have performed over 400 concerts, will entertain the
audience with Uteir arrangements.

MR. AND MRS. HUBERT PRICE. Portland, and Mrs.
RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Price's family, Mrs. Ray Larkin and Mr. and Mrs. l;lerrnan Grande Cake Decorators
Goede just returned from a month's vacation.
Club held its first meeting
They traveled west laking the southern route stopping in recently in Anniversary Hall
New Orleans. They did a lot of sigbtseeing in the French to . discu~s rules and by~aws
~arter. From there they went to Biloxi, Miss. and then to
for the club. Devotions were
· California. They stayed on the Strip in Las Vegas and saw the led by Mrs. Betty Carpenter.
Mills Brothers and Don Rickles at the Riveria . On their return
Mrs. Carpenter is the
they visited in Lincoln, Nebraska with their son and wile, Mr. originator lor the club. Other
and Mrs. Sam Price.
officers at the meeting were
Hubert started west one time but circumstances weren't secretary, Sandra Woodall,
quite as pleasant but very humorous.
ana treasurer, Katrina
It was in 1933when Hubert, his brother, Gayle and another
Hamilton .
college friend headed for California in a Model-T Ford. As they
A
figure
piping
drove into Grand Island, Nebraska, the brakes went out on demonstration is scheduled
their car and they ran right into a fountain in the town square. for 7 p.m . Friday, Feb. 'll
With water pouring everywhere the police arrived and put with Linda Vaughn of
the boys in jail. Hubert and family have since returned to
Parkersburg, W. Va,, dub
Grand Island and 1ocated the newspaper clipping of this front
members
only. Members are
page story.
students Mrs. CarpenU:r has
The Price' had many experiences on their recent trip, but
!aught at Rio Grande College.
none that could top the one in 1933.
· This . club's next monthly
AN INSERVICE metric workshop has been conducted at
Eastern High &amp;hool lor teachers of the district. The
workshops consisted or four meetings held one afternoon each
week !rom 4 to s: 30 p.m'
The teachers constructed metric material to be used in
their classrooms. After having worked a full day at school the
teachers worked energetically and enjoyed constructing new
materials. The following teachers gave of their own time and
energy to attend : Nancy Arnold, Lavina Brannon, Christy
Caldwell, David Chadwell, Bea Douglas, Thomas Gumpl, Rose
Jonas; Pauline Myers, Wilma Parker, Robert Sanders,
Barbara Tripp, Carolyn Smith, Grace Weber, Doris Well and
Michael Wilfong.
The workshop was under the direction of Russell Moore,
secondary supervisor .and Mrs. Grella Suttle, elementary

•

ONE

Ann Watson is wearing a very attractive gold necklace in
keeping with the Bicentennial. It has printed on it 1776.
THREE YOUNG LADS, Wright Street, Pomeroy, called
the office this week and reported that, in their opinion, they
had caught a rather large crawdad.
When the young man on the phone was asked the size he
said about l'h inches long. The boys were Darin Roach,
Timmy and Billy Colmer.
They caught the crawdad in a small creek on Wright
Street. Cerlalnly hope you. ladS ha~e a big~er catch later on.

I

NOW'136Q60

aton
Bold zis-zas
mitered stripes

SPECIAL .ON

are gen tled
by cla ssic
Dalton sty ling

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In Stock

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!

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�S - The Sunday Times,&amp;ntinel ,

Homemakers'
Circle
BY BE1TIE CLARK

Eo..,.....

ExteuteaA.-, ·
Homo

•

"SEWING FOR SPRING"
GALLIPOLIS - Use fabric io duplicate the fashion look of
ready-to-wear in sewn-at-home garments. To achieve best
results, select sewing notions an&lt;J techniques that relate to the
fashion• fabric.
Soft knits are used to achieve the soft, supple fashion look
which is important now and for spring. You'll find a wide
variety of these soft lmit fabrics. One example is nylon jersey
- a very supple Iabrie with a soft, luxurious look and texture.
Select a pattern that enhances such a Iabrie, especlally its
ability to gather and drape beautifully.
Soft knits will need special handling. Experiment to find
sewing notions and techniques that will help you create a
smooth garment. You'll need to use a soft interfacing to
provide shape without stiffness. Often a lightweight fusible
interfacing applied to the facing will work well.
Experiment on fabric scrapll to determine the best
hemming method. In some soft knits, hand hemming stitches
•
will show no matter how carefully or loosely the stitches are
placed. Often you can achieve a smooth hem with fusing web.
ENGAli~MENT ANNOUNCED - Announcement is
Use
a narrow strip of the fusing web - about one-fourth to
BETROTHAL ANNOUNCED- Mr. and Mrs. Robert
made of the engagement of Miss Dianna Rose Root of
thr~ighths
inch wide. Place ibis narrow strip about one. MISS ADAMS ENGAGED- Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R.
J. Roush, Mason, W.Va. announce the engagement and
Long Bottom, to Josepb Paul Hutchins of Louisville, Ky .
fourth
inch
from
the
upper
edge
of
the
hem
and
fuse
It
in
place.
Adams,
362 Debby Drive, Gallipolis, announce the
approaching marriage of their daughter, Pamela Jean, to
The brlde-&lt;!lect is the daughter of Mrs. Delores Provence,
There
are
several
brands
of
fusing
webs
OJi
the
market,
so
engagement
of their daughter, Nancy Kay, to James A.
Marshall (Stormy) See, son ol Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Long Bottom, and Jack Root of Mentor. Mr. Hutchins is
follow
package
directions
carefully.
Mullins,
son
of
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt V. Mullins, 300 Second
Marcus &amp;e, Jerrico Rd., Point Pleasa·nt, W. Va. and
the son of Mrs. Mary Hutchins, Louisville, Ky. Miss Root
the
fiber
content
and
Iabrie
structure
will
Sometimes
Ave.,
Gallipolis.
The bridHiect, a graduate of Gallla
grandson of Mrs. Georgia Cheney, Gallipolis. Roth are
is a 1976 mid-tenn graduate of Eastern High School and
Influence the sewing techniques you use. Some soft wool and
Academy High School, is a seniQr at. the Ohio state
employes of the General James M. Gavin PlanI. A June
her fiance, a 1972 graduate of Seneca High &amp;hool,
fur blend knits are very delicate and require a light touch in
University, Division of Pbysical Therapy, Columbus,
wedding is planned.
Louisville, Ky. is employed at the All Weather SysteinS,
sewing. Usually a light woven interfacing works better on
Ohio. She isalsoa member of the collegiate chapter of the
Inc., in Louisville. Wedding plans are incomplete.
these fabrics. Edge finishes, if needed, often must be done by
Delta Gamma Sorority at Ohio State. Her fiance, a 1969
hand to reduce bulk.
graduate of Pallia Ac~demy, also attended the Ohio state
Suedes and suede-look fabrics create an Important fashion
University, and is now employed by Mullins Enterprises,
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
look this season. These fabrics may be used for an entire
Inc. in Gallipolis.
••
•
garment or for trim. Some new synthetic fabrics look and feel
0
like real suede, but can he machine-washed and dryer-dried.
To achieve good results with suede-look fabrics, select
••
''
0
patterns
with simple, straight lines. These fabrics probably
0
••
•
will not ease well, so avoid style details, such as set-in sleeves, .
•
·•
that call lor easing.
0
GALLIPOLIS - A shower Null, mother-iii-law of the
Most of these fabrics will be pennanenUy marked by pins
0
o
POMEROY - Flowers and by hard pressing. Use sharp, line pins and pin in the seam was given recenUy in honor of bride, Mrs. · Mary Kay
: were reported sent to Mrs. allowances only. Use dres.'!lllaker's chalk and mark on the Miss Beth McGhee at the Robinson, Mrs. Dean Mason,
: Dorothy Roach, a patient at wrong side of the fabric. Or use dressmaker's carbon and a home of John Felker, Lower Kim 'Gooderham, Mrs. Sue
•
•
• Holzer Medical Center, when smooth edge marking wheel-check this technique on a Iabrie River Rd., Gallipolis. Games Jones and Liz Martin .
were played with pri~es
Sending gilts were Mrs. "
: the Chatter Club met recently . scrap to he sure it doesn' t mar the suede surface.
at the home of Mrs. Marie
stitch seams once- accurately! Stitch marks will sbow if awarded to Mrs. Paul Fuller, Gloria SU:vers, Mrs. Gloria
Leifheit. .
.
you must rip and relocate seam. Avoid backstil!;j)ing - tie Mrs. 'Ron Calhoun, and Adams and Nancy, Mrs. ,,
mother of the bride to be, Georgia Cook, Mrs. Mary
Susan Cleland threadS at the end of a line of stitching.
.
Mrs.
Bud
McGhee. Ellen Lingo and Darcy and
presided. Birthday gifts were
You may need to do something "extra" to keep seams flat. Mrs.
received by Mrs. Lola You can use fusing web to anchor seam allowances. Use fusing Refreshments of cake, punch, Holly, Mrs. Barbra Stewart,
GALLIPOLIS
A Stout and son Roger, Mrs.
Harrison, Mrs. Opal Biggs, web to finish hems, too. Top stitching is another way to keep nuts and mints were served Karen Smith and Suzelle '·
miscellaneous household J~unita Woods and daughter Mrs. Don Denney, Mrs. Max Mrs. Betty Biggs, Mrs. edges flat. Take care not to overpress these fabrics as you b&gt;; hostess Debbie Felker and &amp;lowden .
shower was held ·recenUy at Mljl'y, Mrs. Mildred peorge, Jarrell, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Cleland, Mrs. Mary Starcher, work.
Sherie Alley to Mrs. Betty
Hatcher, Mrs. Emma Morris.
the Harris Grange Hall to Mrs. Odella Taylor, Mrs.
Mrs. Elaine Spires, and Mrs.
honor bride-to-be Miss Ethel Hammons, Mrs. Dene
Hostesses were Mrs. Pam Frances Carleton who also
Christea Stout.
&lt;.
Hammons, Miss Johnna Stout sister-in-law, Mrs. received an anniversary gift.
Attending were Mrs. Rhodes,
.,
Games were played with ·
Miss Rita K. George Kathy McCully, and Miss
Herbert Justice, Ewington: and Miss Debbie Denney of Linda McCully cousins of the prizes going to Mrs. Starcher,
NEW HAVEN - The New report and Fay Carpenter the '
Mrs. Thelma ~ippietoe, Bidwell Route. Mrs. Ruby tride to be. Also pre~nt was Mrs. Harrison ," Mrs. Alice
Haven Women of the Church treasurer's report.
Dunbar, W. Va.; Mrs. Judy Weddingion and daughter groom-to-be Danny Justice of Jacobs and Mrs. Hattie
of God met in February in the
It was announced that the , ,
McCully, Mrs. Fran Shaw Verna Kay ·of Vinton Route. Ewington.
Missionary
Building with State Convention will be held "
Mrs.
Harrison
won
Fisher.
·
and Mrs , Fran · Denney,
Pansy Fry and Orpha Fields in Parkersburg on April 23
Sending . gifts were Mrs.
Refreshments of mints, the door prize·.
Gallipolis: Mr. J. C. Stout
Sandwiches,
salad,
cookies,
serving
as hostesses. Roll ca ll · and 24.
and daughter Mellayne, Mrs . . Kay Irwin, Mrs. Irene t potato chips, cake and Kool- coffee and pop were served.
was
answered
by, "I Talk to
POMEROY
Breast
sell
meeting wit!! Mrs. Louise
Missionary
Education
Camden, Mrs. Willa Camden, · Aid were served to all the
Stephen Stout and daughr.ir Mrs.
examination
was
the
God
When
I
... " Eleanor Djrector. Iva Capehart, was ·n
Folmer reading Psalm 15 and
Jacque Glassburn, Mrs. guests.
Stephanie , Mrs. Kathleen Margaret Denney, Mrs.
j&gt;rogram topic presented by an article on Love. The Davis read the secretary's in charge of the program, The
The wedding will be an
Durst, MrS. Garnet Meeks, Pauline McCoy, Mrs. Betty event of Feb. 'll at 7:30p.m.
Mrs, Sharon Bailey and Mrs. contest prepared by Mrs.
theme was " One Nation
Mrs. Lottie Young, Mrs: Judy Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Don
GALLIPOLIS
The
Janet
Pickens of the Meigs Burbara Offutt was won by
at the Church of God of.
Under God." She was '
Hively, Mrs. Garnet Hattan, Phillips, Mr. and Mis. W. H. Prophecy on the 0. J. White Emanon Club enjoyed lour County Cancer Society at the Mrs. Lottie Leonard and Mrs.
assisted by Fay Carpenter. A
Mrs. Pearl Denney, Mr. and Phillips, Mrs. Marie Hively, Road. The custom of open tables of bridge when it met · Thursday meeting of the Vena Whaley.
skit, "The Searl and The
BRIDAL POLICY
Mrs. T. A. McCully, Mrs. Miss Carolyn Fielder, Mrs. church will be observed .•
Thursda'y at the home of Mrs. Rock Springs Better Health
Others at the meeting were
Bonnet" was given by
Esta Volbourn, Mrs. Betty Vernoka Waugh, Mr. and
Wedding and engageClarence Waugh.
Club.
Mrs. Helen Blackston, Mrs.
Delores Taylor and Mrs.
First prize was awarded to
Held at the Rock Springs Betty Conkle, Mrs. Frances ment notices lor tbe
Mrs. Taylor was in _
Capehart.
Mrs. Donald Robinson and Oiurch, Mrs. Louise RadfOrd Folmer, Mrs. Sandy Folmer, Sunday Times Sentinel
charge
of
devotions taken ',
must be In our hands by 12
second prize to Mrs. William was hostess. Mrs. Bailey and . Mrs. Barbara Goeglein, Mrs.
from
Ephesians,
Chapter 4. 1
Willker. Dessert of cherry Mrs. Pickens presented a Beuna Gf11eser, Mrs. Thlema noon on the Thursday
She
read
a
poem,
"Making a
pie, ice cream and coffee was film on breast examination Jeffers, Mrs. SuSie Pullins, preceding publication.
Nation
Great"
and
closed
served. The next meeting will and then discussed the free Mrs. Leonard Leifheit, Mrs. Information may be turned
POMEROY
Steve Department; Phyllis Bearhs
with
circle
prayer
.'
Margret ~Ua Lewis, Council
In or mailed to the
Dawson, ·clinician of the and Susie Casto, Planned Secretary: Henry Cleland, be a book review at the horne cancer clinic held once a Jackie Zirkle, Mrs. Martha
Attending were
lVII,
of
Mrs.
Donald
Robinson.
Gallipolis
Dally Tribune or
month at Veterans Memorial King, Mrs. Judy Humphreys.
Gallipolis Mental ~ealth Parenthood; Doug Llzon, Jr., Bureau of Vocational
Capehart,
Pansy
Fry,
Susie
Pomeroy Dally Sentinel.
Hospital. ·
Next meeting will be hnSted
Center, discussed funding Retired Senior Volunteer
Wolle, Sue Erwin, Becky
Rehabilitation;
Chester
King,
A
thought
for
the
day
:
Engagement
and wedding
The Lord's Prayer and by Mrs. Pbyllis Skinner with
and stalling of the new Pro•gram;
Reed,
. Eleanor Davis, Fay
Bobbie Red Cross Chapter: Vernon George Washington said,
pledge to the nag opened the Mrs. Louise Radford to bave forms are also available on Carpenter, Delores Taylor , .
facility currently under Leadingham, Gallia-Meigs Nease, Meigs County Red
"The basis of our political
request.
the program· and Mrs.
construction in Gallla CAA: Jane Brown, R. N.,\
and Orpha FieldS. Pansy Fry.~.
Cross blood program: Robert system is the right of the
Pullins, the contest.
County, at the Tuesday Meigs County Tuberculosis
won the door prize.
•·
T. Bumgarner, Rotary Club,
ATTENDS MEET
,,
meeting of the Meigs County Clinic: Leafy Chasteen, and Jim Cleland, Ohio Valley people to make and to alter
their
constitutions
of
NEW HAVEN, W. Va.
Human Resources Councll at Senior Citizens Center:
Fellowship,
Inc.
govenunent.''
Mrs. David Flelda, Jr., State
the Meigs Inn.
President of West Virginia
Dawson said the purpose of
Women of the Church of God
the Center will be to better
attended an Executive
serve the residents of the
Committee meeting at !he
three counties, Gallia, Meig;
"
Main Street Church of God in
and Jackson 1 on mental
••
· Oiarleston on Monday and
health prob.lems as well as to
ATHENS - Filmmakers .have been made since April
work with other agencies in are invited to submit their 1974 and cannot have been for competition in European Tuesday.
Create the Interior
festivals.
solving problems.
design
that fits the
flbns before April 10 for the . entered Ireviously in the
Inlof!lllltlon about entry
A discussion was held on 1976 Athens International local festival.
personal
lees Is available by writing
the functions of the 648, 169 Film Festival, to be held here
GUll/ BILL KILLED
Films from the competition the Athens ll)ternational
preferences
and
and the 409 Boards with April 22 through May L
WASHINGTON (UP!)
will be selected for Film Festival, Box 388,
the life style of
Dawson stating that feedback
The House Judiciary Comdistribution worldwide and Athens, Ohio, 45701.
your · family with ..
from the various agencies is
mittee has killed legislation
A total of $2,11011 in Irize
Provincetown. This
welcomed by the Center as a money will be awarded in m
to ban the manufacture, sale,
•
is
heirloom quality
way of better serving the categories, including
resale and importation of
furniture
that
residenta. He spoke of the documentary, narrative,
cheap, easily concealable
retains
Its
beauty
care-line, a 24 hour experimental, animation,
handguns.
pl~y
emerge,ncy service, and of an video and feature filmlJ, the
for years to come.
outreach program being latter two new categories.
trump. East would have had
written. into the new grant More than 5,000 persons
NORTK
Provincetown . has
21
to give him his ninth trick hearts failed to drop.
application.
4Q2
attended last year's five-day
styling that Is ever'
someway or other, but South
Malcolm Orebaugh, also of festival which attracted
" K J 10 6 3
popular.
never gets
was'
in
fOur
spades
.
• Q9 8
the Gallipolis Megtal Health about 200 films. Festival
He
ruffed
the
third
diamond
out
of
date.
Select
4 A 53
Center, stated the Center is to offlcla!s expected at least 300
and promptly led his singleton
A Utah reader wants to
WEST
pieces
suitable
for
EAST
!Dl
develop services within the films this year.
heart toward dummy's jack . know if it is correct to open
410 4 3
49
various rooms in
.region as well as to coorAll lllms will be jlldged
If East took his queen South one notrump with 17 high-card
.974
"AQ85
your home or for
dinate,
keep
from publicly by .a panel of
would have been able to score points including a singleton
tiO 7 2
tAKJ64
accent
compatible
auplication, and provide new nationally known critics. Last 4 J 10 4 2
his lOth trick by takillj! a rul- ac·e.
+K 76
services.
many
other
with
fing finesse against East's
The answer is lhat all exyear's judges Included
SOUTH
Working
with
other Arthur Knight, a West Coast
ace. But East had been doing perts and .writers have found
furnishings.
"AKJ8765
some heavy thinking as soon that such Mnds should be
agencies in drug abuse and critic, and Unwood Dum, a
"2
Created by
as dummy hit the table and opened one of a suit. You can
• 53
alcoholism problems, aging, speclsl effects designer for
•Q98
East won with the ace - not still get to notrump, but in the
and children's services are a "Star Trek" and other
crajt11men ·
'
North-South vulnerable
the queen. East felt that il meanwhile you have shown
part of the program, Hollywood productions.
South held a singleton heart that your hand is better
Orebaugh noted. New serwho take pride
The l(Miay festival wUI also
something good might adapted to suit play .
Wesl North East South
vices discussed were rape feature workshops and
· in excellence
happen. while if South held a
control and transitional seminars, a guest speaker
(Do you have a question
doubleton
he
would
repeat
the
I t
I4
lor the ,.parts? Write "Ask
homes lor childr~n and from Hollywood, feature
apparently proven finesse.
Pass 2 •
Pass 2 4
tho
Jacobys" care of this
'
.
'
geriatrics.
films and a tribute to ''The. Pass 3 N. T. Pass 4 ..
Sure enough something good newspaper. The Jacobys will
. , DIWliOUI
Attending the meeting were Rise of Antfrlcan Cinema." Pass Pass Pass
did happen. South won the answer Individual questions
Jolin Rice, Meigs County
The festlwl Ia open to Oepninglead - %t
spade return in his hand , 'if stamPtd, self-addr•ssed
Eitenslon agent: Mary F. 16mm (optical 801111dtracks
entered dummy with the se- enveloPts are encl08ed. The
Skinner, personal advocacy only) and 35mrn films
cond spade, discarded a club most Interesting questions
coordinator: John S. Culp, produced by Independent By OnuJd ·&amp;James Jacoby
on the king of hearts, led a low will be used in this column
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Sharon Ihle, R N. and Eloise lilmrna kers and production
North would have had no heart. ruffed and had to go one and will receive copies of
Smith. Veigs County Health COippanios. All films must
IIOUble making three no down when the 'Ween uf

•
••

Woman 's World

~

Sarah Carsey 1Char/ene Hoeflich
: Gallipolis-Point Pleasant l Pomeroy-Middleport

:

446-2342

i

Nancy Kay Adams

•• Chatter Club

: sendsflowers
: to patient

Beth McGhee feted

992-2156

a

Shower honors Christia Stout

Breast selfexamination
topic of society program

Church women gather

Game enjoyed

New health center discussed

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

.....

"

TriPle selected
Nortlwn Grawn

Film festival scheduled

EMPIRE CELEBRATES IT'S
th

By Katie Crow

Annie Anybody

Pamela Jean Roush

22, 1976

Katie's Korner

feat11ring

Dianna Rose Root

~'eb .

.Solid Maple

POMEROY - Pomeroy Mayor Dale Smith receivoo lor
Valentine's Day, from his daughter ~usan, a wooden gavel to
use during his duties as Mayor.
Perhaps 'you would also like to lmow the offices of the
council have been moved where the water board office was
located and the water board is now housed where the
unemployment offices were located.
.
The W.ayor himself rolled up his sleeves anq helped w1th.
cleaning and renovating both the rooms. The council room has
been painted, new.floor covering laid and new curtains placed
over the windows.
·
~lte 'an Improvement.

DURING

THE.

SEJ:WING BELATED BTRTHDA Y WISHES to Rachel
McBride, Syracuse, Marie Smith, Mason. and Dude Gibbs,
Pomeroy.
May you have many more.

ONE GROUP OF

VARIED ITEMS

SUlJi.!rvisor.

·

' MRS. KENNETH \l'lcLAUGHIJN, Pomeroy, will . be
admitted to Holzer Medical Center today and will undergo
major surgery Monday.
LIKE TO COMMEND Carolyn Thomas lor a job "well
done " as secretary to the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce.
, Carolyn will be leaving the chamber as she has accepted
employment with WMPO Radio.
Wish the best for you .

Shop in New Haven, and also

a member ,of the cl ub ,
presen'ted a program on
corsage making , She made a

feathered carnation corsage

and a glamillia corsage. The
door prize was won by Sara
Gibbs.
The valentine theme was
used in the decorations .
Others attending were: Mrs.

Marlene Campbell, Mrs.
Orpha Fields, Mrs. Naomi
Bumgarner, Mrs. Maxine
.Miller, Mrs. Marjorie Batey,
Mrs . Marion · Batey, Mrs.
Shelma Jones, Mrs . J&lt;~ nid
Adams , Mrs. Betty Burris,
Mrs . Sally Clark, Mrs. Joy ce
'Moxley , and guests Eric
Russell and Marcia Thorne:

SECTIONAL
REGULAR '799.95

DISCOUNT

2~5

PC.

BEDROOM SUITES

Cake decorators start new club

REG. '449.95

meeting will be March 5 at 7
p.m.
Attending in addition to

'37676

those. named were Naomi

Durst, Roberta Shriver,
Joann Darty, Margaret
Edwards, Pauline White and
Joann Fetty.

NOW

END TABLE

Reg.
1749.95
Now

SOFA AND
LOVE SEAT

NOW
The Newest
Antiques

BEDROOM SUITE

Prt:c ious 1-t ~ k ;Jrar gnl d
w edd i n~ ri ngs. Dcli cattl v
hand craft ed ;Jnt i&lt;j lH.:s t y lt'.
' l n s pir~.::d hy tlw pa11o t,
(l 6 ign t:J ft~r rlw future..: .

SOFA &amp; CHAIR .
REG. '549.95

REG. '1299.95

NOW

See our f ine collection of
bef!ut i ful d iM h onds a nd
v.;·eddi ng Mnd s

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
" House of Diamond s.
and Fine G ilt s1'
422 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio .

Reg. 1749.95
NOW•6oo•o

1--'-5 PC. PINE

by ArtCarved

5 PC. WALNUT

BEDROOM SUITE
R~g.

_1

429.95

1

now

60
'660

SOFA. and
LOVE SEAT

Reg. '89.95 to '99.95

Nehaclima club
meets at library

'46060

SOFA and
LOVE SEAT
REG. '1099.95

60
'360

ONE OAK

DINING ·ROOM SUITE

SOFA &amp;CHAIR .
REG. '699.95 .

REG. '1699.95

•

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. holiday bazaar in November.
The Nehaclima Garden Club A letter was read concerning
beld its February meeting at the state garden club con. the New Haven Public vention to be held March 14-16
Library with Mrs. Lois at the Greenbrier HoteL
Bumgardner, Mrs . Carolyn Members were urged to
· T~rne and Mrs .' Tana attend . The theme of the
Sirl10nton as hilstesses .
\ convention is 11 Aware of Our
IVlrs. Sally Clark, president, Heritage!' •
ca~ed the mee ling to order.
Mrs, Naomi Bumgarner
~'oJlowlng the club song, the
reported that New Haven
Pl~ge of Allegiance and
Bicentennial Week would be
collect, devotions were given co-ordinated by the New
by:Mrs . Tana Simonton who Haven Woman's Club the
excerpts from two week of June 28-July 4. The
one, "I've Got To Talk club was asked to enter a
T~)omeboiy Cod" and "Lilt
float and have an activity,
Your Heart'' .
Mrs. Joy Russell, owner of
club voted to have a the Forget-Me-Not Flower

'7676

THE FINAL CONCERT of the Tri-County Community
Concert Association's 1975-76 season will be presented
Tuesday, 8 p.m. at the Gallia Academy High &amp;hool
auditorium. Duo-harpists Longstreth and Escosa, who
have performed over 400 concerts, will entertain the
audience with Uteir arrangements.

MR. AND MRS. HUBERT PRICE. Portland, and Mrs.
RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Price's family, Mrs. Ray Larkin and Mr. and Mrs. l;lerrnan Grande Cake Decorators
Goede just returned from a month's vacation.
Club held its first meeting
They traveled west laking the southern route stopping in recently in Anniversary Hall
New Orleans. They did a lot of sigbtseeing in the French to . discu~s rules and by~aws
~arter. From there they went to Biloxi, Miss. and then to
for the club. Devotions were
· California. They stayed on the Strip in Las Vegas and saw the led by Mrs. Betty Carpenter.
Mills Brothers and Don Rickles at the Riveria . On their return
Mrs. Carpenter is the
they visited in Lincoln, Nebraska with their son and wile, Mr. originator lor the club. Other
and Mrs. Sam Price.
officers at the meeting were
Hubert started west one time but circumstances weren't secretary, Sandra Woodall,
quite as pleasant but very humorous.
ana treasurer, Katrina
It was in 1933when Hubert, his brother, Gayle and another
Hamilton .
college friend headed for California in a Model-T Ford. As they
A
figure
piping
drove into Grand Island, Nebraska, the brakes went out on demonstration is scheduled
their car and they ran right into a fountain in the town square. for 7 p.m . Friday, Feb. 'll
With water pouring everywhere the police arrived and put with Linda Vaughn of
the boys in jail. Hubert and family have since returned to
Parkersburg, W. Va,, dub
Grand Island and 1ocated the newspaper clipping of this front
members
only. Members are
page story.
students Mrs. CarpenU:r has
The Price' had many experiences on their recent trip, but
!aught at Rio Grande College.
none that could top the one in 1933.
· This . club's next monthly
AN INSERVICE metric workshop has been conducted at
Eastern High &amp;hool lor teachers of the district. The
workshops consisted or four meetings held one afternoon each
week !rom 4 to s: 30 p.m'
The teachers constructed metric material to be used in
their classrooms. After having worked a full day at school the
teachers worked energetically and enjoyed constructing new
materials. The following teachers gave of their own time and
energy to attend : Nancy Arnold, Lavina Brannon, Christy
Caldwell, David Chadwell, Bea Douglas, Thomas Gumpl, Rose
Jonas; Pauline Myers, Wilma Parker, Robert Sanders,
Barbara Tripp, Carolyn Smith, Grace Weber, Doris Well and
Michael Wilfong.
The workshop was under the direction of Russell Moore,
secondary supervisor .and Mrs. Grella Suttle, elementary

•

ONE

Ann Watson is wearing a very attractive gold necklace in
keeping with the Bicentennial. It has printed on it 1776.
THREE YOUNG LADS, Wright Street, Pomeroy, called
the office this week and reported that, in their opinion, they
had caught a rather large crawdad.
When the young man on the phone was asked the size he
said about l'h inches long. The boys were Darin Roach,
Timmy and Billy Colmer.
They caught the crawdad in a small creek on Wright
Street. Cerlalnly hope you. ladS ha~e a big~er catch later on.

I

NOW'136Q60

aton
Bold zis-zas
mitered stripes

SPECIAL .ON

are gen tled
by cla ssic
Dalton sty ling

SHAG
.5 Colors
In Stock

Sizes &amp; to 1B.

NOW

'56060
SOFA AND
LOVE SEAT
REG. '1195.95

·9~~installed

WIN AT BRIDGE

Deceptive

foils contrect

SOFA &amp; CHAIR

REG. '799,95

~~~~

rovineetown•

BAKER FUP~ITURE

JACOBY MODERN.) ,

. ._ _ _ _ _

"'!"'---~----------·---

SOFA &amp; CHAIR

REG. '579.95

GREAT FOOD TO
SATISFY ANY

'

APPEll lEI

- •.- !

NOW

.

from lfeakl charbroiled to your liking, rout
I

Uon of eandwichil, Nladf,

'i
!

. .tiNge and "afood. EnJO!I
ourhomemadero~tao

'

.._

Ohio

- r;tc .

...... ..

'60060

SEE OUR MANY
OTHER BARGAINS

t

c~

P,imt rib of beef frHh from
the oven. arid a wide Mlec"

NOW

....

�'

.,I

·S,-

I

7 - The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Feb. 22, 197G
The :-:lmdar

Tum~-&amp;·ntinel,

~3~.LLRP7............~~·nnP7~~~~. .QEI.TMP•·~--.-.c ~~)

Original deeds lacked rights
Philippine violin virtuoso coming ~ for early Gallia County settlers Gallia

Ft.&gt;IJ . :!:!. 1976

•

Miller-King
fvows read
·' MIDDLE PORT - Miss
1\.Alhryn Diane Kin g and
James Michael Miller exchanged wedding vows in a
double ring ceremony at 2: 30
p.m. ·on Dec. 20 at the
allllbry Church of Christ.
1
1'he bride is the daughter Of
r . and Mrs. William H.
' ng, Rt . I. Middleport, and
t e bridegroom is the son

or

r . and Mrs . Russell E.
·ller. Rl. 4. Pomeroy.
·•.Tite wedding was perrmed before an altar
corated with a center

*

GALLIPOLIS - Philippine
violin virtuoso Gilupez
Kabayao will ~r ese nt a
concert saturday, Ma rch 13
al Gallia Academy Hi gh
School beginning at 8 p.m.
The presentation is being
sponsored by Bicentennial

sil'C'Vl~ and bodice
Venice lace trimmed
the wedding ring neckline,
waist, cuffs and train. Her

vrganza
inst~rL"i.

Drama, Inc. He will be ac-

bouffant ve il of polyester

companied by his wife,
Corazon.
Gilopez Kabayao comes

illusion wa s attached to a

headpiece wrea th or imported fl owers. The bride
carried a bouquet of white
and blue tinted pompon
mums with baby;s bre~th tied
with blue streamers.
Her attendants wree Miss

musically gifted family in the
province of Negros Occidental in the Philippines.
He received his earliest

rangement of white gladioli
nked with hurricane lamp matron of honor , bolh sisters
~ndelabra, and accent of · of the bride ; Mrs . Linda
fllllly lied with blue bows. Atkins. Columbus, and Miss
F1ornily pews were marked Tina Miller, Rt . 4, Pomeroy,
sister of the groom, brides\vith blue satin bows .
' Pavid M. Lucas, Ches- maids .
The honor attendanls wore
$eake, performed the
~j~emony with Mr~. Mary In dark blue gowns while the
bridesmaids were in light
~lcox, Middleport, Rl. I,
l)tgar l!:l, and Miss Sherry blue. They wore fashioned
King , sister of' the bride, gowns of fl owered polyester
Soloist, presenting selections knit in shades of blue with
.i.rlduding "The Twelfth of panels of the solid color and and had a corsage of white
Never,'' "I'll Walk with God" were designed with high carnations tipped in blue .
lind "We've Only Just necklines, short puffed
A reception honori ng the
sleeves and lace accent trim. couple was held in the church
~gun . "
· !Given in marriage by her Their bouquets were of dark social room . The three tiered
fllther , the bride wore a gown blue and white pompon mums cake trimmed in rainbQw
~ guiana nylon knit with with baby 's breath.
colors w&amp;s topped with the
Randy K. HaynEs of Athens traditional miniature bride
was best man for the and groom . On the table were
bridegroom, and ushers were flowers sent to the bride by
Kevin King, brother of the her Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
'
bride, and Rodney Bailey, secret sister.
.
"
Middleport, and David Cole,
Miss Linda Lane registered
Pomeroy, both cousins of the the guests. Presiding at the
?.
bride. Timmy Miller was the serving table were Mrs.
ringbearer. All of the male Richard Finlaw, Sherrie
attendants
wore tuxedos with Barnhart, Tamra Stanley ,
BEFORE
the groom and best man in Christi Stanley·, Sharon Bing,
ligh t blue jackets and black Beverly Wilcox, Rita Bailey
pan ls, and the ushers in black and Linda Gerard.
with light blue shirts.
Mr. and Mrs. Miller reside
For her daughter 's wed- at Route 1, Middleport .
ding, Mrs. King wore a teal
A graduate of 1970, Meigs
blue . gown with chiffon High School, the new Mrs.
sleeves and .had a white Miller is a member of the
carnation corsage. Mrs. Bradbury Church of Christ

(himself a violinist and
doctor-of medicine ) and after
studying in New York under
Theodore Pashkus, once a
mentor of Yehudi Menuhin,
he launched himself into an
international concert career
which has taken him to New
York's Town Hall and Carnegie Hall, to Vienna , Rome,
Madrid,
Tokyo
a nd
numerous other cities and
countries in North America,
Europe, East Asia and New
Zealand.
His services to music in his
member of Xi Gamma Mu
own
country have been
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi,
varied
a nd
readily
Evangeline Chapter, Order of
acknowledged,
and
his
efforts
the Eastern Star, and
to
bring
his
violin
to
the
most
Guardian of Bethel 62, Infar-flung
islands,
and
their
ternational Order of Job 's
towns,
earned
him
the
Daughters. She is employed
in
1961
,
of
being
honor
at Coluntbia Gas Co., Inc.
Mr. Miller also graduated named one of the 10 out· from Meigs in 1970 and is sianding young men of the
affiliated with the Bradbury Philippines . Subsequently,
Church of Christ and works the Silliman University of
as a youth leader. He is Dumaguete City honored him
employed at Russ Certified ·as one of Ute outstanding
Sillimanians in recognition of
Oil in Pomeroy.
.
Out-of-town guests were his musical achievements,
Mr. and Mrs . Dave Lucas, and in 1968 the Central
Chesapeake; Mr _ and Mrs. Philippine University in Iloilo'
Tom King, Columbus; Mr. City accorded him the honor
and
Mrs .
Claremont of being conferred the
Buchanan and Ron, Parkersburg; Mr. and Mrs. A. L.
Leonard, Athen s; J .. M.
Koebel, Gallipolis; .Mr . and
Mrs. Louis Smith, Columbus;
Wayne Carter, New Haven,
W. Va., and Kent and Tammy
MIDDLEPORT - Letters
Sayre, Louisville, Ky .
to Senator Robert Taft and
John Glenn asking that a
National . Beta Sigma PHi
Sorority Week be established
- were .~igned by members of
the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter at a
meeting Tuesday night at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co.

Mr. and Mrs. james M. Milkr

TIME TO

·HAVE. THAT
' OLD DIAMOND

where s he is pianist and

youth leader. She is a

Mrs. Warehime
hosts Pembroke
·update your old diamonds with
brand new setting selected lrom
, the Keepsake catalog of remounts ,, 25 pages in lull color lor you
choose from . You'll li,,d styles
tlasslc'to modern, many

matching wedding rings . All
"'" be custom-fitted to your·
dia1 .........:~ .cJilh Keepsake ~are .

CLARK'S

Jewell} Store
342 Secontt Ave.
Gal

lis, Ohio

GALLIPOLIS - ·Pembroke
Club met Tuesday ·evening
with Mrs. Donald Warehime.
The program was given by
Mrs. Maury Mittleman.
Mrs . Mittleman wore an
authentic costume · of the
period to review "Woman's
Life and Work in the Southern
Colonies" by Julia ChergSpruill. The book was a
discussion of the clothing,
homes, customs and duties of
wives in the South , both in
frontier areas and on plantations.
·

Blue

Patent
&amp;

Black

Patent
Sizes 12 112 to 4

BCD
Width

SIS

99

Open a h1t, patently pretty, a thm edge of wedge
. . the fashion -bright shoe for all her dress-up
'· occasions. lots of toe room, fine fit, •areful finish .
All the . very bllst things.

•

communication
cerning the annual

Tues.

'

,.

.

•

.

•

.J'r! J'f;!(
!14
,

MRS. EON A REIBEL celebrated her 82nd birthday,
Sunday, Feb. 15 with her first great-granddaughter, eight
month old Kristin Elizabeth Shato, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Jimmie Shato of Gallipolis. The farilily gathered at
the Steamboat Inn Restaurant in Racine for dinner.
Afterwards a decorated birthday cake and ice cream
were served to friends and relatives of Mrs. Reibel at her
home on Pleasant Ridge in Pomeroy. Aslo attending were
Henry Reibel (husband), Mr. and Mrs. Donley Reibel and .
daughter Fae, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Victor Brown, Mr.
and Mrs. Manuel, Minersville; Mrs. Althea Strong and
daughter Diane, Tom Ferrell Wilkesville.

BIRTH ANNOUNCED
DAUGHTER BORN
GALLIPOLIS - Mr , and
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jay Brown,
Mrs. Carl E. Shenefield Gallipolis are announcing the
announce the birth of their birth of their first child, a son,
second daughter, Denise Charles Jeremiah, at Holzer
Marie, Jan . 11 at the Holzer · Medical Center Feb. 18.
Medical Center . Another Maternal grandparents are
daughter, Laurie Ann, is six Mr . and Mrs . John D.
years . old. Maternal grand- McKean, Gallipolis,
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Maternal great-grandmother
Carl Dillon, Concord, W. Va. · is Mrs. Charles M. McKean,
and the. paternal grand- Gallipolis. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Rex parents .are Mr. and Mrs.
E. Shenefield, Langsville. · Charles J . Brown, Gallipolis
paternal
greatGreat grandparents are Mrs. and
Grace Colwell, Vinton and grandparents are Mrs.
Mr . and Mrs . Carl H. George Renshaw, Pomeroy
and Mrs. Jacob Brown ,
Shenefield, Langsville.
Gallipolis.

IN THE
SILVER BRIDGE

PLAZA
Nt:W SHIPMENT

&lt;It
.,.""~~·""' · .
Mon. &amp; rn .
9:38 til 8 p.m.
W~.

Sat.

9:30 til 5 p.m.

Thursday

t: JO tj_l 11 noon

"{

!

Bernadine 's, . Country Fare, :~

•

J

and the admission door . Any
donations are tax deductible .. ,
Proceeds will go to Bicen- '·
tennial Drama, Inc.
..:
'

, GILOPEZ KABA YAO

CORAZON KABA YAO

Doctorate of Music degree,

and during his current tour of
the United States and
Canada . A graduate of the
University of San to Tomas
Conserva tory of Music in the
Philippines, unde r the
tutelage of Aida sanz Gonzalez, Mrs. Kabayao has
consistently demonstrated
her keen musicians hip in
performances of solo and '
sonato works. She was the
winn.er of several pi ano
competitions in her country
and has been honored with a
number of awa rds and
scholarships.

..

honoris ca usa .

He was recen tly engaged
by the Malaysian Government to help form and _train
their Youth Symphony Orchestra, and has been closely
associated with the Singapore
Youth Orchestra since it was
founded .
A versatile and flexible
musician , he has premiered
many ·compositions in the
Philippines, and gave the
first performance in New
Zealand of the viol in concerto
by Shostakovitch. Equally at
home as a soloist with or:.

FARAH
LEISURE SUITS

con~
C on~

vention to be held in CinCinnati May 21, 22 and 23, was
read and final plans were
made to go to Athens for a
showing of "Nashville" this
·
weekend.
Mrs. Kathy Cummings,
ways and means chairnt~rson ,
announced that at the March
16 meeting a "do your own
thing " auction will be held .
Arrangements were a lso
discussed for se lling ad vertising for the Meigs
County Fair premium books.
Mrs. Sharon Bailey, service chairperson, noted lhal
there are still openings at the ·
Feb. 26 Cancer Clinic at
Ve.terans Memorial Hospital.

POMEROY
Meigs
Senior Citizens Center
activities located at the
Pomeroy Junior High School
is open 9a.m. -4p,m. Monday
through Friday.
Monday, Feb. 23- Crafts;
Square Dance, 12:30-3 p.m.
Tuesday, Feb. 24 - Crafts;
Ph:/sical Fitness, 10:45- 11:45
a.m.; Chorus 12:30-2 p.m. ·
Wednesday, Feb. 25 Crafts; Games, 12:30-2 p.m.
Thursday, Feb. 26 .Crafts; Physical Fitness,
10:45-11:15 a.m.; Ballroom
Dancing, 12:30-2 p.m.
Friday. Feb. 'll - Art
Class,
10-11:30
a .m.;
Bowling, 1·3 p.m.
Senior Citizens , Nutrition
Program, 11:20 a.m. - 12:30
p.m. Monday through Friday.
Monday - Braised beef
cubes in mushroom sauce on
poodles, buttered green
beans, )Jerry cobbler, bread,
butter, milk.
'
· Tuesday - Meat loaf, au
gratin potatoes, cole slaw,
pineapple upside down cake,
bread, butter, milk.
Wednesday - Chili c m
carne. cott
cheese on
peach
If, strawberry
gelatin th whi ped topping,
s, milk.
y -- Chicken and
dump ngs , buttered p~as,
tossed salad, purple plums,
bread, butter, milk.
Friday - Fried fish,
buttered steamed potatoes,
buttered spinach, citrus
sections, roll, butter, milk,
Coffee, tea and bottermilk
served daily. Lunch served at
Senior Nutrition Center II :30
ID · 12::10 five days weekly.
Lunch is on a donation basis
f"r s~nior citizens. FC(' for
i: tlt ';-.1!- uf !-'l'rJiqr!; I~ $1 .

KOENIG HOME
'"
REEDSVILLE - Arthur .::E . .Koenig, Rt. I, Reed$ville,, :
has been returned home from ::
Pleasant Vwlley Hospital and····
is improving.
''

BUSINESS

Mrs. Susan Oliver reported
on the recent sorority city
council meeting where plans
were discusse d regarding

"Meigs Slim· N'.Trim is for

An artist of grea t prorilisc,
Mrs. Kabayao ha s gained

·

I:
,,

sale. Continue in present

1

location or move. to site of
'"•.
your ~ ho ice .

"
oi 1he equipment is ·
adequate
for
small
business, will sacrifice.
••
112

••

CA~L

992-SSSJ

.,

:~:~16~
,

"

FOR SALE

chestra, with a chamber
group, and in duo per- special notice from the music
forman ces of Sonatas, he critics in her performances
reli shes in playing the with Gilopez Kabayao both in
unaccompan~ed works of
Bach. He is currently on
concert tour in the United
States.
Cor~on Pineda K:abayao , a
young and gifted pianist, has
been accompanist to Gilopez
Kabayao in his performances
throughout the ·Philippines

Chapter members
send letters to senators

A

'

tile 1-strflp
shines IJrigiJt '"?

-

training from his father,

Malone College, Canton,
maid of honor ; Mrs. Debbie
Finlaw of Long Bottom,

with an overjacket of lace

Senior Citizen admlSSlOn . .r

For ticket reservations call .,
446-3919 or 446-0021. Tickets,.,
may be purchased at PJs,;,

from three generations of a

S herry Kin.g, student at

Miller was in a coral gowri

the Philippines and abroad.' \ ·
She has proven to be a •
. capabl e and sym pathetic
partner, endowed at all ltmes
with a sensi live feeling for
ensemble.
:~
Donations are $15 for "
sponsors, $10 for Patrons, $3,
for Adult admission, $1.50 for, ;
Student admission , an~ $1 for ..:

Shampoo,

Tut• s , Wed . &amp; Sa l.

tlle aerial ladder fund for
Meigs County fire departments, and for equipment fOr
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
1\n ice c rea m socia l was se t

9 I ll 5

Unda Ru lh c ,l o ' d

Sh .uon Lo 11 c
Li ssa Hill
Pam Hall hi ll

$}488

NOW

•

GWho'll help you save
lots of energy?
to pay bi lls. Wi l h a checking
coum from The Willi ng Rnnk.
you ean pny o n't ho~;e ltill!! from
th e com fort. of yo ur ho me.

ilC·

..''

Ill

,.

.. .

Yo ur chec kbook fl h;o he1p!i you
ke ep 1.r11ck nf ,YO l,lr ex pen!;''"' :md
h;d nn c(• your bud g-wl. BcHidoH , yr•u' ll
h ~ 1 Vc Htt &lt;H.: cun1te recOrd of w ho you
I) We

'

"'

..

.,

"

Dank .

OhioValley Bank
Qtllo

.

(tome" in

ha ml y Il l tax t.imc ). ComtJ in l.u d ny
11 nd we' ll makl..' li fe :1 l ot easier
,_ fo r you wi\.h n pcnmnnl du..&gt;ek·
ing :wl·m mt from T he Wlllin~

G l'l l!&lt;p OioA

\.!""'n"

~~:an=~~~~= :
. I. d J•son Peanoa, ~

C. Sebert of
Ravenswood, W. Va..
The
vows Will
be
solemnized by the Rev . Paul
W. Hawks Friday, Feb. 27 _at 7
p.m. at the Grace Uruted
Methodist Olurch in an open

g•.r • an
wiD bt l
~phew of the groom,
.,
rmgbearl!l'be 1 has c:hoael';·
a:r · S~~
f JU. bat '
ney sh · ~orbe llret ;

church ceremony .

~

man . U ers

Russell, brother of the brttll, I
Graham stanley and ~- ,
Pearson, brother-GH811
the groom.
..,.;._ _ _ _ _ _ ___

Mrs. Kathy Luikart, cousin
of the groom, Cheylan, W. Va.
will present the wedd1ng
music. Soloist will be Rodney
McClung, cousin of the
groom, with selections to
begin at 6:30. Miss Russell
will be attended by Sally
Winters as maid of honor.
Other attendants will be
sandy Pearson, sister of the
groom, Carolyn Ditbnan and

the finest

n c:au.....
••111·

•

I

and _._..._., ,
..uttiUIIIIr-•1

tableware

( "o-md tna lcd Gift. Registry • Compiele Selection or Ch in a,
Stcrlinb, Cry:nal • At tt!ndanl's Gift s • Socially Corrccl
IIIY i(:HiOII S • R~·g i s leh:J Briib l Consultant at yo ur .servt&lt;;."l!
wil ltnu r dl itr g~ • Receplion Serv ice loaned without cl1arge

~our brroa[ store

Peddler's
Pantry

~---~-...::;'/./'tut/ !?l~
Jewelers

404 SECOND AVENUE

•

Stop in nl

446 -1647

~~=~MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY

~About

~-!

Our

Bridal RqittJ

"Some Thinp Are Fnr*' "
M f.~ BI!Ii,

;

NATIONAL IUUOA L S~:.MV I CJ::

[·f

State &amp; Thlrcl- Gal.._

'

f)

Gallia Historical Society _
selects committee chairmen

"

paid nnrl who you

C~arles

'

to be sold at the sande time.
Mrs. Janet Downie gave
"Heritage Heartbeat," and
Mrs . Oliver the cultural
repor t entitled " Woman
Speaks." Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Libby Sayre,
Mrs. Cwnmings and Mrs .
Sandi sargent.

Aloq ~ wit h our l:rl l' mh; , t. hu U.~.
Pm~ lul Servi ce , we'd like 10 HIIVC yi~ ll
a whol e lot. nf Ctu.: r g-y th i ;~ yt.o :H ,
Namely, t he "'ear nnd t.curo n YlfUr ·
sclf (toSHY nothin g of gaso line) Lhnt
you ex pPn rl ru shin g nil ove r l nwn

I

or

C

om

• for March with baked goods

1County

GAf.LJPOIJS - DebraLyn
Russell, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Jolm W. ( Bill) Russell
has completed plans for ber
wedding to Gary Michael
Sebert son of Mr. and Mrr
'
take lhe 4-H dog project in a
regular 4-H club but they
must understand they will not
be eligible to take part in the
dog obedience judging at the
fair. To do this they need to
belong to one of the 4-H Dog
Clubs and if they are interes ted in joining a dog club
they shoulq contact ·ei ther
Mrs. del.amerens, Abrams
and call the County Extension
Office.

)

ALWAYS WANTED TO

, Th ur . . F r i .
9am t ll 9pm

money . making projects for ·

BY JAMES SANDS
of Peter Stephen Duponceau, lilrary _
GALUPOUS - Gallipolis a lawyer. Peter Duponceau is
While president of this
residents, up to date on their a very strong link that society Dupnnceau
local hlatory, will remember Gallipolis history has with the corresponded with the
thJit the deeds sold by the bicentennial celebration of Moravian missionary In Ohio,
Scioto Land Company in the American Revolution.
John Heckewelder .
France In 1789 did not carry
Duponceau was born on the Heckewelder was a frequent
fuD deed rights. The 800 so Isle of Rhe, on the coast of visitor to Gallipolis. The
BY FRED J. DEEL
Frenclunen who had bought France In 1760. In 1777 be correspondence
of
Gallla County
lands in America and had sailed from France to Heckewelder to Dupooceau
4-H Extension Agent
made ready their passage to AmeriCa with Baron von mostly concerns the language
UWPORTANTCHANGES
America in 1790 thought that Steuben as Von Steuben's and customs of the Delaware
the member. Members of the
INTHE4-HDOG
they dld have full right.
aide-&lt;le-camp. Von Steuben, Indians. On a nmnber of
specialized pug Clubs wiU no~
PROJECT IN
While the French were born in Prussia, had . occasions, however,
be eligible lor this show .
GALLIA COUNTY
sailing across tbe ocean, the petitioned through France's Heckewelder does mention to
These Dog judgings will he
Scioto Company failed secre!Jiry of war to Benjamin Duponceau about the French
GALLIPOLIS
In held on different days at the
financially and it was Franklin to join Washington's at Gallipolis. Apparently recent years, one of the fair and the dogs will be
discovered that land sold to army. The request having Jefferson
was
quite fastest growing projects in allowed on the Fairgrounds
the French was actually part been granted von Steuben, lnterest~d in Duponceau's Ohio has been the 4-H Dog only for tbe time of judging.
of the Ohio Company's tract. Duponceau and von Steuben's work for Jefferson began to project. This is very easy to Dogs will also need to have
The Ohio Company did agree se&lt;.Tetary arrived at Ports- collect word lists from tbe understand since the dog has papers showing that they
to have the land cleared for mouth, New Hampshire. The western tribes.
always been one of the most have had the necessary
the French, bot the new three were immediately
favorite
pels of mankind. veterinary tests and they will
It was Duponceau who kept
settlers had to pay the Ohio dispatched to Valley Forge alter Congress to repay the After all, everyone knows the also have to be kept on a leash
Company for this land. This where Washington 'WI" in French for their misfortune. old saying, "A dog is a man 's at all limes.
meant that in order to settle camp. Von Steubfn aided by Finally on March 3, 1796, best friend.'' And since most
Presently there are two
at what is now Gallipolis the Peter Duponceau was given Congress passed a law people have room for a dog of Dog Clubs in Gallia County
settlers had to pay twice for by Washington the task of granting to the French a tract some breed, and they are for the coming year . These
their land.
training the troops for battle. of land further dQwn the Ohio fairly easy to care for as far clubs are the Gallla County
Many of the French, upon The drill manual that von (in what is now Scioto. as facilities are concerned,, it K-9 Korps and the advisor is
hearing this news , returned · Steuben developed was used C..".1ty). For his services to is easy to understand why the Mrs.
Mary
Francis
to France. Some stayed in throughout the war. In 1780 the citizens of Gallipolis dog project has gained such deLamerens and the other
Alexandria . About 500 made Duponceau l~ft von Steuben Gervais was given a good popularity.
club is a new club that will be
the journey by pack horse because of poor health.
In
the
past
in
Gallia
named later and the advisor
part of this tract. It was out of
through the mountBins to
It was then that he took up Gervais'
tract
that County there has been only is Stanley Abrams. Mrs .
Pittsburgh, where they the study . of law in Duponceau was
paid. one 4-H Dog Club and if 4-H deLamerens, who lives in
loaded everything onto Philadelphia where he Duponceau owned this tract members wanted to take the Gallipolis, has been an adflatboats to go to their new became a very noted lawyer. until 1806.
4-H Dog project they had to visor for seven years. During
home on the Ohio.
Duponceau was also a writer ,
In 1811 Jean Gervais belong to the Dog Club. The this time, she started the K-9
There nus been muc~ wnUng books on law as well returned to France,- but not reason for this has been Korps which wsa . the
dlscllS.ilon of what was the as books on Indian languages. without a visit to his old because Dog Obedience beginning of the 4-H Dog
major problem of these He was for a long time friend Duponceau. Regularly 'requires so much intensive program in GalUa County.'
French settlers. Some ~.d ve president of the Anierican did residents of Gallipolis training that il was felt that a Abrams who lives near
said it ·... as lHt: J.nOlans, others Philosophic Society which (like Bureau, Menager, specialized club was needed. Addison has worked with the
hljve said disease, and still listed among Its members DeVacht and safford) visit This year 4-H members 4-H Dog programs in other
others argue that the men like Washington, with Monsieur Duponceau on wishing to compete in the 4-H parts of Ohio and in other
of
land Adams, Jefferson. Madison, their travels to Philadelphia. Dog Obedience Show at the states in the northwest. This
uncertainty
ownership caused many Ha~Uillon, John Marshall , In 1844 Deponceau died and is Gallia County Junior Fair. will be his first year as a 4-H
French to leave Gallipolis. Lafayette, von Steuben and burled in Philadelphia riot far must still belong to a Dog advisor in Gallia County and
From 1790 to 1195 the French Kosciusko. The building used from Indepentience Hall.
Club but 4-H members in a we are happy that both he and
tried unsucceSBfullv to ~el bv the societv is on
One last note of irony to thia regular club will also be Mrs. deLamerens have
satisfaction on the unfairness Jndependence Square in story is that tbe man chosen allowed to take the Dog "chosen to devote their time
of paying twice for their land. Philadelphia. Built in 1789 it to sponsor the bill In Congress project. And there will be a and effor1 to helping the 4-H '
In 1795 Jean Gervais was is still used today to hold the (a bill that some say saved Dog project judging for these members enroll in the 4-H
selected by the town to go to manuscripts of famous Gallipolis ) was none other members, also; but this dog program here in Gallia
Philadelphia to petition Americans . A picture of than one of America 's most judgi~g will be based upon County.
Congress to . settle this Duponcau, painted by the notoriou$ villains, Aaron the grooming and care of the
So this year, youth
matter. In Philadelphia famous American· painter Burr.
animal and an interview with eligible for 4-H will ~ able to
Gervais sought the services Thomas Sully , hangs in the

Miss Russell finalizes plans

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GALLIPOLIS - The officers of the Galiia County
Historical Society mel· Feb.
19 and· selected standing
committee chairmen for 1976.
They are : library, Mrs. G.
Randolph Hand ; museun1,
Cleeland Willis; publications,
J . Shennan Porter; historic
sites, Mrs. Evan Roderick ;
program, Mrs. Donald
Hippensteel; membership,
Mrs.
George
Grace;
nominations, Mrs. Max
Elliott and genealogy, Mrs .
Richard James.
It was decided to est,ablish
a publicity committee
(subject to confinnatlon by
the
historical
society
directors at the next monlhly
~ellng March 14 at I p.m. at
the St. Peter's Episcopal
Church) and to appoint Mrs.
Keith Suiter chainnan. F. W.
Burdell was designated as the
society's photographer.
Each committee chairman
will be asked to develop a
schedule of activities and
goals for the year and report
their plan of action to the
society directors at an early
meeting.
The society has announced
that It will be glad to be of
service to the citizens and
organizations of Galiia
county wlt})in lt.s capabilities.
The society also wishes to
invite suggestions from
anyone regarding programs,
projects or activities which
will promote ils major funcUon to discover and collect
any material which may help
to establish or illustrate the
history of the area. These
include its exploration,
settlement, developmen( and
activities in peace and war.
Its progress in population,
wealth, education, arts,
science, agr;culture,
manufactur-es, trade and
transportation. From time to
time the historical society
plans to provide information
through the news media of its
committee activities and
services so the general public
will better understand what
services might be available
to them and those , ctl vi ties of
·u.e historical society in which
they would be In teres ted in
participating.
Membership in the Gallia
County Historical Society Is
~ per year per family.
Anyone
Interested
in
becoming a member should
call Mrs. GeorRe Grace, 446-

0953; Mrs . Harry K. Mills,
446-9688, or Mrs. Keith Suiter,
·446"2259 . ' Inquil'ies . or
suggestions regarding the

society's activities may be
directed to Mrs. Richard
James, 446-4047 or Maj . Gen :
r.eorge E. Bush, 446-3415.

•

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NAME

ADDRESS----~-------------------CI TY_____~_ _ _ ST AT o:E____-:-ZIP-

PLEASE ADD SOc FOR MAIL ORDERS.

'· '

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"Lafayette Ma II"

Gallipolis, 0.

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7 - The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Feb. 22, 197G
The :-:lmdar

Tum~-&amp;·ntinel,

~3~.LLRP7............~~·nnP7~~~~. .QEI.TMP•·~--.-.c ~~)

Original deeds lacked rights
Philippine violin virtuoso coming ~ for early Gallia County settlers Gallia

Ft.&gt;IJ . :!:!. 1976

•

Miller-King
fvows read
·' MIDDLE PORT - Miss
1\.Alhryn Diane Kin g and
James Michael Miller exchanged wedding vows in a
double ring ceremony at 2: 30
p.m. ·on Dec. 20 at the
allllbry Church of Christ.
1
1'he bride is the daughter Of
r . and Mrs. William H.
' ng, Rt . I. Middleport, and
t e bridegroom is the son

or

r . and Mrs . Russell E.
·ller. Rl. 4. Pomeroy.
·•.Tite wedding was perrmed before an altar
corated with a center

*

GALLIPOLIS - Philippine
violin virtuoso Gilupez
Kabayao will ~r ese nt a
concert saturday, Ma rch 13
al Gallia Academy Hi gh
School beginning at 8 p.m.
The presentation is being
sponsored by Bicentennial

sil'C'Vl~ and bodice
Venice lace trimmed
the wedding ring neckline,
waist, cuffs and train. Her

vrganza
inst~rL"i.

Drama, Inc. He will be ac-

bouffant ve il of polyester

companied by his wife,
Corazon.
Gilopez Kabayao comes

illusion wa s attached to a

headpiece wrea th or imported fl owers. The bride
carried a bouquet of white
and blue tinted pompon
mums with baby;s bre~th tied
with blue streamers.
Her attendants wree Miss

musically gifted family in the
province of Negros Occidental in the Philippines.
He received his earliest

rangement of white gladioli
nked with hurricane lamp matron of honor , bolh sisters
~ndelabra, and accent of · of the bride ; Mrs . Linda
fllllly lied with blue bows. Atkins. Columbus, and Miss
F1ornily pews were marked Tina Miller, Rt . 4, Pomeroy,
sister of the groom, brides\vith blue satin bows .
' Pavid M. Lucas, Ches- maids .
The honor attendanls wore
$eake, performed the
~j~emony with Mr~. Mary In dark blue gowns while the
bridesmaids were in light
~lcox, Middleport, Rl. I,
l)tgar l!:l, and Miss Sherry blue. They wore fashioned
King , sister of' the bride, gowns of fl owered polyester
Soloist, presenting selections knit in shades of blue with
.i.rlduding "The Twelfth of panels of the solid color and and had a corsage of white
Never,'' "I'll Walk with God" were designed with high carnations tipped in blue .
lind "We've Only Just necklines, short puffed
A reception honori ng the
sleeves and lace accent trim. couple was held in the church
~gun . "
· !Given in marriage by her Their bouquets were of dark social room . The three tiered
fllther , the bride wore a gown blue and white pompon mums cake trimmed in rainbQw
~ guiana nylon knit with with baby 's breath.
colors w&amp;s topped with the
Randy K. HaynEs of Athens traditional miniature bride
was best man for the and groom . On the table were
bridegroom, and ushers were flowers sent to the bride by
Kevin King, brother of the her Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
'
bride, and Rodney Bailey, secret sister.
.
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Middleport, and David Cole,
Miss Linda Lane registered
Pomeroy, both cousins of the the guests. Presiding at the
?.
bride. Timmy Miller was the serving table were Mrs.
ringbearer. All of the male Richard Finlaw, Sherrie
attendants
wore tuxedos with Barnhart, Tamra Stanley ,
BEFORE
the groom and best man in Christi Stanley·, Sharon Bing,
ligh t blue jackets and black Beverly Wilcox, Rita Bailey
pan ls, and the ushers in black and Linda Gerard.
with light blue shirts.
Mr. and Mrs. Miller reside
For her daughter 's wed- at Route 1, Middleport .
ding, Mrs. King wore a teal
A graduate of 1970, Meigs
blue . gown with chiffon High School, the new Mrs.
sleeves and .had a white Miller is a member of the
carnation corsage. Mrs. Bradbury Church of Christ

(himself a violinist and
doctor-of medicine ) and after
studying in New York under
Theodore Pashkus, once a
mentor of Yehudi Menuhin,
he launched himself into an
international concert career
which has taken him to New
York's Town Hall and Carnegie Hall, to Vienna , Rome,
Madrid,
Tokyo
a nd
numerous other cities and
countries in North America,
Europe, East Asia and New
Zealand.
His services to music in his
member of Xi Gamma Mu
own
country have been
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi,
varied
a nd
readily
Evangeline Chapter, Order of
acknowledged,
and
his
efforts
the Eastern Star, and
to
bring
his
violin
to
the
most
Guardian of Bethel 62, Infar-flung
islands,
and
their
ternational Order of Job 's
towns,
earned
him
the
Daughters. She is employed
in
1961
,
of
being
honor
at Coluntbia Gas Co., Inc.
Mr. Miller also graduated named one of the 10 out· from Meigs in 1970 and is sianding young men of the
affiliated with the Bradbury Philippines . Subsequently,
Church of Christ and works the Silliman University of
as a youth leader. He is Dumaguete City honored him
employed at Russ Certified ·as one of Ute outstanding
Sillimanians in recognition of
Oil in Pomeroy.
.
Out-of-town guests were his musical achievements,
Mr. and Mrs . Dave Lucas, and in 1968 the Central
Chesapeake; Mr _ and Mrs. Philippine University in Iloilo'
Tom King, Columbus; Mr. City accorded him the honor
and
Mrs .
Claremont of being conferred the
Buchanan and Ron, Parkersburg; Mr. and Mrs. A. L.
Leonard, Athen s; J .. M.
Koebel, Gallipolis; .Mr . and
Mrs. Louis Smith, Columbus;
Wayne Carter, New Haven,
W. Va., and Kent and Tammy
MIDDLEPORT - Letters
Sayre, Louisville, Ky .
to Senator Robert Taft and
John Glenn asking that a
National . Beta Sigma PHi
Sorority Week be established
- were .~igned by members of
the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter at a
meeting Tuesday night at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co.

Mr. and Mrs. james M. Milkr

TIME TO

·HAVE. THAT
' OLD DIAMOND

where s he is pianist and

youth leader. She is a

Mrs. Warehime
hosts Pembroke
·update your old diamonds with
brand new setting selected lrom
, the Keepsake catalog of remounts ,, 25 pages in lull color lor you
choose from . You'll li,,d styles
tlasslc'to modern, many

matching wedding rings . All
"'" be custom-fitted to your·
dia1 .........:~ .cJilh Keepsake ~are .

CLARK'S

Jewell} Store
342 Secontt Ave.
Gal

lis, Ohio

GALLIPOLIS - ·Pembroke
Club met Tuesday ·evening
with Mrs. Donald Warehime.
The program was given by
Mrs. Maury Mittleman.
Mrs . Mittleman wore an
authentic costume · of the
period to review "Woman's
Life and Work in the Southern
Colonies" by Julia ChergSpruill. The book was a
discussion of the clothing,
homes, customs and duties of
wives in the South , both in
frontier areas and on plantations.
·

Blue

Patent
&amp;

Black

Patent
Sizes 12 112 to 4

BCD
Width

SIS

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Open a h1t, patently pretty, a thm edge of wedge
. . the fashion -bright shoe for all her dress-up
'· occasions. lots of toe room, fine fit, •areful finish .
All the . very bllst things.

•

communication
cerning the annual

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MRS. EON A REIBEL celebrated her 82nd birthday,
Sunday, Feb. 15 with her first great-granddaughter, eight
month old Kristin Elizabeth Shato, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Jimmie Shato of Gallipolis. The farilily gathered at
the Steamboat Inn Restaurant in Racine for dinner.
Afterwards a decorated birthday cake and ice cream
were served to friends and relatives of Mrs. Reibel at her
home on Pleasant Ridge in Pomeroy. Aslo attending were
Henry Reibel (husband), Mr. and Mrs. Donley Reibel and .
daughter Fae, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Victor Brown, Mr.
and Mrs. Manuel, Minersville; Mrs. Althea Strong and
daughter Diane, Tom Ferrell Wilkesville.

BIRTH ANNOUNCED
DAUGHTER BORN
GALLIPOLIS - Mr , and
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jay Brown,
Mrs. Carl E. Shenefield Gallipolis are announcing the
announce the birth of their birth of their first child, a son,
second daughter, Denise Charles Jeremiah, at Holzer
Marie, Jan . 11 at the Holzer · Medical Center Feb. 18.
Medical Center . Another Maternal grandparents are
daughter, Laurie Ann, is six Mr . and Mrs . John D.
years . old. Maternal grand- McKean, Gallipolis,
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Maternal great-grandmother
Carl Dillon, Concord, W. Va. · is Mrs. Charles M. McKean,
and the. paternal grand- Gallipolis. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Rex parents .are Mr. and Mrs.
E. Shenefield, Langsville. · Charles J . Brown, Gallipolis
paternal
greatGreat grandparents are Mrs. and
Grace Colwell, Vinton and grandparents are Mrs.
Mr . and Mrs . Carl H. George Renshaw, Pomeroy
and Mrs. Jacob Brown ,
Shenefield, Langsville.
Gallipolis.

IN THE
SILVER BRIDGE

PLAZA
Nt:W SHIPMENT

&lt;It
.,.""~~·""' · .
Mon. &amp; rn .
9:38 til 8 p.m.
W~.

Sat.

9:30 til 5 p.m.

Thursday

t: JO tj_l 11 noon

"{

!

Bernadine 's, . Country Fare, :~

•

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and the admission door . Any
donations are tax deductible .. ,
Proceeds will go to Bicen- '·
tennial Drama, Inc.
..:
'

, GILOPEZ KABA YAO

CORAZON KABA YAO

Doctorate of Music degree,

and during his current tour of
the United States and
Canada . A graduate of the
University of San to Tomas
Conserva tory of Music in the
Philippines, unde r the
tutelage of Aida sanz Gonzalez, Mrs. Kabayao has
consistently demonstrated
her keen musicians hip in
performances of solo and '
sonato works. She was the
winn.er of several pi ano
competitions in her country
and has been honored with a
number of awa rds and
scholarships.

..

honoris ca usa .

He was recen tly engaged
by the Malaysian Government to help form and _train
their Youth Symphony Orchestra, and has been closely
associated with the Singapore
Youth Orchestra since it was
founded .
A versatile and flexible
musician , he has premiered
many ·compositions in the
Philippines, and gave the
first performance in New
Zealand of the viol in concerto
by Shostakovitch. Equally at
home as a soloist with or:.

FARAH
LEISURE SUITS

con~
C on~

vention to be held in CinCinnati May 21, 22 and 23, was
read and final plans were
made to go to Athens for a
showing of "Nashville" this
·
weekend.
Mrs. Kathy Cummings,
ways and means chairnt~rson ,
announced that at the March
16 meeting a "do your own
thing " auction will be held .
Arrangements were a lso
discussed for se lling ad vertising for the Meigs
County Fair premium books.
Mrs. Sharon Bailey, service chairperson, noted lhal
there are still openings at the ·
Feb. 26 Cancer Clinic at
Ve.terans Memorial Hospital.

POMEROY
Meigs
Senior Citizens Center
activities located at the
Pomeroy Junior High School
is open 9a.m. -4p,m. Monday
through Friday.
Monday, Feb. 23- Crafts;
Square Dance, 12:30-3 p.m.
Tuesday, Feb. 24 - Crafts;
Ph:/sical Fitness, 10:45- 11:45
a.m.; Chorus 12:30-2 p.m. ·
Wednesday, Feb. 25 Crafts; Games, 12:30-2 p.m.
Thursday, Feb. 26 .Crafts; Physical Fitness,
10:45-11:15 a.m.; Ballroom
Dancing, 12:30-2 p.m.
Friday. Feb. 'll - Art
Class,
10-11:30
a .m.;
Bowling, 1·3 p.m.
Senior Citizens , Nutrition
Program, 11:20 a.m. - 12:30
p.m. Monday through Friday.
Monday - Braised beef
cubes in mushroom sauce on
poodles, buttered green
beans, )Jerry cobbler, bread,
butter, milk.
'
· Tuesday - Meat loaf, au
gratin potatoes, cole slaw,
pineapple upside down cake,
bread, butter, milk.
Wednesday - Chili c m
carne. cott
cheese on
peach
If, strawberry
gelatin th whi ped topping,
s, milk.
y -- Chicken and
dump ngs , buttered p~as,
tossed salad, purple plums,
bread, butter, milk.
Friday - Fried fish,
buttered steamed potatoes,
buttered spinach, citrus
sections, roll, butter, milk,
Coffee, tea and bottermilk
served daily. Lunch served at
Senior Nutrition Center II :30
ID · 12::10 five days weekly.
Lunch is on a donation basis
f"r s~nior citizens. FC(' for
i: tlt ';-.1!- uf !-'l'rJiqr!; I~ $1 .

KOENIG HOME
'"
REEDSVILLE - Arthur .::E . .Koenig, Rt. I, Reed$ville,, :
has been returned home from ::
Pleasant Vwlley Hospital and····
is improving.
''

BUSINESS

Mrs. Susan Oliver reported
on the recent sorority city
council meeting where plans
were discusse d regarding

"Meigs Slim· N'.Trim is for

An artist of grea t prorilisc,
Mrs. Kabayao ha s gained

·

I:
,,

sale. Continue in present

1

location or move. to site of
'"•.
your ~ ho ice .

"
oi 1he equipment is ·
adequate
for
small
business, will sacrifice.
••
112

••

CA~L

992-SSSJ

.,

:~:~16~
,

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FOR SALE

chestra, with a chamber
group, and in duo per- special notice from the music
forman ces of Sonatas, he critics in her performances
reli shes in playing the with Gilopez Kabayao both in
unaccompan~ed works of
Bach. He is currently on
concert tour in the United
States.
Cor~on Pineda K:abayao , a
young and gifted pianist, has
been accompanist to Gilopez
Kabayao in his performances
throughout the ·Philippines

Chapter members
send letters to senators

A

'

tile 1-strflp
shines IJrigiJt '"?

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training from his father,

Malone College, Canton,
maid of honor ; Mrs. Debbie
Finlaw of Long Bottom,

with an overjacket of lace

Senior Citizen admlSSlOn . .r

For ticket reservations call .,
446-3919 or 446-0021. Tickets,.,
may be purchased at PJs,;,

from three generations of a

S herry Kin.g, student at

Miller was in a coral gowri

the Philippines and abroad.' \ ·
She has proven to be a •
. capabl e and sym pathetic
partner, endowed at all ltmes
with a sensi live feeling for
ensemble.
:~
Donations are $15 for "
sponsors, $10 for Patrons, $3,
for Adult admission, $1.50 for, ;
Student admission , an~ $1 for ..:

Shampoo,

Tut• s , Wed . &amp; Sa l.

tlle aerial ladder fund for
Meigs County fire departments, and for equipment fOr
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
1\n ice c rea m socia l was se t

9 I ll 5

Unda Ru lh c ,l o ' d

Sh .uon Lo 11 c
Li ssa Hill
Pam Hall hi ll

$}488

NOW

•

GWho'll help you save
lots of energy?
to pay bi lls. Wi l h a checking
coum from The Willi ng Rnnk.
you ean pny o n't ho~;e ltill!! from
th e com fort. of yo ur ho me.

ilC·

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Yo ur chec kbook fl h;o he1p!i you
ke ep 1.r11ck nf ,YO l,lr ex pen!;''"' :md
h;d nn c(• your bud g-wl. BcHidoH , yr•u' ll
h ~ 1 Vc Htt &lt;H.: cun1te recOrd of w ho you
I) We

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Dank .

OhioValley Bank
Qtllo

.

(tome" in

ha ml y Il l tax t.imc ). ComtJ in l.u d ny
11 nd we' ll makl..' li fe :1 l ot easier
,_ fo r you wi\.h n pcnmnnl du..&gt;ek·
ing :wl·m mt from T he Wlllin~

G l'l l!&lt;p OioA

\.!""'n"

~~:an=~~~~= :
. I. d J•son Peanoa, ~

C. Sebert of
Ravenswood, W. Va..
The
vows Will
be
solemnized by the Rev . Paul
W. Hawks Friday, Feb. 27 _at 7
p.m. at the Grace Uruted
Methodist Olurch in an open

g•.r • an
wiD bt l
~phew of the groom,
.,
rmgbearl!l'be 1 has c:hoael';·
a:r · S~~
f JU. bat '
ney sh · ~orbe llret ;

church ceremony .

~

man . U ers

Russell, brother of the brttll, I
Graham stanley and ~- ,
Pearson, brother-GH811
the groom.
..,.;._ _ _ _ _ _ ___

Mrs. Kathy Luikart, cousin
of the groom, Cheylan, W. Va.
will present the wedd1ng
music. Soloist will be Rodney
McClung, cousin of the
groom, with selections to
begin at 6:30. Miss Russell
will be attended by Sally
Winters as maid of honor.
Other attendants will be
sandy Pearson, sister of the
groom, Carolyn Ditbnan and

the finest

n c:au.....
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and _._..._., ,
..uttiUIIIIr-•1

tableware

( "o-md tna lcd Gift. Registry • Compiele Selection or Ch in a,
Stcrlinb, Cry:nal • At tt!ndanl's Gift s • Socially Corrccl
IIIY i(:HiOII S • R~·g i s leh:J Briib l Consultant at yo ur .servt&lt;;."l!
wil ltnu r dl itr g~ • Receplion Serv ice loaned without cl1arge

~our brroa[ store

Peddler's
Pantry

~---~-...::;'/./'tut/ !?l~
Jewelers

404 SECOND AVENUE

•

Stop in nl

446 -1647

~~=~MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY

~About

~-!

Our

Bridal RqittJ

"Some Thinp Are Fnr*' "
M f.~ BI!Ii,

;

NATIONAL IUUOA L S~:.MV I CJ::

[·f

State &amp; Thlrcl- Gal.._

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Gallia Historical Society _
selects committee chairmen

"

paid nnrl who you

C~arles

'

to be sold at the sande time.
Mrs. Janet Downie gave
"Heritage Heartbeat," and
Mrs . Oliver the cultural
repor t entitled " Woman
Speaks." Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Libby Sayre,
Mrs. Cwnmings and Mrs .
Sandi sargent.

Aloq ~ wit h our l:rl l' mh; , t. hu U.~.
Pm~ lul Servi ce , we'd like 10 HIIVC yi~ ll
a whol e lot. nf Ctu.: r g-y th i ;~ yt.o :H ,
Namely, t he "'ear nnd t.curo n YlfUr ·
sclf (toSHY nothin g of gaso line) Lhnt
you ex pPn rl ru shin g nil ove r l nwn

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C

om

• for March with baked goods

1County

GAf.LJPOIJS - DebraLyn
Russell, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Jolm W. ( Bill) Russell
has completed plans for ber
wedding to Gary Michael
Sebert son of Mr. and Mrr
'
take lhe 4-H dog project in a
regular 4-H club but they
must understand they will not
be eligible to take part in the
dog obedience judging at the
fair. To do this they need to
belong to one of the 4-H Dog
Clubs and if they are interes ted in joining a dog club
they shoulq contact ·ei ther
Mrs. del.amerens, Abrams
and call the County Extension
Office.

)

ALWAYS WANTED TO

, Th ur . . F r i .
9am t ll 9pm

money . making projects for ·

BY JAMES SANDS
of Peter Stephen Duponceau, lilrary _
GALUPOUS - Gallipolis a lawyer. Peter Duponceau is
While president of this
residents, up to date on their a very strong link that society Dupnnceau
local hlatory, will remember Gallipolis history has with the corresponded with the
thJit the deeds sold by the bicentennial celebration of Moravian missionary In Ohio,
Scioto Land Company in the American Revolution.
John Heckewelder .
France In 1789 did not carry
Duponceau was born on the Heckewelder was a frequent
fuD deed rights. The 800 so Isle of Rhe, on the coast of visitor to Gallipolis. The
BY FRED J. DEEL
Frenclunen who had bought France In 1760. In 1777 be correspondence
of
Gallla County
lands in America and had sailed from France to Heckewelder to Dupooceau
4-H Extension Agent
made ready their passage to AmeriCa with Baron von mostly concerns the language
UWPORTANTCHANGES
America in 1790 thought that Steuben as Von Steuben's and customs of the Delaware
the member. Members of the
INTHE4-HDOG
they dld have full right.
aide-&lt;le-camp. Von Steuben, Indians. On a nmnber of
specialized pug Clubs wiU no~
PROJECT IN
While the French were born in Prussia, had . occasions, however,
be eligible lor this show .
GALLIA COUNTY
sailing across tbe ocean, the petitioned through France's Heckewelder does mention to
These Dog judgings will he
Scioto Company failed secre!Jiry of war to Benjamin Duponceau about the French
GALLIPOLIS
In held on different days at the
financially and it was Franklin to join Washington's at Gallipolis. Apparently recent years, one of the fair and the dogs will be
discovered that land sold to army. The request having Jefferson
was
quite fastest growing projects in allowed on the Fairgrounds
the French was actually part been granted von Steuben, lnterest~d in Duponceau's Ohio has been the 4-H Dog only for tbe time of judging.
of the Ohio Company's tract. Duponceau and von Steuben's work for Jefferson began to project. This is very easy to Dogs will also need to have
The Ohio Company did agree se&lt;.Tetary arrived at Ports- collect word lists from tbe understand since the dog has papers showing that they
to have the land cleared for mouth, New Hampshire. The western tribes.
always been one of the most have had the necessary
the French, bot the new three were immediately
favorite
pels of mankind. veterinary tests and they will
It was Duponceau who kept
settlers had to pay the Ohio dispatched to Valley Forge alter Congress to repay the After all, everyone knows the also have to be kept on a leash
Company for this land. This where Washington 'WI" in French for their misfortune. old saying, "A dog is a man 's at all limes.
meant that in order to settle camp. Von Steubfn aided by Finally on March 3, 1796, best friend.'' And since most
Presently there are two
at what is now Gallipolis the Peter Duponceau was given Congress passed a law people have room for a dog of Dog Clubs in Gallia County
settlers had to pay twice for by Washington the task of granting to the French a tract some breed, and they are for the coming year . These
their land.
training the troops for battle. of land further dQwn the Ohio fairly easy to care for as far clubs are the Gallla County
Many of the French, upon The drill manual that von (in what is now Scioto. as facilities are concerned,, it K-9 Korps and the advisor is
hearing this news , returned · Steuben developed was used C..".1ty). For his services to is easy to understand why the Mrs.
Mary
Francis
to France. Some stayed in throughout the war. In 1780 the citizens of Gallipolis dog project has gained such deLamerens and the other
Alexandria . About 500 made Duponceau l~ft von Steuben Gervais was given a good popularity.
club is a new club that will be
the journey by pack horse because of poor health.
In
the
past
in
Gallia
named later and the advisor
part of this tract. It was out of
through the mountBins to
It was then that he took up Gervais'
tract
that County there has been only is Stanley Abrams. Mrs .
Pittsburgh, where they the study . of law in Duponceau was
paid. one 4-H Dog Club and if 4-H deLamerens, who lives in
loaded everything onto Philadelphia where he Duponceau owned this tract members wanted to take the Gallipolis, has been an adflatboats to go to their new became a very noted lawyer. until 1806.
4-H Dog project they had to visor for seven years. During
home on the Ohio.
Duponceau was also a writer ,
In 1811 Jean Gervais belong to the Dog Club. The this time, she started the K-9
There nus been muc~ wnUng books on law as well returned to France,- but not reason for this has been Korps which wsa . the
dlscllS.ilon of what was the as books on Indian languages. without a visit to his old because Dog Obedience beginning of the 4-H Dog
major problem of these He was for a long time friend Duponceau. Regularly 'requires so much intensive program in GalUa County.'
French settlers. Some ~.d ve president of the Anierican did residents of Gallipolis training that il was felt that a Abrams who lives near
said it ·... as lHt: J.nOlans, others Philosophic Society which (like Bureau, Menager, specialized club was needed. Addison has worked with the
hljve said disease, and still listed among Its members DeVacht and safford) visit This year 4-H members 4-H Dog programs in other
others argue that the men like Washington, with Monsieur Duponceau on wishing to compete in the 4-H parts of Ohio and in other
of
land Adams, Jefferson. Madison, their travels to Philadelphia. Dog Obedience Show at the states in the northwest. This
uncertainty
ownership caused many Ha~Uillon, John Marshall , In 1844 Deponceau died and is Gallia County Junior Fair. will be his first year as a 4-H
French to leave Gallipolis. Lafayette, von Steuben and burled in Philadelphia riot far must still belong to a Dog advisor in Gallia County and
From 1790 to 1195 the French Kosciusko. The building used from Indepentience Hall.
Club but 4-H members in a we are happy that both he and
tried unsucceSBfullv to ~el bv the societv is on
One last note of irony to thia regular club will also be Mrs. deLamerens have
satisfaction on the unfairness Jndependence Square in story is that tbe man chosen allowed to take the Dog "chosen to devote their time
of paying twice for their land. Philadelphia. Built in 1789 it to sponsor the bill In Congress project. And there will be a and effor1 to helping the 4-H '
In 1795 Jean Gervais was is still used today to hold the (a bill that some say saved Dog project judging for these members enroll in the 4-H
selected by the town to go to manuscripts of famous Gallipolis ) was none other members, also; but this dog program here in Gallia
Philadelphia to petition Americans . A picture of than one of America 's most judgi~g will be based upon County.
Congress to . settle this Duponcau, painted by the notoriou$ villains, Aaron the grooming and care of the
So this year, youth
matter. In Philadelphia famous American· painter Burr.
animal and an interview with eligible for 4-H will ~ able to
Gervais sought the services Thomas Sully , hangs in the

Miss Russell finalizes plans

FOI C

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GALLIPOLIS - The officers of the Galiia County
Historical Society mel· Feb.
19 and· selected standing
committee chairmen for 1976.
They are : library, Mrs. G.
Randolph Hand ; museun1,
Cleeland Willis; publications,
J . Shennan Porter; historic
sites, Mrs. Evan Roderick ;
program, Mrs. Donald
Hippensteel; membership,
Mrs.
George
Grace;
nominations, Mrs. Max
Elliott and genealogy, Mrs .
Richard James.
It was decided to est,ablish
a publicity committee
(subject to confinnatlon by
the
historical
society
directors at the next monlhly
~ellng March 14 at I p.m. at
the St. Peter's Episcopal
Church) and to appoint Mrs.
Keith Suiter chainnan. F. W.
Burdell was designated as the
society's photographer.
Each committee chairman
will be asked to develop a
schedule of activities and
goals for the year and report
their plan of action to the
society directors at an early
meeting.
The society has announced
that It will be glad to be of
service to the citizens and
organizations of Galiia
county wlt})in lt.s capabilities.
The society also wishes to
invite suggestions from
anyone regarding programs,
projects or activities which
will promote ils major funcUon to discover and collect
any material which may help
to establish or illustrate the
history of the area. These
include its exploration,
settlement, developmen( and
activities in peace and war.
Its progress in population,
wealth, education, arts,
science, agr;culture,
manufactur-es, trade and
transportation. From time to
time the historical society
plans to provide information
through the news media of its
committee activities and
services so the general public
will better understand what
services might be available
to them and those , ctl vi ties of
·u.e historical society in which
they would be In teres ted in
participating.
Membership in the Gallia
County Historical Society Is
~ per year per family.
Anyone
Interested
in
becoming a member should
call Mrs. GeorRe Grace, 446-

0953; Mrs . Harry K. Mills,
446-9688, or Mrs. Keith Suiter,
·446"2259 . ' Inquil'ies . or
suggestions regarding the

society's activities may be
directed to Mrs. Richard
James, 446-4047 or Maj . Gen :
r.eorge E. Bush, 446-3415.

•

Qrofessional shoes

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HERE'S YOUR ELIZABETH . ARDEN . j
ORDER FORM:
The Everylhing You've Always Wanted til
lry Collection
Please send me the items marked below tlli- t .00 . .ell. '

'

VISIBLE DIFFERENCE
REFINING MOS!TURE
CREAM COMPLEX
Elizabeth Arden's unique moisturizing and
texturiz ing cream that penetrates up to 20
cell lavers deep .
net wt. 1.2S ot . ( )
net we. 2.5 oz. 20.00 f }

VELVA MOISTURE FILM

You should be getting
more than just a pretty shoe.
You need contoured insoles (cushion
molded to the contours of
your feel), shock absorbing wedges and
a more comfortable side tie.
You·get them all 'from Naturalizer
It's all you'd expect and more.

Lavishes your tace with an abundan c;e of
moisture that smooths and softens
provides a superb-cushion to l)repare your
skin · for make up .
4 fl. oz. S7 .00 ( I
eti.OI.Sll .OO 'f I
16 fl. Ol . $17 .SO ( )
SKIN DYNAMICS
S:XTAA BENEFIT SOAP tor normal to
dry skin
Cont~ins ~ n~tural oil that helps protect
your skin's valuable mo;sture . Liqui_fies
makeur without stripping away v•taL
ne1ura
lubr ic ation . Leaves skin soft ,
fresh , glowiOg clean
not taut.

s.s or . bar and dishu.oo ( )

EXT.RA BENEFIT SOAP tor oity s.~on
Contains natural cl ay s 10 •.t:c k 011 1 itnd
absorb excess surface 0 11 Cll'ar :. away
dirt , surface ' impuri! ics , &lt;1nU mak.:· ~p .
Leaves your skin feelmg fresh , spa rklmg
cleM .

S. 5 01 . bar and diih $41.00 (

EVERYDAY MOISTURE

THE UNIFORM CENTER
366 Stcond Ave.

Gallipolis, 0.

h i

,

A l i ght, non perfumecl to lion that
pene1rates instenlly to add moisture. and
. r lcct~d ingrl"'dients to ~reate more tdeal
11Wi ng condition.-. tor sktn . . Everyday u~e
f•liscs your &lt;; h in ·c; abllttv to rf'IBtn
moisture on11rt .... r11v 10 ~ 1 10 t h• • f~l~m cnt~ .
f ctu"1 i• h elp ". m ,1 ;' " ilin h c .•Phy lookmq skm
.~
tor a vi t al d C Wt · rH' ••D IJ f ·nl
•m cP

MUL TIPLE· ACTION CLEANSING .

Once or twice a w eek, lry extrao rdtn~ry
cleansing . II thoroughly vacuum s out d1rt ,
makeup . exce ss oil an d other surf~~ e
impurities . At the same t im e spec d1 c
ingredien•s work deep down within 1h e
skin to encouragP. il to cle an se itself
biologically .
net wt. 4 oz. u .so I )
COMPLEXIOP\1 RENEWAL · LOTION .
A gentl)r sluffing lotion Jha t ~orks W1lh
your skin to h_el p complete ti s natural
funct ion ot sheddmg i tself ot 'dead cens ~
bar.cs the fresh er , mor e refi _n ed ' newskin '
just be!"ow .. P er form s wdhout_ ~a r s h
abrasives . excessive dryi ng , or. pdl1ng
yet so effect i.vc you only usc 1! once or
lwice a week
.
' fl. oz. 56 .50 ( )
BELIEVABLE
COLOR
MAX1MUM
MOISTURE MAKEUP
.
Formula t ed with moisture t h at's good for
your skin . Gives smooth co verage and a
moist , dewy f mish .
,
Creamy .B eige { )
Tanr~ed Be!ge ( )
Ivory Beige ( I
Sunshmc Bctge ( l
Hushed Peach (
Quiet Ro se ( J
1 tl. Ol. U . SO
BELIEVABLE COLOR MINIMUM OIL

MAKEVP
H ~l p s

r e tard oil br eak through for a
-;moother , fre sh er f inish that tas1 s and
l a5Ts .
Cr('amy Beige ( I
T c1n ned !)eige (
Sunshi n e Beiqc (
tvory Beig-e ( l
Qui (•t r&lt;: ose (
H ush~d Peilch (
I fl. 01 . S6 .SO

BLUE GRASS
Th e fresh . c asual fragran ce with •l no lc of

,,.,.~ soir ilc d charm .
Perfume Mist to sprayn:t wt. ' ot 6.00 ( )
net , 31 . oz . 9.00C )
1
l
FtowcrM •·, tto '.i plashon
·l 11 . oz . 4 -501
ousting Powder to puff on
4. 50 (
, '
nl!twt
nctwt.. 6401
01 .. 6,00 ,(

Because this very special collection is •\tililabll ,_. 1
limited time while supplies last, only one of tach ttem

may be ordered - but you may order all 10 dlft.,.,.t
items .

My order of 5.00 or more is marked.
Please send me all ten! C )
1. Velva Moisture Film, 2 fl. oz. ( )
2. Visible Difference Reli~ing Moisturt·Crem•
Compex., net we. lf~ oz. ( )
J. Conditioning Lash Thickener, "Very Bl•clc,'' net. wt.
.10oz. t )
4. Bye-·Lines NightCare Cream for Eves, iMI. wt. 'lr 11.
(

)

s. Bye-Unes Undermakeup Wrl'nkte Lotion. 1 fl. oz. (

6. Beauty Sleep, net wt. 1 oz.

()

7. Eight Hour Cream, net wt. 1 oz. C )

a. Blue Grass Perfume Spray, netwt .. J2 oz. ( )
9. Believable Color Maximum

MOI51UI w ... "••
"Bilsic Beige," 112 fl. oz. I )
10. Great Color Silky Shadow for Eyes "Alpine lift/'

nel wt .. 08

01 . (

)

NAME

ADDRESS----~-------------------CI TY_____~_ _ _ ST AT o:E____-:-ZIP-

PLEASE ADD SOc FOR MAIL ORDERS.

'· '

e&amp;'I\(Ultl\t'
300 Second Ave.

"Lafayette Ma II"

Gallipolis, 0.

t..l~l~t.~o~z~-!'':·~50~~~~~----~------------------------------~~~~--~-------------------=~~~~~~------------.....,

..

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SUPER MARKETS

SUPER M -A RKETS
i .tme SURDAY

OPEN

252 THIRD AVENUE. .GAlliPOLIS, OHIO
2500
AVofUE. Pl PWSANT. W. VA.
We rHarve the rl8ht to limit quanlltl .. on •II Items In thl1 od. PrlcH
eft.ctlve thru S.turMy, fH . 28 , 1976. None toltlto tleal•n.

FRESH CRISP
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Head

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RED

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DELICIOUS APPLES

•

LARGE SIZE FLORIDA

••

JUICE ORANGES

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•
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GOLDEN CIIISPY
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CARROTS

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DUBUQUE -U.S. GOVT. INSP•

MADE WITH U.S. GOVT.INSP. BEEF

SLICED

FRESH

BEEF LIVER
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•

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ALL PURPOSE

WHITE POTATOES •

e

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LARGE

SPANISH
ONIONS
.
NEW
.
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GREEN CABBAGE

e

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lb;

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$198

3 39c
15c
••r

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D EEF

GR

FRESH

ARMOUR*: STAR-u.s. GOVT.INSP.

CHIPPED

FULLY COOKED

(:

Family Pak '
5-lbs. or more

lb.

U.S. GOVT. INSP •

FESTIVE or MEDALLION
BRAND -U.S.D.A,INSP•

CHOPPED

lb.

PLUMP YOUNG

ARMOUR*:STAR-U.S. GOVT. INSP •

Jumbo Bologna.., ... "'. lb.69c
Bra chwe. er Any~zePiece 69c
lb.

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lb.

lb •
Average

•
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LIMIT ONE PER
CUSTOMER

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2-lbs.

lb.

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VASELINE

ISLAND FARM

PY-0-MY

. MUELLER'S

ALL VARIETIES

ABY POWDER.
or BABYllot. .OIL
each

MIXED
VEGETABLES

ORCHARD FARM
Frozen

THANK YOU

VIVA

ARGO

PURPLE
PLUMS

TOWELS

WEET
PEAS

24-oz. Can

FULLY COOKED HAMS ......~~~~~ •••· ••. 99c
'
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CUT
HAM ROASTS •• I " IHICU. $)39

10 to 14-lb.

lb.

-· SALAD TOMATOES(
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SHANK PORTION -SOME SLICES REMOVED

'••

RED RIPE

I

5

.

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H

1~-oz.

EGG
NOODLES
1-lb.
Cans

PIES
APPLE, CHERRY
or BLUEBERRY

8-oz. Size

1-lb. 1-oz. Cans

FINE, MEDIUM OR WIDE
1-lb. Pkg.

FRUIT
·COCKTAIL
1-lb. Cans

ASSORTED, WHITE,
or DECORATED

JUMBO ROLLS

1-lb. 1-oz. ~ns

ROYAL SCOT

CAKE
MIXES
6.5-oz. Pkg.
&amp; FROSTINGS
5-oz. Pkg.·

for

. MARGARINE
1-lb. Qtrs. Pkg.

THOROFARE

ATE FARE

Fro:a:en-100% FLORIDA
CONCENTRATED

Sliced

WHITE
BR-EAD

ORANGE
JUICE
6-oz. Cans

for

1-lb. 4-oz. Loaves
UMIT3

LIMIT 5

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CLIP &amp; REDEEM
JOHNSON'S

BABY

19

SHAMPOO
11-oz. Bottle

GEORGIAN

TETLEY

/BATHROOM
TISSUE

TEA BAGS
1 OO·c:t. Pic g.

8-Roll Package

MAXWELL HOUSE
lnatant

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tJ

COFFEE
10-oz. Jar

Limit One Pkg. Per Coupon
Valid Thru Sat., feb. 28, 1976
Limit One Coupon Per Customer

Limit One Botti• Per Coupon •
Volld Thru lat •• feb. 28, 1976
Limit One
Per Cuatom•r

•

CLIP &amp; REDEEM
AT AN' "NNl'fAIIf WITH THIS COU~N
AND A MINIMUM '10.00 PURCHASl

DEL HAVEN

·: SALAD ·
. DRESSING
Quart Jar

Limit One Jor Per Coupon
Valid. Thru Sat., feb. 28, 1976
Limit One Coupon Per C.uatomer

•

I

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ar~
SUPER MARKETS

SUPER M -A RKETS
i .tme SURDAY

OPEN

252 THIRD AVENUE. .GAlliPOLIS, OHIO
2500
AVofUE. Pl PWSANT. W. VA.
We rHarve the rl8ht to limit quanlltl .. on •II Items In thl1 od. PrlcH
eft.ctlve thru S.turMy, fH . 28 , 1976. None toltlto tleal•n.

FRESH CRISP
.

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I

••
•

•.•
•

••
•

i•

Head

•

•
•

•••
•

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RED

•

DELICIOUS APPLES

•

LARGE SIZE FLORIDA

••

JUICE ORANGES

•

.•

••'
•••
•
••
•

.

GOLDEN CIIISPY
e

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..

•

CARROTS

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.
•

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89

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17

DUBUQUE -U.S. GOVT. INSP•

MADE WITH U.S. GOVT.INSP. BEEF

SLICED

FRESH

BEEF LIVER
~

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•

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e

•

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ALL PURPOSE

WHITE POTATOES •

e

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LARGE

SPANISH
ONIONS
.
NEW
.
..

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GREEN CABBAGE

e

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lb;

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$198

3 39c
15c
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D EEF

GR

FRESH

ARMOUR*: STAR-u.s. GOVT.INSP.

CHIPPED

FULLY COOKED

(:

Family Pak '
5-lbs. or more

lb.

U.S. GOVT. INSP •

FESTIVE or MEDALLION
BRAND -U.S.D.A,INSP•

CHOPPED

lb.

PLUMP YOUNG

ARMOUR*:STAR-U.S. GOVT. INSP •

Jumbo Bologna.., ... "'. lb.69c
Bra chwe. er Any~zePiece 69c
lb.

'

.••
.•

lb.

lb •
Average

•
•'

LIMIT ONE PER
CUSTOMER

•

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~

2-lbs.

lb.

'

VASELINE

ISLAND FARM

PY-0-MY

. MUELLER'S

ALL VARIETIES

ABY POWDER.
or BABYllot. .OIL
each

MIXED
VEGETABLES

ORCHARD FARM
Frozen

THANK YOU

VIVA

ARGO

PURPLE
PLUMS

TOWELS

WEET
PEAS

24-oz. Can

FULLY COOKED HAMS ......~~~~~ •••· ••. 99c
'
.
CUT
HAM ROASTS •• I " IHICU. $)39

10 to 14-lb.

lb.

-· SALAD TOMATOES(
'
'

SHANK PORTION -SOME SLICES REMOVED

'••

RED RIPE

I

5

.

•

'I

H

1~-oz.

EGG
NOODLES
1-lb.
Cans

PIES
APPLE, CHERRY
or BLUEBERRY

8-oz. Size

1-lb. 1-oz. Cans

FINE, MEDIUM OR WIDE
1-lb. Pkg.

FRUIT
·COCKTAIL
1-lb. Cans

ASSORTED, WHITE,
or DECORATED

JUMBO ROLLS

1-lb. 1-oz. ~ns

ROYAL SCOT

CAKE
MIXES
6.5-oz. Pkg.
&amp; FROSTINGS
5-oz. Pkg.·

for

. MARGARINE
1-lb. Qtrs. Pkg.

THOROFARE

ATE FARE

Fro:a:en-100% FLORIDA
CONCENTRATED

Sliced

WHITE
BR-EAD

ORANGE
JUICE
6-oz. Cans

for

1-lb. 4-oz. Loaves
UMIT3

LIMIT 5

...•
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CLIP &amp; REDEEM
JOHNSON'S

BABY

19

SHAMPOO
11-oz. Bottle

GEORGIAN

TETLEY

/BATHROOM
TISSUE

TEA BAGS
1 OO·c:t. Pic g.

8-Roll Package

MAXWELL HOUSE
lnatant

•

tJ

COFFEE
10-oz. Jar

Limit One Pkg. Per Coupon
Valid Thru Sat., feb. 28, 1976
Limit One Coupon Per Customer

Limit One Botti• Per Coupon •
Volld Thru lat •• feb. 28, 1976
Limit One
Per Cuatom•r

•

CLIP &amp; REDEEM
AT AN' "NNl'fAIIf WITH THIS COU~N
AND A MINIMUM '10.00 PURCHASl

DEL HAVEN

·: SALAD ·
. DRESSING
Quart Jar

Limit One Jor Per Coupon
Valid. Thru Sat., feb. 28, 1976
Limit One Coupon Per C.uatomer

•

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�FA C drive to begin Sunday
GALLIPOLIS - The 1976

''

l.·SHUT -INS VllilT~D - The youth grou p of the Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant Seventh-day
i\dventist Church visited a rea shut-ins recently. In the group who visited Mrs. Martha
Fulton were (1-&lt;") C.1mck Kuhn , Gail Clark, Crystal Green, Mrs. Fulton, Mark Green,
Stephanie Green, Renee Quail, Robbie Green, Danny Mitchell. Mrs. Virginia Thomas is
group leader .

Forest Run UMW entertained
POM~ROY - Mrs. John
Scott and Mrs. Kerns Roush
entertained the United
Meth odist Women of the
Forest Run U1tited Methodist
Church at Mrs. Scott's home
Tuesday evening.
Mrs. Russ Watson opened
the meeting with devotions
entitled ~~ Loves Pray ~r"
from the bookl et "Good

Morning

Lord ." · The

scripture was taken from the
sixth chapter of Matthew.
Devotions were followed by
11
The Lord's Prayer " by the
group.
Mrs . Edill1 Sisson w ~ s

BEAUTY BOUTIOUE
Perm Special
520.00 Perms lor

program leader, and her
progra m was based on ""Our
Heritage, 1976 - Remove not
the Ancient Landmarks
which Thy Fathers Have
Set." The first part was a bout
the beginning of our nation ,
and included art icles by
various members about the
Pilgrims, the Virg.in ia
Co lony, farme rs and the
sib'llers of the Declaration of
~I dependence.
Pa rt two was "The Church
was and is", and readings

liberty - if nothing what can
freedom mean to you?" Each
member cited the landmark
that first came to mind when
the word was mentioned.
An invitation was read
from the ladies of the Trinity
Church to at tend a Lenten.
breakfast on Ash Wednesday,
March 3. Mrs. Richard Jarvis
reported on the retreat of
minister 's wives which she
attended
this
week.
Correspondence was read
concerni ng the tt Hunger"

&lt;md , discussions were held
t'Oncerni ng the circ uit riders,

drive

John Wesley and other
church founders.
Part three centered around

schools. Mrs. Jolm Scott read
an article "The Little Red
School House" and discussion
foll owed concerning progress
and changes in schools. The

Jl4.50

which

is

Day.
Attending were Mrs. Liliian
Henderson, Mrs. Fred Nease,
Mrs. Edison Hollon, Mrs.
Uswin Nease, Mrs. Erma
Roush , Mrs. Harry Wyatt,

We Make Low-Cost Loans for ·

Denver Holter, Mrs. Henry
Salser, Mrs. Edith Sisson,
Mrs·. Russ Watson and Rev.
Richard ,Jarvis.

Ask lor Bev Jeffer s

446-4442

Date

lotns to ··consolidllte" 111 yaur

bills and Pll:;oments

IIIII

I:!!I

FIRST

12.00

) Donor

20.00

) Patron

100.00 or more

( ) Contributor

25.00

) Benefactor

500.00 or more

Name __________~----------------~
Address _______________________

'

•

Social
Calendar

Are you willing to help with
Art Colony projects?
yes ( ) no ( )

Hardly, though in my case that may be enough.
Having come to tht Sunday Times-sentinel and Gallipolis
Tribune more thai! eight months ago fresh and rosy-cneek&lt;d
with a J-Degree out of the University of Maryland I was
unacquainted wiUt Gailia folks, despite the fact that my
parents, (Or. and Mrs. Fred R. Carsey) did bring me into this
world in Ohio (Meigs COunty) and raised me near Mason, W.
Va .
Now I'm not so frightened by strange people.Indeed, I feel
now there are just people I know and like in Gallia COunty.
So, it's time, yo usee, to begin Sarah's Gallla Diary which I
bope, with the help of contributions from readers directed to
me, will become a regular [f!lture.

Exhlbit 1 lor the month of February: Brian ADen,
photograp~y exhibit, "People and Places," Riverby .
Gallery Hours ' Saturdays and Sundays, I p.m. until5 p.m .,
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a.m. until3 p.m. Riverby.

CHRISTINA HALFHILL

Celebrates.
birthday
GALLIPOLIS - Christina
Mae Halfhill, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs . LoweU Halfhill of
Gallipoli-s celebrated her
fourth birthday on Jan . 25 at
the home of Mr . .and Mrs.
Wayne Thompson.
Helping her celebrate were
her parents and her sister,
Carla ; paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Wilmer B. Halfhill, uncle and
aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Thompson, and her cousins.
Tammy, Susan, Bobby and
Rachel Thompson. Refreshments of a bear cake that her
aunt, Judy Thompson made,
coffee and Kooi-Aid were
served : Christina received
many gifts.

Feb. 24, Tuesday, 8 p.m. - F.A.C. Trustees Meeting,
·
Riverby. .
Feb. 26, Thursday - annual meeti~g, 6:30 p.m., Oscar's
Restaurant. Speaker : Professor Sam Crowl, Department of
English Language and Literature, Ohio University,
"Shakespeare Goes to the Movies".
Feb. 29, Sunday, 2 p.m.- 4 p.m. - Parent Child Workshop,
Part n,- Paper mac he sculpture. Instructor : Sarah Moshier.
COntinuation of January workshop. Open to Non-members,
Riverby .
·
~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::~:::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::=:::=::::::;::::::::::::~:~::::~~~~

!!!

Generation Rap .

~

~

.· By Helen and Sue Bottel

1:~
..•.

Unreasonable PareD! No. 5783

town coin dealers to be on

hand. Plans to be made lor
13th annual coin show, March
7, Holiday inn, Gallipolis .
Refreshments; ali interested
persons invited .

TilE GALLIA COUNTY SENIOR CmZENS are looking
for coffee cans with Uchi. They need quite a few to serve as
containers for donations during Ute senior citizens telethon set
lor March 2-4.
Ethel Robinson, chalrtnan of the center's fund-raising
conrinittee, told me they hope to reach their goal of $36,000
needed to keep the center running at its present level. Mrs.
Robinson and her husband, Hoke, wiU paint tbe can.o which will
be placed in beauty and barber shops, and a variety of stores
throughout the county.
U you have any .to donate, please leave them at tbe center
located on Rt. 160 near the city.
A KITE DAY FOR CHILDREN is being planned by the
Gallipolis Kiwanis as a special bicentennial effort, according
to Diane Matthews, coordinating chairman of the Gallia
COunty Bicentennial COmmittee. Diane says the date has been
tentatively set for March 20, but m9re details wiU be
announced Ia ter.

PUBLIC GAMES party, 7
p.m. Monday, Dr.ew Webster
Post 39, American Legion
Horne, with all proceeds · to
Meigs Unit of American
Cancer Society .
TUESDAY
PAST
MATRONS .
Pomeroy Chapter, O.E.S.,
6:30 p.m., potluck dinner at
the
Maso ni c
Temple ,
Tuesday.
MIDDL EPORTPOMEROY area bran ch,
American Association of
University Women, Tuesday,
7:30p.m. at the Meigs High
School library . Theme of the
meeting will be "Twenty-first
Century" with "Deciding
Now" as the program topic
by the Community Committee of Maxine Wingett,
Mrs. Eileen Buck, Miss Helen
Smith, Mres. Jeanette
Thomas and Mrs. Sabra
Morrison. Members to take
articles lor silent auction.
Mrs. Betsy Horky, hostess
chairman .
AMERICAN LEGION
Auxiliary, Drew Webster ·
Post 39, both junior and
senior units, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the hall. Mrs.
Marjorie Goett,
Americanism chairperson to
have the program with a
Bicentennial Minuteman to
be the speaker. Two flags wjll
also be presented.
RACINE AMERICAN
Legion Auxiliary at the hall, 7
p.m. Tuesday.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT Lio.ns Club,
Wednesday noon , at the
Meigs Inn .
. OHIO VALLEY Commandery, Knights Templar,
stated conclave, 7:30 .Wednesday night at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
POMEROY WOMEN 'S
Christian Temperance Union,
annual Frances Willard tea to
be held at 2 p.m. at tbe
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church. Mrs. Josep~ Cook to
have the program.
DINNER for all past
commanders and tr.u stees
and wives, 7 p.m. Wednesday
at Drew Webster P&lt;ist 39,
American Legion Hall.

TilE FIRST SIGNS of spring already are po(lping up in the
yard of Eva Barcus in Gallipolis a result of Utis week's wann
weather. She found a small yellow crocus blooming in her yard
and sighted her first robin of the year.

Rap :
I have a problem nobody can help, so I'm writing to you to
CIVIC BEAUTIFICATION IS the goal of the Galllpoll.s
see if you are the lucky one.
Garden Club's annual dogwood tree sale. Mrs. Donald
See, I'm going out with this guy for three months, and O'Rouke has announced trees planted at the inception of this
Mom found out about it. So I was grounded withOut even the project are now of quite good size, many having been planted
phone for two weeks. I didn't talk to him for quite a whUe, but in publication locations as donations of the club or patrons.
we couldn't stand it, so I called him, and we admitted we cared
Everyone interested in buying or donating a tree should
about each oth'er.
call Mrs. O'Rourke at 446-3529. Orders must be placed by Feb.
As soon as I started seeing him again, I got busted by my
28 for delivery planned in early April.
. folks, and am in lor another two weeks. Mom says I'm "too
young," and he has a car, and I shouldn't be dating guys (I'm
l6and he's 18, very honorable, sensible, and we don't intend to .them. - HELEN
get in trouble.)
+++
Those are all made-up excuses. I think the real reason
NOTE
FROM
SUE:
Has
your boyfriend thought of writing
they're so tough is that my sister ran away when she was 18
a letter to your parents, or visiting them to present his side? U
and got married, so they're overprotecting me. I hate to say
they have a chance to see he's an honorable, sensible guy,
In
1879,
Franklin this, but my sister was a real dodo, and I'm not. Even so they maybe they'D loosen up a little - at least to the extent of
Woolworth opened his first pushed her into leaving with their heavy, unreasonable :.Wes. letting him see you at horne.
How C81l I get my folks to foosen up?- DIANNE
" five-eent '' store in Utica,
For sure they'll never find out how nice he is II you keep
N.Y. Sales for the first week Dear Dianne:
sneaking out. That only leads to heavier rules.
averaged $2.50 a day.
. We may not be able to change your unreasonable parents: Rap :
tt appears they're a couple of rocks that long-distance blasting
The man who signed himseU ''For Fewer Marriages,
won't
budge. But we're printing your letter in hOpes that they
plums, milk.
Therefore
Fewer Divorce$" insisted marriage licenses
may recognize themselves and realize they're "protecting"
shouldn'tbe granted to "diseased, demented, or virgins;" that
Friday - Fried fish, you toward the escape your sister chose.
people should cohabit at least sb&lt; montha before getting legally
buttered steamed potatoes,
Perhaps an older friend or relative could belp persuade hitched
and Uten only if the wonian was pregnant.
cauliflower with cheese
sauce, , roll, orange · and
grapefruit sections, milk.
Choice of beverage served
with each meal.
'

Obviously this gooneybird loses· out on Rule No. I: no
licenses to tbe DEMENTED! - KITIY
Dear Rap:
u the nut with his marriage rules ~· any more jerky
Ideas, he should keep them to himseU I I don 'I plan to shack up
or be pregnant before I can marry. l just plan to be in love with .
the right guy. - P. 0 .
Dea~ Helen and Sue:
We believe "diseased or demented" people have a right to
happiness and should not be denied marriap U they and the
partners know the responsibilities and hardships that may
occur. There are all degrees of mental illneu,' and they
~ouldn't be lumped under "demented." Sterllilatlon may be
considered bere.
The Idea of virginity should be decided by each indlvidual
1st Quality
couple. As for living together as a prerequisite for marriage
'
PANlYHOSE here again il'slhecouple'achoice, not the state's!
It should be a couple's decision when and If they have
ehlldren. To say a woman mllilt be preg..nt ' before llhe
marries Is tll.scrlrnlnalion against chlldleu mates who want to
·
111 ljr;u Yoll• Mt..Sl FR CHAHGE C.md
adopt.
All in all, we feel thai FFMTFD llhould open Na miDcl to
303 Upper RIVer HOld
the problems of sodely and not jllll be concerned with h1l own
Across lrom Silver lridqe PI I l l
hangupa. To each his or her own I - THE SENIOR
Glllipoli5, Open Mon . thru Sat. 10 fll '
1-----·- lrettoknow us; YQU'lllikeus. ------' MARRIAGE AND FAMiftY LIVING CLASS.

Jt~r.

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POMEROY - Poinsettias, forest green velvet accented
holly and palms decorated with a delicate lace overlay
the altar of the Trinity 011 the yoke and front panel.
Church, Pomeroy, for the Her long sleeves and wedding
Dec. 26 wedding of Miss ring neckline were edged
Tanya (\:Iaine Keebaugh and with lace. The gown was
enhanced' by a long flowing
Jason Joe Davis.
The bride is the daughter of train of velvet and lace and a
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin R. veil of white organza. Her
Keebaugh, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, jewelry included the wedding
and the bridegroom is the son cross she wore in her sister's
of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence wedding and she carried a
Bible belong to her maternal
Davis, Mason, W. Va.
Paul Matheny
grandfather,
The candlelight ceremony
of
Highland,
Calif.
took place at 7:30p.m. with
The bride's bouquet was of
the Rev. George Oiler and the
red
carnations outlined with
Rev. W. H. Perrin officiating
variegated
holly and comat the double ring ceremony.
plemented
by red velvet
Music was provided by Mrs.
·
streamers
tied
in lovers'
Carrie Neutzling, organist,
knots.
·
who played "A Time lor Us",
Miss
Janet
Lee
Neal
of
"The Wedding Song", theme
from " Love Story" and the Middleport was maid of
honor for the bride. She wore
. " Lord's Prayer" .
a
gown of red polyester
Red velvet bows marked
fashioned
with a h.igh collar
the family pews and furand
bishop
sleeves wiUt the
thering the holiday motif of
skirt
falling
softly from the
the wedding were two
empire
waistline.
Christmas trees used at the.
Her headband was of white
front of the church.
fur
with a red velvet bow and
Given in marriage by her
holly,
and· she carried pepparents and escorted to the
permint
carnations
altar by her father, the bride
surrounded
by
holly and tied
was attired in a gown of

MONDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER OF
Chamber of Commerce
Monday, noon at Meigs Inn .
CHAPTER 17 of the Ohio
Association of Public School
Employes Monday, 7:30p.m.
at Meigs Junior High in
Middleport.
EASTERN PTSA regular
meeting, 7:30p.m . Monday at
Eastern High School.
OH-KAN
Coi n Club,
l)londay, Co lumbus · and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
building, Mill St. , Middleport.
A social hour and trading
session preceding the 8 p.m.
rneeting with several out of

Featured in the galleries of Rlverby this month are the
works of Ironton photographer Brian Allen.
Entitled "People and Places," his colorful and interesting
exhibit includes photographs from such countries as Austria,
Spain and Japan. Allen was awarded first olace for his
"Carillon," pictured above, in the Professional PhOtography
Division of last July's French Art Colony River Recreation
Festival exhibit; The carillon, located at Stone Mt., Georgia,
the only musical instrument of its kind in the world, Is played
daily. Allen's subjects range from realism to abstract, and are
aU fascinating.
·
He received a certifiea te of merit in tbe 33rd Kodak
International Award. in 1971 with a picture of Innsbruek,
Austria, site of the recent Winter Olympics.

'1Wf.wll~Oll
•

BIRTH ANNOUNCED Mr. and Mrs. Larry Whobrey,
Jr. are announcing the birth
of their second son, Kevin
Ray, Jan. 31, at Pleasant
Valley Hospital. The baby
weighted nine lb., 10'/, oz. Mr.
and Mrs. Whobrey have a
son, Scotty, age 3. Grandparents are Mr . and Mrs. H.
L. Whobrey , Addison, Mr.
an~ Mrs. Lona Jones of
Morehead, Ky. Maternal
great-grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Jesse Pernell of
Olive Hill, Ky. and greatgreat-g randmot~er
Mrs.
Harniliton of Flemingsburg,
Ky .

" Well, folks, here I am!"

Contributions or Membership gifts are deductible for income tax purposes to the extent
provided by law.
'
Send to Mrs. Pat Martin, Treasurer, 1130 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. Make checks
payable to: French Art Colony.

around town. Or what to see and do. Or whom to ask.
.As your WELCOME WAGON Hostess, I can simplify the
busmess of sell in&amp; soUled. Help you besin to enjoy your
new town ~ .•.eood shopplna, lOcal attractions, commUnity
opportunlt10s.
_And mr basket Is full of useful eiHs to please your
fam1ly.
•
Take a braok from unpackl1111and call mo.
·

MAIN OFFICE-SECOND AVE.
AUTO BANK-THIRD AVE.
VINTON BRANCH-VINTON

441-2342

. GALUPOLIS - What does o~ say to introduce herseh
upon launching a personai "column" in the newspaper?

Phone ____________________________

Don't Worry and wonder·about learninl your way

'

by Sarah Carsey

50.00 or more

( ) Family

Just moved In?
1can help you out.
3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU!

Gallia Diary,

Check Category of ·Membership:
) Individual

•

•

(Membership extends one year from this date )

Including
GALLIPOUS - The Senior
Citizens Center, located at 220
Jackson Pike in the County
Home Building, is Open
Monday through Friday from
, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The schedule
of activities for this week is
as follows:
Monday , Feb. 23
Physical Fitness, 11:30 a.m. ;
Band and Chorus Practice, 13 p.m.; Adult ~ducation, I·
2:30p.m.
Tuesday, Feb. 24 Visiting, 9 a :m.-3 p.m.;
Physical Fitness, 11:30 a ..rn.;
Adult Education, 10:31\-2:30;
Blood Pressure Check, 1-2
p.m.
Wednesday, Feb. 25 Physical Fitness, 11:30 a.m.;
Adult Education, I-3 p.m.;
Card Games, 1-3 p.m.
Thursday, Feb. 26 Physical Fitness, 11:30 a.m.;
Adult Education, 1-2;30 p.m.;
Birthday Party, 1:30 p.m.
Friday, Feb. 27- Physical
Fitness, 11:30 a.m.; Art
Class, 1-3 p.m.; Adult
Education, 1-4 p.m.; Social
Hour, 7 p.m.
Sunday, Feb. 29 - Open
House at the Center, 1-3:30
p.m.
Seniors' Co-&lt;&gt;p is open daily
13:30-1 :30 p.m. Senior
Nutrition meals are served 12
noon . The weekly .menu Is:
Monday - Braised beef
cubes , in . mushroom sauce,
rice, buttered green beans,
bread, peach cobbler, mill&lt;.
Tuesday - Ham slices, au
gratin potatoes, cole slaw
with tomato wedge, bread,
pineapple upside-down cake,
milk.
Wednesday - . Chili con
carne, cottage cheese on
peach half salad, cornbread,
strawberry gelatin with
whipped topplrig, milk.
Thursday - Chicken and
dumplings, buttered peas,
gelatin salad, bread, purple

Couple repeats
nupital vows

The French Art COlony invites you to join us in enjoying and promoting the Arts.

Mrs. Ric hard Jarvis, Mrs.

101 Purposes•••

Sarah's

• APPLICATION FOR MEMBERSHIP

in keeping with President's

program concluded with
various landma rks,
nulionally and locally and
with the thought by the lea der
"What . have you done for

Tues . 24 and Wed . 15

char~e

for interested s tudents
from
Ohio
membership drive for the members. 'J'his month 's University at Athens give
French Art Colony is slated workshop is papier mache' lecture demonstrations in
to begin next Sund&lt;ty, Feb. 29 sculpture and is a chance for public schools. It is also
and continue until March 14. parents to participate in art possible a ballroom dance
For those people who become with their children.
class will be offered this
new members, a reception
" Christmas on Thursday" spring. Again , those inwill be held Sunday, March 211 is another program held on terested should contact the
at Riverby.
tile last Thursday of each ~'rench Art Colony so more
A member of the French month in preparation for definite plans can be made.
Art Colony will be able to Christmas, 1976. Those who
The March exh ibit at
salute '76 at Riverby and attend plan and make Riverby will be a collection of
become involved in many unusual decorations lor art work by school children
activities planned for the Riverby, and at fhe same from the Bahama Islands.
months ahead , the FAC time, learn unique decorating
Present members are
reports. Planned for April 24 skills to use during the being urged by the French
at 8 p.m. at Riverby is an art holiday season.
Art Colony to renew their
auction and wine tasting
Classes in ceramics, mixed memberships beginning Feb.
party. The i terns to be media painting, beginning 23 as their salute to '76.
awarded will be exhibited and intermediate painting,
Tl1e 1976 chairperson is
during April at Riverby.
art classes for children five Mrs. Nancy Livernier. For
Work shops such as chair throngh 12 years old, and an additional information on
caning will be offered and introduction to art class ani becoming a member of the
people interested in these currently underway. Classes French Art Colony, contact
activities should contact in sketching and drawing will the following committee
Janet Byers at 446-1903 so be offered later this year.
members : Mrs. Anita Tope,
plans for the workshops can
The dance committee is 446-2457;
Mrs .
Ellen
be made . Parent-child investigating the possibility Chasteen, 446-8574; Donald
workshops are also offered of having modern dance Hippensteel, 446-4886.

being

instituted by the DistriCt.
Forty-seven sick and shut-in
calls were made by the
members the past month.
Patriotic tablecloth, napkins,
favo rs . and refreshments
served by the hostesses were

free of

11 - The Sunday 'l'imes-Sentinel, Feb. 22, 1976

'

MEETING SET
MIDDLEPORT
·A
regular monthly meeting of
MiddlePort Cub Seoul Pack
245 wiD be. held at 7 p.m.
Thursday at the FeeneyBennett Post !28, American
Legion Holne.

STORE HOURS
8 AM-10 PM

MON.-SAT.

10 A.M.-10 P.M. SUNDAY

Prices Effective
298 .SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

Thru Feb. 28, 1976

Mr. and Mrs. jason joe Davis

with green velvet streamers.

Center service
party enjoyed
POMEROY - An Eighth
District junior community
service party was held at the
Athens Mental Health Center
Thursday afternoon for 37
patients.
Cake and ice cream were
served and games were
played with prizes going to
the winners . Going from
Meigs county to ne1p with the
party were Mrs . Albert
Roush and Mrs . Herbert
Hoover, Middleport Unit 128;'
Mrs. Allen Hampton, Middleport Unit 263; Mrs. Olin
Knapp, Pomeroy Unit 39, and
Mrs. Myrtle Walker, Racine
Unit 602 and district chairperson.

Jennifer Buck, niece of the
bride and daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert E. Buck,
Pomeroy, was flower girl.
She wore a gown of red, green
and white with a headpiece of
white fur trimmed with a
. green velvet bow and holly.
She carried a small white
basket accented with a red
velvet bow from which she
dropped holly leaves enroule
to the altar. Mrs. ·JaniCe
Couch Fetty of Henderson, W.
Va. was a bridal assistant.

ensemble of poppy red. The
gown was sleeveless wiih a
high neckline and complemented by a matching full
length coat enhanced by
marlbou feather trim edging
tbe long sleeves and neckline
dipping to the waist on the
coat front. She carried .a long
stemmed red rose given to
her by her daughter, Tanya
during the ceremony.
Mrs. Davis selected a
flowing gown of red polyester
fashioned with a v-neckline
and long sleeves and she had
a corsage of red and green
carnations.
. A recep.tion honoring the
couple was held in the social .
room of Trinity Church. The
Christmas theme was carried
out in the bride's table
decorated ·with red and
green, poinsettias and holly
and featuring the three tiered
wedding cake.
Susie Tillis registered the ·
guests. Serving were Mrs.
Robert Buck, sister of the
bride; Mrs. Ann Blackwood,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Joyce Quillen, Syracuse. Red

Richard Carson , Mason, W.

va. brpther-in-law of the
groom, was best man and
·ushers were David Camp,
and Jeff Russell, both of
Mason.
For the wedding the bride's
lather wore a green jacket
matching his daughter 's
gown with white pants. Mrs.
Keebaugh was in a two piece

Surprise party
honors wife ·
•

CHESTER - Curtis Wolfe
entertained recently with a
surprise birthday party
honoring his wife.
Gifts were presented to
Mrs . Wolle and refreshments
of ice cream and cake were
served to Mr. ·and Mrs. Arthur Orr, Mr. and Mrs.
George Genheimer, Mr. and
Mrs. John Hayes, Mr. and
Mrs. Erroll Conroy, Mrs.
Alice Dodson, Mr. and Mrs.

rill

MASON, W. VA. - Mrs.
William Jacobs entertained
recently with a party
bonoring ber husband on his
birthday.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Harry E. Roush, Mr.
and Mrs. Lewis Hudson, Rt.
I, Minersville; Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Boyd McDaniel, Mr. and Mrs.
Johri McCutcbeon, Mason, w,

CARLA HALFHILL

Bir~hday

SON BORN
POMEROY - Mr. and
Mrs. Brady Knotts, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, are announcing the
birth of a five pound, seven

honored
GALLIPOLIS - Carla
Lorene Halfhill, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Halfhill
of Gallipolis celebrated her
frst birthday on Feb. 18 at
h~r horne. Helping her
celebrate were her parents
and her sister, Christina; her
paternal grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Wilmer B. Halfhill,
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Thompson, and her
cousins,

NAMED TO LIST
POMEROY - Donna Ruth
Francis of Pomeroy has been
named to the autumn dean's
list of Otterbein College. To
be named a student must
have two "A" units and no
grade lower than a ·"B."

A 1974 graduate of Eastern
High School, Mrs. Davis is
queen chairperson for. the
Regatta Queen Contest and
serves on the Board of
Directors of the Southeast
Ohio Junior Miss, Inc., and is
publicity -director for the
Board of Directors of the
Meigs Warriors Amateur
Football team . She. is emP.loyed
as
secretaryreceptionist at the Meigs Inn.
Mr. Davis, a 1974 graduate
of Wahama High School and a
recent graduate of the
Laborers' School in Jackson
Mills, W. Va., is a member of
the Mason United Methodist
~hurch, Mason, W. Va.
Out of town guests -at the
wedding were Levanchia and
Erwin Cain, Orient; grandparents of the bride, and Mr.
and Mrs. )Uck Moore of New
Jersey.

Tammy

otmce son, Bfad Alton, on
Feb. 16 at Pleasant Valley

Hospital. Mr. and Mrs.
Knotts have another son,
'l'imothy, 6.

Va.
Ice cream, cake, potato
chips and punch were served.
Jacobs received many gifts.
TRY OUR

POLISH
SAUSAGE
SANDWICH

CROW'S
STEAK HOUSE
Pomeroy, Ohio

Mens 128.00

COUPON

•

Gronl-. witt. •-'o•tit~t
eworontae. lhe
June loMt ahow

1o.. kl "'- foiRily
Size 42 lttehet &amp;

l

22 '""" h;,h.

i

SUGAR
/,\Hush
iWRtPP..~~~"
Get it on! Hush Puppies"' super terrific Apollo boot with

everything going for you . Great look. Padded ankle collar
for comfort. Wedge heel for walking pleasure .
smooth leather in camel.

Jome\ 0 Bu1h . Mgr.

L__::::::___::~::~--

.

·Limit I per customer
Good only at Powell's
Offer expires : 2·28-76

COUPON

HAVILAND

4 roll pkg.

With Coupon

VINTON. OHIO

,

$399

3 Jb. can ·
WITH COUPON

TOILET TISSUE

obllglatlon.

01\ploy Yard
on W Ma!n Streel

COUPON

COFFEE

'

Call or write , .. or come ln . Transportation
14ladlv furnished to and lrom any of our
Di'Piay Vord nto;
Pomet?y·Mown ltidge
leo l . Vauthon, Mor.

99~

Limit 1 per customer
Good only at Powell's
Expires; 2-28-76

Shop early before the bridge
closes while we have a complete
new selection ~f spring shoes .

I~ ~::::~::;·;;.~;POMROY. Otuo

5 lb. bag
With Coupon

COUPO N

FOLGER'S

DOMINO

coffee and Kool-Aid . were
served. Carla received many
gifts.

in tfhuiM Awf\lfM RoM

i
J
i

~~~A;99e

ments of cpke, ice cream,

----~ .;-;;;;~----,!1

showrooms. without

7-UP &amp; PEPSI

Bubby and Rachel Thompson, her aunt and uncle, Mr.
and Mrs.: Douglas Halfhill,
her cousins, Connie, John,
Ta.mmie and L. D. Regresh-

• 1t1e populor 1loping trJHI

•

'

For Men
And Womeri

Susan,

The Hclrdrid l'ftOnui'Mnt i1

!I

French. City
. . .
24oz.$ ]19 .......
3..
WIENERS ••••••~,...... .
.-...'"'
-

Husband's birthday is honored

Curtis Johnson, Mr . and Mrs.

Howard Wolfe and son Ricky,
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Wolfe,
Dennis Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry
Hartman
and
daughters Marcella and
Carla, Donald Casto, and Mr.
and Mrs. Eldon Van Meter. ·
The birthday of Curt Johnson
was also observed.
Mrs. Wolle also received a
gift from her daughter, Mrs.
Marlene Thompson.
Mr. and Mrs. Wolfe
received word of the birth of a
great-grandson, Derek
James, on Mrs. Wolle's birthday, Feb. 15. Derek, a seven
pound, !5 ounce infant, is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. James
Clary, the former Sandra Van
Meter. ,

and green rice bags were
given to the guests.
For ·her traveling costwne
the bride changed into a
black and rust pantsuit. The
couple resides in Mason.

Open All Day Thursday
FRIDAY NIGHTTILS
Saturday 9 Til s

5f

Limit I per customer
Good only at Powell's
Offer expires: 2·28-76

Reg. 56 .99
With Coupon
Limit I per customer
Good only at Powell's ·
Offer expires: 2-28-76

�FA C drive to begin Sunday
GALLIPOLIS - The 1976

''

l.·SHUT -INS VllilT~D - The youth grou p of the Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant Seventh-day
i\dventist Church visited a rea shut-ins recently. In the group who visited Mrs. Martha
Fulton were (1-&lt;") C.1mck Kuhn , Gail Clark, Crystal Green, Mrs. Fulton, Mark Green,
Stephanie Green, Renee Quail, Robbie Green, Danny Mitchell. Mrs. Virginia Thomas is
group leader .

Forest Run UMW entertained
POM~ROY - Mrs. John
Scott and Mrs. Kerns Roush
entertained the United
Meth odist Women of the
Forest Run U1tited Methodist
Church at Mrs. Scott's home
Tuesday evening.
Mrs. Russ Watson opened
the meeting with devotions
entitled ~~ Loves Pray ~r"
from the bookl et "Good

Morning

Lord ." · The

scripture was taken from the
sixth chapter of Matthew.
Devotions were followed by
11
The Lord's Prayer " by the
group.
Mrs . Edill1 Sisson w ~ s

BEAUTY BOUTIOUE
Perm Special
520.00 Perms lor

program leader, and her
progra m was based on ""Our
Heritage, 1976 - Remove not
the Ancient Landmarks
which Thy Fathers Have
Set." The first part was a bout
the beginning of our nation ,
and included art icles by
various members about the
Pilgrims, the Virg.in ia
Co lony, farme rs and the
sib'llers of the Declaration of
~I dependence.
Pa rt two was "The Church
was and is", and readings

liberty - if nothing what can
freedom mean to you?" Each
member cited the landmark
that first came to mind when
the word was mentioned.
An invitation was read
from the ladies of the Trinity
Church to at tend a Lenten.
breakfast on Ash Wednesday,
March 3. Mrs. Richard Jarvis
reported on the retreat of
minister 's wives which she
attended
this
week.
Correspondence was read
concerni ng the tt Hunger"

&lt;md , discussions were held
t'Oncerni ng the circ uit riders,

drive

John Wesley and other
church founders.
Part three centered around

schools. Mrs. Jolm Scott read
an article "The Little Red
School House" and discussion
foll owed concerning progress
and changes in schools. The

Jl4.50

which

is

Day.
Attending were Mrs. Liliian
Henderson, Mrs. Fred Nease,
Mrs. Edison Hollon, Mrs.
Uswin Nease, Mrs. Erma
Roush , Mrs. Harry Wyatt,

We Make Low-Cost Loans for ·

Denver Holter, Mrs. Henry
Salser, Mrs. Edith Sisson,
Mrs·. Russ Watson and Rev.
Richard ,Jarvis.

Ask lor Bev Jeffer s

446-4442

Date

lotns to ··consolidllte" 111 yaur

bills and Pll:;oments

IIIII

I:!!I

FIRST

12.00

) Donor

20.00

) Patron

100.00 or more

( ) Contributor

25.00

) Benefactor

500.00 or more

Name __________~----------------~
Address _______________________

'

•

Social
Calendar

Are you willing to help with
Art Colony projects?
yes ( ) no ( )

Hardly, though in my case that may be enough.
Having come to tht Sunday Times-sentinel and Gallipolis
Tribune more thai! eight months ago fresh and rosy-cneek&lt;d
with a J-Degree out of the University of Maryland I was
unacquainted wiUt Gailia folks, despite the fact that my
parents, (Or. and Mrs. Fred R. Carsey) did bring me into this
world in Ohio (Meigs COunty) and raised me near Mason, W.
Va .
Now I'm not so frightened by strange people.Indeed, I feel
now there are just people I know and like in Gallia COunty.
So, it's time, yo usee, to begin Sarah's Gallla Diary which I
bope, with the help of contributions from readers directed to
me, will become a regular [f!lture.

Exhlbit 1 lor the month of February: Brian ADen,
photograp~y exhibit, "People and Places," Riverby .
Gallery Hours ' Saturdays and Sundays, I p.m. until5 p.m .,
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a.m. until3 p.m. Riverby.

CHRISTINA HALFHILL

Celebrates.
birthday
GALLIPOLIS - Christina
Mae Halfhill, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs . LoweU Halfhill of
Gallipoli-s celebrated her
fourth birthday on Jan . 25 at
the home of Mr . .and Mrs.
Wayne Thompson.
Helping her celebrate were
her parents and her sister,
Carla ; paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Wilmer B. Halfhill, uncle and
aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Thompson, and her cousins.
Tammy, Susan, Bobby and
Rachel Thompson. Refreshments of a bear cake that her
aunt, Judy Thompson made,
coffee and Kooi-Aid were
served : Christina received
many gifts.

Feb. 24, Tuesday, 8 p.m. - F.A.C. Trustees Meeting,
·
Riverby. .
Feb. 26, Thursday - annual meeti~g, 6:30 p.m., Oscar's
Restaurant. Speaker : Professor Sam Crowl, Department of
English Language and Literature, Ohio University,
"Shakespeare Goes to the Movies".
Feb. 29, Sunday, 2 p.m.- 4 p.m. - Parent Child Workshop,
Part n,- Paper mac he sculpture. Instructor : Sarah Moshier.
COntinuation of January workshop. Open to Non-members,
Riverby .
·
~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::~:::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::=:::=::::::;::::::::::::~:~::::~~~~

!!!

Generation Rap .

~

~

.· By Helen and Sue Bottel

1:~
..•.

Unreasonable PareD! No. 5783

town coin dealers to be on

hand. Plans to be made lor
13th annual coin show, March
7, Holiday inn, Gallipolis .
Refreshments; ali interested
persons invited .

TilE GALLIA COUNTY SENIOR CmZENS are looking
for coffee cans with Uchi. They need quite a few to serve as
containers for donations during Ute senior citizens telethon set
lor March 2-4.
Ethel Robinson, chalrtnan of the center's fund-raising
conrinittee, told me they hope to reach their goal of $36,000
needed to keep the center running at its present level. Mrs.
Robinson and her husband, Hoke, wiU paint tbe can.o which will
be placed in beauty and barber shops, and a variety of stores
throughout the county.
U you have any .to donate, please leave them at tbe center
located on Rt. 160 near the city.
A KITE DAY FOR CHILDREN is being planned by the
Gallipolis Kiwanis as a special bicentennial effort, according
to Diane Matthews, coordinating chairman of the Gallia
COunty Bicentennial COmmittee. Diane says the date has been
tentatively set for March 20, but m9re details wiU be
announced Ia ter.

PUBLIC GAMES party, 7
p.m. Monday, Dr.ew Webster
Post 39, American Legion
Horne, with all proceeds · to
Meigs Unit of American
Cancer Society .
TUESDAY
PAST
MATRONS .
Pomeroy Chapter, O.E.S.,
6:30 p.m., potluck dinner at
the
Maso ni c
Temple ,
Tuesday.
MIDDL EPORTPOMEROY area bran ch,
American Association of
University Women, Tuesday,
7:30p.m. at the Meigs High
School library . Theme of the
meeting will be "Twenty-first
Century" with "Deciding
Now" as the program topic
by the Community Committee of Maxine Wingett,
Mrs. Eileen Buck, Miss Helen
Smith, Mres. Jeanette
Thomas and Mrs. Sabra
Morrison. Members to take
articles lor silent auction.
Mrs. Betsy Horky, hostess
chairman .
AMERICAN LEGION
Auxiliary, Drew Webster ·
Post 39, both junior and
senior units, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the hall. Mrs.
Marjorie Goett,
Americanism chairperson to
have the program with a
Bicentennial Minuteman to
be the speaker. Two flags wjll
also be presented.
RACINE AMERICAN
Legion Auxiliary at the hall, 7
p.m. Tuesday.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT Lio.ns Club,
Wednesday noon , at the
Meigs Inn .
. OHIO VALLEY Commandery, Knights Templar,
stated conclave, 7:30 .Wednesday night at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
POMEROY WOMEN 'S
Christian Temperance Union,
annual Frances Willard tea to
be held at 2 p.m. at tbe
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church. Mrs. Josep~ Cook to
have the program.
DINNER for all past
commanders and tr.u stees
and wives, 7 p.m. Wednesday
at Drew Webster P&lt;ist 39,
American Legion Hall.

TilE FIRST SIGNS of spring already are po(lping up in the
yard of Eva Barcus in Gallipolis a result of Utis week's wann
weather. She found a small yellow crocus blooming in her yard
and sighted her first robin of the year.

Rap :
I have a problem nobody can help, so I'm writing to you to
CIVIC BEAUTIFICATION IS the goal of the Galllpoll.s
see if you are the lucky one.
Garden Club's annual dogwood tree sale. Mrs. Donald
See, I'm going out with this guy for three months, and O'Rouke has announced trees planted at the inception of this
Mom found out about it. So I was grounded withOut even the project are now of quite good size, many having been planted
phone for two weeks. I didn't talk to him for quite a whUe, but in publication locations as donations of the club or patrons.
we couldn't stand it, so I called him, and we admitted we cared
Everyone interested in buying or donating a tree should
about each oth'er.
call Mrs. O'Rourke at 446-3529. Orders must be placed by Feb.
As soon as I started seeing him again, I got busted by my
28 for delivery planned in early April.
. folks, and am in lor another two weeks. Mom says I'm "too
young," and he has a car, and I shouldn't be dating guys (I'm
l6and he's 18, very honorable, sensible, and we don't intend to .them. - HELEN
get in trouble.)
+++
Those are all made-up excuses. I think the real reason
NOTE
FROM
SUE:
Has
your boyfriend thought of writing
they're so tough is that my sister ran away when she was 18
a letter to your parents, or visiting them to present his side? U
and got married, so they're overprotecting me. I hate to say
they have a chance to see he's an honorable, sensible guy,
In
1879,
Franklin this, but my sister was a real dodo, and I'm not. Even so they maybe they'D loosen up a little - at least to the extent of
Woolworth opened his first pushed her into leaving with their heavy, unreasonable :.Wes. letting him see you at horne.
How C81l I get my folks to foosen up?- DIANNE
" five-eent '' store in Utica,
For sure they'll never find out how nice he is II you keep
N.Y. Sales for the first week Dear Dianne:
sneaking out. That only leads to heavier rules.
averaged $2.50 a day.
. We may not be able to change your unreasonable parents: Rap :
tt appears they're a couple of rocks that long-distance blasting
The man who signed himseU ''For Fewer Marriages,
won't
budge. But we're printing your letter in hOpes that they
plums, milk.
Therefore
Fewer Divorce$" insisted marriage licenses
may recognize themselves and realize they're "protecting"
shouldn'tbe granted to "diseased, demented, or virgins;" that
Friday - Fried fish, you toward the escape your sister chose.
people should cohabit at least sb&lt; montha before getting legally
buttered steamed potatoes,
Perhaps an older friend or relative could belp persuade hitched
and Uten only if the wonian was pregnant.
cauliflower with cheese
sauce, , roll, orange · and
grapefruit sections, milk.
Choice of beverage served
with each meal.
'

Obviously this gooneybird loses· out on Rule No. I: no
licenses to tbe DEMENTED! - KITIY
Dear Rap:
u the nut with his marriage rules ~· any more jerky
Ideas, he should keep them to himseU I I don 'I plan to shack up
or be pregnant before I can marry. l just plan to be in love with .
the right guy. - P. 0 .
Dea~ Helen and Sue:
We believe "diseased or demented" people have a right to
happiness and should not be denied marriap U they and the
partners know the responsibilities and hardships that may
occur. There are all degrees of mental illneu,' and they
~ouldn't be lumped under "demented." Sterllilatlon may be
considered bere.
The Idea of virginity should be decided by each indlvidual
1st Quality
couple. As for living together as a prerequisite for marriage
'
PANlYHOSE here again il'slhecouple'achoice, not the state's!
It should be a couple's decision when and If they have
ehlldren. To say a woman mllilt be preg..nt ' before llhe
marries Is tll.scrlrnlnalion against chlldleu mates who want to
·
111 ljr;u Yoll• Mt..Sl FR CHAHGE C.md
adopt.
All in all, we feel thai FFMTFD llhould open Na miDcl to
303 Upper RIVer HOld
the problems of sodely and not jllll be concerned with h1l own
Across lrom Silver lridqe PI I l l
hangupa. To each his or her own I - THE SENIOR
Glllipoli5, Open Mon . thru Sat. 10 fll '
1-----·- lrettoknow us; YQU'lllikeus. ------' MARRIAGE AND FAMiftY LIVING CLASS.

Jt~r.

..

'

·~

POMEROY - Poinsettias, forest green velvet accented
holly and palms decorated with a delicate lace overlay
the altar of the Trinity 011 the yoke and front panel.
Church, Pomeroy, for the Her long sleeves and wedding
Dec. 26 wedding of Miss ring neckline were edged
Tanya (\:Iaine Keebaugh and with lace. The gown was
enhanced' by a long flowing
Jason Joe Davis.
The bride is the daughter of train of velvet and lace and a
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin R. veil of white organza. Her
Keebaugh, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, jewelry included the wedding
and the bridegroom is the son cross she wore in her sister's
of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence wedding and she carried a
Bible belong to her maternal
Davis, Mason, W. Va.
Paul Matheny
grandfather,
The candlelight ceremony
of
Highland,
Calif.
took place at 7:30p.m. with
The bride's bouquet was of
the Rev. George Oiler and the
red
carnations outlined with
Rev. W. H. Perrin officiating
variegated
holly and comat the double ring ceremony.
plemented
by red velvet
Music was provided by Mrs.
·
streamers
tied
in lovers'
Carrie Neutzling, organist,
knots.
·
who played "A Time lor Us",
Miss
Janet
Lee
Neal
of
"The Wedding Song", theme
from " Love Story" and the Middleport was maid of
honor for the bride. She wore
. " Lord's Prayer" .
a
gown of red polyester
Red velvet bows marked
fashioned
with a h.igh collar
the family pews and furand
bishop
sleeves wiUt the
thering the holiday motif of
skirt
falling
softly from the
the wedding were two
empire
waistline.
Christmas trees used at the.
Her headband was of white
front of the church.
fur
with a red velvet bow and
Given in marriage by her
holly,
and· she carried pepparents and escorted to the
permint
carnations
altar by her father, the bride
surrounded
by
holly and tied
was attired in a gown of

MONDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER OF
Chamber of Commerce
Monday, noon at Meigs Inn .
CHAPTER 17 of the Ohio
Association of Public School
Employes Monday, 7:30p.m.
at Meigs Junior High in
Middleport.
EASTERN PTSA regular
meeting, 7:30p.m . Monday at
Eastern High School.
OH-KAN
Coi n Club,
l)londay, Co lumbus · and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
building, Mill St. , Middleport.
A social hour and trading
session preceding the 8 p.m.
rneeting with several out of

Featured in the galleries of Rlverby this month are the
works of Ironton photographer Brian Allen.
Entitled "People and Places," his colorful and interesting
exhibit includes photographs from such countries as Austria,
Spain and Japan. Allen was awarded first olace for his
"Carillon," pictured above, in the Professional PhOtography
Division of last July's French Art Colony River Recreation
Festival exhibit; The carillon, located at Stone Mt., Georgia,
the only musical instrument of its kind in the world, Is played
daily. Allen's subjects range from realism to abstract, and are
aU fascinating.
·
He received a certifiea te of merit in tbe 33rd Kodak
International Award. in 1971 with a picture of Innsbruek,
Austria, site of the recent Winter Olympics.

'1Wf.wll~Oll
•

BIRTH ANNOUNCED Mr. and Mrs. Larry Whobrey,
Jr. are announcing the birth
of their second son, Kevin
Ray, Jan. 31, at Pleasant
Valley Hospital. The baby
weighted nine lb., 10'/, oz. Mr.
and Mrs. Whobrey have a
son, Scotty, age 3. Grandparents are Mr . and Mrs. H.
L. Whobrey , Addison, Mr.
an~ Mrs. Lona Jones of
Morehead, Ky. Maternal
great-grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Jesse Pernell of
Olive Hill, Ky. and greatgreat-g randmot~er
Mrs.
Harniliton of Flemingsburg,
Ky .

" Well, folks, here I am!"

Contributions or Membership gifts are deductible for income tax purposes to the extent
provided by law.
'
Send to Mrs. Pat Martin, Treasurer, 1130 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. Make checks
payable to: French Art Colony.

around town. Or what to see and do. Or whom to ask.
.As your WELCOME WAGON Hostess, I can simplify the
busmess of sell in&amp; soUled. Help you besin to enjoy your
new town ~ .•.eood shopplna, lOcal attractions, commUnity
opportunlt10s.
_And mr basket Is full of useful eiHs to please your
fam1ly.
•
Take a braok from unpackl1111and call mo.
·

MAIN OFFICE-SECOND AVE.
AUTO BANK-THIRD AVE.
VINTON BRANCH-VINTON

441-2342

. GALUPOLIS - What does o~ say to introduce herseh
upon launching a personai "column" in the newspaper?

Phone ____________________________

Don't Worry and wonder·about learninl your way

'

by Sarah Carsey

50.00 or more

( ) Family

Just moved In?
1can help you out.
3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU!

Gallia Diary,

Check Category of ·Membership:
) Individual

•

•

(Membership extends one year from this date )

Including
GALLIPOUS - The Senior
Citizens Center, located at 220
Jackson Pike in the County
Home Building, is Open
Monday through Friday from
, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The schedule
of activities for this week is
as follows:
Monday , Feb. 23
Physical Fitness, 11:30 a.m. ;
Band and Chorus Practice, 13 p.m.; Adult ~ducation, I·
2:30p.m.
Tuesday, Feb. 24 Visiting, 9 a :m.-3 p.m.;
Physical Fitness, 11:30 a ..rn.;
Adult Education, 10:31\-2:30;
Blood Pressure Check, 1-2
p.m.
Wednesday, Feb. 25 Physical Fitness, 11:30 a.m.;
Adult Education, I-3 p.m.;
Card Games, 1-3 p.m.
Thursday, Feb. 26 Physical Fitness, 11:30 a.m.;
Adult Education, 1-2;30 p.m.;
Birthday Party, 1:30 p.m.
Friday, Feb. 27- Physical
Fitness, 11:30 a.m.; Art
Class, 1-3 p.m.; Adult
Education, 1-4 p.m.; Social
Hour, 7 p.m.
Sunday, Feb. 29 - Open
House at the Center, 1-3:30
p.m.
Seniors' Co-&lt;&gt;p is open daily
13:30-1 :30 p.m. Senior
Nutrition meals are served 12
noon . The weekly .menu Is:
Monday - Braised beef
cubes , in . mushroom sauce,
rice, buttered green beans,
bread, peach cobbler, mill&lt;.
Tuesday - Ham slices, au
gratin potatoes, cole slaw
with tomato wedge, bread,
pineapple upside-down cake,
milk.
Wednesday - . Chili con
carne, cottage cheese on
peach half salad, cornbread,
strawberry gelatin with
whipped topplrig, milk.
Thursday - Chicken and
dumplings, buttered peas,
gelatin salad, bread, purple

Couple repeats
nupital vows

The French Art COlony invites you to join us in enjoying and promoting the Arts.

Mrs. Ric hard Jarvis, Mrs.

101 Purposes•••

Sarah's

• APPLICATION FOR MEMBERSHIP

in keeping with President's

program concluded with
various landma rks,
nulionally and locally and
with the thought by the lea der
"What . have you done for

Tues . 24 and Wed . 15

char~e

for interested s tudents
from
Ohio
membership drive for the members. 'J'his month 's University at Athens give
French Art Colony is slated workshop is papier mache' lecture demonstrations in
to begin next Sund&lt;ty, Feb. 29 sculpture and is a chance for public schools. It is also
and continue until March 14. parents to participate in art possible a ballroom dance
For those people who become with their children.
class will be offered this
new members, a reception
" Christmas on Thursday" spring. Again , those inwill be held Sunday, March 211 is another program held on terested should contact the
at Riverby.
tile last Thursday of each ~'rench Art Colony so more
A member of the French month in preparation for definite plans can be made.
Art Colony will be able to Christmas, 1976. Those who
The March exh ibit at
salute '76 at Riverby and attend plan and make Riverby will be a collection of
become involved in many unusual decorations lor art work by school children
activities planned for the Riverby, and at fhe same from the Bahama Islands.
months ahead , the FAC time, learn unique decorating
Present members are
reports. Planned for April 24 skills to use during the being urged by the French
at 8 p.m. at Riverby is an art holiday season.
Art Colony to renew their
auction and wine tasting
Classes in ceramics, mixed memberships beginning Feb.
party. The i terns to be media painting, beginning 23 as their salute to '76.
awarded will be exhibited and intermediate painting,
Tl1e 1976 chairperson is
during April at Riverby.
art classes for children five Mrs. Nancy Livernier. For
Work shops such as chair throngh 12 years old, and an additional information on
caning will be offered and introduction to art class ani becoming a member of the
people interested in these currently underway. Classes French Art Colony, contact
activities should contact in sketching and drawing will the following committee
Janet Byers at 446-1903 so be offered later this year.
members : Mrs. Anita Tope,
plans for the workshops can
The dance committee is 446-2457;
Mrs .
Ellen
be made . Parent-child investigating the possibility Chasteen, 446-8574; Donald
workshops are also offered of having modern dance Hippensteel, 446-4886.

being

instituted by the DistriCt.
Forty-seven sick and shut-in
calls were made by the
members the past month.
Patriotic tablecloth, napkins,
favo rs . and refreshments
served by the hostesses were

free of

11 - The Sunday 'l'imes-Sentinel, Feb. 22, 1976

'

MEETING SET
MIDDLEPORT
·A
regular monthly meeting of
MiddlePort Cub Seoul Pack
245 wiD be. held at 7 p.m.
Thursday at the FeeneyBennett Post !28, American
Legion Holne.

STORE HOURS
8 AM-10 PM

MON.-SAT.

10 A.M.-10 P.M. SUNDAY

Prices Effective
298 .SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

Thru Feb. 28, 1976

Mr. and Mrs. jason joe Davis

with green velvet streamers.

Center service
party enjoyed
POMEROY - An Eighth
District junior community
service party was held at the
Athens Mental Health Center
Thursday afternoon for 37
patients.
Cake and ice cream were
served and games were
played with prizes going to
the winners . Going from
Meigs county to ne1p with the
party were Mrs . Albert
Roush and Mrs . Herbert
Hoover, Middleport Unit 128;'
Mrs. Allen Hampton, Middleport Unit 263; Mrs. Olin
Knapp, Pomeroy Unit 39, and
Mrs. Myrtle Walker, Racine
Unit 602 and district chairperson.

Jennifer Buck, niece of the
bride and daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert E. Buck,
Pomeroy, was flower girl.
She wore a gown of red, green
and white with a headpiece of
white fur trimmed with a
. green velvet bow and holly.
She carried a small white
basket accented with a red
velvet bow from which she
dropped holly leaves enroule
to the altar. Mrs. ·JaniCe
Couch Fetty of Henderson, W.
Va. was a bridal assistant.

ensemble of poppy red. The
gown was sleeveless wiih a
high neckline and complemented by a matching full
length coat enhanced by
marlbou feather trim edging
tbe long sleeves and neckline
dipping to the waist on the
coat front. She carried .a long
stemmed red rose given to
her by her daughter, Tanya
during the ceremony.
Mrs. Davis selected a
flowing gown of red polyester
fashioned with a v-neckline
and long sleeves and she had
a corsage of red and green
carnations.
. A recep.tion honoring the
couple was held in the social .
room of Trinity Church. The
Christmas theme was carried
out in the bride's table
decorated ·with red and
green, poinsettias and holly
and featuring the three tiered
wedding cake.
Susie Tillis registered the ·
guests. Serving were Mrs.
Robert Buck, sister of the
bride; Mrs. Ann Blackwood,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Joyce Quillen, Syracuse. Red

Richard Carson , Mason, W.

va. brpther-in-law of the
groom, was best man and
·ushers were David Camp,
and Jeff Russell, both of
Mason.
For the wedding the bride's
lather wore a green jacket
matching his daughter 's
gown with white pants. Mrs.
Keebaugh was in a two piece

Surprise party
honors wife ·
•

CHESTER - Curtis Wolfe
entertained recently with a
surprise birthday party
honoring his wife.
Gifts were presented to
Mrs . Wolle and refreshments
of ice cream and cake were
served to Mr. ·and Mrs. Arthur Orr, Mr. and Mrs.
George Genheimer, Mr. and
Mrs. John Hayes, Mr. and
Mrs. Erroll Conroy, Mrs.
Alice Dodson, Mr. and Mrs.

rill

MASON, W. VA. - Mrs.
William Jacobs entertained
recently with a party
bonoring ber husband on his
birthday.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Harry E. Roush, Mr.
and Mrs. Lewis Hudson, Rt.
I, Minersville; Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Boyd McDaniel, Mr. and Mrs.
Johri McCutcbeon, Mason, w,

CARLA HALFHILL

Bir~hday

SON BORN
POMEROY - Mr. and
Mrs. Brady Knotts, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, are announcing the
birth of a five pound, seven

honored
GALLIPOLIS - Carla
Lorene Halfhill, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Halfhill
of Gallipolis celebrated her
frst birthday on Feb. 18 at
h~r horne. Helping her
celebrate were her parents
and her sister, Christina; her
paternal grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Wilmer B. Halfhill,
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Thompson, and her
cousins,

NAMED TO LIST
POMEROY - Donna Ruth
Francis of Pomeroy has been
named to the autumn dean's
list of Otterbein College. To
be named a student must
have two "A" units and no
grade lower than a ·"B."

A 1974 graduate of Eastern
High School, Mrs. Davis is
queen chairperson for. the
Regatta Queen Contest and
serves on the Board of
Directors of the Southeast
Ohio Junior Miss, Inc., and is
publicity -director for the
Board of Directors of the
Meigs Warriors Amateur
Football team . She. is emP.loyed
as
secretaryreceptionist at the Meigs Inn.
Mr. Davis, a 1974 graduate
of Wahama High School and a
recent graduate of the
Laborers' School in Jackson
Mills, W. Va., is a member of
the Mason United Methodist
~hurch, Mason, W. Va.
Out of town guests -at the
wedding were Levanchia and
Erwin Cain, Orient; grandparents of the bride, and Mr.
and Mrs. )Uck Moore of New
Jersey.

Tammy

otmce son, Bfad Alton, on
Feb. 16 at Pleasant Valley

Hospital. Mr. and Mrs.
Knotts have another son,
'l'imothy, 6.

Va.
Ice cream, cake, potato
chips and punch were served.
Jacobs received many gifts.
TRY OUR

POLISH
SAUSAGE
SANDWICH

CROW'S
STEAK HOUSE
Pomeroy, Ohio

Mens 128.00

COUPON

•

Gronl-. witt. •-'o•tit~t
eworontae. lhe
June loMt ahow

1o.. kl "'- foiRily
Size 42 lttehet &amp;

l

22 '""" h;,h.

i

SUGAR
/,\Hush
iWRtPP..~~~"
Get it on! Hush Puppies"' super terrific Apollo boot with

everything going for you . Great look. Padded ankle collar
for comfort. Wedge heel for walking pleasure .
smooth leather in camel.

Jome\ 0 Bu1h . Mgr.

L__::::::___::~::~--

.

·Limit I per customer
Good only at Powell's
Offer expires : 2·28-76

COUPON

HAVILAND

4 roll pkg.

With Coupon

VINTON. OHIO

,

$399

3 Jb. can ·
WITH COUPON

TOILET TISSUE

obllglatlon.

01\ploy Yard
on W Ma!n Streel

COUPON

COFFEE

'

Call or write , .. or come ln . Transportation
14ladlv furnished to and lrom any of our
Di'Piay Vord nto;
Pomet?y·Mown ltidge
leo l . Vauthon, Mor.

99~

Limit 1 per customer
Good only at Powell's
Expires; 2-28-76

Shop early before the bridge
closes while we have a complete
new selection ~f spring shoes .

I~ ~::::~::;·;;.~;POMROY. Otuo

5 lb. bag
With Coupon

COUPO N

FOLGER'S

DOMINO

coffee and Kool-Aid . were
served. Carla received many
gifts.

in tfhuiM Awf\lfM RoM

i
J
i

~~~A;99e

ments of cpke, ice cream,

----~ .;-;;;;~----,!1

showrooms. without

7-UP &amp; PEPSI

Bubby and Rachel Thompson, her aunt and uncle, Mr.
and Mrs.: Douglas Halfhill,
her cousins, Connie, John,
Ta.mmie and L. D. Regresh-

• 1t1e populor 1loping trJHI

•

'

For Men
And Womeri

Susan,

The Hclrdrid l'ftOnui'Mnt i1

!I

French. City
. . .
24oz.$ ]19 .......
3..
WIENERS ••••••~,...... .
.-...'"'
-

Husband's birthday is honored

Curtis Johnson, Mr . and Mrs.

Howard Wolfe and son Ricky,
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Wolfe,
Dennis Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry
Hartman
and
daughters Marcella and
Carla, Donald Casto, and Mr.
and Mrs. Eldon Van Meter. ·
The birthday of Curt Johnson
was also observed.
Mrs. Wolle also received a
gift from her daughter, Mrs.
Marlene Thompson.
Mr. and Mrs. Wolfe
received word of the birth of a
great-grandson, Derek
James, on Mrs. Wolle's birthday, Feb. 15. Derek, a seven
pound, !5 ounce infant, is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. James
Clary, the former Sandra Van
Meter. ,

and green rice bags were
given to the guests.
For ·her traveling costwne
the bride changed into a
black and rust pantsuit. The
couple resides in Mason.

Open All Day Thursday
FRIDAY NIGHTTILS
Saturday 9 Til s

5f

Limit I per customer
Good only at Powell's
Offer expires: 2·28-76

Reg. 56 .99
With Coupon
Limit I per customer
Good only at Powell's ·
Offer expires: 2-28-76

�•

f'"'''~~:;;:::::;:;:;:;:;.;:/:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;:;:;:::::y

1Community
~

~ Corner

B~~~:~ene

•
M

1.::
~

:~
•..

POMEROY . - Everyone is being caught up in the
bicentennial celebration of our nation, it would seem, but if
you're not already involved, how about a red, white and blue
flower garden. And now's the time to plan one .
There is a nationally adopted Bicentennial Flower Bed
design and the complete instructions are available through the
Meigs County Extension office. The instructions include not
only suitable flowers for use in the design but very specific
material with diagrams on how to create the destgn. Of course,
it is one of those things where "plan now, plant later" is
essential.
IT WOULD SEEM that come. the great day - July 4 -

there'll be plenty to do and places to go.
.
Rutland is expanding the traditional Fourth celebration to
a three day event, in Middleport, the Railroad Days will be in
full swing, Racine and Chester will both be having special
activities, and in Pomeroy, the Meigs Museum is plaMing the
-unveiling of a new exhibit with an open house. So ... it's a
THIS WORD from Mrs. Clarence Struble on behalf of the
Return · Jonathan Meigs Chapter · of the Daughters of the
American Revolution:
"American History is not only fact but a fascinating story
of the events which led to the foundi!U{ of this countrv 200 years
ago. Review the events, and join the Daughters of the
American Revolution in observing American History Month

now."
BIRTHDAYS are far between for Margaret Blaettnar but
this is her year.' Yep, you're right, Feb. 29 ... So to her , our
birthday wishes!
OUR "FLOWERS FOR THE UVING'' go today to
Barbara Van Meter of Rutland. She is a person of great
understanding and compassion for the iU and elderly.
Besides working at the Holzer Medical Center - she's a
registered nurse - Barbara finds time to do many kindnesses
for those of her community. She's active with the Emergency
Medical Service program, spends a few hours each month
doing blood pressure readings at the Rutland Seruor C1t1zens
Center, and is never too busy to take someone to the hosptlal or
give a consoling word.

\\' ill be Gr·a cc Fpist·upal

SUNDAY
BULAVILLE

Christ ian

Church serv ices Sunday, 7

p:

m. Guesls will be Tile Gospel
Messen,;!ets.
INSTAL I. ATI ON OF OFFI CERS fo r Chun:h W11 men
Unil ed a! Sr. l.t 1 ui ~ C~ ll w!ic
Cl1u r c h Sa lunla,\'. :i p.nr .
Public i nviled.
~IONDAY

EP l SCOP 1\ l.
WtHIIen

CHUH Cfl

will lwld

:r

no un

luncheon at St. Pl~ r e r 's Purisil
H.i!ll, Mcmday . H l! \ ', Tura J.
H e~ycs. &lt;Jssislanl pas tor. Firsl
Prest:·· :- ~·.t an Clrureh will be

TUPPERS PLAINS "GiTls of the Month" selected
by the Future Homemakers
of America Chapter at
Easte rn
High
School
announced last week were
Brenda Boyles for January
and Tammy Pitzer for
February.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Phillip Bo yles, Tuppers
Plains, Miss Boyles is a
sophomore and has been
active in FHA for two years.
She is historian for the
BRENDA BOYLES
chapter and is president of
the Sunbeams 4-H Club and a ·
member of the Meigs County
VIRGINIA THOMAS of U,on, .W. Va. wiU present a
Junior U,aders. Sbe enjoys
program on more nutritious, low cholesterollu~ch _boxes
sewing
and all sports.
during the vegetarian cooking school to begm m Pt.
Miss
Pitzer, daughter of
Pleasant Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton - R.
Pitzer, Rt.1,1,.Qng Bottom, is
' also a sophomore at Eastern.
She is song leader for the
FHA Chapter of which she
has been a member two
years. She is also a member
of the Language Club, her
class president, the Kataros
Youth Group, Meigs County
4-H Junior Leaders , the
TAMMY PITZER
PT.
PLEASANT
many food demonstrations Better Livestock Club, and
the
Bashan
Bunch
4-H
Club.
Virginia Thomas of U,on, W. and recipes featuring low
The chapter celebrated
Va. will discuss ways to cholesterol and vegetarian
prepare more nutritious, low foods. Besides lunches, Mrs. worthwh i le.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon.
cholesterol lunch boxes Thomas
will
present LEO (july 23, Aug. 22) Wi thout 19) Your instincts for selfo n a re very acute toduring the vegetarian homemade egg l ess trying , you ca n cha rm the birds preservati
day . Move in th e directi on yo ur
ou·t
of
"the
trees
today
.
This
cooking sc hool to be held at mayonnaise. Accord ing to
IntuitiOn tells you to follow.
the Appalachian Power Gayle Clar k, school co- doesn't mean that you can Jet
your guard and neglect
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fob. 19)
Demons tration kitchen on ordina tor , other features will down
you r image.
This is not the ty pe of day to be
Jackson Avenue in Pt. be bread baking, sprouting,
doing things alone. If friends
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Use
Pleasant on Tuesdays and healthful desserts, chocolate you
don 't c ome for th. drum up
r imagi nation and perThur sdays from 7:30-8:30 s ubstitut e,
homemade sonality today to get people to some get-togethers.
p.m. Feb. 24 and 26, March 2 vegetar ian s tea ks and do what is needed. They' ll PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20)
Achieving your aims should not
and 4, 9 and II.
hamburgers , and hi gh profit b~' being on the te am.
The school is sponsored by protein walfles. The public is LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct . 23) be difficu lt fCi r ,you today .
Whether you know it o r not,
the Seventh-day Adventist welcome. Cost is 15 per Unless you ha-ve soine fun others
are wo rkmg behind the
Church and American Heart household. To pre-register things to do today, you 'll be scenes to push you forward .
lost . It you 're not asked to a
Association, and will include call 446-2688 or 773-5119.
party. throw one

gues l stJcaker: s pec.ial gues ts
\V (JJ'l ll' n

FHA selects 'Girls of the Month'

SAVE '60°

of Poll '"''"''

MONDAY
REGULAR mee ting of
Gallipolis Chap ter O.E.S, 283
Monday , 7;30 p.m. Initiation
and refreshments.
OCSEA will hold its regular
munthly mee ting Monday , 7
p.m . at Grande Squares.
·TUESDAY
ANN JUDSON Class of the
First Baptist Church will
meet in the fellowship room, 7
p.m. Tuesday.
AMERICAN
LEGION
Auxiliary Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
at the legion all with Mrs.
Silas Hamilton, Americanism
chairperson, will present the
program .
OPEN GATE Garden Club at
the home . of Mrs. Barbara
Allen Tuesday, 7: 30 p.m.
·

TUESDAY
GRE EN PTO will meet·
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the
school.
WEDNESDAY
PYTHIAN SISTERS regular
meeting Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. at the K of P Ha ll.
Practice for initiation. All
members urged to attend .
WEEKEND REVIVAL
beginning Wednesday at the.
Church of God of Holiness,
Lecta, 7:30 each evening.
· Rev.
Fred
Shockley
evangelist.

Jn· 197·2, President Nixon
met with Communist leader
Mao Tse--tung within hours
after his arrival in Peking for
aii unprecedented visit to the
Peoples Republic of China.

AstraGraph
... Bernice Bade Osol
For Sunday, Feb. 22, 1976

ARIES (March 21- Aprll19) It's
(rnportan t today to be around
friends who are active, both
mentally and physically . They 'll
inspire you .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You may have to draw upon the
resources o f others to attain
your end s today. When you
prollt. they will also gain.
GEMI .. I (May 21 CJune 20)
You r approac h is both
philosophical and humorous
today . YoJ.,J bring about harmony because you put others
at ea se.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
Your mos t outstanding ~nack
t Oday is your abi lity to
tran sf orm someth ing seeming ly . u s ~ l ess into somet hing

SAGITTARIUS ( Nov. 23-Dec.
21) You·re the c·atalyst who
get s the ac tion going today.
Although it may be dull when
you make th e scene. th ings will .
be jumping soon thereafter

0

on aSinger·

Stretch-Stitch machine with
'FREE ARM' ease!

.'"

.

'"
•

.

'

~
lw-

•

• f- lat to "h e• arrn' ~Qnw rnb• ht ~ lur en•-r
ol cu ll&gt; , ole.:v"', l)o!&gt;tl~\1$ , w~ • ~ thn!l.

_. ww+ny

..

( 0 11 8t I, &lt;l jJpiU I Uit!

f ~
______,

~· 111

pit\dle! WlliiOU[ f) jJe l[

tti!JI Sf'Binli • Bt.u ll ill 4 ~tel) Outt Onh oltr
• F I~ ~ I 111 e t Ch \lllC tl - adi U11&gt; t o ~n y ltilyth
• E.~clul • llo.lly dCIIgned ~ ' fr o n t d rOp m buhb•n • Pu•I•IJU rto" ~n •t' '" ll a tl)l!d

yo~rse l f.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) ln.
a gentle fashfpn, r(!mind thOSt;:l
who are obligated to you that
their accounts are long over due. You'll get some retu rns

ways of raising money .
On Wednesday the FHA
birthday was celebrated with
a bicentennial party with the
Alexander FHA. There were
games, group singing and
refreshments with Ed Bailey
speaking on tl)e bicenteMial
year.
For Thursday, school day,
members cleaned out their
lockers , while on Friday.
Chapter Day, they '!ore red
and white FHA pms and
badges and made favors for
their teaclters. To conclude
the week, the girls for
community day made favors
for shut-ins.
Next meeting will be March
9 at Eastern High Sehool.

National FHA Hero Week,
Feb. 8-14 with various group
activities . On Sunday
designated
as .l amily
spiritual dly, they attended
church together at the
Tuppers Plains Methodist
Church.
On
Monday,
publicity day, they made
posters and badges, on
Tuesday, family unity day,
observed parents' night.
At the parents' night
program, Dixie Houze and
Debbie Buck representing the
National Fowtdation March
of Dimes presented a film on
fund raising programs.
Refreshments were served
and there was a program on
National FHA Hero Week and

Vegetarian recipes
offered at school

choice you have.

Churc h

UHI V~I I IU/0 pl•t~ . c~I IVU I ~ ~~~ U! C a!J11 1~ 1 ~ .0. 11~

The Fabric Shop

Feb. 22, 1976
Do n"t be afraid 10 set lofty goals
th js co ming year . Your chanceS;
ol mak ing them ar e very gopd .
You have the desire , the determ ination and the talent.

P•Htrftt ,

M&lt;. C~Il " t . K .. !C k ...... !"mpilf ll,
~I NG-Ell ~ALE ~ &amp; S[HV I( f

I I$ W ~~&lt;(Hid

" ' Ill'

l'omtro,, Dl'ltt

•&gt;o .O.It I "''" " "'" ' ~
' A l '•'*'.n"'l ut l"H( SINGt~ CO M!' ANI&lt;

HAFFELT BROTHERS
JOHN AND MAX HAFFELT, OWNERS - 19 YEARS EXPERIENCE

CUSTOM CARPETS
397 JACKSON PIKE

PHONE

446~2107

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

"A~ross

From The Gallla

County Fairgrounds" ·

BEST SELLING

SH GC

Rope Wrapped ·Wedges

THE FAMILY PLACE TO SAVE

ASSORTED
SPRING
PASTEL
COLORS

44

PETS

CASH AND CARRY

REG.
1
3.97

lADIES

$2~~-

SIZES TO

10

12.97

$15~EG.
1

19.97
RESISTS MOST FORMS
OF OIL GAS AND
GREASE

BLACK .

STEEL TOE MEETS OR SURPASSES SAFETY
INSTITUTION REQUIREMENTS -

6" BOOT

$1300

REG.

1

17.97
QUALITY CRAFTED LEATHER
UPPERS
WELT CONSTRUCTION
NEOPRENE NYLON
CORD
SOLES

··~~YD.

·5~~0.

NYLON MULTI-COLORED

NYLON CUT lOOP

COM. TYPE NYLON
10 COLORS

BLACK

'6~~0.
NYLON CUT LOOP

SHAGS

SHAGS

SHAGS

GALUPOLIS - Bethel 73, M a t I hews ;
sec o n d
International Order of Job's messenger, Teresa Stegers;
Daughters installed officers third messenger , Cindy
in special ceremonies Jan. 3 Crews; fourth messe nger,
at
Masoni c
Temple, Shari
Bennett ;
fifth
Gallipolis.
messenger, Jayne Simpkins;
The installing offi cer, librarian, Lynn Gauze ;.
honored queen Beth Layne sen ior custodian, Julia
was presented behind the Pasquale ; junior custodian,
altar and escorted to the East Donna Pasqu a le; inner
by the ass"'ate guardian, guard , Beth Layne; and
P11ul Gauze.
outer
guard,
Tammy
• Mr, and Mrs. Jerry Wade, Guinther.
parents of incoming queen
Ushers were Mike Sibley
Jayne Wade were also and Paul Gauze II. Soloist
escorted and given a seat in Stephanie
Erdy
sang
the East.
"Amazing Grace ."
Other installing otficers
Presentations were carried
were Stephanje Crossen, out and the new installed
Margl Ehman, Teresa Honor Queen received an
Barcus, Lynn Gauze, Becky · arm bouquet of carnations
Seoti, Lois Angell Stapleton ! from Mark Harri son, an
and Mrs. ·Margaret. Erhman. Honored Queen's pin from the
Teresa Sheline was in- Bethel Guardian, Mrs. Cheryl
stalled senior princess and Vance, a gavel from her
Carolyn Smeltzer .was in- parents, a painted picture
stalled junior princess.
from George Tope, a friend ,
Officers to be installed ship book from ·Cryslal and
were guide, Lori Withee; Heidi Jones and necklaces
marshall, Crys tal Jones; !rom both Jayne Simpkins
.cbaplBin, Diane Canterbury ; and the installing officer Miss
treasurer, Susan Lemley ; Beth Layne.
Refreshments were served
musician , Heidi Jones;
rec...der, Annette Snowden ; following the ceremony.
first messenger , Patty

Senior citizens.urged ·
to work at telethon
BY RUTH MILLER
get in .touch with the director
GALLIPOLIS - Come on, soon. Don't forget the memSenior Citizens, let's make bership drive and your dues
this telethon a blg success. for 1976 il you haven't already
Remember the date, March taken care of this little item _
I want to take this op2, 3 and 4.
. In order to raise the portunity to thank everyone
necessary mooey we need It .for their cooperation .in
will take a lot of work by ge tting this telethon planned
senior citizens volWJ!eerlng and ready to go. We really
services and boosters appreciate the cooperation of
volun leering their services the local newspaper and the
,
for hostesses, people to man radio station ,
!he telephones, people to
make and serve coffee,
people lo pick up the pledges.
If everjone pitches lq and
works at least two hours we
would have plenty of help.
Wednesday, March 3 will
be our big day so let's make It
festive as well as successful .
There wlll pe some enNEW HAVEN, W. Va .
tertainment IQ, go along with The New Haven Garden Club
the wilrk. The radio station met at the library recently
will broadcast from our with Mrs. Howard Burris and
center. We hope to have spot Mrs. Lee Gibbs, hostesses.
announcements on televlllion
The members sang the club
channel13 and cable channel songs, gave the pledge of
5. Be sure to llllten to your allegiance and read the
televlllion and radio for in- collecl in unison .
lormatlon on hoW the telethon
The roll call was answered
Ia going.
.by each member naming her
Anyone calling In pledges favorite Bible verse.
should give their name ,
Guest speaker was Mrs.
complete address and phone Paul Powell, New Haven
number. You may call in your librarian, who talked on
pledge, mail II In or even library work and new books
bring U in, In person, There wotth reading .
will be containers set tn many
business places for those to
put money In who do not visit
!he center very often.
We are having open house
Feb. 29 to acquaint as many
CHESHIRE
Mrs.
people as possible with the, Michael Reese was hostess
pr&lt;l8rams a!id acllvllles of for the February meeting of
!he center.
.
the Utile Kyger Ladles Aid.
The response lor volWt leers A covered .diah lwteheon was
has been greal. It takes many enjoyed by 15 members, one
people to keep these guest and eight children.
)li'OI!rams going and since the . For the work session, the
State Department requires women cut carpet rags and
the center's reports show the blocks lor their bicenteMial
number of volunteers and the ~Ill.
amount of time spent in
The business meeting
helping to serve others, we opened with group singing of
need more.
"What A Friend." Pat Reese,
We need some volWtteers to president, gave devotions and
bring In some cookies and read scripture. Prayer was
coffee for the open bouse .as led by Mary Moore.
A get-well card was signed •
as the telethon. Anyone
may call the center at 4&lt;16- lor Mrs. Fay, Reese, who
7100 for Information con- lroke her hlp. Hostess for the
cerning our telethon, open March meeting wiU be Mrs.
bOUit!, or any Prot~ ram you Georgia Burleson, and
are Interested in or II you program .chairperson will he
would like to he a volunteer. Mary Moore .
Mr~ . Sophia Fisher gave a
Anyone Interested In going
" How
Man
to Columbus March 2 for the reading,
Home and Garden Show and Descended," ·Mary Moore
the Art show and ..ale sh11uld read a j)&lt;"'m .

SAXONY PWSH NYLON

'389 sq. YD.

8 COLORS

'6 71 SQ YD

wen

ALL RRST.QUALITY

; SIZES

TO 12

GRAND PRIX

jayne Wade
installed queen

Ladies Aid
holds meeting

Men's Steel Toe Boots
8" ·BOOT

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY &amp;MONDAY, FEBRUARY_.22ili&amp;ili2ii3_ _ _ _ __

PORTABLE 8 TR. TAPE
PLAYER

CARPET:
Free Estimates

WATCH FOR OUR .
CUT ORDIR DIPT.
COMING SOON •••

All WAREHOUSE
STOCK

I

CON AIR

SUnset 40 Minute

BLANK 8 TRACK TAPE
n-

$2}77

./

:2'

_---7, ·
-/

.

" •.

Heck's Reg.

WATERFINGERS .SHOWER
MASSAGE
97

'19

Heck's Reg.

'29.96

Heck's Reg. '2.39 ea.

PT801

*27.96

Jewelry Dept.

Jewelry Dept.

Munsey

Wf-1

Jewelry Dept.

JOHNSON
ROD &amp; REEL
COMBO

POPCORN POPPER

•a••

Heck's Reg. '9.96

Heck's Reg. '11.88

WILSON

BALL GLOVE

•a••

Heck's Reg.

*12.99

Sports Dept •

Dept.

Sports Dept.

PONCHO

~:hE ,

Made of Durable

I.

22 CAL: RIFLE .
WII'IISCOPI

7X35 BINOCULARS

A mode rn-design .72 with troditiOfl al Winchester
quality fe aturtU: Winchester Proof-Steel boorel.
Beod~tlront light. Adjustable rear si9h1. Tough
compos•IIOfl butt plate, crQ5s-bolt safely .

Top quality, pu.•c;,ion, ond" 1uperbly engineered,

feoturing coD!ed optic.s, cenl 11r foc111. Co.e ood

each

'trap .i11c!uded.

Heck's Reg.

Hack's Reg.

Heck's Reg. '1.99.

'27.88

*66•.99

Sporting Goods

Sporting Goods

STP OIL
TREATMENT

Sporth1g Goods

9''

PRES TONE

SEALER &amp;
STOP LEAK

PAN

&amp;~OLLER SET

79t;
Heck's Rag. '1.09

HECK'SREG.
89'

Auto· Dept.

KENDAll

..,

GT·f
-•cu•o

,..

OIL

·, :.

•

KENDAll

•u••llll'

"

ID,Ofll d H
•.•

.....

,

Hardware Dept.

KENDALL

20 oz.

DYNAMARK

10W30
&amp;

·SHOUT

5 HP

GT-1
44~

.,29

Heck's Reg.

LAUNDRY SOIL
REMOVER

69~

Heck's Reg. '1.59

· Limit 6 ·

Houseware Dept.

25~

Houseware Dept.

GARDEN

5347-54

TIUER

$2ogaa
268.66

1

Hardware Dept.

DAISY
DISPOSABLE
SHAVER .

DIAL BATH SOAR

35'

Heck's Reg. '1.56

Auto Dept.

Automotive Dept.

Heck's Reg.

190$

WINCHIS'IIR

Vi~yl

club meets

SANDALS ON ROPE WRAPPED WEDGE BOTIOMS,

PRO-STYLE BASKETBALL
OXFORDS

JAYNE WADE, center, was installed as Honored
Queen ol Job's Daughters recenUy with Teresa Sheline,
smior princess and Carolyn Smeltzer, junior princess.

New Haven

FOR LADIES AND TEENS. SMART INDOOR·OUTDOOR

WHITE DR BLACK
BOYS SIZES TO 6
MEN 'S SIZES
TO 12

.,.

13 - 1be 8und8y 'J'Imes.SenUnel, Feb. 22, 11711

12 - The Sundav Times-sentinel, Feb. 22, 1976

Heck(s Reg.

• •••

'9.'99
. Houseware Dept.

69~
Heck's Reg, 88•
Co,smetlc Dept.

�•

f'"'''~~:;;:::::;:;:;:;:;.;:/:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;:;:;:::::y

1Community
~

~ Corner

B~~~:~ene

•
M

1.::
~

:~
•..

POMEROY . - Everyone is being caught up in the
bicentennial celebration of our nation, it would seem, but if
you're not already involved, how about a red, white and blue
flower garden. And now's the time to plan one .
There is a nationally adopted Bicentennial Flower Bed
design and the complete instructions are available through the
Meigs County Extension office. The instructions include not
only suitable flowers for use in the design but very specific
material with diagrams on how to create the destgn. Of course,
it is one of those things where "plan now, plant later" is
essential.
IT WOULD SEEM that come. the great day - July 4 -

there'll be plenty to do and places to go.
.
Rutland is expanding the traditional Fourth celebration to
a three day event, in Middleport, the Railroad Days will be in
full swing, Racine and Chester will both be having special
activities, and in Pomeroy, the Meigs Museum is plaMing the
-unveiling of a new exhibit with an open house. So ... it's a
THIS WORD from Mrs. Clarence Struble on behalf of the
Return · Jonathan Meigs Chapter · of the Daughters of the
American Revolution:
"American History is not only fact but a fascinating story
of the events which led to the foundi!U{ of this countrv 200 years
ago. Review the events, and join the Daughters of the
American Revolution in observing American History Month

now."
BIRTHDAYS are far between for Margaret Blaettnar but
this is her year.' Yep, you're right, Feb. 29 ... So to her , our
birthday wishes!
OUR "FLOWERS FOR THE UVING'' go today to
Barbara Van Meter of Rutland. She is a person of great
understanding and compassion for the iU and elderly.
Besides working at the Holzer Medical Center - she's a
registered nurse - Barbara finds time to do many kindnesses
for those of her community. She's active with the Emergency
Medical Service program, spends a few hours each month
doing blood pressure readings at the Rutland Seruor C1t1zens
Center, and is never too busy to take someone to the hosptlal or
give a consoling word.

\\' ill be Gr·a cc Fpist·upal

SUNDAY
BULAVILLE

Christ ian

Church serv ices Sunday, 7

p:

m. Guesls will be Tile Gospel
Messen,;!ets.
INSTAL I. ATI ON OF OFFI CERS fo r Chun:h W11 men
Unil ed a! Sr. l.t 1 ui ~ C~ ll w!ic
Cl1u r c h Sa lunla,\'. :i p.nr .
Public i nviled.
~IONDAY

EP l SCOP 1\ l.
WtHIIen

CHUH Cfl

will lwld

:r

no un

luncheon at St. Pl~ r e r 's Purisil
H.i!ll, Mcmday . H l! \ ', Tura J.
H e~ycs. &lt;Jssislanl pas tor. Firsl
Prest:·· :- ~·.t an Clrureh will be

TUPPERS PLAINS "GiTls of the Month" selected
by the Future Homemakers
of America Chapter at
Easte rn
High
School
announced last week were
Brenda Boyles for January
and Tammy Pitzer for
February.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Phillip Bo yles, Tuppers
Plains, Miss Boyles is a
sophomore and has been
active in FHA for two years.
She is historian for the
BRENDA BOYLES
chapter and is president of
the Sunbeams 4-H Club and a ·
member of the Meigs County
VIRGINIA THOMAS of U,on, .W. Va. wiU present a
Junior U,aders. Sbe enjoys
program on more nutritious, low cholesterollu~ch _boxes
sewing
and all sports.
during the vegetarian cooking school to begm m Pt.
Miss
Pitzer, daughter of
Pleasant Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton - R.
Pitzer, Rt.1,1,.Qng Bottom, is
' also a sophomore at Eastern.
She is song leader for the
FHA Chapter of which she
has been a member two
years. She is also a member
of the Language Club, her
class president, the Kataros
Youth Group, Meigs County
4-H Junior Leaders , the
TAMMY PITZER
PT.
PLEASANT
many food demonstrations Better Livestock Club, and
the
Bashan
Bunch
4-H
Club.
Virginia Thomas of U,on, W. and recipes featuring low
The chapter celebrated
Va. will discuss ways to cholesterol and vegetarian
prepare more nutritious, low foods. Besides lunches, Mrs. worthwh i le.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon.
cholesterol lunch boxes Thomas
will
present LEO (july 23, Aug. 22) Wi thout 19) Your instincts for selfo n a re very acute toduring the vegetarian homemade egg l ess trying , you ca n cha rm the birds preservati
day . Move in th e directi on yo ur
ou·t
of
"the
trees
today
.
This
cooking sc hool to be held at mayonnaise. Accord ing to
IntuitiOn tells you to follow.
the Appalachian Power Gayle Clar k, school co- doesn't mean that you can Jet
your guard and neglect
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fob. 19)
Demons tration kitchen on ordina tor , other features will down
you r image.
This is not the ty pe of day to be
Jackson Avenue in Pt. be bread baking, sprouting,
doing things alone. If friends
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Use
Pleasant on Tuesdays and healthful desserts, chocolate you
don 't c ome for th. drum up
r imagi nation and perThur sdays from 7:30-8:30 s ubstitut e,
homemade sonality today to get people to some get-togethers.
p.m. Feb. 24 and 26, March 2 vegetar ian s tea ks and do what is needed. They' ll PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20)
Achieving your aims should not
and 4, 9 and II.
hamburgers , and hi gh profit b~' being on the te am.
The school is sponsored by protein walfles. The public is LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct . 23) be difficu lt fCi r ,you today .
Whether you know it o r not,
the Seventh-day Adventist welcome. Cost is 15 per Unless you ha-ve soine fun others
are wo rkmg behind the
Church and American Heart household. To pre-register things to do today, you 'll be scenes to push you forward .
lost . It you 're not asked to a
Association, and will include call 446-2688 or 773-5119.
party. throw one

gues l stJcaker: s pec.ial gues ts
\V (JJ'l ll' n

FHA selects 'Girls of the Month'

SAVE '60°

of Poll '"''"''

MONDAY
REGULAR mee ting of
Gallipolis Chap ter O.E.S, 283
Monday , 7;30 p.m. Initiation
and refreshments.
OCSEA will hold its regular
munthly mee ting Monday , 7
p.m . at Grande Squares.
·TUESDAY
ANN JUDSON Class of the
First Baptist Church will
meet in the fellowship room, 7
p.m. Tuesday.
AMERICAN
LEGION
Auxiliary Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
at the legion all with Mrs.
Silas Hamilton, Americanism
chairperson, will present the
program .
OPEN GATE Garden Club at
the home . of Mrs. Barbara
Allen Tuesday, 7: 30 p.m.
·

TUESDAY
GRE EN PTO will meet·
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the
school.
WEDNESDAY
PYTHIAN SISTERS regular
meeting Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. at the K of P Ha ll.
Practice for initiation. All
members urged to attend .
WEEKEND REVIVAL
beginning Wednesday at the.
Church of God of Holiness,
Lecta, 7:30 each evening.
· Rev.
Fred
Shockley
evangelist.

Jn· 197·2, President Nixon
met with Communist leader
Mao Tse--tung within hours
after his arrival in Peking for
aii unprecedented visit to the
Peoples Republic of China.

AstraGraph
... Bernice Bade Osol
For Sunday, Feb. 22, 1976

ARIES (March 21- Aprll19) It's
(rnportan t today to be around
friends who are active, both
mentally and physically . They 'll
inspire you .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You may have to draw upon the
resources o f others to attain
your end s today. When you
prollt. they will also gain.
GEMI .. I (May 21 CJune 20)
You r approac h is both
philosophical and humorous
today . YoJ.,J bring about harmony because you put others
at ea se.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
Your mos t outstanding ~nack
t Oday is your abi lity to
tran sf orm someth ing seeming ly . u s ~ l ess into somet hing

SAGITTARIUS ( Nov. 23-Dec.
21) You·re the c·atalyst who
get s the ac tion going today.
Although it may be dull when
you make th e scene. th ings will .
be jumping soon thereafter

0

on aSinger·

Stretch-Stitch machine with
'FREE ARM' ease!

.'"

.

'"
•

.

'

~
lw-

•

• f- lat to "h e• arrn' ~Qnw rnb• ht ~ lur en•-r
ol cu ll&gt; , ole.:v"', l)o!&gt;tl~\1$ , w~ • ~ thn!l.

_. ww+ny

..

( 0 11 8t I, &lt;l jJpiU I Uit!

f ~
______,

~· 111

pit\dle! WlliiOU[ f) jJe l[

tti!JI Sf'Binli • Bt.u ll ill 4 ~tel) Outt Onh oltr
• F I~ ~ I 111 e t Ch \lllC tl - adi U11&gt; t o ~n y ltilyth
• E.~clul • llo.lly dCIIgned ~ ' fr o n t d rOp m buhb•n • Pu•I•IJU rto" ~n •t' '" ll a tl)l!d

yo~rse l f.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) ln.
a gentle fashfpn, r(!mind thOSt;:l
who are obligated to you that
their accounts are long over due. You'll get some retu rns

ways of raising money .
On Wednesday the FHA
birthday was celebrated with
a bicentennial party with the
Alexander FHA. There were
games, group singing and
refreshments with Ed Bailey
speaking on tl)e bicenteMial
year.
For Thursday, school day,
members cleaned out their
lockers , while on Friday.
Chapter Day, they '!ore red
and white FHA pms and
badges and made favors for
their teaclters. To conclude
the week, the girls for
community day made favors
for shut-ins.
Next meeting will be March
9 at Eastern High Sehool.

National FHA Hero Week,
Feb. 8-14 with various group
activities . On Sunday
designated
as .l amily
spiritual dly, they attended
church together at the
Tuppers Plains Methodist
Church.
On
Monday,
publicity day, they made
posters and badges, on
Tuesday, family unity day,
observed parents' night.
At the parents' night
program, Dixie Houze and
Debbie Buck representing the
National Fowtdation March
of Dimes presented a film on
fund raising programs.
Refreshments were served
and there was a program on
National FHA Hero Week and

Vegetarian recipes
offered at school

choice you have.

Churc h

UHI V~I I IU/0 pl•t~ . c~I IVU I ~ ~~~ U! C a!J11 1~ 1 ~ .0. 11~

The Fabric Shop

Feb. 22, 1976
Do n"t be afraid 10 set lofty goals
th js co ming year . Your chanceS;
ol mak ing them ar e very gopd .
You have the desire , the determ ination and the talent.

P•Htrftt ,

M&lt;. C~Il " t . K .. !C k ...... !"mpilf ll,
~I NG-Ell ~ALE ~ &amp; S[HV I( f

I I$ W ~~&lt;(Hid

" ' Ill'

l'omtro,, Dl'ltt

•&gt;o .O.It I "''" " "'" ' ~
' A l '•'*'.n"'l ut l"H( SINGt~ CO M!' ANI&lt;

HAFFELT BROTHERS
JOHN AND MAX HAFFELT, OWNERS - 19 YEARS EXPERIENCE

CUSTOM CARPETS
397 JACKSON PIKE

PHONE

446~2107

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

"A~ross

From The Gallla

County Fairgrounds" ·

BEST SELLING

SH GC

Rope Wrapped ·Wedges

THE FAMILY PLACE TO SAVE

ASSORTED
SPRING
PASTEL
COLORS

44

PETS

CASH AND CARRY

REG.
1
3.97

lADIES

$2~~-

SIZES TO

10

12.97

$15~EG.
1

19.97
RESISTS MOST FORMS
OF OIL GAS AND
GREASE

BLACK .

STEEL TOE MEETS OR SURPASSES SAFETY
INSTITUTION REQUIREMENTS -

6" BOOT

$1300

REG.

1

17.97
QUALITY CRAFTED LEATHER
UPPERS
WELT CONSTRUCTION
NEOPRENE NYLON
CORD
SOLES

··~~YD.

·5~~0.

NYLON MULTI-COLORED

NYLON CUT lOOP

COM. TYPE NYLON
10 COLORS

BLACK

'6~~0.
NYLON CUT LOOP

SHAGS

SHAGS

SHAGS

GALUPOLIS - Bethel 73, M a t I hews ;
sec o n d
International Order of Job's messenger, Teresa Stegers;
Daughters installed officers third messenger , Cindy
in special ceremonies Jan. 3 Crews; fourth messe nger,
at
Masoni c
Temple, Shari
Bennett ;
fifth
Gallipolis.
messenger, Jayne Simpkins;
The installing offi cer, librarian, Lynn Gauze ;.
honored queen Beth Layne sen ior custodian, Julia
was presented behind the Pasquale ; junior custodian,
altar and escorted to the East Donna Pasqu a le; inner
by the ass"'ate guardian, guard , Beth Layne; and
P11ul Gauze.
outer
guard,
Tammy
• Mr, and Mrs. Jerry Wade, Guinther.
parents of incoming queen
Ushers were Mike Sibley
Jayne Wade were also and Paul Gauze II. Soloist
escorted and given a seat in Stephanie
Erdy
sang
the East.
"Amazing Grace ."
Other installing otficers
Presentations were carried
were Stephanje Crossen, out and the new installed
Margl Ehman, Teresa Honor Queen received an
Barcus, Lynn Gauze, Becky · arm bouquet of carnations
Seoti, Lois Angell Stapleton ! from Mark Harri son, an
and Mrs. ·Margaret. Erhman. Honored Queen's pin from the
Teresa Sheline was in- Bethel Guardian, Mrs. Cheryl
stalled senior princess and Vance, a gavel from her
Carolyn Smeltzer .was in- parents, a painted picture
stalled junior princess.
from George Tope, a friend ,
Officers to be installed ship book from ·Cryslal and
were guide, Lori Withee; Heidi Jones and necklaces
marshall, Crys tal Jones; !rom both Jayne Simpkins
.cbaplBin, Diane Canterbury ; and the installing officer Miss
treasurer, Susan Lemley ; Beth Layne.
Refreshments were served
musician , Heidi Jones;
rec...der, Annette Snowden ; following the ceremony.
first messenger , Patty

Senior citizens.urged ·
to work at telethon
BY RUTH MILLER
get in .touch with the director
GALLIPOLIS - Come on, soon. Don't forget the memSenior Citizens, let's make bership drive and your dues
this telethon a blg success. for 1976 il you haven't already
Remember the date, March taken care of this little item _
I want to take this op2, 3 and 4.
. In order to raise the portunity to thank everyone
necessary mooey we need It .for their cooperation .in
will take a lot of work by ge tting this telethon planned
senior citizens volWJ!eerlng and ready to go. We really
services and boosters appreciate the cooperation of
volun leering their services the local newspaper and the
,
for hostesses, people to man radio station ,
!he telephones, people to
make and serve coffee,
people lo pick up the pledges.
If everjone pitches lq and
works at least two hours we
would have plenty of help.
Wednesday, March 3 will
be our big day so let's make It
festive as well as successful .
There wlll pe some enNEW HAVEN, W. Va .
tertainment IQ, go along with The New Haven Garden Club
the wilrk. The radio station met at the library recently
will broadcast from our with Mrs. Howard Burris and
center. We hope to have spot Mrs. Lee Gibbs, hostesses.
announcements on televlllion
The members sang the club
channel13 and cable channel songs, gave the pledge of
5. Be sure to llllten to your allegiance and read the
televlllion and radio for in- collecl in unison .
lormatlon on hoW the telethon
The roll call was answered
Ia going.
.by each member naming her
Anyone calling In pledges favorite Bible verse.
should give their name ,
Guest speaker was Mrs.
complete address and phone Paul Powell, New Haven
number. You may call in your librarian, who talked on
pledge, mail II In or even library work and new books
bring U in, In person, There wotth reading .
will be containers set tn many
business places for those to
put money In who do not visit
!he center very often.
We are having open house
Feb. 29 to acquaint as many
CHESHIRE
Mrs.
people as possible with the, Michael Reese was hostess
pr&lt;l8rams a!id acllvllles of for the February meeting of
!he center.
.
the Utile Kyger Ladles Aid.
The response lor volWt leers A covered .diah lwteheon was
has been greal. It takes many enjoyed by 15 members, one
people to keep these guest and eight children.
)li'OI!rams going and since the . For the work session, the
State Department requires women cut carpet rags and
the center's reports show the blocks lor their bicenteMial
number of volunteers and the ~Ill.
amount of time spent in
The business meeting
helping to serve others, we opened with group singing of
need more.
"What A Friend." Pat Reese,
We need some volWtteers to president, gave devotions and
bring In some cookies and read scripture. Prayer was
coffee for the open bouse .as led by Mary Moore.
A get-well card was signed •
as the telethon. Anyone
may call the center at 4&lt;16- lor Mrs. Fay, Reese, who
7100 for Information con- lroke her hlp. Hostess for the
cerning our telethon, open March meeting wiU be Mrs.
bOUit!, or any Prot~ ram you Georgia Burleson, and
are Interested in or II you program .chairperson will he
would like to he a volunteer. Mary Moore .
Mr~ . Sophia Fisher gave a
Anyone Interested In going
" How
Man
to Columbus March 2 for the reading,
Home and Garden Show and Descended," ·Mary Moore
the Art show and ..ale sh11uld read a j)&lt;"'m .

SAXONY PWSH NYLON

'389 sq. YD.

8 COLORS

'6 71 SQ YD

wen

ALL RRST.QUALITY

; SIZES

TO 12

GRAND PRIX

jayne Wade
installed queen

Ladies Aid
holds meeting

Men's Steel Toe Boots
8" ·BOOT

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY &amp;MONDAY, FEBRUARY_.22ili&amp;ili2ii3_ _ _ _ __

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PLAYER

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COMING SOON •••

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WATERFINGERS .SHOWER
MASSAGE
97

'19

Heck's Reg.

'29.96

Heck's Reg. '2.39 ea.

PT801

*27.96

Jewelry Dept.

Jewelry Dept.

Munsey

Wf-1

Jewelry Dept.

JOHNSON
ROD &amp; REEL
COMBO

POPCORN POPPER

•a••

Heck's Reg. '9.96

Heck's Reg. '11.88

WILSON

BALL GLOVE

•a••

Heck's Reg.

*12.99

Sports Dept •

Dept.

Sports Dept.

PONCHO

~:hE ,

Made of Durable

I.

22 CAL: RIFLE .
WII'IISCOPI

7X35 BINOCULARS

A mode rn-design .72 with troditiOfl al Winchester
quality fe aturtU: Winchester Proof-Steel boorel.
Beod~tlront light. Adjustable rear si9h1. Tough
compos•IIOfl butt plate, crQ5s-bolt safely .

Top quality, pu.•c;,ion, ond" 1uperbly engineered,

feoturing coD!ed optic.s, cenl 11r foc111. Co.e ood

each

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Heck's Reg.

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Heck's Reg. '1.99.

'27.88

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Sporting Goods

Sporting Goods

STP OIL
TREATMENT

Sporth1g Goods

9''

PRES TONE

SEALER &amp;
STOP LEAK

PAN

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79t;
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HECK'SREG.
89'

Auto· Dept.

KENDAll

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•

KENDAll

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"

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Hardware Dept.

KENDALL

20 oz.

DYNAMARK

10W30
&amp;

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5 HP

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44~

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LAUNDRY SOIL
REMOVER

69~

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Houseware Dept.

25~

Houseware Dept.

GARDEN

5347-54

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$2ogaa
268.66

1

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DAISY
DISPOSABLE
SHAVER .

DIAL BATH SOAR

35'

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Auto Dept.

Automotive Dept.

Heck's Reg.

190$

WINCHIS'IIR

Vi~yl

club meets

SANDALS ON ROPE WRAPPED WEDGE BOTIOMS,

PRO-STYLE BASKETBALL
OXFORDS

JAYNE WADE, center, was installed as Honored
Queen ol Job's Daughters recenUy with Teresa Sheline,
smior princess and Carolyn Smeltzer, junior princess.

New Haven

FOR LADIES AND TEENS. SMART INDOOR·OUTDOOR

WHITE DR BLACK
BOYS SIZES TO 6
MEN 'S SIZES
TO 12

.,.

13 - 1be 8und8y 'J'Imes.SenUnel, Feb. 22, 11711

12 - The Sundav Times-sentinel, Feb. 22, 1976

Heck(s Reg.

• •••

'9.'99
. Houseware Dept.

69~
Heck's Reg, 88•
Co,smetlc Dept.

�Rural areas .may
get more help
By BERNARD BRENNER

UPI FARM EDITOR
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
group of rural House
members is preparing to
push legislation designed to
force the administration into
a more active role in planning
rural
economic
for
development, congressional .
sources report .
The pending legislation,
drafted by members of the
Congressional Rural Caucus,
would put new teeth into an
existing law which requires
the Secretary of Agriculture
to submit annual reports to
Congress on progress in improving the rural economy
and on goals for future
progress.
Standing alone, the reports
would do little to improve
economic prospects in rural
areas so they can continue
recent progress in halting or
reversing the flow of people

Ten of the 11 children in this picture of the family of Mr. and Mrs. E . A Vanco
taken almost 47 years ago are still living. With Mr. and Mrs. Vanco in the center
is their daughter Julia now of Pontiac, Mich. The other girls from the left behind the parents
are Anna Smith, Whitman , W. Va .; Mary North, Gallipolis; Rosie Martin, Gallipolis;
Susie McCall, deceased, and Teresa Byer , Middleport. Boys in the family, 1-r are Emery, .
Buffalo Creek, W.Va.; Andy, of Rodney; Bill of Gallipolis; Joe of Bidwell, and John of
Findlay. Mr. and Mrs. Vancolived in Gallia County for many years. Mrs. Vanco di~ in 1948
and Mr. Vanco in 1962. They are buried in Gallia County.

BUCKEYE WINNERS - Back row,lrr, Daye Pettit,
Displa y 2nd place; Bob Adkins, Honorable Mention;
Lewis Botimer, Food Service 2nd place; Rick Smith, Free
Enterprise, Honorable Mention; front, Amy Beck, Bus.
Voc., Honorable Mention; Carol Smith, Fashion
Merchandising, first ; Patty Kn.aeble, Honorable Mention.
NINE STUDENTS COMPETED - First r ow, 1-r ,
Mary Eggelton, Ken Kiskis, Patty Schoonover; second
row, Judy Slone, Cathy Strait, 0Jnde Pope and third row,
Susan Clark, Colin Saunders, Dennis Salisbury.

WEEKend Digest

Students place well in

into big cities. Backers of the
legislation, however, believe
that a stronger stand on the
annual reports would help lay
the groundwork for concrete
action on issues like
expanding federal spurs to
new rural industry and
community · improvement
projects.
Rural caucus leaders say
. that if Agriculture Secretary
EarlL. Butz is forced to draft
timely and specific annual
development
reports
including specific goals, he
will be forced to pay more
attention to the problems
involved . Also, they content,
Butz would be given a
stronger hand in persuading
other administration officials
to put more emphasis on

measures to aid rural areas.
Caucus spokesmen
indicated
they
were
particularly concerned with
the administration's failure
so far to spell out specific
rural d.e velopment goals
which could be used to
measure existing gaps and to
plan future action . In tbe
past, Agriculture Secretary
Earl L. Butz has merely
spelled out existing budget
plans for Items like housing
aid rather than laying oul
long-term goals against
which progress cou ld be
measured, the caucus said.
Under the group's proposed
new bill, Butz would be
required each year to spell
out flve year goals for items
"qualit y
of
in cluding

comm unity.

~ ervices ,

education, emp I o y m e n t,
ener gy, environmental
protection, health, housing ,
transportation , occupational

training ; social services,
sewage treatment. and .sewer

Corner Pearl &amp; Locust St., Middleport, Ohio
J. KERMIT GATIEN
GALLI POLIS
J.
K ermi t
Gatten,
DemocratJc candidate for
Congress from the lOth
. district of Ohio, joined
State Rep. Mike Stioziano, D-Columbus, in
opposition to a P.U.C.O.
de cis ion
to
add
to householders' gas bills to
subsidize industrial use.
Gatten testified In favor of
H.B. 1213 in Columbus,
staling that this subsidy
amounts
to laxation
without representallon. He
also asserted that Ills more
cosily In jobs and money to
Import gas from other
states than to explore the
natural
deposits
in
southern Ohio.

NEW
TOP VALUE
GIFT
CATALOGS

WIN TALENT SHOW - These are the winners of a
talent show held recently by the Tuppers Plains Booster
Club. All received cash prizes. From the left are Roger
Balser, first, vocal and guitar presentation ; Tara Guthrie,
baton routine, secood, and Jeff Shrivers, third, a trumpet
solo.

NOW AVAILABLE
\

Officials con ceded the
administration officials and
delays
may be partly due to
leaders of the rural caucus
the
difficulty
of reporting on a
beaded by Rep. John B.
complex
subject
. But they
Breckinridge, D-Ky. Caucus
said
they
suspected
that part
leaders pointed out that the
first two amual reports were of the trouble may grow out of
·refusal
of
the
"months late" and the third the
annual report, due last administration to assign a
September, still has not been high priority to rural
development efforts.
sent to Congress ,

and water facilities ."
Also, the bill would
specifically require Butz to
draft the goals on the basis of
national needs as well as
state and local objectives.
Caucus officials said that
while state and local needs
are obviously important,
"there are some goals that
only the federal government
can realistically recognize
because
they
involve
responsibilities and powers
beyond those of the states ... "
The issue of annual rural
development reports has
been
a
continuing
controversy
between

Store Hours .
Monday -Fri. 9-8
Sat. 9-9
Sun. 11 -5
Owned &amp; Operated

By
Local People

INSULATION

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FOREMAN and ABBOTT

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Middleport, Ohio

BONUS BUY

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59~

Jh, 992-5321

~District
13 competition
.,
.

RIO
GRANDE
Fourteen students of the
Buckeye Hills Career Center
last week placed well in the
Distr ibu ti ve Education
Distric t Competitive Events.
Buckeye
Hills
is
represented by two clubs,
DECA I is comprised of
sen iors and DECA II is the
junior class . Buckeye Hills is
part of district 13. There are
15 schools in district 13.
Stude nts represen.ti ng
DECA I were Bob Schoonover
in food marketing , Kevin
Marcum in job interviews;
Amy Beck in busi ness
vocabulary; Jeff Staten in ·
business math ; Rick Smith in
the free enterprise system;
Bob Adkins in petroleum
me r cha ndi si ng;
Pa tt y
Knaeble in income tax ; Lewis
Bo timer in food service;
Dave Pettit in display , and
Carol Smith in fashi on
merchandising.
Students
representing
DECA II were Cathy Strait,
fa shion
merchandising;
Cynde Pope, food marketing;
Judy Slone, job interviews;
Dennis Salisbury, the free
enterprise system; Patty
in
sales
Schoonover
d e monstratio·n ; Co lin
Saunders in in vestments;
Susa n Clark in business math; Kenny Kiskis in radio
advertis in g, and Mary

Qy United Press International
SKIERS AND FARMERS SATURDAY WELCOMED the
aftermath of a Friday snowstorm that dumped up to a foot of
snow in some areas of Colorado and the Plains' States. Wind
gusts reached 70 miles per hour as the ,storm ripped across
Colorado, causing blizzard conditions around th'e metropolitan
Denver area .
Interstate 70 from Aurora, Colo. , to the Kansas state line
was closed as was Interstate 25 from south Denver to Colora do
. Springs. The Colorado State Patrol halted all mobile home
traffic out of Lamar because of the wind gusts. "Weekend
skiing is going to be great, " said Marcia Fleming, an avid
skier . "This new snow couldn 't have come at a better time."
, :, •. .uMBUS .:... THE OH!d HIGHWAY PATROL
invest;gation of mental health facilities in the state has
beoome a "witch-hunt" and is taking on clear criminal
overtones, Communications Workers of America Council 4455
Director Herschel M. Sigall charged Friday. Patrol
investigators offered money, candy and cigarettes to
Columbus State Hospital patients in exchange for charges
brought against employes, alleged Sigal!, whose union
represents workers at mental health facilities.
A Sigal! news conference came while Melvin Love, 31, a
hospital janitor indicted for sexual offenses, appeared in
Franklin County Common Pleas Court, where the last of 10
criminal charges against him were dismissed. Patrol charges
sent Love to the Franklin County Jail for three months under
$25,000 bond while he awaited trial.
" As the last of 10 criminal charges were dropped today
against our member, " said Sigall, "it has become all too clear
that the patrol's investigation of menta l institutions is a witch-

hunt.11
TULSA, OKLA' - EVANGELIST KATHRYN Kuhlman
said she was "the most ordinary person in the world ," but to
thousan~• of sic!&lt;ly persons who attended her faith healing
serviceE .he irrepressible preacher was the personification 1of
hope . Miss Kuhlman died FridLy at Hillcrest Medical Center
where she had been a patient si11ce undergoing open heart
surkery December 28. Her age, which she always kept a
secret, was not revea led. A hospital spokesman said the
evangelist died of pulmonary hypertension .
Miss Kuhlman held healing services throughout the
country and regularly preached at the First Presbyterian
Church in Pittsburgh, Pa., her home and headquarters of the
Kathl";n Kuhbnan Foundation . Persons of all ages, sexes,
races and social classes traveled long distances to attend her
healing services, many of them arriving by ambulance or. in
wheelchairs.

.

Eggleton in display.
Mary Eggleton and Carol
Smith took firsts in their
events while Lewis Botimer '
Dave Pettit, Susan Clark, and
Kenny Kiskis each placed
second. These six s tudents
will compete in their event in
the state contest being h eld
March 19 and 20.
Colin S.a WJders had a third
place finish a nd Dennis
Salisbury , Patty Schoonover ,
Patty Knaeble, Jeff Staten,
Ric.k Smith, Bob Adkins , and
Amy Bech all re ceived
honorable mention.
Bu.ckeye Hills Career
Center is proud of each
student who participated and
would llke to wish those
advancing to Sta~e competiti on the bes t of luck.

Get the

HIGHEST
eturn on yQur Dollar
,.._,_

INITIATED
MIDDLEPORT - Terrie
Miller was initiated into ·
membership at the Monday
night . meeting of th e
Middleport Business aqd
Professional Women's Club .
She will also be a club
representative at the spring
district meeting to be held at
Nelsonville. Her name was
not included in an earlier
account of the meeting.

We're giving Top Value Stamps because they help you get
more out of your shopping dollar.
How? Because the appeal of our gift of Top Value Stamps
brihgs more customers to our store. Our sales increase.
This results in more volume. And more volume means we
can run our store more efficiently. We pass the savings on
to our customers in the form of Top Value Stamps and

30-MONTH CERTIFICATES

1-YEAR CERTIFICATES

•

lower prices.

Your bonus of Top Value Stamps is our way of telling you
.we appreciate your patronage. We want you to continue ·
trading with us, so we'll give you all the "extras" we can .
Depend on us for low, low.prices ... and Top Value
Stamps ... every time!

MINIMUM $1,000.00

MINIMUM $1,000 .00

;E-;--·-+------.-.._........ . . ...,...._.._.._. . . .,._. . .,. . :._

l----:~:;~~·;~~;;A

THE INN PLACE
MONDAY NIGHT

FREMONT, OHlO - THREE · PERSONS were killed
Saturday morning in a house near here in Sandusk-1 County.
VictiJTls were identified as Lois Deran , 21, her four-monthold daughte; Kelly Ann, and a fami ly friend· Larry J. Schell.
Mrs. " ' ·""·, husband, Charles, , 21, was released after
treatJ:.cnt at a local hospital. The Sandusky county coroner ·
ruled the three died of smoke inhalation.
COLUMBUS - TWO OHIO Congressmen agreed Saturday
that some changes would be made by Congress in the $6.5
billion federal r evenue sharing program this year, but the
program would be continued beyond its mid-1976 expiration .
Reps. Clarence J . Brown, R.Ohio, and James V. S\anton,
IJ.Ohio, ·addressed revenue sharing as part of a . panel
discussion before the 43rd annual Ohio Newspaper Association
convention, which concluded Saturday .

SPECIAL

I--------- -- .
I

Federal Regulations ·require a substantial pena.ily . for premature withdrawal of certificate funds .

MINIMUM $1.000 .00

.

--·--·-"".J'----~·--"-"-~··-"-~·--. .-.:. . . . . . . . ---~

--..---·~·

Let your dollars work for yoo!
Open .a savings account at the Meigs Branch of the Athens County Savings &amp;

TOP

Loan where Interest on your deposit Is the highest and insured up to $40,000. A
savings account offers you security and stability for now and for the future.
savings account or a time

certlfic~te

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•

VALUE
STAMPS

•

vacation that has always been your dream .
MIMIU

Visit Salad Bar
Fish and Chips
Rolls -Coffee
Tea or Mil k

WASHINGTON - THE POSS!Bll.ITY OF a worldwidl!
influenza epidemic has prompted top medical officials to give
flu vaecine manufacturers the g(Hihead on developing a new

ESIJC

vaccine.
The dedsibn came Fridsy at a meefing of nearly 100 top
private and government flu experts with major vaccine
manufacturers to discuss the discovery of a flu virus strain .
believed similar to the virus that caused the world's greatest ·
flu epidemic ever in 19111-19 in which 20 million persons died
among some 200 million who contracted the disease.
"The sentinment of the group was that we'd better be
prepared and look at the worst eventuality,~· said Dt. Paul
Parkman, deputy director of biologics in the Food and Drug
Administration. "The worst eventuality the group could
conceive of is that this would become widely epidemic
throughout the United States betw!len now and warm weather .
Everybody was very concerned. "

plu s tax

The Tri -CDuntv's Mo s1
Exciting Night Spot '

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992-3~29
Pomeroy, Ohio

l~~~~~~~~ii
' •·

•

......-------·--~-'--------....

MEIGS BRANCH

,GET MORE OUT OF YOUR SHOPPING DOLLAR IT

Big Jim's Plaza
Middleport, Ohio

6ET MORE OUT OF UFE WITH TOP VALUE STIIIPS

Athens Qlunty Savings &amp; Lban Co.
296 W. 2nc! ~~-

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

RICHARD E, JONES, MANAGER
"
;

I

J

.'

�Rural areas .may
get more help
By BERNARD BRENNER

UPI FARM EDITOR
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
group of rural House
members is preparing to
push legislation designed to
force the administration into
a more active role in planning
rural
economic
for
development, congressional .
sources report .
The pending legislation,
drafted by members of the
Congressional Rural Caucus,
would put new teeth into an
existing law which requires
the Secretary of Agriculture
to submit annual reports to
Congress on progress in improving the rural economy
and on goals for future
progress.
Standing alone, the reports
would do little to improve
economic prospects in rural
areas so they can continue
recent progress in halting or
reversing the flow of people

Ten of the 11 children in this picture of the family of Mr. and Mrs. E . A Vanco
taken almost 47 years ago are still living. With Mr. and Mrs. Vanco in the center
is their daughter Julia now of Pontiac, Mich. The other girls from the left behind the parents
are Anna Smith, Whitman , W. Va .; Mary North, Gallipolis; Rosie Martin, Gallipolis;
Susie McCall, deceased, and Teresa Byer , Middleport. Boys in the family, 1-r are Emery, .
Buffalo Creek, W.Va.; Andy, of Rodney; Bill of Gallipolis; Joe of Bidwell, and John of
Findlay. Mr. and Mrs. Vancolived in Gallia County for many years. Mrs. Vanco di~ in 1948
and Mr. Vanco in 1962. They are buried in Gallia County.

BUCKEYE WINNERS - Back row,lrr, Daye Pettit,
Displa y 2nd place; Bob Adkins, Honorable Mention;
Lewis Botimer, Food Service 2nd place; Rick Smith, Free
Enterprise, Honorable Mention; front, Amy Beck, Bus.
Voc., Honorable Mention; Carol Smith, Fashion
Merchandising, first ; Patty Kn.aeble, Honorable Mention.
NINE STUDENTS COMPETED - First r ow, 1-r ,
Mary Eggelton, Ken Kiskis, Patty Schoonover; second
row, Judy Slone, Cathy Strait, 0Jnde Pope and third row,
Susan Clark, Colin Saunders, Dennis Salisbury.

WEEKend Digest

Students place well in

into big cities. Backers of the
legislation, however, believe
that a stronger stand on the
annual reports would help lay
the groundwork for concrete
action on issues like
expanding federal spurs to
new rural industry and
community · improvement
projects.
Rural caucus leaders say
. that if Agriculture Secretary
EarlL. Butz is forced to draft
timely and specific annual
development
reports
including specific goals, he
will be forced to pay more
attention to the problems
involved . Also, they content,
Butz would be given a
stronger hand in persuading
other administration officials
to put more emphasis on

measures to aid rural areas.
Caucus spokesmen
indicated
they
were
particularly concerned with
the administration's failure
so far to spell out specific
rural d.e velopment goals
which could be used to
measure existing gaps and to
plan future action . In tbe
past, Agriculture Secretary
Earl L. Butz has merely
spelled out existing budget
plans for Items like housing
aid rather than laying oul
long-term goals against
which progress cou ld be
measured, the caucus said.
Under the group's proposed
new bill, Butz would be
required each year to spell
out flve year goals for items
"qualit y
of
in cluding

comm unity.

~ ervices ,

education, emp I o y m e n t,
ener gy, environmental
protection, health, housing ,
transportation , occupational

training ; social services,
sewage treatment. and .sewer

Corner Pearl &amp; Locust St., Middleport, Ohio
J. KERMIT GATIEN
GALLI POLIS
J.
K ermi t
Gatten,
DemocratJc candidate for
Congress from the lOth
. district of Ohio, joined
State Rep. Mike Stioziano, D-Columbus, in
opposition to a P.U.C.O.
de cis ion
to
add
to householders' gas bills to
subsidize industrial use.
Gatten testified In favor of
H.B. 1213 in Columbus,
staling that this subsidy
amounts
to laxation
without representallon. He
also asserted that Ills more
cosily In jobs and money to
Import gas from other
states than to explore the
natural
deposits
in
southern Ohio.

NEW
TOP VALUE
GIFT
CATALOGS

WIN TALENT SHOW - These are the winners of a
talent show held recently by the Tuppers Plains Booster
Club. All received cash prizes. From the left are Roger
Balser, first, vocal and guitar presentation ; Tara Guthrie,
baton routine, secood, and Jeff Shrivers, third, a trumpet
solo.

NOW AVAILABLE
\

Officials con ceded the
administration officials and
delays
may be partly due to
leaders of the rural caucus
the
difficulty
of reporting on a
beaded by Rep. John B.
complex
subject
. But they
Breckinridge, D-Ky. Caucus
said
they
suspected
that part
leaders pointed out that the
first two amual reports were of the trouble may grow out of
·refusal
of
the
"months late" and the third the
annual report, due last administration to assign a
September, still has not been high priority to rural
development efforts.
sent to Congress ,

and water facilities ."
Also, the bill would
specifically require Butz to
draft the goals on the basis of
national needs as well as
state and local objectives.
Caucus officials said that
while state and local needs
are obviously important,
"there are some goals that
only the federal government
can realistically recognize
because
they
involve
responsibilities and powers
beyond those of the states ... "
The issue of annual rural
development reports has
been
a
continuing
controversy
between

Store Hours .
Monday -Fri. 9-8
Sat. 9-9
Sun. 11 -5
Owned &amp; Operated

By
Local People

INSULATION

200

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DEL MONTE

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PINEAPPLE-GRAPEFRUIT

FOREMAN and ABBOTT

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Middleport, Ohio

BONUS BUY

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59~

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~District
13 competition
.,
.

RIO
GRANDE
Fourteen students of the
Buckeye Hills Career Center
last week placed well in the
Distr ibu ti ve Education
Distric t Competitive Events.
Buckeye
Hills
is
represented by two clubs,
DECA I is comprised of
sen iors and DECA II is the
junior class . Buckeye Hills is
part of district 13. There are
15 schools in district 13.
Stude nts represen.ti ng
DECA I were Bob Schoonover
in food marketing , Kevin
Marcum in job interviews;
Amy Beck in busi ness
vocabulary; Jeff Staten in ·
business math ; Rick Smith in
the free enterprise system;
Bob Adkins in petroleum
me r cha ndi si ng;
Pa tt y
Knaeble in income tax ; Lewis
Bo timer in food service;
Dave Pettit in display , and
Carol Smith in fashi on
merchandising.
Students
representing
DECA II were Cathy Strait,
fa shion
merchandising;
Cynde Pope, food marketing;
Judy Slone, job interviews;
Dennis Salisbury, the free
enterprise system; Patty
in
sales
Schoonover
d e monstratio·n ; Co lin
Saunders in in vestments;
Susa n Clark in business math; Kenny Kiskis in radio
advertis in g, and Mary

Qy United Press International
SKIERS AND FARMERS SATURDAY WELCOMED the
aftermath of a Friday snowstorm that dumped up to a foot of
snow in some areas of Colorado and the Plains' States. Wind
gusts reached 70 miles per hour as the ,storm ripped across
Colorado, causing blizzard conditions around th'e metropolitan
Denver area .
Interstate 70 from Aurora, Colo. , to the Kansas state line
was closed as was Interstate 25 from south Denver to Colora do
. Springs. The Colorado State Patrol halted all mobile home
traffic out of Lamar because of the wind gusts. "Weekend
skiing is going to be great, " said Marcia Fleming, an avid
skier . "This new snow couldn 't have come at a better time."
, :, •. .uMBUS .:... THE OH!d HIGHWAY PATROL
invest;gation of mental health facilities in the state has
beoome a "witch-hunt" and is taking on clear criminal
overtones, Communications Workers of America Council 4455
Director Herschel M. Sigall charged Friday. Patrol
investigators offered money, candy and cigarettes to
Columbus State Hospital patients in exchange for charges
brought against employes, alleged Sigal!, whose union
represents workers at mental health facilities.
A Sigal! news conference came while Melvin Love, 31, a
hospital janitor indicted for sexual offenses, appeared in
Franklin County Common Pleas Court, where the last of 10
criminal charges against him were dismissed. Patrol charges
sent Love to the Franklin County Jail for three months under
$25,000 bond while he awaited trial.
" As the last of 10 criminal charges were dropped today
against our member, " said Sigall, "it has become all too clear
that the patrol's investigation of menta l institutions is a witch-

hunt.11
TULSA, OKLA' - EVANGELIST KATHRYN Kuhlman
said she was "the most ordinary person in the world ," but to
thousan~• of sic!&lt;ly persons who attended her faith healing
serviceE .he irrepressible preacher was the personification 1of
hope . Miss Kuhlman died FridLy at Hillcrest Medical Center
where she had been a patient si11ce undergoing open heart
surkery December 28. Her age, which she always kept a
secret, was not revea led. A hospital spokesman said the
evangelist died of pulmonary hypertension .
Miss Kuhlman held healing services throughout the
country and regularly preached at the First Presbyterian
Church in Pittsburgh, Pa., her home and headquarters of the
Kathl";n Kuhbnan Foundation . Persons of all ages, sexes,
races and social classes traveled long distances to attend her
healing services, many of them arriving by ambulance or. in
wheelchairs.

.

Eggleton in display.
Mary Eggleton and Carol
Smith took firsts in their
events while Lewis Botimer '
Dave Pettit, Susan Clark, and
Kenny Kiskis each placed
second. These six s tudents
will compete in their event in
the state contest being h eld
March 19 and 20.
Colin S.a WJders had a third
place finish a nd Dennis
Salisbury , Patty Schoonover ,
Patty Knaeble, Jeff Staten,
Ric.k Smith, Bob Adkins , and
Amy Bech all re ceived
honorable mention.
Bu.ckeye Hills Career
Center is proud of each
student who participated and
would llke to wish those
advancing to Sta~e competiti on the bes t of luck.

Get the

HIGHEST
eturn on yQur Dollar
,.._,_

INITIATED
MIDDLEPORT - Terrie
Miller was initiated into ·
membership at the Monday
night . meeting of th e
Middleport Business aqd
Professional Women's Club .
She will also be a club
representative at the spring
district meeting to be held at
Nelsonville. Her name was
not included in an earlier
account of the meeting.

We're giving Top Value Stamps because they help you get
more out of your shopping dollar.
How? Because the appeal of our gift of Top Value Stamps
brihgs more customers to our store. Our sales increase.
This results in more volume. And more volume means we
can run our store more efficiently. We pass the savings on
to our customers in the form of Top Value Stamps and

30-MONTH CERTIFICATES

1-YEAR CERTIFICATES

•

lower prices.

Your bonus of Top Value Stamps is our way of telling you
.we appreciate your patronage. We want you to continue ·
trading with us, so we'll give you all the "extras" we can .
Depend on us for low, low.prices ... and Top Value
Stamps ... every time!

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l----:~:;~~·;~~;;A

THE INN PLACE
MONDAY NIGHT

FREMONT, OHlO - THREE · PERSONS were killed
Saturday morning in a house near here in Sandusk-1 County.
VictiJTls were identified as Lois Deran , 21, her four-monthold daughte; Kelly Ann, and a fami ly friend· Larry J. Schell.
Mrs. " ' ·""·, husband, Charles, , 21, was released after
treatJ:.cnt at a local hospital. The Sandusky county coroner ·
ruled the three died of smoke inhalation.
COLUMBUS - TWO OHIO Congressmen agreed Saturday
that some changes would be made by Congress in the $6.5
billion federal r evenue sharing program this year, but the
program would be continued beyond its mid-1976 expiration .
Reps. Clarence J . Brown, R.Ohio, and James V. S\anton,
IJ.Ohio, ·addressed revenue sharing as part of a . panel
discussion before the 43rd annual Ohio Newspaper Association
convention, which concluded Saturday .

SPECIAL

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Open .a savings account at the Meigs Branch of the Athens County Savings &amp;

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savings account or a time

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•

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Tea or Mil k

WASHINGTON - THE POSS!Bll.ITY OF a worldwidl!
influenza epidemic has prompted top medical officials to give
flu vaecine manufacturers the g(Hihead on developing a new

ESIJC

vaccine.
The dedsibn came Fridsy at a meefing of nearly 100 top
private and government flu experts with major vaccine
manufacturers to discuss the discovery of a flu virus strain .
believed similar to the virus that caused the world's greatest ·
flu epidemic ever in 19111-19 in which 20 million persons died
among some 200 million who contracted the disease.
"The sentinment of the group was that we'd better be
prepared and look at the worst eventuality,~· said Dt. Paul
Parkman, deputy director of biologics in the Food and Drug
Administration. "The worst eventuality the group could
conceive of is that this would become widely epidemic
throughout the United States betw!len now and warm weather .
Everybody was very concerned. "

plu s tax

The Tri -CDuntv's Mo s1
Exciting Night Spot '

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992-3~29
Pomeroy, Ohio

l~~~~~~~~ii
' •·

•

......-------·--~-'--------....

MEIGS BRANCH

,GET MORE OUT OF YOUR SHOPPING DOLLAR IT

Big Jim's Plaza
Middleport, Ohio

6ET MORE OUT OF UFE WITH TOP VALUE STIIIPS

Athens Qlunty Savings &amp; Lban Co.
296 W. 2nc! ~~-

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

RICHARD E, JONES, MANAGER
"
;

I

J

.'

�.

Tax valuations, rates shown by Auditor Frank Hoax on vets continues
.'l11e incTease in valuation from $34,385,192 in 1974 to
$41,8:XI,IOO Iapproximately 21.5 pet.) reflectS the general
reappraisal and the addition of nearly $4 million in the
Meigs Local School district, namely the Meigs Mines.

Mr. Howard Frank. auditur of M c i~s Co_Wlt y. ha.s
supplied the wblc below &lt;'omparinl.! th~ valuations and
rates of tt~xation in M,... igs ( 'ounl y .~ ulxli v i ~i ons in 1974 nnd
1975.

POME ROY - Sandy Swartz Dw ling , originally of
Middleport, sends along a clipping from a Columbus newspaper in reference to · a "Martha Nelson, " born in
Pomeroy 105 years ago.
Miss Nelson died Jan . 30, 1975 after spending nearly 100
years of her life in Ohio mental institutions. Many of the years
were at Orient SUite Institute where she died.
All of her living years except the last two were spent
without ever having a visitor or receiving a letter or greeting
card.
Publicity of her nearly 100 years in a ml!!ltal institution
bro ught streams of cards, letters an&lt;l gifts frorp around the
world. However, Miss Nelson never really enjoyed the gifts,
· and some still arrive at Orient. Slie was too ill mentally and
physically.
Dr. Alfred Z. Soforenko, superintendent of the institute,
ilnswered and still answers the greetings to the late Miss
Nelson.
Last Year the Martha Nelson Rehabmwtion Center was
dedicated and thE! center is used for mentally retarded
persons .
Dr . Soforenko has said that he had the Latin phrase, " Res
lps.a Loquitur'' - meaning , ''Let the evidence speak for itself''
engraved upon Miss Nelson's headstone . Officials never really
knew why she was institutionalized . She was admitted to a
state institution in Columbus in 1875.
POMEROY FIRE CHIEF CHARGES LEGAR repo~ts that
an aerial ladder truck which could be purchased for about
110,000 in Springfield, Ill., has been located. Pictures of the
pieee of equipment are expected most anytime. .
A' yo u no doubt are aware, a public fund drive is
underway for the purchase of such a vehicle for use throughout
Meigs County. The fund is a little over $1,215 and donations
may be sent to Mrs. Don Thomas, 289 Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy .
GEORGE FOSS, FORMERLY of Athens and Columbus,
has only the highest praise for Veterans Memorial Hospital.
George was recently dismissed from the local hospital. He said
the humanitarian attitude of the staff towards patients " is
really wonderful.''
BY THE WAY, Bernard Wallace, 1687 Lincoln Heights,
Pomet'Oy , is doing nicely after sufferins a stroke.• Feb. 10.
Ca rds m ay be sent to him at Pleasant Valley Hospital~ Room
133, Point Pleasant.
·THE POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT LIONS CLUB has a
service offered to Pomeroy business houses. The club provides
the Ame rican Hags and places them In front of sublcribing
business houses every holiday. Proceeds from the service go
Into the club's sight saving program. If you're interested. do .
contact the Rev. William Mlddleswarth who will give you the
details.
•
. IT P AYS TO HAVE TALENT in the family. Last Sunday
when Charles and LaVera Piersall Yeager observed their 25th
.wedding anniversary at Mason, a beautiful tiered, hellrtshaped cake was used on the table. The attractive cake was
made by Ann PiersaU Click, younger sister of Mrs. Yeager.
Mrs. Click resides at Ravenswood.
IRA DAVIS, CALLED HERE BY the death of his ·sister,
Mrs. Myrtle Long, from Springfield dropped by the Pomeroy
National Bank to see for the first time in over 50 years his old
classmate at the R~se Hill school, Edison ~o)lstett.er. Edison
produced an aged p1cture of the students at ~ school among
which· were he and Davis.

Beaver catch of 674 in
·1976 season is record
ATHENS - A total of 674
bea ver was harvested in the
current 1976 beaver trapping
season in Wildlife District
Four. This was the most
beave r
trapped
In
Southeastern Ohio's 13 years
of the modern day season.
Bea ver harvested by
counties . were as follows :
Athens .48, Cochoscton 39;
Vinton 38; Guec~
. Y 36;
Jackson 35 ; Washin n 15;
Hocking 13 ; Per
12 ;
Monroe 1; Meigs 3, and
Belmon t 2.
The three main reasons for
having a beaver trapping
sea so n are: ( I) to give
priv ate landowners relief
from beaver damage; (2) to
prevent the annual increment
of a high population area
from being lost to natural
causes; and (3) to provide
recreation by a limited ,
regulated harvest.
One of the problems beaver
cause is the flooding of land.

Little honored
at OSU dinner
COLUMBUS - Ohio State
University has announced the
names of SOJ!le 400 outstanding seniors honored
Feb. 17 at the 19th annual
Pre side nt's
.Scholarship
Recognition Dinner.
Th e top-ranking seniors
were selected· for the honor
the
undergraduate
by
colleges and schools of the
uni versity. Included was
Dougla s William Little ,
Route 1 Middleport.

Many landowners would
prefer to have the beaver
around if they could control
the water level. There are
two simple beaver pond level
control devices which most
landowners could consiruct
from scrap · lumber or
materials already on hand.
For additional information
on this, . contact the State
Game Protector in your area
or write to the Wildlife
District Four Office, 360 East
State Street, Athens, Ohio
45701.
FORD LEADER NAMED
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - F.
Keith Donley, Trotwood, will
supervise field operations for
the
President
Ford
Conunlttee in Ohio, Keith
McNamara, chairman of the
commiUee, announced
Thursday.
Donley is currently deputy
recorder for Montgomery
County and supervisor of the
uniform commerlcal code
section of the recorder ' s
office.
"Keith Donley brinl!s a
vast amount of experience,
together with dedication and
enthusiasm to President
Ford's campaign in Ohio,"
McNamara said. " He wil,l be
an Invaluable member of our
staff."
Donley, state advisor of the
Teen Age RepublicanS and a
member of the executive
committee
of
the
Montgomery County Men 's
Republican Club and the Ohio
League of Young Republican
Club!, has oerved as a field
man and coordinator In
numerous statewide political
campaigns.

rates

heal Es t at e
VhLUAUONS

1974

SU BD l VI S lONS

Bedford-Neigs
Bedford- Ea s tern
Chester-Ea st er n
Chester-Heigs
Columbia
Lebanon - Southe rn
Lebanon-Eastern
Letart
Olive
Or ange
Rutland
Sa l em
Salisbu r y
Scipio
Sutton- Southern
Sutt on-Me igs

Rutland Vil la ge ·
Middlep ort Villag e
Pomer oy Villa ge
Racine Villa ge
Syr acuse Village

32. 60
32 . 60
33.40
33 . 40
34 . 40
30 . 20
33 . 00
30 . 80
32 . 60
33 .30
33 . 20
32 . o0
32. 40
33. 30
30-20
33 . 00
39. 70
34 . 90
37 .90
36. 00
37 . 30

Meigs Loc al S. D.
Eas t ern Lo cal S. D.
Southern Loc al S. D.
Colum bia ( Al exande r Lo cal S. D.

Book Now Fo.r Summer Cruises.

CALL 446 0696
•

•

.

.

1975

1, 326,610
12 ' 590
2, 9t3 ,090
248,3 50
1 '945' 060
1,281 , 362
157,490
1, 337 ' 590
li , C93,540
1 , 548 ,10(;
, 1, 924, 050
2, 309 , 000
2, 141,830
1, 281 , 000
2,335, 370

31.40
30.90
31.80
32 .30
33 .10
31.80
31.30
32 .lt0
30.90
31.70
32 . 00
31.40
31. 20
32 .10
31. 80
31. 80 .

14 , ~90

22 , 939 , 22

•

Reason 1.
are income tax
specialists. We ask the ri ght questions.
We dig for every hon est deduction We
want to leave no stone unturned to
make sure you pay the small est
legitimate tax .

22 ,789,950
8,317 , 690
8 , 282,910
2 ,46~, 550
41,85 ,100

Three accidents were injury free

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. . '. '.-.-.,. . - . . . .~48

~2~~::.-.~ ~· ~~ ~~.~

•

OtESTER, OHIO
985-3308

Patty's story
impressive but
.has some holes
By DONALD B. THACKREY

JUDGE BETZ HONORED- Judge RobertS. Betz of
the Gallipolis Municipal Court holds the handsome plaque
he received from Chief Justice of )he Ohio Supreme Court,
c. William O'NeiU in ceremonies Feb. 15 at the Sheraton
North Hotel in Columbus. The plaque is inscribed. "The
Supreme Court of Ohio honors Robert S. Betz, Gallipolis
Municipal Court for Superior Judicial Service, 1975."

Nixon chummy
with Kuo-feng
PEKING (UP!)- Former memorable day for us
President Richard M. Nixon because of that historic
arrived in cold and misty visit, " Hua told Nixon during
Peking Saturday to a chatty, a brief informal chat.
friendly welcome from
" Folll' years ag&lt;&gt;-il was
China 's new acting premier, exactly four years this yearHua Kuo·feng , who teased when Mr . Nixon took his
him about daughter Julie 's courageous act in coming to
role in arranging the trip.
Olina ," Hua said. "It was
Nixon's visit was timed to during that visit that our two
coincide with the fourth anni· sides issued the Shanghai
versary of his 1972 visit that conununlque that opened the.
ended almost 25 years of door to development of relaSino-American estrangement
lions."
and restored partial relations
Hua recalled that Nixon's
between the two countries. daughter Julie recently was
Nixon and his wife, Pat, in · China and met with 82arrived at Peking airport year-old Mao. It was during
aboard a special Chl!lese ·that meeting, Hua ~~&amp;ld, that
airliner flown to Los Angeles "Chairman Mao told your
to bring him to China on a · daughter he would welcome
private visit at the invitation you back to China."
of
Communist
party
Laughing, Hua turned to
Foreign Min lste':_ Chiao
Chairman Mao ,Tse-tung.
''Today, Feb. 21, is a ven- .
Continued on Page 18

$48

8'x7' -6" Kitchen
Rubber back, patch plaid .... , ..... .
2

By AL ROSSITER JR.
There have been estimates
UPI Scleoce Editor
· that tens of millions of people
BOSTON ( UP! ) A · would starve, particularly If
combination of low sunspot · bad weather hit farm lands of
activity, past records and India and tbe Soviet Union at
bune-dry conditions indicate ' the same time.
The area most susceptible
the "Great [)rough! of the
'70s" is · beginning in the
to such a drought is that
American high plains, a portion of the plains
noted astrophysicist said extending BOO to 1,000 miles
east of the Rocky Mountains
Saturday.
If it does develop and and running from South
continues for three to five Dakota to the Texas
years, Dr. Walter Orr panhandle.
Roberts, now professor of
Roberts said America's towl
grain crop could be reduced astrophysics
at
the
by eight to 10 per cent.
University of Colorado, told a
Prices would increase and news confereoce at the
people would starve in poor · American Association for tbe
countries with · already Advancement of Science that
meager fond supplies.
western Kansas and western
"I fear if fond aid In some Nebraska would be hardest
form , ·
national
or hit .
international,
is
nol
Other states affected would
established, we are going to be Colorado, South Dakoka,
see a disaster in terms of -Oklahoma, Texas and a small
human nutrition In some part of New Mexico.
parts of the world," said
Drought in the high plains
Roberts, former director of have occurred every 20 to 22
the National Center for years for the past 160 years.
Atmospheric Research of There was a moderate
Boulder, Col.
drought lasting three years In

~:=:~- ;~::~ .~~.~~~. ... .' .................~48

Reagan disclalms
Goldwater's fate
MANCHESTER , N.H. ·
(UPI) - Ronald Reagan
Saturday
answered
accusations he is too
conservative to be elected
president and would lead the
GOP to Goldwater-style
disaster in 1976.
,

"There is a difference,"
ReaiJiln .said between his
challenge of President Ford
and Sen. Barry Goldwater's
landslide defeat at the hands
of President Johnson in 1964.
Noting his two landslide
elections as governor of
California, Reagan said: " I
must have a broader base
than they're suggesting those wbo are charging a '64

repeat."

Ridenour Supply

SUNDAY. FEBRUA'RY 22, 1976

Extra Heavy
Acrilan, Alpine Green

Reg.

INSTALLED

INSTALLED WITH PAD
Choose one of the
selected models of
lightweight, powerful chain saws and
get an extra loop.
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Ph . ttnm

than move it. If you're going to carpet soon, come and save
dollars with us.

CHAIN

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We must clear out all carpet .in stock. We cut the price, rather

&lt;,SPARE

~-

618 East Miin
Pomeroy . Ohio

We will be moving to new quarters in our new warehouse soon.

FREEl.

1

27 Sycamore Strtoet
Gallipolis, Ohio

VOL 11 NO.4

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) Patricia Hearst spent a full
week trying to convince the
seven women and five men on ·
her jury that two months of
abuse and terror In a tiny
closet forced her into a life of
crime and fear-filled Hight .
When she got off the
witness stand, the newspaper
heiress and her attorney, F .
Lee
Bailey,
appeared
satisfied her tale
of
kidnaping , sexual abuse,
pretended conversion to
radicalism, and submission
to her abductors' orders had
held up · under crossexamination.
But prosecutor James L.
Browning Jr. had wrung from
Miss Hearst admissions she
passed up repeated chances
to get away, flred two
separate guns in what she
claimed was a "reflex
action," wasn't sure herself if
!!he was brainwashed, and
had become an advocate of
"social change."
He also got her to modify
her story that her sole
emotion during the bank
robbery for wh,ich she is on
trial was fear of being gunned
down if she ·"messed up."
Miss Hearst admitted she
was also aware she was her
kidnapers' " ticket to gel out
of anything ."
But the prosecutor's most
damaging questions - about
a "missing year" in her
underground life - came
.with the jury out of the
courtroom.
·
Miss Hearst took the $th
Amendment 21 times to avoid
discusaing where she was
between September 1974 and

September 1975 on grounds it
might incriminate her in
another bank robbery - one
in which a customer was
killed.
U.s. District Judge Oliver
J. Carter promised to rule
Monday on a prosecution
motion to aUow questioos
about the missing year before
the jury and oin a defense
motion to block introduction
of a taped jail conversation in
which Miss Hearst uses
radical rhetoric and vulgar
language.
If he decides to allow
interrogation about either,
Miss Hearst will return to the
stand for more crossexamination. If he blocks the
prosecutor .in both cases,
Bailey will begin his
brainwashing defense by
calling UCLA psychiatrist
Louis J. West .
In the middle of Miss
Hearst's week on the stand,
which concluded on her 22nd
birthday, Carter issued an
eight-page ruling questioning
her "credibility" during
previous testimony with the
jury out of the courtroom.
The jurors were unaware of
his views .
The jury also was unaware
· of the $1 million bombing at
the Hearst estate at Sun
Simeon and threats on the life
of Miss Hearst and her
parents until Browning made
a wctical error.
He was asking the
defendant - as he had time
and time again - why she
hadn't contacted her ·parents
or authorities and turned in
William and Emily Harris,
the last remaining members
Continued on page 18

brought begUn'"}; liigb plains

12' WIDE

' tB1

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

Rutland a nd Daniel E . ditch and through a fence.
Shes tina .' Rt. 4 Pomeroy , me( There was on contact be·
on a hillcrest, Shestina tween the cars. There was
yielding to the right into a only slight damage .

CARPET ONLY

'(;v.'.

1948, and with each wave of
letters it s lm oula tes , VA
explains to each applicant
that dividends are payable
only on policies that are kept
in force . But the hoax is
fu eled anew eve ry few years
th•
mysterious
by
distributiOJ of official-looking
application forms complete
with an address where
dividends are said to be
available for the asking.

918,770
5, 199 , 500
5, 426 ,280
861,100
1.457 ,4~0
13 , 863,0 0

18 ,837 , 760
G, 794 ,bl 0
6 , b07 , 562
) ~ 945 060
3+ ,3tf5 ,192

POMEROY - Three ac- on the left, went into a ditch,
cidents were investigated an d went 45 fee l in the ditch
Friday and Saturday by .the before comi ng to a slop .
was
m oder a te
department of Sheriff Robert The r e
C. Hartenbach. No personal damage.
Saturday at 2: ~0 a .m. m
injuries were reported and no
Salisbury Twp . .Donald D.
citations issued.
midnight · Friday Arms , · J, Rt. 4 Pomeroy,
At
Douglas
Rosenb aum, dri vi ng w.est on Bailey Run
traveling north on Pleasant Road m et an unid entifi~d car
Ridge at an apparent high traveling east tha t forced him
rate of speed, lost con.trol in too far to the rig ht and he
gravel, skidded off the road sideswiped a bridge abut·
men t, Arms looked over his
shoulder to see if he had
struck the other car , and
HEARING SCHEDULED
when he looked up he was
CLEVELAND (UP! ) going off the road to the left
Carl DeFreeze, brother of and into a ditch . There was
slain Symbionese Liberation moder ate damage.
Army
leader
Dona ld
Friday at 5 p .m . in'
DeFreeze, was scheduled for Columbia Tpw . on CR 10,
a preliminary hearing today Carol E . Hamon, 20, Rt. I
on a charge of aggravated
murder.
DeFreeze, 22, was arrested ERECflNG PLANT
!list week in connection with
BOWLING GREEN, Ky.
the Dec. 27 shooting death of IUPI ) - Ground breaking
east side tavern owner Jesse ceremonies were scheduled
Smith. Homicide detectives today I or a new industrial
say Smith, 63, was killed by a facility which wi ll employ
shotgun blast during a about 100 people.
,
robbery at his bar.
Harold Huffman , executive
DeFreeze was arraigned vice president of the city's .
Feb. 14and was held in lieu of chamber of commerce, said
$50,0110 bond"
construction would begin on a
Donald "Cinque" DeFreeze facility owned by Continental
died in a gunbattle with Poly, Inc., a division of Ohio
authorities in Los Angeles · Poly of Carrollton, Ohio.
last year . He had been
The plant will cost $2
identified as the leader Of the· million
a nd
will
group
that
kidnaped manufacture
sheeting,
newspaper heiress Patricia . tubing and hags for industrial
Hearst.
use.

recurri nl;t irregularly smee

Henry Block has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for income tax help.

27,99,020

34.40
33 .70
36 . 70
40 . 60
38 . 40

755 ,3 10
4, 316, 680
4,520 ,540
709 , 530
1,143 , 710
11 ,44 5,770

AAA • DELTA QUEEN
SPECIAL 3 DAY CRUISES
An AAA Exclusive'

rates

they a llowed to lapse years
ago.
The hoax
has be en ,

CLEVELAND
The
Veterans Administration and
major veterans organizations
have launched a joint effort to
stamp out a hoax that has
disappointed millions of
veterans since it began in
1948.
L. M. Merritt, director ·of
the Cleveland VA RegionHI
Office said that VA is
recetvmg thousands of
telephone calls and letters
weekly from World War II
veterans who have been
de ceived into expecting
dividends on Gl insurance

Reagan's comments to
about 200 supporters at his
headquarters came · the
mornillfl after he disclosed
Ford twice Invited him to join
the Cabinet.
He was accompanied by his
wife, Nancy, and actor Uoyd
Nolan, a Hollywood colleague
during Reagan's 3o-year

i

the mid 1950s. That was
preceded by the severe dust
bowl drought of the 193(1s.
The~e was a four year
drought centered around
1913.
Roberts said research has
associated the high·· plain
droughts with periods of very
low solar radiation activity
which occur every 11 years
and with abnormaUy low
periods
of
.sun-linked
magnetic field activity which
occur every 22 years.
The low solar and magnetic
activity are now coinciding
and It has been 21 years since
the last drought. In addition •.
Roberts . said It is already
very dry in the high plains.
"I have very serious fear
that the Great Drought Of the
' 7~ has begun," Roberts
said. If it has started, he said
it probably began a year or
two ago when only single
spring rains prevented more
serious. conditions.
Roberts ssid some farmers
already have begun to plow in
winter wheat to help stabilize
the soil, " but it's still in the
situatiQn where rains in the
last week of February or the
first week in March would

.,

Ford confident
•

•

required hospitalization at the Holzer Medical Center. Her
son was treated and released. Ohio Highway Patrolman
Rodney Cook in the picture was continuing his investigation
Saturday.
(Grover Studio picture.)

·:::Dateline
:: : : : :::::: :: : : ::1776
: :;: ::: : ::c. ar h.ItS

•

m two pnmanes
the intelligence community.
By HELEN THOMAS
·
The board Is to Insure
UPI White House Reporter
operations do not
Intelligence
WASHINGTON (UPl) violate
U.S.
)aws and civil
President Ford said &amp;aturdaY
rights,
or
lead
to abuses of
his new ln!elligence oversight
power
of
the
type
disclosed by
board
will
be
·an
Congress
the
past
year. Ford
" independent auditor" of
said
these
responsibilities
spying abuses, free of White
an
"extre~ely
House influence. He also were
significant"
feature
of his
predicted he will win the New
Hampshire and Florida intelligence reforms.
"We have told tbe intelliprimaries.
Ford made his comments gence conununity on the one
in a brief give and take with hand what they can do, and
reporters in the Oval Office, what they can't do on the
where he held a get- other hand," Ford said.
"We sought to achieve
acquainted meeting with the
so
tht
three ·man oversight panel. accountability
individuals
and
·the
various
The President appeared In
a confident mood, and, when Intelligence agencies will
asked what be thought would !mow precisely what their
happen In Tuesday's New responsibiUtles are and to'
Hampshire primary contest whom they are accountable.
"But the main addition
with Ronald Reagan, he said :
which
I
think
Is
uwe're going to win ."
fundamentally
necessary
is
Asked about Florida's
the
oversight
board,
and
you
March 9 primary, he
repeated, "We're going to · are to act as an independent
auditor of what takes place
win."
Ford then spent about a within the intelligence
half hour with · the board, community. You are not to be
headed by veteran diplomat influenced by the White
Robert Murphy, which he House and yoo are not to be
created by executive order influenced by the intelligence
Wednesday ·as part of a conununity."
Continued on Pale 18
reform and reorganization of

still save a major part of the
crop."
·
The .longtime climate
watcher said there is no
certainly the drought Is
Coming or that it will last any
particular length of time. He
also said "some experts
probably would disagree with
his' prediction.
But Dr . Stephen H .
Schneider, deputy head of the
climate project at the Center
of Atmospheric Research ,
said some specialist believe
the situation is more ominous
now ~ .than the conditions of
the 1930s.
"If it were to occur anotber
COLUMBUS (UPI) three years and if it were to Public Utilities Commission
show a substantial reduction of Ohio attorneys have asked
In rainfall, it would be like the the Franklin County Conunon
dust bowl of the '30s," Pleas Court to lift its
Roberts said.
temporary estralnlng.
" If we have a recurrance of enjoining a gas company
the 1930s situation, the from charging residential
marginal lands that are now customers for emergency
being planted with wheat fuel purchased for industrial
with a 50$ or two-out-of- and commercial use on the
three probability will go ground the court lacks
first," he ·said.
jurisdiction.
''Then there will be , · PUCO's legal counsel filed
substantial areas that are a motion Friday to intervene
under Irrigation and their In the court case of Columbia
wells may run dry if the Gas of Ohio, Inc., and a
drought goes oli for two or motion for dismissal.
three years," Roberts said.

BRAINTREE, Mass.
Feb. 21 - AblgaD ·Adams
wrote ber husband that
tbere was an outbreak of
pleurisy fever In the area.
She also noted tbal
preparations for military
action were Increasing
" and something great is
dally expected, something
terrible It wUI be."

Jobless
charged
at 10.6%
By SARA FRITZ
BAL HARBOUR, Fla.
(uP!) - AFL-CIO critics of
the
a ,d mlnistration 's
unemployment
figures
charged Saturday that
joblessness In the nation
during January was 10.6 per
cenHr 2.8 per cent higher
than official estimates.
Labor's counter estimate of
unemployment was
contained In a detailed
economic report adopted
during
the
AFL.CIO
executive council midwinter
meeting.
It also charged that the

administration's

Court asked to get out .
The prior day Oh,io
Attorney General William J.
Brown got the order
preventing Columbia Gas
from charging residential
cuatomersfor the higher cost
emergency fuel being used by
industrial and co~ercial
consumers, on grounds tbe
company did not get PUCO
pennlsslon.
Commissioners said the
PUCO was established by the
Ohio General Asselnbly to
resolve utility-rate matters
and, therefore, the eQurt does
not hlive jurisdiction.

own

economic predictions for 1916
·are "shaky" and those for
1977
portend
another

recession.
The AFL.c!O's economists
charged last week that the
Labor Department used
statistical "gimmickry" to
greatly exaggerate the
moderate
decline
of
unemployment between
December and January. As a
result, they said they
Intended to announce their
own figures, which they
described as "the real
measure of unemployment"
each month in tbe future.
report
released
The
Saturday said the Labor
Qepartment estimate of an
01 per cent drop in
unemployment to 7.8 per cent
in January "did not square
with the continuing $low improvements
In
he

economy!'
· It said the,AFL.c!O arrived
at its own figure of 10.6 per

Q
movie career.
Reagan motored through
New Hampshire's largest
city three days before tbe
nation's first 1978 primary.
He encountered persistent
questioning at three senior
citizens homes about his
plans for Social Security.
"Some of the things said
abOOt me are not things I
have ever said or that I
believe," he said referring to
Ford charges he was
advocating Investing Social
Security funds in the stock
market.
"! think it is unconscionable for whatever· political purpose, fOr someone
to use people on Social
Security
and
frighten
them," he said.
"I deplore that even In a
political season of a
campaign that there.would be
people who would use an
issue of this kind and cause
disturbance to people who are
helpless to do anything," he
said, without mentioning
Ford by name.

ESCAPES SERIOUS INJURY - A CoolYille woman and
her six-year old son escaped serious Injury Friday In a traincar collision on Rt. 7, north of Cheshire. Mrs. Kay Avis,
driver of the car, (above) had facial lacerations which

CLEANUP CAMPAIGN STARTS - 1be Kerr Bobwhites

AI Club did

Its part to help "clean up America" Saturday
morning in the Gallipolis City Park. PiCked up trash in the
park as part of a nationwide, environmental awareness and
action program entitled " Johnny Horizon '76" sponsored
locally by the Gallia County Bic.,ntcnnial Commission. The
club plans to continue its cleanup work on the third Saturday

••
"

• at
tra1n

Cheshire:~
GALLIPOLIS - Kay Avis,
31, Rt. 2, Coolville, ~as listed .
in good condition Saturday at
the Holzer Medical Center
where she was admitted
Friday following a traln~ar
collisiOn on Rt. 7, north of
Cheshire.
According to the GalliaMeigs Post ~tate Highway
Patrol, the Avis car collided
with a
Penn Central'
locomotive and caboose
operated by Alfred A. Duff,
29, Pomeroy. The accident
occurred at 10:17 a.m.
Mrs. Avis was admitted for
severe facial lacerations. Her
six-year ol,d son Michael
Avis, was treated and , •
released. for minor con- "'""',
tusions. They were taken to .•,,:,
the hospital by the Mid- ,,
dleport Emergency Squad. " ,
The accident is still under ~ "
investigation.
il 1·:,
Doris Halfhill, 34, Rt. 1, ,
Middleport, was taken to ~··,
Veterans Memorial Hospitar · '.';
at Pomeroy, for treatment of
injuries suffered in an ac- ".,
cident at 2:40p.m. Friday on ··. ,'
Rt. 124 and the junction to ·
County Road 5.
The · patrol said an auto, ·
driven by Karen Sue Hart, 19,
Rutland, slammed into the' · "
· side of the Halfhill car. Mrs.
Halfhill was taken to the .
hospital by the Pomeroy, '; . ·
Emergency Squad. There
was severe damage . No
charges were filed .
Another Meigs County
accident occurred at 2:3(i ·a .m. Saturday on Rt. 7, six
tenths of a mile north of Rt.
12(
The patrol said an unknOWJI
vehicle drove into the barre~,
on the divider knock' nr
gravel into the front of a ·' drivep by Carla M. Neal, ~ ''.,
• of Gallipolis. There w ....
moderate damage to her car
The other car continued 011.

'"

i:

..

'•''

Six seized . ·:·
in FBI hit'

cent by including an
estimated one
million
By JOHN LEIGHTY
unemployed workers ' 'who
SAN FRANCISOJ (UPI) - "
have become so discouraged ·Six persoils believed to be
lhey no longer actively seek
members ,Qf the radical New •
work" and about hall of the
World Uberation Front were •
estimated 3.5 million part
arrested by pollee and FBI . .
time workers " who want and agents Saturday In a Richneed full time work."
mond, Calif., house where
The AFL.CIO has long
explosives and firearms were
argued that dlscol!raged
seized.
,.
jobseekers should be counted
The six suspects were
among the unemployed and
jailed in Riciinond and the
that part time workers should FBI said lhe significance of
be considered part time
the arrests were "still being
unemployed.
evaluated."
"When these factors are
Those arrested were JaniCI!
included," the report said, Orson, 28, an unemployed
"then a more realistic waitress ; Steven Scipes, 24,
measure of unemployment in an unemployed counselor, of
January would be 10.6 per Berkeley; Carolyn Williams,
cent.''
28,
unemployed,
of
The report · said the Guerneville, Calif.; Ellen
of each inonth, weather permitting. Pictured here are (first administration's forecast for Kesend, 28, sell-employed
row 1-r) Rachel Collins, Ladonna Plants, Janie Caldwell, 1976 is "shaky," because it writer, of San Franciaco;
11ebbie Caldwell, Twnmy Plants, Charles Adkins, co- does not justify predictions of Frederick Salkind, 23, a
worker,
of
l'hairman of the Gallla County Bicentennial Commission; a 6.1 per cent rise in the gross garment
national
product
and·
a
Berkeley ; Alfonso Garcia, a
1second row) Mrs. Rita Shriver, club advisor, Joyce
Boggess, Twnmy Shriver, Karen Caldwell and Nancy decline to 7. 7 per cent in leather craftsman, no
unemployment.
address.
Thompwn .

r

'

�.

Tax valuations, rates shown by Auditor Frank Hoax on vets continues
.'l11e incTease in valuation from $34,385,192 in 1974 to
$41,8:XI,IOO Iapproximately 21.5 pet.) reflectS the general
reappraisal and the addition of nearly $4 million in the
Meigs Local School district, namely the Meigs Mines.

Mr. Howard Frank. auditur of M c i~s Co_Wlt y. ha.s
supplied the wblc below &lt;'omparinl.! th~ valuations and
rates of tt~xation in M,... igs ( 'ounl y .~ ulxli v i ~i ons in 1974 nnd
1975.

POME ROY - Sandy Swartz Dw ling , originally of
Middleport, sends along a clipping from a Columbus newspaper in reference to · a "Martha Nelson, " born in
Pomeroy 105 years ago.
Miss Nelson died Jan . 30, 1975 after spending nearly 100
years of her life in Ohio mental institutions. Many of the years
were at Orient SUite Institute where she died.
All of her living years except the last two were spent
without ever having a visitor or receiving a letter or greeting
card.
Publicity of her nearly 100 years in a ml!!ltal institution
bro ught streams of cards, letters an&lt;l gifts frorp around the
world. However, Miss Nelson never really enjoyed the gifts,
· and some still arrive at Orient. Slie was too ill mentally and
physically.
Dr. Alfred Z. Soforenko, superintendent of the institute,
ilnswered and still answers the greetings to the late Miss
Nelson.
Last Year the Martha Nelson Rehabmwtion Center was
dedicated and thE! center is used for mentally retarded
persons .
Dr . Soforenko has said that he had the Latin phrase, " Res
lps.a Loquitur'' - meaning , ''Let the evidence speak for itself''
engraved upon Miss Nelson's headstone . Officials never really
knew why she was institutionalized . She was admitted to a
state institution in Columbus in 1875.
POMEROY FIRE CHIEF CHARGES LEGAR repo~ts that
an aerial ladder truck which could be purchased for about
110,000 in Springfield, Ill., has been located. Pictures of the
pieee of equipment are expected most anytime. .
A' yo u no doubt are aware, a public fund drive is
underway for the purchase of such a vehicle for use throughout
Meigs County. The fund is a little over $1,215 and donations
may be sent to Mrs. Don Thomas, 289 Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy .
GEORGE FOSS, FORMERLY of Athens and Columbus,
has only the highest praise for Veterans Memorial Hospital.
George was recently dismissed from the local hospital. He said
the humanitarian attitude of the staff towards patients " is
really wonderful.''
BY THE WAY, Bernard Wallace, 1687 Lincoln Heights,
Pomet'Oy , is doing nicely after sufferins a stroke.• Feb. 10.
Ca rds m ay be sent to him at Pleasant Valley Hospital~ Room
133, Point Pleasant.
·THE POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT LIONS CLUB has a
service offered to Pomeroy business houses. The club provides
the Ame rican Hags and places them In front of sublcribing
business houses every holiday. Proceeds from the service go
Into the club's sight saving program. If you're interested. do .
contact the Rev. William Mlddleswarth who will give you the
details.
•
. IT P AYS TO HAVE TALENT in the family. Last Sunday
when Charles and LaVera Piersall Yeager observed their 25th
.wedding anniversary at Mason, a beautiful tiered, hellrtshaped cake was used on the table. The attractive cake was
made by Ann PiersaU Click, younger sister of Mrs. Yeager.
Mrs. Click resides at Ravenswood.
IRA DAVIS, CALLED HERE BY the death of his ·sister,
Mrs. Myrtle Long, from Springfield dropped by the Pomeroy
National Bank to see for the first time in over 50 years his old
classmate at the R~se Hill school, Edison ~o)lstett.er. Edison
produced an aged p1cture of the students at ~ school among
which· were he and Davis.

Beaver catch of 674 in
·1976 season is record
ATHENS - A total of 674
bea ver was harvested in the
current 1976 beaver trapping
season in Wildlife District
Four. This was the most
beave r
trapped
In
Southeastern Ohio's 13 years
of the modern day season.
Bea ver harvested by
counties . were as follows :
Athens .48, Cochoscton 39;
Vinton 38; Guec~
. Y 36;
Jackson 35 ; Washin n 15;
Hocking 13 ; Per
12 ;
Monroe 1; Meigs 3, and
Belmon t 2.
The three main reasons for
having a beaver trapping
sea so n are: ( I) to give
priv ate landowners relief
from beaver damage; (2) to
prevent the annual increment
of a high population area
from being lost to natural
causes; and (3) to provide
recreation by a limited ,
regulated harvest.
One of the problems beaver
cause is the flooding of land.

Little honored
at OSU dinner
COLUMBUS - Ohio State
University has announced the
names of SOJ!le 400 outstanding seniors honored
Feb. 17 at the 19th annual
Pre side nt's
.Scholarship
Recognition Dinner.
Th e top-ranking seniors
were selected· for the honor
the
undergraduate
by
colleges and schools of the
uni versity. Included was
Dougla s William Little ,
Route 1 Middleport.

Many landowners would
prefer to have the beaver
around if they could control
the water level. There are
two simple beaver pond level
control devices which most
landowners could consiruct
from scrap · lumber or
materials already on hand.
For additional information
on this, . contact the State
Game Protector in your area
or write to the Wildlife
District Four Office, 360 East
State Street, Athens, Ohio
45701.
FORD LEADER NAMED
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - F.
Keith Donley, Trotwood, will
supervise field operations for
the
President
Ford
Conunlttee in Ohio, Keith
McNamara, chairman of the
commiUee, announced
Thursday.
Donley is currently deputy
recorder for Montgomery
County and supervisor of the
uniform commerlcal code
section of the recorder ' s
office.
"Keith Donley brinl!s a
vast amount of experience,
together with dedication and
enthusiasm to President
Ford's campaign in Ohio,"
McNamara said. " He wil,l be
an Invaluable member of our
staff."
Donley, state advisor of the
Teen Age RepublicanS and a
member of the executive
committee
of
the
Montgomery County Men 's
Republican Club and the Ohio
League of Young Republican
Club!, has oerved as a field
man and coordinator In
numerous statewide political
campaigns.

rates

heal Es t at e
VhLUAUONS

1974

SU BD l VI S lONS

Bedford-Neigs
Bedford- Ea s tern
Chester-Ea st er n
Chester-Heigs
Columbia
Lebanon - Southe rn
Lebanon-Eastern
Letart
Olive
Or ange
Rutland
Sa l em
Salisbu r y
Scipio
Sutton- Southern
Sutt on-Me igs

Rutland Vil la ge ·
Middlep ort Villag e
Pomer oy Villa ge
Racine Villa ge
Syr acuse Village

32. 60
32 . 60
33.40
33 . 40
34 . 40
30 . 20
33 . 00
30 . 80
32 . 60
33 .30
33 . 20
32 . o0
32. 40
33. 30
30-20
33 . 00
39. 70
34 . 90
37 .90
36. 00
37 . 30

Meigs Loc al S. D.
Eas t ern Lo cal S. D.
Southern Loc al S. D.
Colum bia ( Al exande r Lo cal S. D.

Book Now Fo.r Summer Cruises.

CALL 446 0696
•

•

.

.

1975

1, 326,610
12 ' 590
2, 9t3 ,090
248,3 50
1 '945' 060
1,281 , 362
157,490
1, 337 ' 590
li , C93,540
1 , 548 ,10(;
, 1, 924, 050
2, 309 , 000
2, 141,830
1, 281 , 000
2,335, 370

31.40
30.90
31.80
32 .30
33 .10
31.80
31.30
32 .lt0
30.90
31.70
32 . 00
31.40
31. 20
32 .10
31. 80
31. 80 .

14 , ~90

22 , 939 , 22

•

Reason 1.
are income tax
specialists. We ask the ri ght questions.
We dig for every hon est deduction We
want to leave no stone unturned to
make sure you pay the small est
legitimate tax .

22 ,789,950
8,317 , 690
8 , 282,910
2 ,46~, 550
41,85 ,100

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~2~~::.-.~ ~· ~~ ~~.~

•

OtESTER, OHIO
985-3308

Patty's story
impressive but
.has some holes
By DONALD B. THACKREY

JUDGE BETZ HONORED- Judge RobertS. Betz of
the Gallipolis Municipal Court holds the handsome plaque
he received from Chief Justice of )he Ohio Supreme Court,
c. William O'NeiU in ceremonies Feb. 15 at the Sheraton
North Hotel in Columbus. The plaque is inscribed. "The
Supreme Court of Ohio honors Robert S. Betz, Gallipolis
Municipal Court for Superior Judicial Service, 1975."

Nixon chummy
with Kuo-feng
PEKING (UP!)- Former memorable day for us
President Richard M. Nixon because of that historic
arrived in cold and misty visit, " Hua told Nixon during
Peking Saturday to a chatty, a brief informal chat.
friendly welcome from
" Folll' years ag&lt;&gt;-il was
China 's new acting premier, exactly four years this yearHua Kuo·feng , who teased when Mr . Nixon took his
him about daughter Julie 's courageous act in coming to
role in arranging the trip.
Olina ," Hua said. "It was
Nixon's visit was timed to during that visit that our two
coincide with the fourth anni· sides issued the Shanghai
versary of his 1972 visit that conununlque that opened the.
ended almost 25 years of door to development of relaSino-American estrangement
lions."
and restored partial relations
Hua recalled that Nixon's
between the two countries. daughter Julie recently was
Nixon and his wife, Pat, in · China and met with 82arrived at Peking airport year-old Mao. It was during
aboard a special Chl!lese ·that meeting, Hua ~~&amp;ld, that
airliner flown to Los Angeles "Chairman Mao told your
to bring him to China on a · daughter he would welcome
private visit at the invitation you back to China."
of
Communist
party
Laughing, Hua turned to
Foreign Min lste':_ Chiao
Chairman Mao ,Tse-tung.
''Today, Feb. 21, is a ven- .
Continued on Page 18

$48

8'x7' -6" Kitchen
Rubber back, patch plaid .... , ..... .
2

By AL ROSSITER JR.
There have been estimates
UPI Scleoce Editor
· that tens of millions of people
BOSTON ( UP! ) A · would starve, particularly If
combination of low sunspot · bad weather hit farm lands of
activity, past records and India and tbe Soviet Union at
bune-dry conditions indicate ' the same time.
The area most susceptible
the "Great [)rough! of the
'70s" is · beginning in the
to such a drought is that
American high plains, a portion of the plains
noted astrophysicist said extending BOO to 1,000 miles
east of the Rocky Mountains
Saturday.
If it does develop and and running from South
continues for three to five Dakota to the Texas
years, Dr. Walter Orr panhandle.
Roberts, now professor of
Roberts said America's towl
grain crop could be reduced astrophysics
at
the
by eight to 10 per cent.
University of Colorado, told a
Prices would increase and news confereoce at the
people would starve in poor · American Association for tbe
countries with · already Advancement of Science that
meager fond supplies.
western Kansas and western
"I fear if fond aid In some Nebraska would be hardest
form , ·
national
or hit .
international,
is
nol
Other states affected would
established, we are going to be Colorado, South Dakoka,
see a disaster in terms of -Oklahoma, Texas and a small
human nutrition In some part of New Mexico.
parts of the world," said
Drought in the high plains
Roberts, former director of have occurred every 20 to 22
the National Center for years for the past 160 years.
Atmospheric Research of There was a moderate
Boulder, Col.
drought lasting three years In

~:=:~- ;~::~ .~~.~~~. ... .' .................~48

Reagan disclalms
Goldwater's fate
MANCHESTER , N.H. ·
(UPI) - Ronald Reagan
Saturday
answered
accusations he is too
conservative to be elected
president and would lead the
GOP to Goldwater-style
disaster in 1976.
,

"There is a difference,"
ReaiJiln .said between his
challenge of President Ford
and Sen. Barry Goldwater's
landslide defeat at the hands
of President Johnson in 1964.
Noting his two landslide
elections as governor of
California, Reagan said: " I
must have a broader base
than they're suggesting those wbo are charging a '64

repeat."

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&lt;,SPARE

~-

618 East Miin
Pomeroy . Ohio

We will be moving to new quarters in our new warehouse soon.

FREEl.

1

27 Sycamore Strtoet
Gallipolis, Ohio

VOL 11 NO.4

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) Patricia Hearst spent a full
week trying to convince the
seven women and five men on ·
her jury that two months of
abuse and terror In a tiny
closet forced her into a life of
crime and fear-filled Hight .
When she got off the
witness stand, the newspaper
heiress and her attorney, F .
Lee
Bailey,
appeared
satisfied her tale
of
kidnaping , sexual abuse,
pretended conversion to
radicalism, and submission
to her abductors' orders had
held up · under crossexamination.
But prosecutor James L.
Browning Jr. had wrung from
Miss Hearst admissions she
passed up repeated chances
to get away, flred two
separate guns in what she
claimed was a "reflex
action," wasn't sure herself if
!!he was brainwashed, and
had become an advocate of
"social change."
He also got her to modify
her story that her sole
emotion during the bank
robbery for wh,ich she is on
trial was fear of being gunned
down if she ·"messed up."
Miss Hearst admitted she
was also aware she was her
kidnapers' " ticket to gel out
of anything ."
But the prosecutor's most
damaging questions - about
a "missing year" in her
underground life - came
.with the jury out of the
courtroom.
·
Miss Hearst took the $th
Amendment 21 times to avoid
discusaing where she was
between September 1974 and

September 1975 on grounds it
might incriminate her in
another bank robbery - one
in which a customer was
killed.
U.s. District Judge Oliver
J. Carter promised to rule
Monday on a prosecution
motion to aUow questioos
about the missing year before
the jury and oin a defense
motion to block introduction
of a taped jail conversation in
which Miss Hearst uses
radical rhetoric and vulgar
language.
If he decides to allow
interrogation about either,
Miss Hearst will return to the
stand for more crossexamination. If he blocks the
prosecutor .in both cases,
Bailey will begin his
brainwashing defense by
calling UCLA psychiatrist
Louis J. West .
In the middle of Miss
Hearst's week on the stand,
which concluded on her 22nd
birthday, Carter issued an
eight-page ruling questioning
her "credibility" during
previous testimony with the
jury out of the courtroom.
The jurors were unaware of
his views .
The jury also was unaware
· of the $1 million bombing at
the Hearst estate at Sun
Simeon and threats on the life
of Miss Hearst and her
parents until Browning made
a wctical error.
He was asking the
defendant - as he had time
and time again - why she
hadn't contacted her ·parents
or authorities and turned in
William and Emily Harris,
the last remaining members
Continued on page 18

brought begUn'"}; liigb plains

12' WIDE

' tB1

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

Rutland a nd Daniel E . ditch and through a fence.
Shes tina .' Rt. 4 Pomeroy , me( There was on contact be·
on a hillcrest, Shestina tween the cars. There was
yielding to the right into a only slight damage .

CARPET ONLY

'(;v.'.

1948, and with each wave of
letters it s lm oula tes , VA
explains to each applicant
that dividends are payable
only on policies that are kept
in force . But the hoax is
fu eled anew eve ry few years
th•
mysterious
by
distributiOJ of official-looking
application forms complete
with an address where
dividends are said to be
available for the asking.

918,770
5, 199 , 500
5, 426 ,280
861,100
1.457 ,4~0
13 , 863,0 0

18 ,837 , 760
G, 794 ,bl 0
6 , b07 , 562
) ~ 945 060
3+ ,3tf5 ,192

POMEROY - Three ac- on the left, went into a ditch,
cidents were investigated an d went 45 fee l in the ditch
Friday and Saturday by .the before comi ng to a slop .
was
m oder a te
department of Sheriff Robert The r e
C. Hartenbach. No personal damage.
Saturday at 2: ~0 a .m. m
injuries were reported and no
Salisbury Twp . .Donald D.
citations issued.
midnight · Friday Arms , · J, Rt. 4 Pomeroy,
At
Douglas
Rosenb aum, dri vi ng w.est on Bailey Run
traveling north on Pleasant Road m et an unid entifi~d car
Ridge at an apparent high traveling east tha t forced him
rate of speed, lost con.trol in too far to the rig ht and he
gravel, skidded off the road sideswiped a bridge abut·
men t, Arms looked over his
shoulder to see if he had
struck the other car , and
HEARING SCHEDULED
when he looked up he was
CLEVELAND (UP! ) going off the road to the left
Carl DeFreeze, brother of and into a ditch . There was
slain Symbionese Liberation moder ate damage.
Army
leader
Dona ld
Friday at 5 p .m . in'
DeFreeze, was scheduled for Columbia Tpw . on CR 10,
a preliminary hearing today Carol E . Hamon, 20, Rt. I
on a charge of aggravated
murder.
DeFreeze, 22, was arrested ERECflNG PLANT
!list week in connection with
BOWLING GREEN, Ky.
the Dec. 27 shooting death of IUPI ) - Ground breaking
east side tavern owner Jesse ceremonies were scheduled
Smith. Homicide detectives today I or a new industrial
say Smith, 63, was killed by a facility which wi ll employ
shotgun blast during a about 100 people.
,
robbery at his bar.
Harold Huffman , executive
DeFreeze was arraigned vice president of the city's .
Feb. 14and was held in lieu of chamber of commerce, said
$50,0110 bond"
construction would begin on a
Donald "Cinque" DeFreeze facility owned by Continental
died in a gunbattle with Poly, Inc., a division of Ohio
authorities in Los Angeles · Poly of Carrollton, Ohio.
last year . He had been
The plant will cost $2
identified as the leader Of the· million
a nd
will
group
that
kidnaped manufacture
sheeting,
newspaper heiress Patricia . tubing and hags for industrial
Hearst.
use.

recurri nl;t irregularly smee

Henry Block has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for income tax help.

27,99,020

34.40
33 .70
36 . 70
40 . 60
38 . 40

755 ,3 10
4, 316, 680
4,520 ,540
709 , 530
1,143 , 710
11 ,44 5,770

AAA • DELTA QUEEN
SPECIAL 3 DAY CRUISES
An AAA Exclusive'

rates

they a llowed to lapse years
ago.
The hoax
has be en ,

CLEVELAND
The
Veterans Administration and
major veterans organizations
have launched a joint effort to
stamp out a hoax that has
disappointed millions of
veterans since it began in
1948.
L. M. Merritt, director ·of
the Cleveland VA RegionHI
Office said that VA is
recetvmg thousands of
telephone calls and letters
weekly from World War II
veterans who have been
de ceived into expecting
dividends on Gl insurance

Reagan's comments to
about 200 supporters at his
headquarters came · the
mornillfl after he disclosed
Ford twice Invited him to join
the Cabinet.
He was accompanied by his
wife, Nancy, and actor Uoyd
Nolan, a Hollywood colleague
during Reagan's 3o-year

i

the mid 1950s. That was
preceded by the severe dust
bowl drought of the 193(1s.
The~e was a four year
drought centered around
1913.
Roberts said research has
associated the high·· plain
droughts with periods of very
low solar radiation activity
which occur every 11 years
and with abnormaUy low
periods
of
.sun-linked
magnetic field activity which
occur every 22 years.
The low solar and magnetic
activity are now coinciding
and It has been 21 years since
the last drought. In addition •.
Roberts . said It is already
very dry in the high plains.
"I have very serious fear
that the Great Drought Of the
' 7~ has begun," Roberts
said. If it has started, he said
it probably began a year or
two ago when only single
spring rains prevented more
serious. conditions.
Roberts ssid some farmers
already have begun to plow in
winter wheat to help stabilize
the soil, " but it's still in the
situatiQn where rains in the
last week of February or the
first week in March would

.,

Ford confident
•

•

required hospitalization at the Holzer Medical Center. Her
son was treated and released. Ohio Highway Patrolman
Rodney Cook in the picture was continuing his investigation
Saturday.
(Grover Studio picture.)

·:::Dateline
:: : : : :::::: :: : : ::1776
: :;: ::: : ::c. ar h.ItS

•

m two pnmanes
the intelligence community.
By HELEN THOMAS
·
The board Is to Insure
UPI White House Reporter
operations do not
Intelligence
WASHINGTON (UPl) violate
U.S.
)aws and civil
President Ford said &amp;aturdaY
rights,
or
lead
to abuses of
his new ln!elligence oversight
power
of
the
type
disclosed by
board
will
be
·an
Congress
the
past
year. Ford
" independent auditor" of
said
these
responsibilities
spying abuses, free of White
an
"extre~ely
House influence. He also were
significant"
feature
of his
predicted he will win the New
Hampshire and Florida intelligence reforms.
"We have told tbe intelliprimaries.
Ford made his comments gence conununity on the one
in a brief give and take with hand what they can do, and
reporters in the Oval Office, what they can't do on the
where he held a get- other hand," Ford said.
"We sought to achieve
acquainted meeting with the
so
tht
three ·man oversight panel. accountability
individuals
and
·the
various
The President appeared In
a confident mood, and, when Intelligence agencies will
asked what be thought would !mow precisely what their
happen In Tuesday's New responsibiUtles are and to'
Hampshire primary contest whom they are accountable.
"But the main addition
with Ronald Reagan, he said :
which
I
think
Is
uwe're going to win ."
fundamentally
necessary
is
Asked about Florida's
the
oversight
board,
and
you
March 9 primary, he
repeated, "We're going to · are to act as an independent
auditor of what takes place
win."
Ford then spent about a within the intelligence
half hour with · the board, community. You are not to be
headed by veteran diplomat influenced by the White
Robert Murphy, which he House and yoo are not to be
created by executive order influenced by the intelligence
Wednesday ·as part of a conununity."
Continued on Pale 18
reform and reorganization of

still save a major part of the
crop."
·
The .longtime climate
watcher said there is no
certainly the drought Is
Coming or that it will last any
particular length of time. He
also said "some experts
probably would disagree with
his' prediction.
But Dr . Stephen H .
Schneider, deputy head of the
climate project at the Center
of Atmospheric Research ,
said some specialist believe
the situation is more ominous
now ~ .than the conditions of
the 1930s.
"If it were to occur anotber
COLUMBUS (UPI) three years and if it were to Public Utilities Commission
show a substantial reduction of Ohio attorneys have asked
In rainfall, it would be like the the Franklin County Conunon
dust bowl of the '30s," Pleas Court to lift its
Roberts said.
temporary estralnlng.
" If we have a recurrance of enjoining a gas company
the 1930s situation, the from charging residential
marginal lands that are now customers for emergency
being planted with wheat fuel purchased for industrial
with a 50$ or two-out-of- and commercial use on the
three probability will go ground the court lacks
first," he ·said.
jurisdiction.
''Then there will be , · PUCO's legal counsel filed
substantial areas that are a motion Friday to intervene
under Irrigation and their In the court case of Columbia
wells may run dry if the Gas of Ohio, Inc., and a
drought goes oli for two or motion for dismissal.
three years," Roberts said.

BRAINTREE, Mass.
Feb. 21 - AblgaD ·Adams
wrote ber husband that
tbere was an outbreak of
pleurisy fever In the area.
She also noted tbal
preparations for military
action were Increasing
" and something great is
dally expected, something
terrible It wUI be."

Jobless
charged
at 10.6%
By SARA FRITZ
BAL HARBOUR, Fla.
(uP!) - AFL-CIO critics of
the
a ,d mlnistration 's
unemployment
figures
charged Saturday that
joblessness In the nation
during January was 10.6 per
cenHr 2.8 per cent higher
than official estimates.
Labor's counter estimate of
unemployment was
contained In a detailed
economic report adopted
during
the
AFL.CIO
executive council midwinter
meeting.
It also charged that the

administration's

Court asked to get out .
The prior day Oh,io
Attorney General William J.
Brown got the order
preventing Columbia Gas
from charging residential
cuatomersfor the higher cost
emergency fuel being used by
industrial and co~ercial
consumers, on grounds tbe
company did not get PUCO
pennlsslon.
Commissioners said the
PUCO was established by the
Ohio General Asselnbly to
resolve utility-rate matters
and, therefore, the eQurt does
not hlive jurisdiction.

own

economic predictions for 1916
·are "shaky" and those for
1977
portend
another

recession.
The AFL.c!O's economists
charged last week that the
Labor Department used
statistical "gimmickry" to
greatly exaggerate the
moderate
decline
of
unemployment between
December and January. As a
result, they said they
Intended to announce their
own figures, which they
described as "the real
measure of unemployment"
each month in tbe future.
report
released
The
Saturday said the Labor
Qepartment estimate of an
01 per cent drop in
unemployment to 7.8 per cent
in January "did not square
with the continuing $low improvements
In
he

economy!'
· It said the,AFL.c!O arrived
at its own figure of 10.6 per

Q
movie career.
Reagan motored through
New Hampshire's largest
city three days before tbe
nation's first 1978 primary.
He encountered persistent
questioning at three senior
citizens homes about his
plans for Social Security.
"Some of the things said
abOOt me are not things I
have ever said or that I
believe," he said referring to
Ford charges he was
advocating Investing Social
Security funds in the stock
market.
"! think it is unconscionable for whatever· political purpose, fOr someone
to use people on Social
Security
and
frighten
them," he said.
"I deplore that even In a
political season of a
campaign that there.would be
people who would use an
issue of this kind and cause
disturbance to people who are
helpless to do anything," he
said, without mentioning
Ford by name.

ESCAPES SERIOUS INJURY - A CoolYille woman and
her six-year old son escaped serious Injury Friday In a traincar collision on Rt. 7, north of Cheshire. Mrs. Kay Avis,
driver of the car, (above) had facial lacerations which

CLEANUP CAMPAIGN STARTS - 1be Kerr Bobwhites

AI Club did

Its part to help "clean up America" Saturday
morning in the Gallipolis City Park. PiCked up trash in the
park as part of a nationwide, environmental awareness and
action program entitled " Johnny Horizon '76" sponsored
locally by the Gallia County Bic.,ntcnnial Commission. The
club plans to continue its cleanup work on the third Saturday

••
"

• at
tra1n

Cheshire:~
GALLIPOLIS - Kay Avis,
31, Rt. 2, Coolville, ~as listed .
in good condition Saturday at
the Holzer Medical Center
where she was admitted
Friday following a traln~ar
collisiOn on Rt. 7, north of
Cheshire.
According to the GalliaMeigs Post ~tate Highway
Patrol, the Avis car collided
with a
Penn Central'
locomotive and caboose
operated by Alfred A. Duff,
29, Pomeroy. The accident
occurred at 10:17 a.m.
Mrs. Avis was admitted for
severe facial lacerations. Her
six-year ol,d son Michael
Avis, was treated and , •
released. for minor con- "'""',
tusions. They were taken to .•,,:,
the hospital by the Mid- ,,
dleport Emergency Squad. " ,
The accident is still under ~ "
investigation.
il 1·:,
Doris Halfhill, 34, Rt. 1, ,
Middleport, was taken to ~··,
Veterans Memorial Hospitar · '.';
at Pomeroy, for treatment of
injuries suffered in an ac- ".,
cident at 2:40p.m. Friday on ··. ,'
Rt. 124 and the junction to ·
County Road 5.
The · patrol said an auto, ·
driven by Karen Sue Hart, 19,
Rutland, slammed into the' · "
· side of the Halfhill car. Mrs.
Halfhill was taken to the .
hospital by the Pomeroy, '; . ·
Emergency Squad. There
was severe damage . No
charges were filed .
Another Meigs County
accident occurred at 2:3(i ·a .m. Saturday on Rt. 7, six
tenths of a mile north of Rt.
12(
The patrol said an unknOWJI
vehicle drove into the barre~,
on the divider knock' nr
gravel into the front of a ·' drivep by Carla M. Neal, ~ ''.,
• of Gallipolis. There w ....
moderate damage to her car
The other car continued 011.

'"

i:

..

'•''

Six seized . ·:·
in FBI hit'

cent by including an
estimated one
million
By JOHN LEIGHTY
unemployed workers ' 'who
SAN FRANCISOJ (UPI) - "
have become so discouraged ·Six persoils believed to be
lhey no longer actively seek
members ,Qf the radical New •
work" and about hall of the
World Uberation Front were •
estimated 3.5 million part
arrested by pollee and FBI . .
time workers " who want and agents Saturday In a Richneed full time work."
mond, Calif., house where
The AFL.CIO has long
explosives and firearms were
argued that dlscol!raged
seized.
,.
jobseekers should be counted
The six suspects were
among the unemployed and
jailed in Riciinond and the
that part time workers should FBI said lhe significance of
be considered part time
the arrests were "still being
unemployed.
evaluated."
"When these factors are
Those arrested were JaniCI!
included," the report said, Orson, 28, an unemployed
"then a more realistic waitress ; Steven Scipes, 24,
measure of unemployment in an unemployed counselor, of
January would be 10.6 per Berkeley; Carolyn Williams,
cent.''
28,
unemployed,
of
The report · said the Guerneville, Calif.; Ellen
of each inonth, weather permitting. Pictured here are (first administration's forecast for Kesend, 28, sell-employed
row 1-r) Rachel Collins, Ladonna Plants, Janie Caldwell, 1976 is "shaky," because it writer, of San Franciaco;
11ebbie Caldwell, Twnmy Plants, Charles Adkins, co- does not justify predictions of Frederick Salkind, 23, a
worker,
of
l'hairman of the Gallla County Bicentennial Commission; a 6.1 per cent rise in the gross garment
national
product
and·
a
Berkeley ; Alfonso Garcia, a
1second row) Mrs. Rita Shriver, club advisor, Joyce
Boggess, Twnmy Shriver, Karen Caldwell and Nancy decline to 7. 7 per cent in leather craftsman, no
unemployment.
address.
Thompwn .

r

'

�-·

':, ·:·: :·:·.:·:. ,: ·.·:·.·:,•:.·:· ·: :·:·:·: ·.: :·:;: :·. : -·:·.;:·.: .;:.,::.:. .:·.::.: . ::.:,:,., ., .,:..,:.: :·:;. : : ·.·: :;:)
T wo D emocrat s file .tor :::
r
: : This is how it was r,,
• •
• •
commission
positions
ED. NOTE: The arti cle below
the f1rst of a series

19 - The Sunday-l1mes..sent1nel, Feb. 22, 1976

.·. ·-·-:·-:·· .-

Miller takes Howsam shots
CINCINNi\Ti i UP l i - Cmcinnati Reds President Bob
Howsam Saturday criticized
Marvi n Mille r , executi ve
director of the Major !.£ague
Players' Association. fo r
some comments he made
here Friday pertairung to the
reserve clause.
MlUer had said he wants to
table the negotiations on the
reserve clause until the end of
the season, saying that the
players' assocation and
players would have better
guidelines in slructurmg a
modified reserve clause since
they would know how many
players played out options
and why they did so.
He also said players
haven't made any proposals
w modifiy it because they
don't want "' cnange it.
But Howsam said Miller
can be very amug m saying
the players' assocation has
made no proposal to modify
the reserve clause.
"After all, the reserve
system has been completely
changed in the last few weeks
but, as a result of the Seitz
ruling pending an appeal in
the courts, until that time the
reserve clause was blnding
for the full career of the
player," Howsam said.
"Now it has been changed
wvirtually no control at all,"
he added. "And Miller says
the association doesn't want
to modify it.

Nixon
Continued from page 17
Kuanhua and satd, "She
called her father the very
next day."
The Nixon-Hua chat IIJok
place in a large reception
room of the Tiao Yu Tai
(fishing tackle) guest house
where Nixon stayed when he
first came to China and wrote
one of the most successful
chapters of a presidency that
ended in his resignation.
Mrs. Nixon, wearing a light
green coat with a gray fur
collar, chuckled over Hua's
teasing and said, "We have
promised to call her from
here."
"Yes, you must do ths.t,"
Hua replied.
Nixon, who sat with folded
hands
and
listened
attentively to Hua, told his
host he was ''very honored"
to be back in China. He said
Feb. 21 "is aver; memorable
date for us also."
Nixon satd he was
"psrticularly appreciative of
the great courtesy" the
Chinese had demonstrated by
sending a special plane for
him.
Nixon will spend eight days
in China. His first activity
was to be a meeting before
noon Sunday with Tang Yingchao, the widow of the late
Premier Chou En-lai, the
· official hostess 'durmg the
first Nixon v1sit.
Sunday afternoon Nixon
meets with Hua in the Great
Hsll of the People for their
first round of talks.
This is one of the rare
occasions when the State
Council has hosted a banquet
for a private individual. Chi·
nese officials could not recall
when the last such banquet
was held.
The airport welcome was
short and informal. Only a
handful of Chinese officials
and about 350 selected
ordinary citizens were on
hand.
Among them were 50 sci en- ·
lists, journalists, athletes,
doctors
and
trade'
representatives who have
visited the United States
since the 1972 Nixon visit.
Policemen were spaced
about 15 yards apart over 18mile route through almost
deserted streets to the state
guest house. The Nixons rode
with Hua, who also iS China's
top policeman by virtue of his
job as minister of public
security.
During his visit, Nixon will
visit one of China's most
famous universities and see
wall posters criticizing some
of China's top leadersIncluding deputy Premier
Teng Hsiaoping who hosted
President Ford during his
visit last year.

HONORS WON
MASON - Two Mason
County students at West
Virg10ia Um versity named to
the first semester (3.3)
dean's list were Dale Randolph
Hill,
College
Agriculture and Forestry,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde D.
Hlil, Route 3, !.£on, and Joyce
E. Lanham, College of
Human Resources and
Education, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles C. Lanham,
Po~ Pleasant. ;,

··He's playmg w1th words . ba!'&gt;cball un Ins own len n-; .
'·He won 't ,go to Lhl'• rank
It has qeen modtftcd

completely," he satd. "il ts a
concept that undermines the
very foundatin of the game.
'·Why are we in baseball so
concerned'" he asked .
11
Because ex:perience, not
theory , has taught us how to
keep the interest of the fans .
Anythmg that undermtnes
that interest is not in the best
inters! of the game.
"Anyone woo has watched
what has happened to hockey
and basketball should be able
w understand it. The folding
of clubs should emphasize
this," he said.
Howsaa said most of the
players he has talked with
are as concerned as he is
about what will happen to the
game without a reserve
system.
"Baseball has been good to
them and they don't want to
see it destroyed," he said.
"The rank and file player
may understand what is at
stake. but Miller wants to run

and ftle a nd find out whot
they really want ," he said. · I
thtnk the players shou ld have
their say with a vote
"Many of the players are
sa ying tha t the reserve
system with mmor revisions
IS important, but not major
changes such as the Seitz
ruling.
"Is it worth the gamble to
accept Miller's theory that
baseball can overate without
the rule~ that have earned
the game through many
problems for more than 100

years ?" he asked .

"! don 't want to take that
gam,bie," he said. "If this
man continues with the
position he has taken, it
appears that he is more
determtned to unde rmme

the game than solve its
problems.
"if that is so, then I want to
make sure I do everything in
my power to fight him," he
said.

compromise,
concessions.''

no

He said the powers of the
judiciary, "if properly used,
are amply sufficient to afford
litigants a fair and impartial
trial without any muzzling of
the press."
But he said once the
guarantees of a press and
free speach rights "have
been weakened and their full
vigor diminished, we may
never repair the damage."
"You people of the press
are our watchdogs. It is your
high duty to let in the light so
desperately needed for the
proper functioning of our
American
form
of
democracy," the 119-year-&lt;Jld
jurist said in a speech
conducted by telephone from
New YorK to the ONA's
banquet.
"Our whole destiny as a
nation depends upon our
keeping Freedom of the
Press and Freedom of Speech
inviolate and upon our doing
everything in our power to
prevent the erosion and
weakening of these rights."
Medina, who now takes
cases by personal choice
because of his age, said that
the "unbelievable mess" of
Watergate could not have
surfaced without the news
media.
"Unless we know what iS
goi!lg on we are helplfss," he
said. "This is especi81ly true
in the field of crime and the
administration of criminal
ju'stice."
,He said gag orders - "this
muzzling of the press" may be used "as a cover-up
to prevent the detection of lax
criminal law enforcement or
downright corruption.
"Is it not the right of the
people to know," Medina
asked, ''why so many of those
who commit crimes of every
description are not in jail
where they belong? Does it
make sense w give judges
who administer
these
criminal courts the right to
issue these omnibus gag
orders shutting off from the
press access to everyone who
may conceivably know
anything about the crime?"

Ford
Cont10ued from page 17
Ford said he was confident
the board would do "what is
in the best interests of the
country.''
Murphy ssid the board
hoped to relieVe Ford of "one
or two of the little burdens
you carry." AlsO present
were the other panel
members: Former Army
secretary Stephen Ailes and
New York economist Leo
Cherne.
The
President,
who
returned from his final
campaign swing in New
Hampshire Friday, met with
staffers Saturday morning
and was then interviewed by
Bost&amp;n Globe reporters.

''

·--:-

:-··:.

'.

-:. -:.--·: ': ::·.. :'·:::': ::::::."':':::;:;;~

J
I!Hi\SII.lA. Brazil UPI) - Sccr·etary of State Henry 1
said S.1turday an unpn•«:Pdentet.l U
New treaty explained

'•

!i·

1

:: Ki~sinut•r
S.-Braztl ~:::
::~ p.cicl on 1nter na tiomll and bila tera l coopemtion WO:ts not ;~::
:: meant to turn U.S Latm Amencan policy into "an :;:.
'; obsession" with Cuba
:;;,
. t\l a news conference after the signing ceremony in ~::­
\ Braztlta's futuristtc Foreign MtniStry building, Kissinger :;;:
:' denied the pact had any rela tion to Cuba or that nation 's ;~:
.:: recent Intervention in Angola .
;:;.
.,.. The agreement is not "designed to enlist support ~;::
· :· against Cuba," the secretary sa id. " I don't want to turn ::::
:: our Western Hemisphere policy or our Brazilian policy ;';·
·;: into an obsessic:m with a small Caribbean country."
;:;:
:~: Kissinger , who at the signing with Foreign Minister :~:~
:.;' Antonio Azeredo da Silveira several times called the :;:;
::; Braztlian by his first name, told reporters, 1'1 believe ~;~;
:;: Brazil is destined to join the club ofthe rich."
;:;;
~·~; The 10-point " memorandum of understanding ;~;~
:·:' concerning consultations on matters of mutual interest" ;:;:
::: was negotiated over the last two years and is unique in the }
:.·: history of U.S.South American relations.
;:.;
:.:: Under the pact, the hemispheric giants are to hold high- ;:::
:. · level semiannual talks in Washmgton and Brazilia to ;~;;
;:;: discuss bilateral tssues and the ''full range of foreign ';':
:;.; policy matters including any specific issue that may be ;:;,
raised by either side."
::~:
~·.:
Colombia , Costa Rica and Guatemala are the ;:;:
;:: secretary's last stops on a six-nation Latin-American :·;;
':·: tour. He returns to Washington Tuesday.
:;::

t

:~\._.; :, .·. ,:; .·. :--;-,:; ,:;: ..:.:;: .·.·. ::. ;.,.;:,.;.,.;.;:;.·-:-;:: ;:;.;:;.;:;.;:::;:·.;-·:;.•:: ::::;:; ::· ;:·:;:::;:; ::·::·:::·-:);::

Patty's

Press advised
to fight hard
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - A
senior federal judge has
urged the press to "fight like
tigers" against gag rules in
covering criminal trials or
suffer possibly irreversible
damage to free speech and a
free press.
Harold R. Medina, a senior
judge in the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Second
Circuit, told members of the
Ohio Newspsper Association
at their conventipn Friday
mght, "Stand fast on the First
Amendment freedom of the
press. This is the law of the
land. Stick to it and do not
deviate from your course. No

..:-·

.... · :··:: -:-::.

three days later and to a Los
Angeles teen-ager the next
month - were forced by her
kidnapers.
- She never called or
contacted her parents
because of fear the Harrises
would find out and because "I
felt my parehts wouldn't
'
want to see me again."
- The SLA told her the
kidnaping was the start of a
nationwide revolution whtch
would be a "third world
movement for poor people,
especially pimps and pros-

UPI Statehouse Reporter
001 UMBUS (UPI ) - The
'
Ohio House IS to vote Tuesday
on a nnajor consumer credit
bill whi ch expands the
provisions of the Retail
Installment Sales Act and
eliminates two longstanding
credit traps.
The bill, sponsored by Rep .
Ed ward J · Orlett • D-Dayton •
extends consumer protection
sections of the 1972 Jaw to
sales of motor vehicles and
mobile
homes
and
transactions with physicians,
lawyers public utilities,
financia't institutions and
insurance compsnies.
It also would eliminate the
so.called "waiver of defense"
clause and the "holder in due
course" doctrine under which
consumers have no defense
against faulty products once
an installment purchase
con'tract is assigned to a
financial institution.
Retail sales lobbyists and
financial institutions have resis ted the provisions in
Orlett's bill which were
watered down in the 1972 act.
This is the first time they
have been tried since
Democrats took control of
both chambers of the General
Assembly in 1975.
The 11 holder in due course"
doctrine prevents consumers
from withholding psyment on
faulty gooda because the
merchant
sells
the
installment contract to a
financial institution.
Under current law, the
financial institution can
legally demand psyment if no
claim is registered against
th~ product 15 days after
assignment of the note .
Orlett's bill would give the
buyer a defense against the
seller whether or not the
installment contract had
been sent to a financial
institution.
''Waiver of defense'' means
the buyer ag.:ees he will
make no claim against a
retail seller or the financial
institution to which the
contract iS asstgned. Such a
clause, which also has a !:&gt;day notice period under
existing law, would be
rendered
void
and
unenforceable under 'orlett's
bill.
The Senate Ways and
Means Committee is to begm
work Wednesday morning on
Housepassed
legislation
aimed at preventing future
increases in unvoted real
estate taxes because of
inflation.
The measure, a legislative

response to the state Board of
Tax Appeals' freeze on land
·
to
valuattons, contams up
$200 milhon worth of real
estate tax relief. It would
require a taxpsyer credit
agains t
any
upward
adjustments in property
appraisals, excluding new
c0 n8 t r uct i0 n
0 r
improvements starting next
'
January.
Lo b b y 1s t s
for
municipalities and schools
are expected to try to knock
out an estimated $120 million
worth of credits on the first 10
unvoted mills, inserted on the
fioorwhen the bill cleared the
House, 75 to 22, on Feb. 10.
Supporters of the credits
said local revenue losses
from real property tax
reductions would be made up
by
personal
property
taxpayers - business and
utilities.
The House may vote this
week on a companion bill
designed to reduce inflalton
as a factor in real estate tax
assessments and splitting the
Board of Tax Appeals into

separate admimstra tive and
Judictal agenctes.
The
meas ure
was
.
ed b the
1
unarumous Y approv
Y
House. War and k Means
Commttlee ast wee · .
The . House
Utilities
Commttteef plans :
~~
Tuesday a temoon sen
subcommtttee a. Senatepassed bill re~1smg the
f
Ia by which public
o~~u
.
ut1ltties calculate thetr rate
structures·
.
hall
The subcommtttee . a 1re~dy .dealt .wtth stmilar
legislation whtch turnedtllitiout
more agreeable tr u
es
than consumer ntereats .
That bill is stall~ in the
House Rules Comrruttee.
The House Energy and
Environment ~ommittee mU
hold a ftrst hearmg
Wednesday morning on
legislation introduced last
week relaxing penalties for
strip mine operators who
ywlate ordeiB ~nd rules
ISS~d by the chief of the
Dtvtslon of Reclamation in
the state Department of
Natural Resources.

Services

The YCC program is open
to all young men and women,
age 15 through 18, who are
permanent restdents of the
United States.
Sponsored by the Department of Natural Resources
and the U. S. Agriculture and
Interior Departments, YCC
has been highly successful
during the past several years.
Over 1,000 youths have
par!tcipated in the program
in Ohw. In 1974 Ohto became
the ftrst state to be approved
by the federal government to
operate a YCC program . Two
federal YCC camps in Ohio
have been in operatiOn smce
1971.
YCC participatns for 1976
will be selected with the atd of
a computer setup tn
Wa shington, D. C , to ensure
youths are selected randomly
Without regard to social ,
economic, racml or ethnic
backgrounds
The youths will perform

'

l

PTSA in Eastern needs help
TO THE PARENTS, TEACHERS, AND STUDENTS OF
EASTERN LDCAL:
I would like to have a few minutes of your time to let you
!mow that Eastern Local has a PTSA, Alaociation. These
1ettera stand for Parents, Teachers, and Students. M~ybe
someofyoudldn'tevenknow weh.&amp;dooe, and would have been
to the meetingll sooner if you had.
We coilld sure use 110me more of you good people to come
and help with some ldeaa and di8cussions coocerning the
future of our children and school.
We have a good school, (better than most) but it won't stay
that way II we all don't pitch in and keep it that way! We have
good students, (ranldng tops with me) and they have great
Ideas concerning their school. After all, they go there every
day, and they know !ots more than they are given credit for.
Not to mention a big help to everyone whenever there is a
school function.
We need the students to join ua and tell us their views and
ldeaa, just as they need us. TO LISTEN ! As for needing you
psrents, we need you badly. Our klda need you and our school
needs you -YOW: ideas, help, and concern. The same applies
to Teachers. Let's face it, a handful of people will not get the
job done!
Why not come to our meeting Monday evening, February
23rd at 7:30p.m., talk with other parents, and decide for
yourself. We need the Pl'SA in our school and tt is just as
Important to our kids and their welfare to have Mother and
Dad attend this meetlrtl!. as it is to have them attend our
Booster meetings-these meetings go hand in hand for our
kids. So please come to the meeting and tell us your views and
ideaa, otherwise, the PTSA program may be terminated for
lack of support.
Let's give it a fair cha~you can't lose anything but an
evening at home, but we think you can gain a lot! (I've never
known our school to be a quitter, let's not be one now.) See you
there? - Mary Loogenette, Secretary, Eastern Local PTSA.

conservation work on state
and
fe derally -owned
factlities, atl&lt;!ndmg one of
two four·week camp sessions
in June, July and August.
Both restden ttal and nonresidenttai camps will be ·
provtded tn Ohto.
Typical proJects performed
by YCC work crews include
t•atl constru cti on, land
reclamation, timber stand
1mprovement, eros ion cont;ol
and wildhfe habi tat unprovement.
YCC campers also participate in conser vati on
education programs under
the guidance of experts in the
environmental and resource
management fteid .
Youths interes ted 10 partictpa tm g tn the YCC
program this year should file
their applications as soon as
posstble . The deadline is
March IH
, All applications should he
completed according to the
mstruc tions on the form
provided and mat led to : Ohio
YCC selectton Office, P. 0.
Box 23400, L'Enfant Plaza,
Washington, D_ C 20040.
i\pphcatwns may be obtamed in the Guidance Office
at Gaiha Academy High
School.

WILLIAM WALTERS

DONALD WRfGJrr

Gi\LLIPOLIS
Two
Democ ra ts filed petiti ons
here Friday with the Galli a
County Board of Elec tions as
candidates for coun ty
commissioner in the June
Primary Election .
William L. Walters, Vmton,
will be seeking the nod for the
term beginning Jan. 2 whtie
Donald E. Wright, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, seeks the Jan. 3
term. Walters, a painter, is
no stranger to the political
field. He has been a candidate
for several offices including
sheriff, comrmssioner and

Rotary's history recalled
MIDDLEPORT - Jack
Robson reminisced about the
early days of Rotary In·
ternational for the Mid·
dleport·Pomeroy Rotary
Club followinR d10ner at
Heath United Methodist
Church Friday evening.
Secretary of the local club
more than 20 years, Robson,
a retired grocery salesman,
will attend his eighth internahonal convention of
Rotary this summer in New
Orleans.
He recounted the details of
the first rotary club in
Chicago by an attorney, Paul
Harris, in 1905. Then, with the
help of the more elderly
members, he recalled activity highlights of the
Middleport-Pomeroy club
since it was formed m 1929.
Rotary International

celebrated its 7tst birthday
Feb. 21.
President Vern Weber
announced an · arrangement
has been made w1th Metgs
High School to accept, tuition
free , an exchange student
from a foreign country
begmning the 1976-77 school
term.
Weber named Judge
Robert Buck (Chairman),
Lee
McComas,
Chet
Tannehill,
Ed
Baker
and Carl Denison on
a committee that will
select the student to come
and arrange for hts local care
and keep while attending
school.
Rotary International
supervises the student exchange program, separate
from the Rotary Foundation
program which basically is a

scholarship plan .
A foreign student, commg
to the U. S. under the Rotary
exchange system, ususlly has
his senior year tn high school
to complete (or a comparable
year in whatever school
system his country might
have ), He, or she, resides
with a local family - usually
a Rotary family, although not
necessarily so - and is
supplied board and keep free.
Tthe student is supposed to
supply himself all major
expenses but usually is
provtded pin money expenses
by his American hosts.
The program has become
extraordinarily
popular
among U. S. Rotary clubs in
recent years.
Ladtes of the church served
a ham dinner.

Some 1976licenses go on sale March first

r

&lt;

••
•

Super Shef," Golden Brown Fries
and regular-size soft drink

is

..Y:~~
••• .B~..t
?Jtt. "'""'L:
...__

YCC applications
available at GAHS
Applications for the 1976
Youth Conservation Corps
( YCC) work-learn-earn
program in Ohio have been
sent to aiJ junior and senior
high schools, vocational
schools and offices of the
Bureau of Employment

~

Lellen of optaion are welcomed. Tlloy 1hould be
leu tllu 310 wonkloog (or be oubjed to re•ctloa by
tile editor) alld m111t be •lgaed wltll tbe 1ipee'• addren. Names may be witbheld upoa p.bllcatloa.
However, on requeot, nameo will be dud•ed. LeU en
should be In cood taste, addreoolnc lnuet, not personaUIIeo.

Consumer credit bill
up for vote Tuesday

Conttnued from page 17
of the Symbionese Liberation
Army, from who she was
separated at the time.
'There were many other
people that could have picked
"FinaUy.'' Medina satd, "I up where they left off and if
have a ltttle piece of they'd wanted me dead, all
unsolicited advice whtch I they had to do IS say that
have given before and which I that's what they want," she
give again to you without replied. I
Browning asked her why
qualification:
"Fight like ttgers every she believed that. She said
because it was "happening
inch of the way."
tltutes."
Supreme Court of Ohio now.'' The prosecutor asked
- She was afraid the FBI
Ch1ef Justice C. William what she meant, saw his would kill ber if she was
mistake
and
tried
to
O'Neill presented the 23rd
caught after watching a
annual Glenn L. Cox Ohio wtthdraw the questton. television broadcast of the
Bailey
insisted
she
be
allowed
Newspaper
Carrter
fter; death of six of her
Achievement Awarda Friday to answer and the judge told kidnapers. "! thought I was
her to go ahead.
night.
Miss Hearst then told the dead" when an FBI agent
Timothy Allwme, 14,
captured her in a San
Shelby, and Rebecca Kress, startled jury of the San Francisco apartment.
16, Mansfield, both of whom Simeon bombing and the
- Her fear of the Harrises
carry the Mansfield News threats against her and her and their radical friends kept
Journal, were the winners in parents if she took the her from taking advantage of
the under 50,000 cirulation witness stand.
A few minutes later, the repeated chances to escape
group while Christopher
or notify her parents or
Clark, 13, Dayton Daily prosecutor q ue s ~wped her authorties. She is still afraid. '
News, and Brian Jones, 15, about the shootmg of a "I think there is a gond
Columbus Dispatch, were the sportmg goods store 10 Los chance I could he killed."
junior and senior top award Angeles in which she rescued
winners in the over 50,000 tho Harrises from capture.
Mlss Hearst srud it was "a
circulation category. Jones
NOBODY CITED
reflex
action " when she
was also a winner last year m
GALLIPOLIS
- No one
picked
up
Harris'
automatic
the junior dtvision.
was
cited
following
a traffic
rifle
and
started
firmg.
She
Honorable mention winners
on
Second
mishap
Friday
said
the
gun
jumped
out
of
were: Junior Divison, under
Ave
.
near
the
Park
Central
50,000 circulation, Dominic her hand, she picked it up,
Rossi, Middletown Journal, emplted tl\e 3~bullet clip and Hotel. Ac cording to city
and Beth Ann Evans, Kent- then ptcked up her own gun police, an auto driven by
Ravenna
Record-Courier; and squeezed off three more Charles F Campbell, 60, Rt.
2 Crown City, backed from a
over 50,000 Danny Metbers, rounds.
"You picked up the second p~rking space strikmg a car
Cincinnati Post, and Andre
Brunei, Columbus Ctltzen- gun after the first one, didn't owned by Beverly R. Crouse,
Rt. I, Northup.
Journal ; Senior D1vis10n, you ?"
H
Yes.''
under
50,000,
Larry
"Was that a reflex action
Weinsberger, Findlay
also?"
Courier,
and
Thomas
"Yes. It was ali part of the
Brickner, Fostoria Review
response
we were supposed to
Times; over 50,000, Thomas
have
when
somethmg like
Bartol, Dayton Daily News,
that
happened
."
and Mark Yonder Haar,
Other
highlights
of the
Dayton Journal Herald.
defendant's
testunony,
which
In other action at the
lasted
about
20
hours
and
convention Friday, Harry R
600
pages
of
court
covered
Horvitz, president and
of
Horvttz transcript :
publtsher
- She was slugged in the
Newspspers, Valley Vtew,
face
with a gun butt during
Ohio, was elected prestdent of
thrown in a
her
kidnaping,
the ONA to succeed Wtlliam
A. Ott, president and car ~runk and greeted with
pubhsher, Akron Beacon l~e words, "Bitch, you better
Journal, who becomes be quiet or we'li blow your
chairman of the ONA board head off" when put in a
second vehicle.
of trustees.
- She was taken l\] a tract
Elected ONA vice president
was A. Monroe Courtright, home in suburban Daly City
publisher, The
Public and placed tn a tiny closet
Opinion, Westerville, wtth that she at first thought was a
Charles Glover, president, coffin. She spent nearly two
Dayton Newspapers, Inc., months in closets at two
named as ONA treasurer. hideouts, blindfolded except
Also named to contmue were for trips to the bathroom and
Paul R. Gingher of Columbus for a weekly bath.
- Donald "Cinque" Deas general counsel and
William J. Oertel of Freeze, leader of the SLA,
Worthington as executive pinched her breasts and "private parts" when one of her
director and secretary.
Buckeye Press Association first tape recordings didn't
officers also elected were: please the gang and warned
Vernon Bowling, Bowling- he would hang her from the
Moorman Newspapers, T!PP ceiling if she didn't
City, president; Maynard cooperate.
- Wilham Wolfe raped her
Buck Jr., Harrison NewsHerald,
Cadiz,
vice in the cloSI:t after the band's
president; Richard Cham- women Said he would "show
bers, Ada Herald and her what it was like" to be in
Ohioprint Publications, the SLA. De Freeze raped her
Columbus Grove, secretary; about a week later. She
and Ken Blum, Orrville offered no resistance because
Courier-Crescent, treasurer. she was afraid.
She
pretended
Chosen to head the Ohio
!.£ague of Home Dailies for conversion w the terrorist
the coming year were W. D. band about two months after
Thomson II, Delaware her kidnaping ·because she
Gazette, as president, and felt the ,only alternative was
Daniel Behrens, Marysville death. She was "acting"
Q
Tribune, as vice president. when she joined.
- She still doesn't know if •
John
J.
Ahern
of
Jacksontown continues as her gun was loaded when she
helped rob the Hibernia
secretary-treasurer.
Elected for another term as Bank. She made threatened
trustees of the Ohio gestures at customers, but
Newspaper Association 'said only her name.
- She tried to avqid hitting
were: A. Monroe Courtright,
Westerville; Lee W. Stauffer, anyone when she opened fire
Niles Publishing Co., Niles; at the sporting gooda store,
J . Oliver Amos, Sidney Da1ly aimmg ~ t the "top of the
News; Donald C Rowley, building.'' Her "reflex
1503 Eastern Ave.,
Rowley Publications, Ash· action" was spurred by the
Gallipolis
tabula; William J. Keating, SLA rules of war.
- Her confessions that she
Cincinnati Enquirer, and
willingly
took part in the bank
Alex Machas'- ee, The Pia tn
robbery
on a tape made
n "lrr . Cleveland
1

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Offer gQod Moneta¥__.,.. Friday

FEBRUARY 23·27

COLUMBUS - While 1976
pssaenger car registration
won't get underwya until
April, new multi-year Ohio
license plates for trucks,
trailers, house vehicles,
motorcycles and farm
vehicles will go on sale
Monday, March I at
specially-designated Ucense
agencies across the slate.
Area lOcations include James
Thaler, 24 State St.,
Gallipolis, and William A.
Gibha, 186 Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy, Meigs County.
The Burea~ of Motor
Vehicles ( BMV) reports that
pssaenger car plates will be
available at these and many
other locations starting Aprll
I. A complete list of local
passenger car license
agencies will be released in
the near future.
BMV Registrar Curtis
Andrews is urging Ohio
businesses and individual
motorists who own only nonpssaenger vehicles to take

World's deepest mine
for limestone on sale
By NANCY KERCHEVAL
OOLUMBUS, Cillo (UP!) One of the wonders of Ohio iS

up for sale to anyone who
wants w invest in the deepest
limestone mine in the
world.
The ¥f-mlle deep mine in
Norton, Summit county,
Obio, wu clOied Jan. 30 after
more than 30 years of llerVice
to Plttsburgb Plate Glaaa Co.
"It '• just siWng there,"
llllid John Seberba, peraonnel
director. "We have laughed
and jolted that 1,000 years
from now arclteologist.ll will
rediscover the mine and
wonder what these maaslve

machinea wert.''
Reallltically, however, the
mine wu ciOied because it

10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.

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advantage of the "earlybird"
March plate sale p~riod.
"People who only need
plates for trucks. motorcycles or other nonilllssenger
vehicles can take care of
their
1976
hcensing
requirements
during
March," said Andrews.
••If
you
don ' t
own
a passenger car, why
wait until April or May
- when local license agencies could be crowded with
passenger car owners?"
Registrar Andrews emphasized that no passenger
car plates will be sold during
March, and noted that
Ohioans who own both a
psssengere car and a nonpassenger vehicle can
register both vehicles in a
single trip if they wait until
their assigned passenger car
license month.
Under the state's new
"staggered" licensing
schedule, passenger car
owners with A·K last names

was not economically
profitable to operate,
Scherb&amp;: said during a
tele!DJne interview from hla
Barberton office. And the
oversi%ed mining machlhes
will be left In tact. So will the
traf!Jc llabts, the lunchrooms
and the offices.
"The only future that it
might hold, would be a
storace facility of aome
type," be aald.
The mine wu orlglnally
dug In the early !NO's. PPG
used the limestone to ~ce
IOda 1111 willclt u a basic raw
material in tile ~ion of
glaaa.

"In eaHDCe the bulk of the
production
was
used
captlvely," Scherb&amp; said,
addingJU81 a acant amount
wu 10 to ar• contractors.
"In the ewly 1170's we had
economic and pollution problema with producJnc eoda
ash, 10 we stopped It,"
Scberba uld. "Then '1111• we
ciGIId the . . ub pilot, the
major reuon for lrHplnjj the
mine in operation wa1110ne."
During Its peak ye... about

.,..

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150 men worlted in mine.
Alter the 110da ash industry
was dlaposed of, the smsll
stones In the mine were used
In the manufacture of
cement. When it closed, there
were only 16 miners.
However, the cement plant
In Barberton will close in
May, and PPG will be out of
the cement business when the
last shipments are made
sept. 30.
PPG sold ,its cement
business to Flltrol Corp. a few
yean ago. Scherba said part
of the agreement said PPG
would continue to make
cement 8lld sell au of it to
Flltrol unW 1976.
"AI tllat time If we did not
renew the contract, we were
pledged to go out of' cement
bwdneu," he said. "'Ibis
plant is not economically
competitive becatiae of high
llmeatone costa. The half·
mlle underground mine is an
expensive operation. And
demand for cement is not the
greatest because construction is down."
The plant shutdown
brought about nostalgic
feelinga for both the miners
and the reeldenu of Norton.
"It was a dramatic symbol
of our plant," Scherba said,
"eapecially to miners. They
take a good deal of priile In
themaelves and tend to be
very loyal to their car-.''
And for the city realdenta they're lolinl both tu dollan
and a 100d topic of converA·

must buy their new plates between April I and April 30;
while those in the L·Z
alphabetical group have from
May I through May 31 to

NEWS

LAKEWOOD PARK
By Diane Matthews
GALUPOUS - One of the first most lasting impressions
made upon the visitor to any city, psrticularly in the swruner
season, is its park or parks.
In the late 1890s Murtm McHale establtshed the beautiful "
Lakewood Park. He chose his location carefully, looking for a
spot with natural beauty and easy accessibility . The park was
situated just above the city on the banks of the Ohio River lind .,
could be easily reached by railroad , electric line or boat.
Every modern device for amusement and convenience for '
visitors was supplied. Music, dancing and boating were the 3 '
most attractive features; a fine imported orchestra and a
large dancing pavilion. Nearby a magnificant electric fountain
rivaling that of the World's Fair lent great assistance in the
makeup of the beautiful park.
An elegant hotel and restaurant form a part of the •
complete arrangement. People sl1 around can find no more
beautiful spot in the state to spend a day than Lakewood Park. ·
What is !eli of this once beautiful Gallipolis attraction? On ·
the river one can still see the hotel with lis once elegant ·glory ·
gone.
What is now the Jenkins Concrete Co. was the once
beautiful Lakewood Park.

VeterBDS Memorial Hospital
Admitted
Frances
Hawthorne, Portland; Cheryl
Haning, ,Pomeroy; Mary
POMEROY
Seven
Diehl, Pomeroy; Gertrude
were
fined
and
defendants
Kloes, Middleport; Linda
nine
others
forfeited
honda
in
Batley, Rutland; Milton
Meigs
County
Court
Friday.
Bailey, Vinton; Gay Fields,
Fined by Judge Robert E.
Reedaville.
Buck
were Robert L. NorDischarged - Chrissie
ville,
Letart,
W. Va., 'II and
Imboden, Lillian l£e, Martha
costs,
speeding;
David Klein,
Robinson, Edith Woolard,
Pomeroy,
$5
and
costs, un·
Roselee Wright.
safe vehicle; Wayne E.
Simmons, St. Albans, $9 and
costs, speeding; Lawrence P.
TEN ARRESTED
MIDDLETOWN ; Ohto Luckadoo, Athens, and
(UP!) - In the largest series Donald L. Davis, Belpre, $12
of drug raids and arrests m and costs each, speedmg;
Middletown history, police Fredey Pickens, Pomeroy,
and undercover agents from $50 and costs, 30 days conthe state attorney general's finement, 'l1 days suspended,
office htt several homes 30 days to take driver's test,
Friday and arrested 10 no operator's license; David
persons suspected of nar- L. Donahue, Racine , $10 and
costs, unsafe vehicle.
cotics trafficking.
Forfeiting bonfls were
In similar raids in
Jerry
R. Williams, Gallipolis,
Hamilton County. two others
were arrested and four
persons sought. Middletown
suspects, charged with 52
counts of drug-related crunes
and engaging in organized
crime, were held in Hamtlton
at the Butler County Jail.

Seven draw fines
Robert W. Hansley, Logan, ,
Ohio , Brenda L. Eimer,

1

Columbus, Gary E. White,
Circleville, Bill W. Dressier, ;
Zanesvtlle , and Paul R. ~
Shaults, Saltsburg, f&gt;a ., $'ll .50 ,
each, spe~ding ; Norman D. ,
McBrayer, Pt. Pleasant and
Russell
L.
Fer~&gt;:uson.
Gallipolis, $357 .50 each, '
driving while intoxicated; :
Robert M. Newell, Mtddleport, $34.50 speeding.

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DIPLOMAT NAMED
WASHINGTON (UP!)
President Ford Saturday
announced the appointme~t
of Marquita M. Maytag of La
Jolla, Cab!. , to be ambassador to the Kingdom of
Nepal.

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Mr. Tax is computerized to do your return
accurately and fast. Even with the new exemption changes and low mcome allowances
and tax credits-one visit Is all it takes. And
you take your return with you - short form or
long form-ready to mail

855 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
HOURS
9106 Daily

Sunday
12 Til S P.M.
Evenings

by .
Appointment

Ph. 446-7600

Mr. Tax of America
The tax service people. for the people.

A Wordto

The PennyWise ..•

ON ANY PAIR OF MEN'S OR WOMEN'S

HUSH PUPPIES
SHOES
.
.
•

SUNDAY, FIB. 22 ONLY

lion.
· "Although a tarse number
of Norton relldentl were
never In the mine, It wu not
llli!OIIliiiOII for them to talk
about It," Seberblllald. "The
mine Ia completely llhut
down, but It mna1na one of
the wonders of Ohio.

HOSPITAL

complete 1976 registration. - the last year Ohio issued
The . motor · vehicles chief new metal tags. The state
reported that ail vehicle passenger car registration
registration fees will be the fee,
including
deputy
same as those charged In 1974 regiStrar service charge and
plate reflectorization fee, is
$11. Sixty of the state's 88
counties add on a $5 local
permissive tax, making the
recent Sunday.
total cost of a set of passenger
Mr. and Mrs. Danny car plates $16 in those
Haines, Syracuse, Mr. and counties.
Mrs. Frederick, Chester
Andrews also noted that
RIVER CLEANER
visited Mrs. Sylvia Carpenter more than 91 cents of eve,ry
CLEVELAND (UP!)
and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene dollar his Bureau collects in
Carpenter on Sunday
vehicle registration taxes is The notorious Cuyahoga
Leota Birch was a Sunday returned to local govern- River, which once was
afternoon caller of Mr. and ments to pay for street and classed as a fire hazard - it
. caught fire and damaged two
Mrs. Mtke Evans and family, road improvements.
railroad tressles in 1969 - is
Mrs. Ada Van Meter and Mrs.
getting cleaner, according to
Merle Evans and son.
results of a five-year study
Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Durst,
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
released Friday by the
Mrs. Mary Greer, Mrs. Merle
Tuesday tllrougb Thurs- Cleveland Utilities DepartEvans, Paul Dean Evans,
.day, lair Tuesday, chance ment. Tests conducted at two
Danny Black, David Bryant,
of showers Wednesday and locations on th&lt;:, river
David Talbott, Mrs. Ruby
Thursday. Highs in the 40s beginning m 1910 showed
Bryant and Debra, Louis De
north and 50s south substantial reductions in such
Luz, Leonard Cornell, Mr.
Tuesday
and in the 50s by pollutants as phosphorous,
and Mrs. Woodrow Downie,
Thursday.
Lows In ~· 30s.
organic nitrogen, ammoniaBill Bryant, Mr. and Mrs.
nitrogen, mtrate, nitrite and
Richard Abels, Carol Carter
total nitrogen.
and Harold Grayson were
visitors of the E. H. Carpenter's recently.
!rrEWART TO BE TRIED
LARGEST PUZZLE
JACKSON, Minn. (UPI) The
largest jigsaw puzzle in
James D. Stewart, 18, Cincinthe
world,
made iii 1954,
nati, will go on trial April 13
measured
15
feet by 10 feet
on charges of murdering a
over 10,000
and
contained
visiting student from oil-rich
CHERRY RIDGE
pieces.
fran before Jackson County
By Jane Reeves
Birthday greetings to District Court Judge L.J.
Irvine.
Albert Schultz.
'
Stewart Is accused of
Smcere sympathY. to the
Faye Schultz family in the killing and robbing Ali Morad
death of her broUter, Lonnie Sadeghian, 23, after the
Christopher
of
near Iranian student picked up
Waahlngton County, Belpre. Stewart and a girl friend In
Weekend guests of Mr. and his van. Sadeghian's body
Mrs. ,Dora! Hill were Mr. and was found on the morning of
Mrs. Barry Cwmlngham and Sept. 28 near Jackson
chlldren, Wendy and Eric. Interstate 90.
1
Stewart's co-defendant is
Monday guests of Pud and
Jane Reeves were Mr. and Lynn Price, 19, of Portland,
Mrs. Mike McKnight and Ore. She will be trted at a
Shane and Amy of Dover, date to beset later. Both have
pleaded innocent.'
Ohio.

Stiversville News Notes
Mrs. Maxine Durst is
recuperating at home after
undergoing surgery at
Veteran's Memorial Hospital
several weeks ago.
. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Birch, Waterford, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Roush, Portland,
and Mrs. Evelyn Holter,
Racine called on Mr. Clint
Birch and daughter Leota on
Sunday.
Mrs. Merle Evans and Paul
Dean, local, Robert Van
Meter, Sandy, Lake, Pa., and
Mrs. Lucille Ridenour and
Nancy, Chester, were callers
of Mrs. Mae Van Meter and
Ruby, Long Bottom recently.
Marshall Bryant and
girlfriend, Charleston, W.
Va., Mrs . Violet Ritchie, Mrs.
Freda Middleswart, David
Talbott and Donald Dslley
local were callers at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bryant
and famUy over the weekend .
Mrs. Ralph Brewer and
granddaughter Annette Fitch
are both patients at Veteran's
Memorial Hospital at this
writing.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Abels, Long Bottom vis1ted
her sister, Mrs. Correne De
Luz, who Is a patient at
Holzer Medical Center on
Monday.
Mrs. Fannie Durst and
Mrs. Cass Bissell and Todd,
Long Bottom attended a
movie at Parkersburg, W.
Va. on Sunday.
Rev. and Mrs. L. R.
Gluesencamp and Nicki
visited Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Theiss, Vinton, a

mayor.
Wright, an employee of the
Ohi o Vall ey Publis hing
Company , will he making his
second try for public offi ce.
Last fall, he was a candidate
for the Gallipolis City Board
of Educalton .
Wright will be opposing
fellow Democrat Archte
Meadows, Rt . 2, Crown City ,
for the Jan. 3 nommation.
Thus far , bve persons have
filed for county commissioner posts. Nine other
individuals have obtained
petitions to run for the two
commissioner seats up for
gra b• this fall .
A Uital of II indtviduals
have petitions for the
sheriff's job currently held by
Republican Oscar Baird.

sponsored by the Ga llia County BtcenteMial Cornmtssion
highlighting areas &lt;If Gallia County and the historical
background of each. Diane Matthews, author of this first
article, is coordinating chairperson of the commission on the
project.
~

SILVER IIIDGE PLAZA

The ' Future. Start
Sav'ing ••. Here!
We make it easier then ever tJ save, with
our many savings accounts and savings certificates
.•. all paying the highest rates the law allows!

•,

SHOEs ·

Be Prepared For

Mon. &amp; Fri. 10 til 9
Sunday 1 to 5

COMMERCIAL &amp; SAVINGS BANK
Silver Bridge Plaza

Court Street in Gallipolis

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':, ·:·: :·:·.:·:. ,: ·.·:·.·:,•:.·:· ·: :·:·:·: ·.: :·:;: :·. : -·:·.;:·.: .;:.,::.:. .:·.::.: . ::.:,:,., ., .,:..,:.: :·:;. : : ·.·: :;:)
T wo D emocrat s file .tor :::
r
: : This is how it was r,,
• •
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commission
positions
ED. NOTE: The arti cle below
the f1rst of a series

19 - The Sunday-l1mes..sent1nel, Feb. 22, 1976

.·. ·-·-:·-:·· .-

Miller takes Howsam shots
CINCINNi\Ti i UP l i - Cmcinnati Reds President Bob
Howsam Saturday criticized
Marvi n Mille r , executi ve
director of the Major !.£ague
Players' Association. fo r
some comments he made
here Friday pertairung to the
reserve clause.
MlUer had said he wants to
table the negotiations on the
reserve clause until the end of
the season, saying that the
players' assocation and
players would have better
guidelines in slructurmg a
modified reserve clause since
they would know how many
players played out options
and why they did so.
He also said players
haven't made any proposals
w modifiy it because they
don't want "' cnange it.
But Howsam said Miller
can be very amug m saying
the players' assocation has
made no proposal to modify
the reserve clause.
"After all, the reserve
system has been completely
changed in the last few weeks
but, as a result of the Seitz
ruling pending an appeal in
the courts, until that time the
reserve clause was blnding
for the full career of the
player," Howsam said.
"Now it has been changed
wvirtually no control at all,"
he added. "And Miller says
the association doesn't want
to modify it.

Nixon
Continued from page 17
Kuanhua and satd, "She
called her father the very
next day."
The Nixon-Hua chat IIJok
place in a large reception
room of the Tiao Yu Tai
(fishing tackle) guest house
where Nixon stayed when he
first came to China and wrote
one of the most successful
chapters of a presidency that
ended in his resignation.
Mrs. Nixon, wearing a light
green coat with a gray fur
collar, chuckled over Hua's
teasing and said, "We have
promised to call her from
here."
"Yes, you must do ths.t,"
Hua replied.
Nixon, who sat with folded
hands
and
listened
attentively to Hua, told his
host he was ''very honored"
to be back in China. He said
Feb. 21 "is aver; memorable
date for us also."
Nixon satd he was
"psrticularly appreciative of
the great courtesy" the
Chinese had demonstrated by
sending a special plane for
him.
Nixon will spend eight days
in China. His first activity
was to be a meeting before
noon Sunday with Tang Yingchao, the widow of the late
Premier Chou En-lai, the
· official hostess 'durmg the
first Nixon v1sit.
Sunday afternoon Nixon
meets with Hua in the Great
Hsll of the People for their
first round of talks.
This is one of the rare
occasions when the State
Council has hosted a banquet
for a private individual. Chi·
nese officials could not recall
when the last such banquet
was held.
The airport welcome was
short and informal. Only a
handful of Chinese officials
and about 350 selected
ordinary citizens were on
hand.
Among them were 50 sci en- ·
lists, journalists, athletes,
doctors
and
trade'
representatives who have
visited the United States
since the 1972 Nixon visit.
Policemen were spaced
about 15 yards apart over 18mile route through almost
deserted streets to the state
guest house. The Nixons rode
with Hua, who also iS China's
top policeman by virtue of his
job as minister of public
security.
During his visit, Nixon will
visit one of China's most
famous universities and see
wall posters criticizing some
of China's top leadersIncluding deputy Premier
Teng Hsiaoping who hosted
President Ford during his
visit last year.

HONORS WON
MASON - Two Mason
County students at West
Virg10ia Um versity named to
the first semester (3.3)
dean's list were Dale Randolph
Hill,
College
Agriculture and Forestry,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde D.
Hlil, Route 3, !.£on, and Joyce
E. Lanham, College of
Human Resources and
Education, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles C. Lanham,
Po~ Pleasant. ;,

··He's playmg w1th words . ba!'&gt;cball un Ins own len n-; .
'·He won 't ,go to Lhl'• rank
It has qeen modtftcd

completely," he satd. "il ts a
concept that undermines the
very foundatin of the game.
'·Why are we in baseball so
concerned'" he asked .
11
Because ex:perience, not
theory , has taught us how to
keep the interest of the fans .
Anythmg that undermtnes
that interest is not in the best
inters! of the game.
"Anyone woo has watched
what has happened to hockey
and basketball should be able
w understand it. The folding
of clubs should emphasize
this," he said.
Howsaa said most of the
players he has talked with
are as concerned as he is
about what will happen to the
game without a reserve
system.
"Baseball has been good to
them and they don't want to
see it destroyed," he said.
"The rank and file player
may understand what is at
stake. but Miller wants to run

and ftle a nd find out whot
they really want ," he said. · I
thtnk the players shou ld have
their say with a vote
"Many of the players are
sa ying tha t the reserve
system with mmor revisions
IS important, but not major
changes such as the Seitz
ruling.
"Is it worth the gamble to
accept Miller's theory that
baseball can overate without
the rule~ that have earned
the game through many
problems for more than 100

years ?" he asked .

"! don 't want to take that
gam,bie," he said. "If this
man continues with the
position he has taken, it
appears that he is more
determtned to unde rmme

the game than solve its
problems.
"if that is so, then I want to
make sure I do everything in
my power to fight him," he
said.

compromise,
concessions.''

no

He said the powers of the
judiciary, "if properly used,
are amply sufficient to afford
litigants a fair and impartial
trial without any muzzling of
the press."
But he said once the
guarantees of a press and
free speach rights "have
been weakened and their full
vigor diminished, we may
never repair the damage."
"You people of the press
are our watchdogs. It is your
high duty to let in the light so
desperately needed for the
proper functioning of our
American
form
of
democracy," the 119-year-&lt;Jld
jurist said in a speech
conducted by telephone from
New YorK to the ONA's
banquet.
"Our whole destiny as a
nation depends upon our
keeping Freedom of the
Press and Freedom of Speech
inviolate and upon our doing
everything in our power to
prevent the erosion and
weakening of these rights."
Medina, who now takes
cases by personal choice
because of his age, said that
the "unbelievable mess" of
Watergate could not have
surfaced without the news
media.
"Unless we know what iS
goi!lg on we are helplfss," he
said. "This is especi81ly true
in the field of crime and the
administration of criminal
ju'stice."
,He said gag orders - "this
muzzling of the press" may be used "as a cover-up
to prevent the detection of lax
criminal law enforcement or
downright corruption.
"Is it not the right of the
people to know," Medina
asked, ''why so many of those
who commit crimes of every
description are not in jail
where they belong? Does it
make sense w give judges
who administer
these
criminal courts the right to
issue these omnibus gag
orders shutting off from the
press access to everyone who
may conceivably know
anything about the crime?"

Ford
Cont10ued from page 17
Ford said he was confident
the board would do "what is
in the best interests of the
country.''
Murphy ssid the board
hoped to relieVe Ford of "one
or two of the little burdens
you carry." AlsO present
were the other panel
members: Former Army
secretary Stephen Ailes and
New York economist Leo
Cherne.
The
President,
who
returned from his final
campaign swing in New
Hampshire Friday, met with
staffers Saturday morning
and was then interviewed by
Bost&amp;n Globe reporters.

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J
I!Hi\SII.lA. Brazil UPI) - Sccr·etary of State Henry 1
said S.1turday an unpn•«:Pdentet.l U
New treaty explained

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:: Ki~sinut•r
S.-Braztl ~:::
::~ p.cicl on 1nter na tiomll and bila tera l coopemtion WO:ts not ;~::
:: meant to turn U.S Latm Amencan policy into "an :;:.
'; obsession" with Cuba
:;;,
. t\l a news conference after the signing ceremony in ~::­
\ Braztlta's futuristtc Foreign MtniStry building, Kissinger :;;:
:' denied the pact had any rela tion to Cuba or that nation 's ;~:
.:: recent Intervention in Angola .
;:;.
.,.. The agreement is not "designed to enlist support ~;::
· :· against Cuba," the secretary sa id. " I don't want to turn ::::
:: our Western Hemisphere policy or our Brazilian policy ;';·
·;: into an obsessic:m with a small Caribbean country."
;:;:
:~: Kissinger , who at the signing with Foreign Minister :~:~
:.;' Antonio Azeredo da Silveira several times called the :;:;
::; Braztlian by his first name, told reporters, 1'1 believe ~;~;
:;: Brazil is destined to join the club ofthe rich."
;:;;
~·~; The 10-point " memorandum of understanding ;~;~
:·:' concerning consultations on matters of mutual interest" ;:;:
::: was negotiated over the last two years and is unique in the }
:.·: history of U.S.South American relations.
;:.;
:.:: Under the pact, the hemispheric giants are to hold high- ;:::
:. · level semiannual talks in Washmgton and Brazilia to ;~;;
;:;: discuss bilateral tssues and the ''full range of foreign ';':
:;.; policy matters including any specific issue that may be ;:;,
raised by either side."
::~:
~·.:
Colombia , Costa Rica and Guatemala are the ;:;:
;:: secretary's last stops on a six-nation Latin-American :·;;
':·: tour. He returns to Washington Tuesday.
:;::

t

:~\._.; :, .·. ,:; .·. :--;-,:; ,:;: ..:.:;: .·.·. ::. ;.,.;:,.;.,.;.;:;.·-:-;:: ;:;.;:;.;:;.;:::;:·.;-·:;.•:: ::::;:; ::· ;:·:;:::;:; ::·::·:::·-:);::

Patty's

Press advised
to fight hard
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - A
senior federal judge has
urged the press to "fight like
tigers" against gag rules in
covering criminal trials or
suffer possibly irreversible
damage to free speech and a
free press.
Harold R. Medina, a senior
judge in the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Second
Circuit, told members of the
Ohio Newspsper Association
at their conventipn Friday
mght, "Stand fast on the First
Amendment freedom of the
press. This is the law of the
land. Stick to it and do not
deviate from your course. No

..:-·

.... · :··:: -:-::.

three days later and to a Los
Angeles teen-ager the next
month - were forced by her
kidnapers.
- She never called or
contacted her parents
because of fear the Harrises
would find out and because "I
felt my parehts wouldn't
'
want to see me again."
- The SLA told her the
kidnaping was the start of a
nationwide revolution whtch
would be a "third world
movement for poor people,
especially pimps and pros-

UPI Statehouse Reporter
001 UMBUS (UPI ) - The
'
Ohio House IS to vote Tuesday
on a nnajor consumer credit
bill whi ch expands the
provisions of the Retail
Installment Sales Act and
eliminates two longstanding
credit traps.
The bill, sponsored by Rep .
Ed ward J · Orlett • D-Dayton •
extends consumer protection
sections of the 1972 Jaw to
sales of motor vehicles and
mobile
homes
and
transactions with physicians,
lawyers public utilities,
financia't institutions and
insurance compsnies.
It also would eliminate the
so.called "waiver of defense"
clause and the "holder in due
course" doctrine under which
consumers have no defense
against faulty products once
an installment purchase
con'tract is assigned to a
financial institution.
Retail sales lobbyists and
financial institutions have resis ted the provisions in
Orlett's bill which were
watered down in the 1972 act.
This is the first time they
have been tried since
Democrats took control of
both chambers of the General
Assembly in 1975.
The 11 holder in due course"
doctrine prevents consumers
from withholding psyment on
faulty gooda because the
merchant
sells
the
installment contract to a
financial institution.
Under current law, the
financial institution can
legally demand psyment if no
claim is registered against
th~ product 15 days after
assignment of the note .
Orlett's bill would give the
buyer a defense against the
seller whether or not the
installment contract had
been sent to a financial
institution.
''Waiver of defense'' means
the buyer ag.:ees he will
make no claim against a
retail seller or the financial
institution to which the
contract iS asstgned. Such a
clause, which also has a !:&gt;day notice period under
existing law, would be
rendered
void
and
unenforceable under 'orlett's
bill.
The Senate Ways and
Means Committee is to begm
work Wednesday morning on
Housepassed
legislation
aimed at preventing future
increases in unvoted real
estate taxes because of
inflation.
The measure, a legislative

response to the state Board of
Tax Appeals' freeze on land
·
to
valuattons, contams up
$200 milhon worth of real
estate tax relief. It would
require a taxpsyer credit
agains t
any
upward
adjustments in property
appraisals, excluding new
c0 n8 t r uct i0 n
0 r
improvements starting next
'
January.
Lo b b y 1s t s
for
municipalities and schools
are expected to try to knock
out an estimated $120 million
worth of credits on the first 10
unvoted mills, inserted on the
fioorwhen the bill cleared the
House, 75 to 22, on Feb. 10.
Supporters of the credits
said local revenue losses
from real property tax
reductions would be made up
by
personal
property
taxpayers - business and
utilities.
The House may vote this
week on a companion bill
designed to reduce inflalton
as a factor in real estate tax
assessments and splitting the
Board of Tax Appeals into

separate admimstra tive and
Judictal agenctes.
The
meas ure
was
.
ed b the
1
unarumous Y approv
Y
House. War and k Means
Commttlee ast wee · .
The . House
Utilities
Commttteef plans :
~~
Tuesday a temoon sen
subcommtttee a. Senatepassed bill re~1smg the
f
Ia by which public
o~~u
.
ut1ltties calculate thetr rate
structures·
.
hall
The subcommtttee . a 1re~dy .dealt .wtth stmilar
legislation whtch turnedtllitiout
more agreeable tr u
es
than consumer ntereats .
That bill is stall~ in the
House Rules Comrruttee.
The House Energy and
Environment ~ommittee mU
hold a ftrst hearmg
Wednesday morning on
legislation introduced last
week relaxing penalties for
strip mine operators who
ywlate ordeiB ~nd rules
ISS~d by the chief of the
Dtvtslon of Reclamation in
the state Department of
Natural Resources.

Services

The YCC program is open
to all young men and women,
age 15 through 18, who are
permanent restdents of the
United States.
Sponsored by the Department of Natural Resources
and the U. S. Agriculture and
Interior Departments, YCC
has been highly successful
during the past several years.
Over 1,000 youths have
par!tcipated in the program
in Ohw. In 1974 Ohto became
the ftrst state to be approved
by the federal government to
operate a YCC program . Two
federal YCC camps in Ohio
have been in operatiOn smce
1971.
YCC participatns for 1976
will be selected with the atd of
a computer setup tn
Wa shington, D. C , to ensure
youths are selected randomly
Without regard to social ,
economic, racml or ethnic
backgrounds
The youths will perform

'

l

PTSA in Eastern needs help
TO THE PARENTS, TEACHERS, AND STUDENTS OF
EASTERN LDCAL:
I would like to have a few minutes of your time to let you
!mow that Eastern Local has a PTSA, Alaociation. These
1ettera stand for Parents, Teachers, and Students. M~ybe
someofyoudldn'tevenknow weh.&amp;dooe, and would have been
to the meetingll sooner if you had.
We coilld sure use 110me more of you good people to come
and help with some ldeaa and di8cussions coocerning the
future of our children and school.
We have a good school, (better than most) but it won't stay
that way II we all don't pitch in and keep it that way! We have
good students, (ranldng tops with me) and they have great
Ideas concerning their school. After all, they go there every
day, and they know !ots more than they are given credit for.
Not to mention a big help to everyone whenever there is a
school function.
We need the students to join ua and tell us their views and
ldeaa, just as they need us. TO LISTEN ! As for needing you
psrents, we need you badly. Our klda need you and our school
needs you -YOW: ideas, help, and concern. The same applies
to Teachers. Let's face it, a handful of people will not get the
job done!
Why not come to our meeting Monday evening, February
23rd at 7:30p.m., talk with other parents, and decide for
yourself. We need the Pl'SA in our school and tt is just as
Important to our kids and their welfare to have Mother and
Dad attend this meetlrtl!. as it is to have them attend our
Booster meetings-these meetings go hand in hand for our
kids. So please come to the meeting and tell us your views and
ideaa, otherwise, the PTSA program may be terminated for
lack of support.
Let's give it a fair cha~you can't lose anything but an
evening at home, but we think you can gain a lot! (I've never
known our school to be a quitter, let's not be one now.) See you
there? - Mary Loogenette, Secretary, Eastern Local PTSA.

conservation work on state
and
fe derally -owned
factlities, atl&lt;!ndmg one of
two four·week camp sessions
in June, July and August.
Both restden ttal and nonresidenttai camps will be ·
provtded tn Ohto.
Typical proJects performed
by YCC work crews include
t•atl constru cti on, land
reclamation, timber stand
1mprovement, eros ion cont;ol
and wildhfe habi tat unprovement.
YCC campers also participate in conser vati on
education programs under
the guidance of experts in the
environmental and resource
management fteid .
Youths interes ted 10 partictpa tm g tn the YCC
program this year should file
their applications as soon as
posstble . The deadline is
March IH
, All applications should he
completed according to the
mstruc tions on the form
provided and mat led to : Ohio
YCC selectton Office, P. 0.
Box 23400, L'Enfant Plaza,
Washington, D_ C 20040.
i\pphcatwns may be obtamed in the Guidance Office
at Gaiha Academy High
School.

WILLIAM WALTERS

DONALD WRfGJrr

Gi\LLIPOLIS
Two
Democ ra ts filed petiti ons
here Friday with the Galli a
County Board of Elec tions as
candidates for coun ty
commissioner in the June
Primary Election .
William L. Walters, Vmton,
will be seeking the nod for the
term beginning Jan. 2 whtie
Donald E. Wright, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, seeks the Jan. 3
term. Walters, a painter, is
no stranger to the political
field. He has been a candidate
for several offices including
sheriff, comrmssioner and

Rotary's history recalled
MIDDLEPORT - Jack
Robson reminisced about the
early days of Rotary In·
ternational for the Mid·
dleport·Pomeroy Rotary
Club followinR d10ner at
Heath United Methodist
Church Friday evening.
Secretary of the local club
more than 20 years, Robson,
a retired grocery salesman,
will attend his eighth internahonal convention of
Rotary this summer in New
Orleans.
He recounted the details of
the first rotary club in
Chicago by an attorney, Paul
Harris, in 1905. Then, with the
help of the more elderly
members, he recalled activity highlights of the
Middleport-Pomeroy club
since it was formed m 1929.
Rotary International

celebrated its 7tst birthday
Feb. 21.
President Vern Weber
announced an · arrangement
has been made w1th Metgs
High School to accept, tuition
free , an exchange student
from a foreign country
begmning the 1976-77 school
term.
Weber named Judge
Robert Buck (Chairman),
Lee
McComas,
Chet
Tannehill,
Ed
Baker
and Carl Denison on
a committee that will
select the student to come
and arrange for hts local care
and keep while attending
school.
Rotary International
supervises the student exchange program, separate
from the Rotary Foundation
program which basically is a

scholarship plan .
A foreign student, commg
to the U. S. under the Rotary
exchange system, ususlly has
his senior year tn high school
to complete (or a comparable
year in whatever school
system his country might
have ), He, or she, resides
with a local family - usually
a Rotary family, although not
necessarily so - and is
supplied board and keep free.
Tthe student is supposed to
supply himself all major
expenses but usually is
provtded pin money expenses
by his American hosts.
The program has become
extraordinarily
popular
among U. S. Rotary clubs in
recent years.
Ladtes of the church served
a ham dinner.

Some 1976licenses go on sale March first

r

&lt;

••
•

Super Shef," Golden Brown Fries
and regular-size soft drink

is

..Y:~~
••• .B~..t
?Jtt. "'""'L:
...__

YCC applications
available at GAHS
Applications for the 1976
Youth Conservation Corps
( YCC) work-learn-earn
program in Ohio have been
sent to aiJ junior and senior
high schools, vocational
schools and offices of the
Bureau of Employment

~

Lellen of optaion are welcomed. Tlloy 1hould be
leu tllu 310 wonkloog (or be oubjed to re•ctloa by
tile editor) alld m111t be •lgaed wltll tbe 1ipee'• addren. Names may be witbheld upoa p.bllcatloa.
However, on requeot, nameo will be dud•ed. LeU en
should be In cood taste, addreoolnc lnuet, not personaUIIeo.

Consumer credit bill
up for vote Tuesday

Conttnued from page 17
of the Symbionese Liberation
Army, from who she was
separated at the time.
'There were many other
people that could have picked
"FinaUy.'' Medina satd, "I up where they left off and if
have a ltttle piece of they'd wanted me dead, all
unsolicited advice whtch I they had to do IS say that
have given before and which I that's what they want," she
give again to you without replied. I
Browning asked her why
qualification:
"Fight like ttgers every she believed that. She said
because it was "happening
inch of the way."
tltutes."
Supreme Court of Ohio now.'' The prosecutor asked
- She was afraid the FBI
Ch1ef Justice C. William what she meant, saw his would kill ber if she was
mistake
and
tried
to
O'Neill presented the 23rd
caught after watching a
annual Glenn L. Cox Ohio wtthdraw the questton. television broadcast of the
Bailey
insisted
she
be
allowed
Newspaper
Carrter
fter; death of six of her
Achievement Awarda Friday to answer and the judge told kidnapers. "! thought I was
her to go ahead.
night.
Miss Hearst then told the dead" when an FBI agent
Timothy Allwme, 14,
captured her in a San
Shelby, and Rebecca Kress, startled jury of the San Francisco apartment.
16, Mansfield, both of whom Simeon bombing and the
- Her fear of the Harrises
carry the Mansfield News threats against her and her and their radical friends kept
Journal, were the winners in parents if she took the her from taking advantage of
the under 50,000 cirulation witness stand.
A few minutes later, the repeated chances to escape
group while Christopher
or notify her parents or
Clark, 13, Dayton Daily prosecutor q ue s ~wped her authorties. She is still afraid. '
News, and Brian Jones, 15, about the shootmg of a "I think there is a gond
Columbus Dispatch, were the sportmg goods store 10 Los chance I could he killed."
junior and senior top award Angeles in which she rescued
winners in the over 50,000 tho Harrises from capture.
Mlss Hearst srud it was "a
circulation category. Jones
NOBODY CITED
reflex
action " when she
was also a winner last year m
GALLIPOLIS
- No one
picked
up
Harris'
automatic
the junior dtvision.
was
cited
following
a traffic
rifle
and
started
firmg.
She
Honorable mention winners
on
Second
mishap
Friday
said
the
gun
jumped
out
of
were: Junior Divison, under
Ave
.
near
the
Park
Central
50,000 circulation, Dominic her hand, she picked it up,
Rossi, Middletown Journal, emplted tl\e 3~bullet clip and Hotel. Ac cording to city
and Beth Ann Evans, Kent- then ptcked up her own gun police, an auto driven by
Ravenna
Record-Courier; and squeezed off three more Charles F Campbell, 60, Rt.
2 Crown City, backed from a
over 50,000 Danny Metbers, rounds.
"You picked up the second p~rking space strikmg a car
Cincinnati Post, and Andre
Brunei, Columbus Ctltzen- gun after the first one, didn't owned by Beverly R. Crouse,
Rt. I, Northup.
Journal ; Senior D1vis10n, you ?"
H
Yes.''
under
50,000,
Larry
"Was that a reflex action
Weinsberger, Findlay
also?"
Courier,
and
Thomas
"Yes. It was ali part of the
Brickner, Fostoria Review
response
we were supposed to
Times; over 50,000, Thomas
have
when
somethmg like
Bartol, Dayton Daily News,
that
happened
."
and Mark Yonder Haar,
Other
highlights
of the
Dayton Journal Herald.
defendant's
testunony,
which
In other action at the
lasted
about
20
hours
and
convention Friday, Harry R
600
pages
of
court
covered
Horvitz, president and
of
Horvttz transcript :
publtsher
- She was slugged in the
Newspspers, Valley Vtew,
face
with a gun butt during
Ohio, was elected prestdent of
thrown in a
her
kidnaping,
the ONA to succeed Wtlliam
A. Ott, president and car ~runk and greeted with
pubhsher, Akron Beacon l~e words, "Bitch, you better
Journal, who becomes be quiet or we'li blow your
chairman of the ONA board head off" when put in a
second vehicle.
of trustees.
- She was taken l\] a tract
Elected ONA vice president
was A. Monroe Courtright, home in suburban Daly City
publisher, The
Public and placed tn a tiny closet
Opinion, Westerville, wtth that she at first thought was a
Charles Glover, president, coffin. She spent nearly two
Dayton Newspapers, Inc., months in closets at two
named as ONA treasurer. hideouts, blindfolded except
Also named to contmue were for trips to the bathroom and
Paul R. Gingher of Columbus for a weekly bath.
- Donald "Cinque" Deas general counsel and
William J. Oertel of Freeze, leader of the SLA,
Worthington as executive pinched her breasts and "private parts" when one of her
director and secretary.
Buckeye Press Association first tape recordings didn't
officers also elected were: please the gang and warned
Vernon Bowling, Bowling- he would hang her from the
Moorman Newspapers, T!PP ceiling if she didn't
City, president; Maynard cooperate.
- Wilham Wolfe raped her
Buck Jr., Harrison NewsHerald,
Cadiz,
vice in the cloSI:t after the band's
president; Richard Cham- women Said he would "show
bers, Ada Herald and her what it was like" to be in
Ohioprint Publications, the SLA. De Freeze raped her
Columbus Grove, secretary; about a week later. She
and Ken Blum, Orrville offered no resistance because
Courier-Crescent, treasurer. she was afraid.
She
pretended
Chosen to head the Ohio
!.£ague of Home Dailies for conversion w the terrorist
the coming year were W. D. band about two months after
Thomson II, Delaware her kidnaping ·because she
Gazette, as president, and felt the ,only alternative was
Daniel Behrens, Marysville death. She was "acting"
Q
Tribune, as vice president. when she joined.
- She still doesn't know if •
John
J.
Ahern
of
Jacksontown continues as her gun was loaded when she
helped rob the Hibernia
secretary-treasurer.
Elected for another term as Bank. She made threatened
trustees of the Ohio gestures at customers, but
Newspaper Association 'said only her name.
- She tried to avqid hitting
were: A. Monroe Courtright,
Westerville; Lee W. Stauffer, anyone when she opened fire
Niles Publishing Co., Niles; at the sporting gooda store,
J . Oliver Amos, Sidney Da1ly aimmg ~ t the "top of the
News; Donald C Rowley, building.'' Her "reflex
1503 Eastern Ave.,
Rowley Publications, Ash· action" was spurred by the
Gallipolis
tabula; William J. Keating, SLA rules of war.
- Her confessions that she
Cincinnati Enquirer, and
willingly
took part in the bank
Alex Machas'- ee, The Pia tn
robbery
on a tape made
n "lrr . Cleveland
1

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

'·
'

.,

Offer gQod Moneta¥__.,.. Friday

FEBRUARY 23·27

COLUMBUS - While 1976
pssaenger car registration
won't get underwya until
April, new multi-year Ohio
license plates for trucks,
trailers, house vehicles,
motorcycles and farm
vehicles will go on sale
Monday, March I at
specially-designated Ucense
agencies across the slate.
Area lOcations include James
Thaler, 24 State St.,
Gallipolis, and William A.
Gibha, 186 Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy, Meigs County.
The Burea~ of Motor
Vehicles ( BMV) reports that
pssaenger car plates will be
available at these and many
other locations starting Aprll
I. A complete list of local
passenger car license
agencies will be released in
the near future.
BMV Registrar Curtis
Andrews is urging Ohio
businesses and individual
motorists who own only nonpssaenger vehicles to take

World's deepest mine
for limestone on sale
By NANCY KERCHEVAL
OOLUMBUS, Cillo (UP!) One of the wonders of Ohio iS

up for sale to anyone who
wants w invest in the deepest
limestone mine in the
world.
The ¥f-mlle deep mine in
Norton, Summit county,
Obio, wu clOied Jan. 30 after
more than 30 years of llerVice
to Plttsburgb Plate Glaaa Co.
"It '• just siWng there,"
llllid John Seberba, peraonnel
director. "We have laughed
and jolted that 1,000 years
from now arclteologist.ll will
rediscover the mine and
wonder what these maaslve

machinea wert.''
Reallltically, however, the
mine wu ciOied because it

10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.

"

-·

II

'"

-"

"
'"'

'"'

advantage of the "earlybird"
March plate sale p~riod.
"People who only need
plates for trucks. motorcycles or other nonilllssenger
vehicles can take care of
their
1976
hcensing
requirements
during
March," said Andrews.
••If
you
don ' t
own
a passenger car, why
wait until April or May
- when local license agencies could be crowded with
passenger car owners?"
Registrar Andrews emphasized that no passenger
car plates will be sold during
March, and noted that
Ohioans who own both a
psssengere car and a nonpassenger vehicle can
register both vehicles in a
single trip if they wait until
their assigned passenger car
license month.
Under the state's new
"staggered" licensing
schedule, passenger car
owners with A·K last names

was not economically
profitable to operate,
Scherb&amp;: said during a
tele!DJne interview from hla
Barberton office. And the
oversi%ed mining machlhes
will be left In tact. So will the
traf!Jc llabts, the lunchrooms
and the offices.
"The only future that it
might hold, would be a
storace facility of aome
type," be aald.
The mine wu orlglnally
dug In the early !NO's. PPG
used the limestone to ~ce
IOda 1111 willclt u a basic raw
material in tile ~ion of
glaaa.

"In eaHDCe the bulk of the
production
was
used
captlvely," Scherb&amp; said,
addingJU81 a acant amount
wu 10 to ar• contractors.
"In the ewly 1170's we had
economic and pollution problema with producJnc eoda
ash, 10 we stopped It,"
Scberba uld. "Then '1111• we
ciGIId the . . ub pilot, the
major reuon for lrHplnjj the
mine in operation wa1110ne."
During Its peak ye... about

.,..

..

150 men worlted in mine.
Alter the 110da ash industry
was dlaposed of, the smsll
stones In the mine were used
In the manufacture of
cement. When it closed, there
were only 16 miners.
However, the cement plant
In Barberton will close in
May, and PPG will be out of
the cement business when the
last shipments are made
sept. 30.
PPG sold ,its cement
business to Flltrol Corp. a few
yean ago. Scherba said part
of the agreement said PPG
would continue to make
cement 8lld sell au of it to
Flltrol unW 1976.
"AI tllat time If we did not
renew the contract, we were
pledged to go out of' cement
bwdneu," he said. "'Ibis
plant is not economically
competitive becatiae of high
llmeatone costa. The half·
mlle underground mine is an
expensive operation. And
demand for cement is not the
greatest because construction is down."
The plant shutdown
brought about nostalgic
feelinga for both the miners
and the reeldenu of Norton.
"It was a dramatic symbol
of our plant," Scherba said,
"eapecially to miners. They
take a good deal of priile In
themaelves and tend to be
very loyal to their car-.''
And for the city realdenta they're lolinl both tu dollan
and a 100d topic of converA·

must buy their new plates between April I and April 30;
while those in the L·Z
alphabetical group have from
May I through May 31 to

NEWS

LAKEWOOD PARK
By Diane Matthews
GALUPOUS - One of the first most lasting impressions
made upon the visitor to any city, psrticularly in the swruner
season, is its park or parks.
In the late 1890s Murtm McHale establtshed the beautiful "
Lakewood Park. He chose his location carefully, looking for a
spot with natural beauty and easy accessibility . The park was
situated just above the city on the banks of the Ohio River lind .,
could be easily reached by railroad , electric line or boat.
Every modern device for amusement and convenience for '
visitors was supplied. Music, dancing and boating were the 3 '
most attractive features; a fine imported orchestra and a
large dancing pavilion. Nearby a magnificant electric fountain
rivaling that of the World's Fair lent great assistance in the
makeup of the beautiful park.
An elegant hotel and restaurant form a part of the •
complete arrangement. People sl1 around can find no more
beautiful spot in the state to spend a day than Lakewood Park. ·
What is !eli of this once beautiful Gallipolis attraction? On ·
the river one can still see the hotel with lis once elegant ·glory ·
gone.
What is now the Jenkins Concrete Co. was the once
beautiful Lakewood Park.

VeterBDS Memorial Hospital
Admitted
Frances
Hawthorne, Portland; Cheryl
Haning, ,Pomeroy; Mary
POMEROY
Seven
Diehl, Pomeroy; Gertrude
were
fined
and
defendants
Kloes, Middleport; Linda
nine
others
forfeited
honda
in
Batley, Rutland; Milton
Meigs
County
Court
Friday.
Bailey, Vinton; Gay Fields,
Fined by Judge Robert E.
Reedaville.
Buck
were Robert L. NorDischarged - Chrissie
ville,
Letart,
W. Va., 'II and
Imboden, Lillian l£e, Martha
costs,
speeding;
David Klein,
Robinson, Edith Woolard,
Pomeroy,
$5
and
costs, un·
Roselee Wright.
safe vehicle; Wayne E.
Simmons, St. Albans, $9 and
costs, speeding; Lawrence P.
TEN ARRESTED
MIDDLETOWN ; Ohto Luckadoo, Athens, and
(UP!) - In the largest series Donald L. Davis, Belpre, $12
of drug raids and arrests m and costs each, speedmg;
Middletown history, police Fredey Pickens, Pomeroy,
and undercover agents from $50 and costs, 30 days conthe state attorney general's finement, 'l1 days suspended,
office htt several homes 30 days to take driver's test,
Friday and arrested 10 no operator's license; David
persons suspected of nar- L. Donahue, Racine , $10 and
costs, unsafe vehicle.
cotics trafficking.
Forfeiting bonfls were
In similar raids in
Jerry
R. Williams, Gallipolis,
Hamilton County. two others
were arrested and four
persons sought. Middletown
suspects, charged with 52
counts of drug-related crunes
and engaging in organized
crime, were held in Hamtlton
at the Butler County Jail.

Seven draw fines
Robert W. Hansley, Logan, ,
Ohio , Brenda L. Eimer,

1

Columbus, Gary E. White,
Circleville, Bill W. Dressier, ;
Zanesvtlle , and Paul R. ~
Shaults, Saltsburg, f&gt;a ., $'ll .50 ,
each, spe~ding ; Norman D. ,
McBrayer, Pt. Pleasant and
Russell
L.
Fer~&gt;:uson.
Gallipolis, $357 .50 each, '
driving while intoxicated; :
Robert M. Newell, Mtddleport, $34.50 speeding.

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DIPLOMAT NAMED
WASHINGTON (UP!)
President Ford Saturday
announced the appointme~t
of Marquita M. Maytag of La
Jolla, Cab!. , to be ambassador to the Kingdom of
Nepal.

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Mr. Tax is computerized to do your return
accurately and fast. Even with the new exemption changes and low mcome allowances
and tax credits-one visit Is all it takes. And
you take your return with you - short form or
long form-ready to mail

855 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
HOURS
9106 Daily

Sunday
12 Til S P.M.
Evenings

by .
Appointment

Ph. 446-7600

Mr. Tax of America
The tax service people. for the people.

A Wordto

The PennyWise ..•

ON ANY PAIR OF MEN'S OR WOMEN'S

HUSH PUPPIES
SHOES
.
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SUNDAY, FIB. 22 ONLY

lion.
· "Although a tarse number
of Norton relldentl were
never In the mine, It wu not
llli!OIIliiiOII for them to talk
about It," Seberblllald. "The
mine Ia completely llhut
down, but It mna1na one of
the wonders of Ohio.

HOSPITAL

complete 1976 registration. - the last year Ohio issued
The . motor · vehicles chief new metal tags. The state
reported that ail vehicle passenger car registration
registration fees will be the fee,
including
deputy
same as those charged In 1974 regiStrar service charge and
plate reflectorization fee, is
$11. Sixty of the state's 88
counties add on a $5 local
permissive tax, making the
recent Sunday.
total cost of a set of passenger
Mr. and Mrs. Danny car plates $16 in those
Haines, Syracuse, Mr. and counties.
Mrs. Frederick, Chester
Andrews also noted that
RIVER CLEANER
visited Mrs. Sylvia Carpenter more than 91 cents of eve,ry
CLEVELAND (UP!)
and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene dollar his Bureau collects in
Carpenter on Sunday
vehicle registration taxes is The notorious Cuyahoga
Leota Birch was a Sunday returned to local govern- River, which once was
afternoon caller of Mr. and ments to pay for street and classed as a fire hazard - it
. caught fire and damaged two
Mrs. Mtke Evans and family, road improvements.
railroad tressles in 1969 - is
Mrs. Ada Van Meter and Mrs.
getting cleaner, according to
Merle Evans and son.
results of a five-year study
Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Durst,
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
released Friday by the
Mrs. Mary Greer, Mrs. Merle
Tuesday tllrougb Thurs- Cleveland Utilities DepartEvans, Paul Dean Evans,
.day, lair Tuesday, chance ment. Tests conducted at two
Danny Black, David Bryant,
of showers Wednesday and locations on th&lt;:, river
David Talbott, Mrs. Ruby
Thursday. Highs in the 40s beginning m 1910 showed
Bryant and Debra, Louis De
north and 50s south substantial reductions in such
Luz, Leonard Cornell, Mr.
Tuesday
and in the 50s by pollutants as phosphorous,
and Mrs. Woodrow Downie,
Thursday.
Lows In ~· 30s.
organic nitrogen, ammoniaBill Bryant, Mr. and Mrs.
nitrogen, mtrate, nitrite and
Richard Abels, Carol Carter
total nitrogen.
and Harold Grayson were
visitors of the E. H. Carpenter's recently.
!rrEWART TO BE TRIED
LARGEST PUZZLE
JACKSON, Minn. (UPI) The
largest jigsaw puzzle in
James D. Stewart, 18, Cincinthe
world,
made iii 1954,
nati, will go on trial April 13
measured
15
feet by 10 feet
on charges of murdering a
over 10,000
and
contained
visiting student from oil-rich
CHERRY RIDGE
pieces.
fran before Jackson County
By Jane Reeves
Birthday greetings to District Court Judge L.J.
Irvine.
Albert Schultz.
'
Stewart Is accused of
Smcere sympathY. to the
Faye Schultz family in the killing and robbing Ali Morad
death of her broUter, Lonnie Sadeghian, 23, after the
Christopher
of
near Iranian student picked up
Waahlngton County, Belpre. Stewart and a girl friend In
Weekend guests of Mr. and his van. Sadeghian's body
Mrs. ,Dora! Hill were Mr. and was found on the morning of
Mrs. Barry Cwmlngham and Sept. 28 near Jackson
chlldren, Wendy and Eric. Interstate 90.
1
Stewart's co-defendant is
Monday guests of Pud and
Jane Reeves were Mr. and Lynn Price, 19, of Portland,
Mrs. Mike McKnight and Ore. She will be trted at a
Shane and Amy of Dover, date to beset later. Both have
pleaded innocent.'
Ohio.

Stiversville News Notes
Mrs. Maxine Durst is
recuperating at home after
undergoing surgery at
Veteran's Memorial Hospital
several weeks ago.
. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Birch, Waterford, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Roush, Portland,
and Mrs. Evelyn Holter,
Racine called on Mr. Clint
Birch and daughter Leota on
Sunday.
Mrs. Merle Evans and Paul
Dean, local, Robert Van
Meter, Sandy, Lake, Pa., and
Mrs. Lucille Ridenour and
Nancy, Chester, were callers
of Mrs. Mae Van Meter and
Ruby, Long Bottom recently.
Marshall Bryant and
girlfriend, Charleston, W.
Va., Mrs . Violet Ritchie, Mrs.
Freda Middleswart, David
Talbott and Donald Dslley
local were callers at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bryant
and famUy over the weekend .
Mrs. Ralph Brewer and
granddaughter Annette Fitch
are both patients at Veteran's
Memorial Hospital at this
writing.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Abels, Long Bottom vis1ted
her sister, Mrs. Correne De
Luz, who Is a patient at
Holzer Medical Center on
Monday.
Mrs. Fannie Durst and
Mrs. Cass Bissell and Todd,
Long Bottom attended a
movie at Parkersburg, W.
Va. on Sunday.
Rev. and Mrs. L. R.
Gluesencamp and Nicki
visited Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Theiss, Vinton, a

mayor.
Wright, an employee of the
Ohi o Vall ey Publis hing
Company , will he making his
second try for public offi ce.
Last fall, he was a candidate
for the Gallipolis City Board
of Educalton .
Wright will be opposing
fellow Democrat Archte
Meadows, Rt . 2, Crown City ,
for the Jan. 3 nommation.
Thus far , bve persons have
filed for county commissioner posts. Nine other
individuals have obtained
petitions to run for the two
commissioner seats up for
gra b• this fall .
A Uital of II indtviduals
have petitions for the
sheriff's job currently held by
Republican Oscar Baird.

sponsored by the Ga llia County BtcenteMial Cornmtssion
highlighting areas &lt;If Gallia County and the historical
background of each. Diane Matthews, author of this first
article, is coordinating chairperson of the commission on the
project.
~

SILVER IIIDGE PLAZA

The ' Future. Start
Sav'ing ••. Here!
We make it easier then ever tJ save, with
our many savings accounts and savings certificates
.•. all paying the highest rates the law allows!

•,

SHOEs ·

Be Prepared For

Mon. &amp; Fri. 10 til 9
Sunday 1 to 5

COMMERCIAL &amp; SAVINGS BANK
Silver Bridge Plaza

Court Street in Gallipolis

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�Redmen stop Yellow Jackets, 80-74 '
Five Rio men

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score in double
..
-" figures Friday

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·BEST RECORD--Clav's . Class A entry in the
Gallipolis Rinky-Dink league posted the best overall
record during the 1975-76 campaign with a 15-2 mark. Clay
won the regular season title with a sparkling 13-1 record.
Clay was rumerup in the post-son tourney ,losing a 23-

'

Coopman
no match
for champ
SAN JUAN, P.R. (UP! ) It just doesn't matter who

gets into the ring with
Muhammad Ali.
A polite non-entity named
Jean Pierre Coopman got
$100,000 for gelling knocked
out in five rounds Friday
night, and he was, of course,
grossly overpaid.
Ali got his usual $1 million
for a minor fight. but again
delivered the patented act
which has rriade him, in easy
bouts, more showman than
fighter .
Ali wasn't quite the same
for this one. He found it
imposSible to get mad at, to
make believe he haled, or
even to insult ihe 29-year-old
Belgian . As a result there
were none of the racial or
religious tirades that spark
and sometimes jar the
waiting period before a real
Ali fight.
SHARE REGULAR SEASON.TITLE - The Class B Knicks shared the regulllr season
And yet it made no difchampionship of the Gallipolis Rinky-Dink League with Green. Overall, the Knlcks were 13ference. Many people came,
3. First row, left to right are: Robbie Robbins, Scott Slone and David Bostic. Rear - Ken
~ home TV viewers had a
Bostic, coach ; Chris Ellcessor, John Craft, Mike Jijvely and Cllif Rhodes,. coach. Not
sHow, and everyone was
pictured - Roger Bush.
·
happy.
Ali made no attempt to
. make Coop10an better or
worse than he was.
"None of them," he sald of
all his opponents, " Ain 't
nobody when they get in the
ring against the greatest" .
Next on Ali's agenda is
Jinuny Young in Costa Rica
in April, and for this one Ali
admitted he might "find a
way to hale Jimmy. He's
fresh, he talks back".
"I think I can . heat
something up", Ali said.
In a way, he almost has to.
For Young was a bleak
.disappointment Friday night
while winning a unanimous
10-round verdict from Joe
(King) Roman .
Roman, a talenUess fighter
who is awkward and, refused
to fall down, never once had
Young in trouble, but Jinuny
could not put his ·man away.
Relaxing with the press in
the lobby Saturday Ali told or
being awakened at 2 a.m. by
Coopman and his wife' Elaine.
The Belgian couple had come
wsay good-by and tha.hk him.
"! just couldn't gel mat at
so. nice a man, so nice a
family, could I? " Ali said.
True to the obscurity in
which he walked when he was
here, Coopman and his party
flew to Europe at 5 a.m.
.FINISH STRONG - After loaing theb- first two games of the season by big margins, the
Ali ran through his plans
R~o G~ande Clasa B cagers of the Gallipolis Rinky-Dink League came on strong, finishing
for the year, saying again he
With etght straight wins and the 1976 Class B post-~~eason tiUe. Rio finished the year with a
would retire after 1976.
14-3 mark after Friday's 13-9 upset win over regular season co-champion Green. First row,
left to right are: Matt]!ew Withee, Todd Woolen, Dave Carpenter and David Garber. Rear Gary Adkins, coach; !lteve Bennett, T. J . Owens, AI Smith and Jinuny Green.
guldeljnes on the laaue."
Miller, who said his trlpa
this week were to "find out
what players are thinking"
on the laaue, added that "the
oniy way spring training will
be delayed Is if the owners
delay it."
Only six players from other lind club owners have been
By RICK VAN SANT
DaJ Canton said he believed
tealllB
joined Rettenmund for without a contract since last "some sort or reserve clause
CINCINNATI ( UPI)
Marvin Miller's baseball the supposedly "regional" .Dec. 31 and the controversial Is needed."
reserve clause has been the
lrieftng here turned out to he gathering.
"Being able to become a
MiUer, who had drawil 115 main stwnbling lock to a new free agent would only help the
mly a little chat.
Just one member of the players Wednesday fu Los agreement.
blgname players, it wouldn't
But Miller said Friday he do anything for a player like
world champion Cincinnati Angeles and 24 Thursday In
Reda showed up Friday to Chicago, said he wasn't di~ not believe quick me, and probably not for the
llear the executive db-ector of worried about the low settlement of the reserve majority of players," he said.
the Major League Players a&amp;tendance, aild went ahead cla1111e l.ssue (whether players
Dal Canton, pointing out
and chatted with the seven are legally bound to the same that about 15 Pittsburgh·
Ass~ciation explain the
tea111 year after year) was . Pirates are already in
complicated Issues that players.
Besides Rettenmund, the crucial to the scheduled start Flordia working out, said he
threllten to jeopardize the
lcheduled llart of spring players were Bruce Dal of spring training March 1 or knew of "no ballplayer who
Canton of the Allanta Braves, the beginning of the season wants spring training
training In 10 da)'!' .
"How many Reds can we F.ddie Brinkman of the New April 8.
delayed" because of the dls"We should settle our other r-te.
espect?" Miller allied Merv York Yankees, Rick Waits of
Rettenmund, wbo, as the the Cleveland Indians, Dyar issues, but it wouldn't be bad
·• And we certainly don't
Reda' player repreaentatlve Miller of the Baltimore to go ahead and play out the want anything like the strike
to the assodaUon, dutifully Orioles, Tony Scott of the season with the reserve we had that delayed the start
Montreal Expos and Bill clause unseUied," the silver- of the season a few years
came to the briefing.
"There's nobody else on Flowers of the Pittsburgh haired, dapper Miller said. ·~o." he added . "That
"il'; the end of the season we wouldn't br ~oorl fur
our team In town right now," Pirates.
)Vouid
have 1 a lot more bltseb:dl. "
.The
players
association
Mlrugged Rettlenmund .
,

Regional meet a flop

(

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26 overtime game to Rio Grande Friday night. Front row,
left to right are : Charlie Boggess, Marty Glenn Darren
Haner and Scott Miller. Rear- Bob Erwin, coach· Aaron
Saunders, Jim Wonn, Carl Bing, Loren Rowley ~nd Don
Miller, coach.

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CLASS B CO-CHAMPS - Green shared the 1975-76
regular season Rinky-Dink League title with the Knlcks,

and was runnerup in this year's post season tournament.
Green finished 14-3 on the year. First row, left to right

.

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CLASS A DIVISION
its eighth str3ight win, also
CChampionship Game,
finished with a 14-3 record.
CLAY (16) - Mill er 3-0-6 ;
The two champio,.ohip Rio G l enn 0-2·21 Boggess 6-0 12 ;
er 0 -0 -0 ; Saunders 1-0 -2;
Grande
teams
were · Hn
Bing 1-0 -2 : Wonn 0 ·0 -0 ;
introduced during halftime Rowley 1-0· 2. TOT~LS 12 ·2·
ceremonies of the Rio Grande 26 .RIO GRANDE (21) College-Cedarville College Runyon l -0-2; Wolfe Q. Q. Q;
Mid-Ohio Conference Isaacs 1-0 -2 ; Lanier 3-8 -14;
E'olans 1-1-3 : Young 0· 1 1;
Tournament game at Lyne Thompson
J -0 -6. TOTALS 9Center Friday night.
1 0· 21 .
score by qu·a rters:
Bo• scores of the Clav
85472- 26
championshpis games:
Rio
68284- 28

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CLASS 8 DIVISION
(Championship Game)
GREEN (9)- Moore 0 -0 -0 :
Edelmann 2-0--4 ; Sterrett 0-00 ; Lahe 2c0-.4 ; VanSh: kle 0-0·
0 : Adkins o.-o .O; ReynoldS
0'0'0; Gall ian 0-1-1; Gl_lbert 0 0-0 : R:i c;hle 0-0-0; Ch"evaller o0-0 . TOTAL$ 4-1-9 .

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RIO GRANDE (13) -:
Sennett 1-1-3 ; Wooten 0 -0 -0 :
Smilh 2-1-5; Carpenter 0 -0-0;
Owens 0-1-1; W it hee 0-4--4 .
Garber 0 -0 -0. TOTALS 3·7·13.
Score by quarters :
Green
2 0 1 6- 9
Rio
3325- IJ

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Nt;W YORK (UPI)
Senior Mike Dabney scored
25 points and grabbed II
rebounds Saturday to lead
fifth-ranked Rutgers to a 9479 victory over American
University for its 23rd victory
in a row at Madison Square
·
Garden.
The Eagles trailed by just
four points at the hall and
kept the game close until
Rutgers br.oke loose with six
minutes· left .
The Scarlet Knights were
nursing a 71.()2 lead when
they went on a 14-2 scoring
spree. Dabney, a 6-fool-3
guard,had seven points In the
spurt.
Rutgers, just three games
away from its first unbeaten
season, had five men in
double figures . Junior Ed ·
Jordan scored 23 points and
had six assists while Phil
SeUers added 18 points and
grabbed nine rebounds.
Cleo Wright led the Eagles,
who fell to 9-13, with 25 points
and 15 rebounds ..

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Jos Valentijn · of the
Netherlands won both eventa,
clucking ~8.47 for the 500 and
I : IR.25 for the 1,00. Canada's
C1c.•atan Botichcr
1-'P&lt;'"f'(t

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rinished

h1 hnll1 ('V&lt;'nls .

CEDARVILLE
Wood

52 12 ,

Lones

8 5-21.

Reep

1

o 2:

Smith

1 old ;

Back-to-bl!ck goals b1y Gil
Price at the 7:10 and 6:43

Weob 1 l ' · TOTALS 29·16· 74 . .

marksandadrivinglayupoff

a fast break by Jim Stewart
at the 6:13 mark pushed Rio
ahead by eleven, 67-56.

Thacker 1 o 2; Bu rtn er 2 A

RIO

GRANDE

180 1

Herrman's contract
UP, OVER AND IN - Rio Grande's Jimmy Noe, right, roars toward the hoop for a
la;rup despotethe presence of Cedarville's 6-6 junior forward Don Smith 143 ) dilring Friday's
R!o-Cedarvolie post-&lt;~eason tournament game. Rio won, 8().74. Noe finished with 21 points
and 16 rebounds. (Keith Wilson photos) .

Hewitt signs
. SAN JOSE, Calif. ! UP!) ~
Goalkeeper Mike Hewitt, who
played II games for the North
All)erican Soccer League
champion Tampa Bay
Rowdies in .1975 and posted a
1.18 g.oaisagainst average,
has signed a 1976 eon tract
with
the
San
Jose
Earthquakes. the club ahnounced Friday.
The 26-year-old Hewitt was
obtained from the Rowdies
last week in a straight cash

•Go

a: ,.

-

Alb a nese 5-78 17 ; Caldwe l l

s-

2 12 i Car r in gto n I 0 2; Noe 10
1 21 ; Pri ce .s 2 10 ; Robinson 0 o o, Royse o o.o, Stew art 1 o.
t 4; Swain I 2 4 . TOTALS JJ.
1

\8:~re at

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...

Name
Jim Noe ( RG)

half

_

Rio

'· transaction.

43

11

Rob in F.uris ( Tl

26

Brian Boysel I Ul

14
23

Milrk. Klein ( M )

74

?94
?96

222
2.1&lt;1

BiiiDolby (UI
21
127
FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE
G
Name
2)
Bob Mc1 SOn l M J
17
5cot1 Gephert IM I
24
Robin Fetrri s (T)
2&lt;1
Jamie Pearso n (Ml
Mo:uk Klein (M)
Br (a n Boysel ( U l

Avp .
FT
TP
77 .1
131
719
77 .5
69
66 1
71.7
43
381
?Q.9
75
503
15 3
68
31?
LEADERS
FG
FGM Pet.
92

&lt;6
796
115
?14

?4

7?2
23
120
DAve Wood ((I
22
107
Ed ~ohn s lon I Ul
24
73
Ri ch WheAIIT I
. 26
294
Jim Noe (RGJ
REBOUNDING LEADERS
2J

Name
J•m Noe I RG)
Jim Slewar i iRGl
Jclmie Pearson {M )
Jim Hvss ( Tl

JOB TRAINING COURSES
OPEN lHE DOOR TO A NEW JOB!

·'

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS
COLLEGE

..

106
396
408

56,3

55.8
54.0
53 .4

i3&lt;

51.3
50 .9

590

49 .8

G
26

REB

Ava .

331

17.1

76

279
256
2.56

10 . 7

24
11
23

73

AM Free mfln (MV)

80

578

49 .9

201

10.6
10.6
9 .1

204

8 .9

197
147

8 .6
B. l
8.1

18
K!tn RauchiODI
21
111
J.n B,i llm er IMV )
16
126
,._
FR'EE THROW PERCENTAGE LEADERS
N.lme
G
FT FT A
Miirk Klein IMI
21
75
83
Jlt\1 Huss ITI
2·1
68
18
Din Gnrdr1er (00)
. ·1 1
26
31
D(fve Bu rtner, ( ()
23
3?
39
841 Bradley ?MV)
18 77
33
5k&gt;ve 5crgen l (MVI
18
38
51

7.8
Pel .
90 .&gt;
8 7. 1
B~ . l

87.0
16.0

2'

27

29

75 .9

Rtbi n Frtrri s {T)

24
14

69
49

91
65

75 .4 .

74

40

54

75 .8
14.1

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Local &amp;wling
Sky Line Lanes
Wed. Afternoon Foursome
February 18 , 1976
Team
W L
FOUJ1Iain of v ·ou th
116 68
Nat i. M ineSer\lice
114 70
George ' s Grocery
101 83
Busy Beauty Sa lo n
10 1 83
Somerville RE
93 9 1
Sparky's Sunoco
8 1 95
L ee Su pp l y
.
72 1 12
The Hoot Owls
"126
Lee Supply ha·d high tea m
game 713. So m ervi ll e Real
Esta te ha_d h igh serie~ 2.087 .
Al .i ce Ch a pman hlld high,
game and se ri es 190 -·496 ."
Lee· Sup ply took -six poin ts
f ro m Fouhtain of Youth .
Kandy Nuce had h igh game
157 and I rene Paul sen ·high
series -110 for Lee Supp l y .
Edith Jackson had gam e an d
se r ies !Of" Fountain o f Yo ur~

·sa

REGISTER NOW FOR NEW TERM.

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l't1ARalllth (DAY ClASSES)
MARQt 15th (EVENING Q ASSES)

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aiOOSE ntE PROGRAM ntAT SUITS YOU BEST.

*SECRETARIAl:

* JR. ACCOUNTING
* GENERAL OFFICE
* EXEQJTIVE SECRETARIAL

'

MODULAR HOME "

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BUY YOURS NOWI

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eApproved For Veteran•
eSpecial Alternating Program for Shift Worlcen ': '
eOfferlng Auoclate Degree Program

CAll 446 4367 OR WRITE 36 LOCUsr sr.
State Reaisb1tion No. 75-02-04728

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178 465 .
Sparky 's Sunoc o tOok. six
points fr om
Bus_y Bea uty
Salon . Al ice ChaPman had
high game and se ri es 190 49 8
tor Sparky's Sunoco . For
B,usy B ea uty _ Sa l o n Opal
Casto had h ig h game and
sef"ies 189 d83 .
Somervi ll e R e al Est a t e
took six points fr om Th e
HOot Owls . Lelia Hagg y had
high game 159 a nd Jane
Bowles h ig h ser i es 4)9 t or
Somervi lle Rea l E s tate .
Belly Long stc th 14-1 40 7 tor
The Hoo t Owls .
Nation a l Min e Se rvi ce took
e ight poi nt s from Gcoryc 's
Gro cer y . Jenn ifar Harri s had
high game and series 173 -445
for Nat iona l Min e Ser\li te .
Mary Ann McCarly had
high game an d series 171 4 18
t or
George's
Grocery .
Vi r gi n ia G ro ver co nverted
the 5 10 sp li t . Vicki Adkins
f~' 'l' Ma ry /1 rln
"l hurp t on
\le rted th e '' 7 • • •

TO MEET WEDNESDAY
CHESHIRE - Southern
Valley Athletic Conference
coaches wlll meet at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at Kyger
Creek High Schon! new· here
w select the 1975-7R SVAC

eMARLIDE •WHITMAN
30 Years Financing Available
Also : Complete Line of Quality
Secliortal Homes &amp; Mobile Homes

&amp;'HAOt~~
MOBILE HOMES INC.

is 11-5 overall.
The tailer Pointers jwnped
out to a 13-6 first period lead,
and were stili on top 19-16
during the halftime intermission . South Point led
33-28 going into the final
period. ,
GAHS ou !scored the
Pointers 12-6 in the last canto.
South Point played Nelsonville-York for consolation

of the modern day season.

honors Saturday night.
Jim' Harris paced the
Winners with 11 points. Bruce
Hines added nine and Jeff
Lanham seven.
Ellery Queen and Jim
Davis each had 10 points for
the losers. Tim Adkins added
nine.
In the nightcap, Waverly
limited Nelsonville-York to
just six points in the second
half to post i Is semifinal
victory. Rick Frederick and
Greg Sturgill each had 11
points for Waverly . Jim ·
Robinson had eight. Greg
Pa It on seven and Rick
Penrod six for the Little
Buckeyes.
Waverly led 10-9 after one
period . It was 18-all at
halftime. WHS led 34-22 going
into the final period.
GAHS topped Wahama 6230 and South Point to reach
the finals. Waverly downed
Rock Hill 34-21 and Nelsonville-York.
The
Little
Buckeyes eliminated pretourney favorite Athens 46-38
in their openiRg game while
South Point ousted Meigs, 5329.
Box scores:

Beaver ·harves ted by
counties were as follows:
Athens 48; Coshocton 39;
Vinton 38 ; Guernsey 36;
Jackson 35; Washington 15;
Hocking 13; Perry 12;
Monroe 7;. Meigs 3; and
Belmont 2.
The three main reaso~s for
having a beaver trapping
season are: (l) to give ·
private landowners relief
from beaver damage; (2) to
prevent the annual incrernent
c Semifinal Gamel
of a high population area
SOUTH POINT 1391
from being lost to natural A dk ins 4-1-9; Coburn 1 -0 -2;
Da\l iS 5-0-10 ; Howard 2-1-5 ;
causes; and (3) to provide Queen
5-0-10 ; Ramsey 1-t -3.
recreation by a limited, TOTALS 18-3· 39 .
GALliPOLIS ('10 ) - Smith
regulated harvest.
3-0 -6 ; Lanham 2-l -7; Clarke 0· One of the problems beaver 0 -0 ;· Slerre.t t 0 -4-4; N . Thomas
1 1-3 ; Harris 5-1-11 ; Hines 4' 1·
cause is the flooding of land. 9.
TOTALS 15-10-40 .
Many landowners would
~ Score by quarten:
prefer to have the beaver South Point 13 6 14 6- 39
6 10 12 12- 40
around if they could control Gallipolis
the water level. There are
(Semifinal Game)
WAVERLY ("41) Mont .
two simple !Jeaver pond level gomery
_ 3-0-6 ; Maple 0-0-0;
control devices which most Bi"lC.Ier 0."1. 1: weeter 2-0-A:
5-1-1i; Claytor 1:0
landowners could construct 2F:rederick.
Hol land 2 ~ 0 - 4; Fleser · J-0-2:
from scrap lumbe r or Sturg i ll 4-3 - 11 ; Depue o.o .o.
materials already on hand. TOTALS- 18·5·41 •
NELS -"'( ,O RK
(24)
For additional information Connors
0-1-1; Holte\ 1.1) .2;
on this, contact the State Pa!fon J -1-7; Penrod 2·2-6 .Robinson 4-0- 8 . TOTALS -10-4Game Protector or write to 24
.
the Wildlife District Four
Score by quarters:
10 8 16&lt;?- 41
Office, 360 East State St., " Wa\lerly
Nels . York
· 9 9 -4 '2~ 2-4
Athens, Ohio 45701.

PULL-ON PECOS

NO LACES!
LARGE SELECTION
OF SIZES AND WIDTHS

Trv them (Jn .at

DAN THOMAS &amp; SON

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324 Second Ave.

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CARTER &amp; EVANS

HAS GOOD NIGHT - Paul Albanese (24 ) 6-0 senior
guard for the Rio Grande College Redmen tallied 17
points and was credited with eight assists in Frlday's 80-74
MOC Tournament win over visiting CedarVille. Albanese
canned five straight foul shots in the final minutes of play
to ice Rio's victory.
.

BJ .9

D}le Thatcher I Cl

~n Coomes ( Cl
Sai\leloncs(C)

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57 .5
51 .5

710
148

24

Ron Stoner

160

ANAHEIM I UP!) - The
California Angels purchased
the contract . of ca tcher Ed
Herrmann from the New
York Yankees Friday for an
undisclosed amount of cash
after Herrmann asked the
Yankees io assign hiin to a
West Coast team so he could
he nearer his San Diego
home.
.Herrmann,
Z9,
has
averaged more than 10 home
rWls in his seven major
league seasons, topped by a
career high of 19 in 1970 when
he was with the Chicago
White Sox. He was primarily
a designated hitter and pinch
hitter last year while backing
up catcher Thurman Munson.

Tiger hurler
is sidelined
DETROIT I UP! ) - The
Detroit Tigers announced
Friday tha t left-handed
hitting outfield prospect Att
James has suffered a
ruptured Achilles tendon that
will require surgery.
James, 23, suffered lhe
injury Thursday working out
. with the Macomb Community
College baseball team when a
bat the players were using in
a mock relay race slipped
and banged him on the heel.
Dr . David Mitchell will
perform the surgery next
Tuesday, the Tigers said. He
·will be sidelined for an
indefini e period.

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SCORING LEAUERS
G
FG

Coll ins
D~ve Wood I Cl

BEGINS

Angels purchase

f14)

mark , but never got any

closer.

ATHENS - A total of 674
beaver were harvested in the
curren t 1976 beaver trapping
season in Wildlife District
Four . This was the most
beaver
trapped
in
Southeastern Ohio's 13 years

Waders I " ' Coomes 2.1 5 .

A-.

* BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
, FINISHED THIRD
INZELL, WEST GERMANY I UPI) - Dan lmmer!all or Madison, Wfs.,
bronze medalist in the winter
Olympics· 500-meter sp~ed
skating competition, finished
third in both the 500 and·1,000meter event Saturday at an

outside shooting of Don Smith
and Kev Wait¢rs, cut Rio's
lead to six, 68-&lt;i2, with 4:10
left.
Free throws by Gil Price,
Paul Albanese, and Mark
Swain iced the victory for Rio
Grande in the final minutes of
play.
From the field, Rio shot a
blistering 55 percent, sinking
33 of 60 field goal attempts.
The Redmen were 14 of 24 at
the foul line. Rio picked off 41 .
rebo).lnds, 16 by Jinuny Noe.
Rio had 22 turnovers.
Cedarville hit 29 of 64 field
goal attempts for 45 percent.
The visitors were perfect at
the foul line, sinking 16 ouf of
16 . Cedarville had 44
rebounds, 12 by Steve Lones.
The losers had 16 turnovers.
Rio placed five men in
double figures . Jimmy Noe
had 21, Paul Albanese 17, Jim
Stewart 14, Bob Caldwell 12
and Gil Price 10.
Steve Lones, 6-7 sophomore
forward. scored 21 for
Cedarvil)e. Don Smith, 6-6
junior center added 14 while
Dave Wood , 6-7 sophomore
,for:ward tossed in 12.
Box score.:

MOC cage stats.

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AU five

Brian Boysel tallied 31
points for Urbana and
teanunates Ed Johnston and
BiU Dolby added 17 apiece in
the Blue Knights' Mid.Ohio
Conference Tournament win
over Tiffin.
A. J. Collins contributed 13
points for Urbl!na.
Jim Smith scored 21
markers, Keith Hunter 15,
John Florence 14 and Rich
Wheat 10 for the Dragons.
Tiffin held a 43-42 halftime
lead.
Friday's victory left Rio
Grande with a 14-13 season
record . The Yellow Jackets of
Coach Don Callan finished
their 1975-76 campaign with a
13-13 season reco~.
After a nip-and-tuck battle
the first eight minutes of
play, Rio opened up a five
point lead, 1!1-14, on a driving
layup by Jinuny Noe with
11 :36left in the first half and·
was never headed .
The Redmen led 43-31
during
the
halftime
intermission. Biggest Rio
lead was 16 points, 51-35 with
16 :30 remaining in the game.
The Yellow Jackets reeled
off 11 straight markers to
narrow the m8rgin to five
points (51-'ll!) a t lhe · 12:57

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. POST-SEASON CHAMPS - Rio Grande's Clasa A team captured post«ason
tournament honors of the Gallipolis Rinky-Dink League Friday evening by turning back
regular season champion Clay, 28-26, In overtime. Rio finished 'with a IU seasoo record.
Front row, left to right are: Chipper Young, Steve Wolfe, Steve RWiyon and Steve
Thompson. Rear - Gary Adkins, coach; Kev Lucas, Sarah Evans and Tim Lanier. Not
pictured - Mark Shockley.

wallops

RIO GRANDE - Coach Art Lanham 's. Rio
. Grande College Redmen advanced to the NAJA
District 22 Playoffs following Friday night's 80-74
Mid-Ohio Conference post-season tournament
victory over visiting Cedarville.
The Redmen battled Urbana for the 1976 postseason MOC tournament title last night at Lyne
Center. Urbana upset regular-season champion
Tiffin 87-83 in an opening round game at Tiffin
Friday night .
·

The Jackets, behind the · Ced arv Ilie J 1.

"

Rutgers

GAL LIPOLIS - Coach
Norm
Persin "s
Galli a
Academy High School freshmen edged South Point 40-39
and Waverly trounced
Nelsonville-York 41-24 to gain
the finals of the second annual French City Freshman
tou rnament here Friday
evening.
The victory left GAHS with
a 12-4 season mark. Waverly

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invitation meet.

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are : Gary (Gunner) Lane, coach; Kelly GalUan, Greg
Adkins, Matt VanSickle, Max Sterrett and Ed Moore,
coach. Rear - Ron Halley, coach; Tom Moore, Doug
Gilbert, Jamie Lane, Jeff Olevalier; and Mike Edelmann.
Not pictured - John Richie and Terry Reynolds.

Rio Grande upsets Clay for
A title; Rio B also winner
GALUPOL1S - • Rio
Grande captured both the
Class A and Class B post.
se ason Rinky-Dink
Tournament titles here
Friday evening with a pair of
upset triumphs over regular
season champion Clay and
!XH'hampion Green.
In the first tilt, Rio Grande,
down five points (23-18 )
midway in the final period,
rallied to knot the count at 24ali just before the final
whistle, then went on to stun
Clay 23-26 in a thrilling
overtime.
Charlie Boggess led
Clay'~ attack with 12 points.
Tim Lanier paced the postseason champs with 14,
including the winners two
buckets in the overtime
period.
Clay led 6-6 after one
period. Rio led 14-13 during
the halftime intermission .
Clay led 16-15 going into the
final period.
Clay finished the season
with a 15-2 record. Rio
Grande wound up with a I~
record.
In the Class B title game,
Rfo avenged two regular
season losses to the cochampion Green team with a
13-9 triumph for the postseason crown.
Jamie Lane and Mike
Edelmann each had four
points for Green. AI Smith
paced the winners with five
points.
Rio led 3-2, 6-2 and 11-3 at the
. quartermarks.
Green finished with a 14-3
season marl&lt;. Rio, following

GAHS, Waverly gain
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finals zn tournament

BUILDING SUPPLIES
Olive Street

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Gallipolis, 0.

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�Redmen stop Yellow Jackets, 80-74 '
Five Rio men

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score in double
..
-" figures Friday

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·BEST RECORD--Clav's . Class A entry in the
Gallipolis Rinky-Dink league posted the best overall
record during the 1975-76 campaign with a 15-2 mark. Clay
won the regular season title with a sparkling 13-1 record.
Clay was rumerup in the post-son tourney ,losing a 23-

'

Coopman
no match
for champ
SAN JUAN, P.R. (UP! ) It just doesn't matter who

gets into the ring with
Muhammad Ali.
A polite non-entity named
Jean Pierre Coopman got
$100,000 for gelling knocked
out in five rounds Friday
night, and he was, of course,
grossly overpaid.
Ali got his usual $1 million
for a minor fight. but again
delivered the patented act
which has rriade him, in easy
bouts, more showman than
fighter .
Ali wasn't quite the same
for this one. He found it
imposSible to get mad at, to
make believe he haled, or
even to insult ihe 29-year-old
Belgian . As a result there
were none of the racial or
religious tirades that spark
and sometimes jar the
waiting period before a real
Ali fight.
SHARE REGULAR SEASON.TITLE - The Class B Knicks shared the regulllr season
And yet it made no difchampionship of the Gallipolis Rinky-Dink League with Green. Overall, the Knlcks were 13ference. Many people came,
3. First row, left to right are: Robbie Robbins, Scott Slone and David Bostic. Rear - Ken
~ home TV viewers had a
Bostic, coach ; Chris Ellcessor, John Craft, Mike Jijvely and Cllif Rhodes,. coach. Not
sHow, and everyone was
pictured - Roger Bush.
·
happy.
Ali made no attempt to
. make Coop10an better or
worse than he was.
"None of them," he sald of
all his opponents, " Ain 't
nobody when they get in the
ring against the greatest" .
Next on Ali's agenda is
Jinuny Young in Costa Rica
in April, and for this one Ali
admitted he might "find a
way to hale Jimmy. He's
fresh, he talks back".
"I think I can . heat
something up", Ali said.
In a way, he almost has to.
For Young was a bleak
.disappointment Friday night
while winning a unanimous
10-round verdict from Joe
(King) Roman .
Roman, a talenUess fighter
who is awkward and, refused
to fall down, never once had
Young in trouble, but Jinuny
could not put his ·man away.
Relaxing with the press in
the lobby Saturday Ali told or
being awakened at 2 a.m. by
Coopman and his wife' Elaine.
The Belgian couple had come
wsay good-by and tha.hk him.
"! just couldn't gel mat at
so. nice a man, so nice a
family, could I? " Ali said.
True to the obscurity in
which he walked when he was
here, Coopman and his party
flew to Europe at 5 a.m.
.FINISH STRONG - After loaing theb- first two games of the season by big margins, the
Ali ran through his plans
R~o G~ande Clasa B cagers of the Gallipolis Rinky-Dink League came on strong, finishing
for the year, saying again he
With etght straight wins and the 1976 Class B post-~~eason tiUe. Rio finished the year with a
would retire after 1976.
14-3 mark after Friday's 13-9 upset win over regular season co-champion Green. First row,
left to right are: Matt]!ew Withee, Todd Woolen, Dave Carpenter and David Garber. Rear Gary Adkins, coach; !lteve Bennett, T. J . Owens, AI Smith and Jinuny Green.
guldeljnes on the laaue."
Miller, who said his trlpa
this week were to "find out
what players are thinking"
on the laaue, added that "the
oniy way spring training will
be delayed Is if the owners
delay it."
Only six players from other lind club owners have been
By RICK VAN SANT
DaJ Canton said he believed
tealllB
joined Rettenmund for without a contract since last "some sort or reserve clause
CINCINNATI ( UPI)
Marvin Miller's baseball the supposedly "regional" .Dec. 31 and the controversial Is needed."
reserve clause has been the
lrieftng here turned out to he gathering.
"Being able to become a
MiUer, who had drawil 115 main stwnbling lock to a new free agent would only help the
mly a little chat.
Just one member of the players Wednesday fu Los agreement.
blgname players, it wouldn't
But Miller said Friday he do anything for a player like
world champion Cincinnati Angeles and 24 Thursday In
Reda showed up Friday to Chicago, said he wasn't di~ not believe quick me, and probably not for the
llear the executive db-ector of worried about the low settlement of the reserve majority of players," he said.
the Major League Players a&amp;tendance, aild went ahead cla1111e l.ssue (whether players
Dal Canton, pointing out
and chatted with the seven are legally bound to the same that about 15 Pittsburgh·
Ass~ciation explain the
tea111 year after year) was . Pirates are already in
complicated Issues that players.
Besides Rettenmund, the crucial to the scheduled start Flordia working out, said he
threllten to jeopardize the
lcheduled llart of spring players were Bruce Dal of spring training March 1 or knew of "no ballplayer who
Canton of the Allanta Braves, the beginning of the season wants spring training
training In 10 da)'!' .
"How many Reds can we F.ddie Brinkman of the New April 8.
delayed" because of the dls"We should settle our other r-te.
espect?" Miller allied Merv York Yankees, Rick Waits of
Rettenmund, wbo, as the the Cleveland Indians, Dyar issues, but it wouldn't be bad
·• And we certainly don't
Reda' player repreaentatlve Miller of the Baltimore to go ahead and play out the want anything like the strike
to the assodaUon, dutifully Orioles, Tony Scott of the season with the reserve we had that delayed the start
Montreal Expos and Bill clause unseUied," the silver- of the season a few years
came to the briefing.
"There's nobody else on Flowers of the Pittsburgh haired, dapper Miller said. ·~o." he added . "That
"il'; the end of the season we wouldn't br ~oorl fur
our team In town right now," Pirates.
)Vouid
have 1 a lot more bltseb:dl. "
.The
players
association
Mlrugged Rettlenmund .
,

Regional meet a flop

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26 overtime game to Rio Grande Friday night. Front row,
left to right are : Charlie Boggess, Marty Glenn Darren
Haner and Scott Miller. Rear- Bob Erwin, coach· Aaron
Saunders, Jim Wonn, Carl Bing, Loren Rowley ~nd Don
Miller, coach.

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CLASS B CO-CHAMPS - Green shared the 1975-76
regular season Rinky-Dink League title with the Knlcks,

and was runnerup in this year's post season tournament.
Green finished 14-3 on the year. First row, left to right

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CLASS A DIVISION
its eighth str3ight win, also
CChampionship Game,
finished with a 14-3 record.
CLAY (16) - Mill er 3-0-6 ;
The two champio,.ohip Rio G l enn 0-2·21 Boggess 6-0 12 ;
er 0 -0 -0 ; Saunders 1-0 -2;
Grande
teams
were · Hn
Bing 1-0 -2 : Wonn 0 ·0 -0 ;
introduced during halftime Rowley 1-0· 2. TOT~LS 12 ·2·
ceremonies of the Rio Grande 26 .RIO GRANDE (21) College-Cedarville College Runyon l -0-2; Wolfe Q. Q. Q;
Mid-Ohio Conference Isaacs 1-0 -2 ; Lanier 3-8 -14;
E'olans 1-1-3 : Young 0· 1 1;
Tournament game at Lyne Thompson
J -0 -6. TOTALS 9Center Friday night.
1 0· 21 .
score by qu·a rters:
Bo• scores of the Clav
85472- 26
championshpis games:
Rio
68284- 28

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CLASS 8 DIVISION
(Championship Game)
GREEN (9)- Moore 0 -0 -0 :
Edelmann 2-0--4 ; Sterrett 0-00 ; Lahe 2c0-.4 ; VanSh: kle 0-0·
0 : Adkins o.-o .O; ReynoldS
0'0'0; Gall ian 0-1-1; Gl_lbert 0 0-0 : R:i c;hle 0-0-0; Ch"evaller o0-0 . TOTAL$ 4-1-9 .

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RIO GRANDE (13) -:
Sennett 1-1-3 ; Wooten 0 -0 -0 :
Smilh 2-1-5; Carpenter 0 -0-0;
Owens 0-1-1; W it hee 0-4--4 .
Garber 0 -0 -0. TOTALS 3·7·13.
Score by quarters :
Green
2 0 1 6- 9
Rio
3325- IJ

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24

Nt;W YORK (UPI)
Senior Mike Dabney scored
25 points and grabbed II
rebounds Saturday to lead
fifth-ranked Rutgers to a 9479 victory over American
University for its 23rd victory
in a row at Madison Square
·
Garden.
The Eagles trailed by just
four points at the hall and
kept the game close until
Rutgers br.oke loose with six
minutes· left .
The Scarlet Knights were
nursing a 71.()2 lead when
they went on a 14-2 scoring
spree. Dabney, a 6-fool-3
guard,had seven points In the
spurt.
Rutgers, just three games
away from its first unbeaten
season, had five men in
double figures . Junior Ed ·
Jordan scored 23 points and
had six assists while Phil
SeUers added 18 points and
grabbed nine rebounds.
Cleo Wright led the Eagles,
who fell to 9-13, with 25 points
and 15 rebounds ..

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Jos Valentijn · of the
Netherlands won both eventa,
clucking ~8.47 for the 500 and
I : IR.25 for the 1,00. Canada's
C1c.•atan Botichcr
1-'P&lt;'"f'(t

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rinished

h1 hnll1 ('V&lt;'nls .

CEDARVILLE
Wood

52 12 ,

Lones

8 5-21.

Reep

1

o 2:

Smith

1 old ;

Back-to-bl!ck goals b1y Gil
Price at the 7:10 and 6:43

Weob 1 l ' · TOTALS 29·16· 74 . .

marksandadrivinglayupoff

a fast break by Jim Stewart
at the 6:13 mark pushed Rio
ahead by eleven, 67-56.

Thacker 1 o 2; Bu rtn er 2 A

RIO

GRANDE

180 1

Herrman's contract
UP, OVER AND IN - Rio Grande's Jimmy Noe, right, roars toward the hoop for a
la;rup despotethe presence of Cedarville's 6-6 junior forward Don Smith 143 ) dilring Friday's
R!o-Cedarvolie post-&lt;~eason tournament game. Rio won, 8().74. Noe finished with 21 points
and 16 rebounds. (Keith Wilson photos) .

Hewitt signs
. SAN JOSE, Calif. ! UP!) ~
Goalkeeper Mike Hewitt, who
played II games for the North
All)erican Soccer League
champion Tampa Bay
Rowdies in .1975 and posted a
1.18 g.oaisagainst average,
has signed a 1976 eon tract
with
the
San
Jose
Earthquakes. the club ahnounced Friday.
The 26-year-old Hewitt was
obtained from the Rowdies
last week in a straight cash

•Go

a: ,.

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Alb a nese 5-78 17 ; Caldwe l l

s-

2 12 i Car r in gto n I 0 2; Noe 10
1 21 ; Pri ce .s 2 10 ; Robinson 0 o o, Royse o o.o, Stew art 1 o.
t 4; Swain I 2 4 . TOTALS JJ.
1

\8:~re at

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....

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Name
Jim Noe ( RG)

half

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Rio

'· transaction.

43

11

Rob in F.uris ( Tl

26

Brian Boysel I Ul

14
23

Milrk. Klein ( M )

74

?94
?96

222
2.1&lt;1

BiiiDolby (UI
21
127
FIELD GOAL PERCENTAGE
G
Name
2)
Bob Mc1 SOn l M J
17
5cot1 Gephert IM I
24
Robin Fetrri s (T)
2&lt;1
Jamie Pearso n (Ml
Mo:uk Klein (M)
Br (a n Boysel ( U l

Avp .
FT
TP
77 .1
131
719
77 .5
69
66 1
71.7
43
381
?Q.9
75
503
15 3
68
31?
LEADERS
FG
FGM Pet.
92

&lt;6
796
115
?14

?4

7?2
23
120
DAve Wood ((I
22
107
Ed ~ohn s lon I Ul
24
73
Ri ch WheAIIT I
. 26
294
Jim Noe (RGJ
REBOUNDING LEADERS
2J

Name
J•m Noe I RG)
Jim Slewar i iRGl
Jclmie Pearson {M )
Jim Hvss ( Tl

JOB TRAINING COURSES
OPEN lHE DOOR TO A NEW JOB!

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GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS
COLLEGE

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106
396
408

56,3

55.8
54.0
53 .4

i3&lt;

51.3
50 .9

590

49 .8

G
26

REB

Ava .

331

17.1

76

279
256
2.56

10 . 7

24
11
23

73

AM Free mfln (MV)

80

578

49 .9

201

10.6
10.6
9 .1

204

8 .9

197
147

8 .6
B. l
8.1

18
K!tn RauchiODI
21
111
J.n B,i llm er IMV )
16
126
,._
FR'EE THROW PERCENTAGE LEADERS
N.lme
G
FT FT A
Miirk Klein IMI
21
75
83
Jlt\1 Huss ITI
2·1
68
18
Din Gnrdr1er (00)
. ·1 1
26
31
D(fve Bu rtner, ( ()
23
3?
39
841 Bradley ?MV)
18 77
33
5k&gt;ve 5crgen l (MVI
18
38
51

7.8
Pel .
90 .&gt;
8 7. 1
B~ . l

87.0
16.0

2'

27

29

75 .9

Rtbi n Frtrri s {T)

24
14

69
49

91
65

75 .4 .

74

40

54

75 .8
14.1

•

•

Local &amp;wling
Sky Line Lanes
Wed. Afternoon Foursome
February 18 , 1976
Team
W L
FOUJ1Iain of v ·ou th
116 68
Nat i. M ineSer\lice
114 70
George ' s Grocery
101 83
Busy Beauty Sa lo n
10 1 83
Somerville RE
93 9 1
Sparky's Sunoco
8 1 95
L ee Su pp l y
.
72 1 12
The Hoot Owls
"126
Lee Supply ha·d high tea m
game 713. So m ervi ll e Real
Esta te ha_d h igh serie~ 2.087 .
Al .i ce Ch a pman hlld high,
game and se ri es 190 -·496 ."
Lee· Sup ply took -six poin ts
f ro m Fouhtain of Youth .
Kandy Nuce had h igh game
157 and I rene Paul sen ·high
series -110 for Lee Supp l y .
Edith Jackson had gam e an d
se r ies !Of" Fountain o f Yo ur~

·sa

REGISTER NOW FOR NEW TERM.

.

'

,r

l't1ARalllth (DAY ClASSES)
MARQt 15th (EVENING Q ASSES)

.'

aiOOSE ntE PROGRAM ntAT SUITS YOU BEST.

*SECRETARIAl:

* JR. ACCOUNTING
* GENERAL OFFICE
* EXEQJTIVE SECRETARIAL

'

MODULAR HOME "

••

BUY YOURS NOWI

'

'

eApproved For Veteran•
eSpecial Alternating Program for Shift Worlcen ': '
eOfferlng Auoclate Degree Program

CAll 446 4367 OR WRITE 36 LOCUsr sr.
State Reaisb1tion No. 75-02-04728

•""

••

178 465 .
Sparky 's Sunoc o tOok. six
points fr om
Bus_y Bea uty
Salon . Al ice ChaPman had
high game and se ri es 190 49 8
tor Sparky's Sunoco . For
B,usy B ea uty _ Sa l o n Opal
Casto had h ig h game and
sef"ies 189 d83 .
Somervi ll e R e al Est a t e
took six points fr om Th e
HOot Owls . Lelia Hagg y had
high game 159 a nd Jane
Bowles h ig h ser i es 4)9 t or
Somervi lle Rea l E s tate .
Belly Long stc th 14-1 40 7 tor
The Hoo t Owls .
Nation a l Min e Se rvi ce took
e ight poi nt s from Gcoryc 's
Gro cer y . Jenn ifar Harri s had
high game and series 173 -445
for Nat iona l Min e Ser\li te .
Mary Ann McCarly had
high game an d series 171 4 18
t or
George's
Grocery .
Vi r gi n ia G ro ver co nverted
the 5 10 sp li t . Vicki Adkins
f~' 'l' Ma ry /1 rln
"l hurp t on
\le rted th e '' 7 • • •

TO MEET WEDNESDAY
CHESHIRE - Southern
Valley Athletic Conference
coaches wlll meet at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at Kyger
Creek High Schon! new· here
w select the 1975-7R SVAC

eMARLIDE •WHITMAN
30 Years Financing Available
Also : Complete Line of Quality
Secliortal Homes &amp; Mobile Homes

&amp;'HAOt~~
MOBILE HOMES INC.

is 11-5 overall.
The tailer Pointers jwnped
out to a 13-6 first period lead,
and were stili on top 19-16
during the halftime intermission . South Point led
33-28 going into the final
period. ,
GAHS ou !scored the
Pointers 12-6 in the last canto.
South Point played Nelsonville-York for consolation

of the modern day season.

honors Saturday night.
Jim' Harris paced the
Winners with 11 points. Bruce
Hines added nine and Jeff
Lanham seven.
Ellery Queen and Jim
Davis each had 10 points for
the losers. Tim Adkins added
nine.
In the nightcap, Waverly
limited Nelsonville-York to
just six points in the second
half to post i Is semifinal
victory. Rick Frederick and
Greg Sturgill each had 11
points for Waverly . Jim ·
Robinson had eight. Greg
Pa It on seven and Rick
Penrod six for the Little
Buckeyes.
Waverly led 10-9 after one
period . It was 18-all at
halftime. WHS led 34-22 going
into the final period.
GAHS topped Wahama 6230 and South Point to reach
the finals. Waverly downed
Rock Hill 34-21 and Nelsonville-York.
The
Little
Buckeyes eliminated pretourney favorite Athens 46-38
in their openiRg game while
South Point ousted Meigs, 5329.
Box scores:

Beaver ·harves ted by
counties were as follows:
Athens 48; Coshocton 39;
Vinton 38 ; Guernsey 36;
Jackson 35; Washington 15;
Hocking 13; Perry 12;
Monroe 7;. Meigs 3; and
Belmont 2.
The three main reaso~s for
having a beaver trapping
season are: (l) to give ·
private landowners relief
from beaver damage; (2) to
prevent the annual incrernent
c Semifinal Gamel
of a high population area
SOUTH POINT 1391
from being lost to natural A dk ins 4-1-9; Coburn 1 -0 -2;
Da\l iS 5-0-10 ; Howard 2-1-5 ;
causes; and (3) to provide Queen
5-0-10 ; Ramsey 1-t -3.
recreation by a limited, TOTALS 18-3· 39 .
GALliPOLIS ('10 ) - Smith
regulated harvest.
3-0 -6 ; Lanham 2-l -7; Clarke 0· One of the problems beaver 0 -0 ;· Slerre.t t 0 -4-4; N . Thomas
1 1-3 ; Harris 5-1-11 ; Hines 4' 1·
cause is the flooding of land. 9.
TOTALS 15-10-40 .
Many landowners would
~ Score by quarten:
prefer to have the beaver South Point 13 6 14 6- 39
6 10 12 12- 40
around if they could control Gallipolis
the water level. There are
(Semifinal Game)
WAVERLY ("41) Mont .
two simple !Jeaver pond level gomery
_ 3-0-6 ; Maple 0-0-0;
control devices which most Bi"lC.Ier 0."1. 1: weeter 2-0-A:
5-1-1i; Claytor 1:0
landowners could construct 2F:rederick.
Hol land 2 ~ 0 - 4; Fleser · J-0-2:
from scrap lumbe r or Sturg i ll 4-3 - 11 ; Depue o.o .o.
materials already on hand. TOTALS- 18·5·41 •
NELS -"'( ,O RK
(24)
For additional information Connors
0-1-1; Holte\ 1.1) .2;
on this, contact the State Pa!fon J -1-7; Penrod 2·2-6 .Robinson 4-0- 8 . TOTALS -10-4Game Protector or write to 24
.
the Wildlife District Four
Score by quarters:
10 8 16&lt;?- 41
Office, 360 East State St., " Wa\lerly
Nels . York
· 9 9 -4 '2~ 2-4
Athens, Ohio 45701.

PULL-ON PECOS

NO LACES!
LARGE SELECTION
OF SIZES AND WIDTHS

Trv them (Jn .at

DAN THOMAS &amp; SON

'

324 Second Ave.

I

CARTER &amp; EVANS

HAS GOOD NIGHT - Paul Albanese (24 ) 6-0 senior
guard for the Rio Grande College Redmen tallied 17
points and was credited with eight assists in Frlday's 80-74
MOC Tournament win over visiting CedarVille. Albanese
canned five straight foul shots in the final minutes of play
to ice Rio's victory.
.

BJ .9

D}le Thatcher I Cl

~n Coomes ( Cl
Sai\leloncs(C)

I

57 .5
51 .5

710
148

24

Ron Stoner

160

ANAHEIM I UP!) - The
California Angels purchased
the contract . of ca tcher Ed
Herrmann from the New
York Yankees Friday for an
undisclosed amount of cash
after Herrmann asked the
Yankees io assign hiin to a
West Coast team so he could
he nearer his San Diego
home.
.Herrmann,
Z9,
has
averaged more than 10 home
rWls in his seven major
league seasons, topped by a
career high of 19 in 1970 when
he was with the Chicago
White Sox. He was primarily
a designated hitter and pinch
hitter last year while backing
up catcher Thurman Munson.

Tiger hurler
is sidelined
DETROIT I UP! ) - The
Detroit Tigers announced
Friday tha t left-handed
hitting outfield prospect Att
James has suffered a
ruptured Achilles tendon that
will require surgery.
James, 23, suffered lhe
injury Thursday working out
. with the Macomb Community
College baseball team when a
bat the players were using in
a mock relay race slipped
and banged him on the heel.
Dr . David Mitchell will
perform the surgery next
Tuesday, the Tigers said. He
·will be sidelined for an
indefini e period.

••

SCORING LEAUERS
G
FG

Coll ins
D~ve Wood I Cl

BEGINS

Angels purchase

f14)

mark , but never got any

closer.

ATHENS - A total of 674
beaver were harvested in the
curren t 1976 beaver trapping
season in Wildlife District
Four . This was the most
beaver
trapped
in
Southeastern Ohio's 13 years

Waders I " ' Coomes 2.1 5 .

A-.

* BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
, FINISHED THIRD
INZELL, WEST GERMANY I UPI) - Dan lmmer!all or Madison, Wfs.,
bronze medalist in the winter
Olympics· 500-meter sp~ed
skating competition, finished
third in both the 500 and·1,000meter event Saturday at an

outside shooting of Don Smith
and Kev Wait¢rs, cut Rio's
lead to six, 68-&lt;i2, with 4:10
left.
Free throws by Gil Price,
Paul Albanese, and Mark
Swain iced the victory for Rio
Grande in the final minutes of
play.
From the field, Rio shot a
blistering 55 percent, sinking
33 of 60 field goal attempts.
The Redmen were 14 of 24 at
the foul line. Rio picked off 41 .
rebo).lnds, 16 by Jinuny Noe.
Rio had 22 turnovers.
Cedarville hit 29 of 64 field
goal attempts for 45 percent.
The visitors were perfect at
the foul line, sinking 16 ouf of
16 . Cedarville had 44
rebounds, 12 by Steve Lones.
The losers had 16 turnovers.
Rio placed five men in
double figures . Jimmy Noe
had 21, Paul Albanese 17, Jim
Stewart 14, Bob Caldwell 12
and Gil Price 10.
Steve Lones, 6-7 sophomore
forward. scored 21 for
Cedarvil)e. Don Smith, 6-6
junior center added 14 while
Dave Wood , 6-7 sophomore
,for:ward tossed in 12.
Box score.:

MOC cage stats.

·~' \

AU five

Brian Boysel tallied 31
points for Urbana and
teanunates Ed Johnston and
BiU Dolby added 17 apiece in
the Blue Knights' Mid.Ohio
Conference Tournament win
over Tiffin.
A. J. Collins contributed 13
points for Urbl!na.
Jim Smith scored 21
markers, Keith Hunter 15,
John Florence 14 and Rich
Wheat 10 for the Dragons.
Tiffin held a 43-42 halftime
lead.
Friday's victory left Rio
Grande with a 14-13 season
record . The Yellow Jackets of
Coach Don Callan finished
their 1975-76 campaign with a
13-13 season reco~.
After a nip-and-tuck battle
the first eight minutes of
play, Rio opened up a five
point lead, 1!1-14, on a driving
layup by Jinuny Noe with
11 :36left in the first half and·
was never headed .
The Redmen led 43-31
during
the
halftime
intermission. Biggest Rio
lead was 16 points, 51-35 with
16 :30 remaining in the game.
The Yellow Jackets reeled
off 11 straight markers to
narrow the m8rgin to five
points (51-'ll!) a t lhe · 12:57

_

. POST-SEASON CHAMPS - Rio Grande's Clasa A team captured post«ason
tournament honors of the Gallipolis Rinky-Dink League Friday evening by turning back
regular season champion Clay, 28-26, In overtime. Rio finished 'with a IU seasoo record.
Front row, left to right are: Chipper Young, Steve Wolfe, Steve RWiyon and Steve
Thompson. Rear - Gary Adkins, coach; Kev Lucas, Sarah Evans and Tim Lanier. Not
pictured - Mark Shockley.

wallops

RIO GRANDE - Coach Art Lanham 's. Rio
. Grande College Redmen advanced to the NAJA
District 22 Playoffs following Friday night's 80-74
Mid-Ohio Conference post-season tournament
victory over visiting Cedarville.
The Redmen battled Urbana for the 1976 postseason MOC tournament title last night at Lyne
Center. Urbana upset regular-season champion
Tiffin 87-83 in an opening round game at Tiffin
Friday night .
·

The Jackets, behind the · Ced arv Ilie J 1.

"

Rutgers

GAL LIPOLIS - Coach
Norm
Persin "s
Galli a
Academy High School freshmen edged South Point 40-39
and Waverly trounced
Nelsonville-York 41-24 to gain
the finals of the second annual French City Freshman
tou rnament here Friday
evening.
The victory left GAHS with
a 12-4 season mark. Waverly

. ....
·.·:-

.,

invitation meet.

'

are : Gary (Gunner) Lane, coach; Kelly GalUan, Greg
Adkins, Matt VanSickle, Max Sterrett and Ed Moore,
coach. Rear - Ron Halley, coach; Tom Moore, Doug
Gilbert, Jamie Lane, Jeff Olevalier; and Mike Edelmann.
Not pictured - John Richie and Terry Reynolds.

Rio Grande upsets Clay for
A title; Rio B also winner
GALUPOL1S - • Rio
Grande captured both the
Class A and Class B post.
se ason Rinky-Dink
Tournament titles here
Friday evening with a pair of
upset triumphs over regular
season champion Clay and
!XH'hampion Green.
In the first tilt, Rio Grande,
down five points (23-18 )
midway in the final period,
rallied to knot the count at 24ali just before the final
whistle, then went on to stun
Clay 23-26 in a thrilling
overtime.
Charlie Boggess led
Clay'~ attack with 12 points.
Tim Lanier paced the postseason champs with 14,
including the winners two
buckets in the overtime
period.
Clay led 6-6 after one
period. Rio led 14-13 during
the halftime intermission .
Clay led 16-15 going into the
final period.
Clay finished the season
with a 15-2 record. Rio
Grande wound up with a I~
record.
In the Class B title game,
Rfo avenged two regular
season losses to the cochampion Green team with a
13-9 triumph for the postseason crown.
Jamie Lane and Mike
Edelmann each had four
points for Green. AI Smith
paced the winners with five
points.
Rio led 3-2, 6-2 and 11-3 at the
. quartermarks.
Green finished with a 14-3
season marl&lt;. Rio, following

GAHS, Waverly gain
•
finals zn tournament

BUILDING SUPPLIES
Olive Street

'

Gallipolis, 0.

'

�.·
2:1 - The Sunday Timt'S-Sentinol, Feb. 2'1, W7o ·

~~ ·

Zi ,~·'Tht·. SLUuh1~· Timt'$..,"'t'l1ti rwl,

Feb . :!'J, l!J7li

North Gallia ends loop
play with perfect mark

~?:
u
nter
proposal
presented
..,

. ~-~ '
: t~flw ;'!'ORK (UPI) - The

~eague

Players
, meeting for the
20ib
l"ill) tlle owners in
an ..·effortll tCome to a new
Btsic Agrl!elllent before the
·'

stBrt of spring training,
.x;.,sen~

a counter proposal
the Player Relations
Cqmmittee Saturday but
~
. 'Uther side would divulge the
c¥\lails of the plan.
-: Lee Macl'llail, president of
ll't American League, said
lhe players' proposal would
bii' discussed in -detail at a
~eting of the Player
Relations Committee in New
YOrk on Monday.
,\ .''There was a new
a))proach to the reserve
~tern ~nd other areas and
ll!1 will consider them witlJ
otii" full conunittee Monday,"
siid MacPhail. ·
~lrbe next meeting between
l!le two groups wiD be held in
·l'tllladelphia on Wednesday.
. .;Representing tlle Player
f!1,lations Committee at
Saturday's meeting, which
*held in the office of John
.r: Gaherin, chief negotiator
'} the 24 clubs. were
(o.,

MacPhail: Gahcrin : Louis
Ho ynes, counsel for the
National League and Barry
Rona, counsel to Gaherin.
The Players AsSQCiation was
represented by Marvin
Miller, executive director,
· and Richard Moss, his
assistant.
The biggest stumbling
block in tlle negotiations to
date has been the reserve
clause issue. Recent court
rulings have made the
current reserve rule unworkable and both sides are
trying to come up with a
modified version.
Tne owners, accused in the
past by Miller of not being
willing to bargain, made a
strong '!how of good faitlJ last
week when they presented a
plan that called for a restructuring of tlle reserve system .
Briefly, the plan works this
way:
After completing eight
years in tlle major leagues, a
player may elect to "p.lay
out" a one-year option penod.
At tlle conclusion of his option
year he goes into a selection
svstem under which clubs

select in the n.•,.·crsc orLit.! r uf

their standings.
A player may be selected
by up to eight clubs and is
then free to negotiate,
without any
finan cial
restriction , with these eight
clubs. If more than eight
clubs want him, preference
will be given to the eight with
the poorest records the
preceding .season.
Compensation in the form
of cash and a free agent
selection would then be paid
to clubs losing players. The
new team would pay cash
compensation of three times
the player's salary the
previous year (but not more
than $300,000), ~.ooo times
the new team's ranking in
attendance and. additional
payments if the player
ranked first in any of 14
accepted statistical
categories. The maximum
compensation could · be
~20,000 and the minimum
$54,500.

The former team also
would get certain draft
choices "from the new team .
Under the owners' proposal

no teH m cou ld sign a second
fr ee agent WJtil all others
have signed at least one. It
also could not sign a third
until all others sigoed at least
two and so forth.
Miller is not opposed to the
concept of tlle plan but has
disagreed with the numbers
involved.
"We can accept the idea
tllat a player must have a
certain number of years of
service before he can beC()me
eligible for free agency,"
says Miller. "We can accept
tlle idea of compensation by
his new team to his old team,
if it is carefully defined in
advance and takes into
account the service he has
already given his former
team. And we can accept that
a free agent be allowed to
negotiate with fewer than all
the teams, according to some
formula .
"We don 't feel that the
specific numbers offered on
these points-In years and
dollars-are anywhere near a
realistic proposal, but the
concepts themselves should
be pursued.''

Pockets nip Central Michigan
.

~

-~~OUNT

P.LiilASANT,
(UP!)- Larry Cole,a
!otmer htgll school s~ m
~ntiac, MlCh., hit a Jump
wt With :55 ]eft ffi OVertime
ijput Toledo ahead for g~od
~d help the . Rockets st~k
'if'tral Mtchtgan IJ8..!!7 m

.'IJ)lch.

Mid-American. Conference
action Saturday.
Ben Poquette, wh? fou!ed
out ln the extra penod, lled
tlJe SCore 7'Jr72 at th~. end Of
regulation play on a. lay-up
with :06 to play. HIS shot
capped a
remarkable

.

·
t~ANN ARBOR, MICH. Phil Hubbard, jWJior guard
qyPI ) - Freshmen ce.nter Rickey Green and sophomore
,~
subshtute Pave Baxter
~-.!combin. ed fo.r 56 points
Saturday and 11th-ranked
·
Michigan enhanced its NCAA
Tournament credentials with
a sound 92-61 thrashing of Big
Ten rival Purd)le.
The win entrenches the
Wolverines in second place
behind undefeated and lop·
ranked Indiana in the con.
ference. They have a threegame lead over the Boilermakers with four games
remaining and are hoping for
·anal-large entry. to the NCAA

iJrn;h down

Tournament.

·

Hubbard scored 22 points,
12 in the first half, as

(;rr:ailir1g 56;52, Paterno hit
consecutive baskets to
the Irish a lead they
surrendered, although
Carolina managed to
score once again at 608!1t P.aterno led Notre Dame
23 points with Williams
16, all but one coming
ten minutes. Dave
chipped in 20 for the
a 6-5 junior,
up
17 points but
only one Of five floor shots
a pair of free throws for a
of four points in the first
South Carolina led at
·•lfliiirie

SCORE CORRECTED
ROCK SPRINGS - In the
gymnastics meet between
Meigs and Belpre the score
was Belpre 61.7 and · Meigs
55.05. The scores reported
earlier were in error.

Reds sign three
players Saturday
CINCINNATI (UP!)- The
Cincinnati Reds Saturday
signed three players to 1976
contracts, bringing to 13 the
number of Reds under terms
for tlle coming season.
Signing Saturday were
, Terry Crowley, the leading
pinch hitter on 'the team last
year with 13 hits; and right
handed pitchers Pat Zachary
and Tom Carroll.
Crowley batted .268 with
the Reds in 68 games last

year.
Zachary is one of the
leading candidates to move
up from the Reds' farm club
at Indianapolis . in the
American Association. He
was ·10-7 for the farm team
last year and led the league
with a 2.44 ERA.
Carroll was 6-6 at
Indianapolis last year and 4-1
with the Reds during a period
when Don Gullett was
Injured.

Saturday's
college
results

•

GUIDING HAND CAGE TEAM - Coach Dave
Ratliff's Guiding Hand cagers began their season with
new uniforms provided by. the Gallia·Meigs Fraternal

...

OU drubs Ball State quintet
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) Ohio University, paced by
Scott Love witlJ 22 points,
jumped to an early lead and

PATRIOT - Visiting North
Gallia completed its loop
season unbeaten here Friday
night with a 71-51 triwnph
over Southwestern.
Coach Jim
Foster's
Pirates, winners of the SVAC
championship, ·finished
league play at 12-ll. The
Pirates were 16-2 overall.
NG's only losses were to nonleague opponents, Eastern of
Pike County and Miller.
Friday night, the Pirates
jumped into a I~ first period
lead and were never headed .
Pacing NG as usual were

Order of Police. The team is 2-0. Members are, left to
right, Kenny Shaver, Paul Winston, Dale Tucker, Gene
Shaver, Maurice Smith, Bill Rice and Donnie Saxon.

was never threatened
Saturday in posting a 9()..63
Mid·American Conference
victory over Ball State.
OU, 10-12 overall and !HI in
the MAC, led .all tlle w;&gt;y after
breaking a 2-2 tie. The
Bobcats jumped to a I~ lead
and scored the final 10 points
of the first half for a 47-23
margln at intermission.

Ball State, which fell to lOll overall and 4-8 in the

conference, was unable to cut
into the lead in the final 20
minutes.
The Cardinals were paced
in scoring by .freshman
Randy Bearden's 17 points
and 14 by Jim Fields.
SteveSkaggs had 14 points,
Dave Terek 12 and Bucky
Walden 11 for Ohio, which hit
24 or 26 from the free throw
line. The Bobcats were
second in the nation in free

throw percentage going into
the game.

•~ .

TALLEYNAMEDCOACH
CHARLESTON, S.C.. ( UPI)oo'
- The .Citadel announced
Saturday Thad Talley, an
assistant at tlle University of
Kansas, will become the ,
Bulldogs' head tr.ack and.:;
cross-country coach.
He will take over the job ..::
effective March I.
'1 0

Miami drubs Kent State
K

OXFORD, Ohio (UPI ) Archie Aldridge, Chuck
Goodyear
and
John
Shoemaker combined for 47
points . Saturday to lead
Miami to a 77-54 Mid-

kept ihe . Redskins in
contention for tlle league title
wjth Western Michigan which
has also suffered one defeat.
Miami spotted Kent State a
!HI lead then roared back for
'American Corlrerence win a 36-24 halftime· lead. The
over Kent State.
· Red skins scored the first five
The win was Miami 's lith points in the second half and
in 12 conferenl-e games and with 10 :35 left , Miami

starters were benched in ·»
favor or reserves.
·'
Aldridge had 20 points, ~;
Goodyear 17 and Shoemaker "'
10 as the Redskins won tlielr •· n•
15th game in 22 outings.
:.
Jim Collins led Kent State ':":
with 24 points .
•'"
The Flashes are !HI in the • ,
MAC and 11-11 overall.
'""'
"'
•A&gt;

' '"

United Press International

Dark wood ·
..
Grain
' .!
Plank
Ceiling

Rutgers 9.4 American U. 79
St. Peter's 73 Army 70
Manhattan Bl Navy 63

"I Ill
Iii.

Miami 77 Kent St. 54

'

Michigan 92 Purdue 81
Texas A&amp;M 70 Arkan,sas 69

Notre Dame 90 So. Carolina
63

1Ji t I

Toledo 88 C. Michigan 87 (of)
Georgetown (D .C.) 70 Boston

· Coil.

.J ilt

I

comeback by the Chippewas, . the left corner to make the Ed Beard named
who trail.ed by as many as 17 score 64-83.
.
points early in tlle second
Cole finished witlJ 23 points.
half.
Teammmate Mike Larsen, 49er assistant
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) The lead Changed . seven who starred in high school in
Ed
Beard, who spent his
times in the first two minutes Ludington, Mich., added 21
entire
playing career with
of overtime before Cole point,l9oftheminthesecond
San
Francisco,
Friday was
connected on a jumper from
half.
.
named the sixth 49er
Poquette netted 23 for the assistant coach for 1976.
Beard played eight seasons
as a linebacker after being
drafted out of tlle University
The win raised Toledo's of Tennessee before retiring
Michigan took a 43-34 hall- record to 9-3 in MAC play and
· time lead. Green scored 20 13.7 overall. One of the wins in 1972. He is tlle only
and Baxter came off the wasoverpreviouslyunbeaten assistant coach under Dick
Nolan named by new lfead
bench to hit a career·high 16. Western Michigan last Satur- Coach Monte Clark and will
Sophomores Walter Jor- day.
dan, a forward, and )'ugene
Central fell to 5-7 in the work with tlle linebackers.
Clark still has to . pick
Parker, a guard, scored ·23 conference and 9·13 overall.
offensive
backfield and
points apiece but the
teams
coaches to
.
special
Boilermakers still dropped to
complete
an
eight-man
staff.
13-10 overail and 6-6 in the big
•
Clark
replaced
Nolan
in
ten. The Wolverines are IB-5
January.
this season, including an 11-3
league mark.

i ,.~'.1ichigan bombs Purd u~~;t~;~ 19L:~g~nny ':a~~~
jl·

•

as low as

64

•

Kansas St. 69 Kansas 54

...
~·;J

Waynesburg 76 Alliance 69

DePaul 70 Cincinnati 60
Northwestern 90 Wisconsin 70
Wayne St. 75 Ashland (Ohio)

tit t

for a 10'xl6' room

"''

74
Colorado St. 61 Wyoming 57
Kansas St. 69 Kansas 54
Northwestern 90 WisConsin 77
Ohio University 90 Ball State

'',.,'"''

63

In 1601, the U.S. House of
Representatives named
Thomas Jefferson as the
third president of the United
States. Aaron Burr, who tied
with Jefferson in the
Electoral College, became
vice president.

All -State candidate Greg
James and junior forward
Fred Logan. Each dumped in
24 points and collected 14
rebounds apiece. Robert Neal
was the only other Pirate in
double figures with 11 points,
Don Bush, junior guard, led
SOuth,.cstcrn witlJ 16 points.
Doug Miller canned 11. The
Highlanders
of Coach
Richard Hamilton lost the
services of their leading
rebounder, Kei th Grate,
early. Grate wa s on the bench
most of the contest with four

personals.
Shooting.wise. North Gallia

sank 30 of 77 shots for 36 pet.
from the floor and II of 22 at
the foul line. Southwestern hit
19 of 69 for '!/pel. and 13 of 29
at the charity stripe.
The loss left Southwestern
with a 5-13 record going into
the Class A Sectional Tournament at Meigs High School .
North Gallia, top seeded in
the tournament, will battle
Eastern Friday night in the
opening game. Southwestern
will play the winner of that
contest.
In the reserve tilt, the Little
Bucs of Coach Mike Mulford
scored a come-from-behind, -

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a

Wildcat victory.
. Box score:
Wahama (S'I - Smith 3 ·612 ; H o tbi'ook tt . J.9 ; J . Tucker
4 -0·'8 : Dav is 2 0·4; R . Tucker
2·0·4 ;. T . Tucker 2-0·4; Golds berry 1-2·&gt;1: Lambert 2·0 -4 ;
· Say re 0-J-3; Niswander J.Q.2 ;

Riggs 0-2·2. Totals H -14-56 .
Hannan Trace (82) Shatter J()'. 1-21 ; Halley 7-3 17 ;
McGu ire 4 2- 10 ; Whilt 4· 1·9 ;

Mooney 2.4 8 : Petrie 3 o 6;
Gibson 2·2·6 ; Woodvard Q.J . J :
Rankin 1-0 1. Totals 33-16 -82 . ·

Reserves -

10 15 19 12- 56
16 17 24 25 ~ 82

39. Wahama 31

Hannan Trace

EXTRA CARPET, STORM WINDOWS

"Fill DILIVIRY"

..- Big Blacks rip .Devils
l

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.·-. ..

"'

PT. PLEASANT - Pt.
~leasant's
Big .Blacks,
cUcklng on all cylinders and
llterally running the devil out
of ihelr opposition, delivered
on~ of their best overall
perfonnances of the season
u they raced to a 79-57
victory
over
visiting
Ra,venswood Friday night.
'lbe Red Devils of Coach
Jack Wllieman were simply
. ou\ of the contest after the
early minutes of the first
cpWrter II the Big Blacks p~t
on ·a super show lhllt left the
Ja~kson Countlans shaking

~

their heads in disbelief.
The most obvious factors in
the Big Blacks' run-away
win, which avenged an
earlier 66·64 loss to
Rave.nswood, were the
balanced scoring attack and
the rugged rebounding effort
of the hosts.
Four PPHS starters ended
up . the outing in double
figures despite the fact aU of
them were out of the line-up
for scveml minutes.
Pacin~ the Pt. Pleasant
performance was Captain
Andy Wilson, 8-1 senior

1·0·2:

Walker

o.J.J;

Jeffers 0 -1-1 and McNeal 0·1
1. Totals 19-13-51.
By Quarters:
.
North Gallia 13 14 21 23 - 71
Sou thwestern 6 10 12 23 - 51
Reserves - North Gallia 44

Southwestern 43 .

W L

P

OP

17

0 1171

880

15
10

2 959
6 1004
7 1007

820
979
927

ll
11
11

9

7
7
9
10
10
11
12

983 992
1116 1061

1058 1027

Logan
8
1071 lt45
South Point
B
1108 1126
Athens
7
883 953
Jackson
6
1011 1023
Wellston
4 13 900 1036
Non-S EOAL Results:
Pt . Plea~ant 79 Ravenswood ·

57

Wheelersburg 62 ..East 50

...:....--

SEOAL VARSITY
(Final)

TEAM
W L P OP
Ironton
12 2 778 659
Gallipolis
10 4 801 711
Waverly
9 5 737 743
Athens
7 7 679 711
Meigs
6 8 839 846
Logan
6 8 843 823
Jackson
4 10 768 811
Wellston
2 12 721 862
TOTALS
56 . 56.61" . 6166
Frida'I''S reSult :
Logan 77 ,Athens 61

''LUAUN .PANELING''

SEOAL RESERVES
c Fin au
TEAM
W L P OP
lronlon •
12 ,l:). 6~5 44 2
Waverly
11 3 620 509
Athens
10 4 623 499
Logan
9 5 593 544
Meigs
4 10 518 604
Jackson
4 10 534 663
Wellston
3 11 550 122
Gallipolis
3 11 507 647
TOTALS
56 4630 4630

.

Guard, who zipped 21 points
throUgh the nets. Wilson, who
brought Big Blacks' fans to
their feet on at least two
occalllons with his doubleclutching lay-up drives, hit on
nine of IS field goal attempts
and sank three of five foul
shots .
Also hitting in twin figures
for tlJe hosts were Seniors
Jim Tatterson, Larry Hess
and Bret McConnlck with 15,
12and 11 points, respectively.
· Pt.
Pleasant
and
Ravenswood now own
ifh•n'if'a1 11 -7

~dalf·~ .

.

~

'

s•

Fr ida'l' '' result:

Logan 50 Athens 42
SEOAL FRESHMEN

SEE ·ouR SELECTION OF PANELING

(Finan

Team
Logan

Athens
Gallipolis
Waverly

Me igs
Jackson
Wellston
TOTALS

W L

P

OP

2
"10 ' 2
9 3

602

374

5
8

10

7
3

516

400

.i78

396

401

392

338 460
2 9 350 470
0 12 329 522
41 41 3014 3014

..
Tommy Davis is
·now a Yankee

ARMSTRONG CARPET

By Quarters.:
Wahama
HT

DIVING IN ~ Point Pleasant Big Blacks Captain Andy Wilson, who !eel all scorers with 21
points in Friday night's rout of visiting Ravenswood, dives to get,the ball away from a Red
Devil eager during an in-bounds play .
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Southwestern {Sll -

Ironton
Portsmouth
Gallipolis

... s IQw as

41·.· ,~r

North Gallia (71) - Logan
James 9-6· 24 ; Neal S·
1-11 ; Runyon '2 -0·4 ; S Minnis
2-0· 4; Theiss 2·0-4. Totals 3011 · 71.

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''

10 - 4 · 2~ ;

TEAM
Wheelersburg

for 55 percent and Wahama 14
for 46 .percent. The White
Falcons
m~naged
to
outrebound
the
White
Falcons 40 lo 39 with Marty
Holbrook, Terry Tucker and
Bob Nicewander grabbing 9,
6 and 6 caroms respectively.
Duke Smith was the only
Falcon to score in double
figures. The 5'10" junior
backcourt acre connected on
three of six from the floor and
added six of 10 charity tossed
for a total of 12 points.
Holbrook and Terry Tucker
followed Smith in storing
with 9 and 6 poin Is respectively.
·
In the preliminary contest
the Little 'Cats also gained
revenge over 'coach Homer
Preece's Uttle Falcons by
claiming a low scoring 39-31
affair. The story of the game
was at the free throw line
where Hannan Tra(!e at·
tempted more than four
times the amoWJt allotted
Wahama resulting in

the winners with II points.
Gene Layton topped the
Highlanders with 12 points.
Mark Banks added 10.
Box score :

I Cage standings

Wildcats defeat
Falcons, 82-56
BY GARY CLARK
The Falcons opened the
MERCERVILLE - The second half with six unan ~
Hannan Trace Wildcats swered points to pull to within
scored 49 points during the two at 31-33 behind 'three
second half of action Friday consecutive assists by Terry
night to defeat visiting Tucker but that was as close
Wahama by an 62-56 margin as · the White Falcons could
and avenge an earlier season get as Hannan Trace scored
setback .
the next 12 points to shut off
The loss was the seventh in the . Falcon rally .
a row for the White Falcons
The Wildcats outdistanced
as· their season record dipped the Mason Coun tians t5-l to
to a gloomy 3-16 with just one open final eight minutes to
game remaining before take a commanding 72-46
sectional tournament play lead.
begins.
Coach
Dan
Cor nell 's
. WHS ·has a return · match Wildcats were led by the
with triple-A power Point . shoo ting of seniors David
Pleasant on the bend area Shaffer and Kent Halley and
schools home cour t Friday sophomore Randy McGuire.
night.
Shaffer led the attack with 21 .
Wahama 's Terry Tucker points. Hailey added 17 and
scored the first goal of the McGuire dumped in 10. The
evening for the White Falcons victory snapped a three game
at the 6:20 mark in the initial losing streak for the Wildperiod knotting the score at 2- cats.
2. Hannan Trace then went on
Hannan Trace, third place
to outscore WHS 14-8 dl!fing finisher in the SVAC, comlhe remainder of quarter to pleted its 1976 season with
post a 16-10 lead at the fir st an 11-7 mark .
·
~n .
.
The Wildcats will play
Wahama fared somewhat Southern Saturday night iri
better in th~ second stanza lhe second round of the Class
behind the efforts of juniors A Sectional Tournament · at
Duke Smith and Tim Davis Meigs High School. The
who provided some scoring winner of that contest meets
punch to keep the White Kyger Creek March 3.
Falcons within striking
Shooting statistics like the
distance but an injury to game went to Hannpn Trac~ .
Davis with :30 to play in the The Wildcats shot a warm 46
half forced him to e&lt;it the percent (33 for 71 ) from the
game with a cut that required field while Wahama was
six stitches. Hannan Trace hitting a chilly 33 percent (21
scored the final bucket of the for 63). Both tea ms shot a
half to take a 33-25 ad· total of 29 free throws with
vantage.
Hannan Trace converting 16

44-43 victory. Doug Sisson led

NEW YORK (UP!) Veteran slugger Tommy
Davis wu signed. Friday by
the New York Yankees, in an
effQrt to bolster their righthanded hitting, who then sold
reserve
catcher
Ed
Herrmann to the California
Angels.
· Davis, who will be 36 next
month, was cut loose recently
b&gt;J the Baltimore Orioles
after serving as their
designated hitter for three
seasons •
In selling Herrmann the
Yankees granted the stocky
catcher a request he had
submitted Qf the club at the
end of last season. A native of
San Dlet~o, Callf., he had
uked the Yankees to trade or
sell him to a West Coast club.

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RAVENSWOOD (51! -

Knight. 6 o 1'2 ; Stefanov, 2·2
6 ; Skeens, 1·1·3 : Shumaker , J .
0. 2; Yambrick. 2·0 ·4; Holley,
72 ' 16;
Taylor .
5414 .
TOTALS 24·9· 57.
PT . PLEASANT (79) Hess , S. 2-12 : Tatterson 71 -15 ;
Nibert . 3 o 6; Wilson. 9·3·21 ;
M cCo rmick ,
4 · 3 11 ;
Brownin9 . 2 3 7 ; McDermitt,
0 2 2:
Vaughan.
o.o 0 :
Holland . 0 I l ; Parler . 10 2 .
Rardin , 102 . Fri ar , 00 0.
TOTALS J2.JS-79.
Score by quarten:
Ra \lens wood
t1 15 . 14 ~0 .~1
Pt . Pleasanl 1.5 23 20 :n 79
Reserves -~ Poin l 6? RHS

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TIIISTLEDOWNS
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
(UP!)- Marjon Blue edged
Ruthye Rullar by a nose
Friday to win the featured
ninth race at Thistledown
with a docking of 1:03 3-5 for
. five furlongs over a heavy
·track.
The winner, ridden by Pete
Velasquez, paid $6.60, $4.20
and $3.20. Marge Knight was
third.
·
The tenth race Trlfects of
No Contest (5), Mytato (8)
and Moon Walker (7) was
worth $156.60 and the 9-1 dally
double combination of
Loaded Up and Tom Sceptre
returned $131.60.

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I)

'

�.·
2:1 - The Sunday Timt'S-Sentinol, Feb. 2'1, W7o ·

~~ ·

Zi ,~·'Tht·. SLUuh1~· Timt'$..,"'t'l1ti rwl,

Feb . :!'J, l!J7li

North Gallia ends loop
play with perfect mark

~?:
u
nter
proposal
presented
..,

. ~-~ '
: t~flw ;'!'ORK (UPI) - The

~eague

Players
, meeting for the
20ib
l"ill) tlle owners in
an ..·effortll tCome to a new
Btsic Agrl!elllent before the
·'

stBrt of spring training,
.x;.,sen~

a counter proposal
the Player Relations
Cqmmittee Saturday but
~
. 'Uther side would divulge the
c¥\lails of the plan.
-: Lee Macl'llail, president of
ll't American League, said
lhe players' proposal would
bii' discussed in -detail at a
~eting of the Player
Relations Committee in New
YOrk on Monday.
,\ .''There was a new
a))proach to the reserve
~tern ~nd other areas and
ll!1 will consider them witlJ
otii" full conunittee Monday,"
siid MacPhail. ·
~lrbe next meeting between
l!le two groups wiD be held in
·l'tllladelphia on Wednesday.
. .;Representing tlle Player
f!1,lations Committee at
Saturday's meeting, which
*held in the office of John
.r: Gaherin, chief negotiator
'} the 24 clubs. were
(o.,

MacPhail: Gahcrin : Louis
Ho ynes, counsel for the
National League and Barry
Rona, counsel to Gaherin.
The Players AsSQCiation was
represented by Marvin
Miller, executive director,
· and Richard Moss, his
assistant.
The biggest stumbling
block in tlle negotiations to
date has been the reserve
clause issue. Recent court
rulings have made the
current reserve rule unworkable and both sides are
trying to come up with a
modified version.
Tne owners, accused in the
past by Miller of not being
willing to bargain, made a
strong '!how of good faitlJ last
week when they presented a
plan that called for a restructuring of tlle reserve system .
Briefly, the plan works this
way:
After completing eight
years in tlle major leagues, a
player may elect to "p.lay
out" a one-year option penod.
At tlle conclusion of his option
year he goes into a selection
svstem under which clubs

select in the n.•,.·crsc orLit.! r uf

their standings.
A player may be selected
by up to eight clubs and is
then free to negotiate,
without any
finan cial
restriction , with these eight
clubs. If more than eight
clubs want him, preference
will be given to the eight with
the poorest records the
preceding .season.
Compensation in the form
of cash and a free agent
selection would then be paid
to clubs losing players. The
new team would pay cash
compensation of three times
the player's salary the
previous year (but not more
than $300,000), ~.ooo times
the new team's ranking in
attendance and. additional
payments if the player
ranked first in any of 14
accepted statistical
categories. The maximum
compensation could · be
~20,000 and the minimum
$54,500.

The former team also
would get certain draft
choices "from the new team .
Under the owners' proposal

no teH m cou ld sign a second
fr ee agent WJtil all others
have signed at least one. It
also could not sign a third
until all others sigoed at least
two and so forth.
Miller is not opposed to the
concept of tlle plan but has
disagreed with the numbers
involved.
"We can accept the idea
tllat a player must have a
certain number of years of
service before he can beC()me
eligible for free agency,"
says Miller. "We can accept
tlle idea of compensation by
his new team to his old team,
if it is carefully defined in
advance and takes into
account the service he has
already given his former
team. And we can accept that
a free agent be allowed to
negotiate with fewer than all
the teams, according to some
formula .
"We don 't feel that the
specific numbers offered on
these points-In years and
dollars-are anywhere near a
realistic proposal, but the
concepts themselves should
be pursued.''

Pockets nip Central Michigan
.

~

-~~OUNT

P.LiilASANT,
(UP!)- Larry Cole,a
!otmer htgll school s~ m
~ntiac, MlCh., hit a Jump
wt With :55 ]eft ffi OVertime
ijput Toledo ahead for g~od
~d help the . Rockets st~k
'if'tral Mtchtgan IJ8..!!7 m

.'IJ)lch.

Mid-American. Conference
action Saturday.
Ben Poquette, wh? fou!ed
out ln the extra penod, lled
tlJe SCore 7'Jr72 at th~. end Of
regulation play on a. lay-up
with :06 to play. HIS shot
capped a
remarkable

.

·
t~ANN ARBOR, MICH. Phil Hubbard, jWJior guard
qyPI ) - Freshmen ce.nter Rickey Green and sophomore
,~
subshtute Pave Baxter
~-.!combin. ed fo.r 56 points
Saturday and 11th-ranked
·
Michigan enhanced its NCAA
Tournament credentials with
a sound 92-61 thrashing of Big
Ten rival Purd)le.
The win entrenches the
Wolverines in second place
behind undefeated and lop·
ranked Indiana in the con.
ference. They have a threegame lead over the Boilermakers with four games
remaining and are hoping for
·anal-large entry. to the NCAA

iJrn;h down

Tournament.

·

Hubbard scored 22 points,
12 in the first half, as

(;rr:ailir1g 56;52, Paterno hit
consecutive baskets to
the Irish a lead they
surrendered, although
Carolina managed to
score once again at 608!1t P.aterno led Notre Dame
23 points with Williams
16, all but one coming
ten minutes. Dave
chipped in 20 for the
a 6-5 junior,
up
17 points but
only one Of five floor shots
a pair of free throws for a
of four points in the first
South Carolina led at
·•lfliiirie

SCORE CORRECTED
ROCK SPRINGS - In the
gymnastics meet between
Meigs and Belpre the score
was Belpre 61.7 and · Meigs
55.05. The scores reported
earlier were in error.

Reds sign three
players Saturday
CINCINNATI (UP!)- The
Cincinnati Reds Saturday
signed three players to 1976
contracts, bringing to 13 the
number of Reds under terms
for tlle coming season.
Signing Saturday were
, Terry Crowley, the leading
pinch hitter on 'the team last
year with 13 hits; and right
handed pitchers Pat Zachary
and Tom Carroll.
Crowley batted .268 with
the Reds in 68 games last

year.
Zachary is one of the
leading candidates to move
up from the Reds' farm club
at Indianapolis . in the
American Association. He
was ·10-7 for the farm team
last year and led the league
with a 2.44 ERA.
Carroll was 6-6 at
Indianapolis last year and 4-1
with the Reds during a period
when Don Gullett was
Injured.

Saturday's
college
results

•

GUIDING HAND CAGE TEAM - Coach Dave
Ratliff's Guiding Hand cagers began their season with
new uniforms provided by. the Gallia·Meigs Fraternal

...

OU drubs Ball State quintet
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) Ohio University, paced by
Scott Love witlJ 22 points,
jumped to an early lead and

PATRIOT - Visiting North
Gallia completed its loop
season unbeaten here Friday
night with a 71-51 triwnph
over Southwestern.
Coach Jim
Foster's
Pirates, winners of the SVAC
championship, ·finished
league play at 12-ll. The
Pirates were 16-2 overall.
NG's only losses were to nonleague opponents, Eastern of
Pike County and Miller.
Friday night, the Pirates
jumped into a I~ first period
lead and were never headed .
Pacing NG as usual were

Order of Police. The team is 2-0. Members are, left to
right, Kenny Shaver, Paul Winston, Dale Tucker, Gene
Shaver, Maurice Smith, Bill Rice and Donnie Saxon.

was never threatened
Saturday in posting a 9()..63
Mid·American Conference
victory over Ball State.
OU, 10-12 overall and !HI in
the MAC, led .all tlle w;&gt;y after
breaking a 2-2 tie. The
Bobcats jumped to a I~ lead
and scored the final 10 points
of the first half for a 47-23
margln at intermission.

Ball State, which fell to lOll overall and 4-8 in the

conference, was unable to cut
into the lead in the final 20
minutes.
The Cardinals were paced
in scoring by .freshman
Randy Bearden's 17 points
and 14 by Jim Fields.
SteveSkaggs had 14 points,
Dave Terek 12 and Bucky
Walden 11 for Ohio, which hit
24 or 26 from the free throw
line. The Bobcats were
second in the nation in free

throw percentage going into
the game.

•~ .

TALLEYNAMEDCOACH
CHARLESTON, S.C.. ( UPI)oo'
- The .Citadel announced
Saturday Thad Talley, an
assistant at tlle University of
Kansas, will become the ,
Bulldogs' head tr.ack and.:;
cross-country coach.
He will take over the job ..::
effective March I.
'1 0

Miami drubs Kent State
K

OXFORD, Ohio (UPI ) Archie Aldridge, Chuck
Goodyear
and
John
Shoemaker combined for 47
points . Saturday to lead
Miami to a 77-54 Mid-

kept ihe . Redskins in
contention for tlle league title
wjth Western Michigan which
has also suffered one defeat.
Miami spotted Kent State a
!HI lead then roared back for
'American Corlrerence win a 36-24 halftime· lead. The
over Kent State.
· Red skins scored the first five
The win was Miami 's lith points in the second half and
in 12 conferenl-e games and with 10 :35 left , Miami

starters were benched in ·»
favor or reserves.
·'
Aldridge had 20 points, ~;
Goodyear 17 and Shoemaker "'
10 as the Redskins won tlielr •· n•
15th game in 22 outings.
:.
Jim Collins led Kent State ':":
with 24 points .
•'"
The Flashes are !HI in the • ,
MAC and 11-11 overall.
'""'
"'
•A&gt;

' '"

United Press International

Dark wood ·
..
Grain
' .!
Plank
Ceiling

Rutgers 9.4 American U. 79
St. Peter's 73 Army 70
Manhattan Bl Navy 63

"I Ill
Iii.

Miami 77 Kent St. 54

'

Michigan 92 Purdue 81
Texas A&amp;M 70 Arkan,sas 69

Notre Dame 90 So. Carolina
63

1Ji t I

Toledo 88 C. Michigan 87 (of)
Georgetown (D .C.) 70 Boston

· Coil.

.J ilt

I

comeback by the Chippewas, . the left corner to make the Ed Beard named
who trail.ed by as many as 17 score 64-83.
.
points early in tlle second
Cole finished witlJ 23 points.
half.
Teammmate Mike Larsen, 49er assistant
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) The lead Changed . seven who starred in high school in
Ed
Beard, who spent his
times in the first two minutes Ludington, Mich., added 21
entire
playing career with
of overtime before Cole point,l9oftheminthesecond
San
Francisco,
Friday was
connected on a jumper from
half.
.
named the sixth 49er
Poquette netted 23 for the assistant coach for 1976.
Beard played eight seasons
as a linebacker after being
drafted out of tlle University
The win raised Toledo's of Tennessee before retiring
Michigan took a 43-34 hall- record to 9-3 in MAC play and
· time lead. Green scored 20 13.7 overall. One of the wins in 1972. He is tlle only
and Baxter came off the wasoverpreviouslyunbeaten assistant coach under Dick
Nolan named by new lfead
bench to hit a career·high 16. Western Michigan last Satur- Coach Monte Clark and will
Sophomores Walter Jor- day.
dan, a forward, and )'ugene
Central fell to 5-7 in the work with tlle linebackers.
Clark still has to . pick
Parker, a guard, scored ·23 conference and 9·13 overall.
offensive
backfield and
points apiece but the
teams
coaches to
.
special
Boilermakers still dropped to
complete
an
eight-man
staff.
13-10 overail and 6-6 in the big
•
Clark
replaced
Nolan
in
ten. The Wolverines are IB-5
January.
this season, including an 11-3
league mark.

i ,.~'.1ichigan bombs Purd u~~;t~;~ 19L:~g~nny ':a~~~
jl·

•

as low as

64

•

Kansas St. 69 Kansas 54

...
~·;J

Waynesburg 76 Alliance 69

DePaul 70 Cincinnati 60
Northwestern 90 Wisconsin 70
Wayne St. 75 Ashland (Ohio)

tit t

for a 10'xl6' room

"''

74
Colorado St. 61 Wyoming 57
Kansas St. 69 Kansas 54
Northwestern 90 WisConsin 77
Ohio University 90 Ball State

'',.,'"''

63

In 1601, the U.S. House of
Representatives named
Thomas Jefferson as the
third president of the United
States. Aaron Burr, who tied
with Jefferson in the
Electoral College, became
vice president.

All -State candidate Greg
James and junior forward
Fred Logan. Each dumped in
24 points and collected 14
rebounds apiece. Robert Neal
was the only other Pirate in
double figures with 11 points,
Don Bush, junior guard, led
SOuth,.cstcrn witlJ 16 points.
Doug Miller canned 11. The
Highlanders
of Coach
Richard Hamilton lost the
services of their leading
rebounder, Kei th Grate,
early. Grate wa s on the bench
most of the contest with four

personals.
Shooting.wise. North Gallia

sank 30 of 77 shots for 36 pet.
from the floor and II of 22 at
the foul line. Southwestern hit
19 of 69 for '!/pel. and 13 of 29
at the charity stripe.
The loss left Southwestern
with a 5-13 record going into
the Class A Sectional Tournament at Meigs High School .
North Gallia, top seeded in
the tournament, will battle
Eastern Friday night in the
opening game. Southwestern
will play the winner of that
contest.
In the reserve tilt, the Little
Bucs of Coach Mike Mulford
scored a come-from-behind, -

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a

Wildcat victory.
. Box score:
Wahama (S'I - Smith 3 ·612 ; H o tbi'ook tt . J.9 ; J . Tucker
4 -0·'8 : Dav is 2 0·4; R . Tucker
2·0·4 ;. T . Tucker 2-0·4; Golds berry 1-2·&gt;1: Lambert 2·0 -4 ;
· Say re 0-J-3; Niswander J.Q.2 ;

Riggs 0-2·2. Totals H -14-56 .
Hannan Trace (82) Shatter J()'. 1-21 ; Halley 7-3 17 ;
McGu ire 4 2- 10 ; Whilt 4· 1·9 ;

Mooney 2.4 8 : Petrie 3 o 6;
Gibson 2·2·6 ; Woodvard Q.J . J :
Rankin 1-0 1. Totals 33-16 -82 . ·

Reserves -

10 15 19 12- 56
16 17 24 25 ~ 82

39. Wahama 31

Hannan Trace

EXTRA CARPET, STORM WINDOWS

"Fill DILIVIRY"

..- Big Blacks rip .Devils
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I .

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"'

PT. PLEASANT - Pt.
~leasant's
Big .Blacks,
cUcklng on all cylinders and
llterally running the devil out
of ihelr opposition, delivered
on~ of their best overall
perfonnances of the season
u they raced to a 79-57
victory
over
visiting
Ra,venswood Friday night.
'lbe Red Devils of Coach
Jack Wllieman were simply
. ou\ of the contest after the
early minutes of the first
cpWrter II the Big Blacks p~t
on ·a super show lhllt left the
Ja~kson Countlans shaking

~

their heads in disbelief.
The most obvious factors in
the Big Blacks' run-away
win, which avenged an
earlier 66·64 loss to
Rave.nswood, were the
balanced scoring attack and
the rugged rebounding effort
of the hosts.
Four PPHS starters ended
up . the outing in double
figures despite the fact aU of
them were out of the line-up
for scveml minutes.
Pacin~ the Pt. Pleasant
performance was Captain
Andy Wilson, 8-1 senior

1·0·2:

Walker

o.J.J;

Jeffers 0 -1-1 and McNeal 0·1
1. Totals 19-13-51.
By Quarters:
.
North Gallia 13 14 21 23 - 71
Sou thwestern 6 10 12 23 - 51
Reserves - North Gallia 44

Southwestern 43 .

W L

P

OP

17

0 1171

880

15
10

2 959
6 1004
7 1007

820
979
927

ll
11
11

9

7
7
9
10
10
11
12

983 992
1116 1061

1058 1027

Logan
8
1071 lt45
South Point
B
1108 1126
Athens
7
883 953
Jackson
6
1011 1023
Wellston
4 13 900 1036
Non-S EOAL Results:
Pt . Plea~ant 79 Ravenswood ·

57

Wheelersburg 62 ..East 50

...:....--

SEOAL VARSITY
(Final)

TEAM
W L P OP
Ironton
12 2 778 659
Gallipolis
10 4 801 711
Waverly
9 5 737 743
Athens
7 7 679 711
Meigs
6 8 839 846
Logan
6 8 843 823
Jackson
4 10 768 811
Wellston
2 12 721 862
TOTALS
56 . 56.61" . 6166
Frida'I''S reSult :
Logan 77 ,Athens 61

''LUAUN .PANELING''

SEOAL RESERVES
c Fin au
TEAM
W L P OP
lronlon •
12 ,l:). 6~5 44 2
Waverly
11 3 620 509
Athens
10 4 623 499
Logan
9 5 593 544
Meigs
4 10 518 604
Jackson
4 10 534 663
Wellston
3 11 550 122
Gallipolis
3 11 507 647
TOTALS
56 4630 4630

.

Guard, who zipped 21 points
throUgh the nets. Wilson, who
brought Big Blacks' fans to
their feet on at least two
occalllons with his doubleclutching lay-up drives, hit on
nine of IS field goal attempts
and sank three of five foul
shots .
Also hitting in twin figures
for tlJe hosts were Seniors
Jim Tatterson, Larry Hess
and Bret McConnlck with 15,
12and 11 points, respectively.
· Pt.
Pleasant
and
Ravenswood now own
ifh•n'if'a1 11 -7

~dalf·~ .

.

~

'

s•

Fr ida'l' '' result:

Logan 50 Athens 42
SEOAL FRESHMEN

SEE ·ouR SELECTION OF PANELING

(Finan

Team
Logan

Athens
Gallipolis
Waverly

Me igs
Jackson
Wellston
TOTALS

W L

P

OP

2
"10 ' 2
9 3

602

374

5
8

10

7
3

516

400

.i78

396

401

392

338 460
2 9 350 470
0 12 329 522
41 41 3014 3014

..
Tommy Davis is
·now a Yankee

ARMSTRONG CARPET

By Quarters.:
Wahama
HT

DIVING IN ~ Point Pleasant Big Blacks Captain Andy Wilson, who !eel all scorers with 21
points in Friday night's rout of visiting Ravenswood, dives to get,the ball away from a Red
Devil eager during an in-bounds play .
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Southwestern {Sll -

Ironton
Portsmouth
Gallipolis

... s IQw as

41·.· ,~r

North Gallia (71) - Logan
James 9-6· 24 ; Neal S·
1-11 ; Runyon '2 -0·4 ; S Minnis
2-0· 4; Theiss 2·0-4. Totals 3011 · 71.

''

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''

10 - 4 · 2~ ;

TEAM
Wheelersburg

for 55 percent and Wahama 14
for 46 .percent. The White
Falcons
m~naged
to
outrebound
the
White
Falcons 40 lo 39 with Marty
Holbrook, Terry Tucker and
Bob Nicewander grabbing 9,
6 and 6 caroms respectively.
Duke Smith was the only
Falcon to score in double
figures. The 5'10" junior
backcourt acre connected on
three of six from the floor and
added six of 10 charity tossed
for a total of 12 points.
Holbrook and Terry Tucker
followed Smith in storing
with 9 and 6 poin Is respectively.
·
In the preliminary contest
the Little 'Cats also gained
revenge over 'coach Homer
Preece's Uttle Falcons by
claiming a low scoring 39-31
affair. The story of the game
was at the free throw line
where Hannan Tra(!e at·
tempted more than four
times the amoWJt allotted
Wahama resulting in

the winners with II points.
Gene Layton topped the
Highlanders with 12 points.
Mark Banks added 10.
Box score :

I Cage standings

Wildcats defeat
Falcons, 82-56
BY GARY CLARK
The Falcons opened the
MERCERVILLE - The second half with six unan ~
Hannan Trace Wildcats swered points to pull to within
scored 49 points during the two at 31-33 behind 'three
second half of action Friday consecutive assists by Terry
night to defeat visiting Tucker but that was as close
Wahama by an 62-56 margin as · the White Falcons could
and avenge an earlier season get as Hannan Trace scored
setback .
the next 12 points to shut off
The loss was the seventh in the . Falcon rally .
a row for the White Falcons
The Wildcats outdistanced
as· their season record dipped the Mason Coun tians t5-l to
to a gloomy 3-16 with just one open final eight minutes to
game remaining before take a commanding 72-46
sectional tournament play lead.
begins.
Coach
Dan
Cor nell 's
. WHS ·has a return · match Wildcats were led by the
with triple-A power Point . shoo ting of seniors David
Pleasant on the bend area Shaffer and Kent Halley and
schools home cour t Friday sophomore Randy McGuire.
night.
Shaffer led the attack with 21 .
Wahama 's Terry Tucker points. Hailey added 17 and
scored the first goal of the McGuire dumped in 10. The
evening for the White Falcons victory snapped a three game
at the 6:20 mark in the initial losing streak for the Wildperiod knotting the score at 2- cats.
2. Hannan Trace then went on
Hannan Trace, third place
to outscore WHS 14-8 dl!fing finisher in the SVAC, comlhe remainder of quarter to pleted its 1976 season with
post a 16-10 lead at the fir st an 11-7 mark .
·
~n .
.
The Wildcats will play
Wahama fared somewhat Southern Saturday night iri
better in th~ second stanza lhe second round of the Class
behind the efforts of juniors A Sectional Tournament · at
Duke Smith and Tim Davis Meigs High School. The
who provided some scoring winner of that contest meets
punch to keep the White Kyger Creek March 3.
Falcons within striking
Shooting statistics like the
distance but an injury to game went to Hannpn Trac~ .
Davis with :30 to play in the The Wildcats shot a warm 46
half forced him to e&lt;it the percent (33 for 71 ) from the
game with a cut that required field while Wahama was
six stitches. Hannan Trace hitting a chilly 33 percent (21
scored the final bucket of the for 63). Both tea ms shot a
half to take a 33-25 ad· total of 29 free throws with
vantage.
Hannan Trace converting 16

44-43 victory. Doug Sisson led

NEW YORK (UP!) Veteran slugger Tommy
Davis wu signed. Friday by
the New York Yankees, in an
effQrt to bolster their righthanded hitting, who then sold
reserve
catcher
Ed
Herrmann to the California
Angels.
· Davis, who will be 36 next
month, was cut loose recently
b&gt;J the Baltimore Orioles
after serving as their
designated hitter for three
seasons •
In selling Herrmann the
Yankees granted the stocky
catcher a request he had
submitted Qf the club at the
end of last season. A native of
San Dlet~o, Callf., he had
uked the Yankees to trade or
sell him to a West Coast club.

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RAVENSWOOD (51! -

Knight. 6 o 1'2 ; Stefanov, 2·2
6 ; Skeens, 1·1·3 : Shumaker , J .
0. 2; Yambrick. 2·0 ·4; Holley,
72 ' 16;
Taylor .
5414 .
TOTALS 24·9· 57.
PT . PLEASANT (79) Hess , S. 2-12 : Tatterson 71 -15 ;
Nibert . 3 o 6; Wilson. 9·3·21 ;
M cCo rmick ,
4 · 3 11 ;
Brownin9 . 2 3 7 ; McDermitt,
0 2 2:
Vaughan.
o.o 0 :
Holland . 0 I l ; Parler . 10 2 .
Rardin , 102 . Fri ar , 00 0.
TOTALS J2.JS-79.
Score by quarten:
Ra \lens wood
t1 15 . 14 ~0 .~1
Pt . Pleasanl 1.5 23 20 :n 79
Reserves -~ Poin l 6? RHS

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TIIISTLEDOWNS
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
(UP!)- Marjon Blue edged
Ruthye Rullar by a nose
Friday to win the featured
ninth race at Thistledown
with a docking of 1:03 3-5 for
. five furlongs over a heavy
·track.
The winner, ridden by Pete
Velasquez, paid $6.60, $4.20
and $3.20. Marge Knight was
third.
·
The tenth race Trlfects of
No Contest (5), Mytato (8)
and Moon Walker (7) was
worth $156.60 and the 9-1 dally
double combination of
Loaded Up and Tom Sceptre
returned $131.60.

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I)

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�24 - The Sunday l'imes.&amp;nlmel,

~·eb.

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
BASKETBALL RESULTS
Uni ted Press lnternationa I
Alexander
79
Federal
Hocking bJ
Amanda
Clearcreek
89

M illersport 55

Ashtabula Harbor 72 Geneva
52

Ashtabula 76 Ash-tabula

5 1.

John 71 tot)
Avon 61 S Amher s t 4~
Barberton 99 Mass illon 09

Bay 66 Fairview 54
Bellefontaine 61

Urbana .4&amp;

Bellevue 80 Bu c yrus 46

Berne Union 72 Logan Elm 70
( OI)

B i g Walnut 73 Westerville N
72
Bluffton 67 Allen -East 51

Brunswick 82 Cloverleaf 71
Cana l Winchester 67 Liberty
Union 63
Celina 60 lima Bath 45
Chagrin Falls 64. Twinsburg

"Cin

SOUTHERN'S PAID.. Cross (20) fires a jump shot over the Outstretched hand of
Glouster's Mike Lewis (41 ) during Friday's hardwood contest at Racine . Lewis was high
man in the game with 24 points.

·Logan
topples
Athens
LOGAN - Visiting Athens
up with only four men
on the floor as Logan
defeated the Bulldogs 77-61 in
a Southeastern Ohio League
makeup contest here Friday
night
·
Athens dressed only eig ht
men for the contest. Four
reguIars foul ed out while two
others had four personals
ap iecewhenthegameend.ed .
Eachteamhit27fieldgoals
but Logan canned 23 of 37
charity tosses while Athens
managed only seven of 16
from the foul line .
The victory left Athens with
a 7-11 season record. The
Bulldogs finished fourth in
league play with a 7-7 mark .
Logan finished 8-10 on the
year and tied Meigs for fifth
place with a 6-8 loop mark .
Mike McBroom led the
winners with 29 points . Matt ·
Faulkner had 12 for Athens .
Athenshit27ol52fieldgoal
attempts for 51 percent. The
Bulldogs pull ed down 29
rebounds, seven by Faulkner.
Logan bit 27 of 57 field goal
a tlemp ts I or 47 percen t · Th e
Chiefs had 33 rebounds, 12 by
McBroom .
Logan led 20-15, 40-31 and
51-47 at the quartermarks.
Box score·.
wound

Friday's college scores
College Basketball Fl!esults
By United Pre ss Intern ational
East
Brdgwtr St. 64 Salem St. 63
Brown 72 Columbia 70
Colgate 58 Clarkson 54
Corne ll 68 Yale 59
bel. Valley 70 Juniata 60
I tha ca 95 St. Lawren ce 73
Jersey City 76 Montc lair 60
Manha tianville 72 Mercy 57
Middlebury 68 Bates 66
Penn 80 Harvard 75
Po tsdam 86 New Pal1z 69
Princeton 74 Dartmouth 5 1
RPI 74 Rochester Tech 67
R . I . Coil . 94 N·ew Ha ven 79
SE Massachusetts ·104 Curr y 79
Shepherd 85 Davis&amp;'Eikins 71
Upsala 85 Lycorl')ing 62

South
Hmpdn -Sydny 94 Et'nory&amp;Henr y
72
'
'
Norfolk St. 10 Va . Union 59
Tu skegee lnsL 81 Miles 93
Midwest
Beloit 90 Lawren ce 72
Buena Vist.ii 73 Luther 66
Central 82 Dubuque 65
Cent . Meth 7 1 Graceland 70
Cent. Mo . St. 91 SE Mo . St. 65
Coe 97 Corn ell Iowa 80
lll . Coli . 84 Blackburn 49
Ill . St . 106 Wis ..Milw 85
. Iowa Wsly n 71 Cui. Stcktn 69
Kearney ~5 Washburn .63
Kentucky St . 99 Marian 83
, KnOx 72 Carleton 68
L. Superior 84 Sag . V,al. 82
Lak e land 97 Mich .-Drbrn 66
Loras 96 St. Mary's Minn . 71
Ma,tone 95 Geneva 68
Mankato St. 78 N . Dale St. 71
Mil ljkin 83 Carroll 68
N 'eas t ern 103 Tr nty Chris 67
No . Dakota 98 N.o. Iowa 77
No . Michigan 71 N orthwood 65
Rio Grande 80 Cedarville 74
Ri pon 69 Lake For es t 67
St. X avie r 79 Lewis 64
Shaw 79 Dyke 59
Si mpson 69 Upper Iowa 67
Tarkio 60 Mo . Vall ey 59
Tr in i ty 101 Grace 96
Urbana 87 Tiffin 83
Wm . ~en n 69 Wartburg 68
Southwe$t
Arizona 67 New M ex ico 65
M cMurry 75 Okla . Chris 73

Mldwslrn 72 Bethany Naz 60
Pan Ame r ican 1.13 Sui Ross 82
T exe~s . E t Paso 70 Ar iz. St . 63
Texas Wslyn 83 waylnd Bapt .

69

West
Cen . Wash . 83 Oregon Tech 69
Ch ico St . 73 Sac to St. 69
Davis 96 Stanisla us 66
F t . Lewis 69 Colo . Mines 62
Mumb ldt St . 58 Hyw rd St . 56
Idaho St. 81 Gonzaga 71
Lin field 110 Pac Ore . 82
Lyla Ca l. 84 St .Mry's Cal. 77
No . Colo. 86 Kan . St. -Pttsbg 73
Peppe"rdine 83 N.ev .-Reno 66
Rocky Mntn 85 w . Montana 64
St. Martin's 92 War ner Pa c BO
Seattle U . BO San Francisco 70
So . Oregon 98 E . Oregon 70
so . Ut ah st. 79 westrn St . 63 .
w .wash . St . 68 E .Wash . St . 67
Wh i tman 89 Idaho Coli. 67
Wi l lamelle 85 Pa c Lu th 81

Duffy signs '76

Indian contract
CLEVELAND ( UPI )
Shortstop Frank Duffy, who
hit .243 and drove in 47 runs
last season, agreed to terms
Friday, bringing to 26 the
number of Cleveland Indians
signed lor 1976.
·
Among those still unsigned,
according to Vice PresidentGeneral Manager Phil Segbi,
are infielders Boog Powell
and Rico Carty, relief pitcher
Dave
LaRoche
and
outfielders Charlie Spikes
and George Hendrick.

Chardon .75 Aurora 74 (ot)
Coun.try Day 53 ' Summit
Coun tr y Day 49
Cin Elder 60 Cin L aSall e d6
Cin
Finneylown 86 C in
Harr ison 64
Cin Greenh il ls 82 Cin College
Hil l 65
Cin St . Xavier 69 Cin Moeller
44
Cin Sycamore 91 Cin D eer
Park 65
Cin Walnut
Hi l ls 69 Ci n
wes t ern H i l ls 64
Cin Woodwa r d 58 .C in A i ken 45
Circ levi lle 64 Washington CH
43
Clearview 60 Oberlin 38
Co l
Brookhave n 99 Co l
Mohawk 80
COl E 85 Col Central 80
cOl Eas lm oor 75 Col N 61
Col L i!lden McKin ley 66 Co l W
49
Col Marion -Franklin 88 Col
Nor thland 12
Col Ready 76 Col D eSales l3
Col St Charles 56 Col Hartley
53
Col · Walnut Rldg e 89 Col S 70
Col Wallerson 56 Col Wehrle
54
Col Whets tone 51 Co l Mifflin
44
Co ldwater 74 Parkway 66
Columbia 88 Bu ckeye 62
COlumbus Grov e 88 Cres t
view 79
con n eaut
Bl
Ashtabula
E dgewood 73 Cot
Coshoc t on 65 Dover 51
Del .aware 64 H i ll iard 54
Delphos St. John's 88 51
MaryS 63
E Cl e Sh aw 82 Shaker He.ights
67

Eastl a k e N 58 Wi lloughby S ·16
E l y r ia 66 Lora in 49
E u c lid 91 Brush 72
Fairfie ld Union 85 La n caste r
Fisher· 57
Fr anklin Height s 86 W Jef . ·
ferson 69
Garfield H eig h ts 73 Midpark
56 .
c1e Gilmour 53 Cl e Holy
Nam e 49
Grandview 6 1 Ol entangy 56 (2
oil
Greenan 61 L ondon 57
Groveport 73 M! Vernon 52
Ham ilton Townsh ip 91 Dubl in·
65
Hiland 72 Tu sca rawa s Vall ey
57
Hur on 77 Fremont s t Joseph
62 .
Cin
Indian
Hills
88
Ma r iemont 62
Kalida n Miller Ci ty sa
Lakewood 57 Berea· 52
Liberty - Benton 83 Ar cadia 511
Licking H eights 86 North -

r;dge 70
~~~f~~~~~i~;'

BY GREG BAILEY
RACINE - The Southern
T ornados closed out thelr
regular season on a fine note
Friday night at Racine by
defeating the Glouster
Tomcats, 74-65. Once again a
balanced scoring attack
seemed to be the key to
victory as four Southern
players finished in double
ligures.
The hosts jumped out to an
early 6-1 lead on two baskets
by Chip Brauer and another
by Eric Dunning . But then the
visitors of Coach Forest
Ervin bot moving and took
their first lead of the night at
the 2:30. mark of the initial
period, 10-8, on a bucket by
Tom Lewis , the game 1S
leading scorer with 24
markers . From that point ,
the Jead changed hands nine

limes and the game was lied
13 limes.
The first quarter buzzer
saw the Tornados leading, 16·
12, but when the haJf.time
horn sounded , Le wis tapped
in a rebound for the Tomcats
and the team s went into the
locker H h i . • ~ at a 31-31
stalemate. So4t.hern 's Chip

NIU searching
for new coach
DEKALB, lll. (UP))
Northern Illinois University
began looking lor .a new
basketball. coach today
following Frida y ' s
announcement that the
contract of Coach Emory F.
Luck will not be r enewed at
the end of this season .
Luck, 48, has been head
coach at NIO since March,
1973, compiling a 20-49
record. So far'this season, he
is 4·17 overall and 1-10 in the
MidA.merica Conference.

Brauer picked up his third
personal foul at the 1:07 mark
of the second perioct and had
to go to the bench. Lewis kept
the Torncais in the game in
that first hall as he threw in
15 points and hauled down
nUmerous rebounds. Senior
Danny Brown and junior
Dave Roush each had eight
points lor the Tornados.
The third quarter saw the
same kind of action as each
team moved the ball well, but
the hosts were still on lop at
the buzzer , 48·44 . Roush
paced his team in that canto
by tossing in nine important
points .
The fourth canto was just
as close and at the 5:40 mark,
Glouster took its last lead, 51·
52 . But then in the next'
minute and a half, senior
playmaker Mike Roberts
took charge alter being held
to only four points up to that
time . He scored eight of his
team 's 10 markers (six of
them on foul shots) 1 and
Brauer sank two free tosses
to g ive the hosts a 61-56 ad·
vantage with lour minutes
remaining. With two minutes
remaining, the Tornados
went into a stall and sank
their last five foul shots to ice
Ule victory.
Brauer · led the victors
scoring with 23 big .ones,
while j\Jilior Roush added 21.
Roberts and Brown had
13 and 10, respectively.
The
team
hauled in
a
whopping
48
r ebounds with Brauer getting
19. They had 15 turnovers and
11 a ssists with Dunning
gelling four of them . They
canned 311-80 shots for a cool
38 percent and made .14-23
from the line .
BeSides I.ewis'·24 markers,
Bill Hunter and Jack Meade
had ten each lor the Tomcats .
They connected on 27 of 57

UTILITY
BILLS.••
KEEP YOUR
POCKETS
EMPTY?
With the cost of heating
going up a lmost daily it

is necessary to insulate
eve ry
c rack
and
openirlg in your home .
Each of our homes Is

wrapped with F UME CORE sheathi ng tor th e
best r esu lts on
empty pockets!

those

·
They are : president, Keith
POME!\OY - Many low . existing soil fertility levels
Regrowth During Establish pasture renovation syslen Saunders, news reporter '
productng permanent
Apply Lime and Fertilizer : men! : During the establish becomes a reality, lh• Usa Smith, secretary, Lori
ment period , either grazo agronomist said . . The no
pastures in Ohio can be Apply limestone and fer
Improved greatly by in· tilizer based on soil analysis
occasionally and .or mow l• @age system ehmtnales th•
tr.oduclng 11_10re productive
Graze Close : Close grazing reduce competition from tht tillage operatton prevwusl)
f,..age spect.es through .the reduces vigor of exislin! recovering vegetation to tht thought to be necessary t•
use of no-tillage planting. vegetation and helps increaS&lt; seeding.
seed_ ~roduc tiye for~g•
Ytelds often are doubled or the effectiveness of th•
Fertilize Annually .
spectes .nto an unproducllvo
tripled by planting suitable herbicide treatments t&lt;
Rotationally Graze alte1 past~e area . However, h&lt;
f,..ages and by c,..rective follow .
Estatilisliment.
cauhoned, a number · o·
lert!Uzatlon according to
Apply 2,4-D: Apply 2,4-P a
With the proper use o prectse management step'
Donald K. Myers, Extension the rate of one pound pel
herbicides and sod-seedint are necess~ry for the no
agronomtstat The Ohio State acre active ingredient 1, equipment, the no-tillag• tillage seedmg of forages I&lt;
University.
control broadleal weeds.
be successful.
Massey Ferguson
Apply Paraquat : Appl)
Myers, in ~ no.tillage
forage symposmm on the one-ball pound per acre rat.
OSU campus addressed active ingredient Paraquat t&lt;
nearly
.180
scientists su ppress
the
existin!
represenhng most of the vegetation, at least seve•
The Goodtimes club met Mike Wallen . Guests were
United States and England . days following the 2,4-D an1 Feb. 13 at 33 Evans Heights. Todd Slone, Michael SmiLh,
The OSU Cooperative Ex- just prior to or at time ol Lisa Smith presided and had Alex Wallen and Tina Hentension Service, the Ohio seeding.
ch&lt;!rge of the program. Gail nessy .
Agricultural Research and
Seed in Early Spring 01 1&gt;mith demonstrated sand·
News reporter, Nancy
Development Center, and August with No·Tillag• sea ping.
Copley.
Chevron Che1111cal Company Equipment : Seedings it
The next meeting will be
were co-sponsors.
either April to early May 01 held Feb. 27 at 37 Evans
A combination of the 4-H
Since World War II many . August hqve been successful Heights. Gail Smith is ad- Lucky Fours and the Morton
new and selective h_erbicides Shallow seed placement i: visor. Club members prese nt Flats Friendly Farmers held
have become a:'atlable to required and soli should Ill were Lisa Smith, Scott Slone, a 4-H meeting on Feb. 14 at
control .vegetahon, Myers dry enough to be in a tillabl• Tina Jones, Tracey Hennesy, the PCA building. Kathy
said. Some of these have condi lion .
Na ncy Cople y,
Harold Jones presided and Dick and
made ch anging existing
Rotationally Graze or CiJ Copley, Ronnie Taylor and Lois Sterrett had charge of
species of forages possible
with lillie or no tillage .
Research in Ohio, since 1964
has proved that no-tillage
plan ling can be suecesslul
even on many soils that could
not be planted by .co n.
ventional methods . Since
. then the practice has been
spreading among farmers,
especially in eastern Ohio.
Model
Myers' said Ohio scientists
had
developed
10
MF 230 Tractor
management steps, based on
the years of experimentation,
MF 235 Tractor
Briefly, these are :
MF 255 Tractor
Field Selection: This is
very important in deter·
MF 265 Tractor
mining success of sod
MF 275 Tractor
seeding. Some factors to be
conSidered are (1) drainag e;
the forage species must be
BUY .NOW WHILE SUPPLY IS GOOD AND
suited 1111d adapted lor the
soil drainage; (2) soil type;
research an'd observation
have shown ·no.tillage
systems are most effective on
MANY OTHER POPULAR C~EMICALS ALSO AVAILABLE
slit loain soils ; ( 3) existing
vegetation; ·herbicides
currently available will not
eradicate aggressive
perennial weedy species.
Soil Analy sis: These
permanent pasture sites are
usually acid and low in
RT. 7 NORTH
phosphorus ..Soiltesting is thE
only known means of ob·
talnlng an indication ol

Gallia . 4~H

992~7034

Pome roy

Hn.

9a . m . tiiS : JOp . rh .CI0~edSun .

OhiO

Pearl .sh 992-3323 , Roger Davis , 992-7671

Ellen Fuller, Doug Deems,
Dan Deems, Greg Adkins,
Bart Davis and Kevin Carl&gt;!r.
Guests were Mrs . Maxine
Oliver, Jo Ann Legel, Mrs.
BauseU and Mrs . Deems,
Mr s. Bud Carter and
daug hter . - News reporter,
Lisa Smith.

Ouh News

FARM CHEMICALS
eAatrex 4L

eAatrex lOW

eBiadex 4WDS

.
Was

eBiadex lOW

5931.00
1
7038.00
1
8575.00
1
10,600.00
1
11,500.00
1

eEradicane 6.7E

eLasso EC

"QUALITY ALWAYS"

PCA buiding . Club members
present were Lori Smith, Lisa
Smith, Malt Sterrett, Mike
Sterre tt, Max Sterrett, David
Wandling, Keith Saunders,
Rany Jones, Marcia Bausell,
Mark CBausell, Jo Ellen
Oliver, Keith Ann Oliver ,
Jjsa Legel, KaLhy J ones, Jo

It's time to spring
action-and we're
offering special low .prices on all new MF
farm tractors under 80 pto hp. Check how
much you save:

eSutan 6.7E

PRICES ARE LOW

Now
'4775.00
'5440.00
'6700.00
'8250.00
'9200.00

YOU SAVE
'll~MO
1

1598.00
1875.00
1
2350.00
1
2300.00
1

a

If you need new tractor this spring, you can't
beat these prices. Come see, come SAVE!

GALLIPOLIS TRACTOR INC.
OPEN 8 AM TIL 5 PM

PH. 446-1044

Mayfield 55 Bedford 51

~~d'~nv~ll8e3 7lv~~i ·~;~1:Y6469

Midv iew 68 vermilion 55
Minford 58 Portsmouth N otr e
D a me 46
Monroeville 79 s Cen tr al 52
~~Healthy 57 Fo rreSI Park

See them today and $ave. Sale ends March 7.
Tile Only 21" Solid Stete Self-Propelled

Mower With Self-CMrtlng Electric Stare.

Model S234AE.

The only walk-behind mower that recharges willie p
11111w! It starts with a turn of a key, propels itself with

all-gear drive, and recharges its ni~cad battary with a
built-I n alternator ... automatically. Solid stat~ ignition
for quick starts, super-quiet ·under-the-dec:k muffler,
and all the other superior LAWN-BOY engineering
feature·s make this mower the ultimate in quick and
quiet mo,w ing.

•

IIUGGIITID
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269.95

YOU IA\111

$ 40.00

21" Deluxe Self-Propelled.
Model S253 1nat m...a-KHJ.

wyoming 62 St Bernard 56

.

GLOUSTER ·c6SJ - Feires
3-0 ·6 , Gardner 2-2-6, Lewis 9 ·
Hunter
4-2- 1() ,
6-2• .
Echstenkamper 4-0-8. Meade
5-0· 10. Thorn pson O- l -1. Totals
21 -22 ·65.
SOUTHERN
f741
Roberts 4-5 · 13 , D . Brown S·O·
10 , Brt~~uer 8· 7-23, Roush 10· 1·
21, Cross 2·0 · 4, J . Brown 0-1· 1.
Dunning 1-0· 2 , Totals 30 -14-74 .
score by quarters :
12 19 13 21 - 6'5
Glo us ter
Southern
i6 15 17 26- 71

Smith, trf'as urer, Mall
Sterrett. Chaplain, Lisa
J.eget, Songleader, Keith Ann
Uli ver and recreation leader ,
Jo !':lien Fuller. Refresh·
menl~ were provided by Lisa
and Lori Smith and Lois
Sterrett. The next meeting
will be held March 25 at the

D e l phos
L ockl and 66 Cin R eading 60
L orai n Cath 11 Southvi ew 10
Mansfield Madison 511 New
Philad el phia 44
Marion 60 M in ster 41
rofrvsville 75 Teays Valley n

61

NEW YORK (UPI) - Glen
" Judge" Carberry, who captained the 1922 Knu!e
Rockne.:Coached Notre Dame
football team, died in
Klngsbrldge Veterans
HOBPital 'here Thursday of
respiratory failure .
Carberry, 79,an attorney in
the New York regional office
of
the
Veterans
Administration, was stricken
at borne earlier Thursday and
hospitalized.
A football and basketball
coach at St. Bonaventure in
the mid 1920's, Carberry was
induced by Notre Dame
teammate Jim Crowley of
fabulous Four Horsemen
fame to coach the Michigan
State line in the early '3!\s.
When Crowley moved to
Fordham as bead coach, he
took Carberry along to coach
the Seven Blocks of Granite
that featured the late Vince
Lombardi.

I..County agent's corner ~&lt;'1,:~~.~::. ~1 ~:;Jii~;sJE

fourth cantos). They hit 26-64
shots lor 41 percent and
netted 12·25 free throws .
Wayne Satterfield had seven
of his team 's 28 rebo unds.
Holbert of Glouster led all
scorers with 25 markers.
Officials lor the contests
were Tipton and Taylor.

shots from the field lor 51
percent and netted 11-20 free
throws. They hauled in 39
caroms , with Himter getting
12 of those . Glouster closed
their season with a 4-13 mark,
while the Tornados ended
with a 14-4 mark .
The reserve contest saw an
overtime baitle with the
TomKitlens coming out on
top, 65-94. Regulation ended
57-57, but the first minute of
overtime saw the visitorS
score lour quick ones and
then hang on.
John Sayre tossed in 19
markers lor the losers (eight
in the second and eight in the

11 ~l· progret m. Fred J)(-cl was
the speaker at the meeting

67

N Olmsted 65 Olmsled Fa ll s
58
Nelsonvill e -York 81 Vinton
Coun t y 73
New Brem en 52 Bradford 50
N ewark Cath 73 H ea th 47
N or walk St Paul 70 Map l eton
51
Pri nce to n 69 McNicholas 57
R ey noldsburg 70 Whitehatr67
R idgemont 73 N Union 70
R i verview 105 Crooksvil le 57
Riverdale
76
H ardin .
N or th ern 57
LOGAN pi ) - Myers 2-4·
Sa ndu sky
Sl
Marys
83
B; H awk 5·2· 12 ; Mu lho l l and 5- Ma rgaretta f18
4- 14 ; M c Broom 10 -9-29 ; See l
S t H enry · 104 F r a n k!in 2-0·4; .B rag l in 0·2-2; Lann ing
Monroe 77
2-0;4; R ussel l l -0-2; GasserO - Tr i adelphia
(W
Va&gt;
70
2-2. TOTAL5 .27 -2J -77 . .
Bellaire 66
ATHENS (61) - Faulkner
TriWay 51 W Holmes 40
5· 2·· 12; Heady 5-l -11 ; Chonko ,. Upp er 'Sa ndusky 52 Tiffin 49
J -0-6 ; Greer 6-0 -12.; Bla c kford
Uti ca 70Watkins M emoria l 58
5-1-11 / Meek 3-2-8 ; Wheatey O· Va ll ey 11 8 N West B4
1-1. TOTALS 27·7 ·61.
Wapakoneta 62 Kenton 61
Score by quarters :
Warr"en Lo ca l 63 Belpre 49
At hens
15 16 16 14- 61
Wes te rn Reserve 72 Edison 53
Logan
20 20 11 26- 77 Westerville S 58 Gahanna 55
Reserve s Lo gan 50 Willard 57 No rw al k 55
At h ens 42 .
Wooster 61 Ashland 60
wor th ington 72 Co l Westland

1922 Irish grid
captain claimed

1§~~MDJil~;~~rmm~:r:~;m~;;;~~~~lif~~~~~mll~i~il~~l~~1~~~~;~~~~jj~;ii~;~~~lilii~~~~~~~~i;t;~~m=~:~:~:i~~~f;~~~~~~l~l~~~~!~~~f:!~~~~~~~~j~~~;~~;~~~;;~~;m~;~~!;~~~~ij~;~~~;~~~~;~~;;;~~~;;I~m~~~~~;~}~:~:~:~:~:~:l:~@:j;j;~~1;;

Southern ends season
•
with '74-65 cage wzn

Friday's
high
school
scores

ROUSH NETS 21 :..... Southern's Dave Roush (32)
popped in 21 points to help lead the Tornadoes to a 7~
over Glouster in a non-conference game Friday night. In
foregrou •d is Southern's Chip Brauer ( 44 ). - Jim Hamm
photos.

..

25 - The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Feb. 22, 1976

22, 1976

LAWN-BOY dependability with no-push convenience.
AU-gear drive el.iminates troublesome belts and pUlleys,
applies power to t he rear wheBis where it belong&amp;.

Cycling cot~test

Simplified carburetor for quick starts, no adjustments.
Up- fron t discharge and super IIBCuum action

~~:3..:for

winners .named
MILAN, Italy ( UPI)
Francesco Moser of Italy and
Patrick Sercu of Belgium
won the Milan Six-Day indoor
co;cllng contest Friday when
a last-minute fall knocked out
one of their chief rivals.
Belgian Rik Van Linden ,
who along with Italian Felice
Gimondi bad led the
standings most of the time,
crashed into West German
cyclists Klaud Buggdabl and
Dieter Kemper, who bad
collided and fallen in the
113th lap of a 71).k!Jometer
Arnericalne race.
·
Van Linden's head hit the
bicycle of one of.the Germans
and be
was knocked
.unconscious. He came to just
as an ambulance was abo!Jt to
take him to the h06pital and
instead be went back to the
Sports Palace.

•'

8' cleaner cut.

'=

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COWS &amp; CALVES, SPRINGER COWS, YEARLING
HEIFERS, STEERS and BULLS, FEEDER CALVES,
HOLSTEIN STEERS, ALL BREEDS ACCEPTED.
COWS WILL BE PREGNANCY TESTED.
CATTLE WILL BE RECEIVED DAY OF SALE
FOR MORE· INFORMATION PHONE TOMMY JOE STEWART
446-3941 44~049

liV

See them today at LAWN-BOY dealers ...

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CHESTER , OHIO
98S -3308

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TUPPERS PLAINS , OHIO
667.JtU

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�24 - The Sunday l'imes.&amp;nlmel,

~·eb.

OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
BASKETBALL RESULTS
Uni ted Press lnternationa I
Alexander
79
Federal
Hocking bJ
Amanda
Clearcreek
89

M illersport 55

Ashtabula Harbor 72 Geneva
52

Ashtabula 76 Ash-tabula

5 1.

John 71 tot)
Avon 61 S Amher s t 4~
Barberton 99 Mass illon 09

Bay 66 Fairview 54
Bellefontaine 61

Urbana .4&amp;

Bellevue 80 Bu c yrus 46

Berne Union 72 Logan Elm 70
( OI)

B i g Walnut 73 Westerville N
72
Bluffton 67 Allen -East 51

Brunswick 82 Cloverleaf 71
Cana l Winchester 67 Liberty
Union 63
Celina 60 lima Bath 45
Chagrin Falls 64. Twinsburg

"Cin

SOUTHERN'S PAID.. Cross (20) fires a jump shot over the Outstretched hand of
Glouster's Mike Lewis (41 ) during Friday's hardwood contest at Racine . Lewis was high
man in the game with 24 points.

·Logan
topples
Athens
LOGAN - Visiting Athens
up with only four men
on the floor as Logan
defeated the Bulldogs 77-61 in
a Southeastern Ohio League
makeup contest here Friday
night
·
Athens dressed only eig ht
men for the contest. Four
reguIars foul ed out while two
others had four personals
ap iecewhenthegameend.ed .
Eachteamhit27fieldgoals
but Logan canned 23 of 37
charity tosses while Athens
managed only seven of 16
from the foul line .
The victory left Athens with
a 7-11 season record. The
Bulldogs finished fourth in
league play with a 7-7 mark .
Logan finished 8-10 on the
year and tied Meigs for fifth
place with a 6-8 loop mark .
Mike McBroom led the
winners with 29 points . Matt ·
Faulkner had 12 for Athens .
Athenshit27ol52fieldgoal
attempts for 51 percent. The
Bulldogs pull ed down 29
rebounds, seven by Faulkner.
Logan bit 27 of 57 field goal
a tlemp ts I or 47 percen t · Th e
Chiefs had 33 rebounds, 12 by
McBroom .
Logan led 20-15, 40-31 and
51-47 at the quartermarks.
Box score·.
wound

Friday's college scores
College Basketball Fl!esults
By United Pre ss Intern ational
East
Brdgwtr St. 64 Salem St. 63
Brown 72 Columbia 70
Colgate 58 Clarkson 54
Corne ll 68 Yale 59
bel. Valley 70 Juniata 60
I tha ca 95 St. Lawren ce 73
Jersey City 76 Montc lair 60
Manha tianville 72 Mercy 57
Middlebury 68 Bates 66
Penn 80 Harvard 75
Po tsdam 86 New Pal1z 69
Princeton 74 Dartmouth 5 1
RPI 74 Rochester Tech 67
R . I . Coil . 94 N·ew Ha ven 79
SE Massachusetts ·104 Curr y 79
Shepherd 85 Davis&amp;'Eikins 71
Upsala 85 Lycorl')ing 62

South
Hmpdn -Sydny 94 Et'nory&amp;Henr y
72
'
'
Norfolk St. 10 Va . Union 59
Tu skegee lnsL 81 Miles 93
Midwest
Beloit 90 Lawren ce 72
Buena Vist.ii 73 Luther 66
Central 82 Dubuque 65
Cent . Meth 7 1 Graceland 70
Cent. Mo . St. 91 SE Mo . St. 65
Coe 97 Corn ell Iowa 80
lll . Coli . 84 Blackburn 49
Ill . St . 106 Wis ..Milw 85
. Iowa Wsly n 71 Cui. Stcktn 69
Kearney ~5 Washburn .63
Kentucky St . 99 Marian 83
, KnOx 72 Carleton 68
L. Superior 84 Sag . V,al. 82
Lak e land 97 Mich .-Drbrn 66
Loras 96 St. Mary's Minn . 71
Ma,tone 95 Geneva 68
Mankato St. 78 N . Dale St. 71
Mil ljkin 83 Carroll 68
N 'eas t ern 103 Tr nty Chris 67
No . Dakota 98 N.o. Iowa 77
No . Michigan 71 N orthwood 65
Rio Grande 80 Cedarville 74
Ri pon 69 Lake For es t 67
St. X avie r 79 Lewis 64
Shaw 79 Dyke 59
Si mpson 69 Upper Iowa 67
Tarkio 60 Mo . Vall ey 59
Tr in i ty 101 Grace 96
Urbana 87 Tiffin 83
Wm . ~en n 69 Wartburg 68
Southwe$t
Arizona 67 New M ex ico 65
M cMurry 75 Okla . Chris 73

Mldwslrn 72 Bethany Naz 60
Pan Ame r ican 1.13 Sui Ross 82
T exe~s . E t Paso 70 Ar iz. St . 63
Texas Wslyn 83 waylnd Bapt .

69

West
Cen . Wash . 83 Oregon Tech 69
Ch ico St . 73 Sac to St. 69
Davis 96 Stanisla us 66
F t . Lewis 69 Colo . Mines 62
Mumb ldt St . 58 Hyw rd St . 56
Idaho St. 81 Gonzaga 71
Lin field 110 Pac Ore . 82
Lyla Ca l. 84 St .Mry's Cal. 77
No . Colo. 86 Kan . St. -Pttsbg 73
Peppe"rdine 83 N.ev .-Reno 66
Rocky Mntn 85 w . Montana 64
St. Martin's 92 War ner Pa c BO
Seattle U . BO San Francisco 70
So . Oregon 98 E . Oregon 70
so . Ut ah st. 79 westrn St . 63 .
w .wash . St . 68 E .Wash . St . 67
Wh i tman 89 Idaho Coli. 67
Wi l lamelle 85 Pa c Lu th 81

Duffy signs '76

Indian contract
CLEVELAND ( UPI )
Shortstop Frank Duffy, who
hit .243 and drove in 47 runs
last season, agreed to terms
Friday, bringing to 26 the
number of Cleveland Indians
signed lor 1976.
·
Among those still unsigned,
according to Vice PresidentGeneral Manager Phil Segbi,
are infielders Boog Powell
and Rico Carty, relief pitcher
Dave
LaRoche
and
outfielders Charlie Spikes
and George Hendrick.

Chardon .75 Aurora 74 (ot)
Coun.try Day 53 ' Summit
Coun tr y Day 49
Cin Elder 60 Cin L aSall e d6
Cin
Finneylown 86 C in
Harr ison 64
Cin Greenh il ls 82 Cin College
Hil l 65
Cin St . Xavier 69 Cin Moeller
44
Cin Sycamore 91 Cin D eer
Park 65
Cin Walnut
Hi l ls 69 Ci n
wes t ern H i l ls 64
Cin Woodwa r d 58 .C in A i ken 45
Circ levi lle 64 Washington CH
43
Clearview 60 Oberlin 38
Co l
Brookhave n 99 Co l
Mohawk 80
COl E 85 Col Central 80
cOl Eas lm oor 75 Col N 61
Col L i!lden McKin ley 66 Co l W
49
Col Marion -Franklin 88 Col
Nor thland 12
Col Ready 76 Col D eSales l3
Col St Charles 56 Col Hartley
53
Col · Walnut Rldg e 89 Col S 70
Col Wallerson 56 Col Wehrle
54
Col Whets tone 51 Co l Mifflin
44
Co ldwater 74 Parkway 66
Columbia 88 Bu ckeye 62
COlumbus Grov e 88 Cres t
view 79
con n eaut
Bl
Ashtabula
E dgewood 73 Cot
Coshoc t on 65 Dover 51
Del .aware 64 H i ll iard 54
Delphos St. John's 88 51
MaryS 63
E Cl e Sh aw 82 Shaker He.ights
67

Eastl a k e N 58 Wi lloughby S ·16
E l y r ia 66 Lora in 49
E u c lid 91 Brush 72
Fairfie ld Union 85 La n caste r
Fisher· 57
Fr anklin Height s 86 W Jef . ·
ferson 69
Garfield H eig h ts 73 Midpark
56 .
c1e Gilmour 53 Cl e Holy
Nam e 49
Grandview 6 1 Ol entangy 56 (2
oil
Greenan 61 L ondon 57
Groveport 73 M! Vernon 52
Ham ilton Townsh ip 91 Dubl in·
65
Hiland 72 Tu sca rawa s Vall ey
57
Hur on 77 Fremont s t Joseph
62 .
Cin
Indian
Hills
88
Ma r iemont 62
Kalida n Miller Ci ty sa
Lakewood 57 Berea· 52
Liberty - Benton 83 Ar cadia 511
Licking H eights 86 North -

r;dge 70
~~~f~~~~~i~;'

BY GREG BAILEY
RACINE - The Southern
T ornados closed out thelr
regular season on a fine note
Friday night at Racine by
defeating the Glouster
Tomcats, 74-65. Once again a
balanced scoring attack
seemed to be the key to
victory as four Southern
players finished in double
ligures.
The hosts jumped out to an
early 6-1 lead on two baskets
by Chip Brauer and another
by Eric Dunning . But then the
visitors of Coach Forest
Ervin bot moving and took
their first lead of the night at
the 2:30. mark of the initial
period, 10-8, on a bucket by
Tom Lewis , the game 1S
leading scorer with 24
markers . From that point ,
the Jead changed hands nine

limes and the game was lied
13 limes.
The first quarter buzzer
saw the Tornados leading, 16·
12, but when the haJf.time
horn sounded , Le wis tapped
in a rebound for the Tomcats
and the team s went into the
locker H h i . • ~ at a 31-31
stalemate. So4t.hern 's Chip

NIU searching
for new coach
DEKALB, lll. (UP))
Northern Illinois University
began looking lor .a new
basketball. coach today
following Frida y ' s
announcement that the
contract of Coach Emory F.
Luck will not be r enewed at
the end of this season .
Luck, 48, has been head
coach at NIO since March,
1973, compiling a 20-49
record. So far'this season, he
is 4·17 overall and 1-10 in the
MidA.merica Conference.

Brauer picked up his third
personal foul at the 1:07 mark
of the second perioct and had
to go to the bench. Lewis kept
the Torncais in the game in
that first hall as he threw in
15 points and hauled down
nUmerous rebounds. Senior
Danny Brown and junior
Dave Roush each had eight
points lor the Tornados.
The third quarter saw the
same kind of action as each
team moved the ball well, but
the hosts were still on lop at
the buzzer , 48·44 . Roush
paced his team in that canto
by tossing in nine important
points .
The fourth canto was just
as close and at the 5:40 mark,
Glouster took its last lead, 51·
52 . But then in the next'
minute and a half, senior
playmaker Mike Roberts
took charge alter being held
to only four points up to that
time . He scored eight of his
team 's 10 markers (six of
them on foul shots) 1 and
Brauer sank two free tosses
to g ive the hosts a 61-56 ad·
vantage with lour minutes
remaining. With two minutes
remaining, the Tornados
went into a stall and sank
their last five foul shots to ice
Ule victory.
Brauer · led the victors
scoring with 23 big .ones,
while j\Jilior Roush added 21.
Roberts and Brown had
13 and 10, respectively.
The
team
hauled in
a
whopping
48
r ebounds with Brauer getting
19. They had 15 turnovers and
11 a ssists with Dunning
gelling four of them . They
canned 311-80 shots for a cool
38 percent and made .14-23
from the line .
BeSides I.ewis'·24 markers,
Bill Hunter and Jack Meade
had ten each lor the Tomcats .
They connected on 27 of 57

UTILITY
BILLS.••
KEEP YOUR
POCKETS
EMPTY?
With the cost of heating
going up a lmost daily it

is necessary to insulate
eve ry
c rack
and
openirlg in your home .
Each of our homes Is

wrapped with F UME CORE sheathi ng tor th e
best r esu lts on
empty pockets!

those

·
They are : president, Keith
POME!\OY - Many low . existing soil fertility levels
Regrowth During Establish pasture renovation syslen Saunders, news reporter '
productng permanent
Apply Lime and Fertilizer : men! : During the establish becomes a reality, lh• Usa Smith, secretary, Lori
ment period , either grazo agronomist said . . The no
pastures in Ohio can be Apply limestone and fer
Improved greatly by in· tilizer based on soil analysis
occasionally and .or mow l• @age system ehmtnales th•
tr.oduclng 11_10re productive
Graze Close : Close grazing reduce competition from tht tillage operatton prevwusl)
f,..age spect.es through .the reduces vigor of exislin! recovering vegetation to tht thought to be necessary t•
use of no-tillage planting. vegetation and helps increaS&lt; seeding.
seed_ ~roduc tiye for~g•
Ytelds often are doubled or the effectiveness of th•
Fertilize Annually .
spectes .nto an unproducllvo
tripled by planting suitable herbicide treatments t&lt;
Rotationally Graze alte1 past~e area . However, h&lt;
f,..ages and by c,..rective follow .
Estatilisliment.
cauhoned, a number · o·
lert!Uzatlon according to
Apply 2,4-D: Apply 2,4-P a
With the proper use o prectse management step'
Donald K. Myers, Extension the rate of one pound pel
herbicides and sod-seedint are necess~ry for the no
agronomtstat The Ohio State acre active ingredient 1, equipment, the no-tillag• tillage seedmg of forages I&lt;
University.
control broadleal weeds.
be successful.
Massey Ferguson
Apply Paraquat : Appl)
Myers, in ~ no.tillage
forage symposmm on the one-ball pound per acre rat.
OSU campus addressed active ingredient Paraquat t&lt;
nearly
.180
scientists su ppress
the
existin!
represenhng most of the vegetation, at least seve•
The Goodtimes club met Mike Wallen . Guests were
United States and England . days following the 2,4-D an1 Feb. 13 at 33 Evans Heights. Todd Slone, Michael SmiLh,
The OSU Cooperative Ex- just prior to or at time ol Lisa Smith presided and had Alex Wallen and Tina Hentension Service, the Ohio seeding.
ch&lt;!rge of the program. Gail nessy .
Agricultural Research and
Seed in Early Spring 01 1&gt;mith demonstrated sand·
News reporter, Nancy
Development Center, and August with No·Tillag• sea ping.
Copley.
Chevron Che1111cal Company Equipment : Seedings it
The next meeting will be
were co-sponsors.
either April to early May 01 held Feb. 27 at 37 Evans
A combination of the 4-H
Since World War II many . August hqve been successful Heights. Gail Smith is ad- Lucky Fours and the Morton
new and selective h_erbicides Shallow seed placement i: visor. Club members prese nt Flats Friendly Farmers held
have become a:'atlable to required and soli should Ill were Lisa Smith, Scott Slone, a 4-H meeting on Feb. 14 at
control .vegetahon, Myers dry enough to be in a tillabl• Tina Jones, Tracey Hennesy, the PCA building. Kathy
said. Some of these have condi lion .
Na ncy Cople y,
Harold Jones presided and Dick and
made ch anging existing
Rotationally Graze or CiJ Copley, Ronnie Taylor and Lois Sterrett had charge of
species of forages possible
with lillie or no tillage .
Research in Ohio, since 1964
has proved that no-tillage
plan ling can be suecesslul
even on many soils that could
not be planted by .co n.
ventional methods . Since
. then the practice has been
spreading among farmers,
especially in eastern Ohio.
Model
Myers' said Ohio scientists
had
developed
10
MF 230 Tractor
management steps, based on
the years of experimentation,
MF 235 Tractor
Briefly, these are :
MF 255 Tractor
Field Selection: This is
very important in deter·
MF 265 Tractor
mining success of sod
MF 275 Tractor
seeding. Some factors to be
conSidered are (1) drainag e;
the forage species must be
BUY .NOW WHILE SUPPLY IS GOOD AND
suited 1111d adapted lor the
soil drainage; (2) soil type;
research an'd observation
have shown ·no.tillage
systems are most effective on
MANY OTHER POPULAR C~EMICALS ALSO AVAILABLE
slit loain soils ; ( 3) existing
vegetation; ·herbicides
currently available will not
eradicate aggressive
perennial weedy species.
Soil Analy sis: These
permanent pasture sites are
usually acid and low in
RT. 7 NORTH
phosphorus ..Soiltesting is thE
only known means of ob·
talnlng an indication ol

Gallia . 4~H

992~7034

Pome roy

Hn.

9a . m . tiiS : JOp . rh .CI0~edSun .

OhiO

Pearl .sh 992-3323 , Roger Davis , 992-7671

Ellen Fuller, Doug Deems,
Dan Deems, Greg Adkins,
Bart Davis and Kevin Carl&gt;!r.
Guests were Mrs . Maxine
Oliver, Jo Ann Legel, Mrs.
BauseU and Mrs . Deems,
Mr s. Bud Carter and
daug hter . - News reporter,
Lisa Smith.

Ouh News

FARM CHEMICALS
eAatrex 4L

eAatrex lOW

eBiadex 4WDS

.
Was

eBiadex lOW

5931.00
1
7038.00
1
8575.00
1
10,600.00
1
11,500.00
1

eEradicane 6.7E

eLasso EC

"QUALITY ALWAYS"

PCA buiding . Club members
present were Lori Smith, Lisa
Smith, Malt Sterrett, Mike
Sterre tt, Max Sterrett, David
Wandling, Keith Saunders,
Rany Jones, Marcia Bausell,
Mark CBausell, Jo Ellen
Oliver, Keith Ann Oliver ,
Jjsa Legel, KaLhy J ones, Jo

It's time to spring
action-and we're
offering special low .prices on all new MF
farm tractors under 80 pto hp. Check how
much you save:

eSutan 6.7E

PRICES ARE LOW

Now
'4775.00
'5440.00
'6700.00
'8250.00
'9200.00

YOU SAVE
'll~MO
1

1598.00
1875.00
1
2350.00
1
2300.00
1

a

If you need new tractor this spring, you can't
beat these prices. Come see, come SAVE!

GALLIPOLIS TRACTOR INC.
OPEN 8 AM TIL 5 PM

PH. 446-1044

Mayfield 55 Bedford 51

~~d'~nv~ll8e3 7lv~~i ·~;~1:Y6469

Midv iew 68 vermilion 55
Minford 58 Portsmouth N otr e
D a me 46
Monroeville 79 s Cen tr al 52
~~Healthy 57 Fo rreSI Park

See them today and $ave. Sale ends March 7.
Tile Only 21" Solid Stete Self-Propelled

Mower With Self-CMrtlng Electric Stare.

Model S234AE.

The only walk-behind mower that recharges willie p
11111w! It starts with a turn of a key, propels itself with

all-gear drive, and recharges its ni~cad battary with a
built-I n alternator ... automatically. Solid stat~ ignition
for quick starts, super-quiet ·under-the-dec:k muffler,
and all the other superior LAWN-BOY engineering
feature·s make this mower the ultimate in quick and
quiet mo,w ing.

•

IIUGGIITID
UITIIIIICI
IIALI lltltcl

$309.95
269.95

YOU IA\111

$ 40.00

21" Deluxe Self-Propelled.
Model S253 1nat m...a-KHJ.

wyoming 62 St Bernard 56

.

GLOUSTER ·c6SJ - Feires
3-0 ·6 , Gardner 2-2-6, Lewis 9 ·
Hunter
4-2- 1() ,
6-2• .
Echstenkamper 4-0-8. Meade
5-0· 10. Thorn pson O- l -1. Totals
21 -22 ·65.
SOUTHERN
f741
Roberts 4-5 · 13 , D . Brown S·O·
10 , Brt~~uer 8· 7-23, Roush 10· 1·
21, Cross 2·0 · 4, J . Brown 0-1· 1.
Dunning 1-0· 2 , Totals 30 -14-74 .
score by quarters :
12 19 13 21 - 6'5
Glo us ter
Southern
i6 15 17 26- 71

Smith, trf'as urer, Mall
Sterrett. Chaplain, Lisa
J.eget, Songleader, Keith Ann
Uli ver and recreation leader ,
Jo !':lien Fuller. Refresh·
menl~ were provided by Lisa
and Lori Smith and Lois
Sterrett. The next meeting
will be held March 25 at the

D e l phos
L ockl and 66 Cin R eading 60
L orai n Cath 11 Southvi ew 10
Mansfield Madison 511 New
Philad el phia 44
Marion 60 M in ster 41
rofrvsville 75 Teays Valley n

61

NEW YORK (UPI) - Glen
" Judge" Carberry, who captained the 1922 Knu!e
Rockne.:Coached Notre Dame
football team, died in
Klngsbrldge Veterans
HOBPital 'here Thursday of
respiratory failure .
Carberry, 79,an attorney in
the New York regional office
of
the
Veterans
Administration, was stricken
at borne earlier Thursday and
hospitalized.
A football and basketball
coach at St. Bonaventure in
the mid 1920's, Carberry was
induced by Notre Dame
teammate Jim Crowley of
fabulous Four Horsemen
fame to coach the Michigan
State line in the early '3!\s.
When Crowley moved to
Fordham as bead coach, he
took Carberry along to coach
the Seven Blocks of Granite
that featured the late Vince
Lombardi.

I..County agent's corner ~&lt;'1,:~~.~::. ~1 ~:;Jii~;sJE

fourth cantos). They hit 26-64
shots lor 41 percent and
netted 12·25 free throws .
Wayne Satterfield had seven
of his team 's 28 rebo unds.
Holbert of Glouster led all
scorers with 25 markers.
Officials lor the contests
were Tipton and Taylor.

shots from the field lor 51
percent and netted 11-20 free
throws. They hauled in 39
caroms , with Himter getting
12 of those . Glouster closed
their season with a 4-13 mark,
while the Tornados ended
with a 14-4 mark .
The reserve contest saw an
overtime baitle with the
TomKitlens coming out on
top, 65-94. Regulation ended
57-57, but the first minute of
overtime saw the visitorS
score lour quick ones and
then hang on.
John Sayre tossed in 19
markers lor the losers (eight
in the second and eight in the

11 ~l· progret m. Fred J)(-cl was
the speaker at the meeting

67

N Olmsted 65 Olmsled Fa ll s
58
Nelsonvill e -York 81 Vinton
Coun t y 73
New Brem en 52 Bradford 50
N ewark Cath 73 H ea th 47
N or walk St Paul 70 Map l eton
51
Pri nce to n 69 McNicholas 57
R ey noldsburg 70 Whitehatr67
R idgemont 73 N Union 70
R i verview 105 Crooksvil le 57
Riverdale
76
H ardin .
N or th ern 57
LOGAN pi ) - Myers 2-4·
Sa ndu sky
Sl
Marys
83
B; H awk 5·2· 12 ; Mu lho l l and 5- Ma rgaretta f18
4- 14 ; M c Broom 10 -9-29 ; See l
S t H enry · 104 F r a n k!in 2-0·4; .B rag l in 0·2-2; Lann ing
Monroe 77
2-0;4; R ussel l l -0-2; GasserO - Tr i adelphia
(W
Va&gt;
70
2-2. TOTAL5 .27 -2J -77 . .
Bellaire 66
ATHENS (61) - Faulkner
TriWay 51 W Holmes 40
5· 2·· 12; Heady 5-l -11 ; Chonko ,. Upp er 'Sa ndusky 52 Tiffin 49
J -0-6 ; Greer 6-0 -12.; Bla c kford
Uti ca 70Watkins M emoria l 58
5-1-11 / Meek 3-2-8 ; Wheatey O· Va ll ey 11 8 N West B4
1-1. TOTALS 27·7 ·61.
Wapakoneta 62 Kenton 61
Score by quarters :
Warr"en Lo ca l 63 Belpre 49
At hens
15 16 16 14- 61
Wes te rn Reserve 72 Edison 53
Logan
20 20 11 26- 77 Westerville S 58 Gahanna 55
Reserve s Lo gan 50 Willard 57 No rw al k 55
At h ens 42 .
Wooster 61 Ashland 60
wor th ington 72 Co l Westland

1922 Irish grid
captain claimed

1§~~MDJil~;~~rmm~:r:~;m~;;;~~~~lif~~~~~mll~i~il~~l~~1~~~~;~~~~jj~;ii~;~~~lilii~~~~~~~~i;t;~~m=~:~:~:i~~~f;~~~~~~l~l~~~~!~~~f:!~~~~~~~~j~~~;~~;~~~;;~~;m~;~~!;~~~~ij~;~~~;~~~~;~~;;;~~~;;I~m~~~~~;~}~:~:~:~:~:~:l:~@:j;j;~~1;;

Southern ends season
•
with '74-65 cage wzn

Friday's
high
school
scores

ROUSH NETS 21 :..... Southern's Dave Roush (32)
popped in 21 points to help lead the Tornadoes to a 7~
over Glouster in a non-conference game Friday night. In
foregrou •d is Southern's Chip Brauer ( 44 ). - Jim Hamm
photos.

..

25 - The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Feb. 22, 1976

22, 1976

LAWN-BOY dependability with no-push convenience.
AU-gear drive el.iminates troublesome belts and pUlleys,
applies power to t he rear wheBis where it belong&amp;.

Cycling cot~test

Simplified carburetor for quick starts, no adjustments.
Up- fron t discharge and super IIBCuum action

~~:3..:for

winners .named
MILAN, Italy ( UPI)
Francesco Moser of Italy and
Patrick Sercu of Belgium
won the Milan Six-Day indoor
co;cllng contest Friday when
a last-minute fall knocked out
one of their chief rivals.
Belgian Rik Van Linden ,
who along with Italian Felice
Gimondi bad led the
standings most of the time,
crashed into West German
cyclists Klaud Buggdabl and
Dieter Kemper, who bad
collided and fallen in the
113th lap of a 71).k!Jometer
Arnericalne race.
·
Van Linden's head hit the
bicycle of one of.the Germans
and be
was knocked
.unconscious. He came to just
as an ambulance was abo!Jt to
take him to the h06pital and
instead be went back to the
Sports Palace.

•'

8' cleaner cut.

'=

IUGDimD
LilT PIICI
IIALI PIUCI

$229.95
199.95
$ 30.00

IL th -

Y,

P.M.

COWS &amp; CALVES, SPRINGER COWS, YEARLING
HEIFERS, STEERS and BULLS, FEEDER CALVES,
HOLSTEIN STEERS, ALL BREEDS ACCEPTED.
COWS WILL BE PREGNANCY TESTED.
CATTLE WILL BE RECEIVED DAY OF SALE
FOR MORE· INFORMATION PHONE TOMMY JOE STEWART
446-3941 44~049

liV

See them today at LAWN-BOY dealers ...

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
CHESTER , OHIO
98S -3308

TUPPERS PLAINS
HARDWARE
TUPPERS PLAINS , OHIO
667.JtU

WILKINSON
SMALL ENGINES
MlDD.LEPORT,OHIO
9fl.JOf1 ,

McKNIGHTDAVIES HARDWARE
43COURTST.
GALLI POLlS, 0.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

446-1374

I

'"

&gt;I

�Agriculture and Some.farmers must pay 1975 income taxes
.

•
by March 1; needed forms are availa.b le
our community
II~· Bt•ysou H. ( lltu ll Carter
Gallict l'uu nty Ex ten sion Age nt

GALU POUS - This 1sa remmd erfor folks who qualify as
· fa rmers and who did not fil e a decla ration of estimated tax by
J anuary 15 of this yea r . You must fi le r ou r 1975 Federal
Income Tax RetW'n Form 1040 " "d pay any I:L&lt; due by Ma rch
I.
We have copies of most of the tax forms that you may need
in addition to those you have already received in the mail. If
we can help you in t his way, plea se give us a call.
I also want to pass along som.- reminders com:erning
prepara tion of your 1975 federa l income tax re turn. These were
prepared by Bill Smith . our Area Extens ion Agent. Farm
Management.
Check to make sure you have used the correct tax ta ble in
figuring your tax due. If you hi re someone to prepare your

Get Ready For Spring

I FUNKS G. HYBRIDS

I

eFIELD SEEDS

rc LUrn , it's ~ good idea to cheek on the calculations. AnYone
ca n make a n error- and remember, lt 'syour tax.
Mail your Lax return in plenty of time and use the label which
Ir i 'urnishes, if possible.
Don't forget the $30 individual tax credit available for 1975.
ms reports that this credit was not taken on a large
percentage of early returns filed . Also check to see if you are
eligible to take the earned income credit.
Make sure all income is reported, both farlfl and non-farm.
Keep personal a~d business items separate. Check livestock
sales to make sure that sales of breeding livestock eligible for
ca pital gains treatment are reported properly to give you the
tax brea k allowed .
Farmers often miss this and end up paying tax on entire
gain realized in sale of breeding livestock and dairy cows
ra ther than on 50 percent of the gain. Be sure all expenses are
counted but not double counted.
H you pay cash wages to your own child under age 21, the
wages ~an be deducted as a business expense and you do not
have to pay social security tax on these wages. However, the
wages must be reported for Ohio Workmen 's Compensation .

lly .John Cooper
So it Cons. Service
POINT PLEASANT - The
work of a soil conservationist
with landowners and land ~
users •. but other parts of our
work have to do with conservation educahon and also

eBURPEE SEED 'N START
KITS
PLUS

lay of the land
informing the public what we
are doing.
Two members of our s4fff,

eTOBACCO SEED BED
AND FIELD SUPPLIES
eFERTILIZIER-AMMONIA
NITRATE

J. D. NORTH PRODUCE CO.
VINE STREET

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Okey R. King and Roger
Powell, with Jack Crank, a
landown er , appeared as
guests on Dale Wheeler's
Farmbook program. They
we nt to Huntington a nd the
program was taped for a
show ing
on
Saturday,
February 21. The program
had to do with the installation
of nearly 30,000 feet of tile on
the Crank farm.
They look along colored
pictures which were ta~en

during the installation of the
~Je system and samples of
tile that were used in the
installation as well as
samples of tile that were dug
up after work progressed .
Most of the tile that was dug
up was silted full as a result
of silting 'into the tile over a
period of many years.
SOME
OF
OUR
EDUCATiO!'I work recently
involved mee ting with the
Vocational Agriculture class
at the Vocational School a nd
also meeting w ith Mrs.
Howard Carder's fifth grade
class a t Central School.
At the Vocational School we
discussed farm planning with
Paul
Clark's
farm
management class. After a

classroom

which we explained soils
maps and the various parts of
conservation . plans, and the
land use that could go alon~
with different soil capa-

Vocational Department.
Ar v ille
E.
Sommer,
director of the Vocational
School, a nd the· Vo-Ag
Department at the school are
interested in revising the
conse rvation and land use
plan for the school farm . The
plan was first developed in
1963. Many things that were
pla nned at that lime. have
been .accomplished, but their
program
has
c hanged
. somewhat so that they feel
that a revised pla n is needed
to become mor~ up-to-da te
with their operation .

EXTRA CH.AIN
•

With the Purchase of an
XL-L, Super II, No. 150, Super E-Z
or an Xl-12 and
XL

SEVERAL PEOPLE have
already placed orders for the
wildlife packet being made
a vailable to property owners
by the distri ct. However, the
Dis trict can still accept more
orders. The planl'l available
in this packe t are: Colorado
blue spru~ e. Norway spruce,
Scotch pine, White pine ,
Chinese chestnut, Silky
dogwood, filbert; wayfaring
tree viburnum , and Sawtooth

HOMELITE®
CHAIN SAWS

and Take
Advantage ·
of this
Limited
Offer!

We a lso have a Specia l on ou r XL with 10" bar
lor only $ 104.95. No free chain with this one .

POMEROY
~.: rving Meigs, Galli a

COLUMBUS Initial
claims for unemployment
benefits under the Ohio
Une mpl oyme nt
Compensation Law increased
again last week .
Administrator Albert G.
Giles of the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Serv ic es
(OBES) , announced that
· 23,983 jobless Ohioans filed
initial claim s under the
regular Ohio Law during the
week ending February 14, a
8.3 percent increase over the
previ ous week's total of
22,137. More than 4,300 claims
were attributed to lack-oforders layoff
in . the
automotive industry , Giles
5;1id.
Initial claims under. all
other state and federal
. programs numbered 8,332,
according to Giles, for an
overall total of 32,315,
representing a 6.3 percent
increa se over the prior
wee k's total of 30,393.

&amp; Mason Couniies·

Sen in~ Ohio A.:ril'uhuu
(ur un·r ..f\' YL-a~

. 6, J e rry Falwell 8; Newsmaker ' 75 13.
8.0()-Mormon Choir 3; Day of D i scovery 4 ; Gospel
Caravan 6 ; Church Service 10; Mamre Church 13

8 : 3~[al Roberts 3: Yours for the Asking 4; Kathry~

man 6, _Day of Discovery 8; James Rob ison
Presents 10; Rex Humbard 13; Open Bible 15
9:1)0-Gospet Singing Jubilee 3; Hour of Power 4 · Oral

4 %DISCOUNT THRU FEB. 25

Roberts10; Rex. Humbard 6: Rev . Leonard
· 8; Across the Fence 15,

PLUS
VOLUME DISCOUNTS

Repa$s

9 : 3~What Does the Bible Plainly Say? 8, It Is Written
10; Christ .Is the: Answer 13; Insight 15.
lO :OG-Big Blue Marble Js ; Church Service 4; Leroy

AGRICO • NURISH

Jenkins 6; Christian Center 8; Movie " Shane" 10 ·

Jimmy Swaggart 13; Faith for Today 15; .

FERTILIZER
HERBICIDES

•

IO :Jo-Vegetable Soup 3; Garner Ted Armstrong 4 ·

Jimmy Swaggart 6; Th inking in the Black a· Bl..;
Ridge Quartet 13; This is the Life IS .
•· .
II :GO-TV Chapell; Doctors on Call4; Point of VIew 6;
Re x. Humbard 8, 15; Rev. Henry Mahan 13 ,

SAVE$$ -CHECK OUR PRICES

CHESTER AGRICO
SERVICE CENTER

11 :30-Human Dimension 3; Make A Wish 6 ; F~cus on
Columbus 4; Rev . Calvin Evans 13 .
12:DD:- At Issue 3; Fish In' Hole 4; Issues and Answers

6, Face the Nation 8; Lower Lighthouse 13· To Be

PH. 985-3831

planting. The B. E. Kempers
bought a forty-&lt;&gt;ne acre farm
from Jake Somerville and
plan to raise beef cattle. They
are interested in developing
the land for grass production ·
and they a re also interested
in building a pond for
livestock water.
George Hoffman bought 99
acred from Adrian Lathey to
go along with his present
dairy, He will develop the
a dditional la nd and provide
crops and pasture for his
dairy herd.

'

7:1)0-FII Im 4 ; Talking Hands 8; P ublic Pol ley Forum
10; Spr ing Street USA 13.
7 : 3~ This Is the Life 3; Your Health 4; Revival Fires

PIONEER SEED CORN

Announced 15.

'

12 :3()--Meet The Press 3,4,15; "World of Survival 8;
. Face the Nation 10; Gar ner Ted Armstrong 33.
1.001- Grandstand 3,4,15; Communique 6; Cham.
plonsh!P FIShing 8; Columbus Town Meeti ng 10;
FIShin Hole 13; Adams Chronicles 33 ,
I : J~Ten~ls 3,4,15; Aware 6; Movie " The Last Bft.

zkrleg 8; S~rtsman's Friend 13 .
2 : DO-Superstars 6, 13; Movie " That Wonderful Urge"

10: Onedln Line 33.
.
3:1)0-Joedy Gardner : Basketbal l 8; Rivals of Sherlock
Holmes 33.
·

eo.tl~ bitd showi~g

3 : 3~Grandstand 3.4,15; NBA Basketball 8.10.
4.GO-FBI ~; W1dfe World of Sports 6,13 ; Movie "The
Ra1ders

·. · · "SWAP
N'GO''

4; To Be Announ ced 15; Muslc~ l En.

counter 33 .
4 : 3~ French

Chef 33. ·

5 : 0~Movie "The Ballad of Josie" 3; To Be Announced .

15; A Bi t With Knit 33.

.

"

5 : 3~Gol f 6, 13;; Bobby Vinton 4: Guppies to Groupers

33.
6;GO- News 4; WCH S.TV Report 8; Incred ib le Flight
of the Snow Geese 10 ; American Outdoorsman 15·
American Issues Forum 33.
'
6 : 3~NBC News 3. 4.15; High School Bowl 8; World
Press 33 .

7:0f - World of Disney 3,4,15; Jacques Cousteau 613 ·
~~Minutes8, 10; Capitol Beat 33; Austin City Li,;,lt~

Ph. 992 -2181

Store Hour &lt;; : ~ lore 0p@n !1: 30 to S:lO Clo:oc ., a l S: OO p.m .

-

Mill

~ N imble 6 ; M ic ke y Mouse Club 8; M is te r Rog ers

Kojak 8, 10; Masterpiece Theatre 20,33.
IO :OQ- Bronk 8, 10; Bill Moyers ' Journal 20,33.

'

Man·Trap

News; Beverly Hillbillies &amp;; Elec.
Co . 20.33; .
6:GO-News 3.4.8.10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20:
Special Edvcation 33.
6 : 3~NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Gr iffith 6;
CBS News 8, I 0; Hodgepodge lodge 20.
7: oo- Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth"• • Bowling tor
Dollars 6; Buck Owens 8; News 10.; Can ;J:u
Camera 13; Family Affair 15; On Aging 20;
Resourceful West VIrginia 33.
7:30--That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Don Adams
Screen Test 4; Match Game PM 6; Price Is Rlaht a:
Evening Edition with Martin Agronsky 20; High
Road to Adventure 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Friends
of Man 15; Marco Sportllte 33.
8:00--Symphony No.3 : The Galleries 3; On The Rocks
13; Rich little 4,15; College Basketball 6; Gunsmoke 8; U.S.A.: People &amp; Politics 20,33; Rhoda 10.
8 : 3~Movle 13; Presidential Forum 20.33; Phyllis 10.
9:1)0-Joe Forrester 3.4,15; All In The Family 8.10.
9 : 3~Ma ude 8,10.
IO:GO-Jigsaw John 3,4,15; Rich Man. Poor Man 6,13;
Medi cal Center 8,10; News 20.
10:3~Lock Stock &amp; Barrel 20.
II :GO-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15; Movie 6; ABC News 33
II : J~Johnnv Carson 3,4,15; Movie " Message to My
Daughter" B; Movie "The Big Sleep" 10; College
Basketball 13; Janaki 33 .
·
12 : 3~G ulnness Book of World Records 6.

10; Issues and Answers 13

12:1)0-Janaki 33.
12:3D-Bonanza 4; ABC News 13; News 20 .
1: 3~Peyton Place 4.

'MONDAY, FEB RUARY 23,1976
6 :oo-Sunrlse Semester 10.

6:15-Farm Report 13 .
6 : 2~Good News 13.
6:3D-Columbus Today 4: News6; SUnr ise Semester 8 ·
Farmllme 10.
'
6 :40--Qunce of Prevention 10.

6:45--;Mornlng Report 3.
6 : 5~huek White Reports 10; Good Morning Trl
State 13.
'
7:00--Today 3,4, IS; Good Morn ing, America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7 : 3~Schoolles 10.
,
7:45-Sesame St. 33.
8:00--Lassie 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10.
8 : 3~ B ig Valley 6.
9:1)0-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D.J. 13.
9 : 3~A.M . 3; One life to Live 6;; Tattletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13.
,
IO :DO--;-Celebrlty Swet!pstakes 3,4,15;; Edge of Night 6;
Pnce Is Right 8, 10.
10 : 3~High Rollers 3,4,15; Dinah 6.
II :GO-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Weel&lt;day 4; Gambit
8, 10; Farmer's Daughter 13; Etec. Co. 20.
II : 3~Hollywood Squares3,4,15; Happy Days 13; love
of life 8,10; Sesame Sf: 20.33.
'
11 :55-Take Kerr 8: Dan lmel' s World 10.
12 :00--Magnltlcent Marble Machine 3,15; Let's Make a
Deal13; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; Ne ws 6,8, 10.
12 : 3~Take My Advice 3, 15; All My Children 6,13;
Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.
12:45-E iec. Co. 33.
12:55-NBC News 3,15.
I :GO-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10'; Not For Women Only 15
1: 3~Days of Our Lives 3,4, IS; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13;
As The World Turns 8,1 0.
2:GO-S20.ooo Pyramid 13; Formby' s Antique Fur .
nlture 6.
2 : 3~Doctors 3,4,15; Neighbors 6,13; Guiding light
8, 10.
•
3:GO-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6. 13; All
•n The Family 8. 10; Woman 20; Business 33.
3:3()-..()ne life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Match
.Game 8,10; Consumer Survival Kit 20.
4:00--Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Ma x B.

In 1973, Israeli fighter
planes Shot down ~ civilian
libyan airliner, killing I06 of
the 113 per110ns aboard.

MANAGER
TRAINEES
One
lhe
ol

rapid

p rofit
insurance

CO A L . l imeston e and eillype~
of sa lt an d rock sal t lor ic ~
and snow r emov al . E K ,.
ce l ~io r
Sa lt Wo rk s. E a stfMa ln S t., Po m e roy , Oh io .z
Phon e 992 3891.
•
12·7 lfG•

program ,

For more detai ls call
Rosemary

Clay

s

--ti"""'..----~·

, ...

ONE CAN

----

When the right piece of farm land becomes
available, the expansion-minded farmer acts
.. . often wi th the help o f a long-term low cost
Federal Land Bank Loan .
228 Upper River Roal!
P . O . Box 207, Gallipolis
Phone 446-0203
'

Anewe.o1

'111F.

Turn at traffic

light onto
Ohio . Phone 367-7329

Rt. 554 at

·~

~ss
1 Stre.m
6 Hlrbor
10 Juon 'tlhlp
14 Briel
19 Medll r«auitel
,
l or
2 1 ThrM· blnded
armtdlllo
22 Faltlller
23 8riml111 cap•
24 B.ceme

our outdoor fa
for your outdoor fa
.

checked In

IJ .WY OOP

.

dlv-'GPITitnl
26 Ptrticuier
28 Alllr acr..n
29SmeMdoQ
30 Undergarm.enl

WH&lt;\T'S TMIS ABOuT

'SWAJ.JP PE:Of.&gt;!..E', ZAk: i
Ali:l! ~U PUTTING
ME ONf

32 Biblical w"dl
33Pointofhemm•
34 Glrl 't name
35PiectiOUI
37 Godde11 or
discord
39Lair

133 Engltltl Dlby
Clfr,IOI
134 Unll aiSiam••
currency
135 Mo~mtaln• of
Europe
t37 EmpiOft
t38 MOI'Iemmlldaln
17 Quarrel
chief
7811alltn INPDfl
140 Wolfhound
80 Excu11 (colloq.l 141 RuQGed
8 1 Both.mounraan crnt
82 .._mil
143 Face of clOck
84 Woodin eupport 1415 Make lac.
88 Repu111 1on
148 Netlveof
87 Oeltlnt up
Catalonia
8a BIYII'Igt
148 SChCIOibOC*I
82P.-tainfnglothe 150Comb. form :
ChMit ·
devil
85 Men'a neme
152 Footbali INm
98Aitectlon
t53Men "aneme
98 Onignetione
t54 C•emony

103 Heraldry:
'
grefled
104 OtwouriCI.
40 Conlelnll't
lOS Glrl'l name
41 Unwented plant t08.Ntar ·

t 58Morevaptd

t57 Style ol
autamobtlli
158 Old proftoun
t5i Camm111d 10111
. 180 CorundUIII uHd
42Ltmprlyl
101 Ptr..,tlcolloq.l
lor grinding
108 Wile ol Oetalrll
DOWN
44 Empow.48 SW IIt
110 Commtnd to
47 Obllructe
hor..
1 CrAftkllld fabrk:
48 S.1on1ng
111 Nott of ICIII
2 Reprimand
50 Wlltloultlumb.- 112 Mall of ftoaltng
3Eplc poema
52 Orunkaro.
lea
4 Orgen of
53 Symbol lor
113 1 arracudl
httrln8
115Sunf0d
aamarlum
5 OutfHt
55 Servent
1 1T Server
8 Parent (colloq .I
57Men·anidlneme 119Aalela (lbbr .l
1 Hervett
58Ctoll
1208tkl('t
6
\
59 DIPfiiiiCifl
PJodUCII
eo CoNege diQrH t21 Quality 01 being
with delight
labbr .I
lneflecllva
aFoot lev•
82 HIIIIgtltly
124 TttcM
10 Fore6gn
84 OavtiODed
128 T11r
tllnlata
86 NIWI·QIItllrlng 127 1mltllld
12 Female (COllOq.)
,
oroen lrallon
t 28 Dri111k of ttl a
t3 Conjunction ·
(lnlt.l
· godl
14 GuiHikl bird
88 Pa id notice
130Skickled
· 15Bthwe
89 Firn
132 Saucy
18 Buya btell

Scout Trave le·r

,~.~d•=tld

I

~871 ,

Ours is the new family of Scouts for '76. Rugged . Durable. Fun.
Like the new four-wheel drive International"' Scout Traveler™, big enough for an
outdoor family, with more room for plenty of gear. In fact, 103 cubic feet with the
optional rear seat folded down .
The new Scout Terra'M is the first right-sized four-wheel drive pickup. Built to
get sportsmen with o lot of gear off the beaten trail. It's the only pickup made with
11 cubic feet of in-cob, " lockable" storage- standard.
And the rugged Scout " II. Maneuverable enough to go
Real Bargain!
where most other four-wheelers fear to tread, yet big
enough to carry everything you need.
.
All the new Scouts have four-cylinder engines for fuel
4 WH. DRIVE DEMO.
economy. Or a choice of two powerful V-8's Ia match any
driving need.
So make the introduction . Bring your
family over.

.-.c...··.,.·--~-~---·----·..: ___

SKU~L

POETIC

~onday)

(Aiu,_.et•
ASTRAY

2·18-12t c .,

'75 SCOUT II

PRICED BEUM
DEALER msn

·Scoufthe America others pass by.
.

.

M
.EIGS
EQUIPMENT
CO.
Phone M2-2176
Pomeroy, Ohio
See your lnte::wlional

......_Dealer.

.

,

~

M c DANIEL Cu s tom
But .:
c hermg , Wesl Columb ia. W .•
Va . W e butch er cattle and •

hogs .
S10
catlt e '!
slaughte r ; $7 fo r hogs ; 12c .;
for cutt ing and

wrapping . .&amp;

Slale

and f ed e ra l I n spec t ed ; •
Open 6 d ays p e r we e k . '"

~
l ·J0.26 tc •

Phon e 004 ) 88 2-3274 .

.•
%

automation .

83 Vlalgall king

84ChtniMd61Wlc.
mNIC.Irl
ae Solar dllk
878cM
1008Vftlbolfor
tanlalum
102Titte01re.peet
{pl.l

·

1050r.ntuHol
109JICkdewl

120Chllt1Hd

.

12 1-Brldge
!28trlct
!53 AnUtrtd -.lmtl 122 Mltllvet
5:4MMcullnt ·
1230'-IMee

reNegall~

lllC)tnt ion
7iMahemm.a..,

name
830ulc:hlown
858ur...

-------------SM,ALL effic i ency ap1. for

2· 2i -6t c

5 1 Clpltal 01 Tibet

77 Feclal

redecorated . ful ly carpeted
Call in the ear l y a .m . 992 ~
2288 .
2·22 ·1fc
male occupant. no
an1ma l s. Phone 992 -5786 .

Ill Neut-. lallnd
118AIYeriltKorM

m•aur•
12&amp; Otd &amp;paniltl gold
. c'*t
128F•tt
t271tland off lrolond
t H Foray
131 Trader

- - -----------home , equipPed k it
ELEC .

147Thekava
t48ChHf

:; ~~gllke
14i hh,.ic : u written
I 51 Loud nOIM
88 Repetition
8i Man'a nici;name
· lcolloq.)
90JUmped
'
t53Cant(abbr .l
1!i!S LIIM\ conjunction

AL UMINUM

X

6' in e)C c el len t c ondition.,:a$100 . Phone 992 ·5786.
•

...

2.,22 - 6 t c~

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

T WO ca lves , mi .x ed Hereford•
cow wi th calf . Phone 843 :11.

.,

353.

"'

ha s

Good condit i on!"

4-t

'Sl,OOO . Phone 949 -2 139 a ti er
p .m .

2-22 -JtC"'"

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

- -- - - -

Auto Sales
1963

Ga iax ie, go

F ORD

A l ~o .

...

d •

196·4 Fo~d :·.
Bo th · for $250 . "i
Phone (6 \ 4 ) 9R5 420·1
•

cortdition .

for

part s

2 20 61c

..
.
1

ch e n , 2 bedrooms , 2 car
garag e, ulililies preferred ,
no pe ts . ref . Phone New
Haven . 1 \3041 -882 -2852 .
,

1966 FAL CON Station Wagon ,•
6 cy l, std . air , pair Monroe •

- - ~ - - -.,..- - . -...... - ~ ~~0..:._31p
FURN I SH ED apl ., 5 r ooms
and ba th , large back and
f r on t porch w i t h yar d
ut ilities pa id . A lso , Fur '

sllocks fOr 59 ·67 vw, SlQ. :
Phone 99 2·7826.
..
2·22
·31C eli:"'
_ _ _ _ _ :....__ _ _ _ _ _ _
__.;._
'
1974 M US T A NG II G h ia, &lt;~~
automati c , air condlllo n ing r

nish ed apartment , 3 rooms
and ba lh , with ya r d , utiliti e s
paid . Cal l before 6 p.m . 99 2

t32 s._,
133 PlOt
134 hbylanlan

.tJode of dead ·
•B
3
1 ., urme trlbnmln
138Nowel
1400enllh IM!IIure
14 t Oenllh l•nd
142MII'I'Inlme
144 Tard~

-------------bu ild ing 8" 8' j("!

2·22 -51G,.
----------------------- -·
U N FUR NI SHED
apt.
in 1972 HO NDA 500, 6, 100 miles
:-'
.•.
Po m ero y . 2 bedrm . newly
fairing .

s1n~ l e

114 SNded

72 ThiCket
74 Pr.tlx : twice

space , j_.:a ,;_, i le
nor t h of Meig~ Hi g h Sc hoo l
on old R t . 33 . Ph one 992 ·2941 ..
2-22 · ltc

.

Ma i n ~

2·22 - lt

For Rent

I I 3 Stall

4SBIIOtttlf

matlciOUIIy

W.
Pom e roy . 992 · 2 164.

1 12 Shari Pill

48 FC&amp;IgtU
47 Accomptllhed

81 Pdl.•r ••••
8&amp; LDh colloq .I
87 GrMk lett•
etA eontlntnt
C.-r.)
TO Treating

-

2·22 -3t &amp;r

Modern-

399

Pou l try ,

TRA iLER

231nHCII

83Thour.oruo

Ph;,ni

l eghorn pull e ts. Boi h f loo&amp;..
cage grown ava i lablea
Pou l t r y
h ousing
andfl'

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

COIIIpound
,
82 Parent (COI+ocj.)

58 Rendering
lnune
58 Hindrance
80Whlp

4 ••
I ire s, gir.l s 24" bi,k e , ~
wood e f1 roc ker , eiec . h ot ·•
. plate , all kinds of d is hes . •
Ca ll 742 -2078 .

13"

or

2 BEDRM . mobi le home, r ea l
nice . Ph one 992-33 24.
2-4· tt c

18 Ancient ce,•kll:
20 Era.. ll)l"k'ltlng)

caw..,_.

~ -------- ; ,__ (II

------------- ,.,
H &amp;N
DAY Old or starte~

· ,~ H•lif..a·diYicet ·81 Chem~l
25EaUWftely
terrible
27 cr..ta
28liiM
31 Tr.,tllata
33 FrM tldtel
38.rklltt•m
38 TranNct~
40Hurl
41 UnltOIIIectrtCII
m•turllllant
43 Wt"l MIMI I

2-19 -tr c •

GOOD hay ; he v e r we t.
949 -25 23 .
•

2937 .

'

2 20 J tc'

-.--~-~--·-"'

p.s., p .b .• Phone 992 ·3994

o~

993 -7671.

:
2 · 22 - ltp ~

---------L___ 6-"'
FOR Quick sa le, 1968
Comet ,

cy l. Phone 992 .7749 .

3 AND 4 RM . furnished

and

. unfurnished apts , Phone 992 5434 .

- - ---'"'----- ....... ----

COU NTR Y
Mob i le Horne
Park , Rl. 33 , len miles north
of Pomeroy . Larg~ lOis with'

c onc rete patios , sidewa lks ,
and off s tr ee t
parking . Phone 992-7479.

r un n er&amp;

----

12·31 -ttc
---- - ~ - - - -

BEDRM .

part ially

apt. ,

apartments a t pri ces you
can afford . Your rent i n .
c _lu des month to m o nth
lea s es, a ll" ele c. li v ing ,

H E~E MUNDAy{!-

:;:

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

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

ENJOY grac i ous living a! _
VIllage Manor fn Mid dleport for as low as SlJO
pe_r _. mont h
w i th
all
u tiliiFes
Paid .
Th e se
are bra nd new h igh quality

WH ICH IS 5QI.\GTH iN6 TO B6 GRATEFUL FOR ·

-

FI REWOOD , php n e 949 -2089 .:

!

2-15 -7tc

!'

't

2-19·31C ~

furn ish ed , no pets . Phon e
Robert Hi lt. 949 20 13.

I

Dex ter .

2 20 -4fp '!

·.

2
JL ABNER

•';.

PLAIN GU IT A R and case

All ti001'14~ O/l'tlf to ltiih who ho.1
Ggrupollhi1-A PASSKEY.

70 Unl1 of
JapaniM
currency
71 Fllt1 ..uce
73 Mythologieai
uncMrwaid
75lewmlk ing
body

. 10~Fruit(pl . )

"

--~

1 ·70 -31p .
_....,,_
Ill
CON DiT I O N ED hay tor sal e. :
$ 1 b at e , Also , want e d •
Here fo rd bu lls . Ph on e 74 2

- ....... --'--

o t xrr J

SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 22, 1976

Cheshire,

I 13 ·26 1p "

-

MODERN' wa l nut co n so l e ,•
A.M · FM radio , · 4 s pe e d f

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

I'I~ ANTOM

-

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

NOIJ.fi'IOS

UffiE'S .TRADING CENTER

Clyde B. Wiilker, Mgr.

Jumbl••• BAGGY

I

-

ter ms . Cal l 99 2·3965.

=-..=.:•==:=•~WII~Itn~_jl

YHt~rday',

-

c hanger . Balance $101.10 or '

'
1 -_ _ , . . :... . .

All sizes of tractors to choose from to
fit your needs. Also used riding
mowers and tillers.

--

--··-- ... ·--~

ENTERTAINMENT.

I [)

MERRY TIUER

•
••
12 g a :"

SNA R E dr um , w i th drum
s tand and mus i c s tand . !
c ase . S6 5 . Exce ll ent tor ..
s tude n t Ph on e 949 1045 .
..

~UALLY ~OVIDE FO~

Now arranp the circled.letten
to form the •urprlee an~wer. u
:==:=:~~~~~=;:;::::~·~u~r~~eo~led by the ollove cortoon.

... the land you need now!

...... .._...,..__

1 9 6~ f o R o L T O . N ew
Wi n ch es l er 37 A Si ng le shot .!
Ph o n e 742 2359 .
•

employer.

The Almanac
By
United
Press
International
Today is Sunday, Feb. 22,
the 53rd day of 1976 with 313 to
follow.
The moon is in its last
quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Venus.
The evening stars a re
Mars, Jupiter , lind Saturn.
Those bon• on this d~y are
under the sign of Pisces.
George Washington was
born Feb. 22, 1732.
Also on this day in history :
In 1819, Florida was ceded
to the United States in a
treaty with Spain.

I

Company , I mil e nor th o t
Chesh ir e . onR t 7 P ickyour,
own . 'i20 p er to n . Open 6 da y s
pe r w e ek , or c an 16 141 36 7 •
1330 fo r f urthe r in f o r ma t io n ,'"
1 8 781c.

to

Monday Feb. 23 9 A.M. to
P.M. 304-722 -3371.

n 6tc

----

CO A L F U R S /I.LE . C/1.6 Coal

salary, excellent training

r rJ

I I

include

2, 450i

2
-

coverage, and competitive

• •ulll(Jf\11 f

900,

Ph one 742 2068 .

a dv a n ceme nt ,

· co llect

, " Jt¢..

--~~--.,.-

mi les , $1,950 Ex c on d i t ion .

talk to you .

s haring .

--

KAWA SA K I

1975

An e q ua l opportun"ity

.Urucrambleth... rourJumbleo,
one letter to each square to
form four ordinary wo;d •.

(j

949 2093.

experience

co mpany we would like

r»&amp;MID~u..J lc~~-'IJ -..J , _

I VISWEL I

.'.

SELM A R S1gne t c larin e t ,
Ha rm on y g u i la r
Both in
ex ce llenl c ond i t ion . P hon e

and you are interested in a
career with an exciting

Benefi1s

•.

10 7 8 l f C.'

nation ' s

management

If)

'19') ']l

fasted growing restaurant
chain is expanding in the
West Virginia market
providing many managers
and trainee opportunities.
If you ha"¥e previous
restaurant
or
retail

· I : 3~News 13.
.CHANNEL 5
7:GO-Bozo the Clown (c)
7:3()--PPH S-Rave nswood Basketball (c)
9:1)0-8111 Cosby (c )
9: 3~Wyatt Earp
IO :G0-700 Club ?c)

1

H Pt i I RC w c ld tmi ·:·
rn n c h i n e . n e w c lc c
a ll·
.1 &lt;:rf&gt;c;..,oncs 1nctudcd Ph o n e-·

/ IR CO

1:00--.Tomorrow J .

loy tUNIII AHNI/111

..·.

ro·

r eadV

hog

b ur c; h er . W ill sel l 1,
oY·
whole . &lt;t O c e n ts lb . P hone .'
99 2 110 1 afle r 4 p m .
·.•
2 2251 c -

5 : 3~Adam - 124, 13 ;

Don Kirshner' s Rock Concert 15; Soundstage 20.

fed

G RAI N

4:30-Bewitc hed J ; Mod Squad 6; Partridg e F am i ly 8f
Sesame St. 20,33; To Be Announc ed 15 .
5:00--Bonanza J ; Family Affa ir 8; Star Trek 15.

'

li :GO- News 3.4, 8,10,13,15; ABC News 6· Monty
Python's Flying Circus 20: KUP's Show J 3.
11 : 15-Big Valley 6; CBS News 8, 10; PMA Pul se 1~ .
11 : 3~Star T~.ek 3. Bona~za 4; Sammy and Company
8, Movie

For Sale

20,33; Movie " The Busy Body" 10; D(nah 13.

Sonny and Cher 8, 10; Nova 20,33.
· '
9:1)0-McCiovd 3,4,15; Movie "The Last Detail" 613 ·

ljMARDil

First claims
of jobless up
again in Ohio

Landmark

Carsey, Mgr.

Forums 13 .
6 : JD-T~ i s Week 4; Viewpoint 8.

The price of this packet is
$7 per packet which is to be
paid a t the time of ordering.
These are available at the
district office at 2301&gt; Main
Street. Further information
can be ha d by calling 675-

to

Jack W.

Harris of Glenwood, B. E .
Kemper on Ten Mile Creek
and George Hoffman near
Vernon Churc h.
The Harrises bought the
Emma Wise prOperty near
Glenwood . They asked for
planning assisU.nce with a
special · interest in tree

.
SUNDAY, FEBRUAR'Y 22, 1, 76
6.GO-FII m 4• Talking Back to CBS 10 · Publ ic Polley

oak.

Hurry

•

assistance are Stewart L.

Television Log

7: 3~ Soap Box Derby 33.
8:00-Perry Como 3,4, 15; Si x M i llion. Dollar 6 13 ·

discussion at

we proceeded
to
Lakin Hospital
the farm near
l..• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • l l l l . bilities,
which. is owned by the

POMEROY LANDMARK
OFFERS YOU .AN

4170,
PEOPLE WHO recently
signed cooperative
agreements wi th the Western
Soil Conservation District
and asked for planning

?:1 - The Sunday 'l'lmeso&amp;ntinet, ~·eb . 22, 1976

THE 1976-77 AGRONOMYGUIDESarrlved this week and
if you have not obtained a copy of this Extension bulletin then
please feel free to call us or stop by the Office and obtain yoor
free copy , It covers many aspects of produc~ field crops ~d
although in some places it gets a little bit technical, I feel it IS a
must for anyone involved in farming to any extent.

Public .information work perfQrmed·
is varied because we work

eBULK GARDEN SEED

AFTER A LONG PAINFUL WEEKEND with a tooth ache ,
I found myself in the dentist chair last Tuesday morning about
10:30 getting a tooth pulled. Consequently, I was not able to
participate in the Sod Seeding Forage meeting I had set up for
last Tuesday evening at the Buckeye Hills Career Center. Fred
Dee!, our County Extension Agent, 4-H took over in my place
and did a splendid job. I understand about 105 people attended
the meeting which makes it the largest farm meeting of this
type that we have IJad in Gallla County since I have been
County Agent.
This indicates to me that there is a great deal of interest in
no-tillage forage planting method. I had guessed this earlier
and this is the prime reason I had arranged tor tile meeting.
I'll be glad to talk with any of you concerning bow to go
about this business of renovating pastures and methods using
the no-tillage method. There are ten important management
steps that should be followed .
One or iliese does deal with soil testing because many of our
permanent pasture sites are usually acid and low in
phosphorus. It takeS two to three weeks to get a soil sample
·back now, so by all means bring your soil samples to the
Extension Office right away if you plan to do some sod seeding

tl1is Spring.
Don 'I forget the Soil and Waier Conservation District here
in Gallia County does have a sod seeder available on a rental
hasis and you should he contacting them to make
arrange ments for its use l)lis spring.

car pet ing ,

ran g e
and
refr i gerator , f ree tra sh
pick up , . cabl.e TV at yo uie)Cpense,
and
on -sit e .
la und ry fa cilit ie s. Con .
venient to sh opping o"n Third
and Mi l l Streets in Mid dleport . See the manager at
Rivers i de Apartments or
ca l l 992 . 3273
Fu r nished

apar t ment s

ava ilable .

are

al s o

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

H OU 5. E in Rutlan d . Call 992

sass.

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

an(f

un .

furnrshed mod e rn apt
2
and 3 bedrms ., all eleci~ic
brick building , dec orated
~lastered wal ~ s . comp("ef e
_oungstown k 1tchens , with
d i Sposa! ur,its , storrrq doors

-

1971 MONTE Carlo wiih a lr jO
and mags, S2 ,000. Phone 992 :
567 1.
-

-------------.
1973 PONTIA C Cata l i na .':
2-22 ·4tp"'

Phone 669 -3446 or

742 - 2 46~ .

111

2-22 -3t-c ·

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

~

196J C HEVROLET c ab ov e r !

!rue~-; ,
pow e r
.s t eer in g, ,.
would m a ke a g oo d l og •
trlJ c k . Fi r st $1.200 lakes if ~

La ndm a rk , Eas l M ai n S t. , ,;
Pomeroy .
..
220 6 tc ;

1966 FO R D 200 , 6 cy l engin e ..
an d 3 ~ p e e d l r a n smissio n •
c om p l e te . S IOO . P ho ne 992
71 20 a t Fer 5 :00 .

2 ?0 41p

'

ton p i c k up, v a, •
t r a n smission d
c am p e r and t op per , $2 ,60 0 or

1913 FO R D
3 s pe ed

1

;

wi ll tr ad e for a v an . Phon e

949

2 ~ 88

2 20 3 rc
.
19 ?0 lORD P ick. up tru-c k , lon g
b ed", a u l om a t ic , 6 cy l . PhOn e '
(6 1,0 66 7 33 19.
•

2 20 41c
1968 M E R CURY . C&lt;tl t atl e r 5 1
p.m . 992 59 11.
2 10 J t p ..

•

19 10 1 : TO N Ford XL T p.s.J
p b , a ir cond , S l ,OOO m i l es , ~

S1.400 .
Pho n e
Ke it h
Ri de nou r . ( 6 14) 985 4175.
2 203tp .

1 4 tt c
F UR~ISHED

~

2·2 2. 3tc:o

1967 F I AT
99 2-7826 .

t or pa r ts . P hon e •

2 19 Jt c "'"

----~ - -·-----~·

----

PLYM O UTH
Ro adr u nner ,
1969 , ·1 s p ee d , 59 ,000 m ites .
$750. Phohc 992 2975 .
,

wmdows, completely
2 18 6t p '
Insu lated , front and rear ,
entrance , beaiJiifutly l and - 1972 VE GA , $800 . Phon e 949
scaped , private parking
222 0.
I •
~ec i al low renl . The H&amp;ver{
~
'
errace Apts ., NPw Haven
W . VA . Ph on e (JO &lt;t ) 881
'
and

... . .

243

• 15-9t c
- ---3.-- --- ------

tor Sale or Trade
FOR sale or t rill de

2 l8 -6f c

for pickup

of equa l val ue, a Gravely
altachmen ts .
!="hone 99 2.7363 .

tractor with

-·.--- -·--""

l

1975. DAT SUN 8210 Hatchback
wrth ~ t andard tran sm Ission
and a1r c ond i t i on i ng . Sl 300 ~
Call 99 2 345 J .
'
· •

2 -72 -.oltp ~

1971 - AMERIC A.N
M~ l a dor

Mo lors . ~

v a automati c . &lt;~
r e du ce d f(lr qu ick
sale . Phon e (614 J 667 3956 .
2-J814tp
Pr1ce

�Agriculture and Some.farmers must pay 1975 income taxes
.

•
by March 1; needed forms are availa.b le
our community
II~· Bt•ysou H. ( lltu ll Carter
Gallict l'uu nty Ex ten sion Age nt

GALU POUS - This 1sa remmd erfor folks who qualify as
· fa rmers and who did not fil e a decla ration of estimated tax by
J anuary 15 of this yea r . You must fi le r ou r 1975 Federal
Income Tax RetW'n Form 1040 " "d pay any I:L&lt; due by Ma rch
I.
We have copies of most of the tax forms that you may need
in addition to those you have already received in the mail. If
we can help you in t his way, plea se give us a call.
I also want to pass along som.- reminders com:erning
prepara tion of your 1975 federa l income tax re turn. These were
prepared by Bill Smith . our Area Extens ion Agent. Farm
Management.
Check to make sure you have used the correct tax ta ble in
figuring your tax due. If you hi re someone to prepare your

Get Ready For Spring

I FUNKS G. HYBRIDS

I

eFIELD SEEDS

rc LUrn , it's ~ good idea to cheek on the calculations. AnYone
ca n make a n error- and remember, lt 'syour tax.
Mail your Lax return in plenty of time and use the label which
Ir i 'urnishes, if possible.
Don't forget the $30 individual tax credit available for 1975.
ms reports that this credit was not taken on a large
percentage of early returns filed . Also check to see if you are
eligible to take the earned income credit.
Make sure all income is reported, both farlfl and non-farm.
Keep personal a~d business items separate. Check livestock
sales to make sure that sales of breeding livestock eligible for
ca pital gains treatment are reported properly to give you the
tax brea k allowed .
Farmers often miss this and end up paying tax on entire
gain realized in sale of breeding livestock and dairy cows
ra ther than on 50 percent of the gain. Be sure all expenses are
counted but not double counted.
H you pay cash wages to your own child under age 21, the
wages ~an be deducted as a business expense and you do not
have to pay social security tax on these wages. However, the
wages must be reported for Ohio Workmen 's Compensation .

lly .John Cooper
So it Cons. Service
POINT PLEASANT - The
work of a soil conservationist
with landowners and land ~
users •. but other parts of our
work have to do with conservation educahon and also

eBURPEE SEED 'N START
KITS
PLUS

lay of the land
informing the public what we
are doing.
Two members of our s4fff,

eTOBACCO SEED BED
AND FIELD SUPPLIES
eFERTILIZIER-AMMONIA
NITRATE

J. D. NORTH PRODUCE CO.
VINE STREET

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Okey R. King and Roger
Powell, with Jack Crank, a
landown er , appeared as
guests on Dale Wheeler's
Farmbook program. They
we nt to Huntington a nd the
program was taped for a
show ing
on
Saturday,
February 21. The program
had to do with the installation
of nearly 30,000 feet of tile on
the Crank farm.
They look along colored
pictures which were ta~en

during the installation of the
~Je system and samples of
tile that were used in the
installation as well as
samples of tile that were dug
up after work progressed .
Most of the tile that was dug
up was silted full as a result
of silting 'into the tile over a
period of many years.
SOME
OF
OUR
EDUCATiO!'I work recently
involved mee ting with the
Vocational Agriculture class
at the Vocational School a nd
also meeting w ith Mrs.
Howard Carder's fifth grade
class a t Central School.
At the Vocational School we
discussed farm planning with
Paul
Clark's
farm
management class. After a

classroom

which we explained soils
maps and the various parts of
conservation . plans, and the
land use that could go alon~
with different soil capa-

Vocational Department.
Ar v ille
E.
Sommer,
director of the Vocational
School, a nd the· Vo-Ag
Department at the school are
interested in revising the
conse rvation and land use
plan for the school farm . The
plan was first developed in
1963. Many things that were
pla nned at that lime. have
been .accomplished, but their
program
has
c hanged
. somewhat so that they feel
that a revised pla n is needed
to become mor~ up-to-da te
with their operation .

EXTRA CH.AIN
•

With the Purchase of an
XL-L, Super II, No. 150, Super E-Z
or an Xl-12 and
XL

SEVERAL PEOPLE have
already placed orders for the
wildlife packet being made
a vailable to property owners
by the distri ct. However, the
Dis trict can still accept more
orders. The planl'l available
in this packe t are: Colorado
blue spru~ e. Norway spruce,
Scotch pine, White pine ,
Chinese chestnut, Silky
dogwood, filbert; wayfaring
tree viburnum , and Sawtooth

HOMELITE®
CHAIN SAWS

and Take
Advantage ·
of this
Limited
Offer!

We a lso have a Specia l on ou r XL with 10" bar
lor only $ 104.95. No free chain with this one .

POMEROY
~.: rving Meigs, Galli a

COLUMBUS Initial
claims for unemployment
benefits under the Ohio
Une mpl oyme nt
Compensation Law increased
again last week .
Administrator Albert G.
Giles of the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Serv ic es
(OBES) , announced that
· 23,983 jobless Ohioans filed
initial claim s under the
regular Ohio Law during the
week ending February 14, a
8.3 percent increase over the
previ ous week's total of
22,137. More than 4,300 claims
were attributed to lack-oforders layoff
in . the
automotive industry , Giles
5;1id.
Initial claims under. all
other state and federal
. programs numbered 8,332,
according to Giles, for an
overall total of 32,315,
representing a 6.3 percent
increa se over the prior
wee k's total of 30,393.

&amp; Mason Couniies·

Sen in~ Ohio A.:ril'uhuu
(ur un·r ..f\' YL-a~

. 6, J e rry Falwell 8; Newsmaker ' 75 13.
8.0()-Mormon Choir 3; Day of D i scovery 4 ; Gospel
Caravan 6 ; Church Service 10; Mamre Church 13

8 : 3~[al Roberts 3: Yours for the Asking 4; Kathry~

man 6, _Day of Discovery 8; James Rob ison
Presents 10; Rex Humbard 13; Open Bible 15
9:1)0-Gospet Singing Jubilee 3; Hour of Power 4 · Oral

4 %DISCOUNT THRU FEB. 25

Roberts10; Rex. Humbard 6: Rev . Leonard
· 8; Across the Fence 15,

PLUS
VOLUME DISCOUNTS

Repa$s

9 : 3~What Does the Bible Plainly Say? 8, It Is Written
10; Christ .Is the: Answer 13; Insight 15.
lO :OG-Big Blue Marble Js ; Church Service 4; Leroy

AGRICO • NURISH

Jenkins 6; Christian Center 8; Movie " Shane" 10 ·

Jimmy Swaggart 13; Faith for Today 15; .

FERTILIZER
HERBICIDES

•

IO :Jo-Vegetable Soup 3; Garner Ted Armstrong 4 ·

Jimmy Swaggart 6; Th inking in the Black a· Bl..;
Ridge Quartet 13; This is the Life IS .
•· .
II :GO-TV Chapell; Doctors on Call4; Point of VIew 6;
Re x. Humbard 8, 15; Rev. Henry Mahan 13 ,

SAVE$$ -CHECK OUR PRICES

CHESTER AGRICO
SERVICE CENTER

11 :30-Human Dimension 3; Make A Wish 6 ; F~cus on
Columbus 4; Rev . Calvin Evans 13 .
12:DD:- At Issue 3; Fish In' Hole 4; Issues and Answers

6, Face the Nation 8; Lower Lighthouse 13· To Be

PH. 985-3831

planting. The B. E. Kempers
bought a forty-&lt;&gt;ne acre farm
from Jake Somerville and
plan to raise beef cattle. They
are interested in developing
the land for grass production ·
and they a re also interested
in building a pond for
livestock water.
George Hoffman bought 99
acred from Adrian Lathey to
go along with his present
dairy, He will develop the
a dditional la nd and provide
crops and pasture for his
dairy herd.

'

7:1)0-FII Im 4 ; Talking Hands 8; P ublic Pol ley Forum
10; Spr ing Street USA 13.
7 : 3~ This Is the Life 3; Your Health 4; Revival Fires

PIONEER SEED CORN

Announced 15.

'

12 :3()--Meet The Press 3,4,15; "World of Survival 8;
. Face the Nation 10; Gar ner Ted Armstrong 33.
1.001- Grandstand 3,4,15; Communique 6; Cham.
plonsh!P FIShing 8; Columbus Town Meeti ng 10;
FIShin Hole 13; Adams Chronicles 33 ,
I : J~Ten~ls 3,4,15; Aware 6; Movie " The Last Bft.

zkrleg 8; S~rtsman's Friend 13 .
2 : DO-Superstars 6, 13; Movie " That Wonderful Urge"

10: Onedln Line 33.
.
3:1)0-Joedy Gardner : Basketbal l 8; Rivals of Sherlock
Holmes 33.
·

eo.tl~ bitd showi~g

3 : 3~Grandstand 3.4,15; NBA Basketball 8.10.
4.GO-FBI ~; W1dfe World of Sports 6,13 ; Movie "The
Ra1ders

·. · · "SWAP
N'GO''

4; To Be Announ ced 15; Muslc~ l En.

counter 33 .
4 : 3~ French

Chef 33. ·

5 : 0~Movie "The Ballad of Josie" 3; To Be Announced .

15; A Bi t With Knit 33.

.

"

5 : 3~Gol f 6, 13;; Bobby Vinton 4: Guppies to Groupers

33.
6;GO- News 4; WCH S.TV Report 8; Incred ib le Flight
of the Snow Geese 10 ; American Outdoorsman 15·
American Issues Forum 33.
'
6 : 3~NBC News 3. 4.15; High School Bowl 8; World
Press 33 .

7:0f - World of Disney 3,4,15; Jacques Cousteau 613 ·
~~Minutes8, 10; Capitol Beat 33; Austin City Li,;,lt~

Ph. 992 -2181

Store Hour &lt;; : ~ lore 0p@n !1: 30 to S:lO Clo:oc ., a l S: OO p.m .

-

Mill

~ N imble 6 ; M ic ke y Mouse Club 8; M is te r Rog ers

Kojak 8, 10; Masterpiece Theatre 20,33.
IO :OQ- Bronk 8, 10; Bill Moyers ' Journal 20,33.

'

Man·Trap

News; Beverly Hillbillies &amp;; Elec.
Co . 20.33; .
6:GO-News 3.4.8.10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20:
Special Edvcation 33.
6 : 3~NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Gr iffith 6;
CBS News 8, I 0; Hodgepodge lodge 20.
7: oo- Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth"• • Bowling tor
Dollars 6; Buck Owens 8; News 10.; Can ;J:u
Camera 13; Family Affair 15; On Aging 20;
Resourceful West VIrginia 33.
7:30--That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Don Adams
Screen Test 4; Match Game PM 6; Price Is Rlaht a:
Evening Edition with Martin Agronsky 20; High
Road to Adventure 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Friends
of Man 15; Marco Sportllte 33.
8:00--Symphony No.3 : The Galleries 3; On The Rocks
13; Rich little 4,15; College Basketball 6; Gunsmoke 8; U.S.A.: People &amp; Politics 20,33; Rhoda 10.
8 : 3~Movle 13; Presidential Forum 20.33; Phyllis 10.
9:1)0-Joe Forrester 3.4,15; All In The Family 8.10.
9 : 3~Ma ude 8,10.
IO:GO-Jigsaw John 3,4,15; Rich Man. Poor Man 6,13;
Medi cal Center 8,10; News 20.
10:3~Lock Stock &amp; Barrel 20.
II :GO-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15; Movie 6; ABC News 33
II : J~Johnnv Carson 3,4,15; Movie " Message to My
Daughter" B; Movie "The Big Sleep" 10; College
Basketball 13; Janaki 33 .
·
12 : 3~G ulnness Book of World Records 6.

10; Issues and Answers 13

12:1)0-Janaki 33.
12:3D-Bonanza 4; ABC News 13; News 20 .
1: 3~Peyton Place 4.

'MONDAY, FEB RUARY 23,1976
6 :oo-Sunrlse Semester 10.

6:15-Farm Report 13 .
6 : 2~Good News 13.
6:3D-Columbus Today 4: News6; SUnr ise Semester 8 ·
Farmllme 10.
'
6 :40--Qunce of Prevention 10.

6:45--;Mornlng Report 3.
6 : 5~huek White Reports 10; Good Morning Trl
State 13.
'
7:00--Today 3,4, IS; Good Morn ing, America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7 : 3~Schoolles 10.
,
7:45-Sesame St. 33.
8:00--Lassie 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10.
8 : 3~ B ig Valley 6.
9:1)0-Not For Women Only 3; Phil Donahue 4,15; Lucy
Show 8; Mike Douglas 10; Morning with D.J. 13.
9 : 3~A.M . 3; One life to Live 6;; Tattletales 8; Mike
Douglas 13.
,
IO :DO--;-Celebrlty Swet!pstakes 3,4,15;; Edge of Night 6;
Pnce Is Right 8, 10.
10 : 3~High Rollers 3,4,15; Dinah 6.
II :GO-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Weel&lt;day 4; Gambit
8, 10; Farmer's Daughter 13; Etec. Co. 20.
II : 3~Hollywood Squares3,4,15; Happy Days 13; love
of life 8,10; Sesame Sf: 20.33.
'
11 :55-Take Kerr 8: Dan lmel' s World 10.
12 :00--Magnltlcent Marble Machine 3,15; Let's Make a
Deal13; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; Ne ws 6,8, 10.
12 : 3~Take My Advice 3, 15; All My Children 6,13;
Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.
12:45-E iec. Co. 33.
12:55-NBC News 3,15.
I :GO-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue 8;
Young &amp; the Restless 10'; Not For Women Only 15
1: 3~Days of Our Lives 3,4, IS; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13;
As The World Turns 8,1 0.
2:GO-S20.ooo Pyramid 13; Formby' s Antique Fur .
nlture 6.
2 : 3~Doctors 3,4,15; Neighbors 6,13; Guiding light
8, 10.
•
3:GO-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6. 13; All
•n The Family 8. 10; Woman 20; Business 33.
3:3()-..()ne life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Match
.Game 8,10; Consumer Survival Kit 20.
4:00--Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Ma x B.

In 1973, Israeli fighter
planes Shot down ~ civilian
libyan airliner, killing I06 of
the 113 per110ns aboard.

MANAGER
TRAINEES
One
lhe
ol

rapid

p rofit
insurance

CO A L . l imeston e and eillype~
of sa lt an d rock sal t lor ic ~
and snow r emov al . E K ,.
ce l ~io r
Sa lt Wo rk s. E a stfMa ln S t., Po m e roy , Oh io .z
Phon e 992 3891.
•
12·7 lfG•

program ,

For more detai ls call
Rosemary

Clay

s

--ti"""'..----~·

, ...

ONE CAN

----

When the right piece of farm land becomes
available, the expansion-minded farmer acts
.. . often wi th the help o f a long-term low cost
Federal Land Bank Loan .
228 Upper River Roal!
P . O . Box 207, Gallipolis
Phone 446-0203
'

Anewe.o1

'111F.

Turn at traffic

light onto
Ohio . Phone 367-7329

Rt. 554 at

·~

~ss
1 Stre.m
6 Hlrbor
10 Juon 'tlhlp
14 Briel
19 Medll r«auitel
,
l or
2 1 ThrM· blnded
armtdlllo
22 Faltlller
23 8riml111 cap•
24 B.ceme

our outdoor fa
for your outdoor fa
.

checked In

IJ .WY OOP

.

dlv-'GPITitnl
26 Ptrticuier
28 Alllr acr..n
29SmeMdoQ
30 Undergarm.enl

WH&lt;\T'S TMIS ABOuT

'SWAJ.JP PE:Of.&gt;!..E', ZAk: i
Ali:l! ~U PUTTING
ME ONf

32 Biblical w"dl
33Pointofhemm•
34 Glrl 't name
35PiectiOUI
37 Godde11 or
discord
39Lair

133 Engltltl Dlby
Clfr,IOI
134 Unll aiSiam••
currency
135 Mo~mtaln• of
Europe
t37 EmpiOft
t38 MOI'Iemmlldaln
17 Quarrel
chief
7811alltn INPDfl
140 Wolfhound
80 Excu11 (colloq.l 141 RuQGed
8 1 Both.mounraan crnt
82 .._mil
143 Face of clOck
84 Woodin eupport 1415 Make lac.
88 Repu111 1on
148 Netlveof
87 Oeltlnt up
Catalonia
8a BIYII'Igt
148 SChCIOibOC*I
82P.-tainfnglothe 150Comb. form :
ChMit ·
devil
85 Men'a neme
152 Footbali INm
98Aitectlon
t53Men "aneme
98 Onignetione
t54 C•emony

103 Heraldry:
'
grefled
104 OtwouriCI.
40 Conlelnll't
lOS Glrl'l name
41 Unwented plant t08.Ntar ·

t 58Morevaptd

t57 Style ol
autamobtlli
158 Old proftoun
t5i Camm111d 10111
. 180 CorundUIII uHd
42Ltmprlyl
101 Ptr..,tlcolloq.l
lor grinding
108 Wile ol Oetalrll
DOWN
44 Empow.48 SW IIt
110 Commtnd to
47 Obllructe
hor..
1 CrAftkllld fabrk:
48 S.1on1ng
111 Nott of ICIII
2 Reprimand
50 Wlltloultlumb.- 112 Mall of ftoaltng
3Eplc poema
52 Orunkaro.
lea
4 Orgen of
53 Symbol lor
113 1 arracudl
httrln8
115Sunf0d
aamarlum
5 OutfHt
55 Servent
1 1T Server
8 Parent (colloq .I
57Men·anidlneme 119Aalela (lbbr .l
1 Hervett
58Ctoll
1208tkl('t
6
\
59 DIPfiiiiCifl
PJodUCII
eo CoNege diQrH t21 Quality 01 being
with delight
labbr .I
lneflecllva
aFoot lev•
82 HIIIIgtltly
124 TttcM
10 Fore6gn
84 OavtiODed
128 T11r
tllnlata
86 NIWI·QIItllrlng 127 1mltllld
12 Female (COllOq.)
,
oroen lrallon
t 28 Dri111k of ttl a
t3 Conjunction ·
(lnlt.l
· godl
14 GuiHikl bird
88 Pa id notice
130Skickled
· 15Bthwe
89 Firn
132 Saucy
18 Buya btell

Scout Trave le·r

,~.~d•=tld

I

~871 ,

Ours is the new family of Scouts for '76. Rugged . Durable. Fun.
Like the new four-wheel drive International"' Scout Traveler™, big enough for an
outdoor family, with more room for plenty of gear. In fact, 103 cubic feet with the
optional rear seat folded down .
The new Scout Terra'M is the first right-sized four-wheel drive pickup. Built to
get sportsmen with o lot of gear off the beaten trail. It's the only pickup made with
11 cubic feet of in-cob, " lockable" storage- standard.
And the rugged Scout " II. Maneuverable enough to go
Real Bargain!
where most other four-wheelers fear to tread, yet big
enough to carry everything you need.
.
All the new Scouts have four-cylinder engines for fuel
4 WH. DRIVE DEMO.
economy. Or a choice of two powerful V-8's Ia match any
driving need.
So make the introduction . Bring your
family over.

.-.c...··.,.·--~-~---·----·..: ___

SKU~L

POETIC

~onday)

(Aiu,_.et•
ASTRAY

2·18-12t c .,

'75 SCOUT II

PRICED BEUM
DEALER msn

·Scoufthe America others pass by.
.

.

M
.EIGS
EQUIPMENT
CO.
Phone M2-2176
Pomeroy, Ohio
See your lnte::wlional

......_Dealer.

.

,

~

M c DANIEL Cu s tom
But .:
c hermg , Wesl Columb ia. W .•
Va . W e butch er cattle and •

hogs .
S10
catlt e '!
slaughte r ; $7 fo r hogs ; 12c .;
for cutt ing and

wrapping . .&amp;

Slale

and f ed e ra l I n spec t ed ; •
Open 6 d ays p e r we e k . '"

~
l ·J0.26 tc •

Phon e 004 ) 88 2-3274 .

.•
%

automation .

83 Vlalgall king

84ChtniMd61Wlc.
mNIC.Irl
ae Solar dllk
878cM
1008Vftlbolfor
tanlalum
102Titte01re.peet
{pl.l

·

1050r.ntuHol
109JICkdewl

120Chllt1Hd

.

12 1-Brldge
!28trlct
!53 AnUtrtd -.lmtl 122 Mltllvet
5:4MMcullnt ·
1230'-IMee

reNegall~

lllC)tnt ion
7iMahemm.a..,

name
830ulc:hlown
858ur...

-------------SM,ALL effic i ency ap1. for

2· 2i -6t c

5 1 Clpltal 01 Tibet

77 Feclal

redecorated . ful ly carpeted
Call in the ear l y a .m . 992 ~
2288 .
2·22 ·1fc
male occupant. no
an1ma l s. Phone 992 -5786 .

Ill Neut-. lallnd
118AIYeriltKorM

m•aur•
12&amp; Otd &amp;paniltl gold
. c'*t
128F•tt
t271tland off lrolond
t H Foray
131 Trader

- - -----------home , equipPed k it
ELEC .

147Thekava
t48ChHf

:; ~~gllke
14i hh,.ic : u written
I 51 Loud nOIM
88 Repetition
8i Man'a nici;name
· lcolloq.)
90JUmped
'
t53Cant(abbr .l
1!i!S LIIM\ conjunction

AL UMINUM

X

6' in e)C c el len t c ondition.,:a$100 . Phone 992 ·5786.
•

...

2.,22 - 6 t c~

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

T WO ca lves , mi .x ed Hereford•
cow wi th calf . Phone 843 :11.

.,

353.

"'

ha s

Good condit i on!"

4-t

'Sl,OOO . Phone 949 -2 139 a ti er
p .m .

2-22 -JtC"'"

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

- -- - - -

Auto Sales
1963

Ga iax ie, go

F ORD

A l ~o .

...

d •

196·4 Fo~d :·.
Bo th · for $250 . "i
Phone (6 \ 4 ) 9R5 420·1
•

cortdition .

for

part s

2 20 61c

..
.
1

ch e n , 2 bedrooms , 2 car
garag e, ulililies preferred ,
no pe ts . ref . Phone New
Haven . 1 \3041 -882 -2852 .
,

1966 FAL CON Station Wagon ,•
6 cy l, std . air , pair Monroe •

- - ~ - - -.,..- - . -...... - ~ ~~0..:._31p
FURN I SH ED apl ., 5 r ooms
and ba th , large back and
f r on t porch w i t h yar d
ut ilities pa id . A lso , Fur '

sllocks fOr 59 ·67 vw, SlQ. :
Phone 99 2·7826.
..
2·22
·31C eli:"'
_ _ _ _ _ :....__ _ _ _ _ _ _
__.;._
'
1974 M US T A NG II G h ia, &lt;~~
automati c , air condlllo n ing r

nish ed apartment , 3 rooms
and ba lh , with ya r d , utiliti e s
paid . Cal l before 6 p.m . 99 2

t32 s._,
133 PlOt
134 hbylanlan

.tJode of dead ·
•B
3
1 ., urme trlbnmln
138Nowel
1400enllh IM!IIure
14 t Oenllh l•nd
142MII'I'Inlme
144 Tard~

-------------bu ild ing 8" 8' j("!

2·22 -51G,.
----------------------- -·
U N FUR NI SHED
apt.
in 1972 HO NDA 500, 6, 100 miles
:-'
.•.
Po m ero y . 2 bedrm . newly
fairing .

s1n~ l e

114 SNded

72 ThiCket
74 Pr.tlx : twice

space , j_.:a ,;_, i le
nor t h of Meig~ Hi g h Sc hoo l
on old R t . 33 . Ph one 992 ·2941 ..
2-22 · ltc

.

Ma i n ~

2·22 - lt

For Rent

I I 3 Stall

4SBIIOtttlf

matlciOUIIy

W.
Pom e roy . 992 · 2 164.

1 12 Shari Pill

48 FC&amp;IgtU
47 Accomptllhed

81 Pdl.•r ••••
8&amp; LDh colloq .I
87 GrMk lett•
etA eontlntnt
C.-r.)
TO Treating

-

2·22 -3t &amp;r

Modern-

399

Pou l try ,

TRA iLER

231nHCII

83Thour.oruo

Ph;,ni

l eghorn pull e ts. Boi h f loo&amp;..
cage grown ava i lablea
Pou l t r y
h ousing
andfl'

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

COIIIpound
,
82 Parent (COI+ocj.)

58 Rendering
lnune
58 Hindrance
80Whlp

4 ••
I ire s, gir.l s 24" bi,k e , ~
wood e f1 roc ker , eiec . h ot ·•
. plate , all kinds of d is hes . •
Ca ll 742 -2078 .

13"

or

2 BEDRM . mobi le home, r ea l
nice . Ph one 992-33 24.
2-4· tt c

18 Ancient ce,•kll:
20 Era.. ll)l"k'ltlng)

caw..,_.

~ -------- ; ,__ (II

------------- ,.,
H &amp;N
DAY Old or starte~

· ,~ H•lif..a·diYicet ·81 Chem~l
25EaUWftely
terrible
27 cr..ta
28liiM
31 Tr.,tllata
33 FrM tldtel
38.rklltt•m
38 TranNct~
40Hurl
41 UnltOIIIectrtCII
m•turllllant
43 Wt"l MIMI I

2-19 -tr c •

GOOD hay ; he v e r we t.
949 -25 23 .
•

2937 .

'

2 20 J tc'

-.--~-~--·-"'

p.s., p .b .• Phone 992 ·3994

o~

993 -7671.

:
2 · 22 - ltp ~

---------L___ 6-"'
FOR Quick sa le, 1968
Comet ,

cy l. Phone 992 .7749 .

3 AND 4 RM . furnished

and

. unfurnished apts , Phone 992 5434 .

- - ---'"'----- ....... ----

COU NTR Y
Mob i le Horne
Park , Rl. 33 , len miles north
of Pomeroy . Larg~ lOis with'

c onc rete patios , sidewa lks ,
and off s tr ee t
parking . Phone 992-7479.

r un n er&amp;

----

12·31 -ttc
---- - ~ - - - -

BEDRM .

part ially

apt. ,

apartments a t pri ces you
can afford . Your rent i n .
c _lu des month to m o nth
lea s es, a ll" ele c. li v ing ,

H E~E MUNDAy{!-

:;:

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

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

ENJOY grac i ous living a! _
VIllage Manor fn Mid dleport for as low as SlJO
pe_r _. mont h
w i th
all
u tiliiFes
Paid .
Th e se
are bra nd new h igh quality

WH ICH IS 5QI.\GTH iN6 TO B6 GRATEFUL FOR ·

-

FI REWOOD , php n e 949 -2089 .:

!

2-15 -7tc

!'

't

2-19·31C ~

furn ish ed , no pets . Phon e
Robert Hi lt. 949 20 13.

I

Dex ter .

2 20 -4fp '!

·.

2
JL ABNER

•';.

PLAIN GU IT A R and case

All ti001'14~ O/l'tlf to ltiih who ho.1
Ggrupollhi1-A PASSKEY.

70 Unl1 of
JapaniM
currency
71 Fllt1 ..uce
73 Mythologieai
uncMrwaid
75lewmlk ing
body

. 10~Fruit(pl . )

"

--~

1 ·70 -31p .
_....,,_
Ill
CON DiT I O N ED hay tor sal e. :
$ 1 b at e , Also , want e d •
Here fo rd bu lls . Ph on e 74 2

- ....... --'--

o t xrr J

SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 22, 1976

Cheshire,

I 13 ·26 1p "

-

MODERN' wa l nut co n so l e ,•
A.M · FM radio , · 4 s pe e d f

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

I'I~ ANTOM

-

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

NOIJ.fi'IOS

UffiE'S .TRADING CENTER

Clyde B. Wiilker, Mgr.

Jumbl••• BAGGY

I

-

ter ms . Cal l 99 2·3965.

=-..=.:•==:=•~WII~Itn~_jl

YHt~rday',

-

c hanger . Balance $101.10 or '

'
1 -_ _ , . . :... . .

All sizes of tractors to choose from to
fit your needs. Also used riding
mowers and tillers.

--

--··-- ... ·--~

ENTERTAINMENT.

I [)

MERRY TIUER

•
••
12 g a :"

SNA R E dr um , w i th drum
s tand and mus i c s tand . !
c ase . S6 5 . Exce ll ent tor ..
s tude n t Ph on e 949 1045 .
..

~UALLY ~OVIDE FO~

Now arranp the circled.letten
to form the •urprlee an~wer. u
:==:=:~~~~~=;:;::::~·~u~r~~eo~led by the ollove cortoon.

... the land you need now!

...... .._...,..__

1 9 6~ f o R o L T O . N ew
Wi n ch es l er 37 A Si ng le shot .!
Ph o n e 742 2359 .
•

employer.

The Almanac
By
United
Press
International
Today is Sunday, Feb. 22,
the 53rd day of 1976 with 313 to
follow.
The moon is in its last
quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Venus.
The evening stars a re
Mars, Jupiter , lind Saturn.
Those bon• on this d~y are
under the sign of Pisces.
George Washington was
born Feb. 22, 1732.
Also on this day in history :
In 1819, Florida was ceded
to the United States in a
treaty with Spain.

I

Company , I mil e nor th o t
Chesh ir e . onR t 7 P ickyour,
own . 'i20 p er to n . Open 6 da y s
pe r w e ek , or c an 16 141 36 7 •
1330 fo r f urthe r in f o r ma t io n ,'"
1 8 781c.

to

Monday Feb. 23 9 A.M. to
P.M. 304-722 -3371.

n 6tc

----

CO A L F U R S /I.LE . C/1.6 Coal

salary, excellent training

r rJ

I I

include

2, 450i

2
-

coverage, and competitive

• •ulll(Jf\11 f

900,

Ph one 742 2068 .

a dv a n ceme nt ,

· co llect

, " Jt¢..

--~~--.,.-

mi les , $1,950 Ex c on d i t ion .

talk to you .

s haring .

--

KAWA SA K I

1975

An e q ua l opportun"ity

.Urucrambleth... rourJumbleo,
one letter to each square to
form four ordinary wo;d •.

(j

949 2093.

experience

co mpany we would like

r»&amp;MID~u..J lc~~-'IJ -..J , _

I VISWEL I

.'.

SELM A R S1gne t c larin e t ,
Ha rm on y g u i la r
Both in
ex ce llenl c ond i t ion . P hon e

and you are interested in a
career with an exciting

Benefi1s

•.

10 7 8 l f C.'

nation ' s

management

If)

'19') ']l

fasted growing restaurant
chain is expanding in the
West Virginia market
providing many managers
and trainee opportunities.
If you ha"¥e previous
restaurant
or
retail

· I : 3~News 13.
.CHANNEL 5
7:GO-Bozo the Clown (c)
7:3()--PPH S-Rave nswood Basketball (c)
9:1)0-8111 Cosby (c )
9: 3~Wyatt Earp
IO :G0-700 Club ?c)

1

H Pt i I RC w c ld tmi ·:·
rn n c h i n e . n e w c lc c
a ll·
.1 &lt;:rf&gt;c;..,oncs 1nctudcd Ph o n e-·

/ IR CO

1:00--.Tomorrow J .

loy tUNIII AHNI/111

..·.

ro·

r eadV

hog

b ur c; h er . W ill sel l 1,
oY·
whole . &lt;t O c e n ts lb . P hone .'
99 2 110 1 afle r 4 p m .
·.•
2 2251 c -

5 : 3~Adam - 124, 13 ;

Don Kirshner' s Rock Concert 15; Soundstage 20.

fed

G RAI N

4:30-Bewitc hed J ; Mod Squad 6; Partridg e F am i ly 8f
Sesame St. 20,33; To Be Announc ed 15 .
5:00--Bonanza J ; Family Affa ir 8; Star Trek 15.

'

li :GO- News 3.4, 8,10,13,15; ABC News 6· Monty
Python's Flying Circus 20: KUP's Show J 3.
11 : 15-Big Valley 6; CBS News 8, 10; PMA Pul se 1~ .
11 : 3~Star T~.ek 3. Bona~za 4; Sammy and Company
8, Movie

For Sale

20,33; Movie " The Busy Body" 10; D(nah 13.

Sonny and Cher 8, 10; Nova 20,33.
· '
9:1)0-McCiovd 3,4,15; Movie "The Last Detail" 613 ·

ljMARDil

First claims
of jobless up
again in Ohio

Landmark

Carsey, Mgr.

Forums 13 .
6 : JD-T~ i s Week 4; Viewpoint 8.

The price of this packet is
$7 per packet which is to be
paid a t the time of ordering.
These are available at the
district office at 2301&gt; Main
Street. Further information
can be ha d by calling 675-

to

Jack W.

Harris of Glenwood, B. E .
Kemper on Ten Mile Creek
and George Hoffman near
Vernon Churc h.
The Harrises bought the
Emma Wise prOperty near
Glenwood . They asked for
planning assisU.nce with a
special · interest in tree

.
SUNDAY, FEBRUAR'Y 22, 1, 76
6.GO-FII m 4• Talking Back to CBS 10 · Publ ic Polley

oak.

Hurry

•

assistance are Stewart L.

Television Log

7: 3~ Soap Box Derby 33.
8:00-Perry Como 3,4, 15; Si x M i llion. Dollar 6 13 ·

discussion at

we proceeded
to
Lakin Hospital
the farm near
l..• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • l l l l . bilities,
which. is owned by the

POMEROY LANDMARK
OFFERS YOU .AN

4170,
PEOPLE WHO recently
signed cooperative
agreements wi th the Western
Soil Conservation District
and asked for planning

?:1 - The Sunday 'l'lmeso&amp;ntinet, ~·eb . 22, 1976

THE 1976-77 AGRONOMYGUIDESarrlved this week and
if you have not obtained a copy of this Extension bulletin then
please feel free to call us or stop by the Office and obtain yoor
free copy , It covers many aspects of produc~ field crops ~d
although in some places it gets a little bit technical, I feel it IS a
must for anyone involved in farming to any extent.

Public .information work perfQrmed·
is varied because we work

eBULK GARDEN SEED

AFTER A LONG PAINFUL WEEKEND with a tooth ache ,
I found myself in the dentist chair last Tuesday morning about
10:30 getting a tooth pulled. Consequently, I was not able to
participate in the Sod Seeding Forage meeting I had set up for
last Tuesday evening at the Buckeye Hills Career Center. Fred
Dee!, our County Extension Agent, 4-H took over in my place
and did a splendid job. I understand about 105 people attended
the meeting which makes it the largest farm meeting of this
type that we have IJad in Gallla County since I have been
County Agent.
This indicates to me that there is a great deal of interest in
no-tillage forage planting method. I had guessed this earlier
and this is the prime reason I had arranged tor tile meeting.
I'll be glad to talk with any of you concerning bow to go
about this business of renovating pastures and methods using
the no-tillage method. There are ten important management
steps that should be followed .
One or iliese does deal with soil testing because many of our
permanent pasture sites are usually acid and low in
phosphorus. It takeS two to three weeks to get a soil sample
·back now, so by all means bring your soil samples to the
Extension Office right away if you plan to do some sod seeding

tl1is Spring.
Don 'I forget the Soil and Waier Conservation District here
in Gallia County does have a sod seeder available on a rental
hasis and you should he contacting them to make
arrange ments for its use l)lis spring.

car pet ing ,

ran g e
and
refr i gerator , f ree tra sh
pick up , . cabl.e TV at yo uie)Cpense,
and
on -sit e .
la und ry fa cilit ie s. Con .
venient to sh opping o"n Third
and Mi l l Streets in Mid dleport . See the manager at
Rivers i de Apartments or
ca l l 992 . 3273
Fu r nished

apar t ment s

ava ilable .

are

al s o

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

H OU 5. E in Rutlan d . Call 992

sass.

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

an(f

un .

furnrshed mod e rn apt
2
and 3 bedrms ., all eleci~ic
brick building , dec orated
~lastered wal ~ s . comp("ef e
_oungstown k 1tchens , with
d i Sposa! ur,its , storrrq doors

-

1971 MONTE Carlo wiih a lr jO
and mags, S2 ,000. Phone 992 :
567 1.
-

-------------.
1973 PONTIA C Cata l i na .':
2-22 ·4tp"'

Phone 669 -3446 or

742 - 2 46~ .

111

2-22 -3t-c ·

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

~

196J C HEVROLET c ab ov e r !

!rue~-; ,
pow e r
.s t eer in g, ,.
would m a ke a g oo d l og •
trlJ c k . Fi r st $1.200 lakes if ~

La ndm a rk , Eas l M ai n S t. , ,;
Pomeroy .
..
220 6 tc ;

1966 FO R D 200 , 6 cy l engin e ..
an d 3 ~ p e e d l r a n smissio n •
c om p l e te . S IOO . P ho ne 992
71 20 a t Fer 5 :00 .

2 ?0 41p

'

ton p i c k up, v a, •
t r a n smission d
c am p e r and t op per , $2 ,60 0 or

1913 FO R D
3 s pe ed

1

;

wi ll tr ad e for a v an . Phon e

949

2 ~ 88

2 20 3 rc
.
19 ?0 lORD P ick. up tru-c k , lon g
b ed", a u l om a t ic , 6 cy l . PhOn e '
(6 1,0 66 7 33 19.
•

2 20 41c
1968 M E R CURY . C&lt;tl t atl e r 5 1
p.m . 992 59 11.
2 10 J t p ..

•

19 10 1 : TO N Ford XL T p.s.J
p b , a ir cond , S l ,OOO m i l es , ~

S1.400 .
Pho n e
Ke it h
Ri de nou r . ( 6 14) 985 4175.
2 203tp .

1 4 tt c
F UR~ISHED

~

2·2 2. 3tc:o

1967 F I AT
99 2-7826 .

t or pa r ts . P hon e •

2 19 Jt c "'"

----~ - -·-----~·

----

PLYM O UTH
Ro adr u nner ,
1969 , ·1 s p ee d , 59 ,000 m ites .
$750. Phohc 992 2975 .
,

wmdows, completely
2 18 6t p '
Insu lated , front and rear ,
entrance , beaiJiifutly l and - 1972 VE GA , $800 . Phon e 949
scaped , private parking
222 0.
I •
~ec i al low renl . The H&amp;ver{
~
'
errace Apts ., NPw Haven
W . VA . Ph on e (JO &lt;t ) 881
'
and

... . .

243

• 15-9t c
- ---3.-- --- ------

tor Sale or Trade
FOR sale or t rill de

2 l8 -6f c

for pickup

of equa l val ue, a Gravely
altachmen ts .
!="hone 99 2.7363 .

tractor with

-·.--- -·--""

l

1975. DAT SUN 8210 Hatchback
wrth ~ t andard tran sm Ission
and a1r c ond i t i on i ng . Sl 300 ~
Call 99 2 345 J .
'
· •

2 -72 -.oltp ~

1971 - AMERIC A.N
M~ l a dor

Mo lors . ~

v a automati c . &lt;~
r e du ce d f(lr qu ick
sale . Phon e (614 J 667 3956 .
2-J814tp
Pr1ce

�_,

29 - The SWiday Tllll&lt;&gt;S-Sentinel, ~·eb 22, 1976

For Fast Results "Tlse, The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
--, Help Wanted

Business Services

'

Pt•bll(i'IIIO!l

1\\Qildol)'

l'•

I

•() M ! ONI

II

[1 \1

10

,•J(l l'r ly ti~d~
I or n r or~
11\ IOt m,111011
Cdll YIV ".' &gt;Jl

~

iidllll•

W tl tl

' '{I 61~

,l Ill

C an c •..llla••on
Carrt'Ctl on s will bt'
C{' IJI(' d until 9 am

ac
tor

I N 1 ERE~liNG &lt;'lnd pl cas anl

tC' mpC)rary l tQilT o ffi ce w o rk
f o r l a dy Very good pay , no
eKpcr ten ce necessary Also
net-d lady w1th car for light
delivery worlo:.
Apply to
Mr s Carter , 1 to J p m
Monday r e b n DAY Hall
11~
But t e rn u t
A venue
Pomeroy
2 18 .a c

DAy o f P ubi •C c't iiO il
REGULATIONS
T hl:' PubiiShN resN v i'S
ltlP r•qh t ro C' d •' or rerc c l
&lt;tny &lt;His a eemt'd ol&gt;
rect onal Th£' pubi iS hf'r
w• ll n ot be responstbl(' tor

more I han one mc orrc c 1
•nser •• on
RATES
F o r w ,,n f Ad Sc rv •c c
r,

l.. ('ll iS

J.H'f

\'Old

Oll t'

•nSt"rt,on
M•ll H11 U!l'l Cllargc Sl OLI
1-1

c ents per

consecut•v~

wOrt'l thrf'e

uJse n •o ns

16 c enrs per wora s r;o;

consecut rvP

111sert •ons

?'I Per Ce n t O t5c ounr on
ad ~

pa •d ads and

Syr.1cus e, Oh10
Ph 992 39U
4 10 I mo

l)li ll 11l1UITI

Ea c l\ a d d il•o nal w on1 3

c en ts

BLIND AD S
Add l•o nal 2.,c Ch ar ge
p f' r .'\ d v~rl t SenlV t11
OFF ICE HOURS
H 10 21 Ill to S 00 p 11)
Dally A JO a n1 to 1J 00
Noon Satu rda y
Phon e 1oclay 99 2 2156

In Memory
I N MEMORY of our mot h er ,
Roberta M Lee, who passed
away February 22 1968

EXPERIE~CED

RE SPO N S I BLE
PER SON
Wi! n lf' d to own and o perat e
c andy and ccn f cclton v en d
1ng r ou t e Porn ero y and
s urrounc:ltng an~a Pleas an t
bus1ness HtQI1 profd 1tems
Ca n s r~r t parr 11me Age or
to xp c r ren ce not
m porlatH
R equ rr es car and $960 cas h
•nvestmcn r
Fo r det ail s
wr 1te and tnclud c your
phone SAl , 107/ San Jose
Ave
Burbank
Ca ltforn •a
91S0 1
1 20 31p

wo r d

Mobil~
A

Looktng back W1th memor 1es
A long th e road we t rod
We b l ess t he ye ars we had

you

SHOOTING MATCH jUSt Off
Rt 7 nea r Ro ck Springs
Cemetery
Every Sunday ,
12 30 p m
2 19 31p

-----.·--- -------MAKE SURE you get e v er y
posstble dedu Ct iOn lhtS year
Have your Federal and
Slate Incom e Tax re turn by
an ac count a nt Phone 99 2
617J
1 21 52t c;

INCOME
Tax
Ser v ce
Federal o r St ate taxes
Phon e 99 2 n28 or
see
Wallac e Ru ssell Bradbury
1 30 261C
2 BUILDING S 1 hous e and
ware room , tear down for
ltJrn b er P hcne 09 2 11)'&gt;1
'
7 18 61c

Card of Thanks
.

WOULD ltke l o thank all
those who went flowers ,
ca rd s gtfts , and the many
fnends who though t of Mrs
Stel l a Boo t ell dur tng her
101st b 1rthday
Mrs Roberta 0 Brten
2 22 lip

Ple;,cagla ss · Table Tops
M1rror s Storm &amp; Screens
FERRELL'S GLASS &amp;
HOM E MAINTENANCE
S I dIll Q
v 1n ·y 1
&amp;
Alum1num Wtndow Glass
&amp; Glazmg On t he Job or m
Shop
P 1Ck
up and del very
servtce
Call Collect 388 8239
Spec1alue
tn
build up
roof1ng &amp; hot roofs Free
Eshmates · 10 years
penence
Hary e Ferrell
Bidwell, Oh10
2 6 1 mo

F OR 5 · LE n ear Langsvill e !)
rn1 11ouse root cellar w tth
rQ om over 2 bay d etached
garage l 111 acres , .no ba t h
hot anef c old water 1n k1l
che n I p gas neat heat er s
w 1th house
Call 742 2819
aft er 5pm
1 18 6tp

_

_,___

-~--

---

B EDRM hom e new roof
new bothroorn N c ar Sc hool
Ca ll 7 J 2 2JB 1
2 20 lip

WE WIS H to e)(press our
si ncere thanks and ap
pr ectahon to our fnends and
netghbors for ktndness and
love s hown us durtng the 12 t;!U I LD IN G lots, no less
dea t h of our belo ved mother
than 50 ' x 150' each 1 has
and SISter Myrtle Long To
Qutck access to ctty water
the Pomeroy Emergency
and
sanrtary
sewage
Squad, EwmQ ' s Funera l
Complete
f1nanc1ng
to
Home ~ev Menzel Sm tlh
quall t ted tnterested b1Jyer 11
for htsconso l mg words , ones
Call 992 5786
who took ca re of t h e g r a\ie
2 22 Ol e
al l who se n t flowers , cards
a11d f ood and any who helped
house tn Mtd
us tn any way God bless a tr 3 BEDRM
d l eport
co rner lot
New
p f you Chtl dren Mur ra tn
bath story and half, ut!l tty
Dorothy Lewts, and V 1ol et
room , new carpettng and
Stster Add e and Brorher I ra
n ew roof, garage and work
and Famtlt es
room frut t cel l ar Close to
2 22 ltc
schoo l
and
s h op ptn g
$17,500 Phone 992 7624
1 27 261c

Pets

Pt T S TO GIVE AWAY
PUREBRED Great Dane ,
male 1 yr old Phone 992
3832 or 992 2039 , Metgs Co
Humane Soc 1ety
2 22 6tc

Wanted To Buy
OL D turn1 ture
te e boxes
brass
bed s
old
wall
te le phone s and paris
or
complete households Wr•t e
M
D
M tll er
Rl
2
Pomeroy
Ohto
Call 992
7760
10 7 7 l
q TO 10 f t d ump b ed
1 011 ~ 3677J!I

ACRES on Salem 51,
Rutland , Oh10 PhOne 742
22 84
2 17 6tc

8

4 BEDROOM house for sa le tn
New Haven , $12 ,SOO Call
882 3390
2 22 121c
--~----~---- -- -

l .. x70 MOBILE home, total
electrtc, 3 ton a 1r con
co t l•o n er
excellent con
dthon Ca ll 247 2684 or 247
2664
2 22 6tc

---------

PilOn ['

TEAFORD
B,

7 20 6tc

WANT to buy or talo:. e over
payments on a 3 bedrm
mobtle hom e tn country ,
w1lh at least 1 acre Phone
247 210 7
2 22 Jtc
LA SH pa td l or dll ma k es and
mod el s o t mob1 le homC!i
Phon e ar ea c ode 614 42 3
9) J 1
4 13 1f c

Vtrgtl
Sr Broker
11 0 Mechantc Pomeroy,
Phone 992 -3325

NEW LISTING -

$16

Employment Wanted
WILL babystl tn my home tn
the Chesrer Tuppe rs P l arns
area Phon e (6L1 l 985 3867
2 22 31p
J

SEWING of all k 1nd s dr esses
for all occ as1on s s la c k s ,
stHrts , newborn l a y e t tes
curtatn s drapes Phone 99 2
3035 and ask. fo r Dorothy
2 19 26tc

La Salle
•

HOTEL
'....

00., , ... .,,

Rooms, '5.00 up
Special Rates
by Weelc
or Month

B E DRM
home
IUS!
ftn tshe d remode l 1ng Sa l em
St 1 Rutland Phon e 742 2306
aft er 4 p m or see Milo B
Hutch1 son
9 2J lie

Strout,
Realty

INCOII.POIIATEn

NO. 168 - 36 a , 5 r nome
carpe t ed, mod
f trep la ce forced
fr
ce ll ar,
ou tbld gs , qu1et
setting , $32,000 00

ktlchen
atr fur
several
cou n try

NO 140 - 1 72 a , vacan t
c l eared, good lo c
for
cou ntr y
h ome
or
recrea t iona l
NO 142 -94 a , 6 r home,
new roof. bemg remodeled,
lge barn garage , 2 a lake,
stocked. severa l wooded

acres, good buy, $40,00b 00
NO
144 ~ 25 a , rge
coun lr y
home,
barn
poultry hou se, oth er bldgs ,
$25,000 00 Owner wtll take
land contract

804 W. Main
Pomeroy
992-2298
After Hours Ca II
992 -7133
CONTACT ·
LOIS Pauley
Branch Ma11ager

0

OLD

1 Bea1u t 1ful 1 acre Good 5
brs, &amp; ~ baths Nnt g.=ts
furnace
Good
gnrden
ground · $35,000
IS7 ACRES - Large older
home w1 tll bnlh br1rn ilnd
tractor ~ ~~: (.,....,,. t1mber

2 77 ACRES - Home 3 BR
ranch ty pe, n1ce 1&lt;1tchen W

rei

range FORCE D A1r

fur n ace , full basement ,
own wa t e r, (tap patd)
storm door s &amp; wmdows
LMge garage W workshop
C1rporf 'l lr.1tler hookups

$2ij

000

Rout e 143 - 111 Acres - 1
BR bnth, own &amp; c tty wa ter
gar.1ge Cellnr for frutts,
lrmdscc'lped SS,JOO

REEOSVILLE

AREA -

135 ACR ES Mmerals, C1 t y
\-\Infer ,1\iclt l .lble
Some
trmbt~ r
S173 00 per acre
POMEROY
Larger
hctme
H~ s
new St dtng,
1urnacr trl e &amp; prmf' lmg
co1rpe tma storm doors l'l nd
w1 nctows '2 (,lr g&lt;1r.1gc
Low utillft&lt;?S $18,500

S6 ~ . -·

POMEROY -

NEWLISIINU - : rm r., d
Br ~
2 b,lfhs , cr t y wrn
11nd q v , CornPr lot out
fl ood Onl y Ml SOO

lr.=tme w 1fh almost n ew
roof. ~ ldtng .1nd eMpar l 3
h rdll
Sm,lf l
ynrd $8,000

Wf MIE Sfll FR5 OF
coon P•JUI-l r p 1 Y (/Ill
U'", f f) ' I I I

-

- --lF------'

B1centenntal Coms.
197 5
P.-oof Set (6 pes )
~25 00, 1975 Mrnt Set S9 00,
rq76 Sl l\ier Proof Se t (J
pe s ) $15 00 ' 1976 S1lver
UNC Set (3 pes ) S8 SO
Cal l R!.Jtland , 742 2JJ I
R&amp;J COINS
Roger Wam sley
I 1J I mo

s

HAVE d ump ! ru c k and dozer
W II do haul tn t1 and ex
cavat 1n g Phon e 16 1 1) 667
3319 or 667 3333
2 20 If&lt;.
QUA LI FIED automob1le
• mechan iC looktng lor work
tn own qa r aq e Rea sonab l e
rat es
Call 9'n 71:10 alt er
' 00
2 ?0 I p
EXC AVATI NG doz er loaue"o
and backhoe work
sepltc
tank.s
tnsta ll ed
dump
t r ucks and l o boys tor h 1re
will haul f 1ll dtr1 rop 5011
limeston e and grav el Call
Bob or Ro11er Jeffers , day
phone 992 7089 ntght phone
99'2 J525 or 992 5232
2 11 t f c
REMODELING
Plumb tng
hea l mg and all types of
general
repatr
Worlo:.
guaranteed
20 years ex
perten ce
Phon e 992 2409
5 I ti c
- -- _._

_________ _

EXCAVAT IN G
dozer
backhoe
and
d t tcher
Ch arl es R H alf 1eld Back
Hoe Serv 1ce Ru tl and Oh•o
Phone 742 2008
11 3078 1c

D EAD Stock re moved
No
churge Ca ll 2115 5514 be for e
9 am
272 I f
lH U RM I\ N
Hou se
r urn
St r 1ppm g An l 1qu es botJ q h l
and
sold
p1cku~
\lnd
d e l1 very P aul !J urn e rt 245
9t7(J Marlm Rose 245 95 32

2 •I

YOUR
havo

LOST
vt·~te r day

rt could
b een saved l or~Yvr
wll h
a
portra1t
from
liro11er's Studto Call 446
74 94
Op e n
Tu e sday
Sa t urday 10 S, unt 1l 8 p m
on Thur sday
35 If

Help Wanted
TIME STUDY
ENGINEER
ROBBIN S &amp; Myers In c ot
Go lltpol1 s
Oht o ha s an
101med1ale open tn iJ for an
exper en ced TIME STUDY
ENGINEER th e succe-ss f u l
c and 1dat e wtll be fam·tltar
wilh M T M and
TIME
MOTION analy StS an d w1l l
have 1 o r more y e ar!&gt; ot
ac tual wor'k e,.; per•ence rn
1h c
stanctard
ft c l ds
Qualt fi Cd ilppl 1cant s shou ld
ca ll Mr Donald son at ( 6\ 4)
116 401 2
13 1

MATURE lady to l 1v e n w rth
el derly lady Cal l 446 33 02
belween 4 and 8 p m
_
41 '
BA~ S Ptay e r wan t ed f o r
estab lt shed young ro c k band
age 16 21 Ph 675 2653
36 34

For lease
~ ~~s o FT Off 1ce m lobby ot
L 1bby Ho1 e1 $15 mo Ca ll
446 1743
283 I f

Pets
PUREBRED S1amese k1t
t en
Reg1s1ered German
Shepherd pups Black and
S1lver $20 Ph 411 6 1006
4JJ

I

SEW IN G MACH INE Repatrs ,
servtce, all makes 992 2284
The F abr.c S hop ~ Pom eroy
Aul h orrzed Smger Sales and
Se rv1 ce
We
sha rp en
Sc 1ssors
3 29 lf c

AKC ln sh Sel l er . 14 wks old ,
t ema l e $100 ,J46 6660

BRADFORD , 1\Uc ltonee r
Comp lete Servtce
Phone
9ti9 2487 or 949 2000 Ra c m e
Oh1o Crtlt Brad ford
10 9 IJc

RED DOG limestone gravel
and 1111 dtrl d e ltvered
Phone Btl! Pullt n s 992 2478
2 19 26tc

Wanted To Buy

Ph

vl 59269

"'

JUNK autos and scrap m e1a1
Call 388 8776
" ) 26
ALL PURPOSE t able saw 1n
good co nd1l lon Call 446 2342
dayl tme Ask for Che t
4l J

2 s tory

HOW TO S F ll YOUR
HOM !' ' CA l I US
992 2H(f or 9911568

TANK S clea n ed
Modern San dalton 992 3954
or 992 7349
9 18 t f c

YOU nee d
hauled call
any t.me

IF

your
( 61~)

4]6

'l YR OLD lr15h Setter , male ,
w II sell W1lh l arge dog
hO use for $75 756 1430
'3 J

BR I ARPATC H l&lt;;enne ts AK C
Gordon S etter puppt es
champ on par e nt s
fiKC
Engl1sh Cocker Spante l
p u pp1 es Ph 446 4 191
.tJ I I
LHA SO Apso male , all sh ots
AKC Ca l l 446 0070 e\ien1ngs

44 3

JUA NIT A S Poodle Parlor
F m al week my ad wtll run
Please copy my number for
groom mg and bOardtng m
my home 446 7878

gravel
985 4119

2 18 121p
IF INTERE ~ TED m budd ing
a
new
home
c onta c t
ROUSH CON'STRUCTIO N
free esrtmates , Greg Roush,
997 7583
2 1B 12 rc

AKC M 1n Dachsl1und , 8 wks
red female , temporary
sh ot s 446 4160
423
PINE ,RIDGE COLLII:rs
fiKC Reg Col l te pup s Sa bl e
an d wh rt e 756 1.267
307 If

L UCKETT != arm Equlpmenl ,
West
Wa s h1ngton
St
Albany Phone (6111 698 3012
Or 6JI8 lH8 I
:z 18 26tc

t:J.OANDING, AK C WES1Y
AND PUG PUP CIRCLE L
KENNEL, RT 141,446 4824
281 If

PAPER hangl!lg , pamttng,
pane l 1n~ ,
etc
Phone 9d9
?021
2 18 121 p

RO PI I &lt;; Poodle L\ou t 1que
Profr·ssmna l g room 1ng by
appo 1n1n,ent Ph
116 1911
I ) If

I NTER IO~

and
~ xlerlor
p atr'll
Nu 10b roo S ITIBII
PI'IOIH' ~ 1'o' 1JJ'I
lA tl c

•

•

•
•

BOARDING&amp; AKC PUPPIES
K &amp; P Kennels 388 827~ Rt
··' 1' m I eas1 of Porter
305 I f

'

~

BR MH. private lo t
c ond adult s only , ref
307 7167

"'
a 1r
Ph

443

BRADBURY Eff Apt No 6
turn
1 p erson , no pets $4~
dep, utlltltes m c luded , lsi
floor 446 0957

For Rent or lease

44 1

Mobile Homes for Sale
1971 L A NCER Mobile home
12:w:65 1 ba t hS 2 br, c ar
p e l ed
furn
pon; h un
d erp.nn1ng 675 3214 after 5
p m Wh1 rt poot dtshwa srter
42 6
19 7 ! SC HULT Mobile horne
12x60 , total electrtc Ph 4•16
1098
41 4
TRI S T A TE Mob 1le H o me
Clear a n ce Sale u se d mob ile
homes 8 10, 12 w1dcs Pto
~16 75 72 Bank ftnanctng
30 6 If

or

FtC E s pa ce
downtown Ph

for rent
0008
237 If

4~0

MOBIL6 home

d46 0756
37

II

(1 ~
MOBI LE hOme wtth
auto wa sher !.80 per monlh
156 t922
4JJ

1

UN FU RNI SH ED 7 rm and
bath
hou se tn Th urman
Catt6 82 6&lt;t9l
JJJ

TO ECONOMIZE
on f ue l
undcrpm your mob1ll1 hom e
and anch or tor ~a f ~ lv
F URNI S HE D apt
Adults
Foster Mob1te Hom e Ser
on t y ut1lrltes pa1d , n o )J ets
v1ce, 4~6 2783, or E lm er ·
251.1 State St 146 0085
Sktd rho rc 446 3479
41&lt;
27 !I !f
? 8EDROOM mobile home
B&amp;S MOBILE HOME S
Eas1 ern Avenue Ca ll 446
1976 NOVA 121160 3 br all
0390
el c c trtc
41 If
1970 N o va 12x OO 2 BR Jll
erectr1 c
L A RGE 2 bedroom hou se 1n
1969 Rtlztraft 12x60 2 Br
ce nt er o f town
parllat l y
197 0 K it 12x-1 7 ~ Br
furn tshed Call 446 1015 or
1968 Sl y l e Mar 12x52 2 Br
446 4317
1967 F reetwood 12x60 2 Br
41 tt"
197 1 Concord 1 1~ 6~ ~ H
1968 Cornmodoge 12x52 M H
N ICE LY turn
2 BR Apt
1959 Colon1a l 10x 50 M H
adults only no pets , dep
B&amp; S MODJi c
required 446 7857
29 11
Hom e Sales
PI Pleasant, 'IN Va
237 1I
MOB I LE home space, I m 11e
from HMC Ph 440 JB05
264 ff

'

.

12xSO MOB ILE H OME. 'l BR
446 0952
ground fl oor apt
1969 LIN COLN Cant Mark Il l,
aft er 5
a ll power cr u tse con trol
42 II
AM FM s tereo rad1o good
ltres Needs some r epa trs
MODERN 2 BR garage apt ,
Sl 595 d460390
ce n t rally located
butll tn
35 If
kitchen
a tr co nd
ext ra
- _.
n1ce no pets , ret requ•red
0
1969 VAN
VB eng1 n e
a.r
446 7300
cond
paneled, 4 speakers
42 6
and tape dec k.
carpe t ed
-~- ~- --~-------245 9S94
42 6 MODERN 3 BR home , Phone
446 2871
426
1 1 TON Ford p.ck.up
34 000
mtles. 1973 Ph 446 -1948

___..__ -----·------

_ _____

1975 CHEVELLE
Malibu
Cl ass 1c, Landau roof P S
PB . auto trans
alf ste el
belted radtals
Wil t sell
outrlc;,rhl
or
tak e
over
payments
Call 388 9017
afler6pm

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

41 '
197 1 MERCURY Montego, 4
door a 1r cond
good con
d1 110n Ph 446 1098
41 •

radial tires, one

•4495
72 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

White

with brown vinyl roof, brown leather lnt ,
wheel, AM FM rad1o, rad1al tlrP"&gt;. power 8. atr

T&amp; T

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

'

Cadillac-Oldsmobile
GMAC Fmancmg Available

992-5342

I
I

~-----------'---------·-· .....

SPRING VALLEY
GREEN
APARTMENTS

CANADAY

MASSIE

ADDISON GOOd block
nofY!e , could b ed bedrooms
tak e a took for !9 500

Realty, 32 State St

Tel. 614 446-1998

NEW RANCH frame
wtth brick front , lovely
kitchen
with
plenty
cabinets,
stove ,
dtsh
washer and garbage dtSP
three bedrooms, 11 • baths
carpeted Qn 17 acre lot m
small subd1vis1on tn Btd
well
TRAIL.EA COURT - W1th
18 splices , good 24)136 block
workshop wash house and
two mobile homes Pr tc ed
m1d twen t tes
DUPLEX - Each stde has
f tve rooms 11 1 baths , and
pr tvate
dr•veway
Down t own near scl'1oo ls
EAST END - small ftve
room coftaoe
pnced to
sell
FARM LAND - 'l(J acres
wtth 36 A flat to s lop ect . 30 A
pa sture no f ences ano '
older barns , located 11 mtle
from R 1 JS m Green and
Perry Twp

Rent Starts At
$129 Per Month
Apartments
Available:
One Bedroom Apt .
Two Bedroom Apt ,

OPEN DAILY
For
information
mqutre at ofhce or
ph. 446-1599,
Located 112 mile west
of Holzer Hospttal on
Rl. 35 .

'for Sale

Ut 2 ACRES
Morgat
Twp, no bultdmgs at SlO,

LIKE NEW
1974, 25 fl ,
Holtc:tay Ramblell , fully
equ1pped Has full s tze bed
and complete bathroom
w1th rub an d shower , sleeps
6 Ph 446 08t18
446

per acre

LANO

CONTRACT

Blo c k dwelling w1th ..
rooms
and
batti
or
Chtlllcolhe Road
Repatr
n ee d ed 55.000

73 HONDA Tra tl 70 A 1 cond,
900 m ties Prrce 5295 Ph
446 4J77
44 If

41 ACRES - LOIS of roaa
fron t age tn Chesh1re Twp
on blacktop road hu somE
bulldmgs , no dwelling

THE AMAZI N G Blue Lu stre
W1l l leave your upholstery
beauti ful ly so ft and clean
Re nt e l ect ri c shampooer Sl
Central Suppl y Co
446

PRICE
REDUCED
Three bedroom mobile
hom e
complelely
f ur
n ls hed , has A C unit o n nice
c l e ared one acre lo t w1th
good garage

~----'--~----~---

14 FT alum mum fishing boar.
Wtlh 20hp motor and tratler
446 0081
446

4IACRES -~ F&gt;erryTwp on
blacktop road 10 miles
from city No buildtngs

TYCOON

H OLLA ND 66 H ay Baler and
Rak e Call after 5 p m 25 6

LAKE -

Ba•l

store In good blo ck butld 1ng
wltn 11\ilng quaners Bell er
see now - fishing season IS
just around the corne r

1142
446
1965 FORD F 700 16 ff fl at
bed , Qui ck sa l e Ph 446 4393
442

IS ACRES - Wrth mobile
home and older dwell tny
located
.ot m lies from
Vmton
MODERN
E~ECTRIC
HOME - Six rooms, bart1
and a half ca rpeted w1tll
carport
Over a dozen
acrts end less then twelve
m1nu1e's from Ctt y ShoVJn
by appo intment

14 ACRES - Wtlh older 5
rooms and bath farm
house Most of land cleared
with bern and 1, 000 lb T
base tn Clay Twp

Biggest Selection Used

BUILDING SITES - Hav e
e limited number that can
be bough t smal l down
paymen t

Furniture &amp; Appliances

GROCERY
STORE
Owner says Jo sell - lock
stock.
bar rel,
and
buildings
Room for ex
pens•on
If
ambil•ous
Shown by appotnlmenl

In The Area
1-2 Pc. Black Vinyl LR Suite' - - - ' -$49.95
2-Sofas, priced logo
$20ea.
1-2 Pc. L R Suite, 2 Tables and 2
lamps'--- - - - - - - - - $179.95
1-2 Pc. LR Suite, 3 tables and 2
lamps
$199.95
1- Cedar chest, good one
$64.95
1-White BR Suite, complete with new box
spring and mattress, Must see to
apprectate .
1-Uprighl Freezer, like new
$199.95
Several Refrigerators on hand
SSO up
Automatic Washers &amp; Dryers_ $69.95 up
Reg . $299.95 office desk. walnut finish, with
swivel chair
$169.95
Rockers. lounge chairs, bunk beds, chests,
dressers, record players, desks, beds and
many other items.

KEMPER
HOLLOW
ROAD - Attractive double
W1de mobile home on
permanent foundation with
fenced one a c r e lot

LAST BUT NOT LEAST -

DEBBY OR - 4 yrs O!d
all elec frame wtth cedar
S1dmg , 6 b 1g rms , 2 full
balhS plenty stora ge , l 1v
16 'MJ 1 , cen atr, walls
paneled and d ry wall 100
pet Acry lon carpe t elec
F P b19 ktl equipped w•th
0 W
d•s and self c l ean
oven with Rotts sc ne Th1 s
home h as many un,que
f eatures and ca n be bought
fo r l ess than replacement
cost
COUNTRY AIR ESTATES
- N ew 6 rm B 1 leve l bnc k
and frame , elec f un1 cen
atr , p , baths , k 11
and
fam dy rm paneled co pper
plumb1ng K1l has D W ,
rang e and d1sposar Th1s
house ha s e;,ctra l arge
rooms L•v rm 22 x 15
and bdrm s
sut tabt e for
Kt ng
s1ze
furn1 tu r e
Lo cated on 1, A lot Fa•r
market pr1 ce
PINE ST - Prrce reducer
to S.ll, OOO on lhts brtck &amp;
frame home 5 r ms 8. bath ,
partlal bos e For comfort,
main tenan ce , economy
flymg a nd a cc ess•b tltly to
e v erything, lhts one Is sure
hard to beat
BULAVILLE RD -~ All
brtck Ranch , 1 yrs o ld ,
1500' sq t r ltv area , l arge
ut1ltty rm co ul d be u sed for
work area t or t he Mrs
Good grade of ca rpe r, n tce
k•tchen cab m e ts Cen a tr ,
rural water plus dr well
12 'x 10' block out bldg
Beaultful settt n g on l A
good garden land Prtce Ill
nHd l h trttes
CHATt-iAM AVE 2025112 •Extra ntce 5 rm frame
home approx 12 yr o l d,
new carpet over H W
Floors. new F A
ga~
furnace &amp; co pp er plum
bing Sma ll out bldg Price
"8 ,SOO
JAY DR - 1 yr younq fJ
rm s, 11, baths cen il1r
sel f clean OYen , dtsh
washer
d 1 ~ posa1
and
dra p es l"\lg 10 1 Don 1udge
fr om outs 1d e appearance
Prtc~ 5J r 900
CENTENARY E)C!ra
n1ce 6 rm home J11 bat h S,
new carpet over H V..
co pper plumbing
family
rm panel mc 1at s tor age
bldg
fl at lot 80 x 2',0
'G ooct1 es' tn c l ude a 1r
cn nd drapes and stain less
r.reel s1ove If vou wan 1
qual1ty locarton and prtcc
call now Pnce rcauced to
$29, SOO

: nv -

H'lt 7nd Ave 2
.•ory 6 rm older home
lie block stora ge bldg and
~ar Loca t e d on a la rg e lot
' good buy at $17 000
&gt;iEDGEWOOO DR Owner
.ays se ll now 1 rm fram e
.n larg e lot H W fl oors
11 ba t h s base, s1orm drs
.Jn d wm Price $16 000
FARM 261 f
70 /'.
illable . 2U /' bo ttom 1 ORO
1b t ob base , 30 fl coal J
::1 arns
s110 and some
Imber 1 rm modern brtck
1ome You ca n 1 go wrong
m 11'11s one Pot c nllal plu s
Price S!\9 0011

6 rooms and blHh with full
ba~ement

on large lot at
ed;e of town Owner w tll
help wtth f tnanc lnQ

RON CANADAY
REALTOR

HAVE

LUCRATIVE
&amp;USINE~S
FOR SALE,
COME IN AND DISCUS S
WITH ME
ANY HR 446 1998
A

40 If
74 OL os . Della 88 new radtal
'•res, good con dt lton Ph
d46 26,63
6

..... .ot511

•o

r OR your Ttre and Batte-ry.
needs
, come to Sears Tire
1
hop tn The Stiv e r Or'rdge
Plaza
33 If

212 II

CHIMI'fEY Blocks. 1/'ri V&amp; &amp;
OhiO Lump Coal GalllpOits
Block Co • .U6 2783
273 It

t

'

'

CORN It'd 1 reezer ll ecf
'I Inters
R 10 Grande
511't

Cilrl
21.S

287-f

Co demo , low m 1leagc loaded wtth all options, red
and wh1te ftn1sh

• 4

Fully eq u1pped, low mtleaqe
wood tnm

1973 CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC,
2 door hardtop. vinyl lop. pwr
windows, pwr . door locks,
cruise control, fact a1r.
NOW ONLY

$2895

1974 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX
2 door hardtop, auto, P.S .. P. 8.,
AM-FM radio, mag wheels,
v1nyl top

SEE YOUR SPECIAL SALESMAN
George Harris-Dallas Blevins-Roger
Dtllard

1973 GMC J;4 TON
Automatic, P S, P 8, VB,
16,000 actual miles, local
owner

"'

NOW ONLY

·POMEROY MOTOR CO.

1974 DATSUN 260-Z
Aulomalic lransmtss1on, fact air, chrome
mag wheels

SALE

DAN THOMPSON FORD

4 door, hardtop, pwr wmdows, power steermg,

c.r~~~ec~:;r~l~.~~:~~.~~~..~~~~-··· .,.................. ~ 4795

1975 Ford LTD 4 Dr. Sedan ........... '4195

1972 PONTIAC GRANVILLE 4 DR.

1974 Ford Gran Torino 4 Dr...........'2995

9
21 5

$

Hardtop, pwr windows, pwr seats,
s1lver with sliver vmyl top,
fully equipped .. •.. ....•....•.. .........•.....•.•.•..•.•..

1972 FORD T-BIRD

~!: ~~~~:~~

~.~~. ~~~~ ~ 2895

•••••••••••••• •• •• •••••• ••• •

••

For Sale

302 ve

AT , PS .. ltke new

1973
Mustang .............................. '2995
302
one
owner

1973 Ford Torino V8...................... s2395
1973 Pontiac VB Cat. 4 Dr. HT....... '2795
PS , PB , AT

HT

loaded

Show best of care

1972 Volkswagen 411 4 Dr. Sedan.. s2695

Pomeroy, Ohio Ph. 992·2174

Very low mileage

Sharp

1971 Volkswagen 2 Dr. Sedan ........ s1695
Ph

8x 11 METAL storage bUJid m g,
$75 Ph 245 9484
42 8
197 3 CH EV J ' T PICkup , auto
lrans , PS , PB , 32 000 m t l~s
Ph 245 948d
42 3

70

O LIV ER Tractor
out
N eighborhood Rd , 446 0871
•
42 3

GRAIN FED F re ezer beef
cut1 1ng and wrapping can b e
arra n ged as des1red A I" FI
have m1xed llav and s t ratgn t
T tmo thy lar ge ba te Call T
om Jonc!:&gt; Thurman , 286
2394 af t er 0
423

INDIAN
Squas h
blossom
necklace, green torquo•se .
2 15 959&lt;1
426
HAY SOc bal e Ph

245 95S9
41 4

EAR corn and freeze r beef
Ph 388 9991
34 12

H c adquar tcrs
T ChP.v Ptckup
For d P1 ck up
Mon1 e Carlo
Ford Econolrne Van
1 T GMC P i ckup
T Chevrol "t P1 c kUt:T GMC P tt l..up
J T Che\i Dump Truck
T P1 ckup
GMC Suburba n
F600 Ford Durnp
I 1'.0 rQrd Dump
' T P1 c kup
I 1000 rord Traclor
SOMMERS GMC
Truck s, tnc
133 Ptnc Sf
4otf!Hl2
16 f

fll

TIPE S

ol

ding
milter1al:;
bloc"
b r JCk
sewer
p1pes ,
windows
ltn lc l s etc Cl aude Wtn!ers,
Rto Grande 0 Phone 245
5121 alter 5
123 I f

MOOtLE
Home
1\U -L T ..
' crv1c-&lt;:
Sktrt1ng
root
ro .! mq pat10S awn1ngs
,ln ( hors r •""' n~ent work I rc c
CS ' IIllares
""til 2459111 or
1 1'o 9177 i\l ler
10 p rn
215 f
GOOll cl€'a11 lump &lt;H"~d &lt;..ta k er
coa l
Cil r1 \\ tniH'&gt;
R1o
Gr &lt;1nd c Ph ?1 ~ ~11

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN

dr Sedan Owned by loca l sento r c 1tlzen

1

1974 Ford /z

'"

T011..... ...................... '3995

Four whe~l dnve AT , very low mileage

1972 Opel 2 Dr.............. ............. s1695
if cyl

Sharp

MANY MORE

..
~

~

Clpen Evenings Til6:00
Except Thurs. and Sat. Til5:00

We sell
anyth•ng
for
anybody a t our Aucl10n
Barn or 1n yo ur home For
tnfo rma t1on and p1ckup
~ erv tct' call 2SO 1907
Sal e Every Saturday
N1ght at7 p m

SWAIN

Phone
992-2196

AUCTION SERVICE
Kenneth Swatn , AU(t
Corner Thtrd &amp; Olive

,,

.a

SEE : Fred Blaettnar, Pal Hill, Melvm Little,
or Dan Thompson

New GMC

T~uck

•

1970 Dodge VB Polora .................. s1395

For Sale

For Sale
bow,

J? 3

Jlilt'lf/
I Y6 7

'·

vs, 4 dr sedan . AT , P S

" dr

For Sale

1Y70

'.,

1972 Cadillac Seville ...................... s3195

KODIAK Hulntng
] 88 8202

1969
1970
1970
1969
1974
1971
t97d
19 70
1969
19 71
lt/69

•••

4 dr One careful owner

Ex:tra n1 ce

1

•.

1973 Bronco 4 Wheel Drive ............ '3995

Air co ndrt10ned

-- ------

0

One careful local owner

1972 Ford LTD 4 Dr. Sedan ........... .'1695

"Your Friendly Dealer"

G.llflpolts

Hold overs at Fabulous

1972 Ford Gal. 500 ....................... '1495

BAGGED Ferlll•zer 17 17 17
1144 per ton 12 12 12 5129 75 · - - per ton , 10 20 20 s 153 25 per
ton 6 24 24 S 156 80 per ton
Ammon1um N tl rat e $ 130 p er
ton
S 10 15 S Tob acco
S127 50 per ton
Central Soya
446 -2463
-40 If

l

1975 Demo . &amp; New
February Prices.

Fully e quipped One care ful loca l owner

SEE ONE OF OUR FRIENDLY SALESMEN:
CEWARD CALVERT, J. D. STORY, BILL NELSON

44,

s1r. Thtrd Av t

Almost l1ke the day tt was sold

V8 , low m1l eage,

1

WE BUY, SELL TRADE
E venmgs Call
John fuller 444 4327
Lee Johnson 2S6·6740
DOUfJ Wetherholt
4244
Earl T Wrnters 446 -3828

Gallipolis
Daily Tribune

--.,

'

1974 BUICK ELECTRA CUSTOM

38 ACRES If you are
looklng for a nice plac e
wllh acreage. look at lh•s
Lovely •I Pedroom hom e ,
bath wtfh sh ower , n1c e
k tlc hen w1th butll In range
an d oven forced a1r fur
nace
fully
car pe te d
Loca t ed I n c11v school
dt sln cl close to Ty coon
Lake ve ry good buy tor
$3S,900

6forS100

Pomeroy

"

END-OF-MONTH

20 ACRES Ha s a good
10x50 mob d e home metal
building pr tce 1n c lud es
hsh 1ng boa t l awn mower
located c lose lo Raccoon
Creek on Bear Run Road
Good pla ce to li ve or ntce
summer
hom e,
pr1ce
$13 .900

20'

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. Tile

992-2126

$5695

NOW ONLY

If you have been
loa k1ng for thai p erfect
butld1ng St t e look. at lh1 s
L ovely tra c t of land close ro
Rto Grande
c lly sc hool
dlslrtcr
Goo d buy for
$7,500

'"ED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

"'

Buy io confidence from the right man is
often more important than buying for price.

$4295
..

~ACRE -

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

"

NOW ONLY

AC RES - Lovely r anch
w1lh
b r tck
front
3
bedrooms l arg e f amtly
r oom w1th f1replace , t ully
carpeted , l arg e g arag e
(lose t o Chesh 1re You II
like lh•s for SJ\.600

NEW LIVING ROOM SUITE,
S199 95
REG ~
$299 9S
RICE ' S NEW AND USED
FURN, 854 SECOND AVE
446-9S23
40 If

\.

red w1 t t:i s1m u la l ed

1973 Chev, 112 ton a cy 1aulo., P. S., P. B. $2895.
1972 Chev. 1f21on 6 cy 1. std.
$2150.
1972 Chev . 2 ton 102" C. A. 292 6 cvl. 4
speed
$2995.
1972 Chev 21on 102" C. A. 292 6 oyl., 4
speed
$3095.
1973 Int. 1600 Series, 8 cyl., 5 speed, 104
C.A.
$3895.

21l

__,_

'

'6895
1975 CHEVROLET CAPRICE
ESTATE WAGON

$3895

NOW ONLY

NEW LI STI NG Good
home wtth 2 b ec:trooms,
bath ,
fully
furni s h ed,
locafed on Mt l l Cret'k Rd
Good place to star l for
:1.15 300,

VA Chunks
rn e price IS
not too h1gh , the quality 1S
f~r s t rate
Perf ec t coal f(lr
fireplac es
M ed tum stze
6"x8" Fos ter Co al 446 2783
22 If

l 11
1 reor 1ab1r.
Elec.•r1c , l ' l'rt \ 1 ct t~nd
Power Plants Ph r lt. 2/16
I :.!6 If

1975 CHEVROLET SUBURBAN

1974 PONTIAC FIREBIRO
2 door hard lop, 6 cy l auto, fa ct
lape, power sleertng .

VINTON
Good
3
bedroom 11onH~ n tee bath,
fully c arpeted Good buy
for S11 500

W-

P I\ lOUt r r

'2695
•

LOW DOWN PAYMENT Good 3 bedroom home wtlh
bath
new fu rna ce well
tn su l aled , ga r age , n1c e
level tot L ocated at Btd
well , $14,&lt;100

18 I I

TWO WAY Rad' los Sa les &amp;
Service, New &amp; usect CBs.
pollee m on ilors, antennas,
etc
Bob's Cltlnns B1and
R•dlo Equip , Georges
Creek R d , Gatllpohs Otllo

NOW ONLY

RODNEY N1ce ra•1Ch
o nl y
J years o l d1
3
bedroom s,
balh
wtth
shower
full y carpc t e: d ,
ga r age The pnc e tS rtghL
S23 5-00

USEQ APt•l!A~CES
Washers and dry us 1\ 1 co nd
$40 and up L&amp;A A pplian ces
JOO 4th Ave Rear Ph 440
7)q8

For Sale

Auto, P s, P B, 8 cyl , radto bucket sea ts , good
ttres dark maroon ftni s tl

COU•NTRY AIR ESTATES'
- Lovely brtck ranch wtfh
3 bedrooms , )I ~ baths, fully
ca rp eted, cent ral a•r , 2 car
garage
wtth
elec tr. c
ope n er
N1 ce te ... ~t lot
Pr1ce $34,500

____

bumper

'2695
1974 PLYMOUTH CUDA CPE.

3 speed transmiSSIOn, 4 cy l
eng ine, 11 ,000 miles.

CROWN CITY - Very ntce
home w t th 3 bedrooms ,
tarn1 ly room, fully car
peted
f 1repla &lt;e, carpor l
Located on a n 1c e lar ge
le ve l lot Prt c e $32 ,000

for Sale

446·3636
Any Hour

Auto tran s, rLJdiO, d cfuJo:e bumpers and
gua rds, g ood t 1r es, grey f m l!&gt;h

EUREKA G ood 3
bedroom hom e, n ice bath ,
l arge garage , n1 ce l ot
Good buy for $14 ,SOO

Real Estate For Sale

2St;, Locust St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-3636

1974 DATSUN 710 CPE.

RODNEY-CORA RD
Very n 1ce ldM70 mob1l e
home, 3 bedrooms, fully
carpeted, located on 1 acre
of n 1ce land Prtce $15,500

Real Estate For Sale

REALTY

·~895

415 THIRD AVE - Good
o lde r
h ome
w1lh
3
11 1
baths
b edrooms ,
parltal basement, la rge 1
car garage, niCe lot Pr1ce
reduc ed to $2~ , 000

BIDWELL Good hOme
w tlh 3 bedrooms, bath
qaragc , c ounty wa t er,
large l evel tot
Prtce
$14,900

367-7250

f1n 1sh

BIDWELL
NICe
3
bedro o m
nom e,
fully
carpeted, exce llent shape,
located on 3 leve l l ois
lmmedtate
po ssessto n
Owner will h e lp f1nance
Pr.cc sn 500

~

'•

'•

.4 speed , rad10, w s l1re ~. like new 6,000 m• les, white

Lovely ranch
wtlh J bedrooms uttl 1ty
room 1 car ga ra ge n1 ce
lot 207 Koneon Dr Pnce
S26,000

Pomero1

,.,.',.

'2495
1975 FORD PINTO

IN TOWN -

•3895
71 Cadillac Couoe DeVille
stereo
,
2495

•'

4 s peed trans rAdio, good tires . green fmtsh , low
m1l eage

CH ILLI COT HE RD
N 1c e 3 b ed.r oom home wtlh
bath ,
lull
basement ,
garage
hou s e
has
alumtnum st dmg, good buy
tor S12,8 00

See one of these courteous salesmen :
Pete Burris
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaug~

1968 OLDS Cutlass Supreme,
e)( cond a lso 1972 Toyota
Celie a 446 9528

1973 VEGA GT Kambach exc
cond $1 600 446 4742
4JJ

full stereo,

Open Eves. Til&amp;-Ttl5 p .m . Sat.

197 ,1 OLDS 98 Lu x ury coUpe
PB PS A c
elec sea t
P W , rear d efogger trunk
r e l ease lt lt wheel Stereo
tap e p l ayer cru1se controL
nt•w radta l tires
256 6816
Pr1c e red uced
·13 3

68
VOLKSWAGEN,
good
cond , good t1res , !1.750 075
431 1

wheel ,

"You' ll Uke Our Qu~lrty Way of Doing Business"

40 6

&lt;46

air. T&amp; T

1974 OPEL MANTA CPE.

SMITii NELSON
MOTORS

IN TOWN
N tce
3
bedroom home , IO\iely
baJh , ullltlv room, car port.
eMt.':f'llent c ondJI!On located
on Chatham Ave Pnce
'ii16,000

olue vinyl top, blue cloth Interior, full power

•'

•

TownhOuses
Jll2 Baths
Pay Oply One Utility
Addtson, Ohto
For Information
Call Shirley Adkins

12)(6 0 MOBILE H ome , adu lt s
m ile from hospilal Adult s
Dep r e q Ph 4.16 380 5
14 If

m

AT

Oscar Batrd
John Fuller
Oouq Wetherholt
452 Second Av en u
Galhpol•s, Oh1o 456

White with vinyl root, lull power, atr and AM FM

7 TRAILER
lots $50
trash
warer
and a month
sewage . , . . - - - - - - - - - -....
pa1d , of f B1dwell Rodney
Rd 245 9190
6 ROOM mod er n hom e near
44 6
fhe hosp11al tor rent or --------.
lease Call IJ6 4117
ROOM , pr ivate home Call
43 3
~d 6 1249

RE/\DY M I X COI'-1 •-"c.
Shept1erd dog
443
d e l tvered r tghr to your GERMAN
male, 11 ,
yrs old
AKC
prorect Fast and easy Free
Reg all shols Ph 446 '8502
1963 COMET 4 d r
n ew t lf es
est•mates Phon e 992 3284,
and extras must se l l S1SO
44 3
Goegle.n Ready Mtx Co,
446 1021
M1d dl eporl Oh1o
6 30 ttc AKC: GERMAN Shepherd B
weeks old , black and St iver
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
fem ale Ph after) p m 446
197~
CU TL ASS
Sup r eme ,
- Sweeper s toasters. trons,
4929
tn p le black lot s of ext ra s
al l smq ll app l ta n ces Lawn
41 6
wlll sell or trad e for tru ck,
mower, n ext to Stat e High
also 1909 Sk tpper Camper
way Garage on Ro ut e 7
AKC Poodle puppy , Sliver toy
9' fl for PICkup Prtced to
Phone 985 J825
,
fema le 256 62JO
se ll 256 131 5
4 16 lfc
4I 4
43 3
~ EPTIC

•

Wanted To Do

Auto Sales

D &amp; D TREE Tr1mm 1ng 20
years exper1ence In sured,
free est•mates Ca ll 992 238-4
or (6141 698 7257 A lbany
10151fc

C

White,
equip ,
owner

"'

CHIHUAHUA
Call alter 5

446-3434

owner

.,'

USED CARS- LOWEST PRICES

REALTORS CO N SUL fAN "

Dark blown tan V top, brown leather inter ior, full
power, factory air, T&amp; T wheel, AM FM s1ereo, 1 local

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

"'

Only

RESIDENTER -

no

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

Has 2
sepl1c t anks, city water on

t-A:,HIUNAtsLt:. - J Hrs,
steam heot ntce k 1t large
d1ntng, full basement, and
\itew of nver $19,500
Coun1ry home Ltke new
3 Br s , bnth u t tl tly , porch ,
F A furnace nnd 1 acre
Only $19,500
n ACRES - Ctty water
and gc1 5 Lo rge utility
bu1ldtng
for
hobby
Renovat ed J Brs Askmg
S19,500
3 ACRES - In the coiJ n try
on hard road, dnlled we ll
nnd septt c tank

For MaMtmum Secur~ t y usc
Down
Anchor s t o
T1e
Protect Your Mob1l e Hom e
Co mpl e t e Serv 1ce Call Ron
Sk idm ore, 379 2152 or 446
17S6
tf

Lost
--- ---------FOR SALE

2191tnQ .

Real Estate for Sale

TRI COU NTY Sport s Shop
ProfeSSional ur c h ery and
r eroad1ng s uppli es, 675 2988
36 I f

Currency and Supplres
Buy, Sale or Trade

Ph 949 2023 or 843 2667

6 Acres

7

Ph. (614) 985-4 102
2-12·1 mo

From a sh e!{ t o a hou se, a ll
typ es of bu tld1 ng a nd
remodeling
from
fh'
Add1t1on~.
toundat1on up
ca rpet1ng , p;untang , Std tng ,
roofing , p ancltng
p ap er
h a n gwg etc

500

Rt

BISSELL BUILDERS

CONSTRUCTION

NEAR LY 4 acres -

124, 1ust off
$8,500

I

lake advantage of our
pr1c es
Qualt1y ' built
homes . Ntce lo1s available
in mce locations

COINS

of ntce laytng fenced land 5
room renovated home, 2
Br s modern ba th , mod
k t t , ga s FA Furnace and

outbids

SAVE MONEY?

D&amp;D

3
6 RM nom e n1c e yprct goQd
locahon Phon e 992 7394
2106 tc

WANT ID

Notice

----

73 Cadillac Elderado Cpe.
'5495
73 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

TARA

1 21 1 mo .

"

BR HO ME
! US! f1n1Shed
rem o d e ltng
Salem
St ,
Rutland
Phone 742 2306
a ft er 4 p m or see Milo 8
Hutchtnson
10 9 1fc

O'D ELL A ltnement located
beh tnd
Rut l and
Grade
School
Tuneup . bral&lt;es
whee l balan c tng , a ltnement
Phon e 7112 2004
11 16 1fc

PH. 992-6173

Homes For Sale

1909 K IRK WOOD Mobrle
Home 12 x 45 Furntshed
and tn good co ndtt1on Call
992 5533 afl er 5 p m
22231p

E XCA VATING
BACKHO ES
AND DOZER LARGE AND
SMALL. SEPTIC TANK S
IN S TALLED
BILL
PULLINS PHONE 992 2478
DAY OR NIGHT
2 '}1 52tp

Now accepting clients
for bookkeeping and
Ia x serv tce .

Pomeroy

Ph 992 2174

MODERN hOme tn Chester 8
rooms 2 bat h s. 2 porches
sun porch 1~ basemen t c 1ty
and wel l water natural gas
garoye
Prtce d to se ll
Phon e { 6 14 ) 985 ,110 2
2 4 lfC

'

I

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

ONE A&lt;.K!:::: 0 rms and bath
Rt 3 Pom eroy, Rose Hill
D1ck Davts property full
bas eme nt
alumrnum
St d1n!=! ppne l ed S IO 000 Cal l
Oalo:. H il l, 68 5 6576 even rngs ,
Jaclo:.son 2'86 300J days
2 5 301p
3

t

••

Nathan Btgg s
Rad1ator Spec1al!st

Real Estate For Sale

RUTLAND Arnerrr;:an Le:;J 10n
Gun Club Shoot under
s hell er Beech Grove Road ,
Rutlan d l2 noon Sunday
2 22 1tp

LARRY WHOBREY
PUBLIC
ACOOUNTANT

From th e largest Truck or
Bul l do ze r Radtator to the
srnaltcsl H el:'t er Co r e

1970 MOBI L E hom e 50)( 12 2
b e dr•m p art1ally tur n•shed
2 22 II C
Ca ii Q92 7196 b efore s p m or
alt er 5, call 99 2 61-1 3
2 20 Jtc

Notice

.....

Radiato
Service

And leav e th e rest to God
Th e fam ly o f R a lph E

Lee

MODERN CHEMICALS
100 Kerr Street
Pomerov. Oh10 45749
(614) 992 2798 , DICk Seyler
1 29lrno .

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

For Rent

Free est1 mates on carpeting and 1nstallat1on .
We' ll bnng samp les to your
home w1th no obligation
See how you can ... really
save
M1ke Young , Manager
Sales and InstallatiOn
Rt 3, Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769
Phone day or ntght
614 n'l-'2206
1 IJ I rnO

We Buy Ant1ques

LARRY LAVENDER

Business Opportunities

&amp; OBITUARY

50

Fmancmg A\ia1lab1c
Blown mtoWalls&amp; Att1c!i
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING SOFF!TT
GUTTERS AWNINGS

p&lt;ud

CAR 0 Of THANKS
tor

FURNITURE
STRIPPING SERVICE
Remo\ia l of
Pc11nts
Plashes Varntshes , etc
Wood or Metal
R epa1r s
Reftn tS hlng ot
Furntture
Burn1 shmg Pollshmg of
Copper &amp; Brass

Salesmen's Specials

Realty ltu:.

For Rent

Wanted To Rent

47th ANNIVERSARY

OHIO RIVER

''

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

SLOAN'S
CARPETING

Ant tQu e

Blown
lnsulalton Servoces

QUI\Lirre:o m rn c ms ~wcto r .
must have 6 yrs expe rten ce
7 yrs mos 1 n av e been un
dc r r1round rn Ohro Cont ac t
tndus t r,al
f&lt; c lat . ons
PcrSOI\n e l D ept
7373 w
1 l i th Ave
Columb us Ohto
J3 20t or call ( 6ft ) .u6 327 1
2 11:1 6tc

Wllhrn 10 days

s1 ou

FREE ESTIMATES

•

INTERN A TION AL
HAR
SLEEPING Rooms , weekly
VE STER a leader l n the GARAG E or barn space to
rates Park Cen1ral Hotel
rent
,
for
stor
ag
e
of
2
v
eh•cle
A qr. c ullural trac l or and
306 If
and
qa
rde,
eq1.,11
p
Call
44¢
eq u1 pm ent tn du st ry have
3082
!
rom
8
a
.
m
to
9
p
m
available a r e!at l fra nc tu se
BR
MOBILE
home .
2
4l 6
op en for th e Galltpolts Ohto
eutav tl le Rd, 440 0390
rrac:te area
IH offers a
40 If
compl ete fine of ·ou tdoor
Pow er Products . Lawn &amp;
FURN
apt , 3 rooms w1th
Garden Equtpm e nL and
pnvate bath , 845 Second
servtc(j' pa r ts w1th excellent
Ave Ph 446 2215
sates and prof1l poSS !bll tltes
40 If
FURNISHED
ap!
or
2
Wholesa l e f loor plan and
adul
ts,
centra
l
hear
,
a1
r
r et ad
f•nan c 1n g
AVAILABLE
c ond , off street parkmg
arra ng ements available .
:&gt;ALLI PO LIS ftnest ap t lOr
Ph
446
O
JJ8
tn addl lton to bustness and
tease Color TV , gas
30 I f
management s y s tems Carl
centra l heat central a•r
or wnt e today for more
cond tl loned
Mobile home
dela1ted
tntormat1on
NE W Regency , In c
aparl
overlooking nver Small eff
Waller H Gray I Area Sales
menls 2 BR . Ph 675 5 104
apar t ment one person two
Manager J, 5708 P1nelre e
675 5386 , 07 5 2608 $ 119 per
bedroom turn1sh e c:t house
west No K Columbus Oh10
mo nrh Sa nd Hill Rd , PI
Phon e 446 0338
614 84 0 6233 , 7 p m at hom e
Pl e a sa n L W Va
275 ~~
any l1me a t offtce 614 438
2500
LIGHT housekeepmo room
396 L A RGE room fac1ng park,
Park Centra l Hot el
78 t f
l l ghr
hou sekee p t ng ,
el e vator ,
factllltes
for
reltred person Park Central £ i KAtLER spa ces located m
Horel
Cheshtre , ready tor hook up
TONY' S Decorat 1n g pamtmg
98 If
Phone 367 0505
wall papertng
paneltng
302 I f
Free est 1rnates 67 5 5689
SLE EPING Ro01 11 weekly
53 It
LOW week l y and monthly
rat e Gall 1a Hot el
rates at L tb.by Hotel 446
203 If
SA VE 0 F F Season Spec1a1
1743
now I til March 1 Wtll clean
244 I f
2 BR M~BILE hom e for $100 :J
any S1Le L1v1ng roo'm and
br mobt l e home $125 4ll6
halt for $24 95 We use only
MOBILE home space for renl
017 5
the Best Dry Foam Method
446 0008
Call
M1racre
Carpet
267 tf
'137 t f
creantng 379 2682
19 If
TWIN s1ng te 2 bedroom untt
wtlh palto and large yard
Kttchen has ref , range and
PRUNE grape •nnes
lrurl
dtshwasher 446 4570
rree s 15 yrs exp Ph J79
443
211 4
TOWNHOUSE
43 3
2 BR MH gas . c 1ty water , no
APARlMENTS
pe l s Ph 4d6 4292 aft er 4 30
2 Bedroom
daily

-

! N FORMA T I O N

DEADLINE S
p 1\'
nn" !It tnr~

Business Opportunmes

-

.1\0&lt;;

~

WANT

Real Estate fOf Sale

'

J

Mldcll~eport

...•,l.•
••.•

�_,

29 - The SWiday Tllll&lt;&gt;S-Sentinel, ~·eb 22, 1976

For Fast Results "Tlse, The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
--, Help Wanted

Business Services

'

Pt•bll(i'IIIO!l

1\\Qildol)'

l'•

I

•() M ! ONI

II

[1 \1

10

,•J(l l'r ly ti~d~
I or n r or~
11\ IOt m,111011
Cdll YIV ".' &gt;Jl

~

iidllll•

W tl tl

' '{I 61~

,l Ill

C an c •..llla••on
Carrt'Ctl on s will bt'
C{' IJI(' d until 9 am

ac
tor

I N 1 ERE~liNG &lt;'lnd pl cas anl

tC' mpC)rary l tQilT o ffi ce w o rk
f o r l a dy Very good pay , no
eKpcr ten ce necessary Also
net-d lady w1th car for light
delivery worlo:.
Apply to
Mr s Carter , 1 to J p m
Monday r e b n DAY Hall
11~
But t e rn u t
A venue
Pomeroy
2 18 .a c

DAy o f P ubi •C c't iiO il
REGULATIONS
T hl:' PubiiShN resN v i'S
ltlP r•qh t ro C' d •' or rerc c l
&lt;tny &lt;His a eemt'd ol&gt;
rect onal Th£' pubi iS hf'r
w• ll n ot be responstbl(' tor

more I han one mc orrc c 1
•nser •• on
RATES
F o r w ,,n f Ad Sc rv •c c
r,

l.. ('ll iS

J.H'f

\'Old

Oll t'

•nSt"rt,on
M•ll H11 U!l'l Cllargc Sl OLI
1-1

c ents per

consecut•v~

wOrt'l thrf'e

uJse n •o ns

16 c enrs per wora s r;o;

consecut rvP

111sert •ons

?'I Per Ce n t O t5c ounr on
ad ~

pa •d ads and

Syr.1cus e, Oh10
Ph 992 39U
4 10 I mo

l)li ll 11l1UITI

Ea c l\ a d d il•o nal w on1 3

c en ts

BLIND AD S
Add l•o nal 2.,c Ch ar ge
p f' r .'\ d v~rl t SenlV t11
OFF ICE HOURS
H 10 21 Ill to S 00 p 11)
Dally A JO a n1 to 1J 00
Noon Satu rda y
Phon e 1oclay 99 2 2156

In Memory
I N MEMORY of our mot h er ,
Roberta M Lee, who passed
away February 22 1968

EXPERIE~CED

RE SPO N S I BLE
PER SON
Wi! n lf' d to own and o perat e
c andy and ccn f cclton v en d
1ng r ou t e Porn ero y and
s urrounc:ltng an~a Pleas an t
bus1ness HtQI1 profd 1tems
Ca n s r~r t parr 11me Age or
to xp c r ren ce not
m porlatH
R equ rr es car and $960 cas h
•nvestmcn r
Fo r det ail s
wr 1te and tnclud c your
phone SAl , 107/ San Jose
Ave
Burbank
Ca ltforn •a
91S0 1
1 20 31p

wo r d

Mobil~
A

Looktng back W1th memor 1es
A long th e road we t rod
We b l ess t he ye ars we had

you

SHOOTING MATCH jUSt Off
Rt 7 nea r Ro ck Springs
Cemetery
Every Sunday ,
12 30 p m
2 19 31p

-----.·--- -------MAKE SURE you get e v er y
posstble dedu Ct iOn lhtS year
Have your Federal and
Slate Incom e Tax re turn by
an ac count a nt Phone 99 2
617J
1 21 52t c;

INCOME
Tax
Ser v ce
Federal o r St ate taxes
Phon e 99 2 n28 or
see
Wallac e Ru ssell Bradbury
1 30 261C
2 BUILDING S 1 hous e and
ware room , tear down for
ltJrn b er P hcne 09 2 11)'&gt;1
'
7 18 61c

Card of Thanks
.

WOULD ltke l o thank all
those who went flowers ,
ca rd s gtfts , and the many
fnends who though t of Mrs
Stel l a Boo t ell dur tng her
101st b 1rthday
Mrs Roberta 0 Brten
2 22 lip

Ple;,cagla ss · Table Tops
M1rror s Storm &amp; Screens
FERRELL'S GLASS &amp;
HOM E MAINTENANCE
S I dIll Q
v 1n ·y 1
&amp;
Alum1num Wtndow Glass
&amp; Glazmg On t he Job or m
Shop
P 1Ck
up and del very
servtce
Call Collect 388 8239
Spec1alue
tn
build up
roof1ng &amp; hot roofs Free
Eshmates · 10 years
penence
Hary e Ferrell
Bidwell, Oh10
2 6 1 mo

F OR 5 · LE n ear Langsvill e !)
rn1 11ouse root cellar w tth
rQ om over 2 bay d etached
garage l 111 acres , .no ba t h
hot anef c old water 1n k1l
che n I p gas neat heat er s
w 1th house
Call 742 2819
aft er 5pm
1 18 6tp

_

_,___

-~--

---

B EDRM hom e new roof
new bothroorn N c ar Sc hool
Ca ll 7 J 2 2JB 1
2 20 lip

WE WIS H to e)(press our
si ncere thanks and ap
pr ectahon to our fnends and
netghbors for ktndness and
love s hown us durtng the 12 t;!U I LD IN G lots, no less
dea t h of our belo ved mother
than 50 ' x 150' each 1 has
and SISter Myrtle Long To
Qutck access to ctty water
the Pomeroy Emergency
and
sanrtary
sewage
Squad, EwmQ ' s Funera l
Complete
f1nanc1ng
to
Home ~ev Menzel Sm tlh
quall t ted tnterested b1Jyer 11
for htsconso l mg words , ones
Call 992 5786
who took ca re of t h e g r a\ie
2 22 Ol e
al l who se n t flowers , cards
a11d f ood and any who helped
house tn Mtd
us tn any way God bless a tr 3 BEDRM
d l eport
co rner lot
New
p f you Chtl dren Mur ra tn
bath story and half, ut!l tty
Dorothy Lewts, and V 1ol et
room , new carpettng and
Stster Add e and Brorher I ra
n ew roof, garage and work
and Famtlt es
room frut t cel l ar Close to
2 22 ltc
schoo l
and
s h op ptn g
$17,500 Phone 992 7624
1 27 261c

Pets

Pt T S TO GIVE AWAY
PUREBRED Great Dane ,
male 1 yr old Phone 992
3832 or 992 2039 , Metgs Co
Humane Soc 1ety
2 22 6tc

Wanted To Buy
OL D turn1 ture
te e boxes
brass
bed s
old
wall
te le phone s and paris
or
complete households Wr•t e
M
D
M tll er
Rl
2
Pomeroy
Ohto
Call 992
7760
10 7 7 l
q TO 10 f t d ump b ed
1 011 ~ 3677J!I

ACRES on Salem 51,
Rutland , Oh10 PhOne 742
22 84
2 17 6tc

8

4 BEDROOM house for sa le tn
New Haven , $12 ,SOO Call
882 3390
2 22 121c
--~----~---- -- -

l .. x70 MOBILE home, total
electrtc, 3 ton a 1r con
co t l•o n er
excellent con
dthon Ca ll 247 2684 or 247
2664
2 22 6tc

---------

PilOn ['

TEAFORD
B,

7 20 6tc

WANT to buy or talo:. e over
payments on a 3 bedrm
mobtle hom e tn country ,
w1lh at least 1 acre Phone
247 210 7
2 22 Jtc
LA SH pa td l or dll ma k es and
mod el s o t mob1 le homC!i
Phon e ar ea c ode 614 42 3
9) J 1
4 13 1f c

Vtrgtl
Sr Broker
11 0 Mechantc Pomeroy,
Phone 992 -3325

NEW LISTING -

$16

Employment Wanted
WILL babystl tn my home tn
the Chesrer Tuppe rs P l arns
area Phon e (6L1 l 985 3867
2 22 31p
J

SEWING of all k 1nd s dr esses
for all occ as1on s s la c k s ,
stHrts , newborn l a y e t tes
curtatn s drapes Phone 99 2
3035 and ask. fo r Dorothy
2 19 26tc

La Salle
•

HOTEL
'....

00., , ... .,,

Rooms, '5.00 up
Special Rates
by Weelc
or Month

B E DRM
home
IUS!
ftn tshe d remode l 1ng Sa l em
St 1 Rutland Phon e 742 2306
aft er 4 p m or see Milo B
Hutch1 son
9 2J lie

Strout,
Realty

INCOII.POIIATEn

NO. 168 - 36 a , 5 r nome
carpe t ed, mod
f trep la ce forced
fr
ce ll ar,
ou tbld gs , qu1et
setting , $32,000 00

ktlchen
atr fur
several
cou n try

NO 140 - 1 72 a , vacan t
c l eared, good lo c
for
cou ntr y
h ome
or
recrea t iona l
NO 142 -94 a , 6 r home,
new roof. bemg remodeled,
lge barn garage , 2 a lake,
stocked. severa l wooded

acres, good buy, $40,00b 00
NO
144 ~ 25 a , rge
coun lr y
home,
barn
poultry hou se, oth er bldgs ,
$25,000 00 Owner wtll take
land contract

804 W. Main
Pomeroy
992-2298
After Hours Ca II
992 -7133
CONTACT ·
LOIS Pauley
Branch Ma11ager

0

OLD

1 Bea1u t 1ful 1 acre Good 5
brs, &amp; ~ baths Nnt g.=ts
furnace
Good
gnrden
ground · $35,000
IS7 ACRES - Large older
home w1 tll bnlh br1rn ilnd
tractor ~ ~~: (.,....,,. t1mber

2 77 ACRES - Home 3 BR
ranch ty pe, n1ce 1&lt;1tchen W

rei

range FORCE D A1r

fur n ace , full basement ,
own wa t e r, (tap patd)
storm door s &amp; wmdows
LMge garage W workshop
C1rporf 'l lr.1tler hookups

$2ij

000

Rout e 143 - 111 Acres - 1
BR bnth, own &amp; c tty wa ter
gar.1ge Cellnr for frutts,
lrmdscc'lped SS,JOO

REEOSVILLE

AREA -

135 ACR ES Mmerals, C1 t y
\-\Infer ,1\iclt l .lble
Some
trmbt~ r
S173 00 per acre
POMEROY
Larger
hctme
H~ s
new St dtng,
1urnacr trl e &amp; prmf' lmg
co1rpe tma storm doors l'l nd
w1 nctows '2 (,lr g&lt;1r.1gc
Low utillft&lt;?S $18,500

S6 ~ . -·

POMEROY -

NEWLISIINU - : rm r., d
Br ~
2 b,lfhs , cr t y wrn
11nd q v , CornPr lot out
fl ood Onl y Ml SOO

lr.=tme w 1fh almost n ew
roof. ~ ldtng .1nd eMpar l 3
h rdll
Sm,lf l
ynrd $8,000

Wf MIE Sfll FR5 OF
coon P•JUI-l r p 1 Y (/Ill
U'", f f) ' I I I

-

- --lF------'

B1centenntal Coms.
197 5
P.-oof Set (6 pes )
~25 00, 1975 Mrnt Set S9 00,
rq76 Sl l\ier Proof Se t (J
pe s ) $15 00 ' 1976 S1lver
UNC Set (3 pes ) S8 SO
Cal l R!.Jtland , 742 2JJ I
R&amp;J COINS
Roger Wam sley
I 1J I mo

s

HAVE d ump ! ru c k and dozer
W II do haul tn t1 and ex
cavat 1n g Phon e 16 1 1) 667
3319 or 667 3333
2 20 If&lt;.
QUA LI FIED automob1le
• mechan iC looktng lor work
tn own qa r aq e Rea sonab l e
rat es
Call 9'n 71:10 alt er
' 00
2 ?0 I p
EXC AVATI NG doz er loaue"o
and backhoe work
sepltc
tank.s
tnsta ll ed
dump
t r ucks and l o boys tor h 1re
will haul f 1ll dtr1 rop 5011
limeston e and grav el Call
Bob or Ro11er Jeffers , day
phone 992 7089 ntght phone
99'2 J525 or 992 5232
2 11 t f c
REMODELING
Plumb tng
hea l mg and all types of
general
repatr
Worlo:.
guaranteed
20 years ex
perten ce
Phon e 992 2409
5 I ti c
- -- _._

_________ _

EXCAVAT IN G
dozer
backhoe
and
d t tcher
Ch arl es R H alf 1eld Back
Hoe Serv 1ce Ru tl and Oh•o
Phone 742 2008
11 3078 1c

D EAD Stock re moved
No
churge Ca ll 2115 5514 be for e
9 am
272 I f
lH U RM I\ N
Hou se
r urn
St r 1ppm g An l 1qu es botJ q h l
and
sold
p1cku~
\lnd
d e l1 very P aul !J urn e rt 245
9t7(J Marlm Rose 245 95 32

2 •I

YOUR
havo

LOST
vt·~te r day

rt could
b een saved l or~Yvr
wll h
a
portra1t
from
liro11er's Studto Call 446
74 94
Op e n
Tu e sday
Sa t urday 10 S, unt 1l 8 p m
on Thur sday
35 If

Help Wanted
TIME STUDY
ENGINEER
ROBBIN S &amp; Myers In c ot
Go lltpol1 s
Oht o ha s an
101med1ale open tn iJ for an
exper en ced TIME STUDY
ENGINEER th e succe-ss f u l
c and 1dat e wtll be fam·tltar
wilh M T M and
TIME
MOTION analy StS an d w1l l
have 1 o r more y e ar!&gt; ot
ac tual wor'k e,.; per•ence rn
1h c
stanctard
ft c l ds
Qualt fi Cd ilppl 1cant s shou ld
ca ll Mr Donald son at ( 6\ 4)
116 401 2
13 1

MATURE lady to l 1v e n w rth
el derly lady Cal l 446 33 02
belween 4 and 8 p m
_
41 '
BA~ S Ptay e r wan t ed f o r
estab lt shed young ro c k band
age 16 21 Ph 675 2653
36 34

For lease
~ ~~s o FT Off 1ce m lobby ot
L 1bby Ho1 e1 $15 mo Ca ll
446 1743
283 I f

Pets
PUREBRED S1amese k1t
t en
Reg1s1ered German
Shepherd pups Black and
S1lver $20 Ph 411 6 1006
4JJ

I

SEW IN G MACH INE Repatrs ,
servtce, all makes 992 2284
The F abr.c S hop ~ Pom eroy
Aul h orrzed Smger Sales and
Se rv1 ce
We
sha rp en
Sc 1ssors
3 29 lf c

AKC ln sh Sel l er . 14 wks old ,
t ema l e $100 ,J46 6660

BRADFORD , 1\Uc ltonee r
Comp lete Servtce
Phone
9ti9 2487 or 949 2000 Ra c m e
Oh1o Crtlt Brad ford
10 9 IJc

RED DOG limestone gravel
and 1111 dtrl d e ltvered
Phone Btl! Pullt n s 992 2478
2 19 26tc

Wanted To Buy

Ph

vl 59269

"'

JUNK autos and scrap m e1a1
Call 388 8776
" ) 26
ALL PURPOSE t able saw 1n
good co nd1l lon Call 446 2342
dayl tme Ask for Che t
4l J

2 s tory

HOW TO S F ll YOUR
HOM !' ' CA l I US
992 2H(f or 9911568

TANK S clea n ed
Modern San dalton 992 3954
or 992 7349
9 18 t f c

YOU nee d
hauled call
any t.me

IF

your
( 61~)

4]6

'l YR OLD lr15h Setter , male ,
w II sell W1lh l arge dog
hO use for $75 756 1430
'3 J

BR I ARPATC H l&lt;;enne ts AK C
Gordon S etter puppt es
champ on par e nt s
fiKC
Engl1sh Cocker Spante l
p u pp1 es Ph 446 4 191
.tJ I I
LHA SO Apso male , all sh ots
AKC Ca l l 446 0070 e\ien1ngs

44 3

JUA NIT A S Poodle Parlor
F m al week my ad wtll run
Please copy my number for
groom mg and bOardtng m
my home 446 7878

gravel
985 4119

2 18 121p
IF INTERE ~ TED m budd ing
a
new
home
c onta c t
ROUSH CON'STRUCTIO N
free esrtmates , Greg Roush,
997 7583
2 1B 12 rc

AKC M 1n Dachsl1und , 8 wks
red female , temporary
sh ot s 446 4160
423
PINE ,RIDGE COLLII:rs
fiKC Reg Col l te pup s Sa bl e
an d wh rt e 756 1.267
307 If

L UCKETT != arm Equlpmenl ,
West
Wa s h1ngton
St
Albany Phone (6111 698 3012
Or 6JI8 lH8 I
:z 18 26tc

t:J.OANDING, AK C WES1Y
AND PUG PUP CIRCLE L
KENNEL, RT 141,446 4824
281 If

PAPER hangl!lg , pamttng,
pane l 1n~ ,
etc
Phone 9d9
?021
2 18 121 p

RO PI I &lt;; Poodle L\ou t 1que
Profr·ssmna l g room 1ng by
appo 1n1n,ent Ph
116 1911
I ) If

I NTER IO~

and
~ xlerlor
p atr'll
Nu 10b roo S ITIBII
PI'IOIH' ~ 1'o' 1JJ'I
lA tl c

•

•

•
•

BOARDING&amp; AKC PUPPIES
K &amp; P Kennels 388 827~ Rt
··' 1' m I eas1 of Porter
305 I f

'

~

BR MH. private lo t
c ond adult s only , ref
307 7167

"'
a 1r
Ph

443

BRADBURY Eff Apt No 6
turn
1 p erson , no pets $4~
dep, utlltltes m c luded , lsi
floor 446 0957

For Rent or lease

44 1

Mobile Homes for Sale
1971 L A NCER Mobile home
12:w:65 1 ba t hS 2 br, c ar
p e l ed
furn
pon; h un
d erp.nn1ng 675 3214 after 5
p m Wh1 rt poot dtshwa srter
42 6
19 7 ! SC HULT Mobile horne
12x60 , total electrtc Ph 4•16
1098
41 4
TRI S T A TE Mob 1le H o me
Clear a n ce Sale u se d mob ile
homes 8 10, 12 w1dcs Pto
~16 75 72 Bank ftnanctng
30 6 If

or

FtC E s pa ce
downtown Ph

for rent
0008
237 If

4~0

MOBIL6 home

d46 0756
37

II

(1 ~
MOBI LE hOme wtth
auto wa sher !.80 per monlh
156 t922
4JJ

1

UN FU RNI SH ED 7 rm and
bath
hou se tn Th urman
Catt6 82 6&lt;t9l
JJJ

TO ECONOMIZE
on f ue l
undcrpm your mob1ll1 hom e
and anch or tor ~a f ~ lv
F URNI S HE D apt
Adults
Foster Mob1te Hom e Ser
on t y ut1lrltes pa1d , n o )J ets
v1ce, 4~6 2783, or E lm er ·
251.1 State St 146 0085
Sktd rho rc 446 3479
41&lt;
27 !I !f
? 8EDROOM mobile home
B&amp;S MOBILE HOME S
Eas1 ern Avenue Ca ll 446
1976 NOVA 121160 3 br all
0390
el c c trtc
41 If
1970 N o va 12x OO 2 BR Jll
erectr1 c
L A RGE 2 bedroom hou se 1n
1969 Rtlztraft 12x60 2 Br
ce nt er o f town
parllat l y
197 0 K it 12x-1 7 ~ Br
furn tshed Call 446 1015 or
1968 Sl y l e Mar 12x52 2 Br
446 4317
1967 F reetwood 12x60 2 Br
41 tt"
197 1 Concord 1 1~ 6~ ~ H
1968 Cornmodoge 12x52 M H
N ICE LY turn
2 BR Apt
1959 Colon1a l 10x 50 M H
adults only no pets , dep
B&amp; S MODJi c
required 446 7857
29 11
Hom e Sales
PI Pleasant, 'IN Va
237 1I
MOB I LE home space, I m 11e
from HMC Ph 440 JB05
264 ff

'

.

12xSO MOB ILE H OME. 'l BR
446 0952
ground fl oor apt
1969 LIN COLN Cant Mark Il l,
aft er 5
a ll power cr u tse con trol
42 II
AM FM s tereo rad1o good
ltres Needs some r epa trs
MODERN 2 BR garage apt ,
Sl 595 d460390
ce n t rally located
butll tn
35 If
kitchen
a tr co nd
ext ra
- _.
n1ce no pets , ret requ•red
0
1969 VAN
VB eng1 n e
a.r
446 7300
cond
paneled, 4 speakers
42 6
and tape dec k.
carpe t ed
-~- ~- --~-------245 9S94
42 6 MODERN 3 BR home , Phone
446 2871
426
1 1 TON Ford p.ck.up
34 000
mtles. 1973 Ph 446 -1948

___..__ -----·------

_ _____

1975 CHEVELLE
Malibu
Cl ass 1c, Landau roof P S
PB . auto trans
alf ste el
belted radtals
Wil t sell
outrlc;,rhl
or
tak e
over
payments
Call 388 9017
afler6pm

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

41 '
197 1 MERCURY Montego, 4
door a 1r cond
good con
d1 110n Ph 446 1098
41 •

radial tires, one

•4495
72 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

White

with brown vinyl roof, brown leather lnt ,
wheel, AM FM rad1o, rad1al tlrP"&gt;. power 8. atr

T&amp; T

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

'

Cadillac-Oldsmobile
GMAC Fmancmg Available

992-5342

I
I

~-----------'---------·-· .....

SPRING VALLEY
GREEN
APARTMENTS

CANADAY

MASSIE

ADDISON GOOd block
nofY!e , could b ed bedrooms
tak e a took for !9 500

Realty, 32 State St

Tel. 614 446-1998

NEW RANCH frame
wtth brick front , lovely
kitchen
with
plenty
cabinets,
stove ,
dtsh
washer and garbage dtSP
three bedrooms, 11 • baths
carpeted Qn 17 acre lot m
small subd1vis1on tn Btd
well
TRAIL.EA COURT - W1th
18 splices , good 24)136 block
workshop wash house and
two mobile homes Pr tc ed
m1d twen t tes
DUPLEX - Each stde has
f tve rooms 11 1 baths , and
pr tvate
dr•veway
Down t own near scl'1oo ls
EAST END - small ftve
room coftaoe
pnced to
sell
FARM LAND - 'l(J acres
wtth 36 A flat to s lop ect . 30 A
pa sture no f ences ano '
older barns , located 11 mtle
from R 1 JS m Green and
Perry Twp

Rent Starts At
$129 Per Month
Apartments
Available:
One Bedroom Apt .
Two Bedroom Apt ,

OPEN DAILY
For
information
mqutre at ofhce or
ph. 446-1599,
Located 112 mile west
of Holzer Hospttal on
Rl. 35 .

'for Sale

Ut 2 ACRES
Morgat
Twp, no bultdmgs at SlO,

LIKE NEW
1974, 25 fl ,
Holtc:tay Ramblell , fully
equ1pped Has full s tze bed
and complete bathroom
w1th rub an d shower , sleeps
6 Ph 446 08t18
446

per acre

LANO

CONTRACT

Blo c k dwelling w1th ..
rooms
and
batti
or
Chtlllcolhe Road
Repatr
n ee d ed 55.000

73 HONDA Tra tl 70 A 1 cond,
900 m ties Prrce 5295 Ph
446 4J77
44 If

41 ACRES - LOIS of roaa
fron t age tn Chesh1re Twp
on blacktop road hu somE
bulldmgs , no dwelling

THE AMAZI N G Blue Lu stre
W1l l leave your upholstery
beauti ful ly so ft and clean
Re nt e l ect ri c shampooer Sl
Central Suppl y Co
446

PRICE
REDUCED
Three bedroom mobile
hom e
complelely
f ur
n ls hed , has A C unit o n nice
c l e ared one acre lo t w1th
good garage

~----'--~----~---

14 FT alum mum fishing boar.
Wtlh 20hp motor and tratler
446 0081
446

4IACRES -~ F&gt;erryTwp on
blacktop road 10 miles
from city No buildtngs

TYCOON

H OLLA ND 66 H ay Baler and
Rak e Call after 5 p m 25 6

LAKE -

Ba•l

store In good blo ck butld 1ng
wltn 11\ilng quaners Bell er
see now - fishing season IS
just around the corne r

1142
446
1965 FORD F 700 16 ff fl at
bed , Qui ck sa l e Ph 446 4393
442

IS ACRES - Wrth mobile
home and older dwell tny
located
.ot m lies from
Vmton
MODERN
E~ECTRIC
HOME - Six rooms, bart1
and a half ca rpeted w1tll
carport
Over a dozen
acrts end less then twelve
m1nu1e's from Ctt y ShoVJn
by appo intment

14 ACRES - Wtlh older 5
rooms and bath farm
house Most of land cleared
with bern and 1, 000 lb T
base tn Clay Twp

Biggest Selection Used

BUILDING SITES - Hav e
e limited number that can
be bough t smal l down
paymen t

Furniture &amp; Appliances

GROCERY
STORE
Owner says Jo sell - lock
stock.
bar rel,
and
buildings
Room for ex
pens•on
If
ambil•ous
Shown by appotnlmenl

In The Area
1-2 Pc. Black Vinyl LR Suite' - - - ' -$49.95
2-Sofas, priced logo
$20ea.
1-2 Pc. L R Suite, 2 Tables and 2
lamps'--- - - - - - - - - $179.95
1-2 Pc. LR Suite, 3 tables and 2
lamps
$199.95
1- Cedar chest, good one
$64.95
1-White BR Suite, complete with new box
spring and mattress, Must see to
apprectate .
1-Uprighl Freezer, like new
$199.95
Several Refrigerators on hand
SSO up
Automatic Washers &amp; Dryers_ $69.95 up
Reg . $299.95 office desk. walnut finish, with
swivel chair
$169.95
Rockers. lounge chairs, bunk beds, chests,
dressers, record players, desks, beds and
many other items.

KEMPER
HOLLOW
ROAD - Attractive double
W1de mobile home on
permanent foundation with
fenced one a c r e lot

LAST BUT NOT LEAST -

DEBBY OR - 4 yrs O!d
all elec frame wtth cedar
S1dmg , 6 b 1g rms , 2 full
balhS plenty stora ge , l 1v
16 'MJ 1 , cen atr, walls
paneled and d ry wall 100
pet Acry lon carpe t elec
F P b19 ktl equipped w•th
0 W
d•s and self c l ean
oven with Rotts sc ne Th1 s
home h as many un,que
f eatures and ca n be bought
fo r l ess than replacement
cost
COUNTRY AIR ESTATES
- N ew 6 rm B 1 leve l bnc k
and frame , elec f un1 cen
atr , p , baths , k 11
and
fam dy rm paneled co pper
plumb1ng K1l has D W ,
rang e and d1sposar Th1s
house ha s e;,ctra l arge
rooms L•v rm 22 x 15
and bdrm s
sut tabt e for
Kt ng
s1ze
furn1 tu r e
Lo cated on 1, A lot Fa•r
market pr1 ce
PINE ST - Prrce reducer
to S.ll, OOO on lhts brtck &amp;
frame home 5 r ms 8. bath ,
partlal bos e For comfort,
main tenan ce , economy
flymg a nd a cc ess•b tltly to
e v erything, lhts one Is sure
hard to beat
BULAVILLE RD -~ All
brtck Ranch , 1 yrs o ld ,
1500' sq t r ltv area , l arge
ut1ltty rm co ul d be u sed for
work area t or t he Mrs
Good grade of ca rpe r, n tce
k•tchen cab m e ts Cen a tr ,
rural water plus dr well
12 'x 10' block out bldg
Beaultful settt n g on l A
good garden land Prtce Ill
nHd l h trttes
CHATt-iAM AVE 2025112 •Extra ntce 5 rm frame
home approx 12 yr o l d,
new carpet over H W
Floors. new F A
ga~
furnace &amp; co pp er plum
bing Sma ll out bldg Price
"8 ,SOO
JAY DR - 1 yr younq fJ
rm s, 11, baths cen il1r
sel f clean OYen , dtsh
washer
d 1 ~ posa1
and
dra p es l"\lg 10 1 Don 1udge
fr om outs 1d e appearance
Prtc~ 5J r 900
CENTENARY E)C!ra
n1ce 6 rm home J11 bat h S,
new carpet over H V..
co pper plumbing
family
rm panel mc 1at s tor age
bldg
fl at lot 80 x 2',0
'G ooct1 es' tn c l ude a 1r
cn nd drapes and stain less
r.reel s1ove If vou wan 1
qual1ty locarton and prtcc
call now Pnce rcauced to
$29, SOO

: nv -

H'lt 7nd Ave 2
.•ory 6 rm older home
lie block stora ge bldg and
~ar Loca t e d on a la rg e lot
' good buy at $17 000
&gt;iEDGEWOOO DR Owner
.ays se ll now 1 rm fram e
.n larg e lot H W fl oors
11 ba t h s base, s1orm drs
.Jn d wm Price $16 000
FARM 261 f
70 /'.
illable . 2U /' bo ttom 1 ORO
1b t ob base , 30 fl coal J
::1 arns
s110 and some
Imber 1 rm modern brtck
1ome You ca n 1 go wrong
m 11'11s one Pot c nllal plu s
Price S!\9 0011

6 rooms and blHh with full
ba~ement

on large lot at
ed;e of town Owner w tll
help wtth f tnanc lnQ

RON CANADAY
REALTOR

HAVE

LUCRATIVE
&amp;USINE~S
FOR SALE,
COME IN AND DISCUS S
WITH ME
ANY HR 446 1998
A

40 If
74 OL os . Della 88 new radtal
'•res, good con dt lton Ph
d46 26,63
6

..... .ot511

•o

r OR your Ttre and Batte-ry.
needs
, come to Sears Tire
1
hop tn The Stiv e r Or'rdge
Plaza
33 If

212 II

CHIMI'fEY Blocks. 1/'ri V&amp; &amp;
OhiO Lump Coal GalllpOits
Block Co • .U6 2783
273 It

t

'

'

CORN It'd 1 reezer ll ecf
'I Inters
R 10 Grande
511't

Cilrl
21.S

287-f

Co demo , low m 1leagc loaded wtth all options, red
and wh1te ftn1sh

• 4

Fully eq u1pped, low mtleaqe
wood tnm

1973 CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC,
2 door hardtop. vinyl lop. pwr
windows, pwr . door locks,
cruise control, fact a1r.
NOW ONLY

$2895

1974 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX
2 door hardtop, auto, P.S .. P. 8.,
AM-FM radio, mag wheels,
v1nyl top

SEE YOUR SPECIAL SALESMAN
George Harris-Dallas Blevins-Roger
Dtllard

1973 GMC J;4 TON
Automatic, P S, P 8, VB,
16,000 actual miles, local
owner

"'

NOW ONLY

·POMEROY MOTOR CO.

1974 DATSUN 260-Z
Aulomalic lransmtss1on, fact air, chrome
mag wheels

SALE

DAN THOMPSON FORD

4 door, hardtop, pwr wmdows, power steermg,

c.r~~~ec~:;r~l~.~~:~~.~~~..~~~~-··· .,.................. ~ 4795

1975 Ford LTD 4 Dr. Sedan ........... '4195

1972 PONTIAC GRANVILLE 4 DR.

1974 Ford Gran Torino 4 Dr...........'2995

9
21 5

$

Hardtop, pwr windows, pwr seats,
s1lver with sliver vmyl top,
fully equipped .. •.. ....•....•.. .........•.....•.•.•..•.•..

1972 FORD T-BIRD

~!: ~~~~:~~

~.~~. ~~~~ ~ 2895

•••••••••••••• •• •• •••••• ••• •

••

For Sale

302 ve

AT , PS .. ltke new

1973
Mustang .............................. '2995
302
one
owner

1973 Ford Torino V8...................... s2395
1973 Pontiac VB Cat. 4 Dr. HT....... '2795
PS , PB , AT

HT

loaded

Show best of care

1972 Volkswagen 411 4 Dr. Sedan.. s2695

Pomeroy, Ohio Ph. 992·2174

Very low mileage

Sharp

1971 Volkswagen 2 Dr. Sedan ........ s1695
Ph

8x 11 METAL storage bUJid m g,
$75 Ph 245 9484
42 8
197 3 CH EV J ' T PICkup , auto
lrans , PS , PB , 32 000 m t l~s
Ph 245 948d
42 3

70

O LIV ER Tractor
out
N eighborhood Rd , 446 0871
•
42 3

GRAIN FED F re ezer beef
cut1 1ng and wrapping can b e
arra n ged as des1red A I" FI
have m1xed llav and s t ratgn t
T tmo thy lar ge ba te Call T
om Jonc!:&gt; Thurman , 286
2394 af t er 0
423

INDIAN
Squas h
blossom
necklace, green torquo•se .
2 15 959&lt;1
426
HAY SOc bal e Ph

245 95S9
41 4

EAR corn and freeze r beef
Ph 388 9991
34 12

H c adquar tcrs
T ChP.v Ptckup
For d P1 ck up
Mon1 e Carlo
Ford Econolrne Van
1 T GMC P i ckup
T Chevrol "t P1 c kUt:T GMC P tt l..up
J T Che\i Dump Truck
T P1 ckup
GMC Suburba n
F600 Ford Durnp
I 1'.0 rQrd Dump
' T P1 c kup
I 1000 rord Traclor
SOMMERS GMC
Truck s, tnc
133 Ptnc Sf
4otf!Hl2
16 f

fll

TIPE S

ol

ding
milter1al:;
bloc"
b r JCk
sewer
p1pes ,
windows
ltn lc l s etc Cl aude Wtn!ers,
Rto Grande 0 Phone 245
5121 alter 5
123 I f

MOOtLE
Home
1\U -L T ..
' crv1c-&lt;:
Sktrt1ng
root
ro .! mq pat10S awn1ngs
,ln ( hors r •""' n~ent work I rc c
CS ' IIllares
""til 2459111 or
1 1'o 9177 i\l ler
10 p rn
215 f
GOOll cl€'a11 lump &lt;H"~d &lt;..ta k er
coa l
Cil r1 \\ tniH'&gt;
R1o
Gr &lt;1nd c Ph ?1 ~ ~11

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN

dr Sedan Owned by loca l sento r c 1tlzen

1

1974 Ford /z

'"

T011..... ...................... '3995

Four whe~l dnve AT , very low mileage

1972 Opel 2 Dr.............. ............. s1695
if cyl

Sharp

MANY MORE

..
~

~

Clpen Evenings Til6:00
Except Thurs. and Sat. Til5:00

We sell
anyth•ng
for
anybody a t our Aucl10n
Barn or 1n yo ur home For
tnfo rma t1on and p1ckup
~ erv tct' call 2SO 1907
Sal e Every Saturday
N1ght at7 p m

SWAIN

Phone
992-2196

AUCTION SERVICE
Kenneth Swatn , AU(t
Corner Thtrd &amp; Olive

,,

.a

SEE : Fred Blaettnar, Pal Hill, Melvm Little,
or Dan Thompson

New GMC

T~uck

•

1970 Dodge VB Polora .................. s1395

For Sale

For Sale
bow,

J? 3

Jlilt'lf/
I Y6 7

'·

vs, 4 dr sedan . AT , P S

" dr

For Sale

1Y70

'.,

1972 Cadillac Seville ...................... s3195

KODIAK Hulntng
] 88 8202

1969
1970
1970
1969
1974
1971
t97d
19 70
1969
19 71
lt/69

•••

4 dr One careful owner

Ex:tra n1 ce

1

•.

1973 Bronco 4 Wheel Drive ............ '3995

Air co ndrt10ned

-- ------

0

One careful local owner

1972 Ford LTD 4 Dr. Sedan ........... .'1695

"Your Friendly Dealer"

G.llflpolts

Hold overs at Fabulous

1972 Ford Gal. 500 ....................... '1495

BAGGED Ferlll•zer 17 17 17
1144 per ton 12 12 12 5129 75 · - - per ton , 10 20 20 s 153 25 per
ton 6 24 24 S 156 80 per ton
Ammon1um N tl rat e $ 130 p er
ton
S 10 15 S Tob acco
S127 50 per ton
Central Soya
446 -2463
-40 If

l

1975 Demo . &amp; New
February Prices.

Fully e quipped One care ful loca l owner

SEE ONE OF OUR FRIENDLY SALESMEN:
CEWARD CALVERT, J. D. STORY, BILL NELSON

44,

s1r. Thtrd Av t

Almost l1ke the day tt was sold

V8 , low m1l eage,

1

WE BUY, SELL TRADE
E venmgs Call
John fuller 444 4327
Lee Johnson 2S6·6740
DOUfJ Wetherholt
4244
Earl T Wrnters 446 -3828

Gallipolis
Daily Tribune

--.,

'

1974 BUICK ELECTRA CUSTOM

38 ACRES If you are
looklng for a nice plac e
wllh acreage. look at lh•s
Lovely •I Pedroom hom e ,
bath wtfh sh ower , n1c e
k tlc hen w1th butll In range
an d oven forced a1r fur
nace
fully
car pe te d
Loca t ed I n c11v school
dt sln cl close to Ty coon
Lake ve ry good buy tor
$3S,900

6forS100

Pomeroy

"

END-OF-MONTH

20 ACRES Ha s a good
10x50 mob d e home metal
building pr tce 1n c lud es
hsh 1ng boa t l awn mower
located c lose lo Raccoon
Creek on Bear Run Road
Good pla ce to li ve or ntce
summer
hom e,
pr1ce
$13 .900

20'

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Open Eves. Tile

992-2126

$5695

NOW ONLY

If you have been
loa k1ng for thai p erfect
butld1ng St t e look. at lh1 s
L ovely tra c t of land close ro
Rto Grande
c lly sc hool
dlslrtcr
Goo d buy for
$7,500

'"ED OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

"'

Buy io confidence from the right man is
often more important than buying for price.

$4295
..

~ACRE -

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

"

NOW ONLY

AC RES - Lovely r anch
w1lh
b r tck
front
3
bedrooms l arg e f amtly
r oom w1th f1replace , t ully
carpeted , l arg e g arag e
(lose t o Chesh 1re You II
like lh•s for SJ\.600

NEW LIVING ROOM SUITE,
S199 95
REG ~
$299 9S
RICE ' S NEW AND USED
FURN, 854 SECOND AVE
446-9S23
40 If

\.

red w1 t t:i s1m u la l ed

1973 Chev, 112 ton a cy 1aulo., P. S., P. B. $2895.
1972 Chev. 1f21on 6 cy 1. std.
$2150.
1972 Chev . 2 ton 102" C. A. 292 6 cvl. 4
speed
$2995.
1972 Chev 21on 102" C. A. 292 6 oyl., 4
speed
$3095.
1973 Int. 1600 Series, 8 cyl., 5 speed, 104
C.A.
$3895.

21l

__,_

'

'6895
1975 CHEVROLET CAPRICE
ESTATE WAGON

$3895

NOW ONLY

NEW LI STI NG Good
home wtth 2 b ec:trooms,
bath ,
fully
furni s h ed,
locafed on Mt l l Cret'k Rd
Good place to star l for
:1.15 300,

VA Chunks
rn e price IS
not too h1gh , the quality 1S
f~r s t rate
Perf ec t coal f(lr
fireplac es
M ed tum stze
6"x8" Fos ter Co al 446 2783
22 If

l 11
1 reor 1ab1r.
Elec.•r1c , l ' l'rt \ 1 ct t~nd
Power Plants Ph r lt. 2/16
I :.!6 If

1975 CHEVROLET SUBURBAN

1974 PONTIAC FIREBIRO
2 door hard lop, 6 cy l auto, fa ct
lape, power sleertng .

VINTON
Good
3
bedroom 11onH~ n tee bath,
fully c arpeted Good buy
for S11 500

W-

P I\ lOUt r r

'2695
•

LOW DOWN PAYMENT Good 3 bedroom home wtlh
bath
new fu rna ce well
tn su l aled , ga r age , n1c e
level tot L ocated at Btd
well , $14,&lt;100

18 I I

TWO WAY Rad' los Sa les &amp;
Service, New &amp; usect CBs.
pollee m on ilors, antennas,
etc
Bob's Cltlnns B1and
R•dlo Equip , Georges
Creek R d , Gatllpohs Otllo

NOW ONLY

RODNEY N1ce ra•1Ch
o nl y
J years o l d1
3
bedroom s,
balh
wtth
shower
full y carpc t e: d ,
ga r age The pnc e tS rtghL
S23 5-00

USEQ APt•l!A~CES
Washers and dry us 1\ 1 co nd
$40 and up L&amp;A A pplian ces
JOO 4th Ave Rear Ph 440
7)q8

For Sale

Auto, P s, P B, 8 cyl , radto bucket sea ts , good
ttres dark maroon ftni s tl

COU•NTRY AIR ESTATES'
- Lovely brtck ranch wtfh
3 bedrooms , )I ~ baths, fully
ca rp eted, cent ral a•r , 2 car
garage
wtth
elec tr. c
ope n er
N1 ce te ... ~t lot
Pr1ce $34,500

____

bumper

'2695
1974 PLYMOUTH CUDA CPE.

3 speed transmiSSIOn, 4 cy l
eng ine, 11 ,000 miles.

CROWN CITY - Very ntce
home w t th 3 bedrooms ,
tarn1 ly room, fully car
peted
f 1repla &lt;e, carpor l
Located on a n 1c e lar ge
le ve l lot Prt c e $32 ,000

for Sale

446·3636
Any Hour

Auto tran s, rLJdiO, d cfuJo:e bumpers and
gua rds, g ood t 1r es, grey f m l!&gt;h

EUREKA G ood 3
bedroom hom e, n ice bath ,
l arge garage , n1 ce l ot
Good buy for $14 ,SOO

Real Estate For Sale

2St;, Locust St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-3636

1974 DATSUN 710 CPE.

RODNEY-CORA RD
Very n 1ce ldM70 mob1l e
home, 3 bedrooms, fully
carpeted, located on 1 acre
of n 1ce land Prtce $15,500

Real Estate For Sale

REALTY

·~895

415 THIRD AVE - Good
o lde r
h ome
w1lh
3
11 1
baths
b edrooms ,
parltal basement, la rge 1
car garage, niCe lot Pr1ce
reduc ed to $2~ , 000

BIDWELL Good hOme
w tlh 3 bedrooms, bath
qaragc , c ounty wa t er,
large l evel tot
Prtce
$14,900

367-7250

f1n 1sh

BIDWELL
NICe
3
bedro o m
nom e,
fully
carpeted, exce llent shape,
located on 3 leve l l ois
lmmedtate
po ssessto n
Owner will h e lp f1nance
Pr.cc sn 500

~

'•

'•

.4 speed , rad10, w s l1re ~. like new 6,000 m• les, white

Lovely ranch
wtlh J bedrooms uttl 1ty
room 1 car ga ra ge n1 ce
lot 207 Koneon Dr Pnce
S26,000

Pomero1

,.,.',.

'2495
1975 FORD PINTO

IN TOWN -

•3895
71 Cadillac Couoe DeVille
stereo
,
2495

•'

4 s peed trans rAdio, good tires . green fmtsh , low
m1l eage

CH ILLI COT HE RD
N 1c e 3 b ed.r oom home wtlh
bath ,
lull
basement ,
garage
hou s e
has
alumtnum st dmg, good buy
tor S12,8 00

See one of these courteous salesmen :
Pete Burris
Lloyd Mclaughlin
Marvin Keebaug~

1968 OLDS Cutlass Supreme,
e)( cond a lso 1972 Toyota
Celie a 446 9528

1973 VEGA GT Kambach exc
cond $1 600 446 4742
4JJ

full stereo,

Open Eves. Til&amp;-Ttl5 p .m . Sat.

197 ,1 OLDS 98 Lu x ury coUpe
PB PS A c
elec sea t
P W , rear d efogger trunk
r e l ease lt lt wheel Stereo
tap e p l ayer cru1se controL
nt•w radta l tires
256 6816
Pr1c e red uced
·13 3

68
VOLKSWAGEN,
good
cond , good t1res , !1.750 075
431 1

wheel ,

"You' ll Uke Our Qu~lrty Way of Doing Business"

40 6

&lt;46

air. T&amp; T

1974 OPEL MANTA CPE.

SMITii NELSON
MOTORS

IN TOWN
N tce
3
bedroom home , IO\iely
baJh , ullltlv room, car port.
eMt.':f'llent c ondJI!On located
on Chatham Ave Pnce
'ii16,000

olue vinyl top, blue cloth Interior, full power

•'

•

TownhOuses
Jll2 Baths
Pay Oply One Utility
Addtson, Ohto
For Information
Call Shirley Adkins

12)(6 0 MOBILE H ome , adu lt s
m ile from hospilal Adult s
Dep r e q Ph 4.16 380 5
14 If

m

AT

Oscar Batrd
John Fuller
Oouq Wetherholt
452 Second Av en u
Galhpol•s, Oh1o 456

White with vinyl root, lull power, atr and AM FM

7 TRAILER
lots $50
trash
warer
and a month
sewage . , . . - - - - - - - - - -....
pa1d , of f B1dwell Rodney
Rd 245 9190
6 ROOM mod er n hom e near
44 6
fhe hosp11al tor rent or --------.
lease Call IJ6 4117
ROOM , pr ivate home Call
43 3
~d 6 1249

RE/\DY M I X COI'-1 •-"c.
Shept1erd dog
443
d e l tvered r tghr to your GERMAN
male, 11 ,
yrs old
AKC
prorect Fast and easy Free
Reg all shols Ph 446 '8502
1963 COMET 4 d r
n ew t lf es
est•mates Phon e 992 3284,
and extras must se l l S1SO
44 3
Goegle.n Ready Mtx Co,
446 1021
M1d dl eporl Oh1o
6 30 ttc AKC: GERMAN Shepherd B
weeks old , black and St iver
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
fem ale Ph after) p m 446
197~
CU TL ASS
Sup r eme ,
- Sweeper s toasters. trons,
4929
tn p le black lot s of ext ra s
al l smq ll app l ta n ces Lawn
41 6
wlll sell or trad e for tru ck,
mower, n ext to Stat e High
also 1909 Sk tpper Camper
way Garage on Ro ut e 7
AKC Poodle puppy , Sliver toy
9' fl for PICkup Prtced to
Phone 985 J825
,
fema le 256 62JO
se ll 256 131 5
4 16 lfc
4I 4
43 3
~ EPTIC

•

Wanted To Do

Auto Sales

D &amp; D TREE Tr1mm 1ng 20
years exper1ence In sured,
free est•mates Ca ll 992 238-4
or (6141 698 7257 A lbany
10151fc

C

White,
equip ,
owner

"'

CHIHUAHUA
Call alter 5

446-3434

owner

.,'

USED CARS- LOWEST PRICES

REALTORS CO N SUL fAN "

Dark blown tan V top, brown leather inter ior, full
power, factory air, T&amp; T wheel, AM FM s1ereo, 1 local

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

"'

Only

RESIDENTER -

no

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

Has 2
sepl1c t anks, city water on

t-A:,HIUNAtsLt:. - J Hrs,
steam heot ntce k 1t large
d1ntng, full basement, and
\itew of nver $19,500
Coun1ry home Ltke new
3 Br s , bnth u t tl tly , porch ,
F A furnace nnd 1 acre
Only $19,500
n ACRES - Ctty water
and gc1 5 Lo rge utility
bu1ldtng
for
hobby
Renovat ed J Brs Askmg
S19,500
3 ACRES - In the coiJ n try
on hard road, dnlled we ll
nnd septt c tank

For MaMtmum Secur~ t y usc
Down
Anchor s t o
T1e
Protect Your Mob1l e Hom e
Co mpl e t e Serv 1ce Call Ron
Sk idm ore, 379 2152 or 446
17S6
tf

Lost
--- ---------FOR SALE

2191tnQ .

Real Estate for Sale

TRI COU NTY Sport s Shop
ProfeSSional ur c h ery and
r eroad1ng s uppli es, 675 2988
36 I f

Currency and Supplres
Buy, Sale or Trade

Ph 949 2023 or 843 2667

6 Acres

7

Ph. (614) 985-4 102
2-12·1 mo

From a sh e!{ t o a hou se, a ll
typ es of bu tld1 ng a nd
remodeling
from
fh'
Add1t1on~.
toundat1on up
ca rpet1ng , p;untang , Std tng ,
roofing , p ancltng
p ap er
h a n gwg etc

500

Rt

BISSELL BUILDERS

CONSTRUCTION

NEAR LY 4 acres -

124, 1ust off
$8,500

I

lake advantage of our
pr1c es
Qualt1y ' built
homes . Ntce lo1s available
in mce locations

COINS

of ntce laytng fenced land 5
room renovated home, 2
Br s modern ba th , mod
k t t , ga s FA Furnace and

outbids

SAVE MONEY?

D&amp;D

3
6 RM nom e n1c e yprct goQd
locahon Phon e 992 7394
2106 tc

WANT ID

Notice

----

73 Cadillac Elderado Cpe.
'5495
73 Cadillac Coupe DeVille

TARA

1 21 1 mo .

"

BR HO ME
! US! f1n1Shed
rem o d e ltng
Salem
St ,
Rutland
Phone 742 2306
a ft er 4 p m or see Milo 8
Hutchtnson
10 9 1fc

O'D ELL A ltnement located
beh tnd
Rut l and
Grade
School
Tuneup . bral&lt;es
whee l balan c tng , a ltnement
Phon e 7112 2004
11 16 1fc

PH. 992-6173

Homes For Sale

1909 K IRK WOOD Mobrle
Home 12 x 45 Furntshed
and tn good co ndtt1on Call
992 5533 afl er 5 p m
22231p

E XCA VATING
BACKHO ES
AND DOZER LARGE AND
SMALL. SEPTIC TANK S
IN S TALLED
BILL
PULLINS PHONE 992 2478
DAY OR NIGHT
2 '}1 52tp

Now accepting clients
for bookkeeping and
Ia x serv tce .

Pomeroy

Ph 992 2174

MODERN hOme tn Chester 8
rooms 2 bat h s. 2 porches
sun porch 1~ basemen t c 1ty
and wel l water natural gas
garoye
Prtce d to se ll
Phon e { 6 14 ) 985 ,110 2
2 4 lfC

'

I

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

ONE A&lt;.K!:::: 0 rms and bath
Rt 3 Pom eroy, Rose Hill
D1ck Davts property full
bas eme nt
alumrnum
St d1n!=! ppne l ed S IO 000 Cal l
Oalo:. H il l, 68 5 6576 even rngs ,
Jaclo:.son 2'86 300J days
2 5 301p
3

t

••

Nathan Btgg s
Rad1ator Spec1al!st

Real Estate For Sale

RUTLAND Arnerrr;:an Le:;J 10n
Gun Club Shoot under
s hell er Beech Grove Road ,
Rutlan d l2 noon Sunday
2 22 1tp

LARRY WHOBREY
PUBLIC
ACOOUNTANT

From th e largest Truck or
Bul l do ze r Radtator to the
srnaltcsl H el:'t er Co r e

1970 MOBI L E hom e 50)( 12 2
b e dr•m p art1ally tur n•shed
2 22 II C
Ca ii Q92 7196 b efore s p m or
alt er 5, call 99 2 61-1 3
2 20 Jtc

Notice

.....

Radiato
Service

And leav e th e rest to God
Th e fam ly o f R a lph E

Lee

MODERN CHEMICALS
100 Kerr Street
Pomerov. Oh10 45749
(614) 992 2798 , DICk Seyler
1 29lrno .

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

For Rent

Free est1 mates on carpeting and 1nstallat1on .
We' ll bnng samp les to your
home w1th no obligation
See how you can ... really
save
M1ke Young , Manager
Sales and InstallatiOn
Rt 3, Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769
Phone day or ntght
614 n'l-'2206
1 IJ I rnO

We Buy Ant1ques

LARRY LAVENDER

Business Opportunities

&amp; OBITUARY

50

Fmancmg A\ia1lab1c
Blown mtoWalls&amp; Att1c!i
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING SOFF!TT
GUTTERS AWNINGS

p&lt;ud

CAR 0 Of THANKS
tor

FURNITURE
STRIPPING SERVICE
Remo\ia l of
Pc11nts
Plashes Varntshes , etc
Wood or Metal
R epa1r s
Reftn tS hlng ot
Furntture
Burn1 shmg Pollshmg of
Copper &amp; Brass

Salesmen's Specials

Realty ltu:.

For Rent

Wanted To Rent

47th ANNIVERSARY

OHIO RIVER

''

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

SLOAN'S
CARPETING

Ant tQu e

Blown
lnsulalton Servoces

QUI\Lirre:o m rn c ms ~wcto r .
must have 6 yrs expe rten ce
7 yrs mos 1 n av e been un
dc r r1round rn Ohro Cont ac t
tndus t r,al
f&lt; c lat . ons
PcrSOI\n e l D ept
7373 w
1 l i th Ave
Columb us Ohto
J3 20t or call ( 6ft ) .u6 327 1
2 11:1 6tc

Wllhrn 10 days

s1 ou

FREE ESTIMATES

•

INTERN A TION AL
HAR
SLEEPING Rooms , weekly
VE STER a leader l n the GARAG E or barn space to
rates Park Cen1ral Hotel
rent
,
for
stor
ag
e
of
2
v
eh•cle
A qr. c ullural trac l or and
306 If
and
qa
rde,
eq1.,11
p
Call
44¢
eq u1 pm ent tn du st ry have
3082
!
rom
8
a
.
m
to
9
p
m
available a r e!at l fra nc tu se
BR
MOBILE
home .
2
4l 6
op en for th e Galltpolts Ohto
eutav tl le Rd, 440 0390
rrac:te area
IH offers a
40 If
compl ete fine of ·ou tdoor
Pow er Products . Lawn &amp;
FURN
apt , 3 rooms w1th
Garden Equtpm e nL and
pnvate bath , 845 Second
servtc(j' pa r ts w1th excellent
Ave Ph 446 2215
sates and prof1l poSS !bll tltes
40 If
FURNISHED
ap!
or
2
Wholesa l e f loor plan and
adul
ts,
centra
l
hear
,
a1
r
r et ad
f•nan c 1n g
AVAILABLE
c ond , off street parkmg
arra ng ements available .
:&gt;ALLI PO LIS ftnest ap t lOr
Ph
446
O
JJ8
tn addl lton to bustness and
tease Color TV , gas
30 I f
management s y s tems Carl
centra l heat central a•r
or wnt e today for more
cond tl loned
Mobile home
dela1ted
tntormat1on
NE W Regency , In c
aparl
overlooking nver Small eff
Waller H Gray I Area Sales
menls 2 BR . Ph 675 5 104
apar t ment one person two
Manager J, 5708 P1nelre e
675 5386 , 07 5 2608 $ 119 per
bedroom turn1sh e c:t house
west No K Columbus Oh10
mo nrh Sa nd Hill Rd , PI
Phon e 446 0338
614 84 0 6233 , 7 p m at hom e
Pl e a sa n L W Va
275 ~~
any l1me a t offtce 614 438
2500
LIGHT housekeepmo room
396 L A RGE room fac1ng park,
Park Centra l Hot el
78 t f
l l ghr
hou sekee p t ng ,
el e vator ,
factllltes
for
reltred person Park Central £ i KAtLER spa ces located m
Horel
Cheshtre , ready tor hook up
TONY' S Decorat 1n g pamtmg
98 If
Phone 367 0505
wall papertng
paneltng
302 I f
Free est 1rnates 67 5 5689
SLE EPING Ro01 11 weekly
53 It
LOW week l y and monthly
rat e Gall 1a Hot el
rates at L tb.by Hotel 446
203 If
SA VE 0 F F Season Spec1a1
1743
now I til March 1 Wtll clean
244 I f
2 BR M~BILE hom e for $100 :J
any S1Le L1v1ng roo'm and
br mobt l e home $125 4ll6
halt for $24 95 We use only
MOBILE home space for renl
017 5
the Best Dry Foam Method
446 0008
Call
M1racre
Carpet
267 tf
'137 t f
creantng 379 2682
19 If
TWIN s1ng te 2 bedroom untt
wtlh palto and large yard
Kttchen has ref , range and
PRUNE grape •nnes
lrurl
dtshwasher 446 4570
rree s 15 yrs exp Ph J79
443
211 4
TOWNHOUSE
43 3
2 BR MH gas . c 1ty water , no
APARlMENTS
pe l s Ph 4d6 4292 aft er 4 30
2 Bedroom
daily

-

! N FORMA T I O N

DEADLINE S
p 1\'
nn" !It tnr~

Business Opportunmes

-

.1\0&lt;;

~

WANT

Real Estate fOf Sale

'

J

Mldcll~eport

...•,l.•
••.•

�..
The Sw1d"l'

Tuucs.,')enunel, Feb . 22 ,

l

1 ~76

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds~
Real Estate For Sale

.

*
*

Real Estate For Sale

THE

*
*
*
*
*
*

..

WISEMAN

*
*
*
*
*
*
*

.
You Want Tho Best

If
Th_is home wil l absolutely suit you . One of the best
bu•lt, best ca r ed for homes in thE! area . Huge living

roo':l and master bedroom overlooking river, beautiful
(w .b..

fireplace },

formal

dining
completely equipped ki t chen , 311, baths, wa lk in ceda;

soo

-il

-il

-il

-il

-il
Need investment property or just a large family
home? 6 bedrooms, ' 2 kitchens , Jl/ 2 baths, full
basement , excel lent location, perfect for business,
zoned commerciaL $25.000 buys th i s dandy .

We need listings . Call the
W1seman Agency, 440 -3643 ·
Gallia CQ.'s Largest Real .
Estate Sales· Agency
Office 440 -1043
Evenings Call
Ike Wise~ an 446 -3796
E. N. Wiseman 446- 4SOO
Bud MtGhee 446-1255

•
•
•
•
-il

-il

•
-il

One of the Finest Bricks
Overlooking the beautiful Ohio Valley . large living
room. 2 w -b fireplaces, formal din i ng, charm ing
kitchen With breakfast room , 3 bedrooms, full
basem ent, 1 acre lot runs to the r i ver . You won't find
one better built :

SPR ING ' VAllEY
Lovely 3 ~
be~ ·
1 with
basemen'
;~ t hs .
baseme1
,j
sized
carpctintj
.roughout .
th i rties .

tlJII
fllll
lot .
Mid

150 AC. ~ARM
ac . ~
~·
~. 80

·
BeautifUl ... lrgain
Th i s 3 bP~· ram e and
bri c k
,
large
bedroom
very pretty
kitchen , family or dining _
room . t,.ow th i rti es.

DELICIOUS DESCRIBES
This cream puff in Spri ng
Valley . A well r · ·ed for 3
bedroom ho~
- 'l dining
and large ;
, .)m , r • -~
b~lhs , f irer,
... , approv ed
kn.ch _e n , n e w carpet i ng .
Th1s 15 one you must see ,

-il

...

70
a c:.
pasture
arn s -good ,
3 bedroc.
.:. lOry home in
ex c ellem .arm c ommun i ty .
$65 ,000 .

NEW LISTfNG
lnsp'ecf this beautiful d
l:l edroom brick on a 3 a"e
lot J miles from t own , 1,800
sq. II of fi~o~ing :t ' 1ce wi t h a
sup e r ,
n~
· ,.
l&lt;. it ch e n ,
fir e p l ace
and 2 1 t
car gara).l
. thi s plu s a
ful l
ba s~ . o~enl ,
PEI Ii o ,
carp e t lhroughour , doubl e
over 'd ishwasher , city
sc: hool distr i ct . You ' d waru
to buy th is one first lime
around

--

CITY SCHOOL
DISTRICT
7 Large rooms
3
bedrooms ,
Old
style
remodeled hou se . Family
room , basement. nat . ga s
forced air furnar:e , c ity
water ,
gar!'lge ,
large
tence,;J in yard , Ju s t out of
Gallipolis Ci ty l imits on R t .
141.. Modern kitchen . A real
bargain . Ca l l now .
IN PATRIOT
room s . .4 bedroom s.
remodeled old style home
{nice ), bath with sh.o w er ,
sun
p ~ rch ,
bu i lt i n
cabine t s, cook stove. a i r
condition er , fo r c e d a ir
turhace , barn , firepla ce,
wash house . Y o u .mu s t see
this home .
1

BEAUTIFUL 3
BEDROOMS
F ull ba se ment wi th a la rg e
fami l y room , 2 ba t h s,
garag e, c entra.l a ir ; n ir: e
ca r peting , real nice kit c hen . Locat ed on a large
l ot. -Appr.ox , 2' years o ld .
Y'?u must see the .inside of
th 1s ho~se to appre ci at e i t
JBEDROOMS
7 rooms and bath , full
b .a sement ,
garbage
~1sposa 1 ,
c ity
water ,
c arport , ni c e le v el lot ,
garden ~ '1a ce, por ch . A
cl e an and nice hom e
Pr i ced t o sell now . Onl Y
s 12. 900
OWN YOUR OWN
BUSINESS CARRYOUT
II should pay for itself
With in a ~o~ery few year s .. 77
a cre 175' fron tage on Slal e

r --,---- , --~--

LOTS
for sale, in Green
Township . Ph . &lt;~-46 4948 .
40 6

B UILDING or trailer silewilh
s mall acrea!j,lc. 245 9497 .
40- 12

HO U SE for sal e near V in
ton . Pr ite 55 ,500 . Call 388
88 17.

LIKE new , modern home i n
to wn . 3 B R . fully carpe!ed ,
nice l y turn . Ph . 4.46 009&lt;~ .
$2 6,000.
40 6

------'-----~--- ~

•

41 4

-·-~'1 ---

-c

-if- ·----

RUSSEll WOOD
REALTOR

CALL 1\lt)W OFFICE 446-7699
LARGE , beautiful .4 BR Cape
Cod sty l e home : Ov er 2,200
sq . f t. plus 2 car garag e,
palio and a 6' '1C27 ' front
porch . Has a f i repla c e,
utility room , bu i lt -in kit c hen
w i th d ishw&amp;sher , disposal.
ci t y water and gas On a
lo vely 1 acre lot for only
$36.000 . 446 -4570.
41 12
LOT for sa te, 240 x 1.40 r:orner
of us 35 and Mitchell Rd .
245 -9218 or 245 -5253 .
44 ·6

------FOR SALE

~-----

---

miles from town on Rt. 218 .
':h . 256 -6582 after 6, any
t tme on weekends .
44 -6

Limited Time Offer

RIVERSIDE AMC.JEEP
. Gallipolis, Ohio

FA P M on Rout e 218 , 471 1
. a .. r es, 60 pet. l eve l, 6 room
house , large barn . timber
and coal rights . Toney
R ealty G all ery Of Hom es .
d46 7900 .
37-lf
-~~---~·~- - --

3 BR . Modular Hom e, 2 bat hs ,
furnished exc ept living
ro o m . Toney R ealty Gallery
Of Homes. 440 -7900 .
37-tf

-·-·-

3 BR home near Rio
Grande . To tal e l e c t r'ic,
a .c .. 21 ' ba ths , basem en! ,
f i r epla c e . 545.000.

5 room s and bath in c ity
$) ,000

b
' ' ·'•"'
l"~
r• '~.
~·

''* ' .........
,

HOME 446-9539
3 BR ., 2 bath , e'1Ccellent con

s trucl ! on , fuel oil heat ,
central air , carport and
garage .
Toney
Realty
Gallery Of Homes . 446-7900 .
,

--,--

37 · If

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

J BR BRICK , 2 bath, lar rl •
room s , w car gantge , Clo :.. o:
to lbwn . Toney Realty
Gal l ery Of Homes _ 446 -7900.
j7 ,tf

Real Estate For Sale
or Trade

KNOTTS
UPHOLSTERING
SHOP
Route 2, Box 161 -C
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

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5 p .m . Ph . 256·1142 .

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NEEDS

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Managers
and
Assistant Managers

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Farm Machinery, Sat. Feb. 28
12:00 Noon
1969 Oliver Diesel tractor No 1650, 1092 hrs,
mounted, 4· 14 plows ., mounted Oiiyer
mower, "lnt. 6ft. brush hog, lnt mower, J D 4·
"row corn planter, JD one~ row corn picker.
Oliver post·hole digger, 2 Killbros gravity
wagons, Pittsburg 14· ft disc on rubber,
Cobey manure spreader. poor condition,
i963 Chevrolet 1'12 T Truck, doubtful
condition.
James M. Brown, Pliny W.Va .
Location: on Ale. 35 20 miles above Pl. Pleooant Ius!
below Pliny truck stop. No small items. pleue be
prom pi!
John McNeill Auct.

Pete Sommer, Clerk

71 Rambler Homet 2 dr sedan .......• .... '1595

1975 AMC Pacer X

1972 Dodge Charger

70 Dodge Polara 4 dr, power, air..

Factory
A·C.
AM~ FM,
automatic, rallye wheels. 6,900
miles. silver with black vinyl
top.

Local one owner. 32,000 miles.
factory A- C. By far the cleanest
around. Worth more .

'3995

'2495

1975 Olds Cutlass
Supreme-

GMAC

o •••••••

'1495

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We are expanding and looking
qualified personnel . to fill
management positions : .. .

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•MUST BE ABLE 10 RELOCATE
.OCR I ENT STARTING SAlARY

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eNUMEROUS FRINGE BENEFitS
SEND COMPLETE RESUME TO:

PERSONNEL DIRECI'OR
Box2762
Oiarleston, West VIrginia, 25328
All Replies Confidential
An Equal Opportunity Employer

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72 Dodge, 1 Ton Stake body VB motor, 4 sp.
trans.

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Choice of 2

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Three
bedroom
home
located on Vinton Avenu e .
Newly remodeled kit c hen
with bullf -in Cllbinets , bar ,
trash
comp6ctor ,
refrigerator, and range .
Gas heat , c i ty water and
sewe r . Shown by ap .
pQJnlment only . Priced

SJO,OOO .

spri ng Is tess th.en ninety
days away and we have a
se-..en acre tract of land i n
Harrison Twp ., Including a
20 tee t r ig ht of way to
Raccoon Creek. ideal for a
sum mer weekend retrea t .
Price $3 ,000 .

Business Properly located
at the intersection in
tenterpolnt , la-rge store
bulldlpg ,
wltt1
ii~o~lng
quarters
and
some
equipment, sltueted on 1 1
~ere lot , can be purchased
for 517.,900.00 . AddiiiOnfilly ,
one U'x 70', three bedroom
mobile home can be pur ch ased separate ly , or w i th
the buslness ' property , lor
$7;000.00. Total price tor
business property and
mobile home , 524 ,900 .00 .

Nice modern 3 B R home,
re•dy to move into, near

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Golf Course, largo kitchen,
plenty
af
cabinets,.

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electric

Hyv

Two bedroom heme on
Second
Av e nue , large
f ini s hed r oom upstairs ,
garage basement, central
a i r cond i tioning ; three
room with bath r ental on
rear of property , pri c ed
$35 , 000 . Shown by ap poi ntment only .

OWNER Will FINANCE
55 acres adjoining the
r:itY limit s of Rio Grande .
Lo t ~. of potential ,
RACCOON
CREEK
FRONTAGE 13 acres
ttat boltom land is all
tillable e)(cepl t or t he
shady creek bank . Larg e
barn included for the
bargain pr ice of \13 .000.

Three bedroom , r:a rp et ed
homes loc a t ed on 1S ' l'l120'
lots , attached garage ,
modern kit c hen , $20,000.
Gallipoli s
City
Schoo l
District .
How about this tor in ve·s tm ent or
' ' llve . Jn"
property! One ac re tract of
land with lOA' frontage on
new Route 160, SO ' frontage
on old Rou t e 160 ; 490 ' deep .
Has two mobile homes . one
Is a two bedroom , fully
carpeted , 1973 model w i th
cen tral air condition ing ;
the other Is a one bedroom
older model . Also , has
large 24 ' x28' block building
with furnace which can be
used as two .car garage or
workshop . Rural water .
Owner mo~o~ing , will sell for
Sl9 ,000 .00 .

RARE COUNTRY HOME
3 BR brick ranch
features large LR . with
fireplace . equipped kit .
chen , dining rm ., 1 1 ) baths ,
la rge tam i ly rm . w i th
fireplar:e . cent . air and
garage . A n i ce drive to I he
m i nes or Ga~o~in .
COUNTRY
BEAUTY
Modern 3 BR 1 story home
features a large l R . den
with a new woo dburn ing
firepla c e , laundry rm •
large kitchen with cabinets
and a buill in range , and
WW carpet . This home is
locat ed about 15 mi . north
of town and i s s ituated on
a• .· a c res of ro ll ing land .

71 Dodge Van % Ton

CARROll NORRIS DODGE
~ GALLIPOLIS,

raflge,

end hOod, large utility
room with cabinets. 4
rooms nrpeted, nice lot,

natural gas heal, central
air cond. Inquire ot Corbin
and Snyder Fum. Co. 444.
1171 aftor 5 444·2573.
HELP FINANCE

Wanted To Lease 01' Rent
l OR ~ BEDROOM House in
Gallipolis area . Days 367
7338, nights ••6 -2032 .

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OHIO

Equipment

While bri c k hom e loca t ed ·
at corner of Oliv e and
Four t h
Ave nu e
In
Ga l lipo l is . Owner will sel f
for s 10,500. A ,good buy If
you' re l ook ing tor a small
homf;' ·,
or
lnveslment
prop·erty .
Call Wood Insurance &amp;
Real Estate 446 -1066
Evenings R.uuell Wood
44,· 4618
Ken Mor"'" 4411-CI971

Cfi RTf R · ~. flll' i\\ LI ING
AND HEATING
Cor . r :ourth &amp; Pine.
Phone 4-46 -3888 or 446 4477
165 .If

BUY AND DEVELOP- 0
vacan t lots oh Cheslnut Sl.
Zoned residentia l $12 ,000 .

GENE PLANT) &amp; SON
PLUMBING · Hoating •- Air
Cohdllion i ng 300 1 ourth
1\~o~e . Ph . 4.46 1037.
48 tf

Sales
LIMESTONE for driveWdys .
Carl Winters . Phone 245 ·
5115 .
270 .rf

DEWITT' S PLUMBING

--COMMERCIAL
-·-- -------..---building

ANO HEATING
Route 160at Evergreen
Phone 446 ·27 35
187 -If
ST J\ ND/\RD
Plumbing Heating
215 Th i rd twe .• 446 378~

117 -llo.

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PERRY TWP . - 218 a c re
farm . complete l y fenc ed ,
so A . ! illable , 2 ponds . 2
barns , c orn cr i bs , good 7
rm hom e .

Services Offered

SPEC IAl off -season prices on
A.PPLIANCE
Furniture Upho lstering na_
w
REPAIR SERVICE
to fir s' of march 1976. Call
now . save s . Mowrey ' s WASHERS. dryers, electrit:
range . LS.A Appliances . -4.46.
Furniture and UPholstering.
7398, 245 ·5040 .
Phone 615 -4154 .
6-lf
306 -tf
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NOO F IN G , alum i num. sid,l'ig , CUSTOM REMODELING, 20
years experienc e. 388 ·8308 .
free eslimates . Call 250 -6364
New ·dry wall ceili ng with
256 -tf
swirl or texture, designs .
-·------~-.:----:---- ---·Ot her dry wall, repair, vinyl
HOWARD
Peck
water .
wattpaP.ering , new baths ,
Del.i very day or !light. 245 new k1tchens . Anvthinq in
93 15 or 388 8262 .
remodeling or repair .
292 -t f
11 -lf

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BORDER ' S GARAGE DOOR
Service . Commercial and
Residential. Spec ializing in
operators . Local . 256 -6472 .
20 -11

DAIRY FARM - 22 2A ., 45
A
bo t tom . ba l ance i s
mos lly c l ean rolling land •.
new mi lkin g parlor , 20K60
silo , 2 barn,s , 6- rm , house.
larg e pond and lob . base .

C OUGHE NOU R
Water
De l ivery . 446.. 3962 , 4.46 -4262
any time .
244 -tf

D. DAY
REFRIGERATION
EXCAVATING .
dozer,
backhoe
and
d.it .c her , REGRilloARATION , h eating,
elect ri c. 17 years eKp . 388 Char les R . Hatfield, Back,
8274 .
Hoe Service, Rutland, Ohio.
142 -2008 or .446 -.7687 ,

OWHER
' HAS
BEEN
TRANSFERRED and has
agreed lo se ll this at
lr·aclive 3 BR ranc h fo_r lh e
bargain p ri ce of 526,900 .
Don ' t wa i t to see this
beauty with c arpet o~o~er
Hw floors . l arge LR and
dining area , modern kit
chen . I' , baths. garage and
fla t lol. Located in Gree n
Aa es.

40-11

------- - - -- - BGB LANE 'S Comp le le Book -

CARPENTER
wor6l , hou se
remodeling,
wiring ,
plumbing , pa inting , Ph . A-40 ke e ping and Tilx Service .
29 10
4371 1 •2nd Ave . (Across from
259 -1f
Post Off i ce) . Ga ll ipOlis . Ph .
_,__
446 . 7900 .
weekly
and
monthly serv i ce for com DOZER work , excavat ing ,
land clear i ng . Ph . 446 -0051 .
merc ia ! accounts . lnc:ome
290 -lf
Tax Prepl'!ration .
-43 -2
WALL
PAPER ,
VINYL

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·sow br eedi ng . Call 07!) -4801 or
675 1128.
22 -tf
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For Sale
COf..L , C.A . B , Coal Corp . , 1
m l lenorthofCheshire . on Rl.
1 Pi c k your own . 520 per ton .
Open 6 days a week , 367 7330
tor fu~ 1her inform at ion .
611

wh-i ch al so contain s apt nn d
etJuip . used in th e operat i on.
of the former . Sll~o~er Dollar
Ca fe . Property located at 39 r v 10 Carry on r l ighr Bags .
Court St ., GallipoliS , Oh iO.
New . Never u sed . Perfec t
Shown by appt . only . Ph .
gift for tra~o~eler . Phone 2.·'
446 064A . ,
5610 after 5.
431
29 3 If

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Services Offered

O'BRIEN ELECTRIC
THE TOP SHOP
SERVICE
Custom Built Root Trusses ,
24 Hour Serv i ce
Form i ca Countertops &amp;
Anythi ng in electricity
Cabine t s, Coolville, Oh io ,
446 -8603 .
667_- 3186 .
30 -ff
256 -lf

RANNY BlAC I&lt;BURN ,
BRANCH MANAGEB

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LOW DOWN PAYMENT N ew doub le .wide mobile
hom e offe· r~ J BRs , lar g e
LR . DR , kit c hen wilh s tove
and r ef. , and l'lice cabinets ,
shag carpels and a f l at lot.
W i l l trade for farm .
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DAIRY FARM 163 A .
fl a l and rolling l&lt;md located
south of Rio Grand e with
lois of road fron t age .
Sp ecia l fea tur es are pond ,
I springs , coun t y wat er , rob .
EVANS HEIGHTS - Nice base , good 7 rm . house with
2 ·B R home offers good new k i tc hen , la rge barn
i n e~~:pensive
l iving , to and si lo .
someorie . Features knolly
35
.WEST
pine living room . wi!h ROUTE
woodburning
fireplace . A lmos t new 3 BR brick
ranch is very app ealing
ONLY 5 15, 900 .
and · can b e your dream
home . Large equipped
PRICE
REDUCED
Owner says sell th i s love ly kilchen , 11: balhs , qua lit y
3 BR brick ranch with c arper throughout , cenlra l
almosl 1,400 SQ . fl . of living air , large LR , dining area .
area plus a full baseme~t garag e, full bas ement.
and a 2 car garage . All th 1s
LISTINGS NEEDED plus a large flat wel l land
ADVERTISE NA ·
scaped lol with 2 large WE
TIONALLY- BE BUY shade tre&amp;s .
SELt . - TRADE

Plumbing &amp; Heating

IN .TOWN

Sunday Shoppers Welcome
Come In and Browse Around

Services Offered ·
ADELAIDE DRIVE
Lovely 3 .. BR ranch has
floors with new carpet 1n
LR , ga s heat , air c ond . •
garage ,
la-undry
and
equipp ed kit c hen . Pri c ed at
S1 3. 000 w i th
finan c ing
a\lai labl e

BANK
FINANCING

'4795

71 Datsun Pickup, std shift, camper tops,

STAR CRAFT
T.RAILERS and Folddowns.
Serv i ce what we sell.
Financ i ng ' arranged . Used
l97A TLR . Best buy is in Tri State area . Camp Con l ey
Star Craft Sales. Rl . 62 N.
Pt .• Pleasan t, w. Va .
28 -lf

New , m o d e rn , insulated
and
carp e led .
·th r ee
bedroom
Pr i ck. home ;
electri c al l y heated ;
loc a t ed on Stat e Rl . 586 ,
near the U . 5 . Rty . 35 ifl tersectlon ·a t Rodney: ; 110 '
fron t age a long Rt . 588 ;
Gall i polis
City
~ chool
Di str i ct. Pri c ed 531,600,00 .

and

Silver. wine Landau top, swing
out pucket seats, beautiful car.
15.000 miles.

72 Dodge Pickup 6 cyl, std. shift ·

I,Jnder construction, this ,;new" thr~ bedroom hoiT)e Is
located In Green acres subdivision . The natural
fin i shed cedar siding blends gracefull y with the
peaceful atmosphere of the surround ing hills . Ful l y
carpeted , Insulated , electrica lly heated, cily water ,

$~3.000 . 00

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·PUBLIC AUCTION

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If you hllve been look ing for
that dream hom e i n f.he
CQJJntry , we have a co m ,
pletety
modern
four
bedroom , carp e ted hom e,
fully Insulated , el ec trically ·
heated ; Si luetled on a 4 J 4
acre tract of land ; has deck
and pat i o overlooking
picturesQu e ~ooded. area .
Paneled and car·peted ,
finished basemen! with
k i tchen , ·bathroom , shower
and lan:.~e brick fireplace .
located tour lenths of a
mile off Rl. 554 , near
Bidwell . Only IS minutes
from eit her Ga l lipolis or
Rio Grande. Shown by
appointment . Priced :

FARM app . 18 acres. 4 iJC. 1
bottom , 10 a c . pasture, 4 a•
woOd&amp;, barn, 8 room hou :... ~ ;
with bath on blac.klop 1
Bladen Mere . Rd . Call after 1

ble hobby end sk

and reupholstering
own
furn i tur e
Jn
professional rtlaMer .
Information
an
reservations to v i sit
demonstration
c
without obligation
or ca II af once .

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White with wine top. A· C. AM·
FM. 11,294 miles.

'4695 .

modern kitchen and allached garage, Gallipolis City
School Dlslrlcl . A· real buy lor $28,500 .00.

A course in upi'IOI:IIelrln!~ l
and fu.rniture repal
Class conducted
evening each week
weeks. This Is a

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'5995

Office Ph . 446 -1694
E\ienings
Charles M . Neal446 -1546
J . Michael Neal446 · 1503
sam Ne.al. 446 ·7Jsa

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Pllone f46·2917

4I 6

3 BR home on ..sev e n ·
i h.enths /1. . lot near cit'Y .
Tqtal
ele c lri r:. 20 ' K D '
outbu i lding . $24,500

5 miles from Ho lzer 3 BR
hom e
&amp;
lor
~ 16 . 5 00 .
V illager , 65' x 12 ', 3 BR M .
Hom e an d to t S11 ,500 . '69
Kirkw ood . 55' &gt;&lt; 12' , J BR M .
Home w ith a t t ac hed roo ms
on Jl ,. a . tot for Sl 5.000.

BY OWNER
F H A Ap.proved, J br . home, a

FREE A/C
SAVE '425.00

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Neal ·Realty_

446-1066

•• 1"• 11 ~ing.

6 ROOM and bath with a.t
rached garage , barn 2
outbuildings,
·acre
of
'J"round, more if desired. S
miles from Rio Grande at
Centei-point . Price 515 ,000 .
Phone 1182 694.4 .
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1975 Monte Carlo

Full power equip .• 28.000 miles,
new Buick Limited trade. Lime
green with white top.

74 Dodge Pickup 6 cyl std. shift

We Need Your Horne or Fe1nn To :.iei1.

112 ACRE FAR PI!
In city sc hool ,.. . riel with
11•7 mile ; . " '
double
barn, · pe.~~,r golf
course 01
nouslng , Priced at $125,00 0.00

ER RANSFERRED
has already moved
from
this very nice 3
bedroom hriTie located on
large Spri ~' ey lor .
In c lud es hl
ly room
and kitchen , ....
l l nation
with
w -b fireplace , 11 1
baths,
full
divided
basemen f . Ready for you to
mo~o~e into.

1974 Cadillac Cpe.

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·'1895

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City water, 7 room tile block nice home, forced air
furnace, basement, storm doors, storm windows ,
wood -burning fireplace, sfore bullding, milking house
1!. parlor, corn crib. 35 acres boftom land. Real. nice
farm .
Hlghwa'( No . 7 - J rental
OUI!Oing Sites., level lend,
tra i ler !paces . Al l stock , appro~~: .. 4 mite Qff Rt. 35,
. equ ipment &amp; bldg _ goes . rural water , call for In Buy now .
fOrm atlon . ·
104 ACRE
VACANT LOTS
DAIRY FARM
In Restricted ' Sub -Division .
2 Ponds
8 room home,
C311 for details .
for ced air furna c e, 2 s ilos
BEP.UTIFUL HOME SITE
w i ,l h auto . un l oader &amp;.
Just ott 160-Evergreen 36
feeder , 350 ga l. S. S. cooler ,
acfu. almost all ti l lable .
2 barns , 9 outbuildings ,
Nice hUmk ot land .
tobacco base , milk i ng
lJtACRES
par l or w i th pipeline . Ponds
3800 lb . tobacco base. lots
s rocked w i th bass &amp; Blu e
of coal. lot s of woods, good
G il ls . s ee this .
pasture , Iaroe barn , well,
l ACRES
good place for a home
12' 1':05 ' 3 Bedroom Mobile
away from other people .
Home . 231 ' frontage on
110 ACRES PLUS
Bulavll l e Addison
Rd ,
Vacant ___:_ A woodland
Level. Gas cook sto~o~e ,
wonderland
some
rural water , patio . Only
pasture &amp; tillable land .
5 10.900 .00 .
Leh than S160 .0Q per acre .

2
dr.
miles, A. C.

10,000
AM· F M.
powder blue with dark blue top .
New Electra trade~ in

70 Ford Galaxie 2 dr, power, air........... '1395

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\'\/eire Out To Sell The Earth

PACER

Rl
R VIEW
We ' re going to se ll or trad e
thi s home this month to the
f i rst
quallfiP1
buyer
making a~r
'ble offer.
Owner
•arantee
financinr.
-'1
huge
bedrooms, tam ily room or
dining , 3 baths, overlooking
the river . Very r: lose to
town . Don ' t miss this one
great chance .
OHIO RIVER
Will sp lit the abo~o~e farm as
follows :
,
0 iVer boflotn
30 ac . Oh
wifh 1200 -~·~ tlr)g tl'le
river and~~ - 47 ac;: .
excellen t old ll• . ; k horrl'e-.
and 3 barns . SI05,000.
,...

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1974 Ford LTD

cream with white vinyl top.
We sold it
and have
serviced

71 Ford Pinto 2 dr Runabout ......... .. .. 11695

BABY FARMS

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FARM. no bUildings 3 miles 5.
of Cadmus on 14L For in formation wrile or call Dora
Phares , Box 101. Donald s
ville , Ohio or ca ll 513 88 2
69_17 .
75 16

air .•..••.. 12195

Located on Stale Highway.

Listing, 47 Acres

n

ESTATES

1973 Buick
Limited 4 dr.
Full power equipment. A·C,

.-2095

71 Dodge Dart 2 dr, 6 cyl•...........•.... 11795

Space Reserved for a
Picture of Your Home.
We Need lt.
List Now.

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BRAND NEW BRICK
One of the nice,.• 3 bedroom
homes y,.. •. - \ ft1 . Includ es
family rt~"~ firep l ace,
beautitu~• • ~chen , full
basement , 2 car garage .
Price under SSQ, QOO.OO

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'2295

71 Plymouth FuiJ Ill 2 dr, power ...... o. 11695

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Call -us right now.

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Beautiful 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, modern home, forced
air furnace, good barn, mHk house, storage house, fruit
trees, 2300 lb tobacco base, good blue grass pasture.

Approx . Ph acres . Large modern kitchen , gas furnace,
basement paneled, lot s of shade trees , garden spot.
Formal dining room . O'lly $19,900.00

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Overlooking City

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71 Dodge Demon 340, 2 dr, power· .. ·: ·· ·11895

Nice Home, 81 A Dairy

4 Bedrooms In Syracuse

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71 Dodge Dart 4 dr, sedan, 6 cyl... ..... '· '1895

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c losets. full divi.ded basement (w .b. fireplace) , ·
playroom , poo l room and storage lot runs from 2nd
Av e ..all the way to the river . Price reduced to $87
We'll show it a t your convenie nce .
'
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Owner very anxious to sell t his love ly 3 bedroom brick
1"11me located on a wel l landsc a ped lot overlooking the
c i t y , walking distance tO school. Features a . huge
family room wit h w-b firep lace. 2 baths, built -in
kitchen, 2 car garage . ba sement .

72 Datsun 2 dr, Coupe ...

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room

72 Ford LTD 2 Dr., power,.... , .........

71 Plymouth Satellite, 2 dr, power•••

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fam1ly

Silver with aulo(Tlalic trans.

71 Dodge Monaco 4 dr, power,

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Associate

Ph. Home 379·2114

72 Chevrolet Cbevelle 4 dr, power, air ..... '1895

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room. exceptiona l kitchen (r.ange, sel't-clean d.ouble
ave~ , dishwasher, bar and et.c .), 2 car garage, 2
porches and large 1 3.~ ac. lot with excellent vH!w , You
m ust see this home to r ea l ly appreciate it.

1974 Audi Fox

72 Ch!JSier Newport 2 Dr. Power, air..... '2495

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New listing- The One You've Admired
One of the most affradive homes on Rt.. 141. Nearly
~ew 3 be&lt;;lrC?Om brick with 2 fireplaces, finished fami ly

·Hatchback, while in color. one owner •
17.000 miles. Owned by a local nurse.

72 Dodge Polara Sta Wagon, power, air.'. '2695

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AGENCY
NEEDS
LISTINGS
IMMEDIATELY

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1973 Chevrolet 4-cyl. Vega

73 Chevrolet Vega 2 dr..................... .'1895

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.\terri c.ter

512 2ND AVE. 446-7699

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WISEMAN

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LEADINGHAM
REAL ESTATE

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THE

73 Javelin, AMX 2 Dr. Hdtp .... .... .. ••... 12495

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GALliA COUNTY'S LARGEST REAl ESTATE AGENCY

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74 Dodge Dart 4 Dr. Sedan ............ ... 12895

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AGENCY

CREAM PUFF
CARS III

74 Plymouth Scamp 2 Dr.......... ..... .. 13095

Real Estate For Sat..

Real Estate For Sale

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USED CAR SPECIALS

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HANGING.

AND

PAINT·

lNG,
FAST
AND
RELIABLE . CALl. 2S6-6342 .
264 -11

DESIGNER ,, Builder Ser vices . Bill Walker and Paul
Green; 286-6082 or , 682 -7498.
43 -lf
SANDY AND BEAVER In surance co . has offered
Services for FIre Insurance
coverage !n Gallla County
·f or almost
a cenrury.
Farms, homes and personal
proP.erty coverages are
llva•lable t o meet individual
needs . Contact Don Palmer,
your neig hbor and agent.
44 -6

Services Offered
PASQUALE - Electrica l &amp;
lnsulaling . 103 Cedar St. ,
Gallipolis. Ph . 446 -27 16.
126-lf

- - - A-----------l BERT EHMAN
Water Del i very Service
Patriot Star , Gallipolis
Ph . 379 -2133
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KOTALIC LANDSCAPING
RIO GRANDE, OHIO
COMPLETE PROGRESSIVE
LANDSCAPING

SHRUBS.

TREES .

ROC K

GARDEN S,
ALL
GUARANTEED . Patio and
po ol land scaping . Stone
san.d ,
tool ,
shrubber y
trimming . Dump truck
ser~o~ices . 245 -91 3 1.
187 If

DESIGNER/BUILDER SERVICES
PLAT DEVELOPMENT
NEW COMMERCIAL
NEW RESIDENTIAL
DESIGN
ESTIMATING
LANDSCAPING
CONSULTING

DOZER
BACKHOE
SEPTIC
UNDERPINNING

286-6082 I 682-7498
JACKSON, OHIO

Bill WALKER - PAUL GREEN

�..
The Sw1d"l'

Tuucs.,')enunel, Feb . 22 ,

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1 ~76

For Fast Results Use The Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds~
Real Estate For Sale

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Real Estate For Sale

THE

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WISEMAN

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You Want Tho Best

If
Th_is home wil l absolutely suit you . One of the best
bu•lt, best ca r ed for homes in thE! area . Huge living

roo':l and master bedroom overlooking river, beautiful
(w .b..

fireplace },

formal

dining
completely equipped ki t chen , 311, baths, wa lk in ceda;

soo

-il

-il

-il

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Need investment property or just a large family
home? 6 bedrooms, ' 2 kitchens , Jl/ 2 baths, full
basement , excel lent location, perfect for business,
zoned commerciaL $25.000 buys th i s dandy .

We need listings . Call the
W1seman Agency, 440 -3643 ·
Gallia CQ.'s Largest Real .
Estate Sales· Agency
Office 440 -1043
Evenings Call
Ike Wise~ an 446 -3796
E. N. Wiseman 446- 4SOO
Bud MtGhee 446-1255

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One of the Finest Bricks
Overlooking the beautiful Ohio Valley . large living
room. 2 w -b fireplaces, formal din i ng, charm ing
kitchen With breakfast room , 3 bedrooms, full
basem ent, 1 acre lot runs to the r i ver . You won't find
one better built :

SPR ING ' VAllEY
Lovely 3 ~
be~ ·
1 with
basemen'
;~ t hs .
baseme1
,j
sized
carpctintj
.roughout .
th i rties .

tlJII
fllll
lot .
Mid

150 AC. ~ARM
ac . ~
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~. 80

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BeautifUl ... lrgain
Th i s 3 bP~· ram e and
bri c k
,
large
bedroom
very pretty
kitchen , family or dining _
room . t,.ow th i rti es.

DELICIOUS DESCRIBES
This cream puff in Spri ng
Valley . A well r · ·ed for 3
bedroom ho~
- 'l dining
and large ;
, .)m , r • -~
b~lhs , f irer,
... , approv ed
kn.ch _e n , n e w carpet i ng .
Th1s 15 one you must see ,

-il

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70
a c:.
pasture
arn s -good ,
3 bedroc.
.:. lOry home in
ex c ellem .arm c ommun i ty .
$65 ,000 .

NEW LISTfNG
lnsp'ecf this beautiful d
l:l edroom brick on a 3 a"e
lot J miles from t own , 1,800
sq. II of fi~o~ing :t ' 1ce wi t h a
sup e r ,
n~
· ,.
l&lt;. it ch e n ,
fir e p l ace
and 2 1 t
car gara).l
. thi s plu s a
ful l
ba s~ . o~enl ,
PEI Ii o ,
carp e t lhroughour , doubl e
over 'd ishwasher , city
sc: hool distr i ct . You ' d waru
to buy th is one first lime
around

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CITY SCHOOL
DISTRICT
7 Large rooms
3
bedrooms ,
Old
style
remodeled hou se . Family
room , basement. nat . ga s
forced air furnar:e , c ity
water ,
gar!'lge ,
large
tence,;J in yard , Ju s t out of
Gallipolis Ci ty l imits on R t .
141.. Modern kitchen . A real
bargain . Ca l l now .
IN PATRIOT
room s . .4 bedroom s.
remodeled old style home
{nice ), bath with sh.o w er ,
sun
p ~ rch ,
bu i lt i n
cabine t s, cook stove. a i r
condition er , fo r c e d a ir
turhace , barn , firepla ce,
wash house . Y o u .mu s t see
this home .
1

BEAUTIFUL 3
BEDROOMS
F ull ba se ment wi th a la rg e
fami l y room , 2 ba t h s,
garag e, c entra.l a ir ; n ir: e
ca r peting , real nice kit c hen . Locat ed on a large
l ot. -Appr.ox , 2' years o ld .
Y'?u must see the .inside of
th 1s ho~se to appre ci at e i t
JBEDROOMS
7 rooms and bath , full
b .a sement ,
garbage
~1sposa 1 ,
c ity
water ,
c arport , ni c e le v el lot ,
garden ~ '1a ce, por ch . A
cl e an and nice hom e
Pr i ced t o sell now . Onl Y
s 12. 900
OWN YOUR OWN
BUSINESS CARRYOUT
II should pay for itself
With in a ~o~ery few year s .. 77
a cre 175' fron tage on Slal e

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LOTS
for sale, in Green
Township . Ph . &lt;~-46 4948 .
40 6

B UILDING or trailer silewilh
s mall acrea!j,lc. 245 9497 .
40- 12

HO U SE for sal e near V in
ton . Pr ite 55 ,500 . Call 388
88 17.

LIKE new , modern home i n
to wn . 3 B R . fully carpe!ed ,
nice l y turn . Ph . 4.46 009&lt;~ .
$2 6,000.
40 6

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RUSSEll WOOD
REALTOR

CALL 1\lt)W OFFICE 446-7699
LARGE , beautiful .4 BR Cape
Cod sty l e home : Ov er 2,200
sq . f t. plus 2 car garag e,
palio and a 6' '1C27 ' front
porch . Has a f i repla c e,
utility room , bu i lt -in kit c hen
w i th d ishw&amp;sher , disposal.
ci t y water and gas On a
lo vely 1 acre lot for only
$36.000 . 446 -4570.
41 12
LOT for sa te, 240 x 1.40 r:orner
of us 35 and Mitchell Rd .
245 -9218 or 245 -5253 .
44 ·6

------FOR SALE

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miles from town on Rt. 218 .
':h . 256 -6582 after 6, any
t tme on weekends .
44 -6

Limited Time Offer

RIVERSIDE AMC.JEEP
. Gallipolis, Ohio

FA P M on Rout e 218 , 471 1
. a .. r es, 60 pet. l eve l, 6 room
house , large barn . timber
and coal rights . Toney
R ealty G all ery Of Hom es .
d46 7900 .
37-lf
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3 BR . Modular Hom e, 2 bat hs ,
furnished exc ept living
ro o m . Toney R ealty Gallery
Of Homes. 440 -7900 .
37-tf

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3 BR home near Rio
Grande . To tal e l e c t r'ic,
a .c .. 21 ' ba ths , basem en! ,
f i r epla c e . 545.000.

5 room s and bath in c ity
$) ,000

b
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l"~
r• '~.
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,

HOME 446-9539
3 BR ., 2 bath , e'1Ccellent con

s trucl ! on , fuel oil heat ,
central air , carport and
garage .
Toney
Realty
Gallery Of Homes . 446-7900 .
,

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37 · If

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J BR BRICK , 2 bath, lar rl •
room s , w car gantge , Clo :.. o:
to lbwn . Toney Realty
Gal l ery Of Homes _ 446 -7900.
j7 ,tf

Real Estate For Sale
or Trade

KNOTTS
UPHOLSTERING
SHOP
Route 2, Box 161 -C
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

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5 p .m . Ph . 256·1142 .

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NEEDS

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Managers
and
Assistant Managers

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Farm Machinery, Sat. Feb. 28
12:00 Noon
1969 Oliver Diesel tractor No 1650, 1092 hrs,
mounted, 4· 14 plows ., mounted Oiiyer
mower, "lnt. 6ft. brush hog, lnt mower, J D 4·
"row corn planter, JD one~ row corn picker.
Oliver post·hole digger, 2 Killbros gravity
wagons, Pittsburg 14· ft disc on rubber,
Cobey manure spreader. poor condition,
i963 Chevrolet 1'12 T Truck, doubtful
condition.
James M. Brown, Pliny W.Va .
Location: on Ale. 35 20 miles above Pl. Pleooant Ius!
below Pliny truck stop. No small items. pleue be
prom pi!
John McNeill Auct.

Pete Sommer, Clerk

71 Rambler Homet 2 dr sedan .......• .... '1595

1975 AMC Pacer X

1972 Dodge Charger

70 Dodge Polara 4 dr, power, air..

Factory
A·C.
AM~ FM,
automatic, rallye wheels. 6,900
miles. silver with black vinyl
top.

Local one owner. 32,000 miles.
factory A- C. By far the cleanest
around. Worth more .

'3995

'2495

1975 Olds Cutlass
Supreme-

GMAC

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'1495

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We are expanding and looking
qualified personnel . to fill
management positions : .. .

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•MUST BE ABLE 10 RELOCATE
.OCR I ENT STARTING SAlARY

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eNUMEROUS FRINGE BENEFitS
SEND COMPLETE RESUME TO:

PERSONNEL DIRECI'OR
Box2762
Oiarleston, West VIrginia, 25328
All Replies Confidential
An Equal Opportunity Employer

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72 Dodge, 1 Ton Stake body VB motor, 4 sp.
trans.

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Choice of 2

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Three
bedroom
home
located on Vinton Avenu e .
Newly remodeled kit c hen
with bullf -in Cllbinets , bar ,
trash
comp6ctor ,
refrigerator, and range .
Gas heat , c i ty water and
sewe r . Shown by ap .
pQJnlment only . Priced

SJO,OOO .

spri ng Is tess th.en ninety
days away and we have a
se-..en acre tract of land i n
Harrison Twp ., Including a
20 tee t r ig ht of way to
Raccoon Creek. ideal for a
sum mer weekend retrea t .
Price $3 ,000 .

Business Properly located
at the intersection in
tenterpolnt , la-rge store
bulldlpg ,
wltt1
ii~o~lng
quarters
and
some
equipment, sltueted on 1 1
~ere lot , can be purchased
for 517.,900.00 . AddiiiOnfilly ,
one U'x 70', three bedroom
mobile home can be pur ch ased separate ly , or w i th
the buslness ' property , lor
$7;000.00. Total price tor
business property and
mobile home , 524 ,900 .00 .

Nice modern 3 B R home,
re•dy to move into, near

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Golf Course, largo kitchen,
plenty
af
cabinets,.

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clispas1l,

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electric

Hyv

Two bedroom heme on
Second
Av e nue , large
f ini s hed r oom upstairs ,
garage basement, central
a i r cond i tioning ; three
room with bath r ental on
rear of property , pri c ed
$35 , 000 . Shown by ap poi ntment only .

OWNER Will FINANCE
55 acres adjoining the
r:itY limit s of Rio Grande .
Lo t ~. of potential ,
RACCOON
CREEK
FRONTAGE 13 acres
ttat boltom land is all
tillable e)(cepl t or t he
shady creek bank . Larg e
barn included for the
bargain pr ice of \13 .000.

Three bedroom , r:a rp et ed
homes loc a t ed on 1S ' l'l120'
lots , attached garage ,
modern kit c hen , $20,000.
Gallipoli s
City
Schoo l
District .
How about this tor in ve·s tm ent or
' ' llve . Jn"
property! One ac re tract of
land with lOA' frontage on
new Route 160, SO ' frontage
on old Rou t e 160 ; 490 ' deep .
Has two mobile homes . one
Is a two bedroom , fully
carpeted , 1973 model w i th
cen tral air condition ing ;
the other Is a one bedroom
older model . Also , has
large 24 ' x28' block building
with furnace which can be
used as two .car garage or
workshop . Rural water .
Owner mo~o~ing , will sell for
Sl9 ,000 .00 .

RARE COUNTRY HOME
3 BR brick ranch
features large LR . with
fireplace . equipped kit .
chen , dining rm ., 1 1 ) baths ,
la rge tam i ly rm . w i th
fireplar:e . cent . air and
garage . A n i ce drive to I he
m i nes or Ga~o~in .
COUNTRY
BEAUTY
Modern 3 BR 1 story home
features a large l R . den
with a new woo dburn ing
firepla c e , laundry rm •
large kitchen with cabinets
and a buill in range , and
WW carpet . This home is
locat ed about 15 mi . north
of town and i s s ituated on
a• .· a c res of ro ll ing land .

71 Dodge Van % Ton

CARROll NORRIS DODGE
~ GALLIPOLIS,

raflge,

end hOod, large utility
room with cabinets. 4
rooms nrpeted, nice lot,

natural gas heal, central
air cond. Inquire ot Corbin
and Snyder Fum. Co. 444.
1171 aftor 5 444·2573.
HELP FINANCE

Wanted To Lease 01' Rent
l OR ~ BEDROOM House in
Gallipolis area . Days 367
7338, nights ••6 -2032 .

- -! -- ---t~--· ---- -41 -6

OHIO

Equipment

While bri c k hom e loca t ed ·
at corner of Oliv e and
Four t h
Ave nu e
In
Ga l lipo l is . Owner will sel f
for s 10,500. A ,good buy If
you' re l ook ing tor a small
homf;' ·,
or
lnveslment
prop·erty .
Call Wood Insurance &amp;
Real Estate 446 -1066
Evenings R.uuell Wood
44,· 4618
Ken Mor"'" 4411-CI971

Cfi RTf R · ~. flll' i\\ LI ING
AND HEATING
Cor . r :ourth &amp; Pine.
Phone 4-46 -3888 or 446 4477
165 .If

BUY AND DEVELOP- 0
vacan t lots oh Cheslnut Sl.
Zoned residentia l $12 ,000 .

GENE PLANT) &amp; SON
PLUMBING · Hoating •- Air
Cohdllion i ng 300 1 ourth
1\~o~e . Ph . 4.46 1037.
48 tf

Sales
LIMESTONE for driveWdys .
Carl Winters . Phone 245 ·
5115 .
270 .rf

DEWITT' S PLUMBING

--COMMERCIAL
-·-- -------..---building

ANO HEATING
Route 160at Evergreen
Phone 446 ·27 35
187 -If
ST J\ ND/\RD
Plumbing Heating
215 Th i rd twe .• 446 378~

117 -llo.

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PERRY TWP . - 218 a c re
farm . complete l y fenc ed ,
so A . ! illable , 2 ponds . 2
barns , c orn cr i bs , good 7
rm hom e .

Services Offered

SPEC IAl off -season prices on
A.PPLIANCE
Furniture Upho lstering na_
w
REPAIR SERVICE
to fir s' of march 1976. Call
now . save s . Mowrey ' s WASHERS. dryers, electrit:
range . LS.A Appliances . -4.46.
Furniture and UPholstering.
7398, 245 ·5040 .
Phone 615 -4154 .
6-lf
306 -tf
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NOO F IN G , alum i num. sid,l'ig , CUSTOM REMODELING, 20
years experienc e. 388 ·8308 .
free eslimates . Call 250 -6364
New ·dry wall ceili ng with
256 -tf
swirl or texture, designs .
-·------~-.:----:---- ---·Ot her dry wall, repair, vinyl
HOWARD
Peck
water .
wattpaP.ering , new baths ,
Del.i very day or !light. 245 new k1tchens . Anvthinq in
93 15 or 388 8262 .
remodeling or repair .
292 -t f
11 -lf

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BORDER ' S GARAGE DOOR
Service . Commercial and
Residential. Spec ializing in
operators . Local . 256 -6472 .
20 -11

DAIRY FARM - 22 2A ., 45
A
bo t tom . ba l ance i s
mos lly c l ean rolling land •.
new mi lkin g parlor , 20K60
silo , 2 barn,s , 6- rm , house.
larg e pond and lob . base .

C OUGHE NOU R
Water
De l ivery . 446.. 3962 , 4.46 -4262
any time .
244 -tf

D. DAY
REFRIGERATION
EXCAVATING .
dozer,
backhoe
and
d.it .c her , REGRilloARATION , h eating,
elect ri c. 17 years eKp . 388 Char les R . Hatfield, Back,
8274 .
Hoe Service, Rutland, Ohio.
142 -2008 or .446 -.7687 ,

OWHER
' HAS
BEEN
TRANSFERRED and has
agreed lo se ll this at
lr·aclive 3 BR ranc h fo_r lh e
bargain p ri ce of 526,900 .
Don ' t wa i t to see this
beauty with c arpet o~o~er
Hw floors . l arge LR and
dining area , modern kit
chen . I' , baths. garage and
fla t lol. Located in Gree n
Aa es.

40-11

------- - - -- - BGB LANE 'S Comp le le Book -

CARPENTER
wor6l , hou se
remodeling,
wiring ,
plumbing , pa inting , Ph . A-40 ke e ping and Tilx Service .
29 10
4371 1 •2nd Ave . (Across from
259 -1f
Post Off i ce) . Ga ll ipOlis . Ph .
_,__
446 . 7900 .
weekly
and
monthly serv i ce for com DOZER work , excavat ing ,
land clear i ng . Ph . 446 -0051 .
merc ia ! accounts . lnc:ome
290 -lf
Tax Prepl'!ration .
-43 -2
WALL
PAPER ,
VINYL

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·sow br eedi ng . Call 07!) -4801 or
675 1128.
22 -tf
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For Sale
COf..L , C.A . B , Coal Corp . , 1
m l lenorthofCheshire . on Rl.
1 Pi c k your own . 520 per ton .
Open 6 days a week , 367 7330
tor fu~ 1her inform at ion .
611

wh-i ch al so contain s apt nn d
etJuip . used in th e operat i on.
of the former . Sll~o~er Dollar
Ca fe . Property located at 39 r v 10 Carry on r l ighr Bags .
Court St ., GallipoliS , Oh iO.
New . Never u sed . Perfec t
Shown by appt . only . Ph .
gift for tra~o~eler . Phone 2.·'
446 064A . ,
5610 after 5.
431
29 3 If

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Services Offered

O'BRIEN ELECTRIC
THE TOP SHOP
SERVICE
Custom Built Root Trusses ,
24 Hour Serv i ce
Form i ca Countertops &amp;
Anythi ng in electricity
Cabine t s, Coolville, Oh io ,
446 -8603 .
667_- 3186 .
30 -ff
256 -lf

RANNY BlAC I&lt;BURN ,
BRANCH MANAGEB

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LOW DOWN PAYMENT N ew doub le .wide mobile
hom e offe· r~ J BRs , lar g e
LR . DR , kit c hen wilh s tove
and r ef. , and l'lice cabinets ,
shag carpels and a f l at lot.
W i l l trade for farm .
' /

DAIRY FARM 163 A .
fl a l and rolling l&lt;md located
south of Rio Grand e with
lois of road fron t age .
Sp ecia l fea tur es are pond ,
I springs , coun t y wat er , rob .
EVANS HEIGHTS - Nice base , good 7 rm . house with
2 ·B R home offers good new k i tc hen , la rge barn
i n e~~:pensive
l iving , to and si lo .
someorie . Features knolly
35
.WEST
pine living room . wi!h ROUTE
woodburning
fireplace . A lmos t new 3 BR brick
ranch is very app ealing
ONLY 5 15, 900 .
and · can b e your dream
home . Large equipped
PRICE
REDUCED
Owner says sell th i s love ly kilchen , 11: balhs , qua lit y
3 BR brick ranch with c arper throughout , cenlra l
almosl 1,400 SQ . fl . of living air , large LR , dining area .
area plus a full baseme~t garag e, full bas ement.
and a 2 car garage . All th 1s
LISTINGS NEEDED plus a large flat wel l land
ADVERTISE NA ·
scaped lol with 2 large WE
TIONALLY- BE BUY shade tre&amp;s .
SELt . - TRADE

Plumbing &amp; Heating

IN .TOWN

Sunday Shoppers Welcome
Come In and Browse Around

Services Offered ·
ADELAIDE DRIVE
Lovely 3 .. BR ranch has
floors with new carpet 1n
LR , ga s heat , air c ond . •
garage ,
la-undry
and
equipp ed kit c hen . Pri c ed at
S1 3. 000 w i th
finan c ing
a\lai labl e

BANK
FINANCING

'4795

71 Datsun Pickup, std shift, camper tops,

STAR CRAFT
T.RAILERS and Folddowns.
Serv i ce what we sell.
Financ i ng ' arranged . Used
l97A TLR . Best buy is in Tri State area . Camp Con l ey
Star Craft Sales. Rl . 62 N.
Pt .• Pleasan t, w. Va .
28 -lf

New , m o d e rn , insulated
and
carp e led .
·th r ee
bedroom
Pr i ck. home ;
electri c al l y heated ;
loc a t ed on Stat e Rl . 586 ,
near the U . 5 . Rty . 35 ifl tersectlon ·a t Rodney: ; 110 '
fron t age a long Rt . 588 ;
Gall i polis
City
~ chool
Di str i ct. Pri c ed 531,600,00 .

and

Silver. wine Landau top, swing
out pucket seats, beautiful car.
15.000 miles.

72 Dodge Pickup 6 cyl, std. shift ·

I,Jnder construction, this ,;new" thr~ bedroom hoiT)e Is
located In Green acres subdivision . The natural
fin i shed cedar siding blends gracefull y with the
peaceful atmosphere of the surround ing hills . Ful l y
carpeted , Insulated , electrica lly heated, cily water ,

$~3.000 . 00

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·PUBLIC AUCTION

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If you hllve been look ing for
that dream hom e i n f.he
CQJJntry , we have a co m ,
pletety
modern
four
bedroom , carp e ted hom e,
fully Insulated , el ec trically ·
heated ; Si luetled on a 4 J 4
acre tract of land ; has deck
and pat i o overlooking
picturesQu e ~ooded. area .
Paneled and car·peted ,
finished basemen! with
k i tchen , ·bathroom , shower
and lan:.~e brick fireplace .
located tour lenths of a
mile off Rl. 554 , near
Bidwell . Only IS minutes
from eit her Ga l lipolis or
Rio Grande. Shown by
appointment . Priced :

FARM app . 18 acres. 4 iJC. 1
bottom , 10 a c . pasture, 4 a•
woOd&amp;, barn, 8 room hou :... ~ ;
with bath on blac.klop 1
Bladen Mere . Rd . Call after 1

ble hobby end sk

and reupholstering
own
furn i tur e
Jn
professional rtlaMer .
Information
an
reservations to v i sit
demonstration
c
without obligation
or ca II af once .

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White with wine top. A· C. AM·
FM. 11,294 miles.

'4695 .

modern kitchen and allached garage, Gallipolis City
School Dlslrlcl . A· real buy lor $28,500 .00.

A course in upi'IOI:IIelrln!~ l
and fu.rniture repal
Class conducted
evening each week
weeks. This Is a

·

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5

'5995

Office Ph . 446 -1694
E\ienings
Charles M . Neal446 -1546
J . Michael Neal446 · 1503
sam Ne.al. 446 ·7Jsa

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Pllone f46·2917

4I 6

3 BR home on ..sev e n ·
i h.enths /1. . lot near cit'Y .
Tqtal
ele c lri r:. 20 ' K D '
outbu i lding . $24,500

5 miles from Ho lzer 3 BR
hom e
&amp;
lor
~ 16 . 5 00 .
V illager , 65' x 12 ', 3 BR M .
Hom e an d to t S11 ,500 . '69
Kirkw ood . 55' &gt;&lt; 12' , J BR M .
Home w ith a t t ac hed roo ms
on Jl ,. a . tot for Sl 5.000.

BY OWNER
F H A Ap.proved, J br . home, a

FREE A/C
SAVE '425.00

. g .. • ·.

Neal ·Realty_

446-1066

•• 1"• 11 ~ing.

6 ROOM and bath with a.t
rached garage , barn 2
outbuildings,
·acre
of
'J"round, more if desired. S
miles from Rio Grande at
Centei-point . Price 515 ,000 .
Phone 1182 694.4 .
·

1975 Monte Carlo

Full power equip .• 28.000 miles,
new Buick Limited trade. Lime
green with white top.

74 Dodge Pickup 6 cyl std. shift

We Need Your Horne or Fe1nn To :.iei1.

112 ACRE FAR PI!
In city sc hool ,.. . riel with
11•7 mile ; . " '
double
barn, · pe.~~,r golf
course 01
nouslng , Priced at $125,00 0.00

ER RANSFERRED
has already moved
from
this very nice 3
bedroom hriTie located on
large Spri ~' ey lor .
In c lud es hl
ly room
and kitchen , ....
l l nation
with
w -b fireplace , 11 1
baths,
full
divided
basemen f . Ready for you to
mo~o~e into.

1974 Cadillac Cpe.

•
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·'1895

-------TRUCKS-------

City water, 7 room tile block nice home, forced air
furnace, basement, storm doors, storm windows ,
wood -burning fireplace, sfore bullding, milking house
1!. parlor, corn crib. 35 acres boftom land. Real. nice
farm .
Hlghwa'( No . 7 - J rental
OUI!Oing Sites., level lend,
tra i ler !paces . Al l stock , appro~~: .. 4 mite Qff Rt. 35,
. equ ipment &amp; bldg _ goes . rural water , call for In Buy now .
fOrm atlon . ·
104 ACRE
VACANT LOTS
DAIRY FARM
In Restricted ' Sub -Division .
2 Ponds
8 room home,
C311 for details .
for ced air furna c e, 2 s ilos
BEP.UTIFUL HOME SITE
w i ,l h auto . un l oader &amp;.
Just ott 160-Evergreen 36
feeder , 350 ga l. S. S. cooler ,
acfu. almost all ti l lable .
2 barns , 9 outbuildings ,
Nice hUmk ot land .
tobacco base , milk i ng
lJtACRES
par l or w i th pipeline . Ponds
3800 lb . tobacco base. lots
s rocked w i th bass &amp; Blu e
of coal. lot s of woods, good
G il ls . s ee this .
pasture , Iaroe barn , well,
l ACRES
good place for a home
12' 1':05 ' 3 Bedroom Mobile
away from other people .
Home . 231 ' frontage on
110 ACRES PLUS
Bulavll l e Addison
Rd ,
Vacant ___:_ A woodland
Level. Gas cook sto~o~e ,
wonderland
some
rural water , patio . Only
pasture &amp; tillable land .
5 10.900 .00 .
Leh than S160 .0Q per acre .

2
dr.
miles, A. C.

10,000
AM· F M.
powder blue with dark blue top .
New Electra trade~ in

70 Ford Galaxie 2 dr, power, air........... '1395

. ..
\'\/eire Out To Sell The Earth

PACER

Rl
R VIEW
We ' re going to se ll or trad e
thi s home this month to the
f i rst
quallfiP1
buyer
making a~r
'ble offer.
Owner
•arantee
financinr.
-'1
huge
bedrooms, tam ily room or
dining , 3 baths, overlooking
the river . Very r: lose to
town . Don ' t miss this one
great chance .
OHIO RIVER
Will sp lit the abo~o~e farm as
follows :
,
0 iVer boflotn
30 ac . Oh
wifh 1200 -~·~ tlr)g tl'le
river and~~ - 47 ac;: .
excellen t old ll• . ; k horrl'e-.
and 3 barns . SI05,000.
,...

•••

1974 Ford LTD

cream with white vinyl top.
We sold it
and have
serviced

71 Ford Pinto 2 dr Runabout ......... .. .. 11695

BABY FARMS

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** ********
* * * * * * * * * * ·* * * * *
FARM. no bUildings 3 miles 5.
of Cadmus on 14L For in formation wrile or call Dora
Phares , Box 101. Donald s
ville , Ohio or ca ll 513 88 2
69_17 .
75 16

air .•..••.. 12195

Located on Stale Highway.

Listing, 47 Acres

n

ESTATES

1973 Buick
Limited 4 dr.
Full power equipment. A·C,

.-2095

71 Dodge Dart 2 dr, 6 cyl•...........•.... 11795

Space Reserved for a
Picture of Your Home.
We Need lt.
List Now.

•
•

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BRAND NEW BRICK
One of the nice,.• 3 bedroom
homes y,.. •. - \ ft1 . Includ es
family rt~"~ firep l ace,
beautitu~• • ~chen , full
basement , 2 car garage .
Price under SSQ, QOO.OO

o ••• o ••• o . . . . . . . .

'2295

71 Plymouth FuiJ Ill 2 dr, power ...... o. 11695

.-il

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Call -us right now.

*
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Beautiful 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, modern home, forced
air furnace, good barn, mHk house, storage house, fruit
trees, 2300 lb tobacco base, good blue grass pasture.

Approx . Ph acres . Large modern kitchen , gas furnace,
basement paneled, lot s of shade trees , garden spot.
Formal dining room . O'lly $19,900.00

•
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••

Overlooking City

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••

71 Dodge Demon 340, 2 dr, power· .. ·: ·· ·11895

Nice Home, 81 A Dairy

4 Bedrooms In Syracuse

-il

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0

71 Dodge Dart 4 dr, sedan, 6 cyl... ..... '· '1895

-il

c losets. full divi.ded basement (w .b. fireplace) , ·
playroom , poo l room and storage lot runs from 2nd
Av e ..all the way to the river . Price reduced to $87
We'll show it a t your convenie nce .
'
·

Owner very anxious to sell t his love ly 3 bedroom brick
1"11me located on a wel l landsc a ped lot overlooking the
c i t y , walking distance tO school. Features a . huge
family room wit h w-b firep lace. 2 baths, built -in
kitchen, 2 car garage . ba sement .

72 Datsun 2 dr, Coupe ...

0 •

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room

72 Ford LTD 2 Dr., power,.... , .........

71 Plymouth Satellite, 2 dr, power•••

-il

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fam1ly

Silver with aulo(Tlalic trans.

71 Dodge Monaco 4 dr, power,

•

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Associate

Ph. Home 379·2114

72 Chevrolet Cbevelle 4 dr, power, air ..... '1895

-il

room. exceptiona l kitchen (r.ange, sel't-clean d.ouble
ave~ , dishwasher, bar and et.c .), 2 car garage, 2
porches and large 1 3.~ ac. lot with excellent vH!w , You
m ust see this home to r ea l ly appreciate it.

1974 Audi Fox

72 Ch!JSier Newport 2 Dr. Power, air..... '2495

-il

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New listing- The One You've Admired
One of the most affradive homes on Rt.. 141. Nearly
~ew 3 be&lt;;lrC?Om brick with 2 fireplaces, finished fami ly

·Hatchback, while in color. one owner •
17.000 miles. Owned by a local nurse.

72 Dodge Polara Sta Wagon, power, air.'. '2695

-il

AGENCY
NEEDS
LISTINGS
IMMEDIATELY

*

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1973 Chevrolet 4-cyl. Vega

73 Chevrolet Vega 2 dr..................... .'1895

~
i
!"
.\terri c.ter

512 2ND AVE. 446-7699

-il

WISEMAN

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LEADINGHAM
REAL ESTATE

-il

THE

73 Javelin, AMX 2 Dr. Hdtp .... .... .. ••... 12495

I

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GALliA COUNTY'S LARGEST REAl ESTATE AGENCY

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74 Dodge Dart 4 Dr. Sedan ............ ... 12895

-il

AGENCY

CREAM PUFF
CARS III

74 Plymouth Scamp 2 Dr.......... ..... .. 13095

Real Estate For Sat..

Real Estate For Sale

.

USED CAR SPECIALS

- ----- ----

___ ------

HANGING.

AND

PAINT·

lNG,
FAST
AND
RELIABLE . CALl. 2S6-6342 .
264 -11

DESIGNER ,, Builder Ser vices . Bill Walker and Paul
Green; 286-6082 or , 682 -7498.
43 -lf
SANDY AND BEAVER In surance co . has offered
Services for FIre Insurance
coverage !n Gallla County
·f or almost
a cenrury.
Farms, homes and personal
proP.erty coverages are
llva•lable t o meet individual
needs . Contact Don Palmer,
your neig hbor and agent.
44 -6

Services Offered
PASQUALE - Electrica l &amp;
lnsulaling . 103 Cedar St. ,
Gallipolis. Ph . 446 -27 16.
126-lf

- - - A-----------l BERT EHMAN
Water Del i very Service
Patriot Star , Gallipolis
Ph . 379 -2133
.,___._ _.....,.---'--·---.,-~-----

KOTALIC LANDSCAPING
RIO GRANDE, OHIO
COMPLETE PROGRESSIVE
LANDSCAPING

SHRUBS.

TREES .

ROC K

GARDEN S,
ALL
GUARANTEED . Patio and
po ol land scaping . Stone
san.d ,
tool ,
shrubber y
trimming . Dump truck
ser~o~ices . 245 -91 3 1.
187 If

DESIGNER/BUILDER SERVICES
PLAT DEVELOPMENT
NEW COMMERCIAL
NEW RESIDENTIAL
DESIGN
ESTIMATING
LANDSCAPING
CONSULTING

DOZER
BACKHOE
SEPTIC
UNDERPINNING

286-6082 I 682-7498
JACKSON, OHIO

Bill WALKER - PAUL GREEN

�32 - The SWlday Times&amp;ntinel, Feb. 22, 1978

Seminar
given on electronic banking ..
.
recently on electronic funds developing among participating banks.
transfer in Colwnbus.
Direct deposit of payroll
All county. banks are
members of the Colwnbus (DDP) was a major topic for
Regional Automated Funds discussion since many
Transfer System (CRAFTS), c«npanies as weU as the
sponsor of tbe event, the Federal Government are
organization which is entering the program. DDP
working to slow the growth of permits an employer to
paper checks through deposit the pay directly to an
employee's personal bank
automatic systems.
The seminar included account without Issuing a
discussions of the newest check. A slip with all vital
techniques in automatic Information such as pay
funds transfer and the amount and deductions is
methods of cooperation given to the employee for

GALLIPOLIS - Madge E.
Boggs and Joy Barlow of The
Ohio Valley Bank Co. altended a special seminar

REQUEST DENIED
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Blue
Cross of Northeast Ohio's
request for a 49 per cent rate
increase for 166,000 individual subscribers in 11
counties has been denied by
Insurance Director Harry V.
Jump. Jump said Friday,
however, that he wiD accept a
30 per cent hike if coskontrol
measures are taken. He said

·,

alone expert skaters. The nearesi ice available is Bird
Arena at Ohio University, above, which is open to the
public four nights a week and two sessions Sunday
afternoon.

...

·~
f' -~. '~~r

.....

.

I

will have to file for the lesser
rate increase and It would
probably be April before it
could t.lke effect.

WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY SALE
CONTINUES MONDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

' ji~

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.. . 7

f ~.
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}-' .,. .

II

ELLA HART

FIRST GRADUATES- Tbe first annual conunencement of tbe old
Mason High School was held at the Mason Methodist Church Friday
evening, May 20, 1881. First graduates were the following ladies, Clara
M_atthews, Josie Hart, Ella Hart, JeMie Padi)Il and EUzaheth Stone. Miss
Stone 111arried Virgil A. Lewis, who, with her help, wrote several books.
She learned to type on a callgraph and later assisted her husband in
\\Tiling his West Virginia history. He did a lot of research and dictated to

ELIZABETH STONE

:~:}

IRONTON ~ From time to time

get a n idea for a column that is not
"in season" so it goes into a holding
pattern until the time is right.
Totlay's t;tory, for example, was
eonceivcd last December. Since it is
about fire, late March would be the
best time to run it.
.
Events have happened though
and the time table has to be altered.
As of February 17th we've had 17
wildfires, all but two were purposely
set.
Through last spring, our major
problem was escaping debris fires.
Last fall 's high incen&lt;liary activity
however, dramatically changed the
picture. Of 55 fires last year, 35 were
set by arsonists.
The cat ,and mouse game of
catching a firebug is a frustrating
experience. ·Although we sometimes
know the general area a particular

:;::;:_: I

(;,;
:;:;:;:
:;:::;::
::~::::

:r:::

:;:;;;::
!!i!'!i!

:;:;:;:;
:;:;:;:;
';!;!;!;
;~;:;;;

:;;:;~

:;;r,
~;~;!;
W,
~~'::;:;

~;;

;::

arsonist is wor)ting, we never ~ow

'
. ·
&gt;••••,

*''
~;:;l

~:;:;:;

when they will strike. Incendiary
fires have occurred at all times of
the day and night but mostly, arsonists prefer the cover of darkness
to hide their activities. They ply
their sick trade just like a thief in the
night.

?::;!;!;

• spring coats • junior dresses - costume

It's rather difficult to paint a
picture of the typical arsonist. They

· d. Fores! Se mce
· spec1a
·1
of a trame
Investigator to assist our personnel

come in aU shapes, sizes and ages·

in tracking down the wierdos who

The youngest I've known was an
eight year old; the oldest, a man in
his 40's. I've yet to meet or know of •
woman firebug but no doubt I 'll
.meet one someday.
Setting a forest fire is a criminal
act with little or no thought to the
consequences. Last night our crews
built fire line within fifty feet of an
occupied hOme. Unlike breaking a
picnic table or, multilating a forest
sign, the end result of some fires has
been the loss of human life. Not here
on the Wayne, although with houses
everywhere, we feel its simply a
matter of time until a real tragedy

are responsible.
·
In today's mail we received a
supply of special reward posters
that I requested from Virginia's
.Jefferson National Forest where
they are experime~cing · similar
difficulties.
We are using special codes to
foil those who we believe to be
monitoring our two-way radio
communications. We have special
patrols (olir own and the Sheriff)
that check · known areas of incendiary activity both day and
night. Curr.ently we are considering
special air patrols at night to detect

occurs.

fires and hopefulJy aid in the arrest .:;:::~;

The potential for loss of
resources is great also: Many tend to
UUnk of the loss of trees as the only
impact of a forestfi~e. Like the tip of
·an iceberg however. tbe loss of trees

of these criminals.
Obviously we cannot be
· everywhere at once. Mostly we rely
on the citizenry (you ) for assistance.
In almost all cases, someone knows

cabinets · Microwave oVens, carpet mill ends.

I
Elberfelds in Pomeroy l '

an overrride.

::::::::
::!'!:!::
:;:;:;:;
!;';!;!;
:;:;;;:; ·
!;!;!;!;
;:;;:;;:
:;:;:;:;

The Money Maker Account

.m::

:;~:;:; .

FARMERS lANK MONET MAKER

;:;:;:;:

?,;~~(

D

!*!§

danger of wildfires.
Loss of prime wUdlife habitat,
(and sometimes the wildlife itself )
loss of soil, stream sedimentation,
water . pollution and loss of
recreabon lands often exceed the
value of trees that are lost.
.
Today I requested !be services

civic pride, duty and sometimes the
promise of reward will motivate !~!.
those who possess vital mformation. ·~-~
When it comes to public forest ·
land Ohio ranks 46th in the nation so ~··
we can't afford to loose any and we
certainly can't play pattie-cake with
those who would destroy it.

-

iM

1111•-

under the direction of the
Ohio Association of VICA.
Charles B. Dygert, State
Association Director for the
Ohio VICA Association, will
be in charge of a VICA
meeting with Roy Sims, Ohio
VICA State President,
presiding.
Claire M. (Buzz) Ball will
join the B.H.C.C. VICA
delegation for lunch at the
· Neil House. During the
luncheon, sUite legislators
will be introduced and special
awards and charters will be
presented to VICA clubs of
Ohio.

=

i iNews • • •in Briefs;\

Fair and not as cool
tOnight. Lows 30 to 35. Sunny
and warmer Tuesday. Highs
in the low 80s. Chance of
precipitation near zero
through Tuesday.

Retirement Plan the Money Maker Account is for you.

YQU ~ now save up to •ISOOOO a year
toward your -retirement, TAX FREE.
STOP IN NOW AND SEE WHAT THE FARMERS BANK
MONEY MAKER CAN DO FOR YOU.

24 State Str-(!ef

Gallipolis
Phone 446 -4290

Home 446.4518

"See me for Homeowners Insurance
from State Farm-the world's largest!'
Like a good neighbor.
Sclll! Fvm ill !here.

Sla!t

....

POMEROY, OHIO

~••m r.,~

lll4C...ItJ~Y

..,. Ollu· hlm'"VIOJI. Ullno!'
!IIUUI&amp;N ~ t

Farnters Bank
........ ...... .... ....
anauw

Member Frder.1l Deposit Insurance Corp.

The program opened with a
welcome from Mrs. Earl
Thoma, service unit director,
and the color guard and

Weather

If you are self employed o~ not covered ·by an existing

K. SNOWDEN

cOWltries represented were
served.

pledges led by Middleport
Juniors 39.
Included in Pomeroy
Junior Troop's present.ltion
on India, was a talk by
Chantilal Goradia, a native of
tbat country, who for the past
several years has worked at
the Centtal Operating Co.
Following Goradia 's talk, his
wife, Rupa, sang for ~ the
dancing junior scouts, all
attired in saris. Mrs. Ger·
iContinu•,) on page 10)

·~:~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::f:::::::::::::::::::::::·:·:·:·:;:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:::~:::::~:~:::~:~:::-::~:::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::~~~~

VICA delegates to see State House
State, State Treasurer, State
Auditor, and Attorney
General, and the cbambers of
the Supreme Court, the House
and Senate will be visited.
Delegates from the local
club will be under the
supervision of Ponney Cisco,
Do It Every Time
center director; Charles
Harper, Jackson, and Mrs.
i3(X)KS FOR KIDS · Diana Lintala, Wellston, all
W&gt;.VE REAL BIG
co-advisors of Vica. The
~===!.,~PR:IiolTlNG...
students are Deborah Severt,
1
Patriot; Della Harmon,
Jackson; Beth Fuller,
Wellston; Barb Hall, Bidwell,
and Pam Essman, Wellston .
'The day's activities will be

Girl Guide and Girl Scout
movement, Lord BadenPowell, and his wife, Lady
Baden-Powell.
The program, emceed by
Mrs. Roscoe Wise, leader of
Middleport Troop 39, was
followed with a social hour
when foods symbolic of the

Member FederJI Reserve System

=~=·

··~

By UDited Preu IDteruallonal
MOSCOW (UPI) - The 25th Congress of tbe ·Soviet
Communist party, which opens Tuesday, Ia not expected to
jroduee any major Slll1l"ises. Continuity and stablllty will be
the keynote of the session, ~ted to last 10 days. Some ~.000
delegates will pack the glass and concrete Kremlin Palace of
Congresses to hear party General Secretary leonid Brezhnev
deliver his five-hour keynote speech .
The fact Br~ev will make the major speech Indicates
his 11-year reign will continue. Were he to diseppear from the
scene soon, the policies he propounds at the congress would be
broUght into question. Gray rather than red Is the predominant
tone of the moderrHiay Soviet Union and that extends to the
men who rule it. The days of bloodletting among ~ leadership
and spectacular policy shifts are gone.
MOSCOW - FIVE THOUSAND SOVIET delegates and
hundreda of foreign guests virtually have taken over Moscow
lor Tuelday 's opening of the 25th Congr~ of the Communist
party. u·was the kind of Moscow rarely seen In midwinteror at any other time: clean, spniced up and relatively well
stocked with consumer goods.
Flower sellers appeared on tbe streets for !hi! first time
this winter. Imported foods, including East German leather
jroducts,, Czechoslovak glassware ·and Hung1rlan clothing,
appeared In store lvlndows. A policeman lloppeQ a tore~~~ner
driving a muddied car and, while sparing him the customary
f1.33flne !or operating a dirty vehicle, told htm to wash it "for
the congres&amp;."
COLUMBUS-GOV. JAMES A. RHODES will meet with
plflclala of the Volkswagen company in Gennany'March II In
an attempt to persuade VW to locate Its propoeed U. S.
manufacturing facility in northeastern Ohio - a move Rhodes
laid could make Ohio the leading automobile manufacturing
state tn the nation.
''Our meeting with Volkswagen officials In March will
culminate more than a year of Intense negotiations with VW
. representaUve1 searching for a manufacturing location in .the
United Staletl," Rhodes said in a statement. "We have high
bopes VW will decide to locate at the Brook Park plant." Tbe
Brook Park plant Is one of three leading U. S. sites being
considered by Volkswqen, accord~ to a recent article in
11uJ1neas Week magazine. Other llites under stndy by VW it
laid, are In Detroit and New Stanton, Pa.
BEIRUT, LEBANON - GUNMEN TOOK OVER tbe
·offices of the Canadian embassy In the heart of,Beirut Monday
I.

.: '

. , 'l'.t' Hl r

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday through
Friday a chance of showers
late Wedneoday and Thur,_
day. Fair Friday. Highs In
60s Wednesday, cOOling to
the 40s fn north and 50s in
south by Fflday. Lows In
40s Wednesday and in 30s
Thursday and Friday.

The new Apportionent
Board said the previous one,

under the direction of former
Democratic Gov. John J.
Gilligan, never sought a court
test of the legislative
apportionment plan's
conformity with tbe Ohio
Constitution, and that Judge .
. Battisti· blocked such a test.
Battisli upheld the 1971
apportionment although
Republicans claimed It
violated state constitutiO!I'!I
requirements that legislative
districts lie "compact and
contiguous" and not break up
political subdivisions.
(Continued on page 10)

MICK DAVENPORT,
sealor forward of tho Melga
Marauders, was voted to
the second team All
Southeastetn Ohio basket·
ball team Sunday at
Jackson. See story on page
3. Mitch Meadows, 6-8
M'nj,,,. •·,·nh•r o( lht·
Marauders

wm•

an

honorable

mt• n l iun

:':':':':':;:::':':':':':;:':':':':':&lt;':';;:''''''''''''''''''''''''''''

Dateline : 1776

a Republican, is
chairman
of
the
Apportionment Board
PHILADELPHIA,' Feb.
assigned to draw boundaries 23 - Congress ~irected
of state legislative districts. every colony to enceurage
The lioilrd gave Brown one
tbe making of aaltpetre and
week to name special
gunpawder aad named a
counsel, saying if he does not,
special commlttet to
Rhodes will obtain a
promote the manufacture
mandamus order from tbe
of muskets and bayoaets.
Ohio
Supreme
Court
Two small otoves were
directing the attorney
ordered removed from the
general to name counsel of
assembly room because
the governor's choosing.
the amoke wao aflectlog
The attorney to be named
"the bealth and eyesight"
will carry the board's case to
of the members.
U.S. District Cqurt In Cleve- ::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::
land, seeklni! to overturn a
1973 order wued by Judge
Frank J . Battisti forbidding
anyone to attempt to reverse
the 1971 apportionment untll
- at least 1980.
James R. Marsh, assistant
secretary of siate, said if the
board is unsuccessful in
Two men in their early 20's
Battisti's. court, it will appeal were sought for questioning·
either to the U.S. Court of today by Gallia County
Appeals or the U.S. Supreme sheriff's deputies in conCourt.
nection ·with the alleged
armed robbery Sunday af"
ternoon of the Save More
Service Station.
According to Gallla County
DON'T TRESPASS
Sheriff
OScar Baird, an unMiddleport Mayor Fred
determined
amount of cash
Hoffman warned today
was
taken
from
the station
there is to be no dumpiDg at
located at the intersection of
the Middleport lagoon
Rt. 7 and the Gallipolis Byarea. Anyoae appreheoded
Pass. An audit will bemade to
doing so will be prosecuted.
determine
the exact amount
The lagoon road ia·clased to
missing.
lhe public. Therefore,
According to reports, the
anyoae fouad trespassing
two men walked into the
Ia that area will be
station office · around noon
prosecuted.
yesterday. One man drew a
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::. gun and demanded money.
They reportedly handcuffed

Two men
sought

BREAKING A PINATA WAS thP gn•oe p.....,..ted by the !!alem Center scouts whose
country was Mexico.

Court to make sex ruling

WASHINQTON (UP!) The Supreme Court today
agreed to decide whether
widowers' and husbands'
reiirement benefits un&lt;ler
Social
Seculty
unconstiutionally discriminate on the basis of sex.
Lower courts, following
·::::::::~::~:;:&gt;;'$::::~:::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:::;:::;~::J:;::;:&lt;&lt;&lt;··~
· . earlier high cow:t opinions in
this field of law, found the
system unconstitutional.
The court accepted .a test
case til be argued next fall or
winter alid decided later by
written,opinion.
Under the Social. Security
law, a man applying for old·
age Insurance on the basis of
his wife's earnings must show
that he had, received at least
half Ida support from Ida wife
when she began receiving
old.-age or disebility benefits
or when she died.
A wot.Oan in a like situation

selection.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehoaae Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
state Apportionment Board
today reorganized under
Republican control and
unanimously agreed to seek
modification or vacation of a
federal court order which
now prevents any revisloo of
the state legislative districts
created by a Deinocratic
board in 1971.
. -The three Republican
members of the board
directed Attorney General
William J . Brown, a
Democrat, to name special
counsel agreeable to himself
and Gov. James A. Rllodes, to
carry the board's case to the

~~.

=

I

SWITZERLAND
WAS
APPROPRIATELY
represented or\ the refreshment table with small squares
of Swiss cheese. Pictured here arranging one of the trays
of cheese is Sherrie Southworth, Pomeroy Jlrownie ..

Hundreds came for
International Day·
By Charlene Hoeflich
Hundreds of Girl Scouts,
their families and friends
jammed the Middleport
Elementary School
auditoriwn Sunday afternoon
for the celebration of International Thinking Day .
Coming atti.red in the
costuming of countries
around the world , the scouts
eniertained with songs,
dances , and games in observance of the Feb. 22 joint
birthday of the Founder of the

'!''=!:!'

Kenny Thomas, Salem Center jlinior, Mexico; Amber
Warner, Syracuse junior, J!lmaica; Kim Eblin, Pomeroy
Brownie, Spain (kneeling bull) ; Sonya Wise, Rutland,
junior, Phlllppines; Becky Roush, Syracuse Brownie,
France ; and Rllonda Nease, Pomeroy Brownie,
Switzerland.

COSTUMING CARRIED OUT TilE international
theme of the Girl SCO!lt Thinking Day observance SWlday
at the Middleport Elementary School auditorium. Scouts
wearing costumes of the countries their troops selected
pictured here, left to right, are Cheryl Folmer, Chester
junior, Brazil ; Shilpa Goradia, Pomeroy junior, India ;

MONDAY FROM 9:30 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

veto of a $6.2 billion jobs biD.
Glenn voted to override the
veto, while Taft voted against

~:~;
who is setting t11e fires . We hope that ~::~:

State Government Tuesday,
March 2, in Columbus.
State officials will explain
the function and the operation
of the offices of Secretary of

I

WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY SALE

override President Ford's

is only a Vi$ual warning of the real

'7572

.
reapportion

eAt the Mechanic Street Warehouse - Asale of metal

OPPOSING VOTES CAST
WASHINGTON (UPI) Ohio's U.S. Sen. John Glenn
and Robert Taft Jr. split in
voting Thursday during the
63-35 rollcall vote by which
the Senate refused to

•

:

dacron curtains - tbne Fumishinp Annex .

country school teacher and made him "State Superintendent," he
replied, "I married. a country school teacher and made him State
Superintendent of Schools."
. He was later appointed West Virginia's First State Historian, and
established the Department of Archives and History.

=

They'll

action to

his helper. She so inspired her husband that when someone once referred.

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RIO GRANDE - The
Buckeye Hills career Center
Vocational Industrial Club
delegates accompanied by
their club advisors wiD study
first-hand the operation of

•

•Save plenty on sheets and pillowcases • bath towels ·

to her husband a.s ''State Superintendent," she replied, "I married a

Vol. 27, No. 219

GOP opens

boys' socks • Wintuk knitting yam.

JENNIE PADEN

Fifteen Cents

l

-~

Your Wayne National Forest!li l
By T. ALLANWO LTE R
DISTRICT RANGER

enttne

iaekels - ~· blue denim·western jeans • men's and

\

:~\\i!iit=i~:i:i:i:i:Ii@'tim~i:@:ii:i:;~;:!:!:!:!ii:i~i:!ii~:iiiii!iiiiiiiiiitt.:!:;:;:r:i:~i:ii:i:i:l:iti~~@m~~:i:nl!i!!m!i~ml!li!~tM:i:i:i:i!i:!:i~!@M~i:it@fi@i@@t!~~:\\

.
·.·.·.·.
:::::::
.,.,.,,
:·:-:·:

a·I

. '

·.

ji!·!,f

•

eSpecial sale of men's Wrangler blue denim jeans and .

;, •~ ·2

"

JOSIE HART

e

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
Monday, Feb . .2:1. 1976

that their children were not In school.
Adams said that be and Ord had conferred following this
morning 's Incident and it was decided that any of the students
returning to classes before the end of the day would not be
suspended lor the l.hree-day period Indicated In the rules, but
would be counted as truants and would receive two detentions
for each class period missed today.
Soutbem High School has an enrollment of about 320.
Almost one-fourth of the students are Involved. ·
Adams pointed out that suspended students receive zeros
for tbe three day period and this will affect their grades and,
perbaps, tbe graduating status of some. .

iewelly - handbags • women's daytime dresses•
•

CLARA MATTHEWS

•

that smoking in restrooms and other locations be stopped.
Following the assembly, some students remained in tbe
auditorium and told Adams they wished to protest the new
rules of the board. He advised tbem to write out tbeir jrolests
and present them to Supt. Bobby Ord who would take them to
the nen board meeting.
Adams further told students that they must go to tbeir first
period classes or be suspended. He advised them that if they
did not go to the first class, they would have to leave the school
and school grounds.
Some 75left and Adams this mol')'ling was notifying parents

!

spo~tswear

.....

--- - ' .,- .

.. .

.

The board indicated to principals last Wednesday their
wishes. The board Indicates there is too much noise in the
nauways Delween classes and suggested that students should
visit their lockers mly In the morning and take with tbem
books needed for tbe day's classes. They suggested no talking
in the halls during the clasll changes.
The board also Indicated that there is smoking in restrooms and other places outside the designated smoking area
and Indicated this also must be stopped.
Adams in Monday's assembly told the smokers that they
would be responsible for policing the smoking area and·to see

•Big savlnp tomorrow on women's sportswear - junior

'l'

'

Approltimately 75 students of Southern High School In
Racine left the school building Monday morning In jrotest of
rules 110! down by the Southern Local Board of Education last
Wednelday.
Rules apparently being protested are those dealing with a
more qnierly change of classes and smoking outside of the
designated smoking area.
High School Principal James Adams met with teachers
following the Wednesday night board session and Informed
them of the board's wishes and this morning explained the
wishes of the board to the student body In an assembly.

Elberfelds in Pomeroy

the health insurance carrier

FACIUUES LACK)NG - The recent excellent show
of American skaters at the winter Olympics again focused
attention to the lack of lee skating facilities thro.ugh which
Meigs County yo!lflgSterl' mov ~ proficient, let

Students walkout in protest of rules

personal records.
DDP Is convenient for lhe ;
employee since payday no :
longer means a trip to the.
bank, the possibility of a lost
check or the cba nce a deposit
will not be made.
DDP and other electronic ·
funds transfer programs are ·
necessary to reduce the:
growing number of paper
checks - estimated to be 45
billion nationally by 1980 which threatens to inundate
our banking system with ·•
paper.
••

need not show that .her basis as to servicemen.
The high court said women
husband brrnished half her
support. The dependency of wbo work cannot be deprived
the man must be proven, of the same protection for
while tlie dependency of the their families accorded men
as a result of employment.
woman is presmned.
Appeallng to tbe high court,
The Department of Health,
Education and Welfare HEW argued that the current
estimated that pey about $400 cases can be diatinguished.
. Congress, it said, is merely
million a year.
"This added burden will transferring tax dollars to
Impose a severe burden' on those who need them "to
the Social Security · trust provide lor the general
fund's already strained welfare" and is not Insuring
resources," the department individual taxpayers.
The American Civil
said.
Lower courts relied on Liberties Union, which is
recent Supreme Court involved in several cases,
decisions
that
the argued that the principle of
government must pay the earlier opinions applies.
The government appealed
survivors' insurance to
widowers with thildren on tbe from federal district court
same basis as to widows and decisions in favor of Leon
that it must provide Goldfarb in Brooklyn, N.Y.;
dependency benefits to Hyman G. and Shirley H.
servicewomen on the same
H \ :P 1 l i· ,·.:.!
Pi:IP,e 10)
i)fl

Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach said today Michael
Ray Mullins, 22, Gallipolis,
was returned to Meigs County
Friday from Athens where
poli&lt;:e there had arrested him
on a bad check charge and
will appear in Meigs County
Courl ttday .

Rt•portcc.l lo

lilt'

s heriff's

.

office by Steve Kach, Rt. 1,
R~tland, was the theft of 12
cows which occurred a week.
ago. Betty Morton, Rt. 1,
Rutland, also reported a Iheft
in the past month in a house
owned by ~er late father ,
Walter Preston . Taken were
ll('ating stove, sofa. antiques,
a sewing machine; antique

•

.

•

JUIDpiDg

on children

Frequent complaints have
been received at Middleport
town hall of dogs running
loo"'l in town, ·even jmnplng
on to small children in some
Instances.
Police Chief J. J. CremF.ans
cupboard with glass top, an said the situation cannot be
old Victrola, washstand, and tolerated. He said also that it
is sometimes difficUlt for
table .. .
police
officers to reach the
A deer was killed Saturday
scene
when
a dog is reported
al 9:30 . p. m. in Sutton
running
loose
. He asks
Township on SR 124 when it
ran into the path of a car residents to tie such dogs and
driven by Ronald L. Cun- then phone the department,
which will have the animals
ningham, Syracuse.
picked up by th! dog catcher.

Gallipolis man
held by Athens law
'
'

.Loose dogs

~ f:~~ager then ~ed south
One suspect was described
as1Hltall,l7&gt;-185 pounds with ,
red balr and wearing brown
trousers. The other wu said
to be about lHl tall, 200 pounds
with dark brown hair and
beard.
TWO FINED
Fined in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Saturday were
Eliza Howard, Pomeroy, $100
and costs, upon conviction of
reckless operation, and
Wllliam Dlnguss, Dexter, $30
and cost, no operator's
license, and $40 and costs,

speeding.
LOCAL .TEMPS
The

temperature

in

down town Pomeroy at 11
a.m. Monday was 36 degrees
under sunny skies .

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